1884-1891: Haymarket and Hull House
by Drew VandeCreek, Ph.D.
The Knights of Labor reached their highest popularity and
influence in Illinois in
1884, with 52,000 members in 300 locals, over 200 in Chicago.
The Knights boasted over 600,000 members nationwide, and flexed their
muscle in a successful strike against Jay Gould's Wabash Railroad in 1885.
But the next year the financier effectively broke the Knights by squashing
their strike against the Texas
and Pacific Railroad. Internal dissension between inclusive industrial
unionists and craft unionists, and between social reformers and those
interested in higher pay alone, had effectively weakened the Knights and
hastened their demise.
In the Knights' place, the American Federation of Labor's
more traditional craft unionism emerged, which organized skilled tradesmen
while largely ignoring industrial workers. The federal government also began
to pay increased attention to the railroads, which had so aroused the ire
of both the Knights of Labor and the Grangers. In 1887 the Illinois Senator
Shelby Cullom led the drafting of the Interstate
Commerce Act, which formed an Interstate Commerce Commission devoted to
regulating the railroads and other forms of transportation. 1
In 1885 a heavy rainfall caused disastrous flooding in Chicago
and led the city fathers to develop the Chicago Sanitary District. The new
organization retained engineers, who reversed the flow of Chicago
River and sent the city's wastewater and runoff into the Illinois
River via a new canal. The waterway proved to be the largest
excavation in the world between the completion of the Suez Canal
in 1869 and the Panama Canal in 1914.
Residents of central and southern Illinois
increasingly found themselves linked to Chicago
through a web of economic relationships facilitated by railroads. But where
farmers had once complained that railroads often overcharged them for
cartage, or that Chicago grain
merchants cheated them, they now enjoyed access to the city's merchants.
Mail-order houses shipped circulars, and later catalogs, to rural dwellers,
providing them with an opportunity to partake of a new variety of goods.
Montgomery Ward's openly appealed to Grangers' distaste for middlemen by
touting its ability to bypass small town merchants and offer lower prices.
Increasingly Ward's, as well as Sears, Roebuck and Company, made Chicago
the center for clothing and furnishing the western frontier.
Violent confrontations between organized workers and their
employers, often supported by police and soldiers, continued to
characterize the era. In 1885 Illinois Governor Oglesby sent the state
militia to break up a quarry workers' strike in Lemont, and in the
following year militiamen killed four striking railroad switchmen in East
St. Louis. 2
These events only added to a growing, more complex labor
movement's sense of rage. In the days since the Socialist Labor Party's
electoral defeats in Chicago, a
new generation of anarchists had joined the socialists in the rapidly
expanding city. Anarchists called for the destruction of all government,
relying upon individuals' free association to govern society. Many
anarchists and other radicals pointed out that
governments usually came to the defense of employers, as in the case
of the Great Strike of 1877. Chicago
police regularly broke up peaceful anarchist rallies and meetings in Chicago
in 1884 and 1885. Some of the new labor radicals openly admitted their
fascination with violence and its potential to damage or even overthrow
existing order of industry and its government allies.3
In the spring of 1886 labor organizers nationwide called for
a one-day general strike in support of their effort to establish an
eight-hour workday. The May 1 strike proved to be a success in Chicago
and other cities, and set businessmen and an increasingly conservative
middle class on edge. Chicago newspapers widely predicted that the wave of
labor disturbances would produce violence, and on May 3rd a fracas broke
out between striking workers and replacement workers who had taken their
jobs at the McCormick reaper works on the city's west side Police soon
arrived and killed two strikers. Outraged anarchists and other labor
radicals organized a protest meeting the next day at the nearby Haymarket.
Police also broke up this meeting, which had drawn a disappointing turnout.
But as the police moved in, an unknown person lobbed a dynamite bomb into
their midst, killing an officer. The police opened fire upon the crowd, and
a full riot ensued. Four more police officers were killed, and sixty
injured. At least four civilians lost their lives, and no accurate count of
those injured could be made.
Chicago police
and prosecutors immediately began to round up known radicals, including a
band of anarchists. They quickly charged nine men with the murder of a
police officer. In a highly publicized trial all nine were found guilty.
The Illinois and United States Supreme Courts rejected appeals, and four of
the men were hanged in November of 1887.
.
The Haymarket riot and trials aroused an unprecedented
public furor in Chicago and the nation. In the 1880s Chicago remained a
city, like many others in America, made up largely of recent immigrants,
who often struggled to take up, or rejected, the customs and attitudes of
native born Americans. Many wealthy businessmen, as well as middle class
clerks and salesmen, worried that the new immigrants were exercising undue
influence, despite their poverty. In part this mania arose from the
activities of the growing, nationally circulated journals that brought news
to a large middle class every week. These publications voiced the
prosperous classes' increasing anxiety over the nation's increasing labor
violence, and often demanded swift and sure justice, regardless of matters
of law.4
But while many wealthy and middle-class Americans feared and
attacked immigrants and workers, others turned to learn about their customs
and assist them in their new lives. In 1889 Jane Addams, the daughter of a
wealthy banker from northern Illinois, founded Hull House on the city's
west side. Established as a settlement house after the example of English
reformers who took up residence in London's slums, the dilapidated mansion
soon featured public baths, a kindergarten and nursury,
a playground and gymnasium, an employment bureau, and educational programs
for neighborhood residents.
Rather than openly attempt to change the lives and attitudes
of poor immigrants, as so many devotees of social uplift had done, Addams
proposed to provide them with an opportunity to organize and help themselves. In an eloquent argument for Hull House's
relevance, Addams emphasized not only the settlement house's impact upon
the poor, but upon its well-to-do organizers as well. Citing the
"snare of preparation" that led so many women of America's middle
and upper classes to forever prepare, and never actually do anything,
Addams urged women to become active in civic life.
Hull House's residents came to include, at different times
and in addition to Addams, Florence Kelley, Sophonisba
Breckinridge, Dr. Alice Hamilton, Julia Lathrop, and Ellen Gates Starr.
These women supported neighborhood residents in the formation of important
reform societies, including the Immigrants' Protective League, the Juvenile
Protective Association, and the nation's first juvenile court. Hull House
also facilitated the State of Illinois' investigations of social ills,
including truancy, infant mortality and sanitation. In a city and period
often marked by bitter conflict among the classes, Hull House provided
social reformers with reason for optimism. 5
1.
Hoogenboom, Ari and Olive Hoogenboom. The History of the I.C.C.: From Panacea to Palliative. New York: W.W. Norton and Co., 1976.
2. Bogart, Ernest Ludlow. The Centennial History of Illinois: Industrial State, 1871-1893. Springfield: Illinois Centennial Commission, 1920.
3. Schneirov, Richard. Labor and Urban Politics: Class Conflict and the Origins of Modern Liberalism in Chicago, 1864-1897. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1998.
4. See "The Dramas of Haymarket" at http://www.chicagohs.org/dramas.
5. Elshtain, Jean B. Jane Addams and the Dream of American Democracy: A Life. New York : Basic Books, 2002; Sklar, Kathryn K. Florence Kelley and the Nation's Work. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1995.