[August 6th
marks the 75th anniversary of the bombing
of Hiroshima. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that fraught moment and four
other histories of U.S. military massacres.]
On how 1890s
anti-labor violence parallels Wounded Knee, and a key difference.
I wrote about
the 1894
Pullman Strike as part of this
post on contexts for an indivisible yet deeply divided United States in the
era of the Pledge of Allegiance, and in lieu of a full first paragraph here
would ask you to check that one out for a good bit of what I’d say about this
national labor activism and the violent federal, military response to it.
Thanks!
And welcome
back! President
Grover Cleveland’s use of the military—well more than 10,000 soldiers, not only
in the strike’s Chicago
epicenter but in a number of other cities as well—to quell the strike could
be compellingly linked to yesterday’s subject, the 1890 Wounded Knee massacre. In
both cases, the military was used to put down prominent and influential protest
movements, attacking unarmed American communities in the process; the casualty numbers
in 1894 (in Chicago alone, 30
strikers killed and dozens more wounded) were not nearly as large as at
Wounded Knee, but both similarly reflect the military’s willingness to use
fatal force in these settings of domestic unrest. There’s been a great deal of
discussion in recent years (such as in the aftermath of
Hurricane Katrina) of the legality of military forces being used in
domestic situations, but in truth these 1890s events (and much older ones, like
the 1791
Whiskey Rebellion) highlight that such practices have always been a fraught
but undeniable part of our landscape and histories.
It’s important
to acknowledge the through-line across those different historical moments, but
it’s just as important to recognize and engage with differences between them. Perhaps
the most overt such distinction between the Pullman Strike and Wounded Knee
would be the ways in which many prominent political and media voices sided with
the Pullman Strikers and against Cleveland and the military—that list included Chicago Mayor
John Hopkins, Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld, and
at least in part the
New York Times, which
editorialized that the strike represented “a struggle between the greatest and
most important labor organization and the entire railroad capital.” These
figures and voices were able to publicly express that perspective, I would
argue, because the strike was generally perceived as a conflict between various
American communities (although xenophobic
fears of foreign activists did make their way into the opposition to the
strike). Far too much of the time, in contrast, Native American communities
such as the Lakota were not seen as part of the United States (but rather as an
obstacle to the nation’s continued expansion), making public, political or
media support for them (even in response to brutalities like Wounded Knee) far
less common.
Next massacre
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other histories you’d highlight?
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