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A centenary edition of this classic of labor journalism, industrial history and strike-support activism. During the heroic Pullman strike and boycott of 1894, a young Methodist minister defied the conventions of company-town self-censorship by writing this searing expose of the dictatorial and penny-pinching regime of multimillionaire George M Pullman. That the Rev. Carwardine suffered immediate exile from his Pullman church suggests how deeply threatened the giant railroad manufacturing and operating company was by his plainly written book. Filled with appreciation for meaningful details of the everyday lives of diverse workers with common problems, and with a balanced admiration for the leadership of Eugene V Debs, The Pullman Strike vividly shows how a great experiment in industrial unionism like the American Railway Union could arise. Aware of the vast power and ruthlessness of the Pullman Company, Carwardine also suggests why the union was unable to prevail.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
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1
The Pullman Strike: The Classic First-Hand Account Of An Epoch-Making Struggle In US Labor History
January 1, 1994, Charles H Kerr
Paperback
in English
- 2nd edition
0882862243 9780882862248
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2
The Pullman strike
1973, Published by C. H. Kerr for the Illinois Labor History Society
in English
- Enl. ed. / with introduction & bibliography by Virgil J. Vogel ; biographical note on Carwardine by William Adelman.
0882860038 9780882860039
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Bibliography: p. xliv-xlvii.
The Physical Object
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First Sentence
"The Pullman strike is the greatest and most far-reaching of any strike on record in this country."



