Death in the Haymarket

A Story of Chicago, the First Labor Movement and the Bombing that Divided Gilded Age America

Paperback, 383 pages

English language

Published March 13, 2007 by Anchor.

ISBN:
978-1-4000-3322-5
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OCLC Number:
85892682

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(5 reviews)

1 edition

An Engaging Historical Account that's a Bit Lacking in Analysis

The dawn of the labor movement in the US is often overlooked in favor of the larger labor actions that took place in the early 1900s, but James Green provides an engaging account of the genesis of many of those actions in his review of the Haymarket Affair and the events leading up to it. The chapters preceding the event were by far the most interesting to me, as they concerned the state of labor and intersections with ethnic identities in the Chicago area in the post-Civil War decades. Most of this is a straight historical accounting - personal accounts and newspaper articles woven together to provide a view into the environment of the time. Unfortunately missing are any contextualizing economic or political analyses - how did wages compare to the costs of living, and how did that change over time? What were general economic conditions in the area and …

Review of 'Death in the Haymarket' on 'Goodreads'

An excellent book, carefully detailing the labor and radical movement in Chicago prior to the Haymarket Affair (it starts off in 1865 around the first eight-hour movement) and then everything surrounding it. There is no real argument, except that Haymarket was a travesty of justice and that it's still important for us today. As the closing words of the book put it: "It is impossible to say exactly what might have been different if the police hadn't killed those strikers at McCormick's, if the chief inspector hadn't decided to break up the Haymarket meeting, if someone hadn't thrown the bomb, but it is clear that, in some sense, we are today living with the legacy of those long-ago events" (320).

None

An excellent book, carefully detailing the labor and radical movement in Chicago prior to the Haymarket Affair (it starts off in 1865 around the first eight-hour movement) and then everything surrounding it. There is no real argument, except that Haymarket was a travesty of justice and that it's still important for us today. As the closing words of the book put it: "It is impossible to say exactly what might have been different if the police hadn't killed those strikers at McCormick's, if the chief inspector hadn't decided to break up the Haymarket meeting, if someone hadn't thrown the bomb, but it is clear that, in some sense, we are today living with the legacy of those long-ago events" (320).

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Subjects

  • History Of Labor
  • Illinois - Local History
  • History
  • History - U.S.
  • History: American
  • United States - 19th Century
  • History / United States / 19th Century

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