The Selected Works of Eugene V. Debs, Volume II The Rise and Fall of the American Railway Union, 1892-1896
Eugene V. Debs Selected Works will provide activists and scholars with a definitive trove of his best work that remains readable, informative, and inspiring..
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Sprache: | English |
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La Vergne
Haymarket Books
2020
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Inhaltsangabe:
- Intro
- Introduction
- 1892
- The Battle of Homestead
- Public Opinion
- The Pinkertons at Homestead
- H. C. Frick
- The Switchmen's Strike
- The Homestead Horrors
- H. C. Frick and Alexander Berkman
- Magazine Editor's Biennial Report and Resignationto the Sixteenth Convention of the B of LF[excerpt]
- "My Retirement Is Certain":Speech to the Sixteenth Convention of the B of LF,Cincinnati, Ohio
- The End of the Switchmen's Strike
- Homestead and Treason
- The End of the Homestead Strike
- 1893
- Evolution
- The Labor View of the Election
- The Death of Jay Gould
- A New Start: Statement to the Press
- Industrial Peace
- Standing Armies
- Carnegie Returns
- Coming Events
- Congress, Pinkertons, and Organized Labor
- The Hawaiian Islands
- Law, Lawmakers, and Politics
- Self-Made Men
- A Workingman's Congress
- ARU Permanently Organized:Statement to the Press
- Labor Deliberation
- The Plan of the ARU:Statement to the Press in New York City
- "A Great Thing and Bound to Win":Statement to the Indiana Press19
- Labor and Legislation
- Russianizing the United States
- Chicago Anarchists Pardoned
- The Organization of Workingmen:Speech to the Chicago World's Fair Labor Congress
- The Money Question
- The Pulpit and Socialism
- Business Depression and Legislation
- Labor and Capital and the Distribution of Property
- The Teaching of Christ
- Progress of the Union:Statement to the Press
- The Columbian Fair
- European Military, Money, and Misery
- 1894
- Value of the Ballot
- A Grand Beginning:Speech at the Formation of the ARU Lodgeat Terre Haute
- There Should Be No Aristocracy in Labor's Ranks:Speech in Fort Wayne, Indiana[excerpt]
- Arbitration
- T. V. Powderly and the Knights of Labor
- A Free Press
- The American Protective Association
- The Despotism of Dundy
- The Equality of Men and Women
- Liberty and the Courts
- The Northern Pacific
- Furious Fanatics
- Open Letter to Gov. Knute Nelsonin St. Paul, Minnesota
- ARU Purposes and Procedures
- Government Control of Railroads and Employees
- Objectionable Bosses
- The Labor Problem
- The St. Paul Victory:Speech in Terre Haute
- First Speech to Striking Pullman Workers,Turner Hall, Kensington, Illinois[excerpt]
- Second Speech to Striking Pullman Workers,Turner Hall, Kensington, Illinois[excerpt]
- Judge Caldwell and the Union Pacific Employees
- The Outlook of Labor
- The Union Pacific and the United States
- Keynote Address to the First Convention of the ARU: Uhlich's Hall, Chicago
- The Race Line and the ARU:Statement to the Convention
- The Coal Miners' Strike
- Declaration at the ARU Quadrennial ConventionRegarding a Potential Pullman Boycott[excerpt]
- Speech on the Forthcoming Pullman Boycott toa Mass Meeting of Railroad Workers in Chicago[excerpt]
- Telegram to Labor Leaders Announcingthe Launch of the Pullman Boycott
- Statement on the Strike to the Chicago Tribune
- Statement on the Strike to the Chicago Inter Ocean
- Speech to a Mass Meeting of Illinois Central RailroadWorkers on the Pullman Strike, Fischer's Hall, Chicago[excerpt]
- Message to the Railway Employees of America
- Conditions
- "All We Ask Is Fair Play":Message to the Public
- Telegram to ARU Local Leaders on Statusof the Pullman Boycott
- Warning to All Striking Employees
- "The Situation Is More Favorable Today":Interview with the Chicago Daily News
- Open Letter to President Grover Cleveland
- The Situation
- Statement to the Press While AwaitingRelease on Bail in Chicago
- Proposal to the General Managers' Association from the Board of Directors of the ARU
- Correspondence with P. M. Arthur,Chief Engineer of the B of LE
- Brothers and Friends, the ARUAsks the Helping Hand
- Statement to the Press from Cook County Jail
- To the American Public
- Labor Strikes and Their Lessons
- A Military Era
- Legislation
- Probabilities and Possibilities
- Populist Advice
- Testimony to the United States Strike Commission[excerpt]
- The Limit of Endurance
- An Appeal to Labor
- Separate Organizations Can Never Succeed:Speech to the Seventeenth Convention of the B of LF,Harrisburg, Pennsylvania119
- Altgeld and Pullman
- An Era of Bloodhoundism
- A Larger Standing Army
- Open Letter to a Milwaukee ARU Memberon the Results of the Election
- Denial of News Reports Alleging HostilityToward Samuel Gompers
- Statement to the Press on the Decision Finding ARU Leaders Guilty of Contempt
- 1895
- Accused of Every Crime but Selling Out:Speech at St. Paul, Minnesota
- Address to the American People:A Manifesto from Woodstock Jail
- Our First Great Need
- The Political Lesson of the Pullman Strike
- "The Liberty We Enjoy Is a Hollow Mockery":Message to the People
- The ARU's Fight Is for All Humanity:Speech at the Fargo Opera House, Fargo, North Dakota
- The Solidarity of Labor
- New and Old:The Dead Past Must Bury Its Dead
- "Every Federal Judge Now Constitutes a Tsar":Statement to the Press onthe Supreme Court's Verdict
- "Even in Defeat Our Rewards Are Grand":Circular Letter to Members of the ARU
- Statement to the Press While AwaitingRecommitment to Jail
- Cooperation Not Competition:An Interview with the Cincinnati Enquirer
- Liberty's Anniversary
- The Coming Workingman
- Success and Failure
- Open Letter to the State Convention of thePeople's Party of Texas
- Slaves and Cowards
- Prison and Pardon:Open Letter to William C. Endicott, Jr.
- "The Old Brotherhoods Are Disgraced or Dead":From a Circular Letter of the ARU
- Labor Omnia Vincit
- Open Letter to the Evansville Tribune
- The People's Party's Situation in 1896
- Term Half Over: Interview withthe Chicago Chronicle at Woodstock Jail
- Open Letter to Jacob S. Coxey
- Open Letter to W. L. Rosenberg
- The Pullman Strike After One Year
- Open Letter to the 1895 Labor Day Celebrationin Terre Haute
- The Outlook for 1896:Interview with the St. Louis Chronicle
- Current TopicsThe New Woman, Bicycles, Bloomers
- "In Unity There Is Strength":Open Letter to the Chicago Evening Press
- Myron Reed and Labor Unification
- "Stand Together": Open Letter to W. W. Williams,Editor of Quincy Labor News
- The Mind's Workshop
- Conditions
- Regarding Finances:Letter to the Directors of the ARU
- The Aristocracy of Wealth
- Letter to Thomas J. Elderkin in Chicago
- "The Policy of the Great Northern IsDishonest and Disreputable":Statement to the Associated Press
- Liberty:Speech Delivered on Release from Woodstock Jailat Battery D, Chicago
- Shall the Standing Armyof the United States Be Increased?123
- The Ways of Justice
- 1896
- Consolidation
- "Better to Buy Books Than Beer":Speech at Music Hall, Buffalo, New York
- Centralization and the Role of the Courts:Speech at Germania Hall, Cleveland
- The American University and the Labor Problem
- Competitive System Pressing Labor Down:Interview with the Atlanta Constitution
- What Can the Church Do to Benefitthe Condition of the Laboring Man?Speech at First Baptist Church, Terre Haute
- ARU Ready for Another Fight:Interview with the Associated Press
- "I Will Not Serve for Public Office":Statement to the Press, Birmingham, Alabama
- Open Letter to Alfred S. Edwards,Editor of the Coming Nation44
- Telegram to Henry Demarest Lloyd, Delegateto the People's Party Convention, Saint Louis
- Without the Populists, the Democrats Cannot Win:From a Letter to George P. Garrison
- "Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death":A Labor Day Message
- Endorsement of William J. Bryanfor President of the United States
- "I Have No Prejudice Against the Rich":Speech at Houston, Texas[excerpt]
- An Uprising of the People:Campaign Speech for William Jennings Bryanat Duluth, Minnesota
- Patriotism Versus Plutocracy:Speech for William Jennings Bryan in Cleveland[excerpt]
- Appendix
- Declaration of Principles of theAmerican Railway Union,Embracing All Classes of Railway Employees
- Interview with Eugene V. Debs at Woodstock Jail,by Nellie Bly
- Debs's Busy Life in Jail:Interview with the Chicago Chronicle
- How I Became a Socialist15
- The Federal Government and the Chicago Strike:A Reply to Grover Cleveland
- A Sheriff I Loved
- About the Editors