The year was 1886 and Chicago, Illinois--at the time only fifty-three
years old--had grown to become an important trade center. But as in
other parts of the country, divisions between capitalists and labor
coupled with economic instability to cause friction. Unions were
pressing for an eight-hour workday.
On 3 May, following a national eight-hour walkout, violence broke out
at a union rally, and clashes with police resulted in the deaths of
two workers. Another outdoor meeting was planned for the following
evening at the Haymarket on Randolph Street near Desplaines Street.
The police and government officials were worried that the assembly
would turn violent and as the meeting was winding down, police
marched in and ordered the attendees to disperse.
A bomb was thrown into the gathered police, setting off a wave of
gunfire in the panic that ensued. Seven policemen and at least four
workers were killed in the Haymarket Riot, and more casualties would
follow. Anarchists were rounded up and arrested. Eight men would be
charged with conspiracy, although the actual bomb thrower was never
discovered and it was never proven that the eight men had planned the
bomb throwing. They were convicted on the grounds that their speeches
and actions had incited the mob actions. Four of the men were hanged,
another condemned to die committed suicide, one was given fifteen
years in prison, and the other two--originally condemned to death--
had their sentences commuted and were eventually pardoned in 1893. To
learn more about the Haymarket Riot, the conditions that led to it,
and the aftermath, visit the Chicago Historical Society's online
exhibition, The Dramas of Haymarket.
In Vancouver, British Columbia in Canada, workers on the Canadian
Pacific Railroad lost control of a fire set to clear some land when a
sudden blast of wind blew up. The flames spread quickly consuming
buildings and people in their path. In less than forty-five minutes,
the two-month-old city was in ruins.
On 31 August, a magnitude 7.6 earthquake struck Charlestown, South
Carolina.
The strong earthquake devastated the city leaving 90 percent of the
buildings damaged or destroyed, and sixty people dead. Damage was
reported within a radius of about one-hundred miles, and the quake
was felt in thirty states and Ontario, Canada. Images of the damage
can be found on the Earthquake Center at St. Louis University
website.
Drought plagued the western U.S. that year, and the 22 July New York
Times reported the
following:
FLEEING FROM DROUGHT
Fort Worth, Texas, July 21.--Throughout the day wagons loaded with
families and their effects from the western counties have been
streaming through the city. They are fleeing from the drought
prevalent in the western counties and have come here in the quest of
work. They give most gloomy accounts of the condition of crops and
the lack of water for stock. It has not rained in some of these
drought-stricken counties for over a year. Hundreds of families are
abandoning their cattle and homes and going eastward to keep from
starving to death. The situation is critical. Rain seldom falls in
this drought-stricken district during August, and by that time there
will be nothing left in the country.
If you were parched in Georgia, there was a new way to relieve your
thirst. 1886 was the year that an Atlanta pharmacist, Dr. John
Pemberton, came up with the syrup that would be combined with
carbonated water to become Coca-Cola.
> Comment on this article