Time: How a Bloody Railroad Strike Paved the Way for Labor Day
http://time.com/4020710/first-labor-day/
Jennifer Latson
First Monday of September, 1894: Labor Day is first observed as a national holiday
Its little more than a day off for shopping now, but when Labor Day was first observed, it wasnt all fun and back-to-school sales. Its passage as a federal holiday, in 1894, was a sort of peace offering from President Grover Cleveland for the killing of a dozen or more striking railway workers.
The strike began as unrest in the Illinois town founded by George Pullman, creator of the railroad sleeping car. The town, just outside Chicago, had been built as a utopian home for Pullmans workers, but the utopia was designed to serve Pullman above all others, according to PBS. Its residents all worked for the Pullman company, PBS notes, their paychecks drawn from Pullman bank, and their rent, set by Pullman, deducted automatically from their weekly paychecks.
From 1880 to 1893, all seemed well in Pullman (the town), until an economic depression prompted Pullman (the man) to cut employees wages even though their rents remained the same. The workers walked out. In solidarity, members of the American Railway Union (founded, per TIME, by fiery Socialist Eugene Debs) took up the cause, and its 150,000 members refused to work on trains carrying Pullman cars, prompting a nationwide transportation nightmare.
FULL story at link. Video:
http://ti.me/1NNV0ca