June 25, 1825 – U.S. troops captured Bob Forbes, leader of the Maroons (blacks resisting slavery) in Virginia. (From the Daily Bleed)
A dramatization (1905) of Sitting Bull stabbing Custer (library of Congress) |
June 25, 1876 – Lakota, Cheyenne and Arapahoe tribes defeated Custer and the U.S. Army at Little Big Horn, Montana. (From the Daily Bleed)
June 25, 1878
– Despite mass protests, Ezra Heywood was sentenced to two years hard
labor for advocating free love and sexual emancipation as part of
women's rights. Heywood was an anarchist, feminist and abolitionist who
was hounded and harassed by the moralist vigilante Anthony Comstock. His
wife, Angela Tilton, was considered by many to be even more radical than he was. (From the Daily Bleed)
Haymarket Memorial |
Striking Pullman workers confront National Guard troops in Chicago, 1894 |
Robots in rebellion in 1922 performance of R.U.R. |
June 25, 1938
- The Wages and Hours (later Fair Labor Standards) act was passed,
which banned child labor, set the 40-hour work week and set a national
minimum wage. (From Workday Minnesota and Shmoop Labor History)
June 25, 1941 - A.
Philip Randolph (president Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters) called
off the Negro march on Washington that had been planned for July 1 when
President Roosevelt agreed to issue Executive Order 8802 banning racial
discrimination in defense industries and government employment (creating
the Fair Employment Practices Committee). (From Workday Minnesota and the Daily Bleed)
June 25, 1943—Congress
passed the Smith-Connally Act allowing the government to take over
critical industries affected by strikes, overriding President
Roosevelt's veto. It also prevented unions from contributing to
political campaigns. (From Shmoop Labor History)
June 25, 1968 – The 50,000 strong Poor People's Campaign March from Georgia to Washington D.C., concluded.
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