April 20, 1812— Luddites
attacked factories in Middleton, Manchester, Bolton, Ashton, Oldham
and Cheshire England in protest of new technologies that were throwing
them out of work. (From the Daily Bleed)
Ruins of the Ludlow Mining Camp |
April 20, 1914—Ludlow
Massacre, Colorado. National Guards opened fire on a mining camp during
a strike in Ludlow, Colorado, killing five miners, two women, and
twelve children. By the end of the strike, more than 75 people had been
killed. The strike involved 10,000 members of the united Mine Workers of
America (UMW), 1,200 of whom had been living in the Ludlow tent colony.
Many of the “Guards” were actually goons and vigilantes hired by the
Ludlow Mine Field owner, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who were temporarily
sworn into the State Militia for the occasion. During the assault, they
opened fire on strikers and their families with machine guns and set
fire to the camp.
Armored “Death Car” With Mounted Machine Guns |
Mining
was (and still is) a dangerous job. At the time, Colorado miners were
dying on the job at a rate of more than 7 deaths per 1,000 employees.
The working conditions were not only unsafe, but terribly unfair, too.
Workers were paid by the ton for coal that they extracted, but were
unpaid for so-called “dead work” like shoring up unstable roofs and
tunnels. This system encouraged miners to risk their lives by ignoring
safety precautions and preparations so that they would have more time to
extract and deliver coal. Miners also lived in “company towns” where
the boss not only owned their housing and the stores that supplied their
food and clothing, but charged inflated prices for these services.
Furthermore, the workers were paid in “scrip,” a currency that was valid
only in the company towns. So even if workers had a way to get to
another store, they had no money to purchase anything. Therefore, much
of what the miners earned went back into the pockets of their bosses.
(From Labor History, The Daily Bleed, Wikipedia and Workday Minnesota)
National Guard Arrive in Ludlow |
April 20, 1948
- United Auto Workers President Walter Reuther was shot and seriously
wounded by would-be assassins. He survived and ultimately died in a
plane crash in 1970. Reuther also survived an attempted kidnapping in
April, 1938, while his brother Victor was shot and nearly killed by
police in 1949. The UAW headquarters was also bombed in 1949. Both
Walter and Victor were again nearly killed in a small private plane near
Dulles Airport. Despite this history of attempts on his life, virtually
no media addressed the possibility that his actual death may have been
an assassination. (From The Daily Bleed, and Workday Minnesota)
April 20, 1985 - 250,000 people marched in Washington, D.C., to protest US policy in Central America. (From The Daily Bleed)
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