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{{short description|19th-century secret society in Ireland}} | |||
{{for|the movie|The Molly Maguires (film)}} | |||
{{For|the movie|The Molly Maguires (film){{!}}''The Molly Maguires'' (film)}} | |||
] of the Molly Maguires, in northeastern ]]] | |||
{{Use Irish English|date=May 2015}} | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2015}} | |||
] coal mines, depicted in an 1874 illustration in '']''.]] | |||
The '''Molly Maguires''' was an ] 19th-century ] active in ], ], and parts of the ], best known for their activism among ] and ] ]s in ]. After a series of often violent conflicts, twenty suspected members of the Molly Maguires were convicted of murder and other crimes and were executed by hanging in 1877 and 1878. This history remains part of local Pennsylvania lore and the actual facts are much debated among historians.<ref>Rayback, p. 133</ref> | |||
==Ireland== | |||
The '''Molly Maguires''' was a secret society that originated in Ireland and, according to some historians, was present in the ] fields of ] in the ] in 1876-1877. While crimes attributed to the Mollies—murders, brutal assaults, robberies, arson, and sabotage—were undoubtedly committed, the evidence that they were responsible rests largely upon the testimony of one Pinkerton detective, bolstered by an assortment of prisoners pressed to testify against the alleged perpetrators under threat of prosecution for their own crimes, and with promises not only of freedom, but also, in at least one case, of financial reward. | |||
The Molly Maguires originated in ], where secret societies with names such as ] and ] were common beginning in the 18th century and through most of the 19th century.<ref>Kenny, pp. 10, 14–17, 23, 80.</ref> In some areas the terms ''Ribbonmen'' and ''Molly Maguires'' were both used for similar activism but at different times. The main distinction between the two appears to be that the ] were regarded as "secular, cosmopolitan, and proto-nationalist", with the Molly Maguires considered "rural, local, and ]".<ref>Kenny, pp. 16–18.</ref> | |||
Agrarian rebellion in Ireland can be traced to local concerns and grievances relating to land usage, particularly as traditional socioeconomic practices such as small-scale potato cultivation were supplanted by the fencing and pasturing of land (known as ]). Agrarian resistance often took the form of fence destruction, night-time ploughing of croplands that had been converted to pasture, and killing, mutilating, or driving off livestock. In areas where the land had long been dedicated to small-scale, growing-season leases of farmland, called ], opposition was conceived as "retributive justice" that was intended "to correct transgressions against traditional moral and social codes".<ref name="Kevin Kenny 1998, pp 18-21">Kenny, pp. 18–21.</ref><ref>Kenny, pp. 31–39.</ref> | |||
Violence during the period of Molly Maguires depredations was widespread, with the Irish Catholic miners who allegedly made up the secret order its occasional victims. There is little doubt that some Irish miners conspired to commit crimes. That the coal, iron, and railroad trusts focused almost exclusively upon that group for criminal prosecution cannot be divorced from a simple reality: they made up the core of militant union activism during a bitter strike provoked by reduced wages. | |||
The victims of agrarian violence were frequently Irish land agents, middlemen, and tenants. Merchants and millers were often threatened or attacked if their prices were high. Landlords' agents were threatened, beaten, and assassinated. New tenants on lands secured by evictions also became targets.<ref name="Kevin Kenny 1998, pp 18-21"/> Local leaders were reported to have sometimes dressed as women, i.e., as mothers begging for food for their children. The leader might approach a storekeeper and demand a donation of flour or groceries. If the storekeeper failed to provide, the Mollies would enter the store and take what they wanted, warning the owner of dire consequences if the incident was reported.<ref>Kenny, pp. 20–21.</ref> | |||
Some aspects of their apprehension, trials, and executions are unseemly. Information passed from a Pinkerton detective found its way into the hands of vigilantes who ambushed and murdered miners identified as Molly Maguires, and the killing did not spare the miners' families. The most powerful industrialist of the region, standing to gain much from the destruction of the union upon which he had personally forced a strike, was also the district attorney, and the prosecutor of the union men at their trials. | |||
While the Whiteboys were known to wear white linen frocks over their clothing, the Mollies blackened their faces with burnt cork. There are similarities—particularly in face-blackening and in the donning of women's garments—with the practice of ], in which festive days were celebrated by mummers who travelled from door to door demanding food, money, or drink as payment for performing. The ''Threshers'', the ''Peep o' Day Boys'', the ''Lady Rocks'' (deriving from Captain Rock and the Rockite movement), and the ''Lady Clares'' also sometimes disguised themselves as women.<ref>Kenny, pp. 22–23.</ref> Similar imagery was used during the ] in ].<ref name="National Archives UK">{{cite web|url=http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/resources/rebecca-riots/|title=Rebecca riots – The National Archives|website=nationalarchives.gov.uk}}</ref> | |||
The Molly Maguires history is sometimes presented as the investigation, prosecution, and subsequent punishment of a purely evil underground movement. And it is sometimes presented as a simple struggle between a militant union and powerful industrial forces. The truth is almost certainly somewhere in between. | |||
==Mollys in Ireland== | |||
The Molly Maguires originated in ], where their semi-legendary vigilante organization fought Irish landlords for tenants' rights. The group named itself after a widow, Molly Maguire, who was possibly a mythical figure. According to legend, Molly was killed by her landlord Billy Kilgannon, who instructed her to get out of town, and when she refused to vacate the premises, he levelled the house she was in. Tales of that incident incited violent anti-landlord agitations in the 1840s. The organization was established officially in 1843. {{fact|date=April 2007}} | |||
British and Irish newspapers reported about the Mollies in Ireland in the nineteenth century. ] in '']'' on 25 August 1845 traced the commencement of "Molly Maguireism" to Lord Lorton ejecting tenants in ], ], in 1835.<ref name="Politics ie 1">{{cite web|url=http://www.politics.ie/forum/history/212904-molly-maguires-3.html|title=The Molly Maguires |page =3|website=politics.ie}}</ref> An "Address of 'Molly Maguire' to her children" containing twelve rules was published in '']'' on 7 July 1845. The person making the address claimed to be "Molly Maguire" of "Maguire's Grove, Parish of ]", in ]. The rules advised Mollies about how they should conduct themselves in land disputes and were an attempt to direct the movement's activities: | |||
In the 1880s, the Molly Maguires in Ireland slowly merged with a newly evolving society, the ], becoming a secret society retaining the second front name of ''The Molly Maguires'', or ''The Mollies''. They spread under the cloak of the Hibernians and with the approval of the ], expanded into every Irish county. Their strongest opponents were the ]. The Mollies radicalized the Irish political scene with sectarian violence and intimidation until the outbreak of ] in 1914 and were thought by some to have contributed to the ultimate partition of Ireland.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} | |||
* Keep strictly to the land question, by allowing no landlord more than fair value for his tenure. | |||
* No Rent to be paid until harvest. | |||
* Not even then without an abatement, where the land is too high. | |||
* No undermining of tenants, nor bailiff's fees to be paid. | |||
* No turning out of tenants, unless two years rent due before ejectment served. | |||
* Assist to the utmost of your power the good landlord, in getting his rents. | |||
* Cherish and respect the good landlord, and good agent. | |||
* Keep from travelling by night. | |||
* Take no arms by day, or by night, from any man, as from such acts a deal of misfortune springs, having, I trust you have, more arms than you ever will have need for. | |||
* Avoid coming in contact with either the military, or police; they are only doing what they cannot help. | |||
* For my sake, then, no distinction to any man, on account of his religion; his acts alone you are to look to. | |||
* Let bygones be bygones, unless in a very glaring case; but watch for the time to come.<ref name="Politics ie 1"/> | |||
== |
==Liverpool== | ||
The Molly Maguires were also active in ], ], where many Irish people settled in the 19th century, and many more passed through Liverpool on their way to the ] or ]. The Mollies are first mentioned in Liverpool in an article in ''The Liverpool Mercury'' newspaper on 10 May 1853. The newspaper reported that, "a regular faction fight took place in Marybone amongst the Irish residents in that district. About 200 men and women assembled, who were divided into four parties—the 'Molly Maguires', the 'Kellys', the 'Fitzpatricks' and the 'Murphys'—the greater number of whom were armed with sticks and stones. The three latter sections were opposed to the 'Molly Maguires' and the belligerents were engaged in hot conflict for about half an hour, when the guardians of the peace interfered." | |||
Many historians believe that Irish immigrants transplanted a form of the Molly Maguires organization into ] in the nineteenth century, and that it continued its activities as a clandestine society. They were located in a section of the anthracite ] dubbed the ], which included the counties of ], ], ], ], ], and ]. It is believed that the ] ]s in this organization employed the tactics of intimidation and violence previously used against Irish landlords in a violent confrontation against the ], or ''hard coal'' mining companies in the 19th century. | |||
Later Liverpool newspaper articles from the same time period refer to assaults by Mollies against other Irish Liverpudlians. The "Molly Maguire club" or "Molly's Club" was described as a "mutual defence association" that had been "formed for the mutual assistance of the members when they got into 'trouble', each member subscribing to the funds". Patrick Flynn was the secretary of the Liverpool Molly Maguire Clubs in the 1850s and their headquarters was in an alehouse in Alexander Pope Street also known as Sawney Pope Street. The Liverpool branch of the Molly Maguires was known for its gangsterism rather than any genuine concern for the welfare of Irish people.<ref name="Politics ie 2">, politics.ie; accessed 8 September 2015.</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=The Liverpool Underworld: Crime in the City, 1750–1900|author=McIlwee, Michael|publisher=Liverpool University Press|year=2011|isbn=978-1-84631-700-2|pages=121–122}}</ref> | |||
====Historians disagree about the Mollies==== | |||
==United States== | |||
The Irish coal-mining heritage of the Mollies may have contributed to the wave of violence, which continued well over ten years in the late 19th century in the United States. But historian Aleine Austin believes, | |||
] counties in ] where the Molly Maguires were active.]] | |||
The Mollies are believed to have been present in the ] coal fields of ] in the United States since at least the ] until becoming largely inactive following a series of arrests, trials and executions, between 1876 and 1878. Members of the Mollies were accused of murder, arson, kidnapping, and other crimes, in part based on allegations by ] and the testimony of a ] detective, ] (also known as ''James McKenna''), a native of ]. Fellow prisoners testified against the defendants, who were arrested by the ]. Gowen acted as a prosecutor in some of the trials.<ref>{{cite book|title=]|author=Goldstein, Robert Justin|publisher=]|year=2001|isbn=0-252-06964-1|page=29}}</ref> | |||
The ] seem to have focused almost exclusively upon the Molly Maguires for criminal prosecution. Information passed from the Pinkerton detective, intended only for the detective agency and their client—the most powerful industrialist of the region—was also provided to ]s who ambushed and murdered miners suspected of being Molly Maguires, as well as their families.<ref name="Horan, pp. 151-152">Horan, pp. 151–152.</ref> Molly Maguire history is sometimes presented as the prosecution of an underground movement that was motivated by personal vendettas, and sometimes as a struggle between organized labour and powerful industrial forces. Whether membership in the Mollies' society overlapped with union membership to any appreciable extent remains open to conjecture.<ref>Kenny, Kevin. ''Making Sense of the Molly Maguires'', 1998, pp. 3–5.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The facts show that there was much more terror waged against the Mollys than those illiterate Irishmen ever aroused.<ref name="cahn">{{cite book | last = Cahn | first = William | authorlink = | title = A Pictorial History of American Labor | publisher = Crown Publishers | date = 1972 | pages = p. 126 | doi = | isbn = 978-0517500408}}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Some historians (such as Philip Rosen, former curator of the Holocaust Awareness Museum of the ]) believe that Irish immigrants brought a form of the Molly Maguires organization into America in the 19th century, and continued its activities as a clandestine society. They were located in a section of the anthracite ] dubbed the ], which included the Pennsylvania counties of ], ], ], ], ], and ]. Irish ]s in this organization employed the tactics of intimidation and violence used against Irish landlords during the "]s" yet again in violent confrontations against the anthracite, or ''hard coal'', mining companies in the 19th century.<ref name="PhilipRosen">{{cite news|url=http://www.montgomerynews.com/articles/2010/10/22/colonial_news/news/doc4cc0a9b83d5c6720043158.txt|title=Philip Rosen lectures on the Molly Maguires in Fort Washington|last=Celona|first=Thomas|publisher=Montgomery News, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania|date=2010-10-22|access-date=2010-10-22}}</ref> | |||
Although a legitimate self-help organization for Irish immigrants existed in the form of the ] (AOH), most mainstream writers accept that the Molly Maguires existed as a secret organization in Pennsylvania, and that they used the AOH as a "front." Yet historians are not even in agreement on this last point. For example, Joseph Rayback's 1966 volume ''A History of American Labor'' states that the "identity of the Molly Maguires has never been proved."<ref>{{cite book | last = Rayback | first = Joseph G | authorlink = | title = History of American Labor | publisher = | date = 1966 | pages = p. 126 | doi = | isbn =}}</ref> | |||
===Historians' disagreement=== | |||
Even authors who accept the existence of the Mollies as a violent and destructive group acknowledge a significant scholarship that questions the entire history. In ''The Pinkerton Story'', authors James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett write sympathetically about the detective agency and its mission to bring the Mollies to justice. Yet they observe, | |||
A legal self-help organization for Irish immigrants existed in the form of the ] (AOH), but it is generally accepted that the Mollies existed as a secret organization in Pennsylvania, and used the AOH as a front. However, ]'s 1966 volume, ''A History of American Labor'', claims the "identity of the Molly Maguires has never been proved".<ref>{{cite book|last=Rayback|first=Joseph G.|title=A History of American Labor|url=https://archive.org/details/historyofamerica00rayb|url-access=registration|publisher=The Free Press, MacMillan|date=1959–1966|page=}}</ref> Rayback writes: {{Quote| "The charge has been made that the Molly Maguires episode was deliberately manufactured by the coal operators with the express purpose of destroying all vestiges of unionism in the area... There is some evidence to support the charge... the "crime wave" that appeared in the anthracite fields came after the appearance of the Pinkertons, and... many of the victims of the crimes were union leaders and ordinary miners. The evidence brought against , supplied by James McParlan, a Pinkerton, and corroborated by men who were granted immunity for their own crimes, was tortuous and contradictory, but the net effect was damning... The trial temporarily destroyed the last vestiges of labor unionism in the anthracite area. More important, it gave the public the impression... that miners were by nature criminal in character....<ref>Rayback, p. 133</ref>}} | |||
Authors who accept the existence of the Mollies as a violent and destructive group acknowledge a significant scholarship that questions the entire history. In ''The Pinkerton Story'', authors James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett write sympathetically about the detective agency and its mission to bring the Mollies to justice. They observe:{{Quote|The difficulty of achieving strict and fair accuracy in relation to the Mollie Maguires is very great. Sensible men have held there never even was such an organization... We do believe, however, that members of a secret organization, bound to each other by oath, used the facilities and personnel of the organization to carry out personal vendettas...<ref>{{cite book|last=Horan|first=James David|title=The Pinkerton detective Story|publisher=Heinemann|year=1952|page=129}}</ref>}} | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The difficulty of achieving strict and fair accuracy in relation to the Mollie Maguires is very great. Sensible men have held there never even was such an organization... We do believe, however, that members of a secret organization, bound to each other by oath, used the facilities and personnel of the organization to carry out personal vendettas...<ref>{{cite book | last = Horan | first = James David | authorlink = | title = The Pinkerton Story | publisher = Heinemann | date = 1952 | pages = p. 129 | doi = | isbn =}}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
===History=== | |||
Such disagreements over a period when "Labor was at war with capital, Democrat with Republican, Protestant with Catholic, and immigrant with native" are, perhaps, to be expected.<ref>Horan, p.126.</ref> | |||
During the mid-19th century, ] mining came to dominate northeastern Pennsylvania,<ref>{{Cite web|title=Stories from PA history|work=ExplorePAHistory.com|publisher=WITF, Inc.|url=http://explorepahistory.com/story.php?storyId=1-9-18|access-date=12 June 2011}}</ref> a region already ] twice over to feed America's growing need for energy. By the 1870s, powerful financial syndicates controlled the railroads and the coalfields. Coal companies had begun to recruit immigrants from overseas willing to work for less than the prevailing local wages paid to American-born employees, luring them with "promises of fortune-making". Herded into freight trains by the hundreds, these workers often replaced English-speaking miners who, according to labour historian ]:{{Quote|...were compelled to give way in one coal field after another, either abandoning the industry altogether for other occupations or else retreating, like the vanishing American Indian, westward...<ref name="cahn2">Cahn, p. 124.</ref>}} | |||
The immigrant workers: | |||
====Media attention==== | |||
{{quote|...faced constant hazards from violation of safety precautions, such as they were. Injuries and deaths in mine disasters, frequently reported in the newspapers, shocked the nation.<ref name="cahn2"/>}} | |||
While popular accounts of the Molly Maguires invariably focus on violence, the history unfolded primarily as a struggle between industrialists and a miners' union. Leaders of the American Miners' Association and others, "accused of being Mollies, were arrested and charged with crimes... lurid newspaper sensationalism."<ref name="cahn"/> | |||
About 22,000 coal miners worked in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. 5,500 of these were children between the ages of seven and sixteen years,<ref name="horan4"/> who earned between one and three dollars a week separating slate from coal. Injured miners, or those too old to work at the face, were assigned to picking slate at the "breakers" where the coal was crushed into a manageable size. Thus, many of the elderly miners finished their mining days as they had begun in their youth.<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 51-52">Boyer and Morais, pp. 51–52.</ref> The miners lived a life of "bitter, terrible struggle".<ref name="horan3">Horan, p. 125.</ref> | |||
In ''Labor's Untold Story'', Richard Boyer and Herbert Morais put the responsibility for creating the Molly Maguires on industrialist ], observing that, | |||
====Disaster strikes==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Wages were low, working conditions were atrocious, and deaths and serious injuries numbered in the hundreds each year. On 6 September 1869, a ] in Luzerne County, took the lives of 110 coal miners. The families blamed the coal company for failing to finance a secondary exit for the mine.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 44–45.</ref> | |||
A good number of historians now concede that there was never any organization in Pennsylvania known as the Molly Maguires—although any militant miner might have been called a Molly Maguire after the newspapers had spread Gowen's charge far and wide.<ref>Boyer, Richard O and Morais, Herbert M (1974). ''Labor's Untold Story'', p. 50</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
{{Quote|...the mine owners without one single exception had refused over the years to install emergency exits, ventilating and pumping systems, or to make provision for sound scaffolding. In Schuylkill County alone 566 miners had been killed and 1,655 had been seriously injured over a seven year period...<ref>Boyer and Morais, p. 46.</ref>}} | |||
Gowen, who was wealthy, powerful, and the District Attorney for ], contributed to such perceptions when he declared, | |||
The miners faced a speedup system that was exhausting. In its November 1877 issue, '']'' published an interviewer's comments: "A miner tells me that he often brought his food uneaten out of the mine from want of time; for he must have his car loaded when the driver comes for it, or lose one of the seven car-loads which form his daily work."<ref>Boyer and Morais, p. 47.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The name of Molly Maguire being attached to a man's name is sufficient to hang him.<ref name="cahn"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
As the bodies of the miners were brought up from the Avondale Mine disaster, John Siney, head of the ] (WBA), climbed onto a wagon to speak to the thousands of miners who had arrived from surrounding communities:<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 45">Boyer and Morais, p. 45.</ref> | |||
Although newspapers sensationalized accounts of the Mollies,<ref name="bm">Boyer and Morais, p. 52.</ref> not all media accepted the popular reports. The ] publication ''The Irish World'' denied that any secret fraternity existed in Pennsylvania, and declared that such an organization was the creation of railroad leaders and the Pinkertons.<ref name="morn">{{cite book | last = Morn | first = Frank | authorlink = | title = The Eye That Never Sleeps: A History of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency | publisher = Indiana Univ Pr | date = 1982 | pages = p. 95 | doi = | isbn =978-0253320865}}</ref> The ''Labor Standard'', a newspaper of the Workingmen's Party, believed that Pinkerton agent James McParlan, who infiltrated and testified against the Mollies, was an ].<ref name="morn"/> | |||
{{Quote|Men, if you must die with your boots on, die for your families, your homes, your country, but do not longer consent to die, like rats in a trap, for those who have no more interest in you than in the pick you dig with.<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 45"/>}} | |||
Siney asked the miners to join the union, and thousands did so that day.<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 45"/> Some miners faced additional burdens of prejudice and persecution. In the 1840s, 1850s, and 1860s, some 20,000 Irish workers had arrived in Schuylkill County.<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 45"/> It was a time of rampant beatings and murders in the mining district.<ref>Horan, pp. 126–129.</ref> | |||
====History==== | |||
====Panic of 1873==== | |||
During the 1870s, powerful financial syndicates controlled the railroads and the coalfields. Coal companies had begun to recruit immigrants from overseas, luring them with "promises of fortune-making." Herded into freight trains by the hundreds, these workers often replaced English-speaking miners who, according to George Korson, | |||
The period between 1873 and 1879 (see ]) was marked by one of the worst depressions in the nation's history, caused by economic overexpansion, a stock market crash, and a decrease in the money supply. By 1877 an estimated one-fifth of the nation's workingmen were completely unemployed, two-fifths worked no more than six or seven months a year, and only one-fifth had full-time jobs.<ref>Rayback, p. 129.</ref> Labor organizers angrily watched railway directors riding about the country in luxurious private cars while proclaiming their inability to pay living wages to hungry working men.<ref name="horan4">Horan, p. 127.</ref> | |||
====Mine owners move against the union==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
] detective James McParland, in the 1880s]] | |||
"...were compelled to give way in one coal field after another, either abandoning the industry altogether for other occupations or else retreating, like the vanishing American Indian, westward..."<ref name="cahn2">Cahn, p. 124.</Ref> | |||
], the president of the ], and of the ] and "the wealthiest anthracite coal mine owner in the world", hired ]'s services to deal with the Mollies. Pinkerton selected ] (sometimes called McParlan), a native of County Armagh, to go undercover against the Mollies. Using the alias "James McKenna", he made ] his headquarters and claimed to have become a trusted member of the organization. His assignment was to collect evidence of murder plots and intrigue, passing this information along to his Pinkerton manager. He also began working secretly with a Pinkerton agent assigned to the Coal and Iron Police for the purpose of coordinating the eventual arrest and prosecution of members of the Molly Maguires.<ref>Horan, pp. 130–33.</ref> Although there had been fifty "inexplicable murders" between 1863 and 1867 in Schuylkill County,<ref>Morn, pp. 94–95.</ref> progress in the investigations was slow.<ref name="bm2">Boyer and Morais, p. 51.</ref> There was "a lull in the entire area, broken only by minor shootings". McParland wrote: I am sick and tired of this thing. I seem to make no progress.<ref name="horan">Horan, p. 151.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The union had grown powerful; thirty thousand members—eighty-five percent of Pennsylvania's anthracite miners—had joined. But Gowen had built a combination of his own, bringing all of the mine operators into an employers' association known as the Anthracite Board of Trade. In addition to the railroad, Gowen owned two-thirds of the coal mines in southeastern Pennsylvania. He was a risk-taker and an ambitious man.<ref>Boyer and Morais, p. 48.</ref> Gowen decided to force a strike and showdown.<ref name="bm2"/> | |||
Frequently unable to read safety instructions, the immigrant workers, | |||
====Union, Mollies, and Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH)==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
One of the burning questions for modern scholars is the relationship between the Workingmen's Benevolent Association (WBA), the Mollies, and their alleged cover organization, the ]. Historian Kevin Kenny notes that the convicted men were all members of the AOH. But "the Molly Maguires themselves left virtually no evidence of their existence, let alone their aims and motivation."<ref>Kenny, pp. 5, 10.</ref> Relying upon his personal knowledge before commencing an investigation, McParland believed that the Molly Maguires, under pressure for their activities, had taken the new name, "The Ancient Order of Hibernians" (AOH). After beginning his investigation, he estimated that there were about 450 members of the AOH in Schuylkill County.<ref name="Anthony Lukas 1997, pages 179">Anthony Lukas, ''Big Trouble'', 1997, pp. 179, 182.</ref> | |||
...faced constant hazards from violation of safety precautions, such as they were. Injuries and deaths in mine disasters, frequently reported in the newspapers, shocked the nation.<ref name="cahn2"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
While Kenny observes that the AOH was "a peaceful fraternal society", he does note that in the 1870s the Pinkerton Agency identified a correlation between the areas of AOH membership in Pennsylvania, and the corresponding areas in Ireland from which those particular Irish immigrants emigrated. The violence-prone areas of Ireland corresponded to areas of violence in the Pennsylvania coalfields.<ref>Kenny, pp. 17–18, 25–26.</ref> | |||
Twenty-two thousand coal miners worked in ].<ref name="cahn"/> Fifty-five hundred of the mineworkers in the county were children between the ages of seven and sixteen years<ref name="horan4"/> who earned between one and three dollars a week separating slate from the coal. Injured miners, or those too old to work at the face, were also assigned to picking slate at the "breakers" where the coal was crushed into a manageable size. Thus, many of the elderly miners finished their mining days as they'd begun in their youth.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 51-52.</ref> | |||
In his book ''Big Trouble'', which traces McParland's history, writer ] has written: "The WBA was run by ] men adamantly opposed to violence. But saw an opportunity to paint the union with the Molly brush, which he did in testimony before a state investigating committee ... 'I do not charge this Workingmen's Benevolent Association with it, but I say there is an association which votes in secret, at night, that men's lives shall be taken ... I do not blame this association, but I blame another association for doing it; and it happens that the only men who are shot are the men who dare disobey the mandates of the Workingmen's Benevolent Association.'"<ref>Lukas, p. 178.</ref> | |||
The miners lived a life of "bitter, terrible struggle."<ref name="horan3">Horan, p. 125.</ref> | |||
Of the 450 AOH members that Pinkerton Agent McParland estimated were in Schuylkill County, about 400 belonged to the union.<ref name="Anthony Lukas 1997, pages 179"/> Molly Maguireism and full-fledged trade unionism represented fundamentally different modes of organization and protest.<ref>Kenny, p. 111.</ref> Kenny noted that one contemporary organization, the Pennsylvania Bureau of Industrial Statistics, clearly distinguished between the union and the violence attributed to the Molly Maguires. Their reports indicate that violence could be traced to the time of the Civil War, but that in the five-year existence of the WBA, "the relations existing between employers and employees" had greatly improved. The Bureau concluded that the union had brought an end to the "carnival of crime". Kenny notes the leaders of the WBA were "always unequivocally opposed" to the Molly Maguires.<ref>Kenny, p. 112.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The daily routine of the miner was to crawl in the dim light of his lamp, in mud and trickling water, surrounded by coal dust and perhaps powder smoke... the struggle was a difficult one.<ref name="cahn"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
{{Quote|Most Irish mine workers belonged to the WBA and roughly half the officers of its executive board in 1872 bore Irish names. But, in addition to the WBA, there existed a loosely organized body of men called the Molly Maguires, whose membership appears to have been exclusively Irish ... Both modes of organization... tried to improve conditions of life and labor in the anthracite region. But the strategy of the trade union was indirect, gradual, peaceful, and systematically organized across the anthracite region, while that of the Molly Maguires was direct, violent, sporadic, and confined to a specific locality.<ref>Kenny, pp. 112–113.</ref>}} | |||
=====Disaster strikes===== | |||
Kenny notes there were frequent tensions between miners of English and Welsh descent, who held the majority of skilled positions, and the mass of unskilled Irish labourers. However, in spite of such differences, the WBA offered a solution, and for the most part "did a remarkable job" in overcoming such differences.<ref>Kenny, pp. 116–117.</ref> | |||
Wages were low, working conditions were atrocious, and deaths and serious injuries numbered in the hundreds each year. On September 6, 1869, at the Avondale Mine in ], a fire took the lives of one hundred and seventy-nine coal miners. The families blamed the coal company for failing to finance a secondary exit for the mine.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 44-45.</Ref> | |||
{{Quote|All mine workers, regardless of craft status, national origin, and religious background, were eligible to join the WBA. As a result, many of its rank and file were members of the AOH, and there is evidence that some disgruntled trade union members favored violence against the wishes of their leaders, especially in the climactic year of 1875. But there were no Mollys among the leaders of the WBA, who took every opportunity they could to condemn the Molly Maguires and the use of violence as a strategy in the labor struggle. While the membership of the trade union and the secret society undoubtedly overlapped to some extent, they must be seen as ideologically and institutionally distinct.<ref>Kenny, pp. 117, 199–200.</ref>}} | |||
====Vigilante justice==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
], District Attorney for ] and president of the ] and ]]] | |||
...the mine owners without one single exception had refused over the years to install emergency exits, ventilating and pumping systems, or to make provision for sound scaffolding. In Schuylkill County alone 566 miners had been killed and 1,655 had been seriously injured over a seven year period...<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 46.</Ref> | |||
F.P. Dewees, a contemporary and a confidant of Gowen, wrote that, by 1873, "Mr. Gowen was fully impressed with the necessity of lessening the overgrown power of the 'Labor Union' and exterminating if possible the Molly Maguires." In December 1874, Gowen led the other coal operators to announce a twenty percent pay cut. The miners decided to strike on 1 January 1875.<ref name="bm2"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
{{Quote|Edward Coyle, a leader of the union, and of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, was murdered in March. Another member of the AOH was shot and killed by the Modocs (a rival Welsh gang operating in the anthracite coalfields) led by one Bradley, a mine superintendent. Patrick Vary, a mine boss, fired into a group of miners and, according to the later boast by Gowen, as the miners "fled they left a long trail of blood behind them". At ], a meeting of miners was attacked; one miner was killed and several others wounded.<ref name="Boyer and Morais, pp. 51-52"/>}} | |||
The miners also faced a speedup system that was exhausting. In its November, 1877 issue, ''Harper's New Monthly Magazine'' published an interviewer's comments, | |||
A Pinkerton agent, Robert J. Linden, was brought in to support McParland while serving with the Coal and Iron Police.<ref>Lukas, pp. 183–184.</ref> On 29 August 1875, Allan Pinkerton wrote a letter to George Bangs, Pinkerton's general superintendent, recommending vigilante actions against the Molly Maguires: "The M.M.'s are a species of Thugs... Let Linden get up a vigilance committee. It will not do to get many men, but let him get those who are prepared to take fearful revenge on the M.M.'s. I think it would open the eyes of all the people and then the M.M.'s would meet with their just deserts." On 10 December 1875, three men and two women were attacked in their home by masked men. Author Anthony Lukas wrote that the attack seemed "to reflect the strategy outlined in Pinkerton's memo".<ref>Lukas, p. 184</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
A miner tells me that he often brought his food uneaten out of the mine from want of time; for he must have his car loaded when the driver comes for it, or lose one of the seven car-loads which form his daily work.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 47.</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The victims had been secretly identified by McParland as Mollies. One of the men was killed in the house, and the other two supposed Mollies were wounded but able to escape. A woman, the wife of one of the reputed Mollies, was assassinated.<ref name="horan"/> | |||
As the bodies of the miners were brought up from the Avondale Mine disaster, John Siney, head of the Workingmen's Benevolent Association, climbed onto a wagon to speak to the thousands of miners who had arrived from surrounding communities:<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 45.</Ref> | |||
McParland was outraged that the information he had been providing had found its way into the hands of indiscriminate killers. When McParland heard details of the attack at the house, he protested in a letter to his Pinkerton supervisor. He did not object that Mollies might be assassinated as a result of his ]ing—they "got their just deserving". McParland resigned when it became apparent the vigilantes were willing to commit the "murder of women and children", whom he deemed innocent victims.<ref name="Horan, pp. 151-152"/> His letter stated:{{Quote|Friday: This morning at 8 A.M. I heard that a crowd of masked men had entered Mrs. O'Donnell's house ... and had killed James O'Donnell alias Friday, Charles O'Donnell and James McAllister, also Mrs. McAllister whom they took out of the house and shot ... Now as for the O'Donnells I am satisfied they got their just deserving. I reported what those men were. I give all information about them so clear that the courts could have taken hold of their case at any time but the witnesses were too cowardly to do it. I have also in the interests of God and humanity notified you months before some of those outrages were committed still the authorities took no hold of the matter. Now I wake up this morning to find that I am the murderer of Mrs. McAllister. What had a woman to do with the case—did the in their worst time shoot down women. If I was not here the Vigilante Committee would not know who was guilty and when I find them shooting women in their thirst for blood I hereby tender my resignation to take effect as soon as this message is received. It is not cowardice that makes me resign but just let them have it now I will no longer interfere as I see that one is the same as the other and I am not going to be an accessory to the murder of women and children. I am sure the will not spare the women so long as the Vigilante has shown an example.<ref>Horan, p. 152. In the letter, McParland referred to the Molly Maguires as "Sleepers".</ref>}} There appears to be an error in the detective's report, which also constituted his resignation letter, of the vigilante incident: he failed to convey the correct number of deaths. Two of the three men<!-- exactly which two is unclear given the fact that two shared the same first name --> "were wounded but able to escape".<ref name="Horan, pp. 151-152" /> In the note, McParland reported that these two had been killed by vigilantes. Such notes, possibly containing erroneous or as-yet-unverified information, were forwarded daily by Pinkerton operatives. The content was routinely made available to Pinkerton clients in typed reports. Pinkerton detective reports now in the manuscripts collection at the Lackawanna County Historical Society reveal that Pinkerton had been spying on miners for the mine owners in Scranton. Pinkerton operatives were required to send a report each day. The daily reports were typed by staff, and conveyed to the client for a ten-dollar fee. Such a process was relied upon to "warrant the continuance of the operative's services".<ref>Friedman, Morris. ''The Pinkerton Labor Spy'', 1907, p. 14.<!--ISSN/ISBN needed--></ref><ref>''The Execution, life and Times of Patrick ODonnell'', ISBN 979-8703105542.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Men, if you must die with your boots on, die for your families, your homes, your country, but do not longer consent to die, like rats in a trap, for those who have no more interest in you than in the pick you dig with.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 45.</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
McParland believed his daily reports had been made available to the anti-Molly vigilantes. Benjamin Franklin,<!-- is this name correct??--> McParland's Pinkerton supervisor, declared himself "anxious to satisfy that nothing to do with " McParland was prevailed upon not to resign.<ref>Horan, pp. 152–153.</ref><ref>Later, when McParland tried the same methods he used against miners in Pennsylvania against miners in Idaho, defence attorney Clarence Darrow exposed intimidation of the miners leading them into making false confessions. Linder, Douglas O. ''''</ref> Frank Wenrich, a first lieutenant with the ], was arrested as the leader of the vigilante attackers, but released on bail. Another miner, Hugh McGeehan, a 21-year-old who had been secretly identified as a killer by McParland, was fired upon and wounded by unknown assailants. Later, the McGeehan family's house was attacked by gunfire.<ref>Horan, pp. 153, 157. McGeehan lived with a Mrs. Boyle, a "young widow".</ref> | |||
He asked the miners to join the union, and thousands of them did so that day.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 45.</Ref> | |||
====The strike fails==== | |||
Some miners faced the additional burden of prejudice and persecution. In the 1840s, 1850s, and 1860s, twenty thousand ] workers had arrived in Schuylkill County.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 45.</Ref> The Molly Maguires were Irish and ] in a time and place where signs in employment windows often declared, "No Irish need apply." It was a time of rampant beatings and murders in the mining district, some of which were committed by the Mollies.<ref>Horan, pp. 126-129.</ref> | |||
The union was nearly broken by the imprisonment of its leadership and by attacks conducted by vigilantes against the strikers. Gowen "deluged the newspapers with stories of murder and arson" committed by the Molly Maguires. The press produced stories of strikes in Illinois, in Jersey City, and in the Ohio minefields, all inspired by the Mollies. The stories were widely believed. In Schuylkill County, the striking miners and their families were starving to death. A striker wrote to a friend: Since I last saw you, I have buried my youngest child, and on the day before its death there was not one bit of victuals in the house with six children.<ref name="bm">Boyer and Morais, p. 52.</ref> | |||
Andrew Roy in his book ''A History of the Coal Miners of the United States''<ref name="Andrew Roy"></ref> noted: | |||
=====Six years of depression===== | |||
{{Quote|Hundreds of families rose in the morning to breakfast on a crust of bread and a glass of water, who did not know where a bite of dinner was to come from. Day after day, men, women, and children went to the adjoining woods to dig roots and pick up herbs to keep body and soul together...<ref name="bm"/>}} | |||
After six months, the strike was defeated and the miners returned to work, accepting the 20 percent cut in pay. But miners belonging to the Ancient Order of Hibernians continued the fight.<ref name="bm3" /> McParland acknowledged increasing support for the Mollies in his reports: Men, who last winter would not notice a Molly Maguire, are now glad to take them by the hand and make much of them. If the bosses exercise tyranny over the men they appear to look to the association for help.<ref>Lukas, p. 182.</ref> Lukas observes that the defeat was humiliating, and traces the roots of violence by the Mollies in the aftermath of the failed strike: Judges, lawyers, and policemen were overwhelmingly Welsh, German, or English ... When the coalfield Irish sought to remedy their grievances through the courts, they often met delays, obfuscation, or doors slammed in their faces. No longer looking to these institutions for justice, they turned instead to the Mollies.... Before the summer was over, six men—all Welsh or German—paid with their lives.<ref>Lukas, p. 183.</ref> | |||
The period from 1873 to 1879 was marked by one of the worst depressions in the nation's history, caused by reckless speculation and wholesale stock watering. By 1877 an estimated one-fifth of the nation's workingmen were completely unemployed, two-fifths worked no more than six or seven months a year, and only one-fifth had full-time jobs.<Ref>Rayback, p. 129.</Ref> But not everyone had been suffering equally: | |||
Authors Richard O. Boyer and Herbert M. Morais argue that the killings were not one-sided:{{Quote|Militant miners often disappeared, their bodies sometimes being found later in deserted mine shafts.<ref name="bm3">Boyer and Morais, p. 53.</ref>}} | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Labor angrily watched "railway directors (riding) about the country in luxurious private cars proclaiming their inability to pay living wages to hungry working men."<ref name="horan4">Horan, p. 127.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
==== |
====McParland penetrates the "inner circle"==== | ||
After months of little progress, McParland reported some plans by the "inner circle". Gomer James, a Welshman, had shot and wounded one of the Mollies, and plans were formulated for a revenge killing. But the wheels of revenge were grinding slowly. And there was other violence:{{Quote|November was a bloody month what with the miners on strike.... In the three days around November 18, a Mollie was found dead in the streets of Carbondale, north of Scranton, a man had his throat cut, an unidentified man was crucified in the woods, a mining boss mauled, a man murdered in Scranton, and three men of were guilty of a horror against an old woman, and an attempt to assassinate a Mollie by the name of Dougherty, followed and at once demanded the murder of W. M. Thomas, whom he blamed for the attempt.<ref name="horan2">Horan, p. 139.</ref>}} | |||
{{Quote|On the last day of the month, with Gowen's strikebreakers pouring in, the Summit telegraph office was burned, a train derailed, and McParland advised to send in uniformed police to preserve order.<ref name="horan2"/>}} | |||
], the President of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, and of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company, a ] and "the wealthiest anthracite coal mine owner in the world," hired ] services to deal with the Molly Maguires. Pinkerton selected ], a native of ], to go undercover against the Mollies. Using the alias of James McKenna, he became a trusted member of the organization, and became a secretary for one of its local groups. McParlan's assignment was to collect evidence of murder plots and intrigue, passing this information along to his Pinkerton manager. He also began working secretly with a Pinkerton agent assigned to the ] for the purpose of coordinating the eventual arrest and prosecution of members of the Molly Maguires.<ref>Horan, pp. 130-133.</ref> | |||
A plan to destroy a railroad bridge was abandoned due to the presence of outsiders. The Irish miners had been forbidden to set foot in the public square in ], and a plan to occupy it by force of arms was considered and then abandoned. In the meantime, a messenger reported that Thomas, the would-be killer of one of the Mollies, had been killed in the stable where he worked. McParland himself had been asked to supply the hidden killers with food and whiskey, according to the detective. According to Horan and Swiggett:{{Quote|The probability is that as a man, "Bully Bill Thomas", a Welshman, was no better than his enemies, but he was remarkable in other ways. His killers, leaving him for dead in the stable door, were not aware until two days later that he had survived.<ref>Horan, p. 143.</ref>}} | |||
Although there had been fifty "inexplicable murders" between 1863 and 1867 in Schuylkill County,<ref>Morn, pp. 94-95.</ref> progress in the investigation was slow.<ref name="bm2">Boyer and Morais, p. 51.</ref> There was "a lull in the entire area, broken only by minor shootings." | |||
] | |||
Another plan was in the works, this one against two night watchmen, Pat McCarron and Benjamin Franklin Yost, a Tamaqua Borough Patrolman.<ref>, odmp.org; accessed 8 September 2015.</ref> Jimmy Kerrigan and Thomas Duffy were said to despise Yost, who had arrested them on numerous occasions. Yost was shot as he put out a street light, which at that time necessitated climbing the lamp pole. Before he died, he reported that his killers were Irish, but were not Kerrigan or Duffy. McParland recorded that a Mollie named William Love had killed a Justice of the Peace, surnamed Gwyther, in ]. Unknown Mollies were accused of wounding a man outside his saloon in Shenandoah. Gomer James was killed while tending bar. Then, McParland recorded, a group of Mollies reported to him that they had killed a mine boss named Sanger, and another man who was with him. Forewarned of the attempt, McParland had sought to arrange protection for the mine boss, but was unsuccessful.<ref>Horan, pp. 143–149.</ref> | |||
====The trials==== | |||
McParlan wrote: | |||
When Gowen first hired the Pinkerton agency, he had claimed the Molly Maguires were so powerful they had made powerful financial sources and organized labour "their puppets".<ref>''The Pinkerton Story'', James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett, 1951, p. 130. Horan and Swiggett described the power Gowen attributed to the Mollies as "sway".</ref> When the trials of the alleged puppet masters opened, Gowen had himself appointed as special prosecutor.<ref>Boyer and Morais, ''Labor's Untold Story'', 1974, p. 54.</ref> | |||
The first trials were for the killing of John P. Jones. The three defendants, Michael J. Doyle, Jimmy Kerrigan and Edward Kelly, had elected to receive separate trials. Doyle went first, with his trial beginning 18 January 1876, and a conviction for first-degree murder being returned on 1 February. Before the trial was completed, Kerrigan had decided to become a state's witness and gave details about the murders of Jones and Yost. Kelly's trial began on 27 March, and ended in conviction on 6 April 1876.<ref name="jensen">{{cite web|url=http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/molly.htm|title=Rhodes Molly Maguires (1909)|last=Jensen|first=Richard|date=September 2001|publisher=]|access-date=31 August 2011|archive-date=8 December 2008|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081208172308/http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/molly.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
I am sick and tired of this thing. I seem to make no progress.<ref name="horan">Horan, p. 151.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The first trial of defendants McGeehan, Carroll, Duffy, James Boyle, and James Roarity for the killing of Yost commenced in May 1876. Yost had not recognized the men who attacked him. Although Kerrigan has since been described, along with Duffy, as hating the night watchman enough to plot his murder,<ref>Horan, p. 144.</ref> Kerrigan became a state's witness and testified against the union leaders and other miners. | |||
The union had grown powerful; thirty thousand members—eighty-five percent of Pennsylvania's anthracite miners—had joined. But Gowen had built a combination of his own, bringing all of the mine operators into an employers' association known as the Anthracite Board of Trade. In addition to the railroad, Gowen owned two-thirds of the coal mines in southeastern Pennsylvania. He was a risk-taker and an ambitious man.<Ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 48.</Ref> Gowen decided to force a strike and showdown.<ref name="bm2"/> | |||
]. It was presented by ], along with other similar coffin notices, as evidence in an 1876 murder trial.]] | |||
=====Vigilante justice===== | |||
However, Kerrigan's wife testified in the courtroom that her husband had committed the murder. She testified that she refused to provide her husband with clothing while he was in prison, because he had "picked innocent men to suffer for his crime". She stated that she was speaking out voluntarily, and was only interested in telling the truth about the murder. Gowen cross-examined her, but could not shake her testimony. Others supported her testimony amid speculation that Kerrigan was receiving special treatment due to the fact that McParland was engaged to his sister-in-law, Mary Ann Higgins.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 54–55.</ref> | |||
F.P. Dewees, a contemporary and a confidant of Gowen, wrote that by 1873 "Mr. Gowen was fully impressed with the necessity of lessening the overgrown power of the 'Labor Union' and exterminating if possible the Molly Maguires." In December, 1874, Gowen led the other coal operators to announce a twenty percent pay cut. The miners decided to strike on January 1, 1875.<ref name="bm2"/> | |||
This trial was declared a mistrial due to the death of one of the jurors. A new trial was granted two months later. During that trial, Fanny Kerrigan did not testify. The five defendants were sentenced to death. Kerrigan was allowed to go free. {{Citation needed|date=March 2013}} The trial of Tom Munley for the murders of Thomas Sanger, a mine foreman, and William Uren, relied entirely on the testimony of McParland, and the eyewitness account of a witness. The witness stated under oath that he had seen the murderer clearly, and that Munley was not the murderer. Yet the jury accepted McParland's testimony that Munley had privately confessed to the murder. Munley was sentenced to death.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 55–56.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
From the first it was war, Gowen trying for the absolute extermination upon which Dewees wrote he was determined. Led by the president of the Philadelphia and Reading, the operators unleashed a reign of terror, hiring an armed band of vigilantes who took the name of the "Modocs" and who joined the corporation-owned ] in waylaying, ambushing, and killing militant miners.<ref name="bm2"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Another four miners were put on trial and were found guilty on a charge of murder. McParland had no direct evidence, but had recorded that the four admitted their guilt to him. Kelly was being held in a cell for murder, and he was reputedly quoted as saying: "I would squeal on Jesus Christ to get out of here." In return for his testimony, the murder charge against him was dismissed.<ref>Boyer and Morais, p. 55.</ref> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Edward Coyle, a leader of the union and of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, was murdered in March. Another member of the AOH was shot and killed by the Modocs led by one Bradley, a mine superintendant. Patrick Vary, a mine boss, fired into a group of miners and, according to the later boast by Gowen, as the miners "fled they left a long trail of blood behind them." At Tuscarora a meeting of miners was attacked by vigilantes who shot and killed one miner and wounded several others.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 51-52.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
In November, McAllister was convicted. McParland's testimony in the Molly Maguires trials helped send ten men to the gallows. The defence attorneys repeatedly sought to portray McParland as an ] who was responsible for not warning people of their imminent deaths.<ref>Kenny, pp. 232–233.</ref> For his part, McParland testified that the AOH and the Mollies were one and the same, and the defendants were guilty of the murders.<ref>Kenny, pp. 234–235.</ref> | |||
On December 10, 1876, three men and two women were attacked in their house by masked men. The victims had been secretly identified by McParlan as Mollies. One of the men was killed in the house, and the other two Mollies were wounded but able to escape. A woman, the wife of one of the Mollies, was taken outside of the house and shot dead.<ref name="horan"/> | |||
In 1905, during the ], in preparation for a trial, McParland told another witness, ], that "Kelly the Bum" not only had won his freedom for testifying against union leaders, he had been given $1,000 (~${{Format price|{{Inflation|index=US|value=1000|start_year=1905}}}} in {{Inflation/year|US}}) to "subsidize a new life abroad". McParland had been attempting to convince Orchard to accuse ], leader of the ] (WFM), of ].<ref>Carlson, Peter. ''Roughneck, The Life and Times of Big Bill Haywood'', 1983, p. 91.</ref> Unlike the Mollies, the WFM's union leadership was acquitted. Orchard alone was convicted, and spent the rest of his life in prison.<ref name=hogssu>{{cite news|url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=CdBeAAAAIBAJ&sjid=DjMMAAAAIBAJ&pg=1814%2C3595943|newspaper=Lewiston Morning Tribune |agency=Associated Press|title=Harry Orchard, governor slayer, succumbs in state penitentiary |date=April 14, 1954|page=1}}</ref> | |||
McParlan was outraged that the information he had been providing had found its way into the hands of indiscriminant killers. When he heard some details of the attack at the house, McParlan protested in a letter to his Pinkerton supervisor. He did not object that Mollies might be assassinated as a result of his ] — they "got their just deserving." But McParlan resigned when it became apparent the vigilantes were willing to commit the "murder of women and children," whom he deemed innocent victims.<ref>Horan, pp. 151-152.</ref> His letter stated: | |||
====The executions==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
] for the Molly Maguires execution visible near the entrance]] | |||
Friday: This morning at 8 A.M. I heard that a crowd of masked men had entered Mrs. O'Donnell's house... and had killed James O'Donnell alias Friday, Charles O'Donnell and James McAllister, also Mrs. McAllister whom they took out of the house and shot (Charles McAllister's wife). Now as for the O'Donnells I am satisfied they got their just deserving. I reported what those men were. I give all information about them so clear that the courts could have taken hold of their case at any time but the witnesses were too cowardly to do it. I have also in the interests of God and humanity notified you months before some of those outrages were committed still the authorities took no hold of the matter. Now I wake up this morning to find that I am the murderer of Mrs. McAlister. What had a woman to do with the case—did the in their worst time shoot down women. If I was not here the Vigilante Committee would not know who was guilty and when I find them shooting women in their thirst for blood I hereby tender my resignation to take effect as soon as this message is received. It is not cowardice that makes me resign but just let them have it now I will no longer interfere as I see that one is the same as the other and I am not going to be an accessory to the murder of women and children. I am sure the will not spare the women so long as the Vigilante has shown an example.<ref>Horan, p. 152. In the letter, McParlan referred to the Molly Maguires as "Sleepers."</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
McParlan was prevailed upon not to resign. A man named Frank Winrich, a first lieutenant with the ], was arrested as the leader of the vigilante attackers, but was released on bail. Then another miner, Hugh McGehan, a twenty-one year old who had been secretly identified as a killer by McParlan, was fired upon and wounded by unknown assailants. Later, the McGehan family's house was attacked by gunfire.<ref>Horan, p. 153.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
On 21 June 1877, six men were hanged in the prison at ], and four at ]. A scaffold had been erected in the ]. State militia with fixed bayonets surrounded the prisons and the scaffolds. Miners arrived with their wives and children from the surrounding areas, walking through the night to honour the accused, and by nine o'clock "the crowd in Pottsville stretched as far as one could see." The families were silent, which was "the people's way of paying tribute" to those about to die. | |||
=====Union leadership imprisoned===== | |||
Thomas Munley's aged father had walked more than {{convert|10|mi|abbr=on}} from ] to assure his son that he believed in his innocence. Munley's wife arrived a few minutes after they closed the gate, and they refused to open it even for close relatives to say their final goodbyes. She screamed at the gate with grief, throwing herself against it until she collapsed, but she was not allowed to pass. Four (], John "Yellow Jack" Donahue, Michael J. Doyle and Edward J. Kelly) were hanged on 21 June 1877, at a Carbon County prison in Mauch Chunk (renamed Jim Thorpe in 1953), for the murders of John P. Jones and Morgan Powell, both mine bosses, following a trial later described by a Carbon County judge, John P. Lavelle, as follows:{{Quote|The Molly Maguire trials were a surrender of state sovereignty. A private corporation initiated the investigation through a private detective agency. A private police force arrested the alleged defenders, and private attorneys for the coal companies prosecuted them. The state provided only the courtroom and the gallows.<ref>{{cite book|title=The Hard Coal Docket: 150 Years of the Bench & Bar of Carbon County (1843–1993)|last=Lavelle|first=John P.|year=1994|publisher=Times News}}</ref>}} | |||
The state militia and the ] patrolled the district. Union leaders were "excoriated by the press," and were "denounced from altar and pulpit." On May 12, John Siney, the union leader who had addressed miners at the Avondale disaster, and who favored arbitration and had opposed the strike, was arrested at a mass meeting called to protest the importation of strike breakers. An organizer for the miners' national association by the name of Xeno Parkes was also arrested, along with twenty-six other union officials, all on a charge of conspiracy. Judge John Holden Owes instructed the jury that, | |||
]'' June 21, 1877]] | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Campbell, just before his execution, allegedly slapped a muddy handprint on his cell wall stating "There is proof of my words. That mark of mine will never be wiped out. It will remain forever to shame the county for hanging an innocent man." Doyle and Hugh McGeehan were led to the scaffold. They were followed by Thomas Munley, James Carroll, James Roarity, James Boyle, Thomas Duffy, Kelly, Campbell, and "Yellow Jack" Donahue. Judge Dreher<ref name="Jensen">{{Cite book |last=Jensen |first=Per |title=The Ethology of Domestic Animals |series="Modular Text" series |publisher=] |location=Wallingford, England |date=2009 |isbn=978-1-84593-536-8}}</ref> presided over the trials. | |||
...any agreement, combination or confederation to increase or depress the price of any vendible commodity, whether labor, merchandise, or anything else, is indictable as a conspiracy under the laws of Pennsylvania.<ref name="bm"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Ten more condemned, Thomas Fisher, John "Black Jack" Kehoe, Patrick Hester, Peter McHugh, Patrick Tully, Peter McManus, Dennis Donnelly, Martin Bergan, James McDonnell and Charles Sharpe, were hanged at Mauch Chunk, Pottsville, Bloomsburg and Sunbury over the next two years. Peter McManus was the last Molly Maguire to be tried and convicted for murder at the ] in 1878.<ref name="arch">{{cite web|url=https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce/SelectWelcome.asp|title=National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania|publisher=CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System|format=Searchable database|access-date=27 May 2012|archive-date=21 July 2007|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070721014609/https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce/SelectWelcome.asp|url-status=dead}} ''Note:'' This includes {{cite web|url=https://www.dot7.state.pa.us/ce_imagery/phmc_scans/H001040_01H.pdf|title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form: Northumberland County Courthouse|access-date=2012-05-27|author1=Helen J. Schaffer|author2=Elizabeth H. Kury|author3=James J. Rorke, Jr.|name-list-style=amp|format=PDF|date=July 1974}}</ref> | |||
When he sentenced two of the union officials, Judge Owes addressed them, | |||
====Rhodes's account of the Mollies==== | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Many accounts of the Molly Maguires that were written during, or shortly after, the period offer no admission that there was widespread violence in the area, that vigilantism existed, nor that violence was carried out ''against'' the miners. In 1910, industrialist and historian ] published a major scholarly analysis in the leading professional history journal:<ref name="article">Originally published in ''American Historical Review'' (April 1910; copyright expired)</ref> | |||
I find you, Joyce, to be president of the Union, and you, Maloney, to be secretary, and therefore I sentence you to one year's imprisonment.<ref name="bm"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
=====The strike fails===== | |||
The union was nearly broken by the imprisonment of its leadership and by attacks conducted by vigilantes against the strikers. Gowen "deluged the newspapers with stories of murder and arson" committed by the Molly Maguires. The press produced stories of strikes in Illinois, in Jersey City, and in the Ohio mine fields, all inspired by the Mollies. The stories were widely believed.<ref name="bm"/> | |||
In Schuylkill County the striking miners and their families were starving to death. A striker wrote to a friend, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Since I last saw you, I have buried my youngest child, and on the day before its death there was not one bit of victuals in the house with six children."<ref name="bm"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
In his history of the American coal miner, Andrew Roy recorded, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Hundreds of families rose in the morning to breakfast on a crust of bread and a glass of water, who did not know where a bite of dinner was to come from. Day after day, men, women, and children went to the adjoining woods to dig roots and pick up herbs to keep body and soul together...<ref name="bm"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
After six months the strike was defeated and the miners returned to work, accepting the twenty percent cut in pay. But miners belonging to the Ancient Order of Hibernians continued the fight. Boyer and Morais argue that the killing wasn't all one-sided: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Militant miners often disappeared, their bodies sometimes being found later in deserted mine shafts.<ref name="bm3">Boyer and Morais, p. 53.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
=====McParlan penetrates the "inner circle"===== | |||
After months of little progress, McParlan reported some plans by the "inner circle." ] | |||
Gomer James, a Welshman, had shot and wounded one of the Mollies, and plans were formulated for a revenge killing. But the wheels of revenge were grinding slowly. And there was other violence: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
November was a bloody month what with the miners on strike... In the three days around November 18, a Mollie was found dead in the streets of Carbondale, north of Scranton, a man had his throat cut, an unidentified man was crucified in the woods, a mining boss mauled, a man murdered in Scranton, and three men of were guilty of a horror against an old woman, and an attempt to assassinate a Mollie, Dougherty, followed and at once demanded the murder of W.M. Thomas, whom he blamed for the attempt.<ref name="horan2">Horan, p. 139.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote> | |||
On the last day of the month, with Gowen's strikebreakers pouring in, the Summit telegraph office was burned, a train derailed, and McParlan advised to send in uniformed police to preserve order.<ref name="horan2"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
A plan to destroy a railroad bridge was abandoned due to the presence of outsiders. The Irish had been forbidden by the English and Welsh to set foot in a public square in Mahanoy City, and a plan for the Irish to occupy it by force of arms was considered then abandoned. | |||
In the meantime a messenger reported that Thomas, the would-be killer of one of the Mollies, had been killed in the stable where he worked. McParlan reported that he'd been asked to supply the hidden killers with food and whiskey. Horan and Swiggett write, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The probability is that as a man, Bully Bill Thomas, a Welshman, was no better than his enemies, but he was remarkable in other ways. His killers, leaving him for dead in the stable door, were not aware until two days later that he had survived.<ref>Horan, p. 143.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Another plan was in the works, this one against two night watchmen, Pat McCarron and Benjamin Yost. Accused Mollies Jimmy Kerrigan and Thomas Duffy were said to despise Yost, who had arrested them numerous times. Yost was shot as he put out a street light, which at that time necessitated climbing the lamp pole. Before he died, he reported that his killers were Irish, but were not Kerrigan or Duffy. | |||
McParlan recorded that a Molly by the name of William Love killed a justice of the peace by the name of Gwyther in ]. Unknown Mollies were accused of wounding a man outside his saloon in ]. Gomer James was killed while he tended bar. Then, McParlan recorded, a group of Mollies reported to him that they had killed a mine boss named Sanger, and another man who was with him. Forewarned of the attempt, McParlan had sought to arrange protection for the mine boss, but was unsuccessful.<ref>Horan, pp. 143-149.</ref> | |||
While there was concern whether enough evidence was collected on reprisal killings and assassinations that sufficient arrests of the Mollies could be made, McParlan's identity had been discovered.<ref>Horan, p. 154.</ref> | |||
On ] ], Captain R.J. Linden, a fellow Pinkerton operative with McParlan, captured Thomas Munley at his home in ]. Charles McAllister was apprehended at the same time. | |||
=====The trials===== | |||
] (1836-1889), District Attorney for ], president of the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, and of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company]]When Franklin Gowen first hired the Pinkerton agency, he had claimed the Molly Maguires were so powerful they had made capital and labor "their puppets."<Ref>The Pinkerton Story, James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett, 1951, page 130. Horan and Swiggett described the power Gowen attributed to the Mollies as "sway."</Ref> When the trials of the alleged puppet-masters opened, Gowen had himself appointed as special prosecuter. He thus put himself in the position to personally ask the state, in courtrooms that were guarded by militia with bayonets fixed, to execute the union men that had struck his coal mines.<Ref>Labor's Untold Story, Richard O. Boyer and Herbert M. Morais, 1974, page 54.</Ref> | |||
The first trial of defendants McGeehan, Carroll, Duffy, James Boyle, and James Roarity for the killing of Benjamin Yost commenced in May, 1876. Yost had not recognized the men who attacked him. Although Kerrigan has since been described, along with Duffy, as hating the night watchman enough to plot his murder,<Ref>Horan, p. 144.</Ref> Kerrigan became a state's witness and testified against the union leaders and other miners. However, Kerrigan's wife testified in the courtroom that her husband had committed the murder. She testified that she refused to provide her husband with clothing while he was in prison, because he had "picked innocent men to suffer for his crime." She stated that her speaking out was voluntary, and that she was interested only in telling the truth about the murder. Gowen cross-examined her, but could not shake her testimony. Others supported her testimony amid speculation that Kerrigan was receiving special treatment due to the fact that James McParlan was engaged to his sister-in-law, Mary Ann Higgins.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 54-55.</ref> The five defendants were sentenced to death. Kerrigan was allowed to go free. | |||
McAllister demanded a separate trial and George Kaercher, Esq., the District Attorney, elected to try Munley first. The trial of Tom Munley for the murder of mine foreman Thomas Sanger and his friend, William Uren, relied entirely upon the testimony of James McParlan, and the eyewitness account of a witness. The witness stated under oath that he had seen the murderer clearly, and that Munley was not the murderer. Yet the jury accepted McParlan's testimony that Munley had privately confessed to the murder. Munley was sentenced to death.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 55-56.</ref> | |||
Another four miners were put on trial and were found guilty on a charge of murder for which they had previously been found innocent. The testimony against them came from only two sources: James McParlan, and "Kelly the Bum." McParlan had no direct evidence, but had recorded that the four admitted their guilt to him. Kelly the Bum was being held in a cell for murder, and he had been quoted, "I would squeal on Jesus Christ to get out of here." In return for his testimony, the murder charge against him was dismissed.<ref>Boyer and Morais, p. 55.</ref> | |||
]", allegedly posted by Molly Maguires in ]. It was presented by ], along with other similar coffin notices, as evidence in an ] murder trial.]] | |||
In November McAllister was convicted. | |||
McParlan's testimony in the Molly Maguires trials helped to send ten men to the gallows. The defense attorneys repeatedly sought to portray McParlan as an agent-provocateur who was responsible for not warning people of their imminent deaths. (Kenny 232-33) McParlan testified that the AOH and the Mollys were one and the same, but most historians disagree. (Kenny 234-5) | |||
Many years later in a different trial, James McParlan would tell another witness, a ] by the name of ], that Kelly the Bum not only had won his freedom for testifying against union leaders, he had been given one thousand dollars to "subsidize a new life abroad." McParlan was attempting to convince Orchard to accuse the ], the ], of ].<Ref>Roughneck, The Life and Times of Big Bill Haywood, Peter Carlson, 1983, page 91.</Ref> | |||
=====The executions===== | |||
On June 21, 1877, ten men were hanged in the prison at ], in ], and four were hanged at ], in ]. A scaffold had been erected in each prison. State militia with fixed bayonets surrounded the prisons and the scaffolds inside. Miners arrived with their wives and children from the surrounding areas, walking through the night to honor the accused, and by nine o'clock "the crowd in Pottsville stretched as far as one could see." The families were silent, which was "the people's way of paying tribute" to those about to die. Tom Munley's aged father had walked more than ten miles from ] to assure his son that he knew of his innocence. Munley's wife had arrived a few minutes after they closed the gate, and they refused to open it even for close relatives to say their final good-byes. She screamed at the gate with grief, throwing herself against it until she collapsed, but she was not allowed to pass. | |||
Michael J. Doyle and Hugh McGeehan were the first to be led to the scaffold. A moment before the trap was sprung, they joined hands and Doyle said to McGeehan, "Hughie, let's die like men." They were followed by Thomas Munley, James Carroll, James Roarity, James Boyle, Thomas Duffy, Edward J. Kelly, Alexander Campbell, John Donahue, Thomas P. Fisher, John Kehoe, Patrick Hester, Peter McHugh, Patrick Tully, Peter McManus, and Andrew Lanahan. | |||
Four members of the Molly Maguires, Alexander Campbell, John "Yellow Jack" Donohue, Michael Doyle and Edward Kelly, were hanged on ] ] at a ] prison in Mauch Chunk (renamed ] in 1953), for the murder of mine bosses John P. Jones and Morgan Powell, following a trial that was later described by a ] judge, John P. Lavelle, as follows: | |||
<blockquote>The Molly Maguire trials were a surrender of state sovereignty. A private corporation initiated the investigation through a private detective agency. A private police force arrested the alleged defenders, and private attorneys for the coal companies prosecuted them. The state provided only the courtroom and the ].</blockquote> | |||
Two more of the nineteen condemned men, James McDonald and Charles Sharpe, were hanged at Mauch Chunk. They had known that a pardon from the governor was expected, but their execution was not delayed. Minutes after their bodies were cut from the ropes, the governor's reprieve arrived, too late to spare their lives.<ref>Boyer and Morais, pp. 56-58.</ref> | |||
McAllister was hanged later. | |||
====James Ford Rhodes' account of the Mollies==== | |||
Many accounts of the Molly Maguires that were written during, or shortly after, the period offer no admission that there was widespread violence in the area, that vigilantism existed, nor that violence was carried out ''against'' the miners. | |||
In 1910, industrialist and historian ] published a major scholarly analysis in the leading professional history journal:<ref name="AHArticle">Originally published in ''American Historical Review.'' (April 1910), copyright expired.''</ref> | |||
{{Quotation | |||
|Many of the Mollies were miners and the mode of working the mines lent itself to their peculiar policy. Miners were paid by the cubic yard, by the mine car, or by the ton, and (in the driving of entries) by the lineal yard. In the assignment of places, which was made by the mining boss, there were "soft" jobs and hard. If a Molly applied for a soft job and was refused, his anger was aroused and not infrequently in due time the offending boss was murdered. If he got employment, there was a constant chance of disagreement in measuring-up the work and in estimating the quality of the coal mined, for it was the custom to dock the miners' wages for bad coal with too much slate and dirt, and a serious disagreement was apt to be followed by violence. Little wonder was it that, as the source of the outrages was well understood, mining bosses refused to employ Irishmen, but this did not ensure their safety, as they might then be murdered for their refusal. A good Superintendent of any colliery would, in his quality of superior officer, support an efficient mining boss and would thus fall under the ban himself. John T. Morse, Jr., who made a contemporaneous study of the Molly Maguires, wrote in his vivid account of their operations: "The superintendents and 'bosses' in the collieries could all rest assured that their days would not be long in the land. Everywhere and at all times they were attacked, beaten, and shot down, by day and by night; month after month and year after year, on the public highways and in their own homes, in solitary places and in the neighborhood of crowds, these doomed men continued to fall in frightful succession beneath the hands of assassins."<ref name="AmerLaw">''Amer. Law Review'', Jan. 1877, 233</ref><br> | |||
<br> | |||
The murders were not committed in the heat of sudden passion for some fancied wrong: they were the result of a deliberate system. The wronged individual laid his case before a quasijudicial tribunal demanding the death, say, of a mining boss and urging his reasons. If they were satisfactory, as they usually were, the murder was decreed; but the task was not assigned to the aggrieved person or to any one in his and the victim's neighborhood: perhaps directly-aggrieved parties might be tempted to use more force or more cruelty than necessary. Two or more relatively disinterested Mollies from a different part of the county or even from the adjoining county were selected to do the killing because, being unknown, they could the more easily escape detection. Refusal to carry out the dictate of the conclave was dangerous and seldom happened, although an arrangement of substitution, if properly supported, was permitted. The meeting generally took place in an upper room of a hotel or saloon and, after the serious business, came the social reunion with deep libations of whiskey.<br> | |||
<br> | |||
In attempting to give precise figures, some writers have undoubtedly exaggerated the number of murders by this order from 1865 to 1875; but no one can go through the evidence without being convinced that a great many men were killed to satisfy the vengeful spirit of the Molly Maguires. Some of the victims were men so useful, so conspicuous, and so beloved in their communities that their assassinations caused a profound and enduring impression. In some cases, so Dewees (who has written a very useful story<ref name="Dewees">''The Molly Maguires'', F. P. Dewees, of ], a member of the Schuylkill county bar, 1877</ref>) asserts, robbery was added to murder: superintendents, who were carrying the money for the monthly pay of the miners and laborers, were waylaid as they drove along some lonely road in the desolate country. While the murders were numerous, still more numerous were the threats of murder and warnings to leave the country written on a sheet of paper with a rude picture of a coffin or a pistol and sometimes both. One notice read: "Mr. John Taylor — We will give you one week to go, but if you are alive on next Saturday you will die." Another, to three bosses, charged with "cheating thy men" had a picture of three pistols and a coffin and on the coffin was written, "This is your home."<ref name="Dewees2">Dewees, 367 ''et seq.''; see also 123.</ref> In other mining districts and in manufacturing localities, during strikes and times of turbulence similar warnings have been common and have been laughed at by mining bosses, superintendents, and proprietors; but, in the anthracite region between 1865 and 1876 the bravest of men could not forget how many of his fellows had been shot and suppress a feeling of uneasiness when he found such a missive on his doorstep or posted up on the door of his office at the mine. Many a superintendent and mining boss left his house in the morning with his hand on his revolver, wondering if he would ever see wife and children again.<br> | |||
<br> | |||
The young men of the order were selected for the commission of murder; above them were older heads holding high office and, in a variety of ways, displaying executive ability. They were quick to see what a weapon to their hand was universal suffrage, and, with the aptitude for politics which the Irish have shown in our country, they developed their order into a political power to be reckoned with. Numbering in Schuylkill county only 500 or 600 out of 5,000 Irishmen in a total population of 116,000,<ref name="Cen1870">Census of 1870, Gowen. The 5000 is an estimate of those of a voting age from census data.</ref> the Molly Maguires controlled the common schools and the local government of the townships in the mining sections of the county. They elected at different times three county commissioners and came near electing one of their number, who had acquired twenty thousand dollars worth of property, Associate Judge of the Court of Oyer and Terminer. In one borough a Molly was Chief of Police; another in Mahanoy township, Jack Kehoe, was High Constable.<ref name="Dewees3">"In Carbon county two Mollies have at different times held the office of County commissioner and a Molly also succeeded in being elected to the legislature." Dewees, 32 ''n.''</ref> In the elections were fraudulent voting, stuffing of the ballot-boxes and false returns; in the administration of the offices, fraud and robbery. In Mahanoy township, $60,000 were drawn for the schools and eleven-twelfths of it stolen. Exorbitant road taxes were a fruitful means by which township officials robbed the taxpayers and put the money in their own pockets. In August 1875 an ex-county commissioner, a Molly, and two commissioners then in office, not actually belonging to the order but in sympathy with it, had been convicted of stealing the county funds and each had been sentenced by a full bench <nowiki>]<nowiki>]</nowiki> to two years' imprisonment. At the fall election for governor in this year <nowiki>]<nowiki>]</nowiki> the Molly Maguires, who were naturally Democrats, foresaw Republican success and sold their vote in Schuylkill and Luzerne counties to the Republicans for a certain amount of money in hand and an implied agreement that these convicted commissioners and other criminals who were called by a leading Molly "our men" should be pardoned.<ref name="Elections">Elections in Pennsylvania were much closer then than now <nowiki></nowiki>. In 1875 Hartranft's majority for governor over Judge Pershing, Democrat, was only 12,000 in a vote of 596,000. Although the returns show normal Democratic majorities in Schuylkill and Luzerne counties, Dewees has no doubt that the Molly vote was sold and delivered; what Pershing lost in the Molly strongholds was counterbalanced by gains elsewhere. Dewees feels sure that Hartranft was ignorant of the transaction, 222 ''et seq.'' On March 16, 1876, the three commissioners were pardoned. Pa. Legislative docs., 1877, ii. 1252</ref> It is hardly to be supposed that the Republican politicians who made this bargain were aware of the thoroughly criminal nature of the Molly Maguires, for they had astutely covered themselves with a virtuous cloak, securing from the Legislature in 1871 a charter for the Ancient Order of Hibernians whose motto was "Friendship, Unity and Christian Charity." On October 10, 1875, in a letter to the Shenandoah ''Herald'' Jack Kehoe denied with indignation that the Molly Maguires were synonymous with the Ancient Order of Hibernians, which latter was "composed of men who are law abiding and seek the elevation of their members."<ref name="Dewees4">Dewees, 380.</ref> Kehoe was crafty enough to see the advantage of throwing dust in the eyes of the public and, when the outside world was bargained with, the A.O.H. was put forward; but, as matter of fact, it was the old story of ravening wolves in sheep's clothing.<ref name="passage"></ref><br> | |||
<br> | |||
|] | |||
|''History of the United States from Hayes to McKinley 1877 - 1896'' Volume 8 of the series ''History of the United States of America, From the Compromise of 1850 to the McKinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896'' published October, 1919, The Macmillian Company, New York. Chapter II, pp 52 - 58 | |||
}} | |||
====The question of justice==== | |||
Some have declared unequivocally that justice was done. An industrial spokesman proclaimed after the last trial, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
Peace once more reigns in the anthracite coal regions. Mollie Maguireism is practically dead. The inhabitants of the anthracite coal regions are now enjoying the blessed peace which has recently come to them. God rules, justice must reign, and right must triumph.<Ref>A Pictorial History of American Labor, William Cahn, 1972, page 128.</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Others do not seem so certain. Horan and Swiggett, ever supportive of the Pinkerton cause that is the subject of their book, declare that "evil men had conspired for years to do evil things and the law had at last overtaken them." Yet a footnote suggests that their verdict concerning the trials that condemned the Molly Maguires is heavily qualified. They write, "There was much, of course, in the practices and outlook of the times which is abhorrent today." The footnote to this observation explains, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
At the trials, special assistants to the district attorneys were supplied by the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad, the Lehigh and Wilkes Barre, and the Lehigh Valley. Professor Schlegel in his ''Ruler of the Reading'' (1947) calls "the Mollie trials and their aftermath among the least creditable incidents of life." Professors Allan Nevins and Henry Steele Commager of Columbia University, both distinguished scholars, concur in the veracity and soundness of Professor Schlegel's research and conclusions.<ref>Horan, pp. 124-125.</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Horan and Swiggett also note that others have argued, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
...punishment had gone too far, and that the guilt of some of the condemned was that of association more than participation and but half established by other condemned men seeking clemency for themselves.<ref name="horan3"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Boyer and Morais wrote, | |||
<blockquote> | |||
McParlan agreed to testify, and did testify, that all those whom Gowan wanted removed had freely and voluntarily confessed to him that they had committed various murders. His word was to be corroborated by various prisoners at various of the county's jails, freedom the reward for corroboration. Among those who buttressed McParlan's testimony at the ensuing trials was a prisoner known as Kelly the Bum, who admitted that he had committed every crime in the calendar. Another prisoner was one Jimmy Kerrigan whose wife testified that he himself had committed the murder with which he was charging the miners of the AOH.<ref name="bm3"/> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Joseph G. Rayback, author of ''A History of American Labor'', has observed: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
The charge has been made that the Molly Maguires episode was deliberately manufactured by the coal operators with the express purpose of destroying all vestiges of unionism in the area... There is some evidence to support the charge... the "crime wave" that appeared in the anthracite fields came after the appearance of the Pinkertons, and... many of the victims of the crimes were union leaders and ordinary miners. The evidence brought against , supplied by James McParlan, a Pinkerton, and corroborated by men who were granted immunity for their own crimes, was tortuous and contradictory, but the net effect was damning... The trial temporarily destroyed the last vestiges of labor unionism in the anthracite area. More important, it gave the public the impression... that miners were by nature criminal in character...<Ref>Rayback, p. 133.</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
The union point of view is expressed by the ''Miners' Journal'' of June 22, 1877, which asked simply: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
What did they do? Whenever prices of labor did not suit them, they organized to proclaim a strike.<Ref>A Pictorial History of American Labor, William Cahn, 1972, page 128.</Ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
====The aftermath==== | ====The aftermath==== | ||
When organized labour helped elect ] as mayor of ] two years after the Molly Maguire trials, the opposition vilified his team as the "Molly Maguire Ticket".<ref>Rayback, p. 138.</ref> | |||
In 1979, Pennsylvania Governor ] granted a posthumous pardon to John "Black Jack" Kehoe after an investigation by the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons. The request for a pardon was made by one of Kehoe's descendants. John Kehoe had proclaimed his innocence until his death. The Board recommended the pardon after investigating Kehoe's trial and the circumstances surrounding it. Shapp praised Kehoe, saying the men called "Molly Maguires" were "martyrs to labour" and heroes in the struggle to establish a union and fair treatment for workers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.portal.state.pa.us/portal/server.pt/community/documents_from_1865_-_1945/20425/kehoe_death_warrant/998881|title=Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission website|website=state.pa.us}}</ref> And "... t is impossible for us to imagine the plight of the 19th Century miners in Pennsylvania's anthracite region" and that it was Kehoe's popularity among the miners that led Gowen "'to fear, despise and ultimately destroy '".<ref>Kenny, p. 284.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.historynet.com/molly-macguires-in-pennsylvania-coal-regions.htm|first=Joseph|last=Bloom|title=Molly MacGuires ''(sic)'' in Pennsylvania Coal Regions|date=12 June 2006|access-date=2015-09-12}}</ref> | |||
The Mollys were forced to disband in 1877 after being in existence for about thirty years because, in an effort commissioned by ] president ] (who was also at the time the most influential mine owner in the area), ] agents ] and informed on the activities of the members. | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
Although they are viewed unfavorably by traditional history, there are those who contend that the Molly Maguires, manifesting in the United States as a direct response to wage disputes with the coal industry, are more accurately described as a labor organization than a group of vigilantes, and that the allegations of their more violent crimes were baseless and without evidence. ] mentions the Molly Maguires in Chapter 10 of his '']'', citing them as an example of labor organization in response to the frequent, gross exploitation of workers by industry in the Depression-ridden days after the Civil War. Zinn mentions ] as someone who, after careful study of the evidence available, concludes the 19 members executed were done so for the simple reason that they coordinated strikes whenever wages were reduced. Foner points to the coal mine owners' own words in the ''Miners' Journal'' essentially admitting to this as their chief motive in using the law to pursue the Maguires. | |||
* ]'s ] novel '']'' is partly based on James McParland's infiltration of the Mollies. | |||
* '']'', a feature film starring ] as ] and ] as Molly leader Jack Kehoe was released in 1970. | |||
* A 1965 episode of '']'' titled "Heritage" portrayed the Mollies as active at a fictitious mine in the Sierra in the 1870s, in which the Irish miners protest the use of Chinese labourers during a mine strike. | |||
* ], a folklorist and journalist, wrote several songs on the topic including his composition ''Minstrels of the Mine Patch'', which has a section on the Molly Maguires: "Coal Dust on the Fiddle". | |||
* Irish folk band ] have a song called "Molly Maguires". | |||
* ]' song, "Lament for the Molly Maguires", is on their album ''Upon a Shamrock Shore''. | |||
* They were mentioned by Dr. Donald "Ducky" Mallard and Special Agent Jack Sloane on The Season 17 episode of ] entitled "Musical Chairs" | |||
==See also== | |||
When organized labor helped to elect ] mayor of ] two years after the Molly Maguire trials, the opposition vilified his team as the "Molly Maguire Ticket."<Ref>Rayback, p. 138.</Ref> | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ], miners in 19th-century ] who would attack colleagues who worked during strikes. | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==Footnotes== | |||
==In popular culture== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
* A movie based on these events called '']'', starring ] and ], was released in 1970. | |||
* The ] novel '']'' is partly based on the Molly Maguires. | |||
* George Korson, a folklorist and journalist whom became fascinated with the livelihood of Pennsylvania's miners, wrote several songs and other writings regarding the topic -- best showcased in his composition "Minstrels of the Mine Patch", which has a section specifically on the Molly Maguires: "Coal Dust on the Fiddle". | |||
* Irish folk band ] refer to the Molly Maguires in one of their songs, "Molly Maguires". | |||
* Irish-American Folk Band "The Irish Balladeers" wrote and recorded "The Sons of Molly" based on this history. This song was later covered by the Irish-Canadian band "The Peelers". | |||
* The Irish folk music/] band ] from ] was originally called "Molly Maguire". | |||
* A popular Irish/Bluegrass/Cajun band in Liverpool, UK 1990 were named after The Molly Maguires. | |||
*A musical was performed near Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania that told the story of the Molly Maguires. It was very popular in the area. | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
===Contemporary sources=== | |||
* Dewees, Francis P. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1877. | |||
* Pinkerton, Allan; ''The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives''; New York: G. W. Dillingham Co. Publishers, 1877. | |||
===Scholarly secondary sources=== | ===Scholarly secondary sources=== | ||
* Bimba, Anthony. ''The Molly Maguires''. New York: International Publishers, 1932. | |||
* EH.Net Encyclopedia, August 15 2001 scholarly overview | |||
* Broehl, Jr., Wayne G. ''The Molly Maguires |
* Broehl, Jr., Wayne G. ''The Molly Maguires'', Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1964. | ||
* Gudelunas, Jr., William Anthony, and William G. Shade. ''Before the Molly Maguires: The Emergence of the Ethnoreligious Factor in the Politics of the Lower Anthracite Region: |
* Gudelunas, Jr., William Anthony, and William G. Shade. ''Before the Molly Maguires: The Emergence of the Ethnoreligious Factor in the Politics of the Lower Anthracite Region: 1844–1872''. New York: Arno Press, 1976. | ||
* Foner, Phillip. ''A History of the Labor Movement in the United States: Volume 1, From Colonial Times to the Founding of the American Federation of Labor.'' New York: International Publishers, 1947. | |||
* | |||
* Kenny, Kevin. , New York: Oxford University Press, 1998. | |||
* Kenny, Kevin, "The Molly Maguires in Popular Culture," ''Journal of American Ethnic History'' (1995) 14(4): 27-46. Looks at 8 novels and a film to show how popular depictions have moved from negative to positive. | |||
* Kenny, Kevin. "The Molly Maguires |
* Kenny, Kevin. "The Molly Maguires in Popular Culture", ''Journal of American Ethnic History,'' vol. 14, no. 4 (1995), pp. 27–46. | ||
* Kenny, Kevin. "The Molly Maguires and the Catholic Church", ''Labor History,'' vol. 36, no. 3 (1995), pp. 345–376. | |||
* Morn, Frank. ''The Eye that Never Sleeps: A History of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency'' ;;(1982) | |||
* Lens, Sidney. ''The Labor Wars: From the Molly Maguires to the Sitdowns.'' New York: Doubleday, 1973. | |||
* James Ford Rhodes, ''History of the United States of America, From the Compromise of 1850 to the McKinley-Bryan Campaign of 1896'': Vol 8: 1877-1896 (NY: Macmillan, 1919) Chapter 2. | |||
* Morn, Frank. ''The Eye that Never Sleeps: A History of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency.'' Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1982. | |||
* Bimba, Anthony, "The Molly Maguires. New York: International Publishers, 1970 | |||
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* Rayback, Joseph G. ''A History of American Labor.'' Rev. and exp. ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1974. {{ISBN|1-299-50529-5}} | ||
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==External links== | ||
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* Samuel P. Orth, ''The Armies of Labor'' (1920)-Chapter 4 has a good overview of late 19th century labor history. | |||
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* Zinn, Howard, "A People's History of the United States (1492-Present)" (1980; 2003) | |||
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===Primary sources=== | |||
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* Dewees, Francis P. ''The Molly Maguires: The Origin, Growth, and Character of the Organization'' (1877; 1964) | |||
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== Notes == | |||
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==See also== | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:53, 13 December 2024
19th-century secret society in Ireland For the movie, see The Molly Maguires (film).
The Molly Maguires was an Irish 19th-century secret society active in Ireland, Liverpool, and parts of the eastern United States, best known for their activism among Irish-American and Irish immigrant coal miners in Pennsylvania. After a series of often violent conflicts, twenty suspected members of the Molly Maguires were convicted of murder and other crimes and were executed by hanging in 1877 and 1878. This history remains part of local Pennsylvania lore and the actual facts are much debated among historians.
Ireland
The Molly Maguires originated in Ireland, where secret societies with names such as Whiteboys and Peep o' Day Boys were common beginning in the 18th century and through most of the 19th century. In some areas the terms Ribbonmen and Molly Maguires were both used for similar activism but at different times. The main distinction between the two appears to be that the Ribbonmen were regarded as "secular, cosmopolitan, and proto-nationalist", with the Molly Maguires considered "rural, local, and Gaelic".
Agrarian rebellion in Ireland can be traced to local concerns and grievances relating to land usage, particularly as traditional socioeconomic practices such as small-scale potato cultivation were supplanted by the fencing and pasturing of land (known as enclosure). Agrarian resistance often took the form of fence destruction, night-time ploughing of croplands that had been converted to pasture, and killing, mutilating, or driving off livestock. In areas where the land had long been dedicated to small-scale, growing-season leases of farmland, called conacre, opposition was conceived as "retributive justice" that was intended "to correct transgressions against traditional moral and social codes".
The victims of agrarian violence were frequently Irish land agents, middlemen, and tenants. Merchants and millers were often threatened or attacked if their prices were high. Landlords' agents were threatened, beaten, and assassinated. New tenants on lands secured by evictions also became targets. Local leaders were reported to have sometimes dressed as women, i.e., as mothers begging for food for their children. The leader might approach a storekeeper and demand a donation of flour or groceries. If the storekeeper failed to provide, the Mollies would enter the store and take what they wanted, warning the owner of dire consequences if the incident was reported.
While the Whiteboys were known to wear white linen frocks over their clothing, the Mollies blackened their faces with burnt cork. There are similarities—particularly in face-blackening and in the donning of women's garments—with the practice of mummery, in which festive days were celebrated by mummers who travelled from door to door demanding food, money, or drink as payment for performing. The Threshers, the Peep o' Day Boys, the Lady Rocks (deriving from Captain Rock and the Rockite movement), and the Lady Clares also sometimes disguised themselves as women. Similar imagery was used during the Rebecca Riots in Wales.
British and Irish newspapers reported about the Mollies in Ireland in the nineteenth century. Thomas Campbell Foster in The Times on 25 August 1845 traced the commencement of "Molly Maguireism" to Lord Lorton ejecting tenants in Ballinamuck, County Longford, in 1835. An "Address of 'Molly Maguire' to her children" containing twelve rules was published in Freeman's Journal on 7 July 1845. The person making the address claimed to be "Molly Maguire" of "Maguire's Grove, Parish of Cloone", in County Leitrim. The rules advised Mollies about how they should conduct themselves in land disputes and were an attempt to direct the movement's activities:
- Keep strictly to the land question, by allowing no landlord more than fair value for his tenure.
- No Rent to be paid until harvest.
- Not even then without an abatement, where the land is too high.
- No undermining of tenants, nor bailiff's fees to be paid.
- No turning out of tenants, unless two years rent due before ejectment served.
- Assist to the utmost of your power the good landlord, in getting his rents.
- Cherish and respect the good landlord, and good agent.
- Keep from travelling by night.
- Take no arms by day, or by night, from any man, as from such acts a deal of misfortune springs, having, I trust you have, more arms than you ever will have need for.
- Avoid coming in contact with either the military, or police; they are only doing what they cannot help.
- For my sake, then, no distinction to any man, on account of his religion; his acts alone you are to look to.
- Let bygones be bygones, unless in a very glaring case; but watch for the time to come.
Liverpool
The Molly Maguires were also active in Liverpool, England, where many Irish people settled in the 19th century, and many more passed through Liverpool on their way to the United States or Canada. The Mollies are first mentioned in Liverpool in an article in The Liverpool Mercury newspaper on 10 May 1853. The newspaper reported that, "a regular faction fight took place in Marybone amongst the Irish residents in that district. About 200 men and women assembled, who were divided into four parties—the 'Molly Maguires', the 'Kellys', the 'Fitzpatricks' and the 'Murphys'—the greater number of whom were armed with sticks and stones. The three latter sections were opposed to the 'Molly Maguires' and the belligerents were engaged in hot conflict for about half an hour, when the guardians of the peace interfered."
Later Liverpool newspaper articles from the same time period refer to assaults by Mollies against other Irish Liverpudlians. The "Molly Maguire club" or "Molly's Club" was described as a "mutual defence association" that had been "formed for the mutual assistance of the members when they got into 'trouble', each member subscribing to the funds". Patrick Flynn was the secretary of the Liverpool Molly Maguire Clubs in the 1850s and their headquarters was in an alehouse in Alexander Pope Street also known as Sawney Pope Street. The Liverpool branch of the Molly Maguires was known for its gangsterism rather than any genuine concern for the welfare of Irish people.
United States
The Mollies are believed to have been present in the anthracite coal fields of Pennsylvania in the United States since at least the Panic of 1873 until becoming largely inactive following a series of arrests, trials and executions, between 1876 and 1878. Members of the Mollies were accused of murder, arson, kidnapping, and other crimes, in part based on allegations by Franklin B. Gowen and the testimony of a Pinkerton detective, James McParland (also known as James McKenna), a native of County Armagh, Ireland. Fellow prisoners testified against the defendants, who were arrested by the Coal and Iron Police. Gowen acted as a prosecutor in some of the trials.
The trusts seem to have focused almost exclusively upon the Molly Maguires for criminal prosecution. Information passed from the Pinkerton detective, intended only for the detective agency and their client—the most powerful industrialist of the region—was also provided to vigilantes who ambushed and murdered miners suspected of being Molly Maguires, as well as their families. Molly Maguire history is sometimes presented as the prosecution of an underground movement that was motivated by personal vendettas, and sometimes as a struggle between organized labour and powerful industrial forces. Whether membership in the Mollies' society overlapped with union membership to any appreciable extent remains open to conjecture.
Some historians (such as Philip Rosen, former curator of the Holocaust Awareness Museum of the Delaware Valley) believe that Irish immigrants brought a form of the Molly Maguires organization into America in the 19th century, and continued its activities as a clandestine society. They were located in a section of the anthracite coal fields dubbed the Coal Region, which included the Pennsylvania counties of Lackawanna, Luzerne, Columbia, Schuylkill, Carbon, and Northumberland. Irish miners in this organization employed the tactics of intimidation and violence used against Irish landlords during the "Land Wars" yet again in violent confrontations against the anthracite, or hard coal, mining companies in the 19th century.
Historians' disagreement
A legal self-help organization for Irish immigrants existed in the form of the Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH), but it is generally accepted that the Mollies existed as a secret organization in Pennsylvania, and used the AOH as a front. However, Joseph Rayback's 1966 volume, A History of American Labor, claims the "identity of the Molly Maguires has never been proved". Rayback writes:
"The charge has been made that the Molly Maguires episode was deliberately manufactured by the coal operators with the express purpose of destroying all vestiges of unionism in the area... There is some evidence to support the charge... the "crime wave" that appeared in the anthracite fields came after the appearance of the Pinkertons, and... many of the victims of the crimes were union leaders and ordinary miners. The evidence brought against , supplied by James McParlan, a Pinkerton, and corroborated by men who were granted immunity for their own crimes, was tortuous and contradictory, but the net effect was damning... The trial temporarily destroyed the last vestiges of labor unionism in the anthracite area. More important, it gave the public the impression... that miners were by nature criminal in character....
Authors who accept the existence of the Mollies as a violent and destructive group acknowledge a significant scholarship that questions the entire history. In The Pinkerton Story, authors James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett write sympathetically about the detective agency and its mission to bring the Mollies to justice. They observe:
The difficulty of achieving strict and fair accuracy in relation to the Mollie Maguires is very great. Sensible men have held there never even was such an organization... We do believe, however, that members of a secret organization, bound to each other by oath, used the facilities and personnel of the organization to carry out personal vendettas...
History
During the mid-19th century, hard coal mining came to dominate northeastern Pennsylvania, a region already deforested twice over to feed America's growing need for energy. By the 1870s, powerful financial syndicates controlled the railroads and the coalfields. Coal companies had begun to recruit immigrants from overseas willing to work for less than the prevailing local wages paid to American-born employees, luring them with "promises of fortune-making". Herded into freight trains by the hundreds, these workers often replaced English-speaking miners who, according to labour historian George Korson:
...were compelled to give way in one coal field after another, either abandoning the industry altogether for other occupations or else retreating, like the vanishing American Indian, westward...
The immigrant workers:
...faced constant hazards from violation of safety precautions, such as they were. Injuries and deaths in mine disasters, frequently reported in the newspapers, shocked the nation.
About 22,000 coal miners worked in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. 5,500 of these were children between the ages of seven and sixteen years, who earned between one and three dollars a week separating slate from coal. Injured miners, or those too old to work at the face, were assigned to picking slate at the "breakers" where the coal was crushed into a manageable size. Thus, many of the elderly miners finished their mining days as they had begun in their youth. The miners lived a life of "bitter, terrible struggle".
Disaster strikes
Wages were low, working conditions were atrocious, and deaths and serious injuries numbered in the hundreds each year. On 6 September 1869, a fire at the Avondale Mine in Luzerne County, took the lives of 110 coal miners. The families blamed the coal company for failing to finance a secondary exit for the mine.
...the mine owners without one single exception had refused over the years to install emergency exits, ventilating and pumping systems, or to make provision for sound scaffolding. In Schuylkill County alone 566 miners had been killed and 1,655 had been seriously injured over a seven year period...
The miners faced a speedup system that was exhausting. In its November 1877 issue, Harper's New Monthly Magazine published an interviewer's comments: "A miner tells me that he often brought his food uneaten out of the mine from want of time; for he must have his car loaded when the driver comes for it, or lose one of the seven car-loads which form his daily work."
As the bodies of the miners were brought up from the Avondale Mine disaster, John Siney, head of the Workingmen's Benevolent Association (WBA), climbed onto a wagon to speak to the thousands of miners who had arrived from surrounding communities:
Men, if you must die with your boots on, die for your families, your homes, your country, but do not longer consent to die, like rats in a trap, for those who have no more interest in you than in the pick you dig with.
Siney asked the miners to join the union, and thousands did so that day. Some miners faced additional burdens of prejudice and persecution. In the 1840s, 1850s, and 1860s, some 20,000 Irish workers had arrived in Schuylkill County. It was a time of rampant beatings and murders in the mining district.
Panic of 1873
The period between 1873 and 1879 (see Panic of 1873) was marked by one of the worst depressions in the nation's history, caused by economic overexpansion, a stock market crash, and a decrease in the money supply. By 1877 an estimated one-fifth of the nation's workingmen were completely unemployed, two-fifths worked no more than six or seven months a year, and only one-fifth had full-time jobs. Labor organizers angrily watched railway directors riding about the country in luxurious private cars while proclaiming their inability to pay living wages to hungry working men.
Mine owners move against the union
Franklin B. Gowen, the president of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway, and of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company and "the wealthiest anthracite coal mine owner in the world", hired Allan Pinkerton's services to deal with the Mollies. Pinkerton selected James McParland (sometimes called McParlan), a native of County Armagh, to go undercover against the Mollies. Using the alias "James McKenna", he made Shenandoah his headquarters and claimed to have become a trusted member of the organization. His assignment was to collect evidence of murder plots and intrigue, passing this information along to his Pinkerton manager. He also began working secretly with a Pinkerton agent assigned to the Coal and Iron Police for the purpose of coordinating the eventual arrest and prosecution of members of the Molly Maguires. Although there had been fifty "inexplicable murders" between 1863 and 1867 in Schuylkill County, progress in the investigations was slow. There was "a lull in the entire area, broken only by minor shootings". McParland wrote: I am sick and tired of this thing. I seem to make no progress.
The union had grown powerful; thirty thousand members—eighty-five percent of Pennsylvania's anthracite miners—had joined. But Gowen had built a combination of his own, bringing all of the mine operators into an employers' association known as the Anthracite Board of Trade. In addition to the railroad, Gowen owned two-thirds of the coal mines in southeastern Pennsylvania. He was a risk-taker and an ambitious man. Gowen decided to force a strike and showdown.
Union, Mollies, and Ancient Order of Hibernians (AOH)
One of the burning questions for modern scholars is the relationship between the Workingmen's Benevolent Association (WBA), the Mollies, and their alleged cover organization, the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Historian Kevin Kenny notes that the convicted men were all members of the AOH. But "the Molly Maguires themselves left virtually no evidence of their existence, let alone their aims and motivation." Relying upon his personal knowledge before commencing an investigation, McParland believed that the Molly Maguires, under pressure for their activities, had taken the new name, "The Ancient Order of Hibernians" (AOH). After beginning his investigation, he estimated that there were about 450 members of the AOH in Schuylkill County.
While Kenny observes that the AOH was "a peaceful fraternal society", he does note that in the 1870s the Pinkerton Agency identified a correlation between the areas of AOH membership in Pennsylvania, and the corresponding areas in Ireland from which those particular Irish immigrants emigrated. The violence-prone areas of Ireland corresponded to areas of violence in the Pennsylvania coalfields.
In his book Big Trouble, which traces McParland's history, writer J. Anthony Lukas has written: "The WBA was run by Lancashire men adamantly opposed to violence. But saw an opportunity to paint the union with the Molly brush, which he did in testimony before a state investigating committee ... 'I do not charge this Workingmen's Benevolent Association with it, but I say there is an association which votes in secret, at night, that men's lives shall be taken ... I do not blame this association, but I blame another association for doing it; and it happens that the only men who are shot are the men who dare disobey the mandates of the Workingmen's Benevolent Association.'"
Of the 450 AOH members that Pinkerton Agent McParland estimated were in Schuylkill County, about 400 belonged to the union. Molly Maguireism and full-fledged trade unionism represented fundamentally different modes of organization and protest. Kenny noted that one contemporary organization, the Pennsylvania Bureau of Industrial Statistics, clearly distinguished between the union and the violence attributed to the Molly Maguires. Their reports indicate that violence could be traced to the time of the Civil War, but that in the five-year existence of the WBA, "the relations existing between employers and employees" had greatly improved. The Bureau concluded that the union had brought an end to the "carnival of crime". Kenny notes the leaders of the WBA were "always unequivocally opposed" to the Molly Maguires.
Most Irish mine workers belonged to the WBA and roughly half the officers of its executive board in 1872 bore Irish names. But, in addition to the WBA, there existed a loosely organized body of men called the Molly Maguires, whose membership appears to have been exclusively Irish ... Both modes of organization... tried to improve conditions of life and labor in the anthracite region. But the strategy of the trade union was indirect, gradual, peaceful, and systematically organized across the anthracite region, while that of the Molly Maguires was direct, violent, sporadic, and confined to a specific locality.
Kenny notes there were frequent tensions between miners of English and Welsh descent, who held the majority of skilled positions, and the mass of unskilled Irish labourers. However, in spite of such differences, the WBA offered a solution, and for the most part "did a remarkable job" in overcoming such differences.
All mine workers, regardless of craft status, national origin, and religious background, were eligible to join the WBA. As a result, many of its rank and file were members of the AOH, and there is evidence that some disgruntled trade union members favored violence against the wishes of their leaders, especially in the climactic year of 1875. But there were no Mollys among the leaders of the WBA, who took every opportunity they could to condemn the Molly Maguires and the use of violence as a strategy in the labor struggle. While the membership of the trade union and the secret society undoubtedly overlapped to some extent, they must be seen as ideologically and institutionally distinct.
Vigilante justice
F.P. Dewees, a contemporary and a confidant of Gowen, wrote that, by 1873, "Mr. Gowen was fully impressed with the necessity of lessening the overgrown power of the 'Labor Union' and exterminating if possible the Molly Maguires." In December 1874, Gowen led the other coal operators to announce a twenty percent pay cut. The miners decided to strike on 1 January 1875.
Edward Coyle, a leader of the union, and of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, was murdered in March. Another member of the AOH was shot and killed by the Modocs (a rival Welsh gang operating in the anthracite coalfields) led by one Bradley, a mine superintendent. Patrick Vary, a mine boss, fired into a group of miners and, according to the later boast by Gowen, as the miners "fled they left a long trail of blood behind them". At Tuscarora, a meeting of miners was attacked; one miner was killed and several others wounded.
A Pinkerton agent, Robert J. Linden, was brought in to support McParland while serving with the Coal and Iron Police. On 29 August 1875, Allan Pinkerton wrote a letter to George Bangs, Pinkerton's general superintendent, recommending vigilante actions against the Molly Maguires: "The M.M.'s are a species of Thugs... Let Linden get up a vigilance committee. It will not do to get many men, but let him get those who are prepared to take fearful revenge on the M.M.'s. I think it would open the eyes of all the people and then the M.M.'s would meet with their just deserts." On 10 December 1875, three men and two women were attacked in their home by masked men. Author Anthony Lukas wrote that the attack seemed "to reflect the strategy outlined in Pinkerton's memo".
The victims had been secretly identified by McParland as Mollies. One of the men was killed in the house, and the other two supposed Mollies were wounded but able to escape. A woman, the wife of one of the reputed Mollies, was assassinated.
McParland was outraged that the information he had been providing had found its way into the hands of indiscriminate killers. When McParland heard details of the attack at the house, he protested in a letter to his Pinkerton supervisor. He did not object that Mollies might be assassinated as a result of his labor spying—they "got their just deserving". McParland resigned when it became apparent the vigilantes were willing to commit the "murder of women and children", whom he deemed innocent victims. His letter stated:
Friday: This morning at 8 A.M. I heard that a crowd of masked men had entered Mrs. O'Donnell's house ... and had killed James O'Donnell alias Friday, Charles O'Donnell and James McAllister, also Mrs. McAllister whom they took out of the house and shot ... Now as for the O'Donnells I am satisfied they got their just deserving. I reported what those men were. I give all information about them so clear that the courts could have taken hold of their case at any time but the witnesses were too cowardly to do it. I have also in the interests of God and humanity notified you months before some of those outrages were committed still the authorities took no hold of the matter. Now I wake up this morning to find that I am the murderer of Mrs. McAllister. What had a woman to do with the case—did the in their worst time shoot down women. If I was not here the Vigilante Committee would not know who was guilty and when I find them shooting women in their thirst for blood I hereby tender my resignation to take effect as soon as this message is received. It is not cowardice that makes me resign but just let them have it now I will no longer interfere as I see that one is the same as the other and I am not going to be an accessory to the murder of women and children. I am sure the will not spare the women so long as the Vigilante has shown an example.
There appears to be an error in the detective's report, which also constituted his resignation letter, of the vigilante incident: he failed to convey the correct number of deaths. Two of the three men "were wounded but able to escape". In the note, McParland reported that these two had been killed by vigilantes. Such notes, possibly containing erroneous or as-yet-unverified information, were forwarded daily by Pinkerton operatives. The content was routinely made available to Pinkerton clients in typed reports. Pinkerton detective reports now in the manuscripts collection at the Lackawanna County Historical Society reveal that Pinkerton had been spying on miners for the mine owners in Scranton. Pinkerton operatives were required to send a report each day. The daily reports were typed by staff, and conveyed to the client for a ten-dollar fee. Such a process was relied upon to "warrant the continuance of the operative's services".
McParland believed his daily reports had been made available to the anti-Molly vigilantes. Benjamin Franklin, McParland's Pinkerton supervisor, declared himself "anxious to satisfy that nothing to do with " McParland was prevailed upon not to resign. Frank Wenrich, a first lieutenant with the Pennsylvania National Guard, was arrested as the leader of the vigilante attackers, but released on bail. Another miner, Hugh McGeehan, a 21-year-old who had been secretly identified as a killer by McParland, was fired upon and wounded by unknown assailants. Later, the McGeehan family's house was attacked by gunfire.
The strike fails
The union was nearly broken by the imprisonment of its leadership and by attacks conducted by vigilantes against the strikers. Gowen "deluged the newspapers with stories of murder and arson" committed by the Molly Maguires. The press produced stories of strikes in Illinois, in Jersey City, and in the Ohio minefields, all inspired by the Mollies. The stories were widely believed. In Schuylkill County, the striking miners and their families were starving to death. A striker wrote to a friend: Since I last saw you, I have buried my youngest child, and on the day before its death there was not one bit of victuals in the house with six children.
Andrew Roy in his book A History of the Coal Miners of the United States noted:
Hundreds of families rose in the morning to breakfast on a crust of bread and a glass of water, who did not know where a bite of dinner was to come from. Day after day, men, women, and children went to the adjoining woods to dig roots and pick up herbs to keep body and soul together...
After six months, the strike was defeated and the miners returned to work, accepting the 20 percent cut in pay. But miners belonging to the Ancient Order of Hibernians continued the fight. McParland acknowledged increasing support for the Mollies in his reports: Men, who last winter would not notice a Molly Maguire, are now glad to take them by the hand and make much of them. If the bosses exercise tyranny over the men they appear to look to the association for help. Lukas observes that the defeat was humiliating, and traces the roots of violence by the Mollies in the aftermath of the failed strike: Judges, lawyers, and policemen were overwhelmingly Welsh, German, or English ... When the coalfield Irish sought to remedy their grievances through the courts, they often met delays, obfuscation, or doors slammed in their faces. No longer looking to these institutions for justice, they turned instead to the Mollies.... Before the summer was over, six men—all Welsh or German—paid with their lives.
Authors Richard O. Boyer and Herbert M. Morais argue that the killings were not one-sided:
Militant miners often disappeared, their bodies sometimes being found later in deserted mine shafts.
McParland penetrates the "inner circle"
After months of little progress, McParland reported some plans by the "inner circle". Gomer James, a Welshman, had shot and wounded one of the Mollies, and plans were formulated for a revenge killing. But the wheels of revenge were grinding slowly. And there was other violence:
November was a bloody month what with the miners on strike.... In the three days around November 18, a Mollie was found dead in the streets of Carbondale, north of Scranton, a man had his throat cut, an unidentified man was crucified in the woods, a mining boss mauled, a man murdered in Scranton, and three men of were guilty of a horror against an old woman, and an attempt to assassinate a Mollie by the name of Dougherty, followed and at once demanded the murder of W. M. Thomas, whom he blamed for the attempt.
On the last day of the month, with Gowen's strikebreakers pouring in, the Summit telegraph office was burned, a train derailed, and McParland advised to send in uniformed police to preserve order.
A plan to destroy a railroad bridge was abandoned due to the presence of outsiders. The Irish miners had been forbidden to set foot in the public square in Mahanoy City, and a plan to occupy it by force of arms was considered and then abandoned. In the meantime, a messenger reported that Thomas, the would-be killer of one of the Mollies, had been killed in the stable where he worked. McParland himself had been asked to supply the hidden killers with food and whiskey, according to the detective. According to Horan and Swiggett:
The probability is that as a man, "Bully Bill Thomas", a Welshman, was no better than his enemies, but he was remarkable in other ways. His killers, leaving him for dead in the stable door, were not aware until two days later that he had survived.
Another plan was in the works, this one against two night watchmen, Pat McCarron and Benjamin Franklin Yost, a Tamaqua Borough Patrolman. Jimmy Kerrigan and Thomas Duffy were said to despise Yost, who had arrested them on numerous occasions. Yost was shot as he put out a street light, which at that time necessitated climbing the lamp pole. Before he died, he reported that his killers were Irish, but were not Kerrigan or Duffy. McParland recorded that a Mollie named William Love had killed a Justice of the Peace, surnamed Gwyther, in Girardville. Unknown Mollies were accused of wounding a man outside his saloon in Shenandoah. Gomer James was killed while tending bar. Then, McParland recorded, a group of Mollies reported to him that they had killed a mine boss named Sanger, and another man who was with him. Forewarned of the attempt, McParland had sought to arrange protection for the mine boss, but was unsuccessful.
The trials
When Gowen first hired the Pinkerton agency, he had claimed the Molly Maguires were so powerful they had made powerful financial sources and organized labour "their puppets". When the trials of the alleged puppet masters opened, Gowen had himself appointed as special prosecutor.
The first trials were for the killing of John P. Jones. The three defendants, Michael J. Doyle, Jimmy Kerrigan and Edward Kelly, had elected to receive separate trials. Doyle went first, with his trial beginning 18 January 1876, and a conviction for first-degree murder being returned on 1 February. Before the trial was completed, Kerrigan had decided to become a state's witness and gave details about the murders of Jones and Yost. Kelly's trial began on 27 March, and ended in conviction on 6 April 1876.
The first trial of defendants McGeehan, Carroll, Duffy, James Boyle, and James Roarity for the killing of Yost commenced in May 1876. Yost had not recognized the men who attacked him. Although Kerrigan has since been described, along with Duffy, as hating the night watchman enough to plot his murder, Kerrigan became a state's witness and testified against the union leaders and other miners.
However, Kerrigan's wife testified in the courtroom that her husband had committed the murder. She testified that she refused to provide her husband with clothing while he was in prison, because he had "picked innocent men to suffer for his crime". She stated that she was speaking out voluntarily, and was only interested in telling the truth about the murder. Gowen cross-examined her, but could not shake her testimony. Others supported her testimony amid speculation that Kerrigan was receiving special treatment due to the fact that McParland was engaged to his sister-in-law, Mary Ann Higgins.
This trial was declared a mistrial due to the death of one of the jurors. A new trial was granted two months later. During that trial, Fanny Kerrigan did not testify. The five defendants were sentenced to death. Kerrigan was allowed to go free. The trial of Tom Munley for the murders of Thomas Sanger, a mine foreman, and William Uren, relied entirely on the testimony of McParland, and the eyewitness account of a witness. The witness stated under oath that he had seen the murderer clearly, and that Munley was not the murderer. Yet the jury accepted McParland's testimony that Munley had privately confessed to the murder. Munley was sentenced to death.
Another four miners were put on trial and were found guilty on a charge of murder. McParland had no direct evidence, but had recorded that the four admitted their guilt to him. Kelly was being held in a cell for murder, and he was reputedly quoted as saying: "I would squeal on Jesus Christ to get out of here." In return for his testimony, the murder charge against him was dismissed.
In November, McAllister was convicted. McParland's testimony in the Molly Maguires trials helped send ten men to the gallows. The defence attorneys repeatedly sought to portray McParland as an agent provocateur who was responsible for not warning people of their imminent deaths. For his part, McParland testified that the AOH and the Mollies were one and the same, and the defendants were guilty of the murders.
In 1905, during the Colorado Labor Wars, in preparation for a trial, McParland told another witness, Harry Orchard, that "Kelly the Bum" not only had won his freedom for testifying against union leaders, he had been given $1,000 (~$33,911 in 2023) to "subsidize a new life abroad". McParland had been attempting to convince Orchard to accuse Bill Haywood, leader of the Western Federation of Miners (WFM), of conspiracy to commit another murder. Unlike the Mollies, the WFM's union leadership was acquitted. Orchard alone was convicted, and spent the rest of his life in prison.
The executions
On 21 June 1877, six men were hanged in the prison at Pottsville, and four at Mauch Chunk, Carbon County. A scaffold had been erected in the Carbon County Jail. State militia with fixed bayonets surrounded the prisons and the scaffolds. Miners arrived with their wives and children from the surrounding areas, walking through the night to honour the accused, and by nine o'clock "the crowd in Pottsville stretched as far as one could see." The families were silent, which was "the people's way of paying tribute" to those about to die.
Thomas Munley's aged father had walked more than 10 mi (16 km) from Gilberton to assure his son that he believed in his innocence. Munley's wife arrived a few minutes after they closed the gate, and they refused to open it even for close relatives to say their final goodbyes. She screamed at the gate with grief, throwing herself against it until she collapsed, but she was not allowed to pass. Four (Alexander Campbell, John "Yellow Jack" Donahue, Michael J. Doyle and Edward J. Kelly) were hanged on 21 June 1877, at a Carbon County prison in Mauch Chunk (renamed Jim Thorpe in 1953), for the murders of John P. Jones and Morgan Powell, both mine bosses, following a trial later described by a Carbon County judge, John P. Lavelle, as follows:
The Molly Maguire trials were a surrender of state sovereignty. A private corporation initiated the investigation through a private detective agency. A private police force arrested the alleged defenders, and private attorneys for the coal companies prosecuted them. The state provided only the courtroom and the gallows.
Campbell, just before his execution, allegedly slapped a muddy handprint on his cell wall stating "There is proof of my words. That mark of mine will never be wiped out. It will remain forever to shame the county for hanging an innocent man." Doyle and Hugh McGeehan were led to the scaffold. They were followed by Thomas Munley, James Carroll, James Roarity, James Boyle, Thomas Duffy, Kelly, Campbell, and "Yellow Jack" Donahue. Judge Dreher presided over the trials.
Ten more condemned, Thomas Fisher, John "Black Jack" Kehoe, Patrick Hester, Peter McHugh, Patrick Tully, Peter McManus, Dennis Donnelly, Martin Bergan, James McDonnell and Charles Sharpe, were hanged at Mauch Chunk, Pottsville, Bloomsburg and Sunbury over the next two years. Peter McManus was the last Molly Maguire to be tried and convicted for murder at the Northumberland County Courthouse in 1878.
Rhodes's account of the Mollies
Many accounts of the Molly Maguires that were written during, or shortly after, the period offer no admission that there was widespread violence in the area, that vigilantism existed, nor that violence was carried out against the miners. In 1910, industrialist and historian James Ford Rhodes published a major scholarly analysis in the leading professional history journal:
The aftermath
When organized labour helped elect Terence V. Powderly as mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania two years after the Molly Maguire trials, the opposition vilified his team as the "Molly Maguire Ticket".
In 1979, Pennsylvania Governor Milton Shapp granted a posthumous pardon to John "Black Jack" Kehoe after an investigation by the Pennsylvania Board of Pardons. The request for a pardon was made by one of Kehoe's descendants. John Kehoe had proclaimed his innocence until his death. The Board recommended the pardon after investigating Kehoe's trial and the circumstances surrounding it. Shapp praised Kehoe, saying the men called "Molly Maguires" were "martyrs to labour" and heroes in the struggle to establish a union and fair treatment for workers. And "... t is impossible for us to imagine the plight of the 19th Century miners in Pennsylvania's anthracite region" and that it was Kehoe's popularity among the miners that led Gowen "'to fear, despise and ultimately destroy '".
In popular culture
- Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes novel The Valley of Fear is partly based on James McParland's infiltration of the Mollies.
- The Molly Maguires, a feature film starring Richard Harris as James McParland and Sean Connery as Molly leader Jack Kehoe was released in 1970.
- A 1965 episode of The Big Valley titled "Heritage" portrayed the Mollies as active at a fictitious mine in the Sierra in the 1870s, in which the Irish miners protest the use of Chinese labourers during a mine strike.
- George Korson, a folklorist and journalist, wrote several songs on the topic including his composition Minstrels of the Mine Patch, which has a section on the Molly Maguires: "Coal Dust on the Fiddle".
- Irish folk band The Dubliners have a song called "Molly Maguires".
- The Irish Rovers' song, "Lament for the Molly Maguires", is on their album Upon a Shamrock Shore.
- They were mentioned by Dr. Donald "Ducky" Mallard and Special Agent Jack Sloane on The Season 17 episode of NCIS entitled "Musical Chairs"
See also
- Anti-Rent War
- Battle of Blair Mountain
- Coal strike of 1902
- Coal Wars
- Colorado Labor Wars
- Copper Country strike of 1913–1914
- Cripple Creek miners' strike of 1894
- Harlan County War
- Illinois coal wars
- Mining in the United States
- Secret society
- Scotch Cattle, miners in 19th-century South Wales who would attack colleagues who worked during strikes.
- West Virginia coal wars
- List of worker deaths in United States labor disputes
Footnotes
- Rayback, p. 133
- Kenny, pp. 10, 14–17, 23, 80.
- Kenny, pp. 16–18.
- ^ Kenny, pp. 18–21.
- Kenny, pp. 31–39.
- Kenny, pp. 20–21.
- Kenny, pp. 22–23.
- "Rebecca riots – The National Archives". nationalarchives.gov.uk.
- ^ "The Molly Maguires". politics.ie. p. 3.
- Molly Maguires, politics.ie; accessed 8 September 2015.
- McIlwee, Michael (2011). The Liverpool Underworld: Crime in the City, 1750–1900. Liverpool University Press. pp. 121–122. ISBN 978-1-84631-700-2.
- Goldstein, Robert Justin (2001). Political Repression in Modern America. University of Illinois Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-252-06964-1.
- ^ Horan, pp. 151–152.
- Kenny, Kevin. Making Sense of the Molly Maguires, 1998, pp. 3–5.
- Celona, Thomas (22 October 2010). "Philip Rosen lectures on the Molly Maguires in Fort Washington". Montgomery News, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. Retrieved 22 October 2010.
- Rayback, Joseph G. (1959–1966). A History of American Labor. The Free Press, MacMillan. p. 126.
- Rayback, p. 133
- Horan, James David (1952). The Pinkerton detective Story. Heinemann. p. 129.
- "Stories from PA history". ExplorePAHistory.com. WITF, Inc. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
- ^ Cahn, p. 124.
- ^ Horan, p. 127.
- ^ Boyer and Morais, pp. 51–52.
- Horan, p. 125.
- Boyer and Morais, pp. 44–45.
- Boyer and Morais, p. 46.
- Boyer and Morais, p. 47.
- ^ Boyer and Morais, p. 45.
- Horan, pp. 126–129.
- Rayback, p. 129.
- Horan, pp. 130–33.
- Morn, pp. 94–95.
- ^ Boyer and Morais, p. 51.
- ^ Horan, p. 151.
- Boyer and Morais, p. 48.
- Kenny, pp. 5, 10.
- ^ Anthony Lukas, Big Trouble, 1997, pp. 179, 182.
- Kenny, pp. 17–18, 25–26.
- Lukas, p. 178.
- Kenny, p. 111.
- Kenny, p. 112.
- Kenny, pp. 112–113.
- Kenny, pp. 116–117.
- Kenny, pp. 117, 199–200.
- Lukas, pp. 183–184.
- Lukas, p. 184
- Horan, p. 152. In the letter, McParland referred to the Molly Maguires as "Sleepers".
- Friedman, Morris. The Pinkerton Labor Spy, 1907, p. 14.
- The Execution, life and Times of Patrick ODonnell, ISBN 979-8703105542.
- Horan, pp. 152–153.
- Later, when McParland tried the same methods he used against miners in Pennsylvania against miners in Idaho, defence attorney Clarence Darrow exposed intimidation of the miners leading them into making false confessions. Linder, Douglas O. The Trial of William "Big Bill" Haywood
- Horan, pp. 153, 157. McGeehan lived with a Mrs. Boyle, a "young widow".
- ^ Boyer and Morais, p. 52.
- Andrew Roy
- ^ Boyer and Morais, p. 53.
- Lukas, p. 182.
- Lukas, p. 183.
- ^ Horan, p. 139.
- Horan, p. 143.
- Patrolman Benjamin K. Yost profile, odmp.org; accessed 8 September 2015.
- Horan, pp. 143–149.
- The Pinkerton Story, James D. Horan and Howard Swiggett, 1951, p. 130. Horan and Swiggett described the power Gowen attributed to the Mollies as "sway".
- Boyer and Morais, Labor's Untold Story, 1974, p. 54.
- Jensen, Richard (September 2001). "Rhodes Molly Maguires (1909)". University of Illinois at Chicago. Archived from the original on 8 December 2008. Retrieved 31 August 2011.
- Horan, p. 144.
- Boyer and Morais, pp. 54–55.
- Boyer and Morais, pp. 55–56.
- Boyer and Morais, p. 55.
- Kenny, pp. 232–233.
- Kenny, pp. 234–235.
- Carlson, Peter. Roughneck, The Life and Times of Big Bill Haywood, 1983, p. 91.
- "Harry Orchard, governor slayer, succumbs in state penitentiary". Lewiston Morning Tribune. Associated Press. 14 April 1954. p. 1.
- Lavelle, John P. (1994). The Hard Coal Docket: 150 Years of the Bench & Bar of Carbon County (1843–1993). Times News.
- Jensen, Per (2009). The Ethology of Domestic Animals. "Modular Text" series. Wallingford, England: Centre for Agriculture and Bioscience International. ISBN 978-1-84593-536-8.
- "National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania". CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Archived from the original (Searchable database) on 21 July 2007. Retrieved 27 May 2012. Note: This includes Helen J. Schaffer; Elizabeth H. Kury & James J. Rorke, Jr. (July 1974). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory-Nomination Form: Northumberland County Courthouse" (PDF). Retrieved 27 May 2012.
- Originally published in American Historical Review (April 1910; copyright expired)
- Rayback, p. 138.
- "Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission website". state.pa.us.
- Kenny, p. 284.
- Bloom, Joseph (12 June 2006). "Molly MacGuires (sic) in Pennsylvania Coal Regions". Retrieved 12 September 2015.
Further reading
Contemporary sources
- Dewees, Francis P. The Molly Maguires: The Origin, Growth, and Character of the Organization. Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott, 1877.
- Pinkerton, Allan; The Mollie Maguires and the Detectives; New York: G. W. Dillingham Co. Publishers, 1877.
Scholarly secondary sources
- Bimba, Anthony. The Molly Maguires. New York: International Publishers, 1932.
- Broehl, Jr., Wayne G. The Molly Maguires, Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1964.
- Gudelunas, Jr., William Anthony, and William G. Shade. Before the Molly Maguires: The Emergence of the Ethnoreligious Factor in the Politics of the Lower Anthracite Region: 1844–1872. New York: Arno Press, 1976.
- Foner, Phillip. A History of the Labor Movement in the United States: Volume 1, From Colonial Times to the Founding of the American Federation of Labor. New York: International Publishers, 1947.
- Kenny, Kevin. Making Sense of the Molly Maguires, New York: Oxford University Press, 1998.
- Kenny, Kevin. "The Molly Maguires in Popular Culture", Journal of American Ethnic History, vol. 14, no. 4 (1995), pp. 27–46.
- Kenny, Kevin. "The Molly Maguires and the Catholic Church", Labor History, vol. 36, no. 3 (1995), pp. 345–376.
- Lens, Sidney. The Labor Wars: From the Molly Maguires to the Sitdowns. New York: Doubleday, 1973.
- Morn, Frank. The Eye that Never Sleeps: A History of the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 1982.
- Rayback, Joseph G. A History of American Labor. Rev. and exp. ed. New York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1974. ISBN 1-299-50529-5
External links
- Audio interview with Irish-American historian and author John Kearns about the Molly Maguires
- Brief history of the Molly Maguires
- A Selection of Links for Coal Mining, Mine Fires, & The Molly Maguires
- Trial in Pottsville
- Ohio State University historical article on the Pinkerton infiltration
- Mollies and Black Diamonds
- The Molly Maguires and the Detectives (1877)
- Documents in the Hagley Library Digital Archives
- 19th century in Pennsylvania
- Anthracite Coal Region of Pennsylvania
- History of Carbon County, Pennsylvania
- History of Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania
- Irish-American culture in Pennsylvania
- Irish-American history
- Irish secret societies
- Miners' labor disputes in the United States
- Coal mining in Pennsylvania
- Tamaqua, Pennsylvania
- Working-class culture in Pennsylvania