The Pressed Steel Car Strike of 1909 was an American labor dispute which ran from July to September in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The strike was triggered on July 10th, a payday on which many workers were shorted by the Pressed Steel Car Company.

The strike began on July 13th, and grew to include more than 8,000 workers, 3,000 of whom were also from the Standard Steel Car Company. By the next day, 500 cops began working to protect strikebreakers and evict strikers from company houses. The New York Times called the immigrant workforce "savages" and "illiterate foreigners".

Management refused to speak with the workers' representatives and James Rider, manager of the Pressed Steel Car Company, responded to their strike by hiring Pearl Bergoff, a notorious owner of a strike-breaking paramilitary force.

The workers were joined by members of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), including founders William Trautmann and "Big Bill" Haywood, as well as "Smiling Joe" Ettor.

The walkout drew national attention when, on this day in 1909, a bloody battle took place between strikers, private security agents, and the Pennsylvania State Police. The violence began after strikers boarded a trolley to search for scabs and they were confronted by an armed deputy, who opened fire. In the fighting that followed, between 12 and 26 people were killed.

The strike was settled on September 8th when Pressed Steel Car agreed to a wage increase, the posting of wage rates, and ended abuses in company housing practices. This labor dispute would be a precursor to the Great Steel Strike of 1919.

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    • heartheartbreak [fae/faer]
      ·
      1 year ago

      You could add a squid game premise where there's like a reward or something at the end and they're in a race. Or like a Indiana Jones Lara Croft element where it's like a ancient artifact whateber

    • daisy
      ·
      1 year ago

      okay the producer was somewhat interested in my pitch for the chutes and ladders film adaptation, but the studio is looking more towards a grimdark approach for this title

      An underground complex. Twelve maze-like levels below ground. Thirteen starting competitors each given a flashlight. Each level has intricately-detailed ladders leading to the upper level through shafts - but only enough ladders for the remainder of the competitors minus one. At the top of the ladder is a hatch that can be permanently locked from the upper level.

      There are chutes, but the fate of those who fall into one is never shown.

      The prize for a single winner reaching the surface is unspecified, but hinted to be lavish. The prize for multiple winners who collaborate to reach the surface is to go back to the bottom level without a flashlight in the next round.

      The big advantage here is that it can be filmed really cheap. You just need dark hallways that all look alike, and the final surface exit can be filmed in some forest preserve somewhere.

      You're welcome, Hollywood. I want royalties.