The governmet had the authority to end labor strikes
During the Homestead Act of 1892 the state militia was sent to end the strike.
The state militia was sent in to end the strike. Apex
2003
The Haymarket Strike ended with a bombing in which a policeman was killed. In the ensuing riot, about 50 strikers were killed with hundreds more injured.
The Pullman strike of 1894 ended when the Federal government issued an injunction to end it.
The Pullman Strike, after which the Illinois Supreme Court required George Pullman to end his ownership of the "company town" of Pullman, Illinois.
Pullman Strike (1894)
The Pullman strike of 1894 ended when the Federal government issued an injunction to end it.
the rail road strike and the pullman strike
President Grover Cleveland ordered U.S. Marshals and U.S. Army troops to end the strike because it was affecting the transportation of the U.S. mail.The Pullman Strike ended as a direct result of the violent intervention of federal troops deployed by President Grover Cleveland.
The governmet had the authority to end labor strikes
Eugene Debs Eugene Debs
The Pullman Strike began in May 1894 when workers at the Pullman Company in Chicago went on strike to protest wage cuts and high rents in company-owned housing. The American Railway Union, led by Eugene V. Debs, supported the strike by refusing to handle trains that carried Pullman cars, which disrupted rail traffic nationwide. The federal government intervened, dispatching troops to break the strike, leading to violent clashes and several deaths. The strike effectively ended in July 1894 after the intervention, with the union's defeat marking a significant setback for labor movements at the time.
York Pullman ended in 2000.
The first labor strike to end with the president intervening on behalf of the workers was the Great Railroad Strike of 1877. President Rutherford B. Hayes sent federal troops to quell the strike and ordered the strikers to disperse, effectively ending the strike. This marked a turning point in labor relations in the United States and demonstrated the government's willingness to intervene in labor disputes.
Grover Cleveland sent in troops to stop the Pullman Strike because it had become a violent, national nightmare with railroad workers refusing to service any trains with Pullman cars. Using the pretext of making sure the mail would get through, the federal troops effectively ended the Pullman Strike.