American History Tellers - The Pinkerton Detective Agency | Brothers and Sons | 2
Episode Date: May 15, 2024In the mid-1870s the Pinkerton Detective Agency’s fame was growing, and founder Allan Pinkerton began to pen bestselling books that promoted his and the agency’s crime-fighting image even... more. But after Pinkerton died in 1884, his sons took over and expanded the business, providing guards and watchmen to protect railroads, mines, and factories. By the early 1900s, Pinkertons had become feared labor spies and strike-busters. It wasn’t long before their brutal and deadly methods began to attract scrutiny from the press and federal regulators.Pre-order your copy of the new American History Tellers book, The Hidden History of the White House, for behind-the-scenes stories of some of the most dramatic events in American history—set right inside the house where it happened.Listen to American History Tellers on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Experience all episodes ad-free and be the first to binge the newest season. Unlock exclusive early access by joining Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial today by visiting https://wondery.com/links/american-history-tellers/ now. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Imagine it's March 17, 1874.
You and your brother John are hiding out at your cousin's home outside Roscoe, Missouri.
A week ago, you staged a robbery at Gad's Hill, but it went wrong, and a Pinkerton agent was killed.
You decided it was best to lay low for a while, but about an hour ago,
three men claiming to be cattle buyers visited
the house. Something about them made you suspicious. They were heavily armed and seemed too well
mannered for cattlemen. So you and your brother decided to go after them and find out who they
really are. You catch up to the men at the top of Chalk Hill Road. Hey, you there, stop! One of the
men looks back, but then turns and gives spurs to his horse.
I said stop!
Your brother takes a shot at the man.
You see his hat fly off his head, but he keeps riding.
The other two men come to a stop, then turn around and head back toward you.
The older of the two approaches on his horse.
Now, why'd you go and shoot? We're just passing through here, mister. No law against that.
I told him to stop. He didn't listen. You did, though. Smart decision. Now tell me what you go and shoot? We're just passing through here, mister. No law against that. I told him to stop.
He didn't listen.
You did, though.
Smart decision.
Now, tell me what you're doing here.
Well, since you're so concerned, we're here to buy cattle from the Sims Ranch.
Is that right?
Then why are you headed away from the Sims Ranch?
It's back that way.
Oh, is it now?
I guess we got turned around, is all.
You don't look like ranchers to me.
So drop your guns.
Throw them in the dirt.
Or else... You cock your shotgun and aim it at the man's chest, or else the man and his friend
exchange looks. The older one nods and they drop their guns on the ground. As they do, you notice
that one of the guns is a British tranter revolver. Now that there's a pretty fancy weapon for a ranch
man. Fess up. Who are you really?
Pinkerton? Maybe you haven't heard the news. Pinkertons and sheriff's deputies aren't welcome
in these parts. You turn to your brother. Go after that runaway. I'll cover these two.
Suddenly, the man on the chestnut horse whips out a small Smith & Wesson from his coat,
and before you even notice what's happening, he shoots and misses. You fire back and catch him
in the shoulder, but his horse is spooked and sprints off into the woods. His companion takes
off in the same direction. Come on, John, let's go after him. You chase after the man on the chestnut
horse while your brother exchanges gunfire with the other man, but then suddenly the shooting
stops. You turn back to see your brother has killed the other man, but he's not in great shape either.
John, John, you're hit!
Your brother falls backward off his horse and onto the dusty road.
You realize you're all alone.
You're pretty sure your brother and another Pinkerton are dead.
You don't want to be next.
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Buy It Now. Stream free on Freebie and Prime Video. From Wondery, I'm Lindsey Graham, and this is American History Tellers, our history, your story. In the mid-19th century, after working as spies for the Union during the Civil War,
Alan Pinkerton and his agents shifted their focus to hunting the nation's most notorious
Wild West outlaws, like Jesse James and Butch Cassidy in The Sundance Kid.
Along the way, they established themselves as the nation's best-known
crime fighters, a reputation that was bolstered by the best-selling books Alan Pinkerton wrote
about his adventures and those of his detectives. But after Alan Pinkerton died in 1884, his sons
William and Robert took over the business. Before long, Pinkerton's sons shifted the agency's focus
again, away from hiring out detectives and
undercover operatives to fight crime, to increasingly providing guards and watchmen
for railroads, mines, and factories. And soon, these guards of the agency's new protective arm
became enmeshed in some of the nation's biggest labor battles. Pinkertons became feared anti-labor
spies and strikebusters, and a tool for wealthy corporate barons seeking to undermine labor activists.
As a result of the brutal and sometimes deadly methods
that Pinkertons employed in these disputes,
they began to attract scrutiny from union leaders,
the press, and federal regulators.
And after Pinkerton guards were blamed for the deaths of innocent people
during labor strikes, the agency's reputation took a hit.
The word Pinkerton began to evoke a mercenary thug, and as time went on, the agency struggled
to reclaim its former reputation and the public's trust. This is episode two of our three-part
series on the Pinkerton Detective Agency, Brothers and Sons.
In the years after the Civil War, the Pinkerton Detective Agency maintained a near monopoly as the nation's best-known investigative force,
and the agency's founder, Alan Pinkerton's personal reputation soared.
He was often referred to in newspapers as Alan Pinkerton with having recovered more than $1 million over the years for one of his most trusting clients, the Adams Express Company.
The article also gushed about Pinkerton's Civil War spying, saying that during the war he rendered
many important services to the country, having charge of the Secret Service. And of course,
Pinkerton didn't shy away from this glowing PR. In 1868, he sent several newspapers copies of letters he'd exchanged with Samuel Felton,
the railroad president who'd hired Pinkerton to protect President-elect Lincoln back in 1861.
The result was a series of flattering stories about Pinkerton's success
in breaking up the so-called Baltimore Plot to assassinate Lincoln.
All across the country, the press loved Pinkerton's stories,
which made for great headlines, and newspapers themselves contributed to the mystique of the
bold Pinkerton operatives, depicting them as hell-bent on rounding up gangs like the Reno
Brothers and protecting the railroads from thieves, the most notorious of which were Jesse James and
his brother Frank, who often partnered with brothers Jim, John, and Cole
Younger. The James and Younger boys had been guerrilla fighters for the South during the Civil
War and remained sympathetic to the former Confederacy. They terrorized small towns
throughout Missouri in the late 1860s and early 1870s, robbing banks and trains and killing anyone
who got in their way. In early 1874, the Adams Express Company once again hired
Pinkerton to find the men who kept robbing their trains, and in March, Pinkerton sent Agent Joseph
Witcher to Liberty, Missouri to investigate. Witcher hoped to infiltrate the gang by pretending
to be an itinerant farm worker. He checked in with the local sheriff's office before riding
toward the James family farm. The next day, his body was found by the side of the road. Though Witcher's killers were never identified,
Alan Pinkerton suspected the James Younger gang, and one newspaper claimed there was no doubt in
the minds of the people of Clay County that Witcher was murdered by one of the James boys.
Days later, Pinkerton sent another agent and two deputies to Missouri. On March 16, 1874, the three men, pretending to be cattle buyers,
were confronted by Jim and John Younger on horseback.
A wild shootout erupted on the side of Chalk Hill Road,
and within minutes, John Younger and one of the Pinkerton deputies was dead.
Pinkerton agent Louis Lull was shot and died the next day.
That left Pinkerton furious that the James gang shot and died the next day. That left Pinkerton furious
that the James gang was responsible for the death of his agents. He continued to pursue the gang,
even after the Adams Express Company decided to cut its losses and stop paying the agency.
But finally, in January of 1875, a Pinkerton posse raided the James family farm in Clay County,
Missouri. One member of the posse tossed an explosive device through a window of the family home.
It exploded, killing Jesse's eight-year-old half-brother and badly injuring his mother.
In the wake of this boy's death, many condemned the Pinkertons' aggressive tactics
and sympathized with the James Younger gang, who were becoming rural folk heroes.
And Jesse James stoked the
public outrage. He wrote to newspapers and flaunted his infamy. During one train robbery,
he told the engineer, tell Alan Pinkerton and his detectives to look for us in hell.
But Pinkerton refused to back down, writing, the James and Youngers are desperate men.
When we meet, it must be the death of one or both of us.
Into the late 1870s, Alan Pinkerton continued to recover from the effects of the stroke he had suffered in 1869. While his sons took on more day-to-day management of the agency,
Pinkerton turned to writing. Still partially paralyzed on one side, he dictated stories to his secretary about his and
his agent's heroic deeds. His first book, The Expressman and the Detective, was published in
1874. It was an account of his first big bust working for the Adams Express Company. A year
later, he published The Somnambulist and the Detective, which sold 15,000 copies in its first
few months. Many books would follow, including The Spy, which sold 15,000 copies in its first few months.
Many books would follow, including The Spy of the Rebellion,
his account of the Baltimore Plot, and his Civil War espionage.
Pinkerton called these best-selling books non-fiction
and insisted that the events he depicted actually transpired.
They were well-reviewed in the newspapers
and helped shape the public's perception of the iconic hard-boiled detective.
But over time, readers and critics came to suspect that the author had taken liberties with the facts. Pinkerton stood by his stories, but future historians would reveal that he and
the ghostwriters he dictated his books to often stretched the truth, presenting exaggerated and
semi-fictional accounts of his exploits. But one thing that was absolutely true was the rigor required to run the agency.
While Alan Pinkerton published books, his sons, William and Robert, took on the day-to-day
responsibilities.
William took charge of the Chicago office, and Robert started running things in New York.
The sons quickly discovered that the family business was struggling financially, and in
fact was on the verge of bankruptcy.
Despite the positive publicity and the success of their cases,
business had been hurt by a nationwide depression.
But in other instances, costs rose when Alan Pinkerton,
determined to bring criminals to justice,
sometimes obsessively kept agents on a case
even after a bank or railroad company stopped paying for his services.
So to improve the agency's finances, Pinkerton's sons pushed their father to expand the business
beyond investigating crimes. They saw an opportunity for the agency to provide security
for railroads, mines, and factories. And soon they would hire scores of new employees as guards and
watchmen as they established a new protective patrol department, which proved a
lucrative enterprise. In the hands of Pinkerton's sons, company finances improved and the agency
became busier than ever and increasingly controversial. Imagine it's a cool spring
afternoon in early March 1876. You're an undercover Pinkerton detective posing as a coal miner
in the Shenandoah Mountains
of central Pennsylvania.
You're walking down the dusty main street
of the gritty village of Gerardville
on your way to a tavern
called the Hibernian House.
For more than a year,
you've been working to infiltrate
the Molly Maguires,
a secretive group of Irish labor activists
who've turned to violence and sabotage
in their fight for better pay and working conditions. You've been providing information to the coal company about the Mollies,
but you recently learned rumors have been spreading that you might be a spy. So you have to find a way
to prove your loyalty and maintain your cover. Today, you've decided to confront the powerful
leader of the local Mollie Maguires, John Kehoe, a fellow Irish immigrant and tavern owner
known as King of the Mollies. Kehoe has been telling other miners that you're a bad seed,
and one source told you that he even ordered his men to kill you. So as you enter Kehoe's tavern,
all heads turn and the place gets quiet. Feels like you've just walked into a lion's den.
Hello, Jack. I hear you've been spreading some rumors
about me. Can we talk? Well, look who it is. The mysterious man from, oh, where did you say you
were born? The old country, same as you. Same as me, you say. I came during the famine, but it's
never been clear when you came over or why. And what you did before, you graced us with your
presence. Oh, it's no mystery. I immigrated after the Civil War, worked in New York, and then...
And then you just show up here one day in cold country.
And before you know it, my men are getting arrested,
testifying against each other, charged with murder.
Who are you, really?
You know Kehoe isn't to be trifled with.
You've seen him turn ruthless in an instant.
So now you're worried you may not make it out of this tavern alive. What are you asking me, Jack? Just come out and say it. I've got nothing to hide. Well,
fair enough. Here's what I think. I think you're working for the other side, for those rotten coal
barons. I even think you're a detective. We're making progress, getting the coal company's
attention, but now the papers, they're calling us ruffians and red-handed assassins. All since
you walked through those doors.
Oh, it's not true, Jack, and you know it.
I'm as loyal to the cause as you are.
Is that so?
Can you prove you haven't been snitching on us to that mine owner, Gowan?
How am I supposed to do that in one of your backroom trials?
You've heard about Kehoe's unofficial trials.
It's a risky proposition to subject yourself to an interrogation.
But at this point, you may have no choice.
You're willing to be interrogated by me and my men.
Name the time and place.
All right, then.
Meet me back here tomorrow, one o'clock.
And we'll get to the bottom of this.
Maybe you can prove me wrong,
but you might want to pay a visit to Father O'Connor first
and give your last confession.
For two years, you've worked hard to earn the trust of these men, working the mines
with them, getting to know their families, going to mass and befriending their priests. You've even
participated in a few dangerous raids to try and prove your fealty, but you realize they might be
on to you. It could be time erupted in central Pennsylvania coal country.
Coal miners protested the low wages, long hours, and dangerous conditions they faced
working for Franklin B. Gowan, head of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal Company.
Gowan hired the Pinkerton Agency to investigate disruptive labor activists,
most of them Irish immigrants who belonged to a secret society called the Molly Maguires.
Pinkerton turned to James McParland, a tough and witty Irishman and ex-cop.
Using the alias James McKenna, McParland set about infiltrating the Molly Maguires
and its parent organization, the Ancient Order of the Hibernians, an Irish Catholic fraternity.
It took months of undercover work before McParland was admitted into the Mollies.
He then learned their coded greetings and secret handshakes and worked alongside them in the
dangerous coal mines. All the while, though, he submitted reports to his real boss using secret
drop spots. And when he was accused of being a spy, he fought back and convinced the leaders
of the Mollies that he was loyal to their cause, at one point even agreeing to an informal trial
to prove he was not a detective. After more than two years of dangerous undercover work,
McParland finally collected enough evidence for authorities to bring charges against Jack Kehoe
and other leaders of the Mollie Maguires. In early 1876, scores of Mollies
were arrested and charged with beating or killing mine superintendents, derailing railroad cars,
burning coal tipples, and destroying mining equipment. McParland gave damning testimony
at their trials, facing men who once trusted him. Dozens of Mollies were convicted, and 20 were
hanged, including Jack Kehoe, who was executed in June of 1877.
While historians have since questioned the true extent of the Mollies' criminal activity,
at the time, the highly publicized case generated a lot of new business for the Pinkertons,
helping restore the agency to financial solvency.
But it also highlighted the agency's growing allegiance with big business.
They were now firmly in bed with coal titans, railroad bosses, and bankers.
Critics began to view them as anti-labor and a private army for the capitalists.
And soon, the Pinkerton agency would give their critics even more reason for distrust. Now streaming.
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In the late 1870s, many Americans faced terrible working conditions and long hours.
The average workday was 10 hours a day, six days a week, and pay was low.
Labor unrest in the coal and railroad industries escalated
as workers across the nation pushed for better wages and a shorter eight-hour workday,
while corporations pushed back,
cracking down on unionization and labor reforms. The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 saw rail workers in Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia walk off the job and in some cases vandalize rail lines in
protest. In Redding, Pennsylvania, the state militia fired on striking workers and killed
at least a dozen people.
And right in the middle of all of these labor disputes was the Pinkerton Detective Agency.
By now, William and Robert Pinkerton were exerting more influence on the business.
Robert lobbied to continue expanding the company's protective patrol arm, which provided guards and watchmen to companies, towns, racetracks, factories, and railroads.
This expansion established two tiers within the agency. The top tier included well-trained investigators and detectives. The other included the guards and watchmen of the protective
department, many of them temporary employees on short-term assignments. But Alan Pinkerton
had initially resisted this turn away from the company's previous role as frontier lawman, and for good reason.
Into the 1880s, bandits on horseback continued to plague banks and railroads.
Many of these criminals formed gangs, including the Burrough Brothers of Alabama, the Daltons of Kansas, and the Sontags of California, and of course, the James Brothers.
Alan Pinkerton had continued to pursue his vendetta against them
and occasionally sent agents out after them when he received new information. But despite his best
efforts, he never managed to catch them. Still, their fate was sealed in 1882 when a fellow gang
member killed Jesse and Frank surrendered, finally crushing the James' younger gang for good.
But while Pinkerton's sons, William and Robert,
had cut their teeth chasing bandits on horseback, by the early 1880s, they knew that risky side of the business was in decline. They urged their father to let them move the agency further into
the security business. They also expanded their personal reputations as lawmen by taking on
overseas work, and William made a name for himself hunting down thieves in Europe.
So before long, Pinkerton's sons were leading the agency out of the Wild West era
and to greater heights and international acclaim.
But in the meantime, their father, Alan Pinkerton, had grown frail and sickly.
He and his wife, Joan, spent much of their time on the large estate they'd built outside Chicago,
called the Larches.
There, they entertained visitors,
including former President Ulysses S. Grant and railroad tycoon Cornelius Vanderbilt.
And despite his poor health, Pinkerton would not relinquish control of his business.
He still visited his Chicago office often, and continued to act as a leader of the agency,
firing off blustery letters to his sons and to various satellite offices.
One lingering sticking point between Allen and his sons was the hiring of female detectives.
In an 1881 letter, Allen expressed frustration that the agency wasn't hiring more women.
He wrote a set of instructions for the type of women to look for,
explaining the ideal female agent should be 35 years old,
an easy talker, about 5'6 with dark hair, clarifying,
I don't think blonde would do. He also joked that any female agent they hired should be single,
but if married, her husband must be dead. But a few years later, in 1883, Allen's son Robert
became the official superintendent of the New York office, and he resisted his father's call
to hire more women.
Allen scolded him for being disrespectful, telling Robert he could only call the shots after I'm dead and the sod is growing over my grave. It was only a year later, when Allen
Pinkerton was walking down a Chicago sidewalk, that he fell and bit his tongue. He developed
gangrene and died on July 1, 1884, at the age of 64.
He was buried in the family plot in Chicago beside his favorite female detective, Kate Warren.
Allen's wife, Joan, died two years later and was buried in a plot on her husband's other side.
After their father's death, Pinkerton's sons would launch the company into a new era,
shifting even further from frontier justice into the business of labor
crackdowns and strike-breaking. They opened new field offices in Boston, Kansas City, and Portland,
Oregon, and they continued to expand the agency's protective arm by supplying armed watchmen to
protect company property during labor strikes. Within just a few years, William and Robert
Pinkerton realized that this had become the most profitable part of their business, But they soon found out it could be just as deadly as chasing bandits.
Imagine it's late afternoon on May 3rd, 1886. You and a co-worker are picketing outside McCormick
Harvester, a huge complex of factories and brick warehouses in southwest Chicago. Two days ago, you joined tens of thousands of workers across the city
who all walked off the job to support the push for an eight-hour workday.
It feels like the labor movement is finally gaining momentum,
and you're hoping your bosses at McCormick might actually be willing to address your demands.
So today, you're back on the picket line.
You'd hoped to hear German newspaper editor and labor activist August Spies give a speech.
But today's crowd is bigger, louder, and angrier.
And Spies has been drowned out by the chants and taunts being hurled at the company guards.
You also notice there are Pinkertons patrolling the factory gates, swinging clubs at any strikers within reach.
You turn to your friend.
You know, I heard some scabs walked off the job yesterday, joined the picket line.
Old man McCormick can't hold out much longer.
He can't run a factory if everyone's on strike.
Yeah, but the Pinkertons just keep bringing in more scabs.
If we want to get McCormick's attention, we'll have to stop them from getting in and out of the factory.
Those Pinkertons are a real problem.
Bullies and thugs, if you ask me.
They're basically a secret police force.
Enemies of the working man.
Remember last year's strike?
One of them shot and killed that old man.
Yeah, I heard some of the other guys saying they'd like to see the Pinkertons become corpses.
Well, there's the end of Dave Bell.
His rotten scab should be coming out soon.
The crowd starts surging toward the factory gates,
pulling you and your friend along with it, as some protesters start throwing stones at the factory windows.
We should pull back. We're going to get crushed. A large group of scabs emerge from the gates.
Pinkertons with clubs in their hands and a few armed with pistols walk in front of them,
pushing the crowd back. No, this is no good. We ought to get out of here.
You whip your head around to see where
the gunshots are coming from and realize the police have arrived and are firing into the crowd.
All around you is chaos as strikers, scabs, pinkertons, and police devolve into a melee.
You turn back and look for your friend, but he's disappeared in a crush of bodies.
As you sprint away, you hope he makes it out alive too.
On May 1, 1886, workers from across the United States staged rallies in support of a formalized eight-hour workday. The event was considered to be the first May Day parade. Two days later in
Chicago, another rally was held outside the McCormick Harvester Works, a farming equipment manufacturer
where at least 1,400 workers were on strike. Thousands of other striking workers from across
the city joined the rally, but the event erupted in violence when some protesters began beating
Pinkerton guards who were escorting non-union workers out of the factory. Police arrived and
fired on the crowd, killing at least four people. And yet there was still more violence to come.
The very next night, over 3,000 people attended a rally at Haymarket Square on Chicago's west side.
Labor leaders gave speeches, including Auguste Spies, a newspaper editor and leader of the International Working People's Association.
Another speaker was Albert Parsons, an anarchist newspaper editor and militant
labor organizer. At around 10 p.m., police arrived on the scene and urged the crowd to disperse.
But then someone in the crowd threw a homemade bomb. It exploded, killing officers and bystanders.
Police opened fire and protesters fired back. When the smoke cleared, seven policemen and at least a dozen
others were dead and scores were injured. Eight labor leaders, including Auguste Spies and Albert
Parsons, were arrested, charged with murder, and sentenced to death. From his prison cell,
Parsons wrote letters and articles blaming the violent debacle on the dozens of armed Pinkerton
thugs who were among the officers who beat striking workers
and fired into the crowd.
He wrote,
Pinkerton's private army is used against working men and strikers,
used to shoot them, to arrest them.
This incident came to be known as the Haymarket Massacre.
In the aftermath,
labor leaders continued to blame Pinkerton guards and watchmen
for contributing to escalating labor violence.
But even after this massacre, the Pinkerton agency kept giving opponents ammunition for distrust.
In late 1886, a Pinkerton guard shot into a crowd of strikers at Chicago's stockyards
and killed a bystander. Months later, another Pinkerton guard fired at striking dock workers
outside Jersey City's Coal Wharfs, killing a 15-year-old boy. The labor leader Mary Harris,
known as Mother Jones, called the Pinkertons ex-convicts and hoodlums. And testifying during
the Haymarket trials, a Pinkerton agent admitted that laborers viewed him and his fellow agents
as cold-blooded murderers and the worst enemies the working man has. For William and Robert
Pinkerton, this period of turmoil raised questions about the kinds of men they'd been hiring.
When their father was running the agency, he paid close attention to staffing decisions.
Alan Pinkerton had set high standards for his operatives and wanted his men and women to be pure and above reproach.
And according to the guiding principles he drafted in the 1850s,
Alan Pinkerton never intended his agency to investigate trade
union officers or members in their lawful union activities. But Alan's sons had long since
discarded that restriction, and their business practices called for hiring hundreds of guards
and watchmen whose roles did not require the same level of training or expertise as a detective.
Internally, these guards were called preventives to distinguish
them from the agency's detectives. But in time, that distinction wouldn't matter to labor leaders,
newspaper writers, politicians, and religious leaders who all escalated their criticisms of
the Pinkertons. And as laborers continued to strike and lobby for better wages and conditions,
the word Pinkerton became synonymous with mercenary,
a private soldier or labor spy.
The agency now had a reputation as a massive private army
on the side of industrialists.
But the worst of the violence was yet to come,
and this time, it would be Pinkerton blood that was shed.
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In the years following the Haymarket Massacre, working-class Americans continued to lobby and strike for better pay, shorter workdays, and safer jobs. But Robert Pinkerton viewed the nation's
labor unrest as an opportunity for growth.
Just as his father once sent detectives to investigate train robberies in small frontier towns with outmanned sheriff's offices,
Robert offered to provide far-off companies with scores of Pinkerton guards and watchmen to help protect their property against striking workers and saboteurs.
Into the early 1890s, he and his brother William aggressively expanded their work
for these companies, essentially providing private police forces for factories, railroads, and mines.
At the same time, a Chicago-based group of wealthy business owners called the Citizens Association
had become increasingly troubled by the labor unrest and didn't trust public law enforcement
to protect their businesses. They hired Pinkerton
spies to go undercover and root out labor agitators by infiltrating trade unions, social clubs, and
suspected anarchist groups. Pinkertons were also enlisted to escort non-union workers, or so-called
scabs, to job sites that have been stalled by strikes. Sometimes Pinkerton guards worked as
scabs themselves, but many of these Pinkertons were untrained, short-term hires who made $5 a day.
Lines were being drawn, and the agency's allegiance with big business continued to draw sharp criticism from men like Terrence Powderly,
head of the Knights of Labor Union, who called Pinkertons the enemy of the working class.
Powderly blamed Pinkertons for inciting the violence that led to several deaths during an 1888 strike by Burlington railroad workers.
Powderly called armed Pinkerton guards hired assassins who act on the passions of men just as a red flag acts on a bull.
But the protective patrol side of the business continued to grow.
Robert would later claim that the agency didn't necessarily plant a profit from the turbulent labor movement, but it was something which had grown around our shoulders.
Between 1888 and 1892, William and Robert opened even more field offices
in Denver, St. Louis, St. Paul, and Seattle.
And as the tensions between capital and labor continued to mount,
the Pinkerton agency was dead center in the conflict.
Between 1877 and 1892, Pinkerton
teams worked more than 70 labor strikes, from coal mines in Ohio to rail yards in Iowa and
docks in New Jersey. In the coal fields of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, Pinkerton
guards became a constant presence. Then, in 1892, a new wave of labor strikes spread across America.
Workers in New Orleans, coal miners in
Tennessee, railroad switchmen in Buffalo, copper miners in Idaho, they all walked off their jobs
in protest. At Andrew Carnegie's steel plant in Homestead, Pennsylvania, just east of Pittsburgh,
manager Henry Frick had slashed wages in response to a decline in steel prices,
causing an uproar amongst the workers. Carnegie had claimed to be a pro-labor employer, but was vacationing in Scotland at the time
and let Frick decide how to handle the strike.
So when the workers walked out, Frick built a barbed wire fence around the plant,
then hired Pinkertons to protect it.
When they arrived by boat early on the morning of July 6,
thousands of angry workers were there to greet them.
Imagine it's July 6, 1892. You are a medical student from Chicago, but to earn money during
the summer, you signed on to work as a Pinkerton guard at a Pennsylvania steel mill for $2.50 a day.
You left Pittsburgh this morning on a barge full of fellow recruits brought in from Chicago,
New York, and Philadelphia. The barge full of fellow recruits brought in from Chicago,
New York, and Philadelphia. The barge has been converted into a makeshift lodging facility with sleeping cots, wooden walls, and a roof. It's stiflingly hot inside as you're being towed up
river by a tugboat. When you reach the town of Homestead, you finally see the steel mill looming
up ahead. You turn to the man beside you, who seems like he belongs in high school.
You chatted this morning and learned he was from Brooklyn. He admitted he'd never been out of New York before and never worked as a guard. He's holding tight to a small billy club, his knuckles
white. You point at the mill in the distance. Well, there it is. Our workplace for the next
week or so. Looks like a giant furnace. I don't really understand what we're supposed to do here.
As the tugboat guides your barge near the shoreline,
you peer out one of the barge's windows and see thousands of angry, striking workers rush toward the waterfront landing area.
Oh, I guess they're not happy to see us.
You turn to your left and see a few of your fellow Pinkerton guards standing up front on the bow.
They're armed and shouting at a group of men on shore who are busy pulling back the gangplanes. They're not going to let us land. The young man next to you looks
frightened. We have rifles aimed at us. Well, we've got rifles of our own on the front deck. Let's go
grab ourselves some. No, they told me we might have to duck a few bricks or stones. Nobody said
anything about guns. I've never even fired a gun. But before you can find those rifles, bullets zip into the water all around you.
Some bounce off protective steel plates that were installed on the side of the barge.
Others smash through the windows and wooden walls.
Oh, God, we're sitting ducks.
The young man besides you drops his billy club and falls to his knees, clutching his gut.
Oh, I'm bleeding. Help me, please.
You're only a first-year medical student,
and you've never treated a gunshot before.
You rush to the barge's small galley kitchen
and grab some towels.
Here, lift up your shirt.
Hold this against the wound. Press hard.
Please don't let me die here.
I didn't sign up for this.
As bullets continue to fly,
soon you're rushing to other injured men,
tending to their wounds and keeping your head low.
But the longest day of your life has just begun.
As you take another quick look outside,
you see a raft filled with burning timbers floating directly toward you.
That's when you hear the explosions.
Workers on the dock are throwing dynamite. On July 6, 1892, 376 part-time Pinkerton guards tried to land in two
large barges at Andrew Carnegie's Homestead steel mill. They were met by 6,000 angry, striking steel
workers and their families, who lined the riverbanks and refused to let the Pinkertons
disembark. It's unclear who fired first.
Both sides would blame the other.
But within minutes of the Pinkertons' arrival,
a barrage of gunfire erupted, killing men on the boats and on shore.
Enraged workers tried to set the barges on fire
or blow them to smithereens with dynamite.
They loaded two small cannons with steel scraps and shot at the barges,
then poured oil into the water and set the river on fire.
Some of the Pinkertons tried to surrender by raising a white flag,
but workers on shore shot the flag to ribbons.
After 12 hours of fighting, a Union chairman called for a ceasefire,
and the Pinkertons were allowed to surrender.
As the Pinkerton men were marched through town toward the jailhouse,
some were assaulted and severely beaten. In the end, ten steelworkers and at least
three Pinkerton guards died. Scores more were injured. The New York Times declared,
The events of the day will rank as one of the most remarkable chapters in the history of labor
rights. The news of the violence at the Homestead Mill was so stunning that Congress
launched an investigation into the widespread use of private police during labor strikes.
U.S. Representative William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska was among those who argued it was the
government's job to protect life and property. He stated, these functions should not be transferred
to private individuals and hired detectives. Robert and William Pinkerton were vilified in the press, and it didn't help when the
congressional hearings revealed that they had 250 rifles and 500 revolvers at their
Chicago office alone.
Congress declared that the Pinkertons were indeed a mercenary private police force, but
it failed to find that any laws were broken at Homestead, and it cast blame on the
inadequacies of local police. Still, the government had come to a conclusion, and in 1893, Congress
passed the Anti-Pinkerton Act, which limited the federal government's ability to hire private armed
guards. But this act was largely toothless and left it to the states to decide how to handle
the issue. This triggered states to pass a flurry of
anti-Pinkerton laws of their own, preventing armed guards from operating in their jurisdictions.
By 1899, 24 states had enacted such laws, and with their reputation battered, the Pinkertons
were forced to change their business model once more. They scaled back their protective arm and
took on more investigative cases, and this time bank heists and jewel thieves became a specialty.
As the century came to a close,
the area of expertise that had initially made the Pinkertons public heroes
still had one last gasp.
The nation was moving quickly toward industrialization
and was continuing its rapid westward expansion,
giving a new generation of train robbers an opportunity.
And in 1901, the Pinkertons would join the hunt for one of the most infamous gangs in American history.
From Wondery, this is Episode 2 of the Pinkerton Detective Agency from American History Tellers.
On the next episode, Pinkerton detectives travel throughout the West in search of the nation's
most audacious and elusive bank-robbing desperadoados, Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid. But the agency soon faces new competition with
the creation of a federal crime-fighting agency, the Bureau of Investigation. And a Pinkerton
operative leaves to write some of the most iconic detective novels in the English language.
If you like American History Tellers, you can binge all episodes early and ad-free
right now by joining Wondery Plus in the Wondery app or on Apple Podcasts. Prime members can listen
ad-free on Amazon Music. And before you go, tell us about yourself by filling out a short survey
at wondery.com slash survey. If you'd like to learn more about the Pinkertons, we recommend Pinkerton's Great
Detective by Bo Riffenberg and Inventing the Pinkertons by Paul O'Hara. American History
Tellers is hosted, edited, and produced by me, Lindsey Graham, for Airship. Audio editing by
Christian Paraga. Sound design by Molly Bach. Music by Lindsey Graham. This episode is written
by Neil Thompson, edited by Dorian. This episode is written by Neil Thompson.
Edited by Dorian Marina.
Produced by Alita Rosansky.
Our production coordinator is Desi Blaylock.
Managing producer, Matt Kant.
Senior managing producer, Ryan Lohr.
Senior producer, Andy Herman.
And executive producers are Jenny Lauer-Beckman and Marsha Louis for Wondery. I'm Tristan Redman, and as a journalist, I've never believed in ghosts.
But when I discovered that my wife's great-grandmother was murdered in the house next door to where I grew up,
I started wondering about the inexplicable things that happened in my childhood bedroom.
When I tried to find out more, I discovered that someone who slept in my room after me, someone I'd never met, was visited by the ghost of a faceless woman. So I started
digging into the murder in my wife's family, and I unearthed family secrets nobody could have
imagined. Ghost Story won Best Documentary Podcast at the 2024 Ambies and is a Best True
Crime nominee at the British Podcast Awards 2024. Ghost Story is now the first ever Apple Podcast
Series Essential. Each month, Apple Podcast editors spotlight one series that has captivated
listeners with masterful storytelling, creative excellence, and a unique creative voice and vision.
To recognize Ghost Story being chosen as the first series essential,
Wondery has made it ad-free for a limited time only on Apple Podcasts.
If you haven't listened yet, head over to Apple Podcasts to hear for yourself.