#WFM

2026-02-17

Today in Labor History February 17, 1906: The authorities arrested "Big Bill" Haywood and two others on trumped up charges for the murder of former Idaho Governor Frank Stuenenberg. Clarence Darrow successfully defended them, telling jurors, "If at the behest of this mob you should kill Bill Haywood, he is mortal, he will die, but I want to say that a million men will grab up the banner of labor where at the open grave Haywood lays it down . . ." The actual perpetrator was a one-time WFM union member named Harry Orchard, who was also a paid informant for the Cripple Creek Mine Owners' Association.

Haywood and his WFM comrades had been framed by James McParland, an agent for the Pinkertons Detective Agency. This was the same James McParland who framed dozens of Irish coal miners in Pennsylvania in the 1870s, whom he, and the media, had falsely branded as terrorists (Molly Maguires). Ten of them were executed in one day—the 2nd largest mass execution in U.S. history after the 1862 mass execution of 38 Dakota warriors. My novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, is about one of these Irish miners, a teenager named Mike Doyle.

Read more on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Read more on the Molly Maguires here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

You can get a copy of Anywhere But Schuylkill here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/
boundtogether.org//
historiumpress.com/michael-dunn

Or send me $27 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565) and your mailing address, I will send you a signed copy! (Shipping included)

#workingclass #LaborHistory #BigBillHaywood #IWW #WFM #union #strike #mining #socialism #clarencedarrow #pinkertons #mollymaguires #terrorism #racism #irish #books #novel #historicalfiction #writer #author @bookstadon

Image of Big Bill Haywood, in a suit and fedora, hands in pockets, with the quote, “I’ve never ready Marx’s Capital, but I have the marks of capital all over my body.”
2026-02-04

Today in Labor History February 4, 1869: Labor leader and Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) co-founder William D. "Big Bill" Haywood was born. Haywood started mining at age nine. He became secretary-treasurer of the Western Federation of Miners (WFM) in 1900 and co-founded the IWW in 1905. He was a WFM organizer during the Colorado Labor Wars (1903-1904), in which 33 miners were killed.

At the IWW’s first convention (1905), he said, “We are here to confederate the workers of this country into a working-class movement that shall have for its purpose the emancipation of the working-class from the slave bondage of capitalism. The aims and objects of this organization shall be to put the working-class in possession of the economic power, the means of life, in control of the machinery of production and distribution, without regard to capitalist masters.” With the IWW, he came up with the propaganda ploy of sending workers’ kids out of town, for their own safety, during the Lawrence Textile Strike (1912), leading to a media backlash against the mill owners and the ultimate victory for the workers.

In 1907, he was falsely charged with the bombing murder of former Idaho Governor Frank Steunenberg, but was acquitted with the counsel of Clarence Darrow. The WFM dismissed him in 1918 because of his radicalism. That same year, the Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (future first commissioner of Major League Baseball) convicted him of violating the Alien and Sedition acts during the first Red Scare for his antiwar activism. They sentenced him to 20 years in prison. However, he jumped bail and fled to the Soviet Union, where he died in 1928 from heart failure and alcoholism. His ashes were split between the Kremlin Wall Mausoleum and the Haymarket Martyrs Monument in Chicago.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #bigbillhaywood #IWW #WFM #haymarket #union #strike #capitalism #antiwar #socialism #sabotage #Soviet #communism #sabotage #GeneralStrike #mlb #kremlin

Image of Big Bill Haywood in a suit and fedora, with the quote, “I’ve never read Marx’s Capital, but I have the marks of capitalism all over my body.”
2025-12-30

Today in Labor History December 30, 1905: Governor Frank Steunenberg of Idaho was assassinated by a bomb. Steunenberg had been elected on a Populist Party "defend the working man" ticket. But then he called on federal troops to crush the 1899 miners’ strike. Authorities promptly blamed members of the radical WFM, including Big Bill Haywood, who would later go on to cofound the IWW. The actual assassin was Harry Orchard, a WFM union member who was also a paid informant and agent provocateur for the Cripple Creek Mine Owners’ Association. The investigation was conducted by Pinkerton agent James McParland, the same man who infiltrated the Ancient Order of Hibernians in eastern Pennsylvania and acted as an agent provocateur, leading to the wrongful executions of 20 Irish miners. After interrogation by McParland, Orchard signed a 64-page typed confession claiming that he had been hired to kill Steunenberg by the WFM leadership ("Big Bill" Haywood; General Secretary, Charles Moyer; and President George Pettibone). Superstar labor lawyer Clarence Darrow got all three WFM defendants acquitted. Orchard pled guilty and received a death sentence in a separate trial, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison. McParland also plays prominently in my novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill,” about the period leading up to the wrongful executions of the Irish miners.

Read more about the Western Federation of Miners here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/05/

Read more about the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Read more about the wrongfully convicted Irish miners here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Pick up a copy of my novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/

Or send me $25 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565) and your mailing address, and I will send you a signed copy!

#workingclass #LaborHistory #union #strike #wfm #westernfederationofminers #bigbillhaywood #pinkertons #police #prison #books #novel #historicalfiction #writer #author @bookstadon

1907 photo of (l-r) Charles Moyer, Bill Haywood, and Pettibone. By Retrieved from http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAsteunenberg.htm on April 4, 2006.Originally uploaded on en.wikipedia (Transferred by Niklem), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16365356
2025-12-24

Today in Labor History December 24, 1913: Seventy-three people in Calumet, Michigan died in the "Calumet Massacre," including 59 kids. The majority were Finns, Croats and Slovenes. The Western Federation of Miners (WFM) was having a Christmas party for striking copper miners at the Italian Hall. About 500 miners and their family members were at the party. Someone yelled "Fire!" and dozens were trampled in the panic. Goons and scabs had barred the doors, trapping people inside, exacerbating the injuries and deaths. The person who yelled “fire” was never identified, but many strikers believed it was a company guard. WFM president Charles Moyer claimed that the person was wearing the badge of the Citizen’s Alliance, an anti-union, pro-boss vigilante group that routinely terrorized the miners and their families. In the aftermath, some Alliance members formed a relief committee and collected $25,000 for the survivors’ families, but they refused the money. Committee members believed that Moyer had forbidden his members from accepting the money. So, they shot and kidnapped him, sending him out of town by train, and forbidding him from ever returning to Michigan.

youtube.com/watch?v=UgrPK2CNuJg

There were over 15,000 miners working in Michigan’s Copper Country at the time of the strike. 9,000 had already signed up with the Western Federation of Miners (WFM). They were striking for union recognition, as well as better wages and hours, and safer working conditions. They typically had to work 10-12 hours per day, six days per week, including children. Additionally, they were forced to live in Company Towns, in which everything was owned by the mine owners. Rent, heating fuel, medical care, and even the tools of the trade, were deducted from the workers’ paychecks, leaving them little, to nothing, for themselves. The mine owners used Pinkertons, and several other private detective agencies as strike breakers and agents provocateur. In addition to those who died in the Calumet Hall disaster, another 15-20 were killed by cops and private cops. The strike continued until April, 1914, when the union was driven out of the Keweenaw Peninsula. The Copper Country strike in Michigan occurred concurrently with the Colorado Minefield War, with the infamous Ludlow Massacre occurring just days after the Michigan strike ended, in which National Guards and private cops massacred over a dozen unarmed women and children.

Prior to the Copper Country strike, in 1905, Moyer and WFM organizer, Big Bill Haywood were falsely charged with the murder of former Idaho governor, Frank Steunenberg, a long-time enemy of the WFM. Famed Pinkerton detective James McParland, who had previously infiltrated and helped destroy the WBA mining union in Pennsylvania (1875), ran the investigation. McParland (using his pseudonym, James McKenna) is also the villain in my first two novels: “Anywhere But Schuylkill” and “Red Hot Summer in the Big Smoke.” Famed union attorney Clarence Darrow successfully defended Haywood and Moyer. Mary Doria Russell wrote about the Calumet disaster in her 2019 novel, “The Women of Copper Country.”

You can read my full article on the Ludlow Massacre here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

And my article on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

And my article on the WFM here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/05/

You can pick up a copy of Anywhere But Schuylkill here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/

Or send me $25 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565) and your mailing address, and I will send you a signed copy!

#workingclass #LaborHistory #massacre #mining #union #strike #scabs #christmas #party #woodyguthrie #children #ludlow #pinkerton #wfm #books #novels #fiction #historicalfiction #author #writer @bookstadon

2025-10-15

Как мы перешли от контроля рабочего времени сотрудников к оптимизации управления персоналом

Когда работаешь в B2B, быстро понимаешь: выигрывает не тот, кто «продает коробку», а тот, кто помогает клиенту зарабатывать больше и тратить меньше. Маркетинг здесь предельно прагматичен: сперва — понять реальные боли и ограничения целевого рынка, затем — убрать их так, чтобы ключевые метрики клиента пошли вверх. Наш рынок — компании, где трудозатраты и управляемость персонала напрямую бьют по марже. А значит, наша задача — не слежка за временем ради галочки, а повышение прибыльности за счет гибкого управления персоналом. Именно поэтому мы прошли путь от «учета ради контроля» к «управлению ради эффективности». Мы начали с прозрачной фиксации явок и автоматизации табелей — там, где деньги утекали из-за ошибок, переработок и человеческого фактора. Но запрос бизнеса быстро изменился: дефицит кадров, колебания спроса, рост издержек. Ответом стала WFM-логика: прогноз нагрузки, шаблоны под производственный план, биржа смен, распределение смен по навыкам и ограничениям ТК.

habr.com/ru/articles/956692/

#wfm #управление_персоналом #оптимизация_трудозатрат #рабочее_время #учет_рабочего_времени #составление_расписаний #автоматизация_бизнеспроцессов #интеграция_с_1с #прогнозирование_спроса #планирование_ресурсов

2025-10-03

🎮♟️ Azizana is streaming "can’t get no sleep 💟dono !wheel💟" at https://twitch.tv/azizana (10052 Followers) #german #persian #English #chess #trolling #findom #WFM

2025-10-02

🎮♟️ AnnaCramling is streaming "2400 TODAY? !course !board" at https://twitch.tv/annacramling (486971 Followers) #English #Chess #Sweden #Educational #Competitive #FutureGrandmaster #WFM #WFMAnnaCramling #WFMAnnaCramlingBellon

The Drop Bear 2.0 :angery:dropbear@aus.social
2025-09-08

Hmmm so, I will be implementing a product I have never worked with, implemented or even heard of before 🤷‍♀️ Has anyone had anything to do with Tanda? #HRIS #Payroll #WFM

2025-07-13

Today in Labor History July 13, 1892: Martial law was declared in Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, with National Guards and federal troops coming to “restore order.” The Western Federation of Miners had called the strike, demanding a living wage of $3.50/day. However, their militancy escalated when they discovered that the bosses were using Pinkertons to infiltrate and undermine their union, and after mine guards killed of one of their members. Things came to a head on July 11, when WFM members fought gunbattles with company guards at several mines and dynamited the Frisco mine.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mining #strike #union #wfm #idaho #nationalguard #livingwage #pinkertons

View of the Frisco Mill-Explosion in Gem, Idaho after dynamite explosion set by Union Strikers. Barnard Studio (Wallace, Idaho)
2025-07-11

Today in Labor History July 11, 1892: Frisco Mine was dynamited by striking Coeur D’Alene miners after they discovered they had been infiltrated by Pinkertons and after one of their members had been shot. The striking miners belonged to the Western Federation of Miners. Prior to this, the mine owners had increased work hours, decreased pay and brought in a bunch of scabs to replace striking workers. Ultimately, over 600 striking miners were imprisoned without charge by the military in order to crush the strike.

You can read my article on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/?s=pinke

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mining #union #strike #bombing #pinkertons #wfm #scabs #friscomine

Caption on image: Frisco Mill and Mine, Between Wallace and Burke, Idaho, Couer d'Alene The Frisco Mine, also known as the Helena-Frisco Mine, was destroyed by dynamite on July 14, 1892. This led to martial law in the Coeur d'Alenes silver mining region. Subjects (LCTGM): Mining--Idaho; Mine buildings--Idaho Subjects (LCSH): Frisco Mine (Idaho); Mines and mineral resources--IdahoBy Unknown author - Alaska, Western Canada and United States Collection, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=77550855
2025-06-08

Today in Labor History June 8, 1904: A battle between the Colorado state militia and striking miners occurred in Dunnville, Colorado. As a result, six union members died and 15 were taken prisoner. The authorities deported 79 of the strikers to Kansas. Most of this was done under the auspices of Rockefeller, who effectively owned the state government and militia.

This incident occurred during the Colorado Labor Wars of 1903-1904. Big Bill Haywood and the Western Federation of Labor (WFM) led the strikes. However, they were violently suppressed by Pinkerton and Baldwin-Felts detectives, local cops and militias. Scholars have said “There is no episode in American labor history in which violence was as systematically used by employers as in the Colorado labor war of 1903 and 1904.”
James McParland ran the Pinkerton agency in Denver. He had served as an agent provocateur in the Pennsylvania miners’ union in the 1870s. The state convicted and executed 20 innocent Irish coal miners because of his false testimony. (I depict that story in my novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill.”) McParland also tried to sabotage the WFM, in Colorado, by placing spies and agents provocateur within the union. And he unsuccessfully tried to get Big Bill Haywood convicted for murdering former Idaho Governor Frank Steunenberg. Haywood was innocent.

You can read more on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

You can pick up my novel here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/
christophersbooks.com/
boundtogether.org//
historiumpress.com/michael-dun

Or send me $25 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565) and your mailing address, and I will send you a signed copy!

#workingclass #LaborHistory #colorado #laborwars #bigbillhaywood #wfm #union #strike #Pinkertons
#scab #solidarity #jamesmcparland #books #novel #historicalfiction #author #writer #AnywhereButSchuylkill @bookstadon

Famous Western Federation of Miners poster entitled "Is Colorado in America?" Shows American flag, with the stripes filled with phrases like: Martial law declared in Colorado; Habeas corpus suspended; Free Press throttled; Free Speech denied; Bull Pens for union men; Union men exiled from homes and families in Colorado; constitutional right to bear arms questioned in colorado. By Western Federation of Miners - Political Posters, Labadie Collection, University of Michigan, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=68853818
2025-06-06

Today in Labor History June 6, 1894: Colorado’s governor sent in the state militia to support the Cripple Creek miners' strike, the only time in history that a state militia was used to help a workers’ struggle, rather than to suppress it. The mine owners were demanding a 10-hour day without an increase in pay. In response, the miners went on strike. There was considerable violence from both sides during the strike, led by the Western Federation of Miners (WFM). On March 16, some miners ambushed, shot and beat some sheriff’s deputies. The judge, a WFM member, let the miners off, but charged the deputies with carrying concealed weapons. Furious, the Sheriff arrested 20 union leaders. Meanwhile, the mine owners conspired to bring in hundreds of scabs and deputized vigilantes. When the new deputies marched on the strikers’ camp, the miners blew up several mine structures, forcing the deputies to flee. The mine owners hired hundreds more vigilantes for their army. When he heard about the size of the miner owners’ force, the governor declared the deputies illegal and sent in state troops to defend the miners.

On June 5, the day before the state troops arrived, the mine owners’ army began cutting telegraph lines and arresting reporters and hundreds of town residents. When the state troops arrived, there were already gun battles going on between the vigilante army and the miners. However, the state troops gained control of the town relatively quickly and the mine owners disbanded their army and sent them home. 300 miners were arrested, but only four were convicted. And the populist governor pardoned them all. The WFM won, keeping the 8-hour day and their $3/day wages. And, they were so popular because of their victory, that they easily organized most of the other industries in the region (e.g., waitresses, laundry workers, bartenders, newsboys) into 54 new locals.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #mining #colorado #union #strike #solidarity #militia #sabotage #police #policebrutality #acab #EightHourDay #wfm #vigilantes #cripplecreek

Cripple Creek, Colo., under martial law in 1894. By Rastall, Benjamin McKie. University of Wisconsin. - https://archive.org/details/laborhistoryofcr00rast/page/20/mode/2up, PD-US, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5887846
2025-04-23

This Aerial kit's been a long time in progress, but I've learned a lot doing it.
#gundam #gunpla #wfm

1/144 Scale Gundam Aerial Gunpla done with metallic paints.1/144 Scale Gundam Aerial Gunpla done with metallic paints.1/144 Scale Gundam Aerial Gunpla done with metallic paints.1/144 Scale Gundam Aerial Gunpla done with metallic paints.
2025-04-05

Forgot to post, but finished the HG Pharact + Expansion parts a while ago for Gunpla Brazil Group Build

Photo Gallery:
imgur.com/gallery/hg-pharact-w

Pharact Gundam model finished facing forward while dual wileding his guns, he is in flying position with the arms by the side and the guns facing down.Pharact Gundam model finished facing forward while wielding his sniper rifle formed by joining his two small guns, it is in flying position searching for his target.Pharact Gundam standing and preparing his beam saber that is hidden behing Its arm.Pharact Gundam standing and with his beam sable ready .
2025-03-27

Today In Labor History March 27, 1904: The authorities kicked Mother Jones out of Colorado for “stirring-up” striking coal miners. Earlier in March, the authorities deported 60 striking miners from Colorado. In June, they arrested 22 in Telluride. For nearly 2 years, strikers, led by the Western Federation of Miners, were violently attacked by Pinkerton and Baldwin-Felts detectives. 33 strikers were killed. At least two scholars have said “There is no episode in American labor history in which violence was as systematically used by employers as in the Colorado labor war of 1903 and 1904.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #colorado #union #strike #mining #motherjones #WorkplaceViolence #scabs #coal #pinkertons #colorado #minewars #wfm #WesternFederationOfMiners #womenshistorymonth

Image of Mother Jones, in glasses and bonnet, with the caption "If they want to hang me, let them. And on the scaffold I will shout 'Freedom for the working class.'"
Michael Fauscettemfauscette@techhub.social
2025-03-25

Outreach founder Manny Medina has a new startup that helps AI agents get paid
zurl.co/j7d4m
#ai #agenticai #wfm #pricing

2025-02-17

Today in Labor History February 17, 1906: The authorities arrested "Big Bill" Haywood and two others on trumped up charges for the murder of former Idaho Governor Frank Stuenenberg. Clarence Darrow successfully defended them, telling jurors, "If at the behest of this mob you should kill Bill Haywood, he is mortal, he will die, but I want to say that a million men will grab up the banner of labor where at the open grave Haywood lays it down . . ." The actual perpetrator was a one-time WFM union member named Harry Orchard, who was also a paid informant for the Cripple Creek Mine Owners' Association.

Haywood and his WFM comrades had been framed by James McParland, an agent for the Pinkertons Detective Agency. This was the same James McParland who framed dozens of Irish coal miners in Pennsylvania in the 1870s, whom he, and the media, had falsely branded as terrorists (Molly Maguires). Ten of them were executed in one day—the 2nd largest mass execution in U.S. history after the 1862 mass execution of 38 Dakota warriors. My novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, is about one of these Irish miners, a teenager named Mike Doyle.

Read more on the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Read more on the Molly Maguires here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Pick up a copy of Anywhere But Schuylkill here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/
christophersbooks.com/
boundtogether.org//
historiumpress.com/michael-dun

Or send me $27 via Venmo (@Michael-Dunn-565) and your mailing address, I will send you a signed copy! (Shipping included)

#workingclass #LaborHistory #BigBillHaywood #IWW #WFM #union #strike #mining #socialism #clarencedarrow #pinkertons #mollymaguires #terrorism #racism #irish #books #novel #historicalfiction #writer #author @bookstadon

Image of Big Bill Haywood, in a suit and fedora, hands in pockets, with the quote, “I’ve never ready Marx’s Capital, but I have the marks of capital all over my body.”
Michael Fauscettemfauscette@techhub.social
2025-02-12

Workday unveils AI agent workforce management system
zurl.co/6yQDY
#ai #agenticai #genai #wfm

2025-02-04

Today in Labor History February 4, 1869: Labor leader and Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) co-founder William D. "Big Bill" Haywood was born. Haywood started mining at age nine. He became secretary-treasurer of the Western Federation of Miners (WFM) in 1900 and co-founded the IWW in 1905. He was a WFM organizer during the Colorado Labor Wars (1903-1904), in which 33 miners were killed.

At the IWW’s first convention (1905), he said, “We are here to confederate the workers of this country into a working-class movement that shall have for its purpose the emancipation of the working-class from the slave bondage of capitalism. The aims and objects of this organization shall be to put the working-class in possession of the economic power, the means of life, in control of the machinery of production and distribution, without regard to capitalist masters.” With the IWW, he came up with the propaganda ploy of sending workers’ kids out of town, for their own safety, during the Lawrence Textile Strike (1912), leading to a media backlash against the mill owners and the ultimate victory for the workers.

In 1907, he was falsely charged with the bombing murder of former Idaho Governor Frank Steunenberg, but was acquitted with the counsel of Clarence Darrow. The WFM dismissed him in 1918 because of his radicalism. That same year, the Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis (future first commissioner of Major League Baseball) convicted him of violating the Alien and Sedition acts during the first Red Scare for his antiwar activism. They sentenced him to 20 years in prison. However, he jumped bail and fled to the Soviet Union, where he died in 1928 from heart failure and alcoholism. His ashes were split between the Kremlin Wall Mausoleum and the Haymarket Martyrs Monument in Chicago.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #bigbillhaywood #IWW #wfm #haymarket #kremlin #union #strike #capitalism #antiwar #socialism #soviet #sabotage #soviet #communism #sabotage #generalstrike #mlb #kremlin

Image of Big Bill Haywood in a suit and fedora, with the quote, “I’ve never read Marx’s Capital, but I have the marks of capitalism all over my body.”
2024-12-30

Today in Labor History December 30, 1905: Governor Frank Steunenberg of Idaho was assassinated by a bomb. Steunenberg had been elected on a Populist Party "defend the working man" ticket. But then he called on federal troops to crush the 1899 miners’ strike. Authorities promptly blamed members of the radical WFM, including Big Bill Haywood. The actual assassin was Harry Orchard, a WFM union member who was also a paid informant and agent provocateur for the Cripple Creek Mine Owners’ Association. The investigation was conducted by Pinkerton agent James McParland, the same man who infiltrated the Ancient Order of Hibernians in eastern Pennsylvania and acted as an agent provocateur, leading to the wrongful executions of 20 Irish miners. After interrogation by McParland, Orchard signed a 64-page typed confession claiming that he had been hired to kill Steunenberg by the WFM leadership ("Big Bill" Haywood; General Secretary, Charles Moyer; and President George Pettibone). Superstar labor lawyer Clarence Darrow got all three WFM defendants acquitted. Orchard pled guilty and received a death sentence in a separate trial, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison. McParland also plays prominently in my novel, “Anywhere But Schuylkill,” about the period leading up to the wrongful executions of the Irish miners.

Read more about the Western Federation of Miners here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2021/05/

Read more about the Pinkertons here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Read more about the wrongfully convicted Irish miners here: michaeldunnauthor.com/2024/04/

Pick up a copy of my novel, Anywhere But Schuylkill, here:
keplers.com/
greenapplebooks.com/
christophersbooks.com/
boundtogether.org//
thehistoricalfictioncompany.co

#workingclass #LaborHistory #union #strike #wfm #westernfederationofminers #bigbillhaywood #pinkertons #police #prison #books #novel #historicalfiction #writer #author @bookstadon

1907 photo of (l-r) Charles Moyer, Bill Haywood, and Pettibone. By Retrieved from http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAsteunenberg.htm on April 4, 2006.Originally uploaded on en.wikipedia (Transferred by Niklem), Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=16365356

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