Document 17.2 Emma Goldman, Reflections on the Homestead Strike, 1931

Emma Goldman | Reflections on the Homestead Strike, 1931

Emma Goldman was one of the most prominent radicals of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Goldman argued for sexual freedom and women’s liberation. In addition, as an anarchist, she initially advocated the overthrow of capitalism through violent attacks. To this end, during the Homestead strike Goldman’s lover, Alexander Berkman, attempted unsuccessfully to assassinate Henry Clay Frick, the manager of Carnegie’s steel plant. In this passage from her autobiography, Goldman describes the events that led to the assassination attempt.

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A few days after our return to New York the news was flashed across the country of the slaughter of steel-workers by Pinkertons. Frick had fortified the Homestead mills, built a high fence around them. Then, in the dead of night, a barge packed with strike-breakers, under protection of heavily armed Pinkerton thugs, quietly stole up the Monongahela River. The steel-men had learned of Frick’s move. They stationed themselves along the shore, determined to drive back Frick’s hirelings. When the barge got within range, the Pinkertons had opened fire, without warning, killing a number of Homestead men on the shore, among them a little boy, and wounding scores of others.

The wanton murders aroused even the daily papers. Several came out in strong editorials, severely criticizing Frick. He had gone too far; he had added fuel to the fire in the labour ranks and would have himself to blame for any desperate acts that might come.

We were stunned. We saw at once that the time for our manifesto had passed. Words had lost their meaning in the face of the innocent blood spilled on the banks of the Monongahela. Intuitively each felt what was surging in the heart of the others. Sasha [Alexander Berkman] broke the silence. “Frick is the responsible factor in this crime,” he said; “he must be made to stand the consequences.” It was the psychological moment for an Attentat [political violence]; the whole country was aroused, every-body was considering Frick the perpetrator of a cold-blooded murder. A blow aimed at Frick would re-echo in the poorest hovel, would call the attention of the whole world to the real cause behind the Homestead struggle. It would also strike terror in the enemy’s ranks and make them realize that the proletariat of America had its avengers.

Source: Emma Goldman, Living My Life (New York: Alfred Knopf, 1931), 86–87.

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