The Winner of The Gilded Cage

P.A. De Voe has won a copy of The Gilded Cage by Judy Alter. Congrats to P.A. De Voe!

Thanks to Judy Alter for describing a historical riot that was similar to 21st-century protests. Thanks, also, to everyone who visited and commented on Relevant History this week. Watch for another Relevant History post, coming soon.

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The One Percent in the 1880s

Judy Alter author photoRelevant History welcomes back Judy Alter, a native of Chicago who lives in Texas but never lost her love for the Windy City and its lake. She is the author of over seventy books, fiction and nonfiction, adult and young-adult, including fictional biographies Libbie (Elizabeth Bacon Custer); Jessie (Jessie Benton Frémont); Cherokee Rose (Lucille Mulhall, first rodeo girl roper); and Sundance, Butch and Me (Etta Place). Today she writes contemporary cozy mysteries. She is the single parent of four children and the grandmother of seven. To learn more about her and her books, visit her web site and blog, and follow her on Facebook and Goodreads.

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In many ways, Chicago in the 1880s was a mirror image of industrial cities across the nation. It was a city of circles with the business district at the core, ringed by slums—hastily thrown up shacks and shanties, even places like the Patches where people lived outdoors on the river bank. Then came “the suburbs,” grand homes of the business barons. To the west were the Stockyards, where families lived in Packingtown with filthy streets and oppressive odors, infested in summer by mosquitoes.

Like the rest of the country, Chicago was threatened by worker unrest as laborers demanded an eight-hour day and better wages. There were 20,000 active anarchists in Chicago, led by a man named Parsons who had run for office to change the system from within. Defeated by ballot stuffing, he vowed to destroy the system, and called for strikes in his newspaper, The Alarm.

Prelude to violence
Trouble began in Chicago with the 1886 strike at the McCormick reaper plant. On 1 May 1886, a German anarchist named August Spies led 80,000 men up Michigan Avenue, where they laid down their tools. Factories were silent and empty. The city was prepared for violence, but the demonstration was peaceful. Still, nerves were on edge.

On 3 May, Cyrus McCormick used police and strikebreakers to prevent returning strikers from going back to work. They used Billy clubs and rifle butts to crack skulls and injured several, some severely. August Spies gathered the uninjured a distance away and began exhorting them about their rights. When the shift bell rang, striking workers drove the strikebreakers back inside and began smashing windows. Spies called for a peaceful meeting the following evening in Haymarket Square.

Again, the city was prepared for violence, expecting perhaps a bomb. Spies attracted only 2500 men this time. Mayor Carter Harrison asked riot troops to be on alert at the nearby police station but clearly ordered Police Chief Bonfield not to order his men to fire. A decade earlier Bonfield had ordered his men to fire at strikers, and Harrison did not want a repeat of the violence.

The mayor himself attended the rally, standing near Spies and ostentatiously lighting a cigarette over and over to call attention to his presence. Satisfied that the gathering was peaceful, he went by the police station to tell Bonfield to send his troops home. There would be no violence in Chicago that night.

The Haymarket Riot
Bonfield disobeyed. He marched his troops to the meeting, which had now dwindled to about 300 men whom he ordered to disband. Instead someone threw a bomb, Bonfield yelled “Fire,” and the police fired wildly into the crowd. At least seven policemen and one civilian died; many more were injured as men scrambled to avoid the bullets.

August Spies and seven other anarchists were arrested; seven sentenced to be hung, one to fifteen years. Two later had their sentences commuted to life in prison, and one cheated the hangman through suicide. But four men were hung. The Haymarket Riot became a landmark event in the history of America’s labor relations.

The Palmer mansionWhat does it have to do with the story of Cissy and Potter Palmer in my book The Gilded Cage? It is woven into the novel partly as the historical background and partly because it shows the difference in their reactions. Palmer condemned the protestors and claimed they should have stayed home. Cissy believed in taking philanthropy to those who need it. In the novel she bundles food and blankets to take to the families of the arrested men. Police, she told her son, would take care of their own—the families of those officers who died.

To me, this story has remarkable relevance in this day of social discontent and the widening gap between the haves and the have-nots. It was either Edmund Burke or George Santayana (sources differ) who wrote, “Those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it.” That’s one of the major themes of The Gilded Cage.

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The Gilded Cage book coverA big thanks to Judy Alter. She’ll give away a trade paperback copy of The Gilded Cage to someone who contributes a comment on my blog this week. I’ll choose the winner from among those who comment by Friday at 6 p.m. ET. Delivery is available in the U.S. only.

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The Winners of A Ballad for Sallie

Terrie Farley Moran and Pam De Voe have won copies of A Ballad for Sallie by Judy Alter. Congrats to Terrie and Pam!

Thanks to Judy Alter for a look at the not-so-Wild West. Thanks, also, to everyone who visited and commented on Relevant History this week. Watch for another Relevant History post, coming soon.

#RelevantHistory Terrie Farley Moran + Pam De Voe are #winners of A BALLAD FOR SALLIE by @judyalter #histfic http://bit.ly/1ejRssH

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The Wild West—or Was It?

Judy Alter author photoRelevant History welcomes Judy Alter, who writes the Kelly O’Connell and the Blue Plate Café mystery series—but for many years she wrote historical fiction and nonfiction for adults and children, mostly about women in the American West. She is the winner of two Spur Awards from Western Writers of America, two Western Heritage (Wrangler) Awards from the National Cowboy Museum and Hall of Fame, and the Owen Wister Award for Lifetime Achievement from WWA, among other honors. These days Judy’s western works are categorized as western historical romance although that wasn’t her intent when she wrote them. For more information, check her blog, and look for her on Facebook, Twitter, and Goodreads.

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My career as a western writer began with a chapter in an anthology. When the women of Western Writers of American decided to put together an anthology about women who won the West, I volunteered to write about Georgia Arbuckle Fix, a pioneer woman physician on the prairies of western Nebraska.

Her life as a doctor was filled with adventure—she had to learn to “read” the prairie so she wouldn’t get lost in those vast open spaces. Once she was called to repair a hole in a young man’s skull—he had been hit by the spinning handle of a water bucket rope. Dr. Fix sewed a flattened half dollar over the hole, and that man was still riding in the rodeo parade when he was seventy-five. Another time she was called to a birth in a filthy house with five raggedy, hungry children and the father gone off somewhere. During the two days she spent cleaning the house and children, she found the father’s stash of liquor and poured it on the ground. Rumor is that nothing would ever grow in that spot.

All of this was fact, supported by articles about Dr. Fix in reputable sources, but it was great fodder for historical fiction. And I eventually turned it into a novel called Mattie, blissfully unaware that Mari Sandoz had written the same story in Miss Morissa. My career writing about women of the West was launched.

It was easy to avoid the western myth in that book because I had facts—and no cowboys and Indians. But in the mid-to-late nineteenth century, the western myth was born and fostered by such artists as Frederic Remington and Charles M. Russell and novelists like Owen Wister, author of The Virginian, who created the image of the silent, strong, flawless cowboy, the eastern schoolteacher come West, the shootout, the uncivilized Indian, and other stereotypes. Eastern publications such as Leslie’s Illustrated, Harper’s Weekly, and Harper’s Monthly strengthened those stereotypes, and easterners saw an American Wild West that never existed. Eventually, in the early twentieth century, that mythic West showed up on movie screens.

Etta PlaceFor the novelist writing about the American West, separating fact from myth may be the greatest challenge. Writing about the realistic West requires research and the ability to resist the West of novels, paintings, and movies. I often found it both fascinating and more accurate to fictionalize the life of a real woman, and thus I wrote about Libby Custer, Jessie Benton Frémont, Etta Place of the Hole in the Wall Gang, and a cowgirl named Lucille Mulhall, though she became Cherokee Rose in my book.

Libby CusterThe real lives of some women of the West were so fascinating they didn’t need the embellishment of the myth. Did you know, for instance, that General Custer delighted in quirting his wife’s horse until it bolted and ran off across the prairie with her clinging to its back? Or that Lucille Mulhall could rope multiple horses with one loop? Or that Etta Place rode on robberies with the gang, riding hard for days in the getaway?

For most women of the American West, in that time period life was hard, with physical labor from dawn to night—tending children, making a home in a sod hut, cooking over a fire fueled by prairie chips (buffalo droppings) and collecting those chips in a wheelbarrow. Their complexions were ruined by sun and wind, they lost too many children in infancy and youth, and they themselves died young. That is not the stuff of storytelling.

But there were and still are fascinating stories of women who lived with optimism and a certain freedom from restraint that their eastern sisters didn’t enjoy. Their stories should be told in fiction. Novelists need to explore the real women of the historical West or create their own characters who take advantage of the opportunities of the new land.

As recently as the early twenty-first century, publishers didn’t get the idea. Covers resorted to the mythic West—for instance, the original cover of Libbie shows her standing in a field of prairie grass beside a barbed wire fence—barbed wire had barely been introduced by the time Custer was killed. In the background was a stockade—when the text made clear forts were not fenced, let alone with sturdy logs in the treeless West. The cover of Sundance, Butch, and Me shows men robbing a train—nary a woman in sight. And the cover of Ballad for Sallie, a novel about a street orphan in Fort Worth, shows a man dismounting a horse while his gun blazes away.

Unfortunately the myth lives on. Only accurate research will counter its effects.

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A Ballad for Sallie book cover imageA big thanks to Judy Alter. She’ll give away trade paperback copies of Ballad for Sallie to two people who contribute a comment on my blog this week. I’ll choose the winner from among those who comment by Friday at 6 p.m. ET. Delivery is available within the continental United States only.

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