Word: mcnear
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...short time, McNear was making money on his "two streaks of rust." Then he started battling labor unions. In 1929 he rode a cowcatcher through an engineers' picket line to break his first strike. In 1941, he took on the railroad brotherhoods again, rode out shootings and fires, finally refused Government arbitration and lost his road by seizure...
Little businessmen along George P. McNear Jr.'s Toledo, Peoria & Western Railroad were tired of the four-month strike on the road which had kept them from shipping grain, coal and steel. They were also mad enough four months later to do something about it. Nineteen shippers made up a $10,000 pool, used it to hire a smart lawyer. He went into Federal Court with a novel plea: the T. P. & W. (though highly solvent), was "physically bankrupt," so a receiver should be appointed to run the trains...
...Finish. State police found evidence that some pickets had brought guns to the scene, but no evidence that any had been used. Later that afternoon the four guards-all discharged servicemen, said by the union to have been paid $375 a month by George McNear-were charged with murder. The brotherhoods' leaders, offering to give evidence that McNear had transported the guns, demanded that he be arrested on the same charge...
...McNear, who has been bitterly fighting the unions almost continuously since he bought the line in 1926, was at lunch in Peoria's Creve Coeur Club when the shooting broke out. Afterward he insisted that the strikers had fired first; the guards in self-defense. Next day he took...
Thus had come the first U.S. strike killing in three years. George McNear's tracks were red now with more than rust...