Most of the historical plaques at Camden Yards are about particular players’ home-runs or Babe Ruth’s father’s tavern, but a new marker outside the ballpark pays tribute not to ballplayers but to workers whose names we’ll never know.
Unveiled yesterday, the sign on the Howard Street side of the old Camden train depot recalls the tens of thousands of people who joined in the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, a protest against pay cuts and poor working conditions that started in Baltimore and Martinsburg, W.Va., then spread across the country, halting rail traffic and factory production and helping to launch the modern labor movement.
Read the complete story at The Baltimore Brew.
Related News
- Heroic Act on the Rails: SMART-TD Brother Burned while Saving Crewmate
- Unions Join Together to Fix Overtime Tax Loophole for Transportation Workers
- Help Amtrak Conductor, Local 166 Member Get Back to Work
- CSX Trainee Death Exposes Glaring Safety Gaps
- Fewer Eyes Mean More Derailments
- Santa Monica Local Wins Cost of Living Increases
- Senate Hearing Indicates Trouble for Public Transportation
- REMINDER: Registration Open for Anaheim Regional Training Seminar
- 2025 National Agreement Freight Negotiations Update from President Ferguson
- NRLC Bargaining Chart