Examples of Pinkerton agents in the following topics:
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- The Molly Maguires were an Irish-American organization of coal miners, opposed and persecuted by industrialists and Pinkerton agents.
- In the 1870s, the Reading Railroad blamed the deals of two dozen mine foremen and administrators on a secret society of Irishmen called the "Molly Maguires. " Although the Reading Railroad hired a Pinkerton undercover detective to investigate, it is highly probable that most of the men accused and executed for being Molly Maguires were innocent.
- Gowen and the testimony of Pinkerton detective James McParland.
- Gowen decided to force a strike and showdown, and hired Pinkerton agent James McParland to go undercover against the Mollies.
- McParland's assignment was to collect evidence of murder plots and intrigue, passing this information along to his Pinkerton manager.
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- After three agents were shot, many of the Pinkertons refused to continue the firefight.
- Just before noon, a sniper shot killed another Pinkerton agent.
- The Pinkertons, too, wished to surrender.
- Their arms were stripped from them, and as the Pinkertons crossed the grounds of the mill, the crowd formed a gauntlet through which the agents passed.
- Men and women threw sand and stones at the Pinkerton agents, spat on them, and beat them.
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- Although the Reading Railroad hired a Pinkerton undercover detective to investigate, it is highly probable that most of the men accused and executed for being Molly Maguires were innocent.
- Gowen and the testimony of Pinkerton detective James McParland.
- Carnegie's steel works in Homestead, Pennsylvania, hired a group of 300 Pinkerton detectives to break a bitter strike by the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers.
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- In the riots of 1892 at Carnegie's steel works in Homestead, Pennsylvania , a group of 300 Pinkerton detectives , whom the company had hired to break a bitter strike by the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, were fired upon by strikers and 10 were killed.
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- Donald Trump in a New Hampshire Town Hall on August 19th, 2015 at Pinkerton Academy in Derry, NH
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- The XYZ Affair refers to the bribes demanded by French agents in the negotiating dispatches to cease French seizures of American vessels.
- When Adams sent a three-man delegation, Charles Pinckney, John Marshall, and Elbridge Gerry, to Paris to negotiate a peace agreement with France, French agents demanded major concessions from the United States as a condition for continuing diplomatic relations.
- Since Adams omitted the names of these French agents in the dispatches, referring to them as "X, Y, and Z", this became known as the XYZ Affair.
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- When Richard Warren Sears was a railroad station agent in North Redwood, Minnesota, he received an impressive shipment of watches from a Chicago jeweler, which the local cube jeweler did not want.
- Sears purchased the watches, sold them for a considerable profit to other station agents, and then ordered more for resale.
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- This intensified during the Grant administration, as whiskey distillers bribed Treasury Department agents, who in turn helped the distillers evade taxes to the tune of up to $2 million per year; the agents would neglect to collect a duty of 70 cents per gallon, then split the bonus profits.
- The ringleaders had to coordinate distillers, rectifiers, gaugers, storekeepers, revenue agents, and Treasury clerks by way of recruitment and extortion.
- Missouri Revenue Agent John A.
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- He and other Massachusetts agents were received by James, who promised in October 1688 to address the colony's concerns.
- The Massachusetts agents then petitioned the new monarchs and the Lords of Trade (who oversaw colonial affairs) for restoration of the Massachusetts charter.
- Agents for both colonies worked in England to rectify the charter issues.
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- The Federalists, on the other hand, were suspicious of the Democrat-Republican party's affinity for France, especially since in the released dispatches of the XYZ affair, agent "Y" had boasted of the existence of a "French" party in American politics.