---
title: "Haymarket Affair"
year: 1886
country: "United States"
canonical: "https://recap.at/1886/haymarket-affair"
slug: "haymarket-affair"
recapType: "global_event"
startDate: "1886-01-01"
---

# Haymarket Affair

On May 4, 1886, a bomb exploded at a Chicago labor rally, killing police and bystanders. Police arrested eight anarchist activists—most without solid evidence—and executed four in what became a foundational injustice for the American labor movement and a symbol of state violence against dissent.

## Summary

On May 4, 1886, a bomb detonated in Haymarket Square during a labor demonstration in Chicago, killing at least seven police officers and an unknown number of civilians. The explosion triggered a panic that turned the peaceful rally into chaos, with police opening fire on the crowd. What followed was a witch hunt: authorities arrested eight anarchist activists—Albert Parsons, August Spies, Adolph Fischer, George Engel, Louis Lingg, Michael Schwab, Samuel Fielden, and Oscar Neebe—most of whom had no direct connection to the bombing. The trial was a travesty of due process, driven by anti-immigrant hysteria and business interests hostile to the nascent labor movement. Four men were hanged on November 11, 1887; Lingg died by suicide in his cell; two had their sentences commuted to life imprisonment; and Neebe received 15 years.

The immediate context matters. Chicago in May 1886 was roiling with labor unrest. The Haymarket gathering itself was called to protest police violence from the previous day, when officers had killed several strikers at the McCormick factory. The rally drew thousands, and it remained largely orderly until someone—the actual bomber was never identified—threw the device into the police line. Panic ensued, and the authorities' response was brutality and opportunism.

The trial revealed how little evidence connected most of the defendants to the bombing itself. The prosecution argued that their anarchist speeches and writings made them complicit in the act, regardless of who threw the bomb. Judge Joseph E. Gary presided over a deeply prejudicial proceeding. The jury was stacked with businessmen and their allies. The defense had few resources. Expert testimony was unreliable; mob sentiment ran hot against "foreign radicals." The verdict was almost foregone.

The executions transformed the defendants into martyrs for the international labor and anarchist movements. Albert Parsons' last words—"Let the voice of the people be heard"—became iconic. Newspaper accounts and courtroom records circulated globally, fueling outrage. The Haymarket Affair became shorthand for the collision between capital and labor, and for the machinery of state power deployed against dissent. It galvanized support for the eight-hour workday and worker organizing, even as it demonstrated the lethal risks of that organizing in 1880s America.

Today, May 1 is celebrated as International Workers' Day partly because of Haymarket. The affair exposed how quickly democratic institutions could be weaponized against a political movement deemed threatening by the powerful. The bombs—one thrown by a person unknown to history, others constructed by the legal system itself—killed more than bodies. They killed whatever fragile promise of fair trial and due process might have existed for labor activists in the Gilded Age.

## Key facts

- **Date**: May 4, 1886
- **Location**: Haymarket Square, Chicago, Illinois
- **Police killed**: At least 7
- **Civilians killed**: Unknown, estimated at least 4
- **Anarchists arrested**: 8
- **Executed by hanging**: 4 (November 11, 1887)
- **Presiding judge**: Joseph E. Gary
- **Actual bomber identified**: Never

## Timeline

- **1886-05-03** — McCormick factory violence
  Police kill several workers during a strike at the McCormick factory in Chicago, setting the stage for the following day's protest.
- **1886-05-04** — Haymarket rally and bombing
  A peaceful labor demonstration in Haymarket Square turns violent when an unknown person throws a bomb into the police line, killing at least 7 officers. Police open fire on the crowd, killing civilians.
- **1886-05-04** — Mass arrests begin
  Chicago authorities arrest eight anarchist activists in the days following the bombing, most with tenuous connections to the explosion.
- **1886-06-21** — Trial begins
  The trial of the eight defendants opens before Judge Joseph E. Gary. The prosecution pursues a strategy of guilt by association and inflammatory speech rather than direct evidence.
- **1886-08-20** — Guilty verdicts
  The jury finds all eight defendants guilty. Seven are sentenced to death; Oscar Neebe receives 15 years imprisonment.
- **1887-06-26** — Illinois Supreme Court upholds convictions
  The state Supreme Court rejects appeals from the defense, clearing the way for executions.
- **1887-11-10** — Louis Lingg dies by suicide
  Hours before scheduled execution, anarchist Louis Lingg detonates a dynamite cartridge in his mouth in his cell.
- **1887-11-11** — Four executions
  Albert Parsons, August Spies, Adolph Fischer, and George Engel are hanged. Their final statements are preserved in newspapers and later publications.
- **1887-11-11** — Commutations announced
  Illinois Governor Richard Oglesby commutes the sentences of Michael Schwab and Samuel Fielden to life imprisonment.
- **1893-06-26** — Pardons granted
  Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld pardons the three surviving defendants (Schwab, Fielden, and Neebe), declaring the trial a miscarriage of justice.

## Relationships

- **echoed**: american-civil-war-begins — Haymarket (1886) echoed the Civil War's unresolved conflict between labor and capital; both centered on competing visions of human dignity and economic freedom, with state violence as the arbiter.
- **echoed**: may-1968-paris-uprising — May 1968 Paris uprising drew directly on May Day commemorations rooted in Haymarket martyrs (May 1st, 1890 onwards); anarchist and radical labor traditions that Haymarket crystallized were revived by 1960s student-worker movements.
- **responded to**: communist-manifesto — Haymarket (1886) represented the violent collision of Marxist and anarchist theory (outlined in the 1848 Manifesto) with American industrial capitalism; the trial became a crucible testing whether radical ideology could survive state repression.

## Consequences

- **1894 — Labor Day established as federal holiday**: Congress rushed to create Labor Day (first Monday in September) partly as a peace gesture to the labor movement after Haymarket's fallout, displacing the May 1st International Workers' Day that the left had adopted in memory of the executed men.
- **1890 — International Workers' Day (May 1st) commemorations begin**: Labor movements worldwide adopted May 1st as International Workers' Day explicitly to honor the Haymarket martyrs, turning a local Chicago tragedy into a global symbol of working-class struggle.
- **1901 — Rise of anarchist assassinations and bombings in America**: Radicalized by the executions and trial of Haymarket defendants, anarchists carried out a wave of attacks, culminating in Leon Czolgosz assassinating President William McKinley, deepening public fear of radical labor movements.
- **1886 — Expansion of police surveillance and labor-suppression powers**: In the immediate aftermath, police departments across the US expanded their authority to surveil, arrest, and disrupt labor organizing, setting precedents for decades of anti-union enforcement.
- **1886 — Formation of American Federation of Labor (AFL)**: Samuel Gompers and others, shaken by Haymarket's violence and radical associations, founded the AFL that same year, deliberately distancing mainstream unionism from anarchism and pursuing incremental reform over revolution.

## Then vs now

- **U.S. union membership**: 1886: ~3% of workforce → 2023: 10.1% of workforce — Haymarket galvanized organizing; union density peaked at ~35% in the 1950s before steady decline.
- **Police use of lethal force against protesters**: 1886: Largely unregulated; Haymarket police fired into crowds without oversight → 2024: Subject to state law, departmental policy, and civil litigation, though accountability remains contested — Haymarket exemplified police impunity; modern standards emerged from decades of civil rights litigation.
- **Public sympathy for labor organizing**: 1886: Haymarket bomb poisoned mainstream opinion; anarchism became radioactive → 2023: Labor has rebounded in public favor, with 71% of Americans approving of unions (2023 Gallup) — Haymarket's association with violence haunted unions for a generation.

## Impact

On May 4, 1886, a bomb exploded at a workers' rally in Chicago's Haymarket Square, killing police officers and civilians. The subsequent trials and executions of anarchist organizers became a foundational moment in American labor history—one that hardened class conflict, radicalized the left, and gave police sweeping powers to suppress dissent.

---
Canonical: https://recap.at/1886/haymarket-affair