It was not always safe to be a millionaire, as Gould and his banker-ally Sage learned. In 1892 there was a particularly bloody strike against the steel plants at Homestead, Pennsylvania, and the leader of the management forces was the younger partner of Andrew Carnegie, the very able and very forceful magnate Henry Clay Frick. It was Frick who hired Pinkerton men to be a private army against the Union workers at Homestead. The casualty rate was high (between 20 and 40 people on both sides). Then, while Frick was in his office giving his daily orders for the strike breaking (which eventually succeeded), a small man came into the office. He was Mr. Alexander Berkman, a anarcho-socialist, and boyfriend of the anarchist spokeswoman, Emma Goldman. Berkman attacked and injured Frick with a knife and gun. Frick was seriously wounded, and Berkman arrested. Berkman would have a heavy jail sentence for the attempted assassination. Frick would recover.
Whatever one thinks of Frick's anti-union feelings, one aspect of his career keeps his memory somewhat green - he was a major art collector, and his homes in his native Pittsburgh, Pa., and in New York City (on Central Park East facing 5th Avenue) remain two lovely art collection museums. I recommend then to you if you visit either city.
Whatever one thinks of Frick's anti-union feelings, one aspect of his career keeps his memory somewhat green - he was a major art collector, and his homes in his native Pittsburgh, Pa., and in New York City (on Central Park East facing 5th Avenue) remain two lovely art collection museums. I recommend then to you if you visit either city.
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