jump to navigation

Ned McAdoo and the Molly Maguires: Chapter Four July 1, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, advertising, Archie McAdoo, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, Black Jack Kehoe, Books, Colleges, courts, criminal law, Department of Labor, Education, Fiction, film, Higher Education, homicide, Labor Law, labor unions, Law, Molly Maguires, movies, murder, mysteries, New McAdoo, news, NLRB, Novel, organized labor, Publishing, Self-publishing, spies, Supreme Court, Terrorism, trials, Truth, Uncategorized, unions, Universities, Wages & Hours.
add a comment

CHAPTER FOUR (1973)

“Curse of Convicted Mollie Still Lives”
by Jim Castagnera

On June 21, 1877 four men were hanged in the Central Pennsylvania coaltown of Mauch Chunk. The four — Michael Doyle, Edward Kelly, Alexander Campbell, and “Yellow Jack” Donohue — were members of a secret society of Irish coal miners, known as the Mollie Maguires. They had been convicted of murder in the most sensational trial to ever take place in the Carbon County courthouse, located in Mauch Chunk.
The Molly Maguires used terror and violence to combat the oppression of their English and Welsh foremen at a time when wages for a danger-filled day “in the hole” amounted to about fifty cents. The name was derived from a similar secret society, formed in mid-19th century Ireland, whose members frequently dressed in women’s clothing to better ambush the rent collectors. The power of the American Mollies peaked during the 1870s. They are credited with about 150 murders, and incited the mining communities to sporadic mob violence. They even organized strikes in unsuccessful attempts to bring the great mining and railroad companies to their knees.

Finally, the Pinkerton Detective Agency, hired by the mine owners, sent an undercover agent named James McParlen into the anthracite coal fields. He successfully infiltrated the Mollie organization, and lived to testify at trials in Carbon and Schuylkill Counties which sent some dozen Mollies to the gallows.
“Yellow Jack” Donohue had been convicted of the 1871 murder of Morgan Powell, a foreman for the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company in Summit Hill, a tiny Carbon County community.
His three companions on the gallows had been found guilty of killing a mine foreman named John P. Jones.
Newspaper accounts of the executions record that “Yellow Jack,” Doyle and Kelly displayed no remorse as they faced the hangman’s noose. Only Campbell protested his innocence.
As they dragged him from his cell on the first floor of the county jail, Campbell flattened the palm of his left hand against the damp plaster wall.
“This hand print,” he vowed, “will remain here as proof of my innocence. He shouted this vow over and over as the sheriff’s deputies dragged him to the gibbet in the jail yard.
Campbell dropped two feet, six inches through the trap door. He took fourteen minutes to die. When the county coroner pronounced him dead at last, his body was cut down and taken home for burial.
The years passed. The Mollie Maguires gave way to the United Mine Workers of America with its less violent tactics and more successful strikes. Alexander Campbell’s hand print remained.
After the turn of the century the palm print on the jail wall became something of a legend in the anthracite coal regions. Tourists from the Pennsylvania Pocono Mountains made the pilgrimage to Mauch Chunk to see for themselves the curious legacy left by Alexander Campbell.
The response of local law officers to this notoriety was less than enthusiastic. The open sore of Molly-Maguireism was slow to heal.
Anti-Irish sentiment persisted into the twentieth century.
In 1930 a Pennsylvania Dutchman named Biegler was elected sheriff in Carbon County. Biegler was known to be anti-Irish and anti-Catholic. He was determined to put an end to the legend which had grown up around the so-called ‘miracle’ in the first floor cell.
One night he brought the county road gang into the jail and had them tear out the wall that bore the bizarre shadow of a human hand. When the rubble was cleared, the road gang put in a new wall and covered it with fresh plaster. Sheriff Biegler retired early the next morning, confident that he had obliterated the noxious Irish ‘miracle.’
When he awoke and visited the cell later that day, he was appalled to find that the fresh plaster was marred by the vague outline of a hand. By evening a black palm was clearly visible on the cell wall. Or so the story goes. Witnesses who will corroborate the strange incident are hard to find.
But a more recent attempt to obliterate the hand from the wall can be corroborated. In 1960 Sheriff Charles Neast took up residence in the jailhouse in Jim Thorpe. (The name Mauch Chunk was changed to Jim Thorpe in 1954 to honor the great Indian athlete.) To test the authenticity of the 83-year-old print, he covered it with a green latex paint.
As Ferdinand “Bull” Herman, the current jail turn-key, is pleased to point out
to visitors, the shadow hand has once again reemerged and is clearly visible.
The Carbon County Jail, built in 1869, looks the same today as when it housed four condemned Irish terrorists nearly a century ago. In fact it was used by Paramount Pictures in 1968 for several scenes (including the inevitable gallows scene) in the movie titled “The Molly Maguires.”
The jail still has a few prisoners — a duo of dope addicts and a local gent who wrote some bad checks — but no prisoner has agreed to sleep in the cell containing the hand print. No cot is kept in the cell. The ponderous steel-grating door is opened only to accommodate tourists. According to “Bull” Herman the number of visitors to the cell grows each year.
“People come from all over to see the hand,” he says, “Had some folks in from Georgia not long ago. It seems people around here have begun to forget about it. But people from out of state hear about it somehow.”
No doubt the Paramount movie contributed to renewed interest in the Mollie Maguires. Sadly, the film overlooked the hand print. But the legend of this eerie, black silhouette survives by word of mouth. “Bull” Herman is summoned to the massive, black and gold front doors of the jail by curious tourists more frequently every year.
It’s almost as if some power we know little about has decreed that the legacy of Alexander Campbell — the hanged Mollie who swore his innocence — will remain to be seen by succeeding generations of Americans. And will remain to thrill and haunt the sons and daughters of the miners who used to dig the Black Gold.
************

Excerpt from the diary of Maggie Mulhearn, dated June 13, 1973:
My silly parents wouldn’t take me to see the hand print. They said it wasn’t the sort of thing a teenaged girl should be interested in. I swear! They’d still have me playing with dolls if they could !! And I’m 13 !!!
Thank God I can always get Gram and Pop Pop to do whatever I want them to. After Sunday dinner, I helped Gram with the dishes. Then we all got into Pop Pop’s new Impala and drove to Jim Thorpe. It’ll be our little secret, Pop Pop said and winked at me as he turned round to back the car out of his driveway.
What a creepy place the jail is ! And that old guy, the Bull !! Well, he’s really just a skinny old man. Really, I guess it’s the place that makes him seem like such a creep. I kept wanting to call him Egor ! Probably he’s somebody’s Pop Pop. But how can he hang around that place all the time ?? I mean, I know it’s his job. But REALLY !!!
The door actually creaked when he opened it. Boris Karloff ! And the smell! It made me think of Pop Pop’s socks when he comes into the kitchen in the summertime after working in his garden all morning and pulls off his old work-boots and then yanks off those white socks that he owns a thousand pairs of. Anyway, that’s how it smelled.
Then “the Bull” (ha, ha) took us to the cell. The bars must weigh a ton, they’re so thick. They creaked a little, too, when he opened them. Besides the regular bars there was some kind of steel mesh attached to them. I asked Mr. Bull and he said that had been added on to all the cell bars much later than when
the Molly Maguires were here.
The hand print was pretty high up on the wall and I asked him if he’d mind reaching up and putting his hand on the hand print. Then I took his picture. I think he was flattered. I think this makes him feel important, like some kind of celebrity or something.
I thought the whole thing was a lot of fun. But Pop Pop and Gram seemed a little upset when we left the jail. When we got back to their house I asked them about it. And then they told me about my Great Great Grandfather.

[If you like this story, consider buying this and its prequel, Why My Dad Hates Ice Cream, at my storefront: http://stores.lulu.com/store.php?fAcctID=1257238%5D

Chaos at the Labor Board? June 19, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, Archie McAdoo, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, courts, criminal law, Department of Labor, FLSA, Graduate assistants, Labor Law, labor unions, Law, Molly Maguires, news, NLRB, organized labor, Student interns, Supreme Court, trials, Truth, Uncategorized, unions, Wages & Hours.
add a comment

The law firm of Morgan Lewis reports the following new Supreme Court decision:
“U.S. Supreme Court Rules 5-4: Two-Member National Labor Relations Board Lacked Authority to Act

In New Process Steel, L.P. v. Nat’l Labor Relations Bd., No. 08-1457, decided June 17, 2010, the U.S. Supreme Court held that Section 3(b) of the Taft-Hartley Act requires that the National Labor Relations Board (the Board) maintain a membership of three in order to exercise its authority. This decision places into question the fate of more than 500 cases decided by the two-member Board over a 27-month period, including five other cases pending before the Supreme Court and approximately 70 cases pending before various federal courts of appeals challenging the validity of the two-member rulings.”

This is just the most recent conservative volley in the ongoing labor war between the Dems and the GOP. When the Republicans in the Senate refused to confirm President Obama’s pro-labor nominees for the understaffed NLRB, the Prez used his power of recess appointment to put two Dems on the Board, while declining to elevate the pro-management nominee. (Traditionally the ruling party has three members to the other party’s two at any given time on a fully staffed Board.)

Now, the GOP’s allies on the high court have hurled a rebuke at the pro-labor NLRB chair. As noted above, more than 500 cases decided by the rump Board now may need to be revisited, essentially putting the agency so far behind that it may never dig out. To paraphrase a famous early Supreme Court case, “The power to bury under work is the power to destroy.”

Where is American higher education today? June 16, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, advertising, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, Books, coleges, Colleges, Computers, courts, Cyberspace, Department of Labor, Education, film, Graduate assistants, Higher Education, International students, Labor Law, Law, libel, Libera arts, Liberal Arts, movies, news, Publishing, Student interns, Student Law, Students, Supreme Court, Teaching Assistants, Terrorism, trials, Truth, Uncategorized, Universities.
add a comment

In the September/October issue of Change Magazine, I published an article entitled “The Role of Higher Education in the 21st Century: Collaborator or Counterweight?” I have reprinted it below. In succeeding posts, I intend to examine how my predictions and my hopes for higher education, as expressed in that article, have faired in the decade since it was published.

DOC061610

Vintage Archie McAdoo, Attorney at Large June 14, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, advertising, Archie McAdoo, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, Books, Computers, courts, criminal law, Cyberspace, Department of Labor, Education, Fiction, film, Higher Education, Labor Law, Law, libel, Miranda rights, Molly Maguires, murder, mysteries, New McAdoo, news, Novel, Publishing, spies, Student Law, Supreme Court, Terrorism, Uncategorized.
add a comment

For those of you following the unfolding novel, Ned McAdoo and the Molly Maguires, herewith some vintage cartoons about his old man, Archie.

Some media attention for my piece on unpaid student interns June 13, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, courts, criminal law, Department of Labor, Education, FLSA, Graduate assistants, Higher Education, International students, Internships, Labor Law, Law, news, NLRB, Student interns, Student Law, Students, Summer Jobs, Supreme Court, Teaching Assistants, trials, Uncategorized, Wages & Hours.
add a comment

Ned McAdoo and the Molly Maguires, Chapter Three June 5, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, Animal rights, Archie McAdoo, Attorney at Large, attorneys, Bill of Rights, Books, Computers, courts, criminal law, Cyberspace, Education, Fiction, film, homicide, Labor Law, Law, libel, Miranda rights, Molly Maguires, movies, murder, mysteries, New McAdoo, news, Novel, Publishing, Supreme Court, Terrorism, trials, Uncategorized.
add a comment

CHAPTER THREE (1987)
On the evening of the day that he met Maggie Mulhearn, Archie told us during dinner of the unusual engagement.
“Who are the Molly Maguires?” Katy asked the question that was also in my mind. Given that Pop later confessed to me how he had indulged that afternoon in a celebratory pig out and snooze, in retrospect I’m surprised at how much he knew about John Kehoe and the so-called Molly Maguires when he responded to our collective curiosity.
“There are two kinds of coal in Pennsylvania,” he began, swallowing a bit noisily the piece of pork chop he had been chewing. “There’s soft coal. Bituminous. That’s the most common and it’s mined out around Pittsburgh. The second kind is anthracite, or… Ned?” He looked my way. The mashed potatoes on their way to my mouth stopped in mid air. The gravy dribbled from them back down onto my plate. This had always been one of Pop’s favorite pedagogic ploys, as far back as I can recall.
“Uh… hard coal?” I ventured, hoping that logic ruled in the realm of coal mining.
“Very good, Ned,” said my Father, showing no apparent pride that I had managed to guess the obvious. “Hard coal. Yes. Not so common, and today not very significant. But in the second half of the 19th century big money was being made in hard coal. By railroads such as the Reading, and by the people who owned and ran them. Naturally,” he continued, “like almost everyone else on the planet at that time, the hard coal miners were exploited.”
“What does that mean… exploited?” Katy questioned him.
“It means used… taken advantage of,” Mom chimed in, this brief interruption in his disquisition affording the Old Man opportunity enough to shovel in a big fork-full of mashed spuds and wash them down with a big gulp of the white wine he was having with his dinner.
“Right,” resumed Archie, delicately wiping some gravy from his fleshy, pink lower lip. “The miners in eastern Pennsylvania, where the hard coal was mined — they were mostly Irish, by the way — were required to work very long hours for very little pay. The work was exceptionally dangerous, even for a time when thousands of railroad and industrial workers were killed and injured every year.”
“So who are the Molly Maguires?” Katy impatiently persisted, as she always did when Dad got into his professorial posture.
“The Molly Maguires,” he went on, betraying only a very tiny bit of annoyance at this second, and apparently unwanted, interruption (his plate was clean, his wine glass empty now), “were Irish miners who rebelled against mine and railroad companies and took matters into their own hands.
“It was a secret society, the Molly Maguires, and its members shot mine owners and operators, blew up railroads and mines, and generally tried to make life as miserable for the capitalists as they made it for the miners and their families. But it was a no win situation.”
“What do you mean?” asked Katy.
“I know,” I said, stealing Archie’s thunder. “They were all caught and hanged.”
“How do you know that?” Archie inquired, a little disappointed that I had gotten to reveal the climax to his story.
“Because,” I said with some satisfaction, “I just remembered that I saw the movie on the late show one night.”
“Oh, yeah,” the Old Man reflected, caressing the right side of his bulbous nose with a pensive forefinger. “I remember the film. Do you recall it, Karen?”
Mom had gotten up and begun clearing the dinner dishes as a prelude to dessert. “Not really,” she replied. “I know we saw it years ago. But I can’t say it left too much of an impression.”
Mom was a Philly girl. The rest of Pennsylvania was an unknown wilderness to her, except for a couple of favorite Pocono resorts, which were the “known wilderness” in her mind. The history of the hard coal region was of no moment to her.
“Sean Connery and Richard Harris, wasn’t it, Ned?” Pop turned back to me, Mom in his view having nothing useful to contribute.
“Sean Connery for sure,” I responded. Connery was still a big star in the 1980s and on into the nineties. “I’m not sure who any of the other guys in it were.”
“Well, we ought to rent it,” Archie reasoned. In the next instant he was pushing himself ponderously back from the table.
“Don’t you want dessert?” Mom sounded a bit startled, and where Archie and dessert were concerned, rightly so.
“I’m going over to Movies Unlimited to see if I can get that flick,” he declared. “I’ll have my dessert with the movie.”
And so, a half hour later our family of four was gathered round the electronic hearth in the basement family room, watching a film released in 1970 by Paramount Pictures. The movie is called “The Molly Maguires,” staring, yes, Sean Connery, Richard Harris, and a soap opera rage of that era named Samantha Eggar. Directed by Martin Ritt, a film maker with a reputation for making “message films,” the movie captures the legend well enough:
The action opens with Richard Harris, playing the Pinkerton detective James McParlan, arriving at Shenandoah in central-eastern Pennsylvania, where he’s been dispatched by Alan Pinkerton, who’s been put on the payroll of the Reading Railroad to infiltrate and expose the Mollies. Under the alias of Jamie McKenna, McParlan takes a job down in the mines, meanwhile spreading around the local pub crowd the largess he attributes to “passing the queer” (fencing counterfeit money). The upshot is that Connery a/k/a Black Jack Kehoe, a fellow miner, initiates McParlan into his little band of desperadoes, a tight-knit band of terrorists within the ranks of the benevolent Irish social club, the Ancient Order of Hibernians.
Katy wasn’t much interested in this hoary yarn of labor exploitation and unrest. After gobbling a slab of Mom’s chocolate cake with a scoop of vanilla ice cream, she went to her room upstairs in search of more rewarding pursuits. The movie offered enough action to keep me interested, as the little band of Irish terrorists tore up the Reading’s tracks with their black powder charges and ambushed offensive mine bosses in their victims’ stables and outhouses. Mom stayed on to the end, too, though she insisted that one light stay lit — Archie likes the room dark as a theater when he watches a video — and she read some company documents she’d brought home in her briefcase, only occasionally casting a fleeting glance at the action on the screen.
But the Old Man was entranced. As the legendary tale lumbered inexorably to its tragic conclusion — McParlan’s betrayal of his comrades and his secret oath, their trial and execution, his rejection by Samantha Eggar (whose loyalty lay with her mine patch community), McParlan’s departure from the coal fields with his pockets filled with money but his heart just as heavy with unrequited love — Pop pumped down three big slabs of Mom’s extra-moist devil’s food cake (but no ice cream), sluiced down with about half a dozen cups of coffee. In fairness to my Dad, I note here that his concession to a healthier lifestyle that evening, as almost always, was decaf coffee sweetened artificially. This concession, pushed and policed by my mother, assuaged any twinge of guilt he might otherwise have felt about the three desserts.
Then, with Sean Connery and his comrades duly hanged by the neck until dead, and the chocolate cake (or what was left of it) duly sealed in saran wrap, Mom and I headed upstairs to our respective bedrooms and, gratefully, to our beds.
But not Pop. He adjourned to the sunroom at the back of the house, where he gobbled up the book he had begun before dozing off in his office that afternoon. One thing I always had to admit about the Old Man: if he could gorge himself on cake, he likewise could gorge himself on knowledge. He told me once that, when he started into law school, an attorney-friend of his father had given him a foam rubber cushion as a gift. “You’ll need this more than you’ll need your brains,” he had told Archie, who added that he used that cushion hard during his three years of legal education. And when I started into law school five years ago, Archie wrapped that beat-up cushion, with its foam rubber showing through the torn material at the corners, and gave it to me.
I did all right in law school but I never developed Pop’s power of uninterrupted concentration. Though I was upstairs asleep, still only a high school student, in my mind’s eye I can see him pawing over the battered paperback book, that in the months ahead became his constant companion, sometimes in his briefcase, often in his suit coat pocket. I can see the dim lamplight illuminating the side of his jowly face, and his ever-sweaty hands clutching the book.
Archie had read nearly the whole book by the time morning rolled around and Mom gave him a gentle kiss on the forehead — something I did see first hand — before tiptoeing out to the garage and heading for her job at REF Group.

Relativity June 5, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, attorneys, Bill of Rights, Books, courts, criminal law, Cyberspace, Education, Fiction, film, Higher Education, Labor Law, Law, libel, Miranda rights, movies, murder, news, Novel, Publishing, slander, spies, Students, Supreme Court, Terrorism, trials, Uncategorized, William Gibson.
add a comment

“A nation consists of its laws. A nation does not consist of its situation at a given time. If an individual’s morals are situational, that individual is without morals. If a nation’s laws are situational, that nation has no laws, and soon isn’t a nation.” William Gibson, Spook Country (2007) at 136-37.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WMqReTJkjjg

Intelligence is Advertising turned inside out June 3, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, advertising, attorneys, Books, Computers, Cyberspace, Education, Fiction, Higher Education, Law, libel, movies, mysteries, news, Novel, Publishing, spies, Uncategorized, William Gibson.
add a comment

So says William Gibson in Spook Country.
What we see on the outside is the ad. Turn it inside out and you’ll find the intelligence… the confidential research… inside it.

Life reduced to risk management? June 2, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, attorneys, Books, Computers, courts, Cyberspace, Education, Fiction, GPS, Higher Education, Law, mysteries, news, Novel, Publishing, Terrorism, trials, Uncategorized, William Gibson.
add a comment

“We have no future because our present is too volatile. We have only risk management.” — William Gibson, Pattern Recognition

Miranda or Stasi… You Be the Judge June 1, 2010

Posted by kchrenterprises in academia, attorneys, Bill of Rights, courts, criminal law, Cyberspace, Education, Fiction, film, Higher Education, homicide, Labor Law, Law, Miranda rights, movies, murder, mysteries, news, Supreme Court, Terrorism, trials.
add a comment

Today a majority of the US Supreme Court decided that if a detainee maintains silence for hours on end, this alone does not establish that he wishes to exercise his Miranda rights. Unless and until he expressly says so, he has not exercised them, and any time he opens his mouth, he has waived them.

Interrogate anyone continuously and eventually s/he will break down and start talking. This is beautifully illustrated in the opening sequence of the 2007 German film about the Stasi of the late, great East Germany, entitled “The Lives of Others.” Check it out on Youtube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iu-NJA4Y1RI