Abstract
WAS EARLY SUMMER 1894; the depression which had been triggered by the stock market crash was into its second year. The ranks of the unemployed continued to grow along with the discontent of the labor force. Coxey's had been unceremoniously dismissed by the Washington, D.C. police in April. Southern California's own Army of the Unemployed, deceived and swindled by its commanders, fell defeated before the wrath of public opinion. The hot and humid weather of these early days of summer almost seemed to anticipate the tremendous thunderstorm about to burst over the Southland.
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