THG Podcast: Assassinated US Governors

    [Music]
    welcome to the history guy podcast a
    podcast dedicated to stories of lesser
    known historical events told by Lance
    skyer also known as the history guy on
    YouTube I’m Josh your host a writer for
    the channel and eldest son of the
    history guy we tell all kinds of stories
    about history from the modern era to the
    ancient past so you never know what
    we’re going to talk about next one thing
    you can be sure of it is history that
    deserves to be
    remembered today the history guide tells
    two stories of American political
    assassinations at the turn of the 19th
    century first he talks about the only
    assassination of a sitting us Governor
    then he talks about the former Governor
    killed by Dynamite while they happened
    in different parts of the country
    together they illustrate some of the
    biggest political battles of the time
    and the lengths that some went to get
    their
    way without further Ado let me introduce
    the history
    guy as a successful attorney in Kentucky
    state senator William goal took on the
    interests of the powerful railroads and
    the wealthy Elite of the Gilded Age but
    along the way he made enemies the
    political career and assassination of
    William Goble still the only sitting us
    Governor ever to be assassinated is
    history that deserves to be remembered
    William Justice Goble was born in 1856
    to German immigrant parents in
    Pennsylvania his father served in the
    Civil War on the union side leaving his
    mother at home with four children she
    taught them about their German Heritage
    William spoke only German until age six
    his father was discharged from the Army
    in 1863 and moved the family to
    Covington Kentucky just across the Ohio
    River from Cincinnati William eventually
    decided to become an attorney and
    Apprentice with former Kentucky Governor
    John Stevenson from age 15 to 21 he
    graduated from Cincinnati Law School in
    1877 he eventually became Stevenson’s
    partner in his law practice Stevenson
    was Chief counsil to Kentucky Central
    Railroad and Goble became an expert in
    contracts corporations and
    railroads he went into his own law
    practice to address alleged abuse by the
    railroads and negligence in the courts
    many overworked injured Railroad
    employees and widows came to him for
    help settlements were large and he
    became quite Rich Goble also defended
    Railroad employees arrested in the 1894
    Pullman Strike he didn’t charge a fee
    became hailed as the railroad lawyer and
    the poor man’s lawyer in 1887 Kentucky
    state Senator James Bryan decided to
    resign his seat and run for lieutenant
    governor Goble decided to run for the
    seat because it represented Covington he
    ran on a platform of railroad regulation
    and support for organized labor with a
    popular platform and the support of
    Stevenson Goble assumed that his
    election would be easy but ran into
    problems because the union labor party
    was running on a similar platform and
    appealing to both Democrats and
    Republicans goal Ren as a Democrat won
    by just 56 votes he came to a Kentucky
    Democratic party that was on Hard Times
    Republicans had come to the state to to
    break white rule during Reconstruction
    the economy was poor workers wages were
    low farmers were in debt and taxes were
    high Goble was not a southerner his
    family had fought for the union he was
    not the typical Kentucky Democrat he
    believed in civil rights or blacks and
    women and he added a populist agenda
    there were only two years left in the
    term Goble was serving so Goble had to
    make a name for himself quickly his
    first bill reduced the tolls on
    Covington roads owned by a corporation
    favored more regulation and reforms
    voters love to but he made the
    ex-confederate ruling class angry he
    served on a committee to investigate
    lobbying by the railroad industry it’s
    lobbyists had attempted to get the
    legislature to abolish the Kentucky
    Railroad Commission goal’s committee
    uncovered abuses by lobbyists such as
    giving free passes money food whiskey to
    legislators he helped defeat the bill to
    abolish the commission became quite
    popular in this district and easily won
    re-election in 1889 in
    1893 in 1890 he served on the committee
    drafting the new Kentucky Constitution
    secured a passage put in the Railroad
    Commission in the Constitution and thus
    insulating it from the legislature and
    attempts to abolish it but Goble made
    enemies in the process and that nearly
    cost him his political
    career the Kentucky Constitution
    included a clause Banning anyone who had
    participated in a duel from holding
    office a leftover from its days as a
    western frontier state that had a
    dueling problem it also required public
    officials to swear an oath that they
    would not fight any duels goal nearly
    run a foul of this clause in
    1895 John Leathers Sanford a former
    Confederate Colonel turned Banker was
    widely believed to have cost goal an
    appointment to ky’s highest court in
    retaliation for goal leading legislation
    to lower the tolls in Covington costing
    Sanford a lot of money Goble wrote an
    article in a newspaper calling him garia
    John Sanford was angered when Goble let
    a group opposed to increases in the
    tolls on the bridge between Covington
    and Cincinnati one of his Investments
    the last straw was when Goble
    transferred three accounts from
    Sanford’s Bank to another Sanford Was
    Heard saying he was going to kill Goble
    or be killed on a trip to the bank in
    Covington Goble and his colleague were
    stopped by Sanford while talking Sanford
    kept his hand on his pistol in his
    pocket Goble held on to his pistol sford
    asked Goble if he wrote the article and
    he said he had both men fired at each
    other but Witnesses were not sure who
    fired first Goble had turned the last
    moment and Sanford shot went through
    goal’s clo where as the Cincinnati
    inquir explained pass through his
    coattails trousers and underclothing
    without drawing blood Sanford was shot
    in the head just above the right eye he
    died 5 hours later Goble turned himself
    into police and was investigated for
    murder he pled self-defense the corers
    inquest agreed it was a stroke of good
    luck had he been convicted to
    participating in a duel he would have
    been banned from holding public
    office in 1899 9 Goble received the
    Democratic nomination for governor
    during the election he campaigned
    against the Louisville and Nashville
    Railroad and talked about his opponent
    and comment William Taylor and his cozy
    relationship with the railroad Goble
    asked crowds if they wanted the railroad
    to be the master or the servant of the
    people in 1904 the chairman of the
    railroad admitted that they spent
    $900,000 to attempt to defeat goal on
    November 7th 1899 Taylor beat goal by a
    narrow margin of just 2383 votes
    Goble was gracious in defeat but his
    supporters were not Democrats in some
    counties began making accusations of
    voting problems and Goble was persuaded
    to ask for a recount under the Kentucky
    Constitution contested elections were to
    be decided by a contest committee made
    up of 11 members of the legislature the
    committee drawn by lot included more
    Democrats and favored goal Taylor sent
    for supporters to come to Frankfurt and
    thousands of armed mountain men from
    Eastern Kentucky answered his call to
    intimidate his opponents in order to
    take the election in his favor the
    Louisville Courier General declared
    armed mob of Mountaineers invade
    Frankfurt to bully the
    legit on the clear and cold morning of
    January 30th 1900 goo walked to the old
    state capital in Frankfurt despite
    having been warned of an assassination
    attempt he had two bodyguards with him
    including Captain e Lillard Warden of
    the State Penitentiary as they reached
    the State House gate a shot rang out
    Goble uttered an involuntary exclamation
    of pain and attempted to draw his
    revolver but his strength failed him and
    he sank to the sidewalk several more
    shots followed but no one else was
    wounded Goble was carried two blocks to
    the capital hotel where a doctor ee Hume
    had an office the doctor immediately
    recognized that the bullet wound which
    had entered above the right breast and
    punctured along before exiting next to
    the spine was Mortal Goble was taken to
    a room on the second floor of the hotel
    the shots were fired from the direction
    of a three-story building in which a
    number of State officials including
    governor Taylor and Secretary of State
    Caleb Powers had
    offices when Taylor was told of the
    event he seemed to be horrified and
    decried the assassination attempt but as
    goal supporters started to come to
    Frankfurt he called out the state
    militia in order to preserve order the
    militia formed so quickly that some
    people were suspicious thinking that he’
    already planned to call the militia for
    some unknown
    purpose the state teetered on the brink
    of a civil war for several days the
    Democratic majority in the legislature
    tried to meet but Taylor had them
    forcibly dispersed Taylor then ordered a
    meeting of the assembly himself but
    called them to London Kentucky a
    republican dominated area the Republican
    minority came while the Democrats did
    not resulting in the Republicans not
    having a
    quorum Taylor tried to keep the contest
    committee from meeting but they managed
    to outwit him and meet in secret on
    January 31st the contest committee
    declared the injured Goble the winner
    the Republican minority was angered as
    were voters in Republican districts
    Taylor remained defiant
    Goble was sworn as his Governor from his
    sick bed knowing that Goble was not long
    for this world his lieutenant governor
    JCW Beckham was also sworn in goal’s
    first order was to disband the militia
    called up by Taylor the call was ignored
    by the Republican commander of the
    militia Beckham as acting Governor then
    replaced the agitant general of the
    militia with one of goal’s men who
    formed another
    militia for a while Kentucky had two
    Governors two Lieutenant Governors two
    agitant
    two militias and two legislator all
    continuing to do business as if the
    others didn’t
    exist Taylor remained defiant he tried
    to draft Bank vouchers to pay his
    militia but the president of the bank
    refused the payment he pardoned a
    prisoner in the State Penitentiary but
    the warden who had been with Goble when
    he was shot refused to free the prisoner
    Taylor continued to use his militia to
    forcibly prevent the legislature from
    meeting when a judge sent an order
    restraining him from doing so he had his
    soldiers arrest the man serving the
    order
    Goble died from the gunshot wound on
    February 3rd 1900 journalist said his
    last words were tell my friends to be
    brave fearless and loyal to the Common
    People his lieutenant governor Beckham
    was sworn in but the standoff with
    Taylor
    continued with Goal dead Democrats and
    Republicans tried to negotiate a
    compromise on the election Democrats
    would get the governorship for Beckham
    Republicans would remove the militia
    from Frankfurt and Democrats would give
    immunity to any Republican official
    involved in the
    assassination Taylor however did not
    want to leave office and refused to
    recognize the agreement turning to the
    courts when a warrant was issued for the
    arrest of Caleb Powers Taylor’s
    Secretary of State for the assassination
    Taylor protected him instructing the
    militia to block him from being arrested
    Powers managed to escaped Frankfurt
    wearing a disguise trying to get to a
    republican area but was caught by the
    sheriff in
    Lexington ultimately the Kentucky court
    of appeal said the legislature acted
    legally in declaring goal the winner
    Taylor Taylor appealed to the US Supreme
    Court who refused to hear the case
    allowing the court of appeals decision
    to stand out of legal options Taylor
    stepped down and JC W Beckham became
    Governor 16 people including Taylor were
    indicted in the eventual case about the
    assassination Taylor fled to
    Indianapolis the Indiana Governor
    refused to extradite him so he was never
    questioned about the case by Kentucky
    authorities three of the men accused
    made deals to testify for the state in
    exchange for immunity five went to trial
    and two were acquitted Caleb Powers was
    convicted along with Harry uty and Jim
    Howard prosecutors said Powers was The
    Mastermind uty was the intermediary and
    Howard was the Assassin the trials were
    highly irregular all three judges were
    prog Global Democrats and the jury pool
    was light on Republicans Republican
    appeals courts overturned the
    convictions of powers and Howard Powers
    was tried three more times with two
    convictions and a hung jury Howard was
    also tried and convicted again udy was
    sentenced to life in prison and did not
    appeal it after 2 years in prison became
    a witness for the state in Howard’s
    second trial he testified that Taylor
    had conspired with UT and Howard he
    admitted that he acted as an
    intermediary and supported the
    prosecution theory that Taylor and
    Powers were the masterminds and Howard
    the
    Assassin despite the three men spending
    some time in prison for the crime the
    assassination of goal has never been
    conclusively solved and most historians
    think that the identity of the Assassin
    and any plotters will likely never be
    discovered after serving 8 years years
    in prison in 1908 Howard and Powers were
    pardoned by Beckham’s successor Augustus
    Wilson Powers went on to be elected to
    two terms in the United States House of
    Representatives utti was paroled in 1916
    and pardoned in 1919 Taylor was also
    pardoned by Wilson but he rarely
    returned to Kentucky and became a
    successful lawyer in
    Indiana Goble was an unlikely politician
    in Kentucky he wasn’t even a native
    wasn’t part of the traditional power
    structure of the Gilded a AG he didn’t
    give rousing speeches he excelled at
    working behind the scenes to get his
    agenda passed he took on powerful
    railroads and corporations in his home
    state and while he wasn’t part of the
    ex-confederate ruling class his populist
    agenda attracted voters he remains the
    only sitting governor in US history to
    be assassinated a victim of the powerful
    wealthy of the Gilded
    Age now’s the part of the episode where
    we get to chat with the history guy a
    little bit about what we just heard what
    we’re going to hear and some behind the
    scenes stuff you only get to hear about
    on the podcast and we’d like to welcome
    Betty Joe my grandmother and the history
    guys mom back to the
    podcast you know this is a this is an
    amazing story as I mean as all the
    stories we look at we always pick great
    ones but this pair of stories that we’re
    looking at today is is wild especially
    because it’s just it’s almost totally
    forgotten this is a period of history
    that uh I think a lot of people you know
    it gets glossed over in the history
    books we I think people understand that
    there was Labor unrest in the United
    States but to the level of what happened
    say here in Idaho uh this is a former
    you know retired governor and he’s
    assassinated with dynamite and I it’s I
    don’t know when people are told about
    this anything like it it’s not brought
    up in most of the most of the uh when
    you talk about you know issues with
    labor they don’t talk about the time
    that this former governor was blown up
    by booby trap uh because of his
    opposition to Labor uh you know part of
    the fun of being the history guy uh is
    that you know you get to learn about I
    mean I I have degrees in history I never
    heard either I I did not hear either of
    these ever mentioned in any history
    class that I ever took and they really
    do represent the era it’s not that this
    these are just you know odd events they
    are they’re both just crazy stories it’s
    crazy what’s going on in these states
    and and but that that these were these
    did really represent the big challenges
    of the time largely at this time a
    populist challenge a challenge of Labor
    uh and a lot of the development of the
    West so it’s because you know we we like
    to talk about the wild west we think
    about you know the hers or or or the
    Indian Wars or whatever and really it
    was a lot of it had to do with these
    labor struggles uh and and really you
    know what did what did that mean the
    people that were populating the West
    thought differently than the people in
    the East and they were more populist
    they were more egalitarian people had
    gone west to escape the structures and
    that led to these challenges of course
    you don’t have a mind if you you don’t
    have a rich person to build the mind but
    you don’t have a mind if you don’t have
    poor people to mind the mind and that
    always led to conflict but they’re also
    just they’re crazy both these stories
    are just they’re whack they’re out of
    control something’s wrong with people
    and so I think that that that part of
    the lesson here is you know if we think
    you hear people today they’ll think
    America is more divided than it’s ever
    been uh it might be more divided than
    most people’s memory I mean I guess that
    that depends because I think we
    sometimes kind of forget what the 1970s
    were like but uh certainly it is not
    more divided than it’s ever been it’s
    not more divided than the Civil War but
    it’s really I mean this turn of the
    century it’s a guilded age is coming
    along and and the this this kind of
    conflict uh we just you couldn’t imagine
    that today you could not imagine today
    in a contested election that someone’s
    answer would be lean out the window and
    shoot the guy right I mean that’s it’s
    it’s absolutely wild and these are the
    things I mean this would be big big news
    today if if any of this happened I mean
    we’re talking about we’re talking about
    straight up terrorism and and in
    oh yeah well two Governors two
    legislators two militias two militia
    captains or two two two and and you know
    that’s that’s insane I mean you know we
    we don’t even in all that we have today
    and there’s a lot today there’s
    contested elections today Arizona was
    just you know still arguing over the
    Arizona election still arguing over
    Georgia in the cycle before that and you
    know for all of that you know the answer
    was never that both of you raised up an
    armed militia and used it to literally
    keep the legislature from meeting but
    one of the other really interesting
    things is that these are forgotten
    stories we don’t remember them we don’t
    know anything about them and today we
    know what happened three minutes ago and
    so you always have to remember that
    Communications has made all the
    difference in the world as far as how we
    react to things and how we see things
    and in those days I’m sure that they
    knew that things were split or that
    people didn’t agree with each other but
    just think about the whole concept is
    different because because we have
    instant news yeah you didn’t have a news
    cycle here you didn’t have 24-hour you
    didn’t have people looking at their
    Oh’s just being on the other side of the
    other side of the state would have would
    have made it a different experience he
    would have been at a distance from it
    and today we would we’d have I mean we’d
    have people filming every piece of it
    there’d be witness uh you know iPhone
    videos from every angle and it’s it’s a
    very different it’s true we would see it
    different so maybe uh division today
    affects the whole nation and the
    perception of the nation maybe faster
    than it than it did then but so I mean
    that the thing that that we have these
    you know these two stories that are you
    a good distance apart between what
    Kentucky and Idaho and they both did
    involve the you know the presidency and
    National politics at the time uh but I
    mean that shows that these still were
    representing National Trends and
    National divisions uh and both of these
    stories going to end up you know tying
    to some of those same divisions so you
    in different ways but it is you know
    when we talk about I mean it’s just
    amazing how can these be forgotten
    because understanding this and
    understanding the nation survive this
    and understanding how the nation survive
    that might be meaningful in days when we
    have political division and disagreement
    and and elections that
    in dispute and and all the sorts of
    things that that led to these it’s
    interesting because in Lexington there
    is a brass plaque on the ground that
    says this is where Goble was shot uh and
    I wonder how many people walk over that
    plaque and have no idea who William
    Goble is more or less outside of
    Kentucky uh well and I wonder if in
    Kentucky do you suppose if you’re in a
    duel today they can take you that you
    can’t no longer be Governor you still
    can’t I wonder how many of those laws
    still exist cuz I thought that was
    really funny too if you’re if you’re in
    Kentucky and someone’s going to run you
    don’t like challenge him to a duel
    apparently if you get them to fight a
    duel they they they’re ineligible but I
    yes I mean we T right now you will have
    candidates on both sides where the other
    side is says you they love that guy so
    much that he could literally shoot
    someone dead in the street and they
    would still vote for him that literally
    happened in he literally shot the guy in
    the face and then ran for govern yeah
    that one that’s I mean it’s it’s
    shocking cuz you hear that and you’re
    like oh my gosh he I mean he shot a dude
    I mean in public
    I I don’t know how you you think it
    would make it difficult the big question
    was was it a duel that was the the real
    question there was was it a duel that
    was that was they really care if the guy
    died I it would be an interesting it
    would be an interesting uh of course we
    don’t you know we don’t generally I mean
    they they they were Kentucky was not
    exactly the the frontier exact at at
    that point but uh more so maybe than you
    know New York but yeah more so yeah you
    know it’s it’s a mountaineering State I
    think I mean it was certainly were a
    little bit more Rough and Ready in the
    nation and you know at the turn of the
    century there but and you know he he got
    shot right through his underwear too you
    have to you have to appreciate how lucky
    he was that this guy was able to shoot
    in a way that literally pierced his
    underwear and didn’t you know didn’t
    draw BL managed to and I mean they were
    they were
    close I I they had to have been by they
    had have been standing right right next
    to each other but and you know Ang Angry
    Words turn to gunfire that’s that’s
    that’s never a good thing but I mean
    it’s not something we would expect of
    someone that’s you running for govern it
    would be it would be uh pretty crazy for
    for someone who was you know running for
    governor for a for a political person to
    literally get in a gunfight although
    also you know I think that today we we
    kind of view view that a little
    differently uh it’s it’s a you know now
    we’ve got we’ve got it’s a very
    different world than it used to be it is
    yeah I mean yeah well you know we’ve
    talked about the Hamilton duel and I
    mean know that’s things things have just
    kind of changed with time so uh we we I
    guess less frequently deal with our
    political issues via gunfire it’s not
    like it’s completely
    it’s it’s still a political but it’s
    maybe not the same political issue that
    it used to be it’s maybe not the same
    yes they’re probably not shooting
    literally out of the window of the
    governor’s office that’s yeah that one
    we don’t know that it might have been
    from the Secretary of State’s office
    we’re not sure which window that’s
    something we might know today just
    because we would we would have some
    video where you could see maybe see the
    shot coming through or something that
    that’s true yeah so they would have a
    clear idea of who it was that was
    shooting at each other there from the in
    front of the the the the captain of the
    prison and yeah uh you know this is this
    story it’s it’s kind of crazy for out
    but it’s really interesting uh uh
    because Goble was you know he was such a
    political Outsider uh he was challenging
    the traditional structures he was uh
    presenting himself as a hero of the
    Common Man uh and that’s you know you
    always see that I mean those sort of
    populists always rise and you see them
    in all sorts of of eras of history and
    you know whenever you challenge the
    status quo then there’s going to be some
    Kickback uh and it’s interesting where
    they both found uh their uh their
    support base and you you can laugh
    certainly about the politics of it and
    when you know when you question an
    election when they when when he decided
    for a recount they didn’t actually go
    recount the votes uh they just by lot
    Drew
    11 members of the Kentucky state house
    and then they decided and obviously they
    were going to decide based on their
    politics so then you’re just wondering
    who’s who’s drawing the right straws I
    mean that that’s all around bizarre uh
    but and the story that he’s the only you
    know uh sitting us Governor to have been
    assassinated of course it’s very story
    is that he wasn’t actually a governor
    when when he was shot he was only a
    governor but he was a governor by the
    time that he died uh is really I mean
    this is this is this whole story is is
    crazy and it’s crazy that politics could
    get so acrimonious that it would come to
    the point that you’re both you know you
    both your arm militias are facing each
    other uh and and yet you know uh uh
    despite all of that I mean the only
    violence that occurred was this
    assassination I mean you know it didn’t
    erupt into into gosh you you sure think
    it could have and I mean these were you
    want to talk about partisanship it would
    be it would be crazy
    if if you know one one candidate in say
    a govern a govern governatori candidate
    in the state you know calls in the the
    Democratic militia and the the
    Republican militia is is a different
    entity that’s uh it’s it doesn’t quite
    work like and you name and you got you
    know you got different judges and you
    got I mean there’re all but and there so
    I mean there there really could have
    been a civil Civil War here and I just
    love the fact that we had two
    legislatures we had two Governors we had
    two everything uh uh which is just
    absolutely just think about what that
    must have been like and who followed
    whose orders and so forth I know yeah
    what if you had to you know you know the
    bank the bank guy uh the bank President
    says oh I’m not going to I’m not going
    to
    honor he has to make he’s got to make
    make a decision on that and the captain
    of the prison doesn’t accept the pardon
    and and so so I mean you know you you’ve
    divided up the the offices by you know
    who’s taking what side and it’s kind of
    hard to see in this whole story here
    there was any truly neutral party no
    everyone seemed to be you don’t that I
    mean it’s not like they go to some court
    or something like that where someone’s
    saying we’re going to try to easily
    adjudicate this based on the law I mean
    they’re all I mean it was no question
    when you selected your legislators by
    lot what they were going to vote
    regardless of what the what the vote
    count was uh and and and the way to
    prevent that was to literally use the
    you know armed people try to keep them
    from meeting from meeting and voting you
    know you can see how that felt like a I
    mean it feels like a system that’s
    really R for abuse where where you know
    if you’re like oh well I lost the
    election well you know I’ll just all I
    have to do is ask for a recount and
    apparently that’s enough yes and and
    then hopefully my guys will the on I
    mean that’s crazy and I mean that’s
    certainly not the first time you know
    all all the time you’ll have places
    where through throughout American
    history and honestly throughout world
    history where you know there’s a
    position where there’s a committee of
    five people or whatever and it all comes
    down to which side gets more people yeah
    making making that decision though I
    mean to be fair it doesn’t sound like
    Goble was really trying to game the
    system it sound like he was he was
    convinced that there was the election
    irregularities gosh what does that sound
    like oh my goodness we’ve got some the
    other guy was sure he had been elected
    it was a very narrow election gosh we
    never see anything like that happened
    these days uh so I mean it is uh it is
    important because we just not told the
    story which I don’t I don’t know why uh
    it is important because it says that
    this nation has faced more division than
    we have today and we managed to come
    through that uh it is important
    certainly as a lesson to learn I mean
    probably the best way to solve things is
    not to raise two militias and try to see
    you know can who’s got the most guns you
    know there’s there’s a lot of but it
    also is as it’s a it’s a ripping
    historical yarn it is I mean it is a
    drama of All Sorts to see what’s going
    on throughout you know and prison escape
    I mean I you can look at the best plots
    that we see on television shows and they
    really aren’t as crazy as this one and
    there many things happen you’re like how
    could how could that happen why would
    that continue happening uh and uh I mean
    it’s one of these things that would be
    hard to write as a story today because
    people might not necessarily believe
    yeah we we could really you and they
    shoot him and before he bleeds to death
    they make him Governor you know which at
    that point you know I mean it sounds
    like they knew that the the wound was
    you know was Mortal was Mortal I mean
    when they were they weren’t doing that
    thinking oh maybe he’ll recover it
    didn’t seem like that was it seems like
    everyone thought that that was unlikely
    uh but you know they’re making a point
    of all and I’m not sure exactly what
    point they’re making except that you
    know how dare you shoot our guy in the
    in public but well maybe the point was
    we want we don’t want the guy who shot
    him to
    be by virtue of shooting the opponent to
    make
    or or maybe he was a dead man walking
    huh yeah yeah you and and he you know I
    guess to an extent uh uh he sacrificed
    his life in order to come to a
    conclusion uh on this on this uh you
    know uh the Stormfront that they had run
    into you know this it does show just how
    I mean how National these these labor
    issues were because you know the two
    stories we talk about today are about
    two very different industries that were
    in you know very different locations but
    they they were fairly similar in terms
    of you know what the the actual like
    foundational argument was about and the
    fact that you know this is a guy who was
    a he was not a typical politician and he
    was able to make a name for himself you
    know essentially in politics by picking
    the S he picked as a lawyer yeah
    absolutely I mean labor was the really
    the biggest issue of the day especially
    as things do in the west and you know
    Goble was standing for railroadman and
    railroad rights and that’s that’s what
    got him there uh and you do you do have
    to wonder because we’ll talk about
    sternenberg in in in a moment here you
    have to wonder you know if uh if he had
    been Governor uh would he have having to
    work with all those diverse State
    interests been able to maintain uh that
    degree of loyalty because sternenberg is
    going to find out in a bit that it’s
    it’s kind of hard to stay on on one side
    versus another so I mean to an extent uh
    you know Goble maybe couldn’t have been
    anything but a martyr I’m not I’m not
    saying it was a good thing he was shot
    or anything like that I’m saying that
    maybe his political path was Set uh and
    maybe that shows in the fact that you
    know he’d had the violence before in
    terms of the you know the the the
    shooting match between he and arriv Ral
    so I mean you know it’s it seems like he
    was on a path kind of from the start and
    that’s where the path ended
    up if you support the history guy and
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    history guy.com
    next up the history guide talks about
    the assassination of former Idaho
    Governor
    Stenberg 112 years ago today on December
    30th 1905 retired former Idaho Governor
    Frank Stenberg went for a walk around
    his neighborhood in well Idaho through
    nearly 10 in of December snow as he
    strolled that frigid December morning
    you can imagine that like millions of
    others that he was thinking about the
    possibilities for the new year when he
    returned home he opened the side gate to
    his yard and it exploded while he was
    gone someone had rigged the gate with
    several sticks of dynamite blown nearly
    10 ft in the air the governor was
    grievously injured and died in his home
    later that day the assassination of
    Frank Stenberg made national headlines
    in its day and the trial that followed a
    national sensation included some of the
    most famous Advocates of the day arguing
    over one of the most contentious issues
    facing the Young Nation it is a story of
    the wildest part of the wild west and a
    part of the nation’s history that many
    people would rather forget and yet this
    now nearly forgotten political
    assassination deserves to be remembered
    as much as we think of the West in terms
    of cowboys and Indians Outlaws and
    lawmen and settlers crossing the nation
    in their covered wagons the history
    development in the American West was
    actually largely driven by minerals the
    discovery of gold in California in 1849
    the famed Gold Rush drove the westw
    expansion and the overall development of
    the United States perhaps more than any
    other single event the California Gold
    Rush was followed by many more from the
    Black Hills of South Dakota to Tombstone
    Arizona to the Alaskan Klondike many US
    Western States including Nevada Colorado
    Idaho Arizona Montana North and South
    Dakota and Alaska were originally
    settled not by Farmers but by Miners and
    Prospectors and while many of those
    miners headed west hoping to strike
    their Fortune the vast majority ended up
    working in a profession that was
    dangerous grueling and where power was
    concentrated in the hands of the mine
    owners attempts to unionize labor in the
    American mining industry began as early
    as the 1860s although early attempts
    tended to be short-lived responses to
    specific complaints in response mine
    owners formed mine owners associations
    intended to protect the interests of the
    mining companies a similar event in the
    escalating conflict was the labor strike
    in cordine Idaho in 1892 the central
    labor complaint had to do with
    automation replacing Miners and reducing
    wages but the situation escalated when
    it was discovered that the mine Owners
    Association had infiltrated the miners
    Union with a detective along the M
    owners to outmaneuver many of the
    Union’s plans the use of these so-called
    labor spies in this case a detective
    from the famous Pinkerton agency named
    Charlie Singo was a particular bone of
    contention the discovery of the labor
    spy led to a violent confrontation with
    striking miners exchanging gunfire with
    mine guards and replacement workers
    called strike Breakers three people were
    killed and 17 injured in the violence in
    response Idaho Governor Norman bushnel
    Wy declared martial law deploying both
    troops of the Idaho National Guard and
    later federal troops many union members
    were confined without formal charges in
    the four months of Martial law the
    heavy-handed response resulted in the
    formation of a new better organized and
    more militant Union organization called
    the Western Federation of miners the wfm
    would then play a central role in the
    many violent mining labor disputes in
    the United States and Canada in the
    latter part of the 19th and early part
    of the 20th centuries the wfm LED
    strikes in Creek Colorado in
    1894 and Leadville Colorado in 1896 both
    of which resulted in the deployment of
    the Colorado National Guard while the
    former was largely successful in
    achieving its goals the latter was not
    and resulted in an evolution into a
    smaller more radically socialist and
    more violent wfm this would set the
    stage for another labor dispute in
    Calene in 1899
    in 1896 Idaho had elected a new governor
    a former newspaper editor named Frank
    stunnenberg the 36-year-old stunnenberg
    had won the nomination for both the
    Democratic and the populist party and
    had won the election on the back of
    significant Union support he was the
    first Idaho governor who was not a
    Republican and Mining Company fears that
    he would not support them in a labor
    dispute was enough to cause them to
    raise wages he easily won election to
    another two-year term in
    1898 but trouble flared in 1899 the
    Western Federation of miners was having
    a dispute with two mining operations
    that chose to pay a lower wage and
    operate only with non-union miners the
    wfm perceived these two mining
    operations to be a threat to their wage
    scale on April 29th 1899 union members
    from the wfm used nearly 3,000 lb of
    dynamite to destroy a mill belonging to
    the Bunker Hill mine so much Dynamite
    was needed that the union men
    commandeered a train at gunpoint to move
    it all the mill contained a huge
    concentrator used to refine ore into
    silver in the blast the wfm destroyed
    the most expensive piece of mining
    equipment in the United States worth
    more than A4 million dollars at the time
    the local sheriff supported the union
    and did nothing to prevent the violence
    shocked by the extent of the damage and
    the lawlessness Stenberg appealed to
    President William McKinley for federal
    troops declaring sashon County where the
    event had occurred to be in a state of
    insurrection and Rebellion once again
    martial law was declared the response
    was heavy-handed including
    indiscriminate arrests where hundreds of
    of men were herded into so-called
    bullpens without trial or the right of
    hius Corpus some were held in inhuman
    conditions for as much as a year
    politicians sympathetic to the union
    cause were arrested newspapers critical
    the federal response were closed down
    the power of the wfm in the area was
    broken one of the Union supporters was
    convicted of murderer and the death of
    one of the Bunker Hill employees and
    several were convicted of the federal
    crime of interfering with the maale for
    the Abduction of the train used to carry
    the dynamite
    for his action declaring martial law
    Stenberg was seen as a traitor by the
    unions that had helped to elect him he
    did not seek re-election in 1900 but
    enmity against him clearly remained 5
    years later when he was killed by the
    booby trap on his gate the wfm
    immediately fell under suspicion in the
    assassination 2 days after the explosion
    January 1st 1906 a suspect was arrested
    the man named Harry Orchard had been
    staying at a local hotel a waitress
    reported that he had acted suspiciously
    on the day of the bombing a search of
    his hotel room found further evidence
    that he had made the bomb the lead
    investigator a famous Pinkerton
    detective named James mcparland
    convinced Orchard that he would be
    better off if he became a witness for
    the state Orchard then told an
    astounding tale not only had he killed
    Governor Stenberg but he admitted to 17
    other murders all at the behest he
    claimed of the leadership of the western
    Federation of miners the trial of wfm
    leader Big Bill Haywood held in 1907 was
    one of the most dramatized of the day
    called by the press the greatest trial
    of modern time one question regarding
    the Mind Leader’s arrest in Colorado
    went all the way to the United States
    Supreme Court the prosecution included
    future US senator William Bora and the
    wfm leaders were represented by the
    legendary attorney Clarence Darrow after
    nearly a 3-month trial Haywood was
    acquitted largely because Orchard’s
    testimony could not be corroborated in
    the end only Harry Orchard was convicted
    and sentenced to life in prison the
    trials of the three wfm leaders in the
    assassination of Frank stunnenberg ended
    up being sort of a watershed in the
    American labor movement while the trials
    themselves offered plenty of drama and
    there were accusations of misconduct on
    both sides they ended up being sort of
    Trials on the idea of organized labor in
    the United States and the acquittals
    represented not just the fact that the
    jurors could objectively appreciate
    facts but also showed the growing
    Sympathy for the populist movement in
    the Western United States still there
    are many who argued that the jurors were
    intimidated that they were afraid that
    their families would face violence if
    they convicted and to this day there’s
    still disagreement over whether the wfm
    was involved in stenberg’s
    murder ironically the aquid might have
    represented sort of a death nail for the
    radical tactics of the wfm exhausted
    after years of violent confrontations
    including the notorious Colorado labor
    Wars in 1903 and 1904 labor had soured
    on violent tactics and the acquittals
    themselves showed that labor members
    could get Fair trials in the United
    States which itself undercut much of the
    rationalization that was used to justify
    those violent tactics in embracing more
    radical socialism had alienated many of
    the former allies of the wfm and so by
    the 1910s the Western Federation of
    minors had lost its position as a
    leading voice in the labor movement in
    the Western United States in 1916 they
    changed their name to the international
    Union of Mind Mill and smelter workers
    and enjoyed a brief Resurgence in the
    1930s and 1940s but their association
    with socialism cost them during the Red
    Scare of the 1950s and finally with
    declining influence they merged with the
    Steel Workers Union in 1967
    Harry Orchard was sentenced to life in
    prison for the murder and died in the
    Idaho State penitentiary in 1954 at the
    age of 88 he maintained throughout his
    life that his confession and implication
    of the wfm leadership was true Big Bill
    Haywood’s Fame in the labor movement
    grew after his acle he eventually split
    with the wfm as the union moved away
    from more radical socialism and aligned
    himself with the industrial workers of
    the world which he had helped to found
    in 1918 he and over a 100 other members
    of the iww were arrested Ed Under The
    Espionage Act for instigating a labor
    strike during wartime facing up to 30
    years in prison he skipped bail and fled
    to Russia where he became an ally of the
    Bolsheviks he died in Russia in
    1928 The Once trial of the century has
    largely faded from the national memory
    as has the period of violent labor
    confrontations at the turn of the 20th
    century and yet that period when
    violence was common on both sides
    represented significant changes in
    American culture and law and established
    the industrial labor movement in the
    United States and for that reason alone
    that assassination of Frank Stenberg on
    a frigid December morning in
    1905 deserves to be
    remembered I feel like in this episode
    as you’re telling the story The the
    intro is so shocking because it’s just
    this guy walking around he’s going for a
    walk and then he gets blown up by
    Dynamite a booby trap of dynamite that
    was set up while he was that’s pretty
    harsh for someone to put several sticks
    of dynamite in your garden fence while
    well I mean it does start out quite
    startling because he’s out taking a walk
    when there’s 10
    in the real lesson on both of these is
    don’t go for a walk because that’s when
    it when it goes bad but yeah he goes out
    for a walk in 10 inches of snow what’s
    the worst that you think he’s going to
    get pneumonia or something like that he
    opens the gate and he’s blown in the air
    so yes this was uh this was a political
    assassination and it was done to make a
    statement and uh uh boy it did so I mean
    again if we want to talk about how
    divisive things are very little uh a
    small percentage of our politics today
    uh deal with dynamite whereas this
    particular episode has quite quite a
    shocking amount of dynamite more sticks
    than should be necessary to kill one guy
    and more sticks than should be necessary
    to make a political Point certainly was
    not them just trying I mean man if if
    you’re going to kill a guy there are
    ways to do it that are a little less
    dramatic right this is this was this was
    a statement and and it was very clear
    statement I think that you know you use
    Dynamite as a as an assassin from the
    the mining Union
    10 foot in the air yeah you’re making it
    very clear like this was us allegedly
    because you know the union always always
    denied it maybe he was just a crazy guy
    with with sticks of dynamite for some
    reason but uh and and again this is this
    was a this a former Governor that was
    killed because of act that he took as a
    governor uh I never once heard a mention
    of this name uh in in getting a degree
    in United States history uh and it’s I
    mean it’s a very I think unknown event
    but it did represent uh not just uh the
    politics of the time I mean when we talk
    about the labor unrest of the time
    there’s a lot of things that people talk
    about including the Mind Wars in
    Colorado but it represent maybe the Apex
    of those Wars uh because it really was
    the events around the Stenberg
    assassination that would kind of change
    the trajectory of Labor and kind of
    represent the end of that of that very
    volatile very violent era of of Labor
    dispute where you know there were a lot
    of guns involed uh and so I mean nothing
    nothing we talk about with labor today
    even you know even you know this messy
    disputes with labor today uh I mean you
    know they don’t involve you know having
    to hijack a train to carry all the
    dynamite goodness yeah that’s well and
    it’s really it’s it’s hard to say
    exactly who was a good guy in this uh CU
    I can I can kind of see I can kind of
    see where everyone was at I mean we kind
    of see how you know how the union was
    radicalized uh where where they you know
    they feel like they don’t have any
    support in the government and that their
    only their only choice is and you can
    see where you know when the federal the
    federal troops come in to to and you
    know they’re essentially only take
    they’re they’re clearly taking a side
    well yeah well I mean you can see why a
    pro pro-union Governor would eventually
    have to call in troops just because of
    the level of violence you can see how
    the the the union would see that as a
    betrayal but you also see as soon as
    they got there as soon as as the
    military got there I mean they’re just
    randomly arresting people they are
    shutting them away in camps forever I
    mean you can see here how this all how
    this could spiral to to where it did
    it’s really and you know it’s it’s kind
    of interesting because the the real core
    of the dispute that ended up in all of
    this uh really had to do it’s it’s kind
    of it’s a weird detail sort of thing so
    in Idaho there there’s wet mines and
    there’s dry mines and the the wet mines
    people were literally working way waste
    deep in cold water and in the dry mines
    you were working out of the cold water
    so that that when you worked in the wet
    mines they paid you more because you had
    to buy special equipment uh these you
    know overalls rubber overalls I guess to
    not freeze to death in the water so the
    dry mind say we can play less per day
    but the miners still make more but we
    would be not paying the minimum Union
    wage and so we had to use non-union
    miners uh so that’s an interesting
    that’s an interesting discussion you can
    see what one minor might say I would be
    willing to take a little less pay if I
    don’t have to buy the pans and stand in
    the water uh and that was the dispute
    where the union saw that as as a chance
    at union busting because you’re using
    non-union workers and breaking their
    wage agreements which they had fought
    for so hard uh and that’s where that’s
    where the tension comes from but it
    seems I mean you can see like two sides
    of that story uh and it does feel like a
    bit of an extreme response uh to then
    blow up the most expensive piece of
    buying equipment in the United States
    well and that’s and I mean you want to
    talk about you know where in terms of
    you know who is on whose side they blow
    this place up and I mean they blow it
    into Smither and like they they
    don’t at first they essentially are
    saying we’re not going to you know we’re
    not going to do anything about that like
    it’s we’re we’re just going to let them
    go well yeah the sheriff was on their
    side so he wasn’t I me that’s crazy
    could you could you imagine a sheriff
    today what somebody goes and I mean they
    they turn that thing into match sticks
    and and the sheriff refuses to arrest
    him well and kill the person too I mean
    kill the kill the yeah and and and then
    they’re mad that the governor you know
    does something about it it’s also
    interesting because we were in the midst
    of the Spanish American war he couldn’t
    call up the state militia because they
    were they were in the Philippines
    fighting and so we had to send troops I
    mean it’s it’s it’s crazy about I mean
    again this was you know this was just a
    really crazy if we’re going to talk
    about division imagine a time when what
    the labor dispute is well I disagree
    with you over way your mind so I’m going
    to literally blow your processing plant
    to match sticks with someone inside
    there uh that’s that’s crazy yeah this
    one again it’s crazy and then uh and
    then they become so mad over the
    response which to be fair feels awfully
    heavy-handed by the time they do it of
    course it’s hard to call the Army into a
    domestic dispute and have that be uh you
    know have that be anything other than a
    fairly you know brutal response because
    that’s not what the arm’s built to do
    right but anyway so they’re so mad about
    that that after the guy retires they
    wait till he goes out in a walk and they
    blow up his fence you know it’s it’s uh
    it’s all around crazy it’s wild how deep
    these you know these uh loyalties and
    grudges I mean held is that this they
    this I mean this was years after he was
    it was several years after he had
    retired and he was essentially out of
    the game you know it’s he was it was a
    political assassination but they saw him
    as as betraying the movement yeah it was
    clearly a political assassination based
    so it really was what he did as Governor
    that led to that and it’s interesting
    because he had been a you you you
    imagine he didn’t lose his Sympathy for
    the union you just can’t you can’t let
    them just blow stuff up that they mean
    if you let them do that I I at some
    point there’s just you know what’s the
    where’s the rule of law but it’s yeah
    there’s got to be so I mean it shocked
    even his conscience and you know he felt
    he felt they had to moveed to the rule
    of law and you know some of these things
    like now it’s against the law it would
    be a significant violation of the law
    for the for the owners to infiltrate the
    Union uh with a with a spy that’s which
    is crazy stuff although I I bet they
    still try to do some of that uh although
    at least you it would be against the law
    and you can see where these I mean you
    you can really see where the mine owners
    who seem to have all the power and the
    money and stuff and who are admittedly
    at odds with the workers I mean that’s
    that was that’s been true uh I mean
    throughout history but especially once
    you get into industrialization and stuff
    like that uh and and and you can see why
    that turned why so much of that turned
    to you know these these bull bullist
    well and down in in Colorado The
    Experience had been I mean darn near
    Civil War The Experience had literally
    been you know armed groups on both sides
    and then a lot of death uh from Union
    troops you know massacres by by militia
    and troops so you can see how they had
    radicalized to that point I mean but it
    it makes a difference here when we find
    out you know where Big Bill Haywood
    winds up you know that we’re it’s a
    little different than we see today I
    mean these were there were people that
    were literally seeing this in the same
    way that the Bolsheviks were seeing it
    in Russia uh and they were they were
    seeing this as as as a revolution and I
    think they would have been willing to
    call up the red guards just like like
    Russia was so this was this was kind of
    the Apex of that they’d had all the
    violence in Colorado
    and that had for some of them said you
    know violence is not working and for
    others it had radicalized them and so
    that something like the dry mine pays
    less than the wet mine could lead to
    something as dramatic as 3,000 pounds of
    TNT dynamite then then could lead to
    something as dramatic as killing a
    former governor who’s out of the game
    with with dynamite it’s all around crazy
    and then of course it goes into uh it
    goes into the whole trial Story the
    person his Orchard is is he knows that
    he did it he but he’s he is claiming
    that they’ve killed lots of people it
    leads to another it leads to another
    trial and and uh you know it’s it’s and
    all of that in the end comes down to it
    really takes the violence team out of
    Labor movement moves it a different
    direction so that we still have Labor
    unrest uh we still have you know
    significant labor unrest after this
    period uh but uh it is moved away from
    the point where that is that is kind of
    armed camps in in what is close to Civil
    War uh and you know away from something
    that looks like a bolic res like to
    think we’re a little more civilized now
    um I I I prefer either way you know
    whether where your argument wants to be
    in whether things have gotten better or
    worse or whatever uh I I think in
    general we’re in a better place when we
    can you know when a strike doesn’t
    involve uh armed gunfights I in general
    in general I mean we we still we still
    see labor action obviously in America
    and and after the period of this we it’s
    been regulated in so many ways that are
    intended to I the whole idea is that we
    learned how terrible it could be and it
    was intended to to serve both sides
    without it turning into uh the the you
    know massacres and things that we had uh
    really much more violent our whole
    vision of what the wild west looked like
    these times you know after the turn of
    the century much more violent uh than uh
    than you know white her whacking people
    in DOD City and stuff like that uh with
    his you know with the butt of his gun uh
    so I mean it’s Justa perod of US history
    I mean it’s it’s interesting that we
    don’t think of it in the same way that
    we think of you know other parts of US
    history I mean how Wild and Woolly this
    was that you were you know you were
    using Dynamite on the former Governor uh
    and uh it it just says again you know
    the lesson that we learned from all of
    that is that we can disagree and not
    have it turn into that sort of violence
    so in an era when uh you know it’s not
    all that uncommon to have people in the
    street upset over things uh maybe the
    lesson we need to learn is go relearn
    the lessons of these forgotten events
    and say that you know we can be uh very
    much divided as a nation uh and yet we
    we can come to Solutions as a nation
    that uh that don’t tear the nation apart
    because we did that we tried it and it
    was it was we learned that it was you
    know worse and then one of these days we
    might find Jimmy haa who
    knows he’s he’s underneath the
    mine you know even if you’re talking
    about the H era I mean still I mean you
    know the dynamite wasn’t usually
    involved I mean that’s I don’t we have
    no idea how many as far as we know we
    have no idea how many assassinations
    were order by the by the by the uh uh
    unions you know in either era might be
    the reason we can’t find haa oh
    maybe certainly you know this this does
    come off as the unions inside and this
    is I mean this is true in other places
    too where that you know this this
    concentrated power could come off as I
    mean this was almost organized crime the
    the level of I mean it was essentially
    what they were doing of course yeah
    what’s more organized crime than being
    able to call up your own militia you
    know I mean so so yeah so yeah I mean
    and you know there’s there’s all sorts
    of accusations on both sides and labor
    disput and stuff like that today and
    sympathies for the Nations shift back
    and forth between labor and management
    and all that sort of thing uh and and I
    you know I think there there have always
    been arguments about Connections uh
    between unions and Union Busters and
    organized crime and and power and you
    know the rich versus the poor and the
    and the Working Man versus the uh
    management and all the I mean all those
    issues are still around today uh but I
    mean if if we think that those issues
    are are crazy today if we think those
    ISS are radical today if we think issues
    between populists and powerbase are
    radical today uh then honestly we’ve
    we’ve not seen anything like that uh
    like we’ve like what the nation has
    already survived so I you my my you know
    I would say as a historian and I usually
    just like to tell history and let people
    make their own decisions but I would say
    one of the lessons we learned from this
    is don’t be that let’s not do this again
    right let’s not shoot from the windows
    of the courthouse let’s uh let’s not use
    Dynamite on our enemies let’s not blow
    things up as our as our means of
    solution uh and you know this this
    realize that we can have differing
    opinions without tearing the nation
    apart because it does seem occasionally
    these days that people have forgotten
    those lessons uh and maybe that they
    should hear in class about William Goble
    and and and sternenberg and and uh and
    you know what it means when we when we
    take our politics the wrong certainly
    you know uh solution the solutions we
    have are not always perfect and uh you
    can see in places like this where the
    the solutions were imperfect that led us
    to where we got but you have to think
    that you know we’re still better off if
    we’re not blowing each other up yeah I
    mean we we learned lessons then we
    changed the way that we did things then
    if we have to learn lessons now that’s
    fine but let’s not learn them the same
    hard way that we did
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    Listen to this episode of the THG Podcast, which posts in addition to regular History Guy content, about a month after it releases on podcast services. Subscribe to the RSS feed for more: https://feeds.captivate.fm/thehistoryguy/

    Today the History Guy tells two stories of American political assassinations at the turn of the 19th century. First he talks about the only assassination of a sitting US governor. Then he talks about the former governor killed by dynamite. While they happened in different parts of the country, together they illustrate some of the biggest political battles of the time, and the lengths some went to get their way.

    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As very few images of the actual event are available in the Public Domain, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.

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    16 Comments

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    2. One of the things that was kind of glossed over that was a major point in the 1899 Mining strike was the Federal troops that were sent by McKinley at the request of Steunenberg were African American soldiers called Buffalo Soldiers. Many former Confederate soldiers had moved to Northern Idaho post Civil War. So being rounded up and put into pens by Black soldiers would not have helped. Also another interesting fact is that the partners in Bunker Hill Mining Company were Protestant, while many of the miners were Irish Catholics. So this built a lot of animosity in the region between the unions and the State and Federal government.

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