The Coal miners' strike of 1873, was a strike against wage cuts in the Mahoning, Shenango, and TuscarawasValleys of northeastern Ohio and northwestern Pennsylvania.[1] In the Tuscarawas Valley, the labor action lasted six months, and in the Mahoning Valley four and a half months,[2] but the walkouts failed. The introduction of imported strikebreakers and manufacturers finding substitutes for the area's special block-coal, forced the organized miners back to work at prevailing wages.[3]
^Roy, Andrew, History of the Coal Miners of the United States, Green Wood Press, pp. 133–134.
^“The Mahoning Valley Strikers Superseded,” Cleveland Daily Leader, May 15, 1873, 2, GenealogyBank, https://www.genealogybank.com/