'Frank Steunenberg' (born
August 8,
1861 in
Keokuk,
Iowa – died
December 30,
1905 in
Caldwell,
Idaho) was the fourth
Governor of the
State of
Idaho, serving from
1897 until
1901. He is perhaps best known for his
1905 assassination by one-time union member
Harry Orchard, who also admitted to being a paid informant for the
Cripple Creek, Colorado,
Mine Owners' Association.
[Roughneck, The Life and Times of Big Bill Haywood, Peter Carlson, 1983, page 119.] Orchard attempted to implicate leaders of the radical
Western Federation of Miners in the murder. The labor leaders were found innocent
[Roughneck, The Life and Times of Big Bill Haywood, Peter Carlson, 1983, page 135.] in two trials,
[The Autobiography of Big Bill Haywood, William Dudley Haywood, 1929, page 224 ppbk.] but Orchard spent the rest of his life in prison.
Early career
Steunenberg attended Iowa State at Ames and then went on to become a printer's apprentice, and publisher. In
1881 he was hired by the ''
Des Moines Register'' in
Des Moines, Iowa. Steunenberg later published a newspaper in
Knoxville,
Tennessee, before finally settling in
Caldwell, Idaho where he joined his brother taking over the
Caldwell Tribune for six years
[Idaho State Historical Society Public Archives Research Library. http://www.idahohistory.net/Reference%20Series/0402.pdf]
In Caldwell Steunenberg became active in politics and was elected to the first Idaho Legislature in
1890 as a
fusion candidate endorsed by both the
Democratic and
Populist Parties.
Governor
With labor union support, in
1896 Steunenberg was nominated as both the Democratic and Populist candidate for governor. He won the November election and became the first Governor of Idaho who was not a member of the
Republican Party. Steunenberg served during a period of considerable labor unrest in the Idaho mining industry. As a result, many corporations, fearing that Steunenberg's government would not support them if there was a
strike, increased their wages for workers.
The
Bunker Hill Mining Company, however, did not. In April
1899 striking members of the
Western Federation of Miners destroyed the company's mill at
Wardner. In response Steunenberg declared
martial law and asked President
William McKinley to send federal troops to quell the unrest. This action was seen as a betrayal by Steunenberg's union supporters. Steunenberg did not seek reelection in
1900.
Assassination and Trial
On December 30, 1905, Steunenberg was killed outside his house in Caldwell by a bomb rigged to his front gate.
Harry Orchard was arrested shortly thereafter for the murder, and the investigation was conducted by
Pinkerton agent
James McParland. With the promise of a lighter sentence, McParland compelled Orchard to write a confession in which he implicated
"Big Bill" Haywood, general secretary of the Western Federation of Miners,
Charles Moyer, president of the Western Federation of Miners, and
George Pettibone, a labor activist who had a prior conviction related to an
1892 dispute in
Coeur d'Alene, as co-conspirators. McParland arrested the three in Colorado in February
1906.
The nationally publicized trial took place in
Boise in
1907. There was a lack of evidence in a case that was supported only by Orchard's testimony.
Clarence Darrow, a lawyer who specialized in defending trade union leaders, won an acquittal for Haywood. Pettibone was defended in a separate trial by
Judge Hilton of Denver, and was also acquitted. Charges were dropped against Moyer.
[The Autobiography of Big Bil Haywood, William Dudley Haywood, 1929, page 224 ppbk.] Orchard received a death sentence in a separate trial, but the sentence was commuted to life in prison.
More information about the Steunenberg trials at
James McParland.
References
Additional references
★
''Murder of Frank Steunenberg''
★
Biography
See also
★
Harry Orchard, convicted murderer
★
James McParland, Pinkerton Detective responsible for investigation
★
Steve Adams, accused accomplice
★
Bill Haywood, union leader accused of conspiracy
★
Frank R. Gooding, Idaho Governor during murder and trials
★
Coeur d'Alene miners' dispute, alleged reason for the murder
★
List of assassinated American politicians
Further reading
★
The Trial of Bill Haywood - a detailed account of the murder trial
★
Big Trouble: A Murder in a Small Western Town Sets Off a Struggle for the Soul of America by
J. Anthony Lukas. An extensive discussion of the class warfare occurring at the turn of the 20th century.