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Frank Steunenberg assassination site
Idaho

This corner on 16th & Dearborn Streets in Caldwell, Idaho marks the former home of Idaho governor Frank Steunenberg.  Steunenberg, who served as governor of Idaho from 1897 to 1901, was assassinated at his home by a bomb detonation on December 30, 1905.  More info below: 

 

Frank Steunenberg, former governor of Idaho, was returning through eight inches of freshly fallen snow to his home in Caldwell, Idaho shortly after 6PM on December 30, 1905 when he pulled a wooden slide that opened the gate to his side door, triggering a bomb that blew him ten feet into the air. Within an hour, he was dead. Steunenberg's assassination was to lead to one of the most remarkable trials in American history.

Steunenberg was born in Iowa in 1861. After leaving school at age 16, he apprenticed for Knoxville, Iowa paper for four years before taking a job as a typefitter for the Des Moines Register. Steunenberg quit his job in Des Moines, studied two years at the Iowa Agricultural College in Ames, then returned to Knoxville where he published the local paper until 1886. Steunenberg arrived in Idaho in 1887 after receiving a request to help a brother who had just acquired the moribund Caldwell Tribune. Steunenberg began writing stories on topics of local interest, especially the town's dire shortage of unmarried females.

Steunenberg was elected to the state legislature in 1890, and ran as one of five candidates for the Democratic nomination for governor in 1896. Politics were in disarray in Idaho in 1896. The Idaho Republican Party was split between those loyal to the national ticket headed by William McKinley, a champion of keeping the gold standard, and Silver Republicans who favored a move to a silver standard that would greatly benefit Idaho's many silver mines. Steunenberg won the Democratic nomination by endorsing "fusion" with the Populist ticket, then went on to win the governorship by the biggest landslide in Idaho's history.

When labor violence erupted in northern Idaho in 1899, Governor Steunenberg took a tough stance. He said at the time, "We have taken the monster by the throat and we are going to choke the life out of it. No halfway measures will be adopted. It is a plain case of the state or the union winning, and we do not propose that the state shall be defeated." Steunenberg declared martial law and asked President McKinley to send federal troops, a decision which led to the arrests of hundreds of union activists who were rounded up and kept in northern Idaho stockades for months without trials. Steunenberg's assassination was retaliation for these strong anti-union measures.

 

From: https://www.famous-trials.com/haywood/229-steunenberg

Copyright: William L
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 20756x10378
Taken: 12/08/2023
Caricate: 28/03/2024
Published: 28/03/2024
Numero di visualizzazioni:

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Tags: frank steunenberg; idaho; caldwell; assassination; murder; governor; ex-governor; crime scene; homicide; bomb; detonation; blast; western federation of miners; union
More About Idaho

Idaho is a state located in the northwestern region of the United States of America.  Idaho is the 14th largest state by area, ranks 39th by population and 53rd by population density of the 50 United States.  Idaho was the 43rd state to be admitted into the Union, on July 3, 1890.  Idaho is landlocked, being bordered by Canada on the north and the states of Washington and Oregon on the west, Nevada and Utah on the south and Montana and Wyoming on the east.  Idaho is nicknamed "The Gem State" because nearly every known gemstone is found within the state.  Idaho is also famous for producing about one third of all potatoes grown in the USA.  Idaho also hosts the largest barrel cheese factory in the world, producing 120K metric tons of cheese per year.  There is some ambiguity as to where the name "Idaho" came from, but it is generally believed to have simply been made up by George M. Willing.  There is a possibility it was derived from a Native American phrase.  Idaho is very mountainous and is a popular outing destination of the outdoorsman.  The state population was about 1.58M in July 2011 with 84% being Caucasian, 11.2% Hispanic and 1.1% Native American.  The state capital and largest city is Boise.Source: wikipedia


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