Eric Eggen

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Olney used an earlier legal opinion that any train of any kind carrying a mail car was a mail train; interfering with it was thus a violation of U.S. law. The decision forced often-reluctant federal marshals to act when strikers blocked any train with both a Pullman and a mail car. The railroads refused to run any mail trains without Pullmans.
The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865-1896 (Oxford History of the United States)
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