“Bitter Creek” tells many faceted story of Rock Springs Massacre ...Middle East

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Author’s note: On September 2, 1885, white coal miners in Rock Springs, Wyoming, rioted and murdered at least 28 of the town’s Chinese residents and drove the rest of them out of town at gunpoint. The bloodshed, known as the Rock Springs Massacre, was the result of a decade of labor struggles in the Union Pacific coal mines. In November 1875, in the middle of a financial crisis caused by reckless speculation in railroads, the Union Pacific brought in Chinese workers to break a strike.

Number One 

March 1874 New York, New York 

To write about the New York Stock Exchange is to simply describe the movements of Jay Gould. Before he came to the Union Pacific, 

he issued fraudulent stock to wrestle the Erie Railroad away from Cornelius Vanderbilt and drove up  the price of gold until it crashed on Black Friday. 

All in a day’s work before he goes home to his family, their faces bright in the portrait on the mantelpiece. He retires to his own library 

but the day still weighs on him, that latest acquisition— he runs his finger down the ledger of coal mines in the West. The price of coal is falling, 

the price of mining must fall too. He pauses on Rock Springs, Mine Number One, the most productive of them all, mouthing 

these words under his breath: Mine. Number One.

Landlocked 

November 1874 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

He returns to air, dusts the soot off his skin, walks home on the banks 

of Bitter Creek, so named for the water too hard to drink. The stars  

a blanket in the sky, telling stories he cannot yet read. All day he crouches 

in a sweltering room, picking at seams for nuggets of coal, setting charges 

to clear the debris. Coal dust gathers in his lungs. All day he swallows 

his tears. All day he tries not to think of the past. He prays 

his lamp keeps flickering  and the old canary keeps singing.

Town Hall 

October 1875 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

First they cut our wages. 

We agreed only if they lowered their prices  at the store. 

Now they break their promise. 

How will we feed our children if  we keep working for less? 

Why do we pay  while they live in their gilt? 

I say we call a strike on November 8th. 

Restore our pay to five cents a bushel. 

November 2nd we start working  half days. 

We will not dig extra this winter. 

Let’s see how far they get  without us. 

Let’s go for broke.

Housekeeping 

November 1875 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

No matter how much she scrubs the floor, the dust returns, a fine silver on every surface in the house. 

“We live in a dugout, dear. It’s pointless,” John tells her, but she cannot stop—it is not proper for a woman to live in such a mess. 

These days he hardly comes home for dinner, staying out late in the union hall—and she knows— stopping by the saloon for a pint or five after talking all day about how much longer to strike. There are only so many ways she can make their pantry last. 

She counts how much she owes the store, how much for flour, for eggs, maybe some roast for Sunday—no, that was only a girlhood dream, like the dream that he would put his hands on her breasts, two fingers missing.

Ultimatum 

November 5, 1875 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

S.H.H. Clark, the general superintendent of the Union Pacific Coal Department 

Does your union propose to dictate to this company regarding the amount of coal it is to mine? 

Do you intend to limit our supply of coal from our own mines? 

Do you wish to cripple us in failing to give us an adequate supply of coal 

for the purpose of running our trains and supplying  the needs of the people residing along the line of our road? 

If that is your purpose, gentlemen, I herewith give you notice that in a very short time I will have a body of men here 

who will dig for us all the coal we want.

Letter Home 

November 19, 1875 San Francisco, California 

My dearest wife, 

I have good news for you. Yesterday I was praying at the temple and this big man walked in, saying he needed a hundred men for a job. I said I built the railroad, I didn’t mind the winter nights, and I knew how to handle the explosives. “Great! You’re just what we’re looking for,” he said, giving me a train pass and telling me I must be at the depot in the morning. 

I’m sorry that I haven’t written much these days. It’s hard to stand all day in lines, waiting for someone, anyone, to call me. 

Some nights I think about those years I spent shoveling snow and blasting rock. I kept praying a shard won’t shatter in my heart. But I had work. I made money. I know it’s hard for you too. Our dear boys are growing so fast. And Mother needs her medicines. 

I carry your sweet letters in my pocket, read them again when I long to hear your voice. I thought I would go home after two years in California, land of golden peaks and dreams made on the backs of desperate fools. No matter how much I work, it never seems to be enough. I can’t say what Wyoming

will bring. I’ll still be blasting rock, this time in the coal mines. I promise to write more  

when I get there— 

 Your faithful husband.

Strikebreakers 

November 21, 1875 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

Snow falls the night before. Winds whip the sagebrush, the rocky hills. 

Men huddle in their hovels, light the last oil in their lamps, eat the scraps left on their stoves.  

No work, nowhere to go, some of them drink all day in the saloons. 

Cold seeps under their skins. Fourteen days—how long more can they hold out? 

Soldiers arrive in the cover of night, the moon and stars still shrouded in clouds. 

The troops stand guard before the mines, the shops, the company store, the banks of Bitter Creek, now a trickle in the dour of winter. 

Their footsteps sink into the snow. 

They signed up to fight for their country, for life, liberty, and happiness— 

Governor Thayer rides the two o’clock train from Cheyenne. 

They dine him in first class,  befitting, they say, a dignitary of the Territory.  

The blood of steaks soaks the mash on their plates. 

Wine stains the tablecloth. 

They shake hands, whisper plans, and step out under the cold blue sky— 

refusing to look at the men on strike. 

Four-fifteen. 

A train pulls up from Sacramento,  its shadow cast across this fractured land. 

A hundred and fifty Chinamen alight still in a daze, their long hair braided into queues. 

They set up camp across the creek, make dinners of noodles, slicing the pork so thin the fat glistens in the broth. 

That night they sleep in boxcars, wrapped in wool.  

The strikers plead, “We’ll go back to work if you send those people away.” But the Chinese are here to stay.

The governor says, 

“Legitimate labor should not be interfered with, no matter the race  and nationality of the laborer. 

Law and order will be enforced even if it takes the might of the army.” 

The soldiers hide their scowls. 

Mine Number Three. 

Carpenters build huts all morning, a makeshift Chinatown on the icy ground. And

this, posted at the company store: 

All persons whose names appear below can obtain employment at Mine Number One.  None others need apply. 

All miners desiring passes  for themselves and their families must apply at once, as none will be granted after November 24th. 

Those who stay sign their right to strike away. * 

Where else can the white men go? 

Rock Springs is a desert  surrounded by mountains and snow,

dependent on the Union Pacific for work and housing, to get to Omaha or Denver, Salt Lake City or San Francisco. 

Stomping on the muddy ground, they board the trains to futures unknown, biting their lips so hard they bleed.

Letter Home 

December 1875 Rock Springs, Wyoming 

It’s a strange place out here. Not snowy like the mountains or stormy like the sea. 

It’s a desert of broken rock. 

And it is cold. We live in wooden huts. Winds seep through the cracks. 

The white men are hostile. 

I don’t know what happened, but soldiers escorted us when we arrived. Company guards protect us in the mines. 

But I’m getting paid, finally. Here’s my first paycheck, as I promised. I don’t think I can stay here long, but the money is good. 

I want to see you all again.

Teow Lim Goh is the author of two previous books of poetry, “Islanders” and “Faraway Places.” Her essay collection “Western Journeys” was a finalist for the 2023 Colorado Book Award in Creative Nonfiction. She lives in Denver.

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