ring the unions’ power, management in several industries has used many devices to defeat strikers. They have locked workers out, hired scabs and security guards, and relied on the government to provide troops.Despite many defeats, unions continued to organize. As they saw the success of the strike in Lawrence, their power crossed many ethnic lines, and involved workers of many different backgrounds.Bibliography:Milton Meltzer, Bread and Roses, Vintage Sundial, New York, 1967Philip S. Foner, History of the Labor Movement in the United States, International Publishers, New York, 1947Philip S. Foner, Women and the American Labor Movement, Free Press, New York, 1980Susan Campbell Bartoletti, Kids On Strike, Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, 1999Linda Jacobs Altman, The Pullman Strike of 1894, The Millbrook Press, Brookfield, Connecticut, 1994Sidney Lens, Strikemakers & Strikebreakers, Lodestar Books, New York, 1985David Montgomery, The Fall of the House of Labor, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1987Patricia and Fredrick McKissack, A Long Hard Journey: The Story of the Pullman Porter, Walker & Company, New York, 1989William Z. Foster, American Trade Unionism, International Publishers, New York, 1970John J. Flagler, The Labor Movement in the United States, Lerner Publications Company, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1990Rosemary Laughlin, The Pullman Strike of 1894: American Labor Comes of Age, Morgan Reynolds Incorporated, Greensboro, 2000...