It was the first and largest battle in an industrial war which temporarily halted the great advances made by the labour movement in the 1880s, but, at the same time, ultimately led to significant improvements in working conditions through the introduction of the arbitral system of industrial relations and the early successes of the political labour movement.
In an entertaining and lively narrative, drawing together material from a wide range of sources, Stuart Svensen provides definitive answers to questions which in the past have proved elusive: Who was at fault - the capitalist conspirators or the power hungry union leaders? Was the strike responsible for the depression in the 1890s? and Whose strike was it - the maritime or pastoral industry?