Because of its geography, the state of Mississippi was dependent on Illinois Central lines. Violence flared there first, on October 3. When a train carrying strikebreakers pulled in to
McComb, Mississippi, a railroad center, it was met by an armed and waiting crowd of 100 strikers. The crowd and passengers exchanged gunfire and thrown bricks, then the badly shot-up train fled. Reports of high casualties were not accurate. A striker named Hugh Montgomery was reported as killed by a brick, but he was documented as later testifying for an investigating committee, and nobody on the train was killed. But as many persons were wounded by the hundreds of shots exchanged in the space of 20 minutes, the incident was serious enough for Governor
Edmond Noel to call out the state guard. Also on October 3, a striking switchman named Robert Mitchell was killed by a strikebreaker in
Cairo, Illinois. In
Denison, Texas an angry mob chased 35 strikebreakers out of town. The same day, a "special guard" named J.J. Pipes was killed at the
Southern Pacific yards in
Houston, perhaps from the
friendly fire of other strikebreakers, and other men were wounded. At one o'clock the following morning on the shop grounds in Houston, a strikebreaker named Frank Tullis was shot and killed, most likely by a striker or sympathizer. Also on October 4, in McComb a striker named Lem Haley was fatally shot by other strikers, even as the governor ordered four more companies of state militia to counter "hundreds of heavily armed men" reported to be pouring into the town. On October 5, strikebreakers arriving in New Orleans were met with two separate riots, with women "prominent in several of the mobs". On October 6, violence similar to that in McComb broke out in
Water Valley, Mississippi, causing Governor Noel to send the state guard there as well. From October 2 through at least November 29, a steady pattern of strike-related shootings and assaults plagued downstate Illinois, centered in
Carbondale,
Centralia,
Mounds, and
East St. Louis. Striker J.S. Coldereau was fatally shot in a saloon fight by a strikebreaker in
Bakersfield, California on November 25, 1911. On December 5, in
Salt Lake City, John G. Hayden, a striking carman of the
Oregon Short Line, was shot by two Italian strikebreakers, Frank Malazia and R. Pucci. Hayden died days later of his injuries. Malazia was indicted for murder but ultimately acquitted. On December 16 there was a third related fatality in Houston, when a non-striking shop worker named Thomas Lyons was reportedly shot while feeding his cats. == Into 1912 ==