In the words of the
Chicago Tribune, "It was the fatal beating of John Barcoski, a miner in the Pittsburgh district several years ago, that hastened the end of "the system." Researchers acknowledged the historical role of John Barcoski's slaying in the demise of Coal and Iron Police. Pennsylvania state legislator and former miner
Michael Musmanno was outraged by the case, and introduced a bill to banish this private police force. The bill was vetoed by the Republican governor
John Stuchell Fisher, which led to Musmanno's resignation. Musmanno then published a short story about the case, entitled "Jan Volkanik," blending Barcoski's identity with a semi-legendary Polish coal mining figure. Fisher's successor,
Gifford Pinchot, fatally crippled the private police forces by refusing to fund them or renew any of their state commissions, and the Coal and Iron Police officially ceased to exist in 1935. That story in turn was basis for the 1935 film
Black Fury starring
Paul Muni and directed by
Michael Curtiz. The film's subject matter was controversial. The executive secretary of the
National Coal Association, D.J. Battle, attempted to stop production through political pressure. Its release was banned entirely in Chicago and several countries. The
British Board of Film Censors deemed a speech describing the unfair relationship between the miners and union leaders as inflammatory, and ordered it removed. In 1966, Musmanno published a novel version of the screenplay also named
Black Fury. ==See also==