As the strike loomed, one of the prominent officials of San Francisco's
United Railroads, Patrick Calhoun, contracted with the nationally known "King of the Strikebreakers" James A. Farley, for four hundred replacement workers waiting on board ship. The streetcar Carmen's Union struck on May 5, 1907, for an 8-hour day and $3 per day. Farley's armed workers took control of the entire system. The violence started two days later, Bloody Tuesday, when a shootout on Turk Street left 2 dead and about 20 injured. On May 25, both the pro-labor Mayor
Eugene Schmitz and Calhoun were indicted on corruption charges, and on June 13 Schmitz was found guilty of extortion, to be replaced by
Edward Robeson Taylor. The action effectively collapsed in November, and officially abandoned in mid-February with the dissolution of Carmen's Union Local 205. == Results ==