The 1913 Kaijan Revolt: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
Lauchenoiria (talk | contribs) (categories!!!) |
||
| Line 56: | Line 56: | ||
===Federal Invention=== | ===Federal Invention=== | ||
Immediately, the USCC sent its private military force made of around 200 or so former military and police officers to deal with the most troublesome settlement of Summer's Town. In Summer's Town, workers had raided the armory and storehouse and prepared to face off with the USCC Brigade. At a point known as Twin Hills, the Brigade was stopped by a barricade stationed by a dozen armed workers. When they refused to let the unit pass, Joshua Adam's ordered his men to open fire. The USCC Brigade then marched unopposed to Summer's Town, however, workers had positioned themselves deep within the field's | Immediately, the USCC sent its private military force made of around 200 or so former military and police officers to deal with the most troublesome settlement of Summer's Town. In Summer's Town, workers had raided the armory and storehouse and prepared to face off with the USCC Brigade. At a point known as Twin Hills, the Brigade was stopped by a barricade stationed by a dozen armed workers. When they refused to let the unit pass, Joshua Adam's ordered his men to open fire. The USCC Brigade then marched unopposed to Summer's Town, however, workers had positioned themselves deep within the field's | ||
[[Category:Conflicts]][[Category:History]][[Category:Slokais Islands]] | |||
Revision as of 14:45, 12 February 2024
| The 1913 Kaijan Revolt | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
|
Federal Forces
|
Rebels
| ||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
|
Govermeant
United Sugar and Coffee Company
|
Rebels
| ||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
| Kaijanese Federal Company | Yellow Cats Militia | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 45,000 | 3,500 | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| 8,700 | 2,100 | ||||||
The 1913 Kaijan Revolt was a conflict between federal forces supporting the United Sugar and Coffee Company and militia groups supporting workers of the Free Kaijan Union of Industrial Workers. Much of the conflict involved Mohammed Manaho raiding several farms and settlements to spark a greater conflict for Kaijanese independence. The revolt ended with the capture and execution of Manaho by federal forces in March of 1914.
Background
The United Sugar and Coffee Company was founded in 1854, to unite Sugar and Coffee plantations, specifically in the Kaijanese market. During the 1870s and 1880s, both industries grew immensely with the industrialization of farming, with smaller farms being absorbed into company settlements. Additionally, the USCC set up small businesses directly controlled by corporate management to get revenue from their worker's purchases. The USCC also prevented its workers from unionizing, often using police to arrest union leadership on charges of political disruption. In 1905, workers of the USCC made appeals to the federal government, as workers did not receive wages for certain weeks of work. As a result, the USCC was the subject of a federal investigation, which declared that workers had to be paid in standard currency instead of corporate meal tickets, which was commonplace in USCC settlements. In 1912, the Free Kaijan Union of Industrial was founded with sugar and coffee workers being key supporters. Despite these developments, fraud and corruption occurred in individual farms. The inciting incident was when a 17-year-old worker was subject to corporal punishment by a company boss. As a result on June 1st, 10,000 workers went on strike.
Conflict
Federal Invention
Immediately, the USCC sent its private military force made of around 200 or so former military and police officers to deal with the most troublesome settlement of Summer's Town. In Summer's Town, workers had raided the armory and storehouse and prepared to face off with the USCC Brigade. At a point known as Twin Hills, the Brigade was stopped by a barricade stationed by a dozen armed workers. When they refused to let the unit pass, Joshua Adam's ordered his men to open fire. The USCC Brigade then marched unopposed to Summer's Town, however, workers had positioned themselves deep within the field's