this post was submitted on 12 Oct 2024
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On this day in 1898, the Battle of Virden began when armed members of the United Mine Workers of America (UMW) surrounded a train full of strikebreakers and exchanged fire with company guards. 13 people were killed, dozens more wounded.

After a local chapter of the UMW began striking at a mine in Virden, Illinois, the Chicago-Virden Coal Company hired black strikebreakers from Birmingham, Alabama and shipped them to Virden by train.

The company hired armed detectives or security guards to accompany the strikebreakers, and an armed conflict broke out when armed miners surrounded the train as it arrived in town. A total of four detectives and seven striking mine workers were killed, with five guards, thirty miners, and an unrecorded number of strikebreakers wounded.

After this incident, Illinois Governor John Tanner ordered the National Guard to prevent any more strikebreakers from coming into the state by force. The next month, the Chicago-Virden Coal Company relented and allowed the unionization of its workers.

"When the last call comes for me to take my final rest, will the miners see that I get a resting place in the same clay that shelters the miners who gave up their lives on the hills of Virden, Illinois...They are responsible for Illinois being the best organized labor state in America."

Mother Jones

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[–] Frank@hexbear.net 7 points 2 months ago (3 children)

Working on the kernel of a story about the Blue Wizards and the men of the East, where the Blue Wizards "lose faith" (I forget how Tolkien described it) because upon reaching the nations east of Mordor they come to love the people and cultures they find there and become upset and dismayed that all of these people were left in the clutches of Morgoth and later Sauron without aid from the great powers in the West. While they don't turn against the Valar their discovery of the horrors wrought on the men of the east does lead to a crisis of faith which causes them to doubt the limitations of their mission to simply resist Sauron and, after spending many long centuries providing aid and counsel to eastern men in their efforts to resist the Dark Lords, they decide to remain among men after the defeat of Sauron to continue to aid them in re-building after millenia of oppression and torment, only returning to Valinor much later and then only in spirit, having lain down and died in their corporeal bodies rather than bodily journeying back to Aman.

When they finally return they are greeted with curiosity rather than hostility. They explain their reasoning to the assembly of the Valar and the Valar understand that their failure to aid the distant men of the East, due only to their distance from the blessed land and a belief that these men were lesser as a result, was a shameful failure. The blue wizards are reconciled with their friends and kin and continue to abide in Aman thereafter, satisfied that the time they spent counselling and aiding the men they came to love was time well spent, and that the men of the east will cast off the last of Sauron's shadows and propser by their own wisdom and abilities.

I'm also playing with the idea that some of the elves captured by Morgoth in the First Age escaped in to the east and maintained a small colony, joining the culture of the men there and becoming a small community of immortals who acted as preservers of knowledge, wisdom, and memory in a land that frequently faced enormous destruction at the hands of the dark lords. Heroes and sages would fall before the might of the Dark Lords, kingdoms would perish, but the small community of elves would endure and help their short-lived friends rebuild, inspiring them with stories of their forebears.

When the blue wizards arrive they bring the eastern elves up to date on the long, sad history of their western kin and the men, elves, and wizards join their strengths together. After the defeat of Sauron the Elves join the hosts of men who pursue the broken remnants of Saurons armies west, eventually meeting outriders of Gondor. From their the elves journey to Minas Tirith and meet King Ellesar and Arwen, and are overjoyed to see kin again after so many thousands of years of separation. They travel west and leave Middle Earth for Aman on the very last of the ships to leave the Grey Havens. Arriving in Aman they become a source of great joy as friends and relatives separated by countless thousands of years, and even by death, are rejoined at last.

As these elves were so distant they had no contact with Valinor or their western kin, except that the Valar were aware of them. Unable to reach them by conventional means this small group of elves would receive visions from the great Valar - Manwe, Orome, Yavannah, Aule, and Olmo, but these visions were dim and came only in sleep. Rather than explicit instruction they nudged the eastern elves towards inspirations and insights, while providing hope and comfort.

[–] LocalOaf@hexbear.net 4 points 2 months ago

I like your funny words magic man

saruman-orb jfk-gaming

[–] GeorgeZBush@hexbear.net 3 points 2 months ago

I like all of this, it all fits nicely. Always been fascinated by the Blue Wizards and the eastern lands of Middle-earth.

[–] GalaxyBrain@hexbear.net 3 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I like that you manage to split the difference between Tolkien'a earlier and later ideas about the Blue Wizards. I've been thinking of doing something about the colonization of the south by Numenor and it's consequences but the east is equally fascinating and comes with a Nazgul. I wasn't going to involve the blue wizards directly because I was aiming to make it a combination of texts from the invading numenoreans and what texts survived from the Easterlings prior to and during the conquest as they sorta become one thing as official record and another passed down in secret ans the blue wizards would be a constant but never directly seen by the presumed writer of the text. I feel it's important for Tolkien fanfic to stick to the red book of westmarch rule where it's an in universe written history and therefore biased.

I also had some different ideas regarding dark elves of the east who evaded or eacaped morgoth in the first age but tbh I'm scared to bring that into play cause I'd have to get a Tolkien linguistics guy on board to make a separate branch from prot sindarin to get names and stuff.

On an easier one, I've wanted to make an account of Saruman'a dealings with The Shire. Mostly to bring my theory that the bomb the orcs used in the battle of Helm'a Deep was reverse engineered from one of Gandalf's fireworks that was pilfered by some of the sketchier Hobbits who had been sending Longbottom Leaf to Isengard. It fits with the evil cannot create, only corrupt deal and I'm certain if I'd written a letter to Tolkien when he was alive asking if this were the case he'd say "yes".

Also, another theory but more of a debunk of some people's cinema sins bullshit critique of elves being able to see further than the curvature of the earth. They can literally sail a boat beyond the curvature of the earth.

Long story short, if we're both gonna fanfic about The East I'd love to be consistent with each other. We seem to be onto compatible stuff. And also, how are you planning on writing it? I'm going Silmarillion style cause fuck knows I can't write a novel but can write in the silm style. I'm Silm Shady