Bibliography
Primary
"PLAN A DEMONSTRATION TO FREE EUGENE V. DEBS: SOCIALISTS AND OTHER RADICALS WILL PARADE IN WASHINGTON APRIL 13." New York Times (1857-1922), Mar 21, 1920.
"STRIKE INJUNCTION LIKE DEBS ORDER: VIOLATION OF COURT DECREE IN 1894 SENT AMERICAN RAILWAY UNION HEAD TO JAIL. SIMILARITY IN APPLICATION PULLMAN LABOR TROUBLE AND ITS FINISH IS RECALLED BY CURRENTTOPICS." 1922.New York Times (1857-1922), Sep 10, 1.
Debs, Eugene V. “The Canton, Ohio Speech, Anti-War Speech.” The Canton, Ohio Speech.
“Debs's Acceptance Speech.” eHISTORY.
Rogers, W. A., Artist. King Debs / W.A. Rogers. United States, 1894. Photograph.
Debs, Eugene V. (Eugene Victor), 1855-1926. Eugene V. Debs' Canton Speech. Chicago:Socialist Party of the United States
Campaign Button, "For President, Convict No.9653" Smithsonian Institution
Secondary
Morgan, H. Wayne. “‘Red Special’: Eugene V. Debs and the Campaign of 1908.” Indiana Magazine of History 54, no. 3 (1958): 211–36.
Gangross, Aaron. “Eugene V. Debs and the Politics of Dissent in Modern America.” International Labor and Working-Class History, no. 60 (2001): 206–9.
Constantine, J. Robert. “Eugene V. Debs: An American Paradox.” Monthly Labor Review 114, no. 8 (1991): 30–33
Lepore, Jill. “Eugene V. Debs and the Endurance of Socialism.” The New Yorker
Morgan, H. Wayne. “The Utopia of Eugene V. Debs.” American Quarterly 11, no. 2 (1959): 120–35.
McMurry, Donald L. “Federation of the Railroad Brotherhoods, 1889-1894.” Industrial and Labor Relations Review 7, no. 1 (1953): 73–92.
Ivie, Robert L. “Toward a Humanizing Style of Democratic Dissent.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 11, no. 3 (2008): 454–58.
“The Strike of 1894.” National Parks Service. U.S. Department of the Interior.
“Free Speech on Trial.” National Archives and Records Administration. National Archives and Records Administration.