Pinkerton agents

(noun)

A private security and detective agency founded in 1850 who employers often used in labor disputes to infiltrate unions, guard factories, and enforce strikebreaking measures.

Related Terms

  • Henry Clay Frick
  • Alexander Berkman

Examples of Pinkerton agents in the following topics:

  • The Molly Maguires

    • The Molly Maguires were an Irish-American organization of coal miners, opposed and persecuted by industrialists and Pinkerton agents.
    • In the 1870s, the Reading Railroad blamed the deals of two dozen mine foremen and administrators on a secret society of Irishmen called the "Molly Maguires. " Although the Reading Railroad hired a Pinkerton undercover detective to investigate, it is highly probable that most of the men accused and executed for being Molly Maguires were innocent.
    • Gowen and the testimony of Pinkerton detective James McParland.
    • Gowen decided to force a strike and showdown, and hired Pinkerton agent James McParland to go undercover against the Mollies.
    • McParland's assignment was to collect evidence of murder plots and intrigue, passing this information along to his Pinkerton manager.
  • The Homestead Strike

    • After three agents were shot, many of the Pinkertons refused to continue the firefight.
    • Just before noon, a sniper shot killed another Pinkerton agent.
    • The Pinkertons, too, wished to surrender.
    • Their arms were stripped from them, and as the Pinkertons crossed the grounds of the mill, the crowd formed a gauntlet through which the agents passed.
    • Men and women threw sand and stones at the Pinkerton agents, spat on them, and beat them.
  • Lockouts

    • Industrialist Henry Clay Frick sent private security agents from the Pinkerton National Detective Agency to break the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers strike at a Homestead, Pennsylvania steel mill.
    • Two strikers were killed, 12 wounded, along with 2 Pinkertons killed and 11 wounded.
  • Principle-Agent Problem

    • The principle-agent problem (agency dilemma) exists when conflicts of interest arise between a principal and an agent in a business setting.
    • In economics, the principal-agent problem (also known as an agency dilemma) exists when conflicts of interest arise between a principal and an agent in a business setting .
    • This connection sets the standard for judging the performance of the agent.
    • The diagram shows the basic idea of the principle agent problem.
    • P is the principle and A is the agent.
  • Summary and references

    • Pinkerton, Richard L. (1994).
  • Biological Control of Microbes

    • Those that result in bacterial death are called bactericidal agents.
    • Those causing temporary inhibition of growth are bacteriostatic agents.
    • No single antimicrobial agent is most effective for use in all situations - different situations may call for different agents.
    • A number of factors affect selection of the best agent for any given situation - Antimicrobial agents must be selected with specific organisms and environmental conditions in mind.
    • Once an agent has been selected, it is important to evaluate it's effectiveness.
  • Agents

    • A decision also implies the existence of an agent.
    • In the case of an agent or agents representing a principal, there may be a conflict or incompatibility among their objectives.
    • This is referred to as the principal/agent problem.
    • The agent has a conflict of interest.
    • A stockbroker acts as an agent for an investor; a doctor may act as the agent for a patient.
  • Antisense Agents

    • Antisense agents are short oligonucleotides that bind to target messenger RNA and inhibit protein synthesis.
    • When this agent binds to the pathogen DNA or messenger RNA, the biosynthesis of target proteins is disrupted.
    • A limiting factor in their potential application as therapeutic agents for bacterial infections is their poor uptake by bacterial cells.
    • Antisense agents also exhibit efficacy in broader clinical applications such as cancer therapy.
    • Discuss the mechanism of antisense agents and the advantages and disadvantages of antisense therapy
  • Overview of Reducing Agents

    • Note that Lithium Aluminum Hydride (LiAlH4) is the strongest reducing agent listed, and it reduces all the substrates.
  • Chelating Agents

    • Usually these ligands are organic compounds and are called chelants, chelators, chelating agents, or sequestering agents; the resulting complexes are called chelate compounds.
    • Chelation therapy is the use of chelating agents to detoxify poisonous metal agents, such as mercury, arsenic, and lead, by converting them to a chemically inert form that can be excreted without further interaction with the body.
    • Such chelating agents include the porphyrin rings in hemoglobin and chlorophyll.
    • Enterobactin, produced by E. coli, is the strongest chelating agent known.
    • Ethylenediamine serves as a chelating agent by binding via its two nitrogen atoms.
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