The Pinkertons are a fascinating period of history. "Detective agency" in the modern parlance doesn't really fit. They were a private army for the wealthy that at one time was larger than the US army.
One particularly famous incident (after the founder's death) was the Homestead strike [1]. Strike-breaking was very much in the Pinkerton's wheelhouse and it's a good example of what they were actually used for [2].
There doesn't seem to be a lot of fiction that features the Pinkertons prominently. One exception is the (excellent) HBO TV series Deadwood.
It's particularly apropos at this time because the lawless violence and organized labor suppression of the robber barons in the Pinkerton era is very much the future we are careening towards.
>There doesn't seem to be a lot of fiction that features the Pinkertons prominently. One exception is the (excellent) HBO TV series Deadwood
There's also The Tall Target, a 1951 movie that sometimes gets played on classic movie channels, which is about the "Baltimore Plot" in which Abraham Lincoln was supposedly going to be assassinated on his way to his first inauguration in 1861. Supposedly it was prevented by the Pinkertons, although historians question if any real plot was planned.
> There doesn't seem to be a lot of fiction that features the Pinkertons prominently. One exception is the (excellent) HBO TV series Deadwood.
Also any of Dashiell Hammett's Continental Op stories. The Contintental Detective Agency is the Pinkertons with the serial numbers filed off. Hammett himself worked as a Pinkerton, among other things, before he got into writing.
I got into his writing because Raymond Chandler was such a big fan as I learned from his essay The Simple Art of Murder[1]
RDR2 is a good example. I'd forgotten about that. The level of historical accuracy in that game was truly incredible. It's really the best of Rockstar whereas GTA5 was (IMHO) the worst of Rockstar (and I loved the GTA3 games and GTA4). I'll be interested to see where GTA6 lands.
Deadwood was particularly good because it not only featured Pinkertons but painted them really well as the defenders of the wealthy and basically just a large and well-funded gang.
> There doesn't seem to be a lot of fiction that features the Pinkertons prominently.
There's a long Clive Cussler series about the "Van Dorn Detective Agency", which is clearly the Pinkertons.[1] Willie Sutton, the bank robber, wrote of the Pinkertons, "They were as powerful as the cops, and much better organized."
Pinkerton, the company, is still around, but they haven't done much detective work since the 1960s. Now they're mostly a security guard service.
> If you tell a farmer you’re collecting signatures to cap the salaries of government employees, and you’re a smooth-talking confidence man, the farmer will sign almost anything, even the deed to his own land. This kind of swindle is called “the boodle game”.
The actual American belief is generally "[Most] Rich people bad government worse".
The Pinkertons were breaking strikes launched by Americans, after all. May Day is a commemoration of an event that took place in Chicago. The reaction to the cold-blooded murder of an insurance executive on a public street is pretty characteristically American, in my view. We just don't like power.
One particularly famous incident (after the founder's death) was the Homestead strike [1]. Strike-breaking was very much in the Pinkerton's wheelhouse and it's a good example of what they were actually used for [2].
There doesn't seem to be a lot of fiction that features the Pinkertons prominently. One exception is the (excellent) HBO TV series Deadwood.
It's particularly apropos at this time because the lawless violence and organized labor suppression of the robber barons in the Pinkerton era is very much the future we are careening towards.
[1]: https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/americanexperience/features/carnegi...
[2]: https://allthatsinteresting.com/pinkerton-detective-agency