Category: Railroad Mythology
- The Great Anarchist Network
The Great Anarchist Network was the fear that the nation’s wandering poor—especially hobos riding freight trains—were not merely transient laborers or homeless travelers, but a distributed underground of trained saboteurs communicating by secret symbols and ready to attack rail lines, factories, food supplies, and towns at revolutionary command. The theory drew on two real and visible features of early twentieth-century life: the vast mobile hobo population and the existence of a practical sign system used to communicate information about food, work, police, danger, and travel. Under Red Scare conditions, those signs were reinterpreted by some observers as evidence of an organized anarchist infrastructure. In its strongest form, the theory treated every marked post, wall, or rail-side sign as a node in a national sabotage network.