Menu
  • Excerpts
  • Exhibits
  • Collections
  • Originals
  • Categories
  • Map
  • Search
Person

Ernest Freeberg

Bylines

  • Mugshot of Eugene Debs

    Eugene Debs Was an American Hero

    He forced the country to engage in a three-year conversation about the meaning of free speech that shaped policy and law after World War I.
    by Shawn Gude, Ernest Freeberg via Jacobin on June 16, 2020

Related Excerpts

Viewing 1–3 of 3
Chickens.

Our Pets, Our Plates

In defense of the furred and the hoofed.
by Anne Matthews via The American Scholar on March 10, 2024
A pair of horses are unable to pull an overcrowded streetcar in New York City, shown in Harper's Weekly on Sept. 21, 1872.

A Virus Crippled U.S. Cities 150 Years Ago. It Didn’t Infect Humans.

The Great Epizootic, an equine flu in 1872-1873, infected most U.S. horses. Streetcars and mail delivery stopped across the country while fires raged.
by Jodie Tillman via Retropolis on February 12, 2023
Eugene Debs in a suit

Eugene Debs Believed in Socialism Because He Believed in Democracy

Eugene Debs’s unswerving commitment to democracy and internationalism was born out of his revulsion at the tyranny of industrial capitalism.
by Shawn Gude via Jacobin on September 2, 2020
  • How Bunk Works
  • Who We Are
  • About Bunk
  • Recommend a Resource
  • Bunk on Instagram
  • Bunk on Twitter
  • Bunk on Bluesky
brought to you by
© Bunk History