The Göschenen unrest took place on the 27th and 28th of July 1875 in the Swiss municipality of Göschenen in the canton of Uri.
During the construction of the Gotthard tunnel the population of Göschenen rose a few times. The construction workers lived in precarious conditions.[1]
On the 27th of July the Italian tunnel workers began a strike, demanding better wages and created an uproar in the village. The trigger was an argument between the post chief and the miners, who refused to continue digging before the smoke from the explosions got cleared. There was an exchange of words until the miners left the workplace in anger. On the way out a rumour got spread out, that a dynamite box was on fire, which caused the crew to run outside. [2]
The usual answer "No one is forced to work in the tunnel" from the chief engineer Ernest von Stockalper didn't work this time and the workers moved on to the village, where they made a stop in front of the post, where the mayor (and at the same time also a postman) lived and let their anger out. There Luigi Dissune under a wave of applause laid down the demands of the workers: increase of their salary by one Frank, functioning ventilation system and safer working conditions. They threatened, that no miner would work, until their conditions were met. That was reinforced by setting up posts in front of the tunnel portal. Some of the miners spent the night talking and singing. On the 28th of July at 6'o clock in the morning as well weren't let any miners in, only stonemasons and company workers. [2]
The chief engineer von Stockalper demanded assistance from the mayor and send a telegram to the construction office in Altdorf. The telegram stated the need of 50 armed men and 30 thousand Franks. At the same time the mayor, Karl Arnold, asked assistance from the Uri administration for reinforcements for the Göschenen militia, which was commanded by a rural police officer.[3] At 8 o'clock the Landammann and the Uri governor decided to send all of the rural police from Altdorf to Amsteg in order to offer support and weapons to Göschenen. The team was to be deployed along the road and the militia was led by policemen Sergeant Trösch. In Altdorf he quickly gathered seven men and drove with the rural police towards Göschenen, and in Wassen a further eight men were recruited. He arrived in Göschenen at 4 PM with 22 men. During the first advance to the post office the workers resisted, so Sergeant Trösch had to retreat. Only when the Göschen militia joined him he attempted to advance again. By this time there were already injuries among the law enforcement officers. The around thirty men looked "a little ridiculous in their hoods and military caps"[4] and were outnumbered by the demonstrators, who were also throwing stones. It is unknown who fired the first shot and why and the exact order of events is unclear as well. The demonstrators subsequently dispersed. Amongst them four people died and several got injured.
After the strike followed from the 29th of July until 2nd of August an active service deployment of the cantonal infantry unit in Göschenen and later on an unarmed federal intervention under the leadership of a federal commissioner and Councillor, Colonel Hans Hold.[5]
The investigation reports of the Uri canton, that were demanded by the Federal Council were deemed by it as insufficient, because in it practically only the criminal aspects of the strike were presented. Therefore, the Federal Council decided that there should be a supplementary investigation, which would encompass three key points: the relationship between the workers and the company, the sanitary conditions and the legitimacy of the police and military measures, undertaken by the Uri canton. Colonel Hans Hold was assigned to lead the investigation, beginning his assignment on the 23rd of September.[6]
Councillor Hold then submitted two reports to the Federal Council, one of which would get published in the Swiss federal gazette. There Hold would describe in addition to the turn of events, the difficult living and working conditions of the guest workers:
In a second unpublished report he criticized the lawlessness and sanitary conditions at the big construction site:
The Swiss envoy Giovanni Battista Pioda in Rome reported on the 29th of December 1875, that the published report of Colonel Hold, which had previously announced demands for compensation for the bereaved and injured, satisfied the Italian government.