Howard Zinn talks about this strike briefly in his book. This is one of the earliest labor strikes that involved black and white laborers working together. They sort-of won by not losing and remaining non violent. The media tried to whip up a race war, the governor called in troops to quell the "Hostile Negroes" and in the end calm prevailed and nobody was killed like in so many other labor movements at the time and into the early 1900's.
Zinn is unabashedly Socialist and comes at history from that perspective. Many people here in Hubski won't agree with his point of view, and some of the stuff in APHOTUS is bonkers, but reading outside perspectives is important for understanding how we got to here.
There are so few labor strikes that ended sort-of 'not bad' that I figured today, with the end of sillyseason and the start of batshitseason, we needed a reminder that things get better, and when people work together things get done. And every once in a while, cooler heads prevail.