Nah, they'd have beat the crap out of each other by now. Leonsis, Bateman, etc. wouldn't last in Homestead. Now Bugsy Watson or Dale Hunter .... LOL
See David Brody, "Steelworkers: the Non-union Era", as best I remember...and I used to know that stuff in the late '70s. Carnegie and Frick (of the Frick Museum) decided to break the union, the Amalgamated Association of Iron, Tin, and Steel Workers. Put up barbed wire and machine-gun towers around the Homestead mill. Town supported the strikers, so Carnegie hired armed Pinkerton's to bring several barges of strike-breakers down river. Homestead's strikers gathered on a bluff above town, armed with rifles. Threatened to shoot down into the strike-breakers. Pinkertons and strike-breakers surrendered...I believe were escorted out of town by the sheriff. Carnegie ordered the Pennsylvania State (Mounted) Police to attack the striker's neighborhood. Evicted everyone, brought in more strike-breakers. (Yes, Andrew Carnegie could "order" the state police to do whatever he wanted.)
One of the things we investigated, back when I was a history major, was the way that strikers in the 1870s and 1880s had the support of their towns. Grocers extended credit for food; local police refused to arrest union men...they were all neighbors, depending on each other.
Corporations grew and took over the state governments, using state courts and state police to break strikes...as Carnegie did at Homestead.
Teddy Roosevelt and the Progressives argued that since monopoly corporations owned the state governments, the Federal government had to pass inter-state commerce laws to balance the public interest against corporate interest. (Those were the terms of political battles between about 1895 and 1920.)