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Explore the rise and impact of labor unions in history, from fighting for workers' rights and fair conditions to facing challenges like blacklisting and yellow dog contracts. Discover key unions like the Knights of Labor and AFL, their mission, and the significance of major strikes like Haymarket Riot and Homestead Strike.
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Employers (Power) vs. Workers • Yellow Dog Contracts • Blacklisting • No Job Security • Child Labor • Working Conditions • Long hours & Low wages
Labor Unions • What did they do? • Why were they needed? • What is a closed shop?
Knights of Labor • founded ~1869 • Important person ~Terence Powerly • Who were they representing? ~Skilled and unskilled workers 1886 – 700,000 Workers
What did they try to accomplish? ~1st important labor organization • Demands ~8hr day, end child labor, equal pay for equal work, safety codes, graduated income tax
American Federation of Labor • founded ~1886 • important person ~ Samuel Gompers • Who were they representing? ~Craft union, separate union for every skill, Excluded African Americans
What did they try to accomplish? ~ Working conditions, pay and control over jobs, later merged with the CIO(Congress of Industrial Organizations) • Why did this union last?
United Mine Workers • founded ~1890 • important people ~John Mitchell ~Co-founder – Philip H. Penna ~John Lewis
United Mine Workers • Who were they representing? ~Coal miners – now all miners • What did they try to accomplish?~Eight- hour work day in 1898 ~Collective bargaining rights in 1933 ~Later health (black lung disease) and retirement benefits
American Railway Union • founded ~1893 • Important people ~Eugene V. Debs (Socialist) • Who were they representing? ~All railway workers, regardless of craft or service
What did they try to accomplish? ~Workers’ wages ~Was the largest union of its time ~The first industrial union in the United States (Didn’t last because of its leaders)
Industrial Workers of the World • When it was founded ~1905 • Important people ~Big Bill Haywood ~Other socialists
Who were they representing? ~The Wobblies believed that all workers should organize as a class • What did they try to accomplish? ~Worker solidarity in the revolutionary struggle to overthrow the employing class • Wanted to bring about a change in society! Communism
International Ladies Garment Workers Union • founded ~1900 • Important people ~Frances Perkins ~Ann Morgan ~Alva Vanderbilt Belmont
Who were they representing? ~Workers in the sweatshops, clothing and textiles, primarily female membership • What did they try to accomplish? ~Improve worker’s wages & job conditions, hours
United Auto Workers • founded ~1935- under the AFL • important person ~Samuel Gompers • Who were they representing? ~Auto workers including African Americans • What did they try to accomplish? ~Collective bargaining – benefits for auto workers
Strikes • Scabs, Blacklisted What was the purpose? What did people risk?
Great Upheaval 1886 Throughout the U.S. 1,500 strikes 400,000 Workers Why were they striking? Better wages Better working conditions Results of the strike Violence
Haymarket Riot • When it occurred 4 May 1886 Where it occurred Chicago 40,000 Chicago workers Anarchists Why were they striking? 8hr day
Results of the strike Unknown person threw a bomb at police Violence At least fifty dead or wounded civilians lay in the streets 60 officers lay wounded 7 dead 8 anarchists found guilty of murder 4 hanged 1 committed suicide, later the rest were pardoned
Homestead Strike • When it occurred ~1892 • Where it occurred ~Homestead, Pennsylvania • Identify the labor union and people involved ~Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel Workers (the AA, formed in 1876) ~Henry Clay Frick – Carnegie Steel Company
Why were they striking? ~Protest a wage cut and working conditions • Results of the strike ~Replacement workers hired ~Broke the union
Pullman Strike • When it occurred ~1894 • Where it occurred ~Pullman, Illinois • Identify the labor union and people involved ~George Pullman~Eugene Debs ~ARU – American Railway Union
Why were they striking? ~Protesting cut wages, but still had to pay same prices for rents and prices at company stores • Results of the strike Government ordered end to strike President Cleveland ordered in troops Strike broken and ARU destroyed
Boston Strike • When it occurred 1919 • Where it occurred Boston • Identify the labor union and people involved Police Commissioner Edwin Curtis Gov. Calvin Coolidge
Why were they striking? Poor working conditions – 12 hour shifts Stagnant wages were paid $1,600 wanted $2,000 Police wanted to unionize (AFL) Voted 1,134 to 2 to strike
Results of the strike ~Riots and looting throughout the city ~Coolidge sent in the national guard ~The Police who struck were fired ~New officers were hired and given higher wages, more vacation days, city-provided uniforms – what the strikers wanted ~Police won’t unionize until after WWII
Seattle Strike • When it occurred ~1919 • Where it occurred ~Seattle • Identify the labor union and people involved ~AFL and IWW (wobblies) 65,000 ~Charles Piez ~Ole Hanson - mayor
Why were they striking?~Gain higher wages • Results of the strike ~Federal troops called in, special deputies hired ~Russian did it
United Mine Workers Strike • When it occurred ~1919 • Where it occurred ~Coal mines W. Virginia • Identify the labor union and people involved ~400,000 coal miners ~John L. Lewis
Why were they striking? ~50% pay increase ~5-day workweek ~6hr day • Results of the strike ~President Wilson gave a 14% increase