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SOLUTIONS TO INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION: LABOR UNIONS????. Working conditions. THE GOAL OF THE LABOR UNION. Better wages Benefits Working conditions. If negotiation does not work, take more action: slow downs, walk outs, strikes.
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THE GOAL OF THE LABOR UNION • Better wages • Benefits • Working conditions. • If negotiation does not work, take more action: • slow downs, • walk outs, • strikes
FAMOUS STRIKES AND RIOTS: SHIRTWAIST STRIKERS MARCH TO CITY HALL.
Female Shirtwaist makers hold signs that read "Workhouse Prisoner."
Textile strikers in Lawrence, MA, gather near the railroad tracks
FAMOUS STRIKES AND RIOTS:THE GREAT RAILROAD STRIKE • After cutting wages, workers went on strike across East Coast led to Riots • Strikers destroyed equipment & rioted in the streets. • President Hayes called in state militias which caused problems led to over 100 dead before strike ended • Result: • Weakened railroad unions • Damaged reputation of labor unions because of the disruption and failure.
FAMOUS STRIKES AND RIOTS:THE HAYMARKET SQUARE RIOT • AFL was demanding a 8hr workday for all Employers, and if not done by May 1, 1886, called for a general strike • Police harassment of workers/strikers killed 4 strikers the day before, called for a meeting in Haymarket Square • Police ordered people to disperse, bomb was thrown (killed 6 officers, 67 injured) • 8 anarchists convicted of murder, unjust trial, they were scapegoats • 7 sentenced to death 1 suicide, 4 executed, 2 terms to life in prison
THE HOMESTEAD STRIKE • Members of AAISW (Iron & Steel Workers union) very skilled workers. • Mid-1880s, steel industry had new production methods, which reduced companies’ dependence on skilled labor • After wage cut after wage cut, AAISW called for a strike, head of homestead Henry Clay Frick called for 300 Pinkertons guards (strikebreakers) • Battle between strikers and Pinkertons, 3 guards, 10 strikers died, guards surrendered, but company called in PA National Guard (8,000 troops) • Public turned against strikers after Frick assassination attempt • AAISW failed in its attempt, membership declined to anything
THE PULLMAN STRIKE • Pullman Palace Car Company built/repaired at company in Pullman, Chicago • Company built town of Pullman so workers could rent homes from owner, George M. Pullman • Rents high • Workers went on strike, • Thousands of railroad workers in 27 states/territories went on strike • No transportation from Chicago to West Coast • Most state governors supported Business side, but Ill. Governor Peter Aletgeld was sympathetic towards workers and did not send state militia • Pres. Cleveland disliked unions and sent troops • Union leaders (Eugene V. Debs) were arrested and imprisoned. The strike collapsed.
Three Major Labor Unions • Knights of Labor • American Federation of Laborers (AFL) • WOBBLIES
KNIGHTS OF LABOR • Membership opened to all workers, and most business & professional people. • Excluded: lawyers, bankers, liquor dealers, and professional gamblers. • WELCOMED women! • Philosophy: 8 hour work day, abolition of child labor, wanted long range reform to replace the “wage system” with a “cooperative system” in which workers themselves control a large part of the economy. • 700,000 members by 1886. • Too big to control local chapters launched series of strikes that discredited the Union. 1890 membership shrunk to 100,000. A few years later, disappeared.
American Federation of Laborers (AFL) • Founded by Samuel Gompers • Mainly skilled workers. • Generally hostile to organizing unskilled workers • AFL against women in the workforce. • Philosophy: Accept capitalism, but secure for the workers a greater share of capitalism’s material rewards.
WOBBLIES • Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) • Never more than 100,000 members • Conducted numerous strikes, many with bloodshed!
LABOR’S WEAKNESSES • Wages rose hardly at all, could not keep up w/ rising cost of living • Reason for Failures: • ONLY 4% of industrial workers belonged to a Union in 1900. • Reasons for not organizing: • Immigrants usually only intended to make some money in America and then return home • Other American workers believed they were not going to be part of a permanent working class and that they or their children would become a higher position in society.
DISLIKE FOR LABOR UNIONS • Often hard to Unionize • If wide unemployment, people rather low paying jobs than no jobs • resentment of unions by middle class believed radical workers to be at heart of all problems