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The Gilded Age. The Rise of Big Labor. Sources of Labor. Former Self-employed Siblings in farming families Immigrants (largest category) Between 1870 and 1920 24 million immigrants arrived from: Southern and Eastern Europe – 60% Northern Europe – 25% Other (Asia, Mexico, etc.) – 15%
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The Gilded Age The Rise of Big Labor
Sources of Labor • Former Self-employed • Siblings in farming families • Immigrants (largest category) • Between 1870 and 1920 24 million immigrants arrived from: • Southern and Eastern Europe – 60% • Northern Europe – 25% • Other (Asia, Mexico, etc.) – 15% • By 1910 53% of all wage earners were of foreign birth
Effect of Mechanization on Labor • Changed employer-employee relations • Gradually reduced customary autonomy • Decision making became centralized in management • Workers generally lost control of production process • Pace of production set by managers • Increasingly impersonal • Created new categories of workers • Skilled artisans generally replaced by unskilled “machine tenders” • Supervisors, managers
Knights of Labor • Rejected “wage slavery” • Open to all laborers, skilled and unskilled • Maintained an adversarial relationship with business • Advocated broad social and economic reforms • Producer’s cooperatives • End to Child labor • Graduated income tax • Monetary reform
The American Federation of Labor • Restricted to skilled laborers • Accepted wage system • Wanted to work with business owners • Promised amenable labor relations
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 • First nationwide strike • Began in Martinsburg, WV • Strike spread quickly along the rail routes • Strikers halted all train traffic • Unemployed and workers in other industries joined the protest • Mobs defied militia sent to disperse them • Rioting persisted for about a week • Fearing a national insurrection President Hayes called out the army to suppress the strike • Federal troops fired into a crowd in Pittsburg, killing 20 • By the end of the strike over 100 were dead
Homestead Steel Strike • Carnegie determined to gain control over every facet of production • Want to break the Amalgamated Iron, Steel and Tin Workers Union • Workers went on strike in June • Governor refused to use National Guard to disperse them • Steel Company used a private army • After day-long gun battle, governor sent in troops to restore order • Factory reopened with strikebreakers • After four months the union was forced to admit defeat • Carnegie reduced workforce by 25% • Lengthened work day • Cut wages 25% • Affected all steel workers • Within a decade, every major steel company operated without union interference
Eugene V. DebsHead of the American Railway Union and founder of the American Socialist Party