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Labor Unions & Strikes. Early Unions. First trade unions in the U.S. organized in the late 18 th century Women started organizing in the 1820s. Unions did not become significant until after the Civil War. Women. In 1834-36 women worked 16-17 hours a day to earn $1.25-$2 a week.
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Early Unions First trade unions in the U.S. organized in the late 18th century Women started organizing in the 1820s. Unions did not become significant until after the Civil War
Women In 1834-36 women worked 16-17 hours a day to earn $1.25-$2 a week. A girl weaver in a non-union mill would get $4.20/wk versus $12/wk in a union mill. Workers had to buy their own needles and thread and were fined for being a few minutes late to work Pulmonary ailments were common due to dust accumulation on the floors and tables.
1842 – Commonwealth v. Hunt Before this labor unions that attempted to “close” or create a unionized workplace could be charged with conspiracy The Supreme Court ruled that unions were not necessarily criminal or conspiring organizations if they did not advocate violence or illegal activities Legalized the existence of trade organizations Right to establish “closed shops” = have to belong the union to work there
Yellow-Dog Contracts An agreement between an employer and an employee in which the employee agrees, as a condition of employment, not be a member of a labor union Were widely used by employers to prevent the formation of unions by permitting employers to take legal action against union organizers Outlawed in 1932 by the Norris-LaGuardia Act
1866 – National Labor Union Dissolved in 1873 Paved the way for other labor unions Drew support from construction workers and skilled employees Campaigned for the exclusion of Chinese workers from the U.S. and did little to defend the rights of women and blacks The depression of the 1870s drove down union membership
Railroad Unions After 1870, union organizations started By 1901, 17 major railway unions (brotherhoods) were in operation Their main goals was building insurance and medical packages for their members and negotiating work rules like seniority and grievance procedures They were successful in securing the passage of the Adamson Act, a federal law that provided 10 hours pay for an 8 hour day.
Molly Maguires Terrorists or working class heroes? Molly Maguire was, supposedly, the leader of riots in Ireland against English landowners during the 1840s and 1850s Irish coal miners brought the organization with them when they came to work in the coal mines of PA Working conditions were awful, safety regulations were non-existent or neglected
Molly Maguires 20 executed between 1877 and 1879 Evidence provided by James McParland, a Pinkerton detective who infiltrated them During the Civil War, Irish immigrant miners killed a number of coal mine supervisors who attempted to draft them into the Union Army It is not known whether the murderers were members of the Molly Maguires The Pinkerton Agency used the publicity to attract clients Civil Rights: A private corporation initiated the investigation using a private detective agency; a private police force arrested the men and coal company attorneys prosecuted them. The state only provided the courtroom and carried out the execution
1877 – Great Railroad Strike The country’s first major rail strike The strikes and violence briefly paralyzed trade Governors in 10 states mobilized state militia and National Guard troops to reopen rail traffic Violent confrontations took place including in Philadelphia where troops fired on a crowd – killing 20 civilians, including women and at least 3 children The strike was broken within a few weeks Many native-born Americans blame the violence on foreign agitators
Knights of Labor 1885 – Knights of Labor led railroad workers to victory against Jay Gould and his entire Southwestern Railway system. 1886 – coordinate 1400 strikes involving over 600,000 workers spread over the country (double the numbers from the year before) Some were peaceful and some were violent Demands were usually focused on the 8 hour day
1869 – Knights of Labor First effective labor organization on a national level The acceptance of all groups led to an explosion of membership after 1880 They hoped to make gains through political or cooperative ventures rather than through strikes and boycotts Successful in developing a working class culture, involving sports, leisure activities and educational projects for their members
1886 – Bay View Tragedy Milwaukee, Wisconsin Building trades workers and Polish laborers were striking against their employers demanding an 8 hour day. Workers were camping in a nearby field. Gov. Jeremiah Rusk ordered the National Guard to “shoot to kill” any strikers who attempted to enter the Milwaukee mill The next day a crowd of people, including children approached the mill and were fired upon. 7 people died, including a 13 year old boy and several more were injured
1886 – Haymarket Square Riot Strikers rally against the McCormick plant A team of political anarchists, who were not Knights of Labor, tried to join in support A bomb exploded as police were dispersing the peaceful rally, killing 7 policemen and wounding others The anarchists were blamed and their spectacular trial gained national attention The reputation of the Knights of Labor was tarnished by the false accusation that they promoted anarchism and violence. Many members left and joined other unions that were considered more respectable
1881 - American Federation of Labor A federation of different unions, did not directly enroll workers Skilled workers – no unskilled, no women, no African-Americans Thought women threatened the jobs of men since they worked for lower wages Goals: prohibit child labor, 8 hour day, exclusion of foreign contract workers Grew steadily as the KOL all but disappeared
1893 – American Railway Union Led by Eugene Debs Unionized all railway workers regardless of craft or service Organized a number of strikes but only the first was successful
1894 – Pullman Strike Pullman Railroad Cars – Made luxury sleeping cars During depression of 1890s the company cut wages Company town – rent and product prices remained the same Discontented workers joined the American Railway Union The entire union went on strike to support the Pullman workers Within 4 days, 125,000 workers on 29 railroads were refusing to work
Pullman Strike A federal court issued an injunction - an order to go back to work Based on the Sherman Anti-Trust Act – prohibited “every contract, combination in the form of trust or otherwise, or conspiracy in restraint of trade or commerce among the several states” Debs and the union leaders ignored the injunction Strike was broken when U.S. Marshals and 2,000 Army troops were sent in by President Cleveland on the premise that the strike interfered with the delivery of the U.S. Mail. By the end, 13 strikers were killed, 57 wounded. An estimated $340,000 worth of property damage and Debs went to prison for 6 months for violating the federal court order The ARU disintegrated
Eugene Debs Left school at age 14 and went to work for railroad Worked his way up to being a railroad fireman Became active in labor movement Read Karl Marx while in jail for Pullman Strike 1897 – co-founded the Social Democratic Party Presidential candidate in 1900 1901 – the SDP merged with the Socialist Party of America 1904, 1908, 1912, 1916, 1920 – presidential candidate for the SPA
Debs’ Quotes “While there is a lower class I am in it; while there is a criminal element I am of it; while there is a soul in prison, I am not free” “It is better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don’t want and to get it” “The most heroic word in all languages is revolution” “…those who work the hardest, and at the most difficult and menial tasks, have the least”
Socialist Party Between 1901 and 1912 membership grew from 13,000 to 118, 000 Its journal Appeal to Reason was selling 500,00 copies a week Prominent members: Bill Haywood, Margaret Sanger, Helen Keller, Upton Sinclair, A. Philip Randolph, W.E.B. DuBois, Claude McKay, Sinclair Lewis, Jack London, Mary “Mother” Jones
Johnstown Flood Henry Clay Frick and a group of wealthy businessmen purchase an abandoned reservoir and modify it into a private resort lake The dam was lowered and widened to allow a road across the top. A fish screen was put across the spillway to retain fish for fishermen. These actions weakened the dam. Over 50 wealthy Pittsburgh industrialists belonged to the club The dam showed many signs of weakness prior to its ultimate failure but these were ignored by the industrialists who did not want to pay for costly repairs
Johnstown Flood May 31, 1889 after a large rainstorm men noticed the dam was failing and worked to stop it and officials didn’t believe the warnings because there had been too many false alarms before When it was over, several towns had been wiped out 2,209 were dead including 95 entire families, 396 children – 98 children lost both parents and 1 in every 3 bodies found were never identified 1,600 homes were destroyed and $17 million in property damage meant clean-up continued for years The club was never held legally responsible in the trials that followed. The flood was ruled an “act of God” and survivors got no compensation Club members contributed little to the relief efforts but Andrew Carnegie did build a library in Johnstown
1892 – Homestead Strike Henry Clay Frick, Superintendent of Carnegie Steel proposed to cut workers’ wages Contract talks with the union broke down Frick shut the mill, installed 3 miles of wooden fence topped with barbed wire around the mill and hired 300 guards from the Pinkerton Detective Agency Guards were confronted by hundreds of workers and townsfolk. A gun battle broke out and 7 workers and 3 Pinkertons were killed. Within days 8,500 National Guard troops took control of the plant
Homestead Strike Public opinion turned against the steel workers’ union when Frick was seriously wounded in an assassination attempt. By November 1892, the union was broken and the mill re-opened as a non-union plant using African- American and eastern European workers Union leaders were blacklisted from the steel industry for life The steel mills went from an 8 hour day to a 12 hour day, 6 days a week with a 24 hours shift followed by a day off, every two weeks. The steel industry did not unionize again for 44 years
Alexander Berkman & Emma Goldman – American Anarchists Active in the union movement – travelled the country making speeches Upset with the use of Pinkertons and the death of strikers in Homestead, PA, Berkman decided to kill Henry Frick Berkman shot Frick three times and stabbed him twice but Frick survived the attack Berkman was sent to prison Goldman was imprisoned a year later for urging the unemployed to steal food they needed After her release, Goldman campaigned for women’s suffrage and birth control information Berkman was sent back to jail during WWI for violating the Espionage Act for publishing material against the war On the second anniversary of the Russian Revolution, 10,000 suspected communists and anarchists were arrested in the U.S. The majority were released but Goldman, Berkman and 245 others were deported to Russia
United Mine Workers • Founded in 1890 • Goals – mine safety, independence from company towns and collective bargaining • Won 8 hour day in 1898 • Associated with a number of violent clashes with authorities • Lattimer Massacre 1897 – 19 miners killed by police in PA during a march to support unions Sixteen Tons
1902 – Anthracite Coal Strike President Theodore Roosevelt favored a compromise solution and the nation was facing a coal shortage heading into the winter The strike ended after 163 days and a commission set up by TR held hearings for 3 months hearing from all sides The miners got a 10% raise rather than 20% and a 9 hour day rather than an 8 hour day and a panel was set up to settle future disputes Lawyer for the mine managers - “These men don’t suffer. Why, hell, half of them don’t even speak English.”
Mary “Mother” Jones“Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the living” Born in Ireland, moved to Canada as a teen and then to Michigan, teacher & dressmaker Lost her husband and all 4 children to yellow fever and her workshop was destroyed in a fire She began a career as a labor organizer for the Knights of Labor and then the United Mine Workers Very effective speaker Called “the most dangerous woman in America” for her success in organizing mine workers against mine owners
1903 - Children’s Strike Organized by Mary “Mother” Jones Protesting lax enforcement of child labor laws Marched from Philadelphia to the home of President Theodore Roosevelt in New York Carried banners that said “We want to go to school and not the mines!” Showed children missing fingers and other disabilities caused by work to newspapers to draw attention to her cause
1905 – Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) 43 groups opposed to the AFL formed a radical labor organization Goal – promote worker solidarity in the revolutionary struggle to overthrow the employing class Led by William “Big Bill” Haywood – charged with murdering the governor of Idaho & defended by Clarence Darrow. Despite a Pinkerton detective getting a coerced statement blaming Haywood, there was no evidence he or the union was involved. Popular with immigrants
IWW (The “Wobblies”) Split in two in 1908 One group headed by Eugene Debs advocated political action The other headed by William Haywood advocated strikes, boycotts and even sabotage Leaders of the IWW were attacked, lynched, framed for crimes for their union activities and imprisoned for opposing World War I Bill Haywood fled to the Soviet Union Because of the attacks and the loss of their strongest leader, the union membership declined dramatically during the 1920s.
1909 – NY Shirtwaist Strike About 1/5th the workers – mostly women – working at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory walked off their jobs The owners locked them out and hired prostitutes to replace the strikers The strike spread to other garment industry shops in Manhattan and came to be called the “Uprising of Twenty Thousand” – estimated that 40,000 participated by the end The strike lasted 14 weeks and workers from other shops won concessions on wages and working conditions but the managers of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory refused to sign the agreement
1911 – Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Saturday, March 25, a fire broke out in the Triangle Factory located on the top 3 floors of a 10 story building Fueled by combustible garments, cloth & dust it spread quickly 500 workers were there that day – mostly immigrant women, some as young as 12 and mostly from Russia, Italy, Germany or Hungary Although a few escaped, most were trapped by the flames and the locked doors More than 60 chose to jump rather than die in the flames and 24 died when a fire escape collapsed under the weight of the women on it 146 people died and thousands watched as women flung themselves from the windows of the burning building
1912 – Bread & Roses Strike Textile strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts – 25,000 workers Slogan appeals to both fair wages and dignified conditions Workers won pay increases and time and a quarter pay for overtime and the promise of no discrimination against the strikers
1914 – Ludlow Massacre An attack by the Colorado National Guard on a tent colony of 12,000 striking coal miners and their families 19-25 people died including at least 2 women and 11 children who were asphyxiated and burned to death in a single tent. The leader of the strike and two other miners were found - shot in the back Congress responded to the public outcry by launching an investigation Big Bad John
1915 – Joe Hill – IWW martyr Union organizer and IWW activist Convicted of murder in a Utah court International campaign to have his conviction reversed – the daughter of a former Mormon church president, Samuel Gompers, President Woodrow Wilson Executed by firing squad – according to a member of the firing squad, Hill gave the command “Fire” himself “Goodbye Bill, I die a true rebel. Don’t waste time mourning, organize!” Became bigger in death than in life