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Knights of Labor

The Knights of Labor (K of L), officially the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, was an American labor federation that was active in the late 19th century, especially the 1880s. It operated in the United States as well in Canada,[1] and had chapters also in Great Britain and Australia.[2] Its most important leader was Terence V. Powderly. The Knights of Labor promoted the social and cultural uplift of the worker, and demanded the eight-hour day. In some cases it acted as a labor union, negotiating with employers, but it was never well organized or funded. It was notable in its ambition to organize across lines of gender and race and in the inclusion of both skilled and unskilled labor. After a rapid expansion in the mid-1880s, it suddenly lost its new members and became a small operation again. The Knights of Labor had served, however, as the first mass organization of the white working class of the United States.[3]

Knights of Labor
The Seal of the Knights of Labor
AbbreviationK of L
Formation1869 (1869)
Founders
Dissolved1949 (1949)
TypeLabor federation
Location
    • Canada
    • United States
Key people

It was founded by Uriah Stephens on December 28, 1869,[4] reached 28,000 members in 1880, then jumped to 100,000 in 1884. By 1886, 20% of all workers were affiliated, nearly 800,000 members.[5] Its frail organizational structure could not cope as it was battered by charges of failure and violence and calumnies of the association with the Haymarket Square riot. Most members abandoned the movement in 1886–1887, leaving at most 100,000 in 1890. Many opted to join groups that helped to identify their specific needs, instead of the KOL which addressed many different types of issues.[5] The Panic of 1893 terminated the Knights of Labor's importance.[6] While their national headquarters closed in 1917, remnants of the Knights of Labor continued in existence until 1949, when the group's last 50-member local dropped its affiliation.

Origins edit

In 1869, Uriah Smith Stephens, James L. Wright, and a small group of Philadelphia tailors founded a secret organization known as the Noble Order of the Knights of Labor. The collapse of the National Labor Union in 1873 left a vacuum for workers looking for organization. The Knights became better organized with a national vision when, in 1879, they replaced Stephens with Terence V. Powderly, who was just 30 years old at the time. The body became popular with trade unions and Pennsylvania coal miners during the economic depression of the mid-1870s, then it grew rapidly. The KOL was a diverse industrial union open to all workers. The leaders felt that it was best to have a versatile population in order to get points of view from all aspects. The Knights of Labor barred five groups from membership: bankers, land speculators, lawyers, liquor dealers and gamblers. Its members included low skilled workers, railroad workers, immigrants, and steel workers. This helped the workers to get an organizational identity. As one of the largest labor organization in ninetieth century, Knights wanted to classify the workers as it was a time where large scale factories and industries were rapidly growing. Even though skilled workers were prioritized at the beginning 1880s but slowly later by the time of 1886, nearly a million workers were enrolled. [7]

 
Terence Powderly, Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor during its meteoric rise and precipitous decline (1890)

As membership expanded, the Knights began to function more as a labor union and less of a secret organization. During the 1880s, the Knights of Labor played a huge role in independent and third-party movements. Local assemblies began not only to emphasize cooperative enterprises, but to initiate strikes to win concessions from employers. The Knights of Labor brought together workers of different religions, races and genders and helped them all create a bond and unify all for the same cause. The new leader Powderly opposed strikes as a "relic of barbarism", but the size and the diversity of the Knights afforded local assemblies a great deal of autonomy.

In 1882, the Knights ended their membership rituals and removed the words "Noble Order" from their name. This was intended to mollify the concerns of Catholic members and the bishops who wanted to avoid any resemblance to freemasonry. Though initially averse to strikes to advance their goals, the Knights did aid various strikes and boycotts. The Wabash Railroad strike in 1885 saw Powderly finally adapt and support an eventually successful strike against Jay Gould's Wabash Line after C. A. Hall, a carpenter and Knights member, was fired for attending a meeting in February. The strike included stopping track, yard, engine maintenance, the control or sabotage of equipment, and the occupation of shops and roundhouses.[8] Gould met with Powderly and agreed to call off his campaign against the Knights of Labor, which had caused the turmoil originally. This gave momentum to the Knights and membership surged. By 1886, the Knights had more than 700,000 members.

The Knights' primary demand was for the eight-hour workday. They also called for legislation to end child and convict labor as well as a graduated income tax. They also supported cooperatives. The only woman to hold office in the Knights of Labor, Leonora Barry, worked as an investigator. She described the horrific conditions in factories employing women and children. These reports made Barry the first person to collect national statistics on the American working woman.[9]

Powderly and the Knights tried to avoid divisive political issues, but in the early 1880s, many Knights had become followers of Henry George's ideology known now as Georgism. In 1883, Powderly officially recommended George's book and announced his support of "single tax" on land values. During the New York mayoral election of 1886, Powderly was able to successfully push the organization towards the favor of Henry George.[10] In 1886, the Knights became of the part of the short lived United Labor Party, an alliance of labor organizations formed in support of George's campaign in the 1886 New York City mayoral election.[11]

The Knights of Labor helped to bring together many different types of people from all different walks of life; for example Catholic and Protestant Irish-born workers. The KOL appealed to them because they worked very closely with the Irish Land League.[12] The Knights had a mixed record on inclusiveness and exclusiveness. They accepted women and blacks (after 1878) and their employers as members, and advocating the admission of blacks into local assemblies. However, the organization tolerated the segregation of assemblies in the South. Bankers, doctors, lawyers, stockholders, and liquor manufacturers were excluded because they were considered unproductive members of society. Asians were also excluded, and in November 1885, a branch of the Knights in Tacoma, Washington violently expelled the city's Chinese workers, who amounted to nearly a tenth of the overall city population at the time.[13] The Union Pacific Railroad came into conflict with the Knights. When the Knights in Wyoming refused to work more hours in 1885, the railroad hired Chinese workers as strikebreakers and to stir up racial animosity. The result was the Rock Springs massacre, that killed scores of Chinese workers, and drove the rest out of Wyoming.[14] About 50 African-American sugar-cane laborers organized by the Knights went on strike and were murdered by strikebreakers in the 1887 Thibodaux massacre in Louisiana. The Knights strongly supported passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the Contract Labor Law of 1885, as did many other labor groups, demonstrating the limits of their commitment to solidarity. While they claimed to not be "against immigration", their anti-Asian racism demonstrated the limits and inconsistency of their anti-racist platform.[15]

Decline edit

 
J. R. Sovereign, Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor from 1893

Southwest railroad strike of 1886 edit

The Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886 was a Knights strike involving more than 200,000 workers. Beginning on March 1, 1886, railroad workers in five states struck against the Union Pacific and Missouri Pacific railroads, owned by Jay Gould. At least ten people were killed. The unravelling of the strike within two months led directly to the collapse of the Knights of Labor and the formation of the American Federation of Labor.[16]

Catholic Church edit

The Knights of Labor attracted many Catholics, who were a large part of the membership, perhaps a majority. Powderly was also a Catholic. However, the Knights's use of secrecy, similar to the Masons, during its early years concerned many bishops of the Church. The Knights used secrecy and deception to help prevent employers from firing members.

After the Archbishop of Quebec condemned the Knights in 1884, twelve American archbishops voted 10 to 2 against doing likewise in the United States. Furthermore, Cardinal James Gibbons and Bishop John Ireland defended the Knights. Gibbons went to the Vatican to talk to the hierarchy.[17]

In 1886, right after the peak of the Knights of Labor, they started to lose more members to the American Federation of Labor. It has been believed that the fall of the Knights of Labor was due to their lack of adaptability and beliefs in the old-style industrial capitalism.[18]

Legacy edit

Though often overlooked, the Knights of Labor contributed to the tradition of labor protest songs in America. The Knights frequently included music in their regular meetings, and encouraged local members to write and perform their work. In Chicago, James and Emily Talmadge, printers and supporters of the Knights of Labor, published the songbook "Labor Songs Dedicated to the Knights of Labor" (1885). The song "Hold the Fort" [also "Storm the Fort"], a Knights of Labor pro-labor revision of the hymn by the same name, became the most popular labor song prior to Ralph Chaplin's IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) anthem "Solidarity Forever". Pete Seeger often performed this song and it appears on a number of his recordings. Songwriter and labor singer Bucky Halker includes the Talmadge version, entitled "Our Battle Song," on his CD Don't Want Your Millions (Revolting Records 2000). Halker also draws heavily on the Knights songs and poems in his book on labor song and poetry, For Democracy, Workers and God: Labor Song-Poems and Labor Protest, 1865-1895 (University of Illinois Press, 1991).

Racism and wages edit

The Knights of Labor supported the Chinese Exclusion Act, claiming that industrialists were using Chinese workers as a wedge to keep wages low. To stop companies from doing this, they supported Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and also the Alien Contract labor law 1885. Even though the Acts were useful to pass the laws they wanted, they weren't satisfied so they attacked Chinese workers and burned down their places.[19]

Anti-Chinese rhetoric and violence were more prevalent among the western chapters of the Knights. In 1880, San Francisco Knights wrote, "They bear the semblance of men, but live like beasts...who eat rice and the offal of the slaughter house." The article also calls Chinese "natural thieves" and states that all Chinese women are prostitutes. In March 1882, Knights joined the San Francisco rally to demand expulsion of the Chinese. Several years later, mobs led by the Knights of Labor, a loosely structured labor federation, rounded up Seattle's Chinese-born workers and campaigned prevent further immigration.

Historian Catharine Collomp notes that "Chinese exclusion was the only issue about which the Knights of Labor and the American Federation of Labor constantly lobbied the Federal government."

Haymarket Riot edit

The labor movement, including those in the Knights of Labor, were rallying for an eight-hour workday and protesting with their slogan: "Eight Hours for Work, Eight Hours for Rest, Eight Hours for What We Will." Through Eight Hour rallies and legislative lobbying, labor leaders came into direct conflict with employers, who neither accepted unions nor believed that governments should intervene on workers' behalf. During an Eight Hour campaign in Chicago in 1886, a conflict between organized laborers and employers turned violent. By the mid-1880s, Chicago was the center of immigrant and working-class organizing, with a wide array of labor organizations. Demands for the eight-hour workday were at the heart of a strike against one of Chicago's most powerful employers, the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company, which refused to bargain with the union.[20]

While workingmen had gathered to strike against the plant, some of them had drawn fire from authorities. City police and private guards had injured and killed some of the strikers. Which prompted responses from a bigger working class, which included anarchists Albert Parsons, Michael Schwab, August Spies, Adolph Fischer, and labor organizer Oscar Neebe. On May 4, they organized a protest in Chicago's Haymarket Square. After the main speakers, Parson and Spies, left the platform, someone from the crowd threw a bomb into a group of police standing in the square, which left seven police dead, and sixty protesters from the crowd injured. Afterwards, the eight anarchists were arrested and seven of them were sentenced to death in a trial that focused on political beliefs, not the actions of the anarchists. Two of the condemned had their sentences commuted; but after Louis Lingg committed suicide in prison, the remaining four were executed.[20]

The Haymarket trial had two distinct effects on the labor movement: first, a nationwide campaign to round up anarchists and, second, a steep decline in the Knights of Labor's membership. Terence Powderly, the Knights president, disavowed the Haymarket eight, even as local trade unions and Knights assemblies around the country protested the arrests. Rapid growth of the labor union in the mid-1880s weakened the bonds that held it together, New Knights members had joined the organization in the wake of its victories over southwestern railroads, but without fully understanding or accepting the Knights' movement culture. While it would be over a decade before the Knights disbanded, these organizational weaknesses, and the strength of the new trade federation union, led to the Knights' decline.[20]

Leadership edit

Grand Master Workmen edit

1878: Uriah Smith Stephens[21]
1879: Terence V. Powderly[22]
1893: James Sovereign[22]
1897: Henry A. Hicks[22]
1898: John N. Parsons[22]
1900: Isaac D. Chamberlain[22]
1900: Simon Burns[22]
1901: Henry A. Hicks[23]
1902: John Hayes

Grand Worthy Foremen edit

1878: Ralph Beaumont[24]
1879: Terence V. Powderly[21]
1879: Richard Griffiths[21]
1882: Ralph Beaumont[24]
1883: Henry A. Coffeen
1884: Richard Griffiths
1888: Morris L. Wheat
1890: Hugh Cavanaugh[24]
1893: Michael J. Bishop[24]
1896: Thomas McGuire
1897: Isaac D. Chamberlain
1901: Arthur McConnell
1902: Isaac A. Sanderson
1910s: William A. Denison

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gregory S. Kealey and Bryan D. Palmer, Dreaming of What Might Be: The Knights of Labor in Ontario, 1880–1900 (1982); Douglas R. Kennedy, The Knights of Labor in Canada (1956).
  2. ^ Steven Parfitt, "The First-and-a-half International: The Knights of Labor and the History of International Labour Organization in the Nineteenth Century." Labour History Review 80.2 (2015): 135-167.
  3. ^ Roark, James L.; Johnson, Michael P.; Furstenburg, Francois; Cline Cohen, Patricia; Hartmann, Susan M.; Stage, Sarah; Igo, Sarah E. (2020). "Chapter 19 The City and Its Workers: 1870–1900". The American Promise: A History of the United States (Kindle). Vol. Combined Volume (Value Edition, 8th ed.). Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martin's. Kindle Locations 14511-14513. ISBN 978-1319208929. OCLC 1096495503.
  4. ^ "Knights of Labor Facts, information, pictures". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  5. ^ a b Kaufman, Jason (2001). "Rise and Fall of a Nation of Joiners". The Knights of Labor Revisited. 31 (4): 553–579.
  6. ^ Kemmerer and Wickersham, (1950)
  7. ^ Voss, Kim (1988). "Labor Organization and Class Alliance: Industries, Communities, and the Knights of Labor". Theory and Society. 17 (3): 329–364. doi:10.1007/BF00160843. ISSN 0304-2421. JSTOR 657519. S2CID 147551660.
  8. ^ Case, Theresa A. (2009). "Blaming Martin Irons: Leadership and Popular Protest in the 1886 Southwest Strike". The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. 8 (1): 51–81. doi:10.1017/S1537781400001006. ISSN 1537-7814. JSTOR 40542736. S2CID 147049676.
  9. ^ Whitman, American Reformers, 57.
  10. ^ Weir, Robert E. (October 1997). "A Fragile Alliance: Henry George and the Knights of Labor". The American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 56 (4). doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1997.tb02653.x.
  11. ^ Genovese, Frank C. (1991). "Henry George and Organized Labor: The 19th Century Economist and Social Philosopher Championed Labor's Cause, but Used Its Candidacy for Propaganda". The American Journal of Economics and Sociology. 50 (1): 113–127. doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1991.tb02500.x. ISSN 0002-9246. JSTOR 3487043.
  12. ^ Hallgrimsdottir, Helga; Benoit, Cecilia (2007). "From Wage Slaves to Wage Workers". Cultural Opportunity Structures and the Evolution of the Wage Demands of the Knights of Labor and the American Federation of Labor, 1880-1900. 85 (3): 1393–1411.
  13. ^ "A Radical History of Seattle's International District: A Walking Tour". 2015.
  14. ^ Craig Storti, Incident at Bitter Creek: The Story of the Rock Springs Chinese Massacre (1990),
  15. ^ Parfitt, Steven. Knights Across the Atlantic: The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland. Liverpool University Press. p. 43.
  16. ^ Theresa A. Case, The Great Southwest Railroad Strike and Free Labor (Texas A&M University Press, 2010); online review
  17. ^ James Hennesey, American Catholics, Oxford University Press, 1981, page 188.
  18. ^ Wheeler, Hoyt (2002). The Future of the American Labor Movement. Cambridge University Press. pp. 85.
  19. ^ "Knights of Labor - Definition, Goals & Leader". 7 October 2021.
  20. ^ a b c Faue, Elizabeth (2017). Rethinking the American Labor Movement. New York: Routledge. pp. 22–24. ISBN 9780415895835.
  21. ^ a b c McNeill, George E. (1887). The Labor Movement: The Problem of To-day (PDF). New York: M. W. Hazen. p. 621.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Reports of the Industrial Commission on Labor Organizations, Labor Disputes, and Arbitration, and on Railway Labor. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. 1901.
  23. ^ "Labor leader is deposed". New York Times. 17 November 1901.
  24. ^ a b c d The Samuel Gompers Papers. University of Illinois Press. 1986. ISBN 9780252033896.

Further reading edit

Scholarly studies edit

  • Birdsall, William C. (July 1953). "The Problem of Structure in the Knights of Labor". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 6 (4): 532–546. doi:10.2307/2518795. JSTOR 2518795.
  • Blum, Edward J. " 'By the Sweat of Your Brow': The Knights of Labor, the Book of Genesis, and the Christian Spirit of the Gilded Age." Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas 11.2 (2014): 29–34.
  • Browne, Henry J. The Catholic Church and the Knights of Labor. Washington: Catholic University of America Press, 1949.
  • Case, Theresa A. The Great Southwest Railroad Strike and Free Labor (Texas A&M University Press, 2010); online review, on 1886
  • Cassity, Michael J. (June 1979). "Modernization and Social Crisis: The Knights of Labor and a Midwest Community, 1885-1886". Journal of American History. 66 (1): 41–61. doi:10.2307/1894673. JSTOR 1894673.
  • Commons, John R. et al., History of Labour in the United States: Volume 2, 1860-1896. (4 vol 1918). vol 2
  • Conell, Carol, and Kim Voss. "Formal Organization and the Fate of Social Movements: Craft Association and Class Alliance in the Knights of Labor," American Sociological Review Vol. 55, No. 2 (Apr., 1990), pp. 255–269 in JSTOR, focus on steel industry
  • de Leon, Cedric. "Black from white: How the rights of white and black workers became 'labor' and 'civil' rights after the US civil war." Labor Studies Journal 42.1 (2017): 10–26. online[permanent dead link]
  • Fink, Leon. "The New Labor History and the Powers of Historical Pessimism: Consensus, Hegemony, and the Case of the Knights of Labor," Journal of American History Vol. 75, No. 1 (Jun., 1988), pp. 115–136 in JSTOR, historiography
  • Fink, Leon. Workingmen's Democracy: The Knights of Labor and American Politics. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983. online
  • Grob, Gerald N. "The Knights of Labor and the Trade Unions, 1878-1886," Journal of Economic History Vol. 18, No. 2 (Jun., 1958), pp. 176–192 in JSTOR
  • Hild, Matthew. Greenbackers, Knights of Labor, and Populists: Farmer-Labor Insurgency in the Late-Nineteenth-Century South (U of Georgia Press, 2010).
  • Hild, Matthew. "Building the Alabama Labor Movement: Nicholas Byrne Stack and the Knights of Labor." Alabama Review 73.2 (2020): 91–117.
  • Hild, Matthew. "The Knights of Labor and the Third-Party Movement in Texas, 1886–1896." Southwestern Historical Quarterly 119.1 (2015): 24–43. online
  • Hoffman, Richard C. "Producer co-operatives of the Knights of Labor: seeking worker independence." Labor History (2022): 1–19.
  • Kessler, Sidney H. (July 1937). "The Organization of Negroes in the Knights of Labor". Journal of Negro History. 37 (3): 248–276. doi:10.2307/2715493. JSTOR 2715493. S2CID 149648934.
  • Kaufman, Jason. "Rise and Fall of a Nation of Joiners: The Knights of Labor Revisited," Journal of Interdisciplinary History Vol. 31, No. 4 (Spring, 2001), pp. 553–579 in JSTOR statistical study of competition with other unions and with fraternal societies for members
  • Kemmerer, Donald L.; Edward D. Wickersham (January 1950). "Reasons for the Growth of the Knights of Labor in 1885-1886". Industrial and Labor Relations Review. 3 (2): 213–220. doi:10.2307/2518830. JSTOR 2518830.
  • Keohane, Jennifer. " 'Labor is Noble and Holy': Ironic Inclusion and Exclusion in the Knights of Labor, 1885-1890." Rhetoric Review 38.3 (2019): 311–324. online
  • Levine, Susan. "Labor's True Woman: Domesticity and Equal Rights in the Knights of Labor," Journal of American History Vol. 70, No. 2 (Sep., 1983), pp. 323–339 in JSTOR
  • Levine, Susan. True Women: Carpet Weavers, Industrialization, and Labor Reform in the Gilded Age. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1984.
  • Licht, Walter; Kealey, Gregory; Palmer, Bryan; Fink, Leon (Summer 1985). "The Knights of Labor Commemorated and Reconsidered: : Dreaming of What Might Be: The Knights of Labor in Ontario, 1880-1900; Workingmen's Democracy: The Knights of Labor and American Politics". Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 16 (1): 117–123. doi:10.2307/204327. JSTOR 204327.
  • Miner, Claudia (1983). "The 1886 Convention of the Knights of Labor". Pylon. 44 (2): 147–159. doi:10.2307/275026. JSTOR 275026.
  • McLaurin, Melton Alonza. The Knights of Labor in the South. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1978.
  • Phelan, Craig. Grand Master Workman: Terence Powderly and the Knights of Labor (Greenwood, 2000), scholarly biography online edition 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Taussig, Frank W. "The South-Western Strike of 1886." The Quarterly Journal of Economics 1.2 (1887): 184–222; detailed coverage by a leading scholar; online
  • Voss, Kim. The Making of American Exceptionalism: The Knights of Labor and Class Formation in the Nineteenth Century. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1994. Sociological study. online 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Ware, Norman J. The Labor Movement in the United States, 1860 - 1895: A Study In Democracy. (1929).
  • Weir, Robert E. Beyond Labor's Veil: The Culture of the Knights of Labor. (Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996) online edition 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Weir, Robert E. (1997). A fragile alliance: Henry George and the Knights of Labor[permanent dead link]. The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 56, 421–439.
  • Weir, Robert E. Knights Unhorsed: Internal Conflict in Gilded Age Social Movement (Wayne State University Press, 2000)
  • White, Richard (2011). Railroaded: The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-06126-0.
  • Wright, Carroll D. "An Historical Sketch of the Knights of Labor," Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 1, no. 2 (January 1887), pp. 137–168. in JSTOR

Outside US edit

  • Arvidsson, Stefan The style and mythology of socialism: socialist idealism, 1871-1914. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, 2017.
  • Kealey, Gregory, and Brian Palmer, Dreaming of What Might Be: The Knights of Labor in Ontario, 1880-1900. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982.
  • Parfitt, Steven. Knights Across the Atlantic: The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland (2017) contents also see online review
  • Parfitt, Steven. "A nexus between labour movement and labour movement: the Knights of Labor and the financial side of global labour history." Labor History 58.3 (2017): 288–302.
  • Parfitt, Steven. "Transnational Borrowings: Scottish Sons of Labour and American Knights of Labor, 1887–1890." Labour History Review 85.2 (2020): 127–157.
  • Parfitt, Steven. "The First-and-a-half International: The Knights of Labor and the History of International Labour Organization in the Nineteenth Century." Labour History Review 80.2 (2015): 135–167.
  • Parfitt, Steven. "Completing the Order’s History Down Under: The Knights of Labor in Australia." Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History 110 (2016): 1–18.
  • Parfitt, Steven. "Constructing the Global History of the Knights of Labor." Labor 14.1 (2017): 13–37.
  • Pelling, Henry (1956). "The Knights of Labor in Britain, 1880-1901". Economic History Review. 9 (new series) (2): 313–331. doi:10.2307/2591749. JSTOR 2591749., shows that American workers in the window glass industry set up an English chapter in 1884 to watch the business in Europe; it remained small
  • Toth, Gyorgy. "Knights across the Atlantic: The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland." (2019): 151–156.
  • Watillon, Leon. and Frederic Meyers, The Knights of Labor in Belgium. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1978. Also in partial translation by Frederic Meyers, Institute of Industrial Relations, Los Angeles, 1959: http://www.oac.cdlib.org/ark:/28722/bk0003t812j/?brand=oac4

Primary sources edit

By Knights edit

  • Knights of Labor (1887–1913). Proceedings of the General Assembly, 10th - 30th (microfilm). Library of American civilization. LAC 23217-20.
  • Knights of Labor (1878–1886). Record of the proceedings of the General Assembly, 1st - 9th (microfilm). Library of American civilization. LAC 23214-16.
  • Powderly, Terence Vincent (1889). Thirty Years of Labor. 1859-1889. Excelsior publishing house. p. 693. Terence Vincent Powderly.
  • Powderly, Terence Vincent (1889). Thirty Years of Labor. 1859-1889. Excelsior publishing house. p. 693. Terence Vincent Powderly.
  • Powderly, Terence Vincent; Edmund Janes James (1891). The Labor Movement: The Problem of To-day. The M. W. Hazen Company. pp. 628. Terence Vincent Powderly.
    • Powderly, Terence Vincent (1891). The Labor Movement: The Problem of To-day; Chapter XV: The History of the Knights of Labor. New York, M.W. Hazen Co. pp. 397–428. Terence Vincent Powderly.
  • Powderly, Terence Vincent; John Williams Hayes (1891). John A. Turcheneske Jr (ed.). Terence Vincent Powderly Papers 1864-1937 and John Williams Hayes Papers 1880-1921, The Knights of Labor. pp. 109 reels.
  • William Baillie Baird papers, at the University of Maryland libraries. Baird was a commissioned organizer of the Knights of Labor.

By others edit

  • A.C. Dunham, "The Knights of Labor," New Englander and Yale Review, vol. 45, no. 195 (June 1886), pp. 490–498.
  • John Stephens Durham, "The Labor Unions and the Negro," Atlantic Monthly, vol. 81, no. 484 (February 1898), pp. 222–231.
  • Henry George, "The New Party," North American Review, vol. 145, no. 368 (July 1887), pp. 1–8.
  • Rufus Hatch, "The Labor Crisis," North American Review, vol. 142, no. 355 (June 1886), pp. 602–607.
  • Richard J. Hinton, "American Labor Organizations," North American Review, vol. 140, no. 338 (January 1885), pp. 48–63.
  • M.E.J. Kelley, "Women and the Labor Movement, North American Review, vol. 166, no. 497 (April 1898), pp. 408–418.
  • George Frederic Parsons, "The Labor Question," Atlantic Monthly, vol. 58, no. 345 (July 1886), pp. 97–113.
  • Carroll D. Wright, "An Historical Sketch of the Knights of Labor," Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 1, no. 2 (January 1887), pp. 137–168.

External links edit

  • Record of proceedings of the General Assembly of the Knights of Labor 1878
  • Catholic University of America. Retrieved October 8, 2006.
  • "Knights of Labor" . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.

knights, labor, officially, noble, holy, order, american, labor, federation, that, active, late, 19th, century, especially, 1880s, operated, united, states, well, canada, chapters, also, great, britain, australia, most, important, leader, terence, powderly, pr. The Knights of Labor K of L officially the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor was an American labor federation that was active in the late 19th century especially the 1880s It operated in the United States as well in Canada 1 and had chapters also in Great Britain and Australia 2 Its most important leader was Terence V Powderly The Knights of Labor promoted the social and cultural uplift of the worker and demanded the eight hour day In some cases it acted as a labor union negotiating with employers but it was never well organized or funded It was notable in its ambition to organize across lines of gender and race and in the inclusion of both skilled and unskilled labor After a rapid expansion in the mid 1880s it suddenly lost its new members and became a small operation again The Knights of Labor had served however as the first mass organization of the white working class of the United States 3 Knights of LaborThe Seal of the Knights of LaborAbbreviationK of LFormation1869 1869 FoundersUriah Smith StephensJames L Wrightet al Dissolved1949 1949 TypeLabor federationLocationCanadaUnited StatesKey peopleTerence V PowderlyLeonora BarryIt was founded by Uriah Stephens on December 28 1869 4 reached 28 000 members in 1880 then jumped to 100 000 in 1884 By 1886 20 of all workers were affiliated nearly 800 000 members 5 Its frail organizational structure could not cope as it was battered by charges of failure and violence and calumnies of the association with the Haymarket Square riot Most members abandoned the movement in 1886 1887 leaving at most 100 000 in 1890 Many opted to join groups that helped to identify their specific needs instead of the KOL which addressed many different types of issues 5 The Panic of 1893 terminated the Knights of Labor s importance 6 While their national headquarters closed in 1917 remnants of the Knights of Labor continued in existence until 1949 when the group s last 50 member local dropped its affiliation Contents 1 Origins 2 Decline 2 1 Southwest railroad strike of 1886 2 2 Catholic Church 3 Legacy 3 1 Racism and wages 3 2 Haymarket Riot 4 Leadership 4 1 Grand Master Workmen 4 2 Grand Worthy Foremen 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 7 1 Scholarly studies 7 2 Outside US 7 3 Primary sources 7 3 1 By Knights 7 3 2 By others 8 External linksOrigins editIn 1869 Uriah Smith Stephens James L Wright and a small group of Philadelphia tailors founded a secret organization known as the Noble Order of the Knights of Labor The collapse of the National Labor Union in 1873 left a vacuum for workers looking for organization The Knights became better organized with a national vision when in 1879 they replaced Stephens with Terence V Powderly who was just 30 years old at the time The body became popular with trade unions and Pennsylvania coal miners during the economic depression of the mid 1870s then it grew rapidly The KOL was a diverse industrial union open to all workers The leaders felt that it was best to have a versatile population in order to get points of view from all aspects The Knights of Labor barred five groups from membership bankers land speculators lawyers liquor dealers and gamblers Its members included low skilled workers railroad workers immigrants and steel workers This helped the workers to get an organizational identity As one of the largest labor organization in ninetieth century Knights wanted to classify the workers as it was a time where large scale factories and industries were rapidly growing Even though skilled workers were prioritized at the beginning 1880s but slowly later by the time of 1886 nearly a million workers were enrolled 7 nbsp Terence Powderly Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor during its meteoric rise and precipitous decline 1890 As membership expanded the Knights began to function more as a labor union and less of a secret organization During the 1880s the Knights of Labor played a huge role in independent and third party movements Local assemblies began not only to emphasize cooperative enterprises but to initiate strikes to win concessions from employers The Knights of Labor brought together workers of different religions races and genders and helped them all create a bond and unify all for the same cause The new leader Powderly opposed strikes as a relic of barbarism but the size and the diversity of the Knights afforded local assemblies a great deal of autonomy In 1882 the Knights ended their membership rituals and removed the words Noble Order from their name This was intended to mollify the concerns of Catholic members and the bishops who wanted to avoid any resemblance to freemasonry Though initially averse to strikes to advance their goals the Knights did aid various strikes and boycotts The Wabash Railroad strike in 1885 saw Powderly finally adapt and support an eventually successful strike against Jay Gould s Wabash Line after C A Hall a carpenter and Knights member was fired for attending a meeting in February The strike included stopping track yard engine maintenance the control or sabotage of equipment and the occupation of shops and roundhouses 8 Gould met with Powderly and agreed to call off his campaign against the Knights of Labor which had caused the turmoil originally This gave momentum to the Knights and membership surged By 1886 the Knights had more than 700 000 members The Knights primary demand was for the eight hour workday They also called for legislation to end child and convict labor as well as a graduated income tax They also supported cooperatives The only woman to hold office in the Knights of Labor Leonora Barry worked as an investigator She described the horrific conditions in factories employing women and children These reports made Barry the first person to collect national statistics on the American working woman 9 Powderly and the Knights tried to avoid divisive political issues but in the early 1880s many Knights had become followers of Henry George s ideology known now as Georgism In 1883 Powderly officially recommended George s book and announced his support of single tax on land values During the New York mayoral election of 1886 Powderly was able to successfully push the organization towards the favor of Henry George 10 In 1886 the Knights became of the part of the short lived United Labor Party an alliance of labor organizations formed in support of George s campaign in the 1886 New York City mayoral election 11 The Knights of Labor helped to bring together many different types of people from all different walks of life for example Catholic and Protestant Irish born workers The KOL appealed to them because they worked very closely with the Irish Land League 12 The Knights had a mixed record on inclusiveness and exclusiveness They accepted women and blacks after 1878 and their employers as members and advocating the admission of blacks into local assemblies However the organization tolerated the segregation of assemblies in the South Bankers doctors lawyers stockholders and liquor manufacturers were excluded because they were considered unproductive members of society Asians were also excluded and in November 1885 a branch of the Knights in Tacoma Washington violently expelled the city s Chinese workers who amounted to nearly a tenth of the overall city population at the time 13 The Union Pacific Railroad came into conflict with the Knights When the Knights in Wyoming refused to work more hours in 1885 the railroad hired Chinese workers as strikebreakers and to stir up racial animosity The result was the Rock Springs massacre that killed scores of Chinese workers and drove the rest out of Wyoming 14 About 50 African American sugar cane laborers organized by the Knights went on strike and were murdered by strikebreakers in the 1887 Thibodaux massacre in Louisiana The Knights strongly supported passage of the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the Contract Labor Law of 1885 as did many other labor groups demonstrating the limits of their commitment to solidarity While they claimed to not be against immigration their anti Asian racism demonstrated the limits and inconsistency of their anti racist platform 15 Decline edit nbsp J R Sovereign Grand Master Workman of the Knights of Labor from 1893Southwest railroad strike of 1886 edit Main article Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886 The Great Southwest railroad strike of 1886 was a Knights strike involving more than 200 000 workers Beginning on March 1 1886 railroad workers in five states struck against the Union Pacific and Missouri Pacific railroads owned by Jay Gould At least ten people were killed The unravelling of the strike within two months led directly to the collapse of the Knights of Labor and the formation of the American Federation of Labor 16 Catholic Church edit The Knights of Labor attracted many Catholics who were a large part of the membership perhaps a majority Powderly was also a Catholic However the Knights s use of secrecy similar to the Masons during its early years concerned many bishops of the Church The Knights used secrecy and deception to help prevent employers from firing members After the Archbishop of Quebec condemned the Knights in 1884 twelve American archbishops voted 10 to 2 against doing likewise in the United States Furthermore Cardinal James Gibbons and Bishop John Ireland defended the Knights Gibbons went to the Vatican to talk to the hierarchy 17 In 1886 right after the peak of the Knights of Labor they started to lose more members to the American Federation of Labor It has been believed that the fall of the Knights of Labor was due to their lack of adaptability and beliefs in the old style industrial capitalism 18 Legacy editThough often overlooked the Knights of Labor contributed to the tradition of labor protest songs in America The Knights frequently included music in their regular meetings and encouraged local members to write and perform their work In Chicago James and Emily Talmadge printers and supporters of the Knights of Labor published the songbook Labor Songs Dedicated to the Knights of Labor 1885 The song Hold the Fort also Storm the Fort a Knights of Labor pro labor revision of the hymn by the same name became the most popular labor song prior to Ralph Chaplin s IWW Industrial Workers of the World anthem Solidarity Forever Pete Seeger often performed this song and it appears on a number of his recordings Songwriter and labor singer Bucky Halker includes the Talmadge version entitled Our Battle Song on his CD Don t Want Your Millions Revolting Records 2000 Halker also draws heavily on the Knights songs and poems in his book on labor song and poetry For Democracy Workers and God Labor Song Poems and Labor Protest 1865 1895 University of Illinois Press 1991 Racism and wages edit The Knights of Labor supported the Chinese Exclusion Act claiming that industrialists were using Chinese workers as a wedge to keep wages low To stop companies from doing this they supported Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and also the Alien Contract labor law 1885 Even though the Acts were useful to pass the laws they wanted they weren t satisfied so they attacked Chinese workers and burned down their places 19 Anti Chinese rhetoric and violence were more prevalent among the western chapters of the Knights In 1880 San Francisco Knights wrote They bear the semblance of men but live like beasts who eat rice and the offal of the slaughter house The article also calls Chinese natural thieves and states that all Chinese women are prostitutes In March 1882 Knights joined the San Francisco rally to demand expulsion of the Chinese Several years later mobs led by the Knights of Labor a loosely structured labor federation rounded up Seattle s Chinese born workers and campaigned prevent further immigration Historian Catharine Collomp notes that Chinese exclusion was the only issue about which the Knights of Labor and the American Federation of Labor constantly lobbied the Federal government Haymarket Riot edit The labor movement including those in the Knights of Labor were rallying for an eight hour workday and protesting with their slogan Eight Hours for Work Eight Hours for Rest Eight Hours for What We Will Through Eight Hour rallies and legislative lobbying labor leaders came into direct conflict with employers who neither accepted unions nor believed that governments should intervene on workers behalf During an Eight Hour campaign in Chicago in 1886 a conflict between organized laborers and employers turned violent By the mid 1880s Chicago was the center of immigrant and working class organizing with a wide array of labor organizations Demands for the eight hour workday were at the heart of a strike against one of Chicago s most powerful employers the McCormick Harvesting Machine Company which refused to bargain with the union 20 While workingmen had gathered to strike against the plant some of them had drawn fire from authorities City police and private guards had injured and killed some of the strikers Which prompted responses from a bigger working class which included anarchists Albert Parsons Michael Schwab August Spies Adolph Fischer and labor organizer Oscar Neebe On May 4 they organized a protest in Chicago s Haymarket Square After the main speakers Parson and Spies left the platform someone from the crowd threw a bomb into a group of police standing in the square which left seven police dead and sixty protesters from the crowd injured Afterwards the eight anarchists were arrested and seven of them were sentenced to death in a trial that focused on political beliefs not the actions of the anarchists Two of the condemned had their sentences commuted but after Louis Lingg committed suicide in prison the remaining four were executed 20 The Haymarket trial had two distinct effects on the labor movement first a nationwide campaign to round up anarchists and second a steep decline in the Knights of Labor s membership Terence Powderly the Knights president disavowed the Haymarket eight even as local trade unions and Knights assemblies around the country protested the arrests Rapid growth of the labor union in the mid 1880s weakened the bonds that held it together New Knights members had joined the organization in the wake of its victories over southwestern railroads but without fully understanding or accepting the Knights movement culture While it would be over a decade before the Knights disbanded these organizational weaknesses and the strength of the new trade federation union led to the Knights decline 20 Leadership editGrand Master Workmen edit 1878 Uriah Smith Stephens 21 1879 Terence V Powderly 22 1893 James Sovereign 22 1897 Henry A Hicks 22 1898 John N Parsons 22 1900 Isaac D Chamberlain 22 1900 Simon Burns 22 1901 Henry A Hicks 23 1902 John HayesGrand Worthy Foremen edit 1878 Ralph Beaumont 24 1879 Terence V Powderly 21 1879 Richard Griffiths 21 1882 Ralph Beaumont 24 1883 Henry A Coffeen 1884 Richard Griffiths 1888 Morris L Wheat 1890 Hugh Cavanaugh 24 1893 Michael J Bishop 24 1896 Thomas McGuire 1897 Isaac D Chamberlain 1901 Arthur McConnell 1902 Isaac A Sanderson 1910s William A DenisonSee also edit nbsp Organized labour portalLabor unions in the United States Labor federation competition in the United States IWW Olivier David Benoit Mary Harris Jones Mary Stirling first woman delegate to annual conventionReferences edit Gregory S Kealey and Bryan D Palmer Dreaming of What Might Be The Knights of Labor in Ontario 1880 1900 1982 Douglas R Kennedy The Knights of Labor in Canada 1956 Steven Parfitt The First and a half International The Knights of Labor and the History of International Labour Organization in the Nineteenth Century Labour History Review 80 2 2015 135 167 Roark James L Johnson Michael P Furstenburg Francois Cline Cohen Patricia Hartmann Susan M Stage Sarah Igo Sarah E 2020 Chapter 19 The City and Its Workers 1870 1900 The American Promise A History of the United States Kindle Vol Combined Volume Value Edition 8th ed Boston MA Bedford St Martin s Kindle Locations 14511 14513 ISBN 978 1319208929 OCLC 1096495503 Knights of Labor Facts information pictures encyclopedia com Retrieved 14 May 2015 a b Kaufman Jason 2001 Rise and Fall of a Nation of Joiners The Knights of Labor Revisited 31 4 553 579 Kemmerer and Wickersham 1950 Voss Kim 1988 Labor Organization and Class Alliance Industries Communities and the Knights of Labor Theory and Society 17 3 329 364 doi 10 1007 BF00160843 ISSN 0304 2421 JSTOR 657519 S2CID 147551660 Case Theresa A 2009 Blaming Martin Irons Leadership and Popular Protest in the 1886 Southwest Strike The Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 8 1 51 81 doi 10 1017 S1537781400001006 ISSN 1537 7814 JSTOR 40542736 S2CID 147049676 Whitman American Reformers 57 Weir Robert E October 1997 A Fragile Alliance Henry George and the Knights of Labor The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 56 4 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1997 tb02653 x Genovese Frank C 1991 Henry George and Organized Labor The 19th Century Economist and Social Philosopher Championed Labor s Cause but Used Its Candidacy for Propaganda The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 50 1 113 127 doi 10 1111 j 1536 7150 1991 tb02500 x ISSN 0002 9246 JSTOR 3487043 Hallgrimsdottir Helga Benoit Cecilia 2007 From Wage Slaves to Wage Workers Cultural Opportunity Structures and the Evolution of the Wage Demands of the Knights of Labor and the American Federation of Labor 1880 1900 85 3 1393 1411 A Radical History of Seattle s International District A Walking Tour 2015 Craig Storti Incident at Bitter Creek The Story of the Rock Springs Chinese Massacre 1990 Parfitt Steven Knights Across the Atlantic The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland Liverpool University Press p 43 Theresa A Case The Great Southwest Railroad Strike and Free Labor Texas A amp M University Press 2010 online review James Hennesey American Catholics Oxford University Press 1981 page 188 Wheeler Hoyt 2002 The Future of the American Labor Movement Cambridge University Press pp 85 Knights of Labor Definition Goals amp Leader 7 October 2021 a b c Faue Elizabeth 2017 Rethinking the American Labor Movement New York Routledge pp 22 24 ISBN 9780415895835 a b c McNeill George E 1887 The Labor Movement The Problem of To day PDF New York M W Hazen p 621 a b c d e f Reports of the Industrial Commission on Labor Organizations Labor Disputes and Arbitration and on Railway Labor Washington DC Government Printing Office 1901 Labor leader is deposed New York Times 17 November 1901 a b c d The Samuel Gompers Papers University of Illinois Press 1986 ISBN 9780252033896 Further reading editScholarly studies edit Birdsall William C July 1953 The Problem of Structure in the Knights of Labor Industrial and Labor Relations Review 6 4 532 546 doi 10 2307 2518795 JSTOR 2518795 Blum Edward J By the Sweat of Your Brow The Knights of Labor the Book of Genesis and the Christian Spirit of the Gilded Age Labor Studies in Working Class History of the Americas 11 2 2014 29 34 Browne Henry J The Catholic Church and the Knights of Labor Washington Catholic University of America Press 1949 Case Theresa A The Great Southwest Railroad Strike and Free Labor Texas A amp M University Press 2010 online review on 1886 Cassity Michael J June 1979 Modernization and Social Crisis The Knights of Labor and a Midwest Community 1885 1886 Journal of American History 66 1 41 61 doi 10 2307 1894673 JSTOR 1894673 Commons John R et al History of Labour in the United States Volume 2 1860 1896 4 vol 1918 vol 2 Conell Carol and Kim Voss Formal Organization and the Fate of Social Movements Craft Association and Class Alliance in the Knights of Labor American Sociological Review Vol 55 No 2 Apr 1990 pp 255 269 in JSTOR focus on steel industry de Leon Cedric Black from white How the rights of white and black workers became labor and civil rights after the US civil war Labor Studies Journal 42 1 2017 10 26 online permanent dead link Fink Leon The New Labor History and the Powers of Historical Pessimism Consensus Hegemony and the Case of the Knights of Labor Journal of American History Vol 75 No 1 Jun 1988 pp 115 136 in JSTOR historiography Fink Leon Workingmen s Democracy The Knights of Labor and American Politics Urbana University of Illinois Press 1983 online Grob Gerald N The Knights of Labor and the Trade Unions 1878 1886 Journal of Economic History Vol 18 No 2 Jun 1958 pp 176 192 in JSTOR Hild Matthew Greenbackers Knights of Labor and Populists Farmer Labor Insurgency in the Late Nineteenth Century South U of Georgia Press 2010 Hild Matthew Building the Alabama Labor Movement Nicholas Byrne Stack and the Knights of Labor Alabama Review 73 2 2020 91 117 Hild Matthew The Knights of Labor and the Third Party Movement in Texas 1886 1896 Southwestern Historical Quarterly 119 1 2015 24 43 online Hoffman Richard C Producer co operatives of the Knights of Labor seeking worker independence Labor History 2022 1 19 Kessler Sidney H July 1937 The Organization of Negroes in the Knights of Labor Journal of Negro History 37 3 248 276 doi 10 2307 2715493 JSTOR 2715493 S2CID 149648934 Kaufman Jason Rise and Fall of a Nation of Joiners The Knights of Labor Revisited Journal of Interdisciplinary History Vol 31 No 4 Spring 2001 pp 553 579 in JSTOR statistical study of competition with other unions and with fraternal societies for members Kemmerer Donald L Edward D Wickersham January 1950 Reasons for the Growth of the Knights of Labor in 1885 1886 Industrial and Labor Relations Review 3 2 213 220 doi 10 2307 2518830 JSTOR 2518830 Keohane Jennifer Labor is Noble and Holy Ironic Inclusion and Exclusion in the Knights of Labor 1885 1890 Rhetoric Review 38 3 2019 311 324 online Levine Susan Labor s True Woman Domesticity and Equal Rights in the Knights of Labor Journal of American History Vol 70 No 2 Sep 1983 pp 323 339 in JSTOR Levine Susan True Women Carpet Weavers Industrialization and Labor Reform in the Gilded Age Philadelphia Temple University Press 1984 Licht Walter Kealey Gregory Palmer Bryan Fink Leon Summer 1985 The Knights of Labor Commemorated and Reconsidered Dreaming of What Might Be The Knights of Labor in Ontario 1880 1900 Workingmen s Democracy The Knights of Labor and American Politics Journal of Interdisciplinary History 16 1 117 123 doi 10 2307 204327 JSTOR 204327 Miner Claudia 1983 The 1886 Convention of the Knights of Labor Pylon 44 2 147 159 doi 10 2307 275026 JSTOR 275026 McLaurin Melton Alonza The Knights of Labor in the South Westport CT Greenwood Press 1978 Phelan Craig Grand Master Workman Terence Powderly and the Knights of Labor Greenwood 2000 scholarly biography online edition Archived 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Taussig Frank W The South Western Strike of 1886 The Quarterly Journal of Economics 1 2 1887 184 222 detailed coverage by a leading scholar online Voss Kim The Making of American Exceptionalism The Knights of Labor and Class Formation in the Nineteenth Century Ithaca NY Cornell University Press 1994 Sociological study online Archived 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Ware Norman J The Labor Movement in the United States 1860 1895 A Study In Democracy 1929 Weir Robert E Beyond Labor s Veil The Culture of the Knights of Labor Pennsylvania State University Press 1996 online edition Archived 27 June 2019 at the Wayback Machine Weir Robert E 1997 A fragile alliance Henry George and the Knights of Labor permanent dead link The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 56 421 439 Weir Robert E Knights Unhorsed Internal Conflict in Gilded Age Social Movement Wayne State University Press 2000 White Richard 2011 Railroaded The Transcontinentals and the Making of Modern America W W Norton amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 06126 0 Wright Carroll D An Historical Sketch of the Knights of Labor Quarterly Journal of Economics vol 1 no 2 January 1887 pp 137 168 in JSTOROutside US edit Arvidsson Stefan The style and mythology of socialism socialist idealism 1871 1914 Abingdon Oxon Routledge 2017 Kealey Gregory and Brian Palmer Dreaming of What Might Be The Knights of Labor in Ontario 1880 1900 New York Cambridge University Press 1982 Parfitt Steven Knights Across the Atlantic The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland 2017 contents also see online review Parfitt Steven A nexus between labour movement and labour movement the Knights of Labor and the financial side of global labour history Labor History 58 3 2017 288 302 Parfitt Steven Transnational Borrowings Scottish Sons of Labour and American Knights of Labor 1887 1890 Labour History Review 85 2 2020 127 157 Parfitt Steven The First and a half International The Knights of Labor and the History of International Labour Organization in the Nineteenth Century Labour History Review 80 2 2015 135 167 Parfitt Steven Completing the Order s History Down Under The Knights of Labor in Australia Labour History A Journal of Labour and Social History 110 2016 1 18 Parfitt Steven Constructing the Global History of the Knights of Labor Labor 14 1 2017 13 37 Pelling Henry 1956 The Knights of Labor in Britain 1880 1901 Economic History Review 9 new series 2 313 331 doi 10 2307 2591749 JSTOR 2591749 shows that American workers in the window glass industry set up an English chapter in 1884 to watch the business in Europe it remained small Toth Gyorgy Knights across the Atlantic The Knights of Labor in Britain and Ireland 2019 151 156 Watillon Leon and Frederic Meyers The Knights of Labor in Belgium Westport CT Greenwood Press 1978 Also in partial translation by Frederic Meyers Institute of Industrial Relations Los Angeles 1959 http www oac cdlib org ark 28722 bk0003t812j brand oac4Primary sources edit By Knights edit Knights of Labor 1887 1913 Proceedings of the General Assembly 10th 30th microfilm Library of American civilization LAC 23217 20 Knights of Labor 1878 1886 Record of the proceedings of the General Assembly 1st 9th microfilm Library of American civilization LAC 23214 16 Powderly Terence Vincent 1889 Thirty Years of Labor 1859 1889 Excelsior publishing house p 693 Terence Vincent Powderly Powderly Terence Vincent 1889 Thirty Years of Labor 1859 1889 Excelsior publishing house p 693 Terence Vincent Powderly Powderly Terence Vincent Edmund Janes James 1891 The Labor Movement The Problem of To day The M W Hazen Company pp 628 Terence Vincent Powderly Powderly Terence Vincent 1891 The Labor Movement The Problem of To day Chapter XV The History of the Knights of Labor New York M W Hazen Co pp 397 428 Terence Vincent Powderly Powderly Terence Vincent John Williams Hayes 1891 John A Turcheneske Jr ed Terence Vincent Powderly Papers 1864 1937 and John Williams Hayes Papers 1880 1921 The Knights of Labor pp 109 reels William Baillie Baird papers at the University of Maryland libraries Baird was a commissioned organizer of the Knights of Labor By others edit A C Dunham The Knights of Labor New Englander and Yale Review vol 45 no 195 June 1886 pp 490 498 John Stephens Durham The Labor Unions and the Negro Atlantic Monthly vol 81 no 484 February 1898 pp 222 231 Henry George The New Party North American Review vol 145 no 368 July 1887 pp 1 8 Rufus Hatch The Labor Crisis North American Review vol 142 no 355 June 1886 pp 602 607 Richard J Hinton American Labor Organizations North American Review vol 140 no 338 January 1885 pp 48 63 M E J Kelley Women and the Labor Movement North American Review vol 166 no 497 April 1898 pp 408 418 George Frederic Parsons The Labor Question Atlantic Monthly vol 58 no 345 July 1886 pp 97 113 Carroll D Wright An Historical Sketch of the Knights of Labor Quarterly Journal of Economics vol 1 no 2 January 1887 pp 137 168 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The New International Encyclopaedia Knights of Labor Record of proceedings of the General Assembly of the Knights of Labor 1878 Select Bibliography of Terence V Powderly and the Knights of Labor Catholic University of America Retrieved October 8 2006 Knights of Labor New International Encyclopedia 1905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Knights of Labor amp oldid 1206095270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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