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Labor history of the United States

The nature and power of organized labor in the United States is the outcome of historical tensions among counter-acting forces involving workplace rights, wages, working hours, political expression, labor laws, and other working conditions. Organized unions and their umbrella labor federations such as the AFL–CIO and citywide federations have competed, evolved, merged, and split against a backdrop of changing values and priorities, and periodic federal government intervention.

In most industrial nations, the labor movement sponsored its own political parties, with the US as a conspicuous exception. Both major American parties vied for union votes, with the Democratic Party usually much more successful. Labor unions became a central element of the New Deal coalition that dominated national politics from the 1930s into the mid-1960s during the Fifth Party System.[1] Liberal Republicans who supported unions in the Northeast lost power after 1964.[2][3] In recent decades, an enduring alliance was formed between labor unions and the Democrats, whereas the Republican Party has become hostile to unions and collective bargaining rights.[4]

The history of organized labor has been a specialty of scholars since the 1890s, and has produced a large amount of scholarly literature focused on the structure of organized unions. In the 1960s, as social history gained popularity, a new emphasis emerged on the history of workers, including unorganized workers, and with special regard to gender and race. This is called "the new labor history". Much scholarship has attempted to bring the social history perspectives into the study of organized labor.[5]

By most measures, the strength of organized labor has declined in the United States over recent decades.[6]

Organized labor prior to 1900 edit

The history of labor disputes in America substantially precedes the Revolutionary period. In 1636, for instance, there was a fishermen's strike on an island off the coast of Maine and in 1677 twelve carmen were fined for going on strike in New York City.[7] However, most instances of labor unrest during the colonial period were temporary and isolated, and rarely resulted in the formation of permanent groups of laborers for negotiation purposes. Little legal recourse was available to those injured by the unrest, because strikes were not typically considered illegal. The only known case of criminal prosecution of workers in the colonial era occurred as a result of a carpenters' strike in Savannah, Georgia, in 1746.[7]

Legality and Hunt (1842) edit

By the early 19th century, the career path for most artisans still involved apprenticeship under a master, followed by moving into independent production.[8] However, over the course of the Industrial Revolution, this model rapidly changed, particularly in the major metropolitan areas. For instance, in Boston in 1790, the vast majority of the 1,300 artisans in the city described themselves as "master workman". By 1815, journeymen workers without independent means of production had displaced these "masters" as the majority. By that time journeymen also outnumbered masters in New York City and Philadelphia.[9] This shift occurred as a result of large-scale transatlantic and rural-urban migration. Migration into the coastal cities created a larger population of potential laborers, which in turn allowed controllers of capital to invest in labor-intensive enterprises on a larger scale. Craft workers found that these changes launched them into competition with each other to a degree that they had not experienced previously, which limited their opportunities and created substantial risks of downward mobility that had not existed prior to that time.[8]

These conditions led to the first labor combination cases in America. Over the first half of the 19th century, there are twenty-three known cases of indictment and prosecution for criminal conspiracy, taking place in six states: Pennsylvania, Maryland, New York, Louisiana, Massachusetts, and Virginia.[10] The central question in these cases was invariably whether workmen in combination would be permitted to use their collective bargaining power to obtain benefits—increased wages, decreased hours, or improved conditions—which were beyond their ability to obtain as individuals. The cases overwhelmingly resulted in convictions. However, in most instances the plaintiffs' desire was to establish favorable precedent, not to impose harsh penalties, and the fines were typically modest.[11]

One of the central themes of the cases prior to the landmark decision in Commonwealth v. Hunt, which settled the legality of unions, was the applicability of the English common law in post-revolutionary America. Whether the English common law applied—and in particular whether the common law notion that a conspiracy to raise wages was illegal applied—was frequently the subject of debate between the defense and the prosecution.[12] For instance, in Commonwealth v. Pullis, a case in 1806 against a combination of journeymen cordwainers in Philadelphia for conspiracy to raise their wages, the defense attorneys referred to the common law as arbitrary and unknowable and instead praised the legislature as the embodiment of the democratic promise of the revolution.[13] In ruling that a combination to raise wages was per se illegal, Recorder Moses Levy strongly disagreed, writing that "[t]he acts of the legislature form but a small part of that code from which the citizen is to learn his duties . . . [i]t is in the volumes of the common law we are to seek for information in the far greater number, as well as the most important causes that come before our tribunals."[13]

As a result of the spate of convictions against combinations of laborers, the typical narrative of early American labor law states that, prior to Hunt in Massachusetts in 1842, peaceable combinations of workingmen to raise wages, shorten hours or ensure employment, were illegal in the United States, as they had been under English common law.[12] In England, criminal conspiracy laws were first held to include combinations in restraint of trade in the Court of Star Chamber early in the 17th century.[14] The precedent was solidified in 1721 by R v Journeymen Tailors of Cambridge, which found tailors guilty of a conspiracy to raise wages.[15] Leonard Levy went so far as to refer to Hunt as the "Magna Carta of American trade-unionism",[16] illustrating its perceived standing as the major point of divergence in the American and English legal treatment of unions which, "removed the stigma of criminality from labor organizations".[16]

However, case law in America prior to Hunt was mixed. Pullis was actually unusual in strictly following the English common law and holding that a combination to raise wages was by itself illegal. More often combination cases prior to Hunt did not hold that unions were illegal per se, but rather found some other justification for a conviction.[17] After Pullis in 1806, eighteen other prosecutions of laborers for conspiracies followed within the next three decades. However, only one such case, People v. Fisher, also held that a combination for the purpose of raising wages was illegal. Several other cases held that the methods used by the unions, rather than the unions themselves, were illegal.[17] For instance, in People v. Melvin, cordwainers were again convicted of a conspiracy to raise wages. Unlike in Pullis, however, the court held that the combination's existence itself was not unlawful, but nevertheless reached a conviction because the cordwainers had refused to work for any master who paid lower wages, or with any laborer who accepted lower wages than what the combination had stipulated. The court held that methods used to obtain higher wages would be unlawful if they were judged to be deleterious to the general welfare of the community.[18] Commonwealth v. Morrow continued to refine this standard, stating that, "an agreement of two or more to the prejudice of the rights of others or of society" would be illegal.[19]

Another line of cases, led by Justice John Gibson of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania's decision in Commonwealth v. Carlisle, held that motive of the combination, rather than simply its existence, was the key to illegality. Gibson wrote, "Where the act is lawful for an individual, it can be the subject of a conspiracy, when done in concert, only where there is a direct intention that injury shall result from it".[18] Still other courts rejected Pullis' rule of per se illegality in favor of a rule that asked whether the combination was a but-for cause of injury. Thus, as economist Edwin Witte stated, "The doctrine that a combination to raise wages is illegal was allowed to die by common consent. No leading case was required for its overthrow".[20] Nevertheless, while Hunt was not the first case to hold that labor combinations were legal, it was the first to do so explicitly and in clear terms.

Early federations edit

The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen — now part of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters — was founded in May 1863.[21]

The National Labor Union (NLU), founded in 1866, was the first national labor federation in the United States. It was dissolved in 1872.

The regional Order of the Knights of St. Crispin was founded in the northeast in 1867 and claimed 50,000 members by 1870, by far the largest union in the country. A closely associated union of women, the Daughters of St. Crispin, formed in 1870. In 1879 the Knights formally admitted women, who by 1886 comprised 10 percent of the union's membership,[22] but it was poorly organized and soon declined. They fought encroachments of machinery and unskilled labor on autonomy of skilled shoe workers. One provision in the Crispin constitution explicitly sought to limit the entry of "green hands" into the trade, but this failed because the new machines could be operated by semi-skilled workers and produce more shoes than hand sewing.[23]

Railroad brotherhoods edit

 
The Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886 was a trade union strike involving more than 200,000 workers.[24]

With the rapid growth and consolidation of large railroad systems after 1870, union organizations sprang up, covering the entire nation. By 1901, 17 major railway brotherhoods were in operation; they generally worked amicably with management, which recognized their usefulness.[25] Key unions included the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (BLE), Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Division (BMWED), the Order of Railway Conductors, the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.[26] Their main goal was building insurance and medical packages for their members, as well as negotiating work rules, such as those involving seniority and grievance procedures.[27]

They were not members of the AFL, and fought off more radical rivals such as the Knights of Labor in the 1880s and the American Railroad Union in the 1890s. They consolidated their power in 1916, after threatening a national strike, by securing the Adamson Act, a federal law that provided 10 hours pay for an eight-hour day. At the end of World War I they promoted nationalization of the railroads, and conducted a national strike in 1919. Both programs failed, and the brotherhoods were largely stagnant in the 1920s. They generally were independent politically, but supported the third party campaign of Robert M. La Follette in 1924.[28]

Knights of Labor edit

The first effective labor organization that was more than regional in membership and influence was the Knights of Labor, organized in 1869. The Knights believed in the unity of the interests of all producing groups and sought to enlist in their ranks not only all laborers but everyone who could be truly classified as a producer. The acceptance of all producers led to explosive growth after 1880. Under the leadership of Terence V. Powderly they championed a variety of causes, sometimes through political or cooperative ventures.[29]

Powderly hoped to gain their ends through politics and education rather than through economic coercion. The Knights were especially successful in developing a working class culture, involving women, families, sports, and leisure activities and educational projects for the membership. The Knights strongly promoted their version of republicanism that stressed the centrality of free labor, preaching harmony and cooperation among producers, as opposed to parasites and speculators.[29]

One of the earliest railroad strikes was also one of the most successful. In 1885, the Knights of Labor led railroad workers to victory against Jay Gould and his entire Southwestern Railway system. In early 1886, the Knights were trying to coordinate 1,400 strikes involving over 600,000 workers spread over much of the country. The tempo had doubled over 1885, and involved peaceful as well as violent confrontations in many sectors, such as railroads, street railroads, and coal mining, with demands usually focused on the eight hour day. Suddenly, it all collapsed, largely because the Knights were unable to handle so much on their plate at once, and because they took a smashing blow in the aftermath of the Haymarket Riot in May 1886 in Chicago.[30]

The Haymarket Riot started as a strike organized by the Knights at the McCormick Reaper Factory in Chicago. Along with the McCormick strike, on May 1, 80,000 mostly immigrant workers led a general strike in Chicago, along with 340,000 workers in the rest of the United States. Attending the strike were a rising movement of armed anarchists formed as a result of the police violence of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877. While beginning relatively peacefully, police and strikers began to clash.[31] As strikers rallied against the McCormick plant, a team of political anarchists, who were not Knights, tried to piggyback support among striking Knights workers. A bomb exploded as police were dispersing a peaceful rally, killing seven policemen and wounding many others. The anarchists—who had built the bomb—were blamed. Their spectacular trial gained national attention. The Knights of Labor were seriously injured by the false accusation that the Knights promoted anarchistic violence. Some Knights locals transferred to the less radical and more respectable AFL unions or railroad brotherhoods.[32]

American Federation of Labor edit

 
The American Federation of Labor union label, c. 1900
 
Samuel Gompers in 1894; he was the AFL leader 1886–1924.

The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions began in 1881 under the leadership of Samuel Gompers. Like the National Labor Union, it was a federation of different unions and did not directly enroll workers. Its original goals were to encourage the formation of trade unions and to obtain legislation, such as prohibition of child labor, a national eight hour day, and exclusion of Chinese and other foreign contract workers.[33][34]

Strikes organized by labor unions became routine events by the 1880s. There were 37,000 strikes between 1881 and 1905. By far the largest number were in the building trades, followed far behind by coal miners. The main goal was control of working conditions, setting uniform wage scales, protesting the firing of a member, and settling which rival union was in control. Most strikes were of very short duration. In times of depression strikes were more violent but less successful, because the company was losing money anyway. They were successful in times of prosperity when the company was losing profits and wanted to settle quickly.[35]

The Federation made some efforts to obtain favorable legislation, but had little success in organizing or chartering new unions. It came out in support of the proposal, traditionally attributed to Peter J. McGuire of the Carpenters Union, for a national Labor Day holiday on the first Monday in September. It also threw itself behind the eight hour movement, which sought to limit the workday by either legislation or union negotiation.[36]

In 1886, as the relations between the trade union movement and the Knights of Labor worsened, McGuire and other union leaders called for a convention to be held at Columbus, Ohio, on December 8. The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions merged with the new organization, known as the American Federation of Labor or AFL, formed at that convention.[37]

The AFL was formed in large part because of the dissatisfaction of many trade union leaders with the Knights of Labor, an organization that contained many trade unions and that had played a leading role in some of the largest strikes of the era. The new AFL distinguished itself from the Knights by emphasizing the autonomy of each trade union affiliated with it and limiting membership to workers and organizations made up of workers, unlike the Knights which, because of its producerist focus, welcomed some who were not wage workers.

The AFL grew steadily in the late 19th century while the Knights all but disappeared. Although Gompers at first advocated something like industrial unionism, he retreated from that in the face of opposition from the craft unions that made up most of the AFL.

The unions of the AFL were composed primarily of skilled men; unskilled workers, African-Americans, and women were generally excluded. The AFL saw women as threatening the jobs of men, since they often worked for lower wages.[38]

Western Federation of Miners edit

The Western Federation of Miners (WFM) was created in 1893. Frequently in competition with the American Federation of Labor, the WFM spawned new federations, including the Western Labor Union (later renamed to the American Labor Union). The WFM took a conservative turn in the aftermath of the Colorado Labor Wars and the trials of its president, Charles Moyer, and its secretary treasurer, Big Bill Haywood, for the conspiratorial assassination of Idaho's former governor. Although both were found innocent, the WFM, headed by Moyer, separated itself from the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) (launched by Haywood and other labor radicals, socialists, and anarchists in 1905) just a few years after that organization's founding convention. In 1916 the WFM became the International Union of Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers, which was eventually absorbed by the United Steelworkers of America.[39]

Pullman Strike edit

During the major economic depression of the early 1890s, the Pullman Palace Car Company cut wages in its factories. Discontented workers joined the American Railway Union (ARU), led by Eugene V. Debs, which supported their strike by launching a boycott of all Pullman cars on all railroads. ARU members across the nation refused to switch Pullman cars onto trains. When these switchmen were disciplined, the entire ARU struck the railroads on June 26, 1894. Within four days, 125,000 workers on twenty-nine railroads had people quit work rather than handle Pullman cars.[40] Strikers and their supporters also engaged in riots and sabotage.[41][42]

The railroads were able to get Edwin Walker, general counsel for the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway, appointed as a special federal attorney with responsibility for dealing with the strike. Walker went to federal court and obtained an injunction barring union leaders from supporting the boycott in any way. The court injunction was based on the Sherman Anti-Trust Act which 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 other leaders of the ARU ignored the injunction, and federal troops were called into action.[43]

The strike was broken up by United States Marshals and some 2,000 United States Army troops, commanded by Nelson Miles, sent in by President Grover Cleveland on the premise that the strike interfered with the delivery of US Mail. During the course of the strike, 13 strikers were killed and 57 were wounded. An estimated $340,000 worth of property damage occurred during the strike. Debs went to prison for six months for violating the federal court order, and the ARU disintegrated.

Organized labor, 1900–1920 edit

 
New York City shirtwaist workers on strike, taking a lunch break

Australian historian Peter Shergold confirms the findings of many scholars[who?] that the standard of living for US industrial workers was higher than in Europe. He compares wages and the standard of living in Pittsburgh with Birmingham, England. He finds that, after taking into account the cost of living (which was 65 percent higher in the US), the standard of living of unskilled workers was about the same in the two cities, while skilled workers had about twice as high a standard of living. The American advantage grew over time from 1890 to 1914, and there was a heavy steady flow of skilled workers from Britain to industrial America.[44] Shergold revealed that skilled Americans did earn higher wages than the British, yet unskilled workers did not, while Americans worked longer hours, with a greater chance of injury, and had fewer social services.[44]

American industry had the highest rate of accidents in the world.[45][46] The US was also the only industrial power to have no workman's compensation program in place to support injured workers.[46]

From 1860 to 1900, the wealthiest 2 percent of American households owned more than a third of the nation's wealth, while the top 10 percent owned roughly three-quarters of it.[47] The bottom 40 percent had no wealth at all.[48] In terms of property, the wealthiest 1 percent owned 51 percent, while the bottom 44 percent claimed 1.1 percent.[48] Historian Howard Zinn argues that this disparity along with precarious working and living conditions for the working classes prompted the rise of populist, anarchist, and socialist movements.[49][50] French economist Thomas Piketty notes that economists during this time, such as Willford I. King, were concerned that the United States was becoming increasingly inegalitarian to the point of becoming like old Europe, and "further and further away from its original pioneering ideal."[51]

Nationwide from 1890 to 1914 the unionized wages in manufacturing rose from $17.63 a week to $21.37, and the average work week fell from 54.4 to 48.8 hours a week. The pay for all factory workers was $11.94 and $15.84 because unions reached only the more skilled factory workers.[52]

Coal strikes, 1900–1902 edit

The United Mine Workers was successful in its strike against soft coal (bituminous) mines in the Midwest in 1900, but its strike against the hard coal (anthracite) mines of Pennsylvania turned into a national political crisis in 1902. President Theodore Roosevelt brokered a compromise solution that kept the flow of coal going, and higher wages and shorter hours, but did not include recognition of the union as a bargaining agent.[53]

Women's Trade Union League edit

The Women's Trade Union League, formed in 1903, was the first labor organization dedicated to helping working women. It did not organize them into locals; its goal was to support the AFL and encourage more women to join labor unions. It was composed of both working women and middle-class reformers, and provided financial assistance, moral support, and training in work skills and social refinement for blue-collar women. Most active in 1907–1922 under Margaret Dreier Robins, it publicized the cause and lobbied for minimum wages and restrictions on hours of work and child labor. Also under Dreier's leadership, they were able to pass crucial legislation for wage workers, and establish new safety regulations.[54][55][56]

In 1911, a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in Manhattan, New York City. Due to the lack of fire safety measures in the building, 146 primarily female workers were killed in the incident. This incident led to a movement to increase safety measures in factories. It also was an opportunity for the Women's Trade Union League to open conversation for the conditions of women's workplaces in the labor movement.[57]

Industrial Workers of the World edit

 
Flyer distributed in Lawrence, Massachusetts, September 1912. The Lawrence textile strike was a strike of immigrant workers.

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), whose members became known as "Wobblies", was founded in Chicago in 1905 by a group of about 30 labor radicals. Their most prominent leader was William "Big Bill" Haywood.[58] The IWW pioneered creative tactics, and organized along the lines of industrial unionism rather than craft unionism; in fact, they went even further, pursuing the goal of "One Big Union" and the abolition of the wage system. Many, though not all, Wobblies favored anarcho-syndicalism.[59]

Much of the IWW's organizing took place in the West, and most of its early members were miners, lumbermen, cannery, and dock workers. In 1912 the IWW organized a strike of more than twenty thousand textile workers, and by 1917 the Agricultural Workers Organization (AWO) of the IWW claimed a hundred thousand itinerant farm workers in the heartland of North America.[60] Eventually the concept of One Big Union spread from dock workers to maritime workers, and thus was communicated to many different parts of the world. Dedicated to workplace and economic democracy, the IWW allowed men and women as members, and organized workers of all races and nationalities, without regard to current employment status. At its peak it had 150,000 members (with 200,000 membership cards issued between 1905 and 1916[61]), but it was fiercely repressed during, and especially after, World War I with many[citation needed] of its members killed, about 10,000[citation needed] organizers imprisoned, and thousands more deported as foreign agitators. In 1927 the IWW also led a successful Colorado general coal strike for better conditions.[62] The IWW proved that unskilled workers could be organized. The IWW exists today, but its most significant impact was during its first two decades of existence.

Government and labor edit

In 1908 the US Supreme Court decided Loewe v. Lawlor (the Danbury Hatters' Case). In 1902 the Hatters' Union instituted a nationwide boycott of the hats made by a nonunion company in Connecticut. Owner Dietrich Loewe brought suit against the union for unlawful combinations to restrain trade in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. The Court ruled that the union was subject to an injunction and liable for the payment of triple damages.

In 1915 Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, speaking for the Court, again decided in favor of Loewe, upholding a lower federal court ruling ordering the union to pay damages of $252,130. (The cost of lawyers had already exceeded $100,000, paid by the AFL). This was not a typical case in which a few union leaders were punished with short terms in jail; specifically, the life savings of several hundreds of the members were attached. The lower court ruling established a major precedent, and became a serious issue for the unions.

The Clayton Act of 1914 presumably exempted unions from the antitrust prohibition and established for the first time the Congressional principle that "the labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce". However, judicial interpretation so weakened it that prosecutions of labor under the antitrust acts continued until the enactment of the Norris-La Guardia Act in 1932.

State legislation 1912–1918: 36 states adopted the principle of workmen's compensation for all industrial accidents. Also: prohibition of the use of an industrial poison, several states require one day's rest in seven, the beginning of effective prohibition of night work, of maximum limits upon the length of the working day, and of minimum wage laws for women.

Colorado Coalfield War edit

On 23 September 1913, the United Mine Workers of America declared a strike against the Rockefeller-owned Colorado Fuel and Iron, in what is better known as the Colorado Coalfield War. The peak of the violence came after months of back-and-forth murders that culminated in the 20 April 1914 Ludlow Massacre that killed over a dozen women and children when Colorado National Guard opened fire on a striker encampment at Ludlow. The strike is considered the deadliest labor unrest in American history.[63]

World War I edit

Samuel Gompers and nearly all labor unions were strong supporters of the war effort. They used their leverage to gain recognition and higher wages.[64] They minimized strikes as wages soared and full employment was reached. To keep factories running smoothly, Wilson established the National War Labor Board in 1918, which forced management to negotiate with existing unions.[65] The AFL unions and the railway brotherhoods strongly encouraged their young men to enlist in the United States Armed Forces. They fiercely opposed efforts to reduce recruiting and slow war production by the anti-war IWW and left-wing Socialists. President Wilson appointed Gompers to the powerful Council of National Defense, where he set up the War Committee on Labor. The AFL membership soared to 2.4 million in 1917. Anti-war socialists controlled the IWW, which fought against the war effort and was in turn shut down by legal action of the federal government.[66]

Women in the labor force during WWI edit

During WWI, large numbers of women were recruited into jobs that had either been vacated by men who had gone to fight in the war, or had been created as part of the war effort. The high demand for weapons and the overall wartime situation resulted in munitions factories collectively becoming the largest employer of American women by 1918.[67] While there was initial resistance to hiring women for jobs traditionally held by men, the war made the need for labor so urgent that women were hired in large numbers and the government even actively promoted the employment of women in war-related industries through recruitment drives. As a result, women not only began working in heavy industry, but also took other jobs traditionally reserved solely for men, such as railway guards, ticket collectors, bus and tram conductors, postal workers, police officers, firefighters, and clerks.[68]

World War I saw women taking traditionally men's jobs in large numbers for the first time in American history.[67] Many women worked on the assembly lines of factories, producing trucks and munitions, while department stores employed African American women as elevator operators and cafeteria waitresses for the first time. The Food Administration helped housewives prepare more nutritious meals with less waste and with optimum use of the foods available.[68] Morale of women remained high, as millions joined the Red Cross as volunteers to help soldiers and their families, and with rare exceptions, women did not protest the draft.[69]

The United States Department of Labor created a Women in Industry group, headed by prominent labor researcher and social scientist Mary van Kleeck.[70] This group helped develop standards for women who were working in industries connected to the war, alongside the War Labor Policies Board, of which van Kleeck was also a member. After the war, the Women in Industry Service group developed into the US Women's Bureau, headed by Mary Anderson.[71]

Women of Color in 20th Century Labor Movements edit

Women of color played a significant role in the American labor movement of the 20th century, helping to advance workers' rights in a variety of workplace environments, including fields, factories, and homes. They used instruments including labor unions, strikes, and legislative campaigning to improve their working conditions, pay, and hours. These women took part in neighborhood projects addressing labor rights in addition to being involved in the women's suffrage and civil rights movements. Their principal battle was for equal treatment in society. A particularly famous leader of the African-American community was Ella Baker who helped organize the Young Negroes Cooperative League in the early 1930s, a group that was help pool community resources and provide cheaper goods and services to members. She later cofounded In Friendship, an organization that raised money for the civil rights movement. She went on to help form the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Two other important leaders, Dorothy Height—who worked to help improve opportunities for African-American women—and activist Dolores Huerta—who lobbied on behalf of migrant farmers and eventually founded the United Farm Workers of America—were also essential in promoting social justice and fair labor standards. Their combined efforts made a big difference in creating a more diverse and equal workplace.

 
Picture of Rose Schneiderman

Jewish Women in 20th Century Labor Movements

One must also recognize the significant role Jewish women played in the American labor movement of the 20th century. Jewish mass immigration came to the United States in the early twentieth century, just as the ready-made clothing industry skyrocketed. In the Old Country, most Jewish women were married off as quickly as possible; in America, that was no longer an option. Families counted on women's wages, sometimes sending that money back to their families in Europe or using it to pay the rent, buy food and clothing, bring relatives from Europe to America, or keep the men in their family in school. Most women learned to sew in the workshops of the Old Country and they utilized this skill to help them find jobs in the United States.

Unfortunately, women who worked in garment factories were often subject to sexual harassment, unsafe conditions, exploitation, and wage discrimination. And yet, as Jews who emerged from a left-wing progressive tradition, these female garment workers nurtured a commitment to social justice, one that served as the catalyst for the labor organizing that these women later led.

A number of unions were created in the Lower East Side during the beginning of the 20th century. Most were organized by the International Ladies Garment Workers Union, an organization that was founded in 1900 and, while initially founded by and only accessible to men, went on to be run by many Jewish women who advocated for education as a means of shaping a society that could support the working class.

Strikes in the women's garment industry occurred almost yearly in one city or another. A notable example took place in 1909 and was led by Rose Schneiderman. Schneiderman worked as a cap maker in New York City and, after encountering poor working conditions, decided to organize a local union of the United Cloth and Cap Makers in New York City. Soon after, Schneiderman began serving as vice president of the New York Women's Trade Union League, where she organized the "Uprising of the 20,000" a landmark garment workers' strike that took place from 1909 to 1910 and eventually led to basic improvements for workers.

Strikes of 1919 edit

In 1919, the AFL tried to make their gains permanent and called a series of major strikes in meat, steel,[72] and many other industries. Management counterattacked, claiming that key strikes were run by Communists intent on destroying capitalism.[73] Nearly all the strikes ultimately failed,[dubious ] forcing unions back to positions similar to those around 1910.[74]

Coal strike of 1919 edit

 
"Keeping Warm": the Los Angeles Times, a conservative newspaper, demands federal action to stop the coal strike, November 22, 1919.

The United Mine Workers under John L. Lewis called a strike for November 1, 1919, in all soft (bituminous) coal fields.[75] They had agreed to a wage agreement to run until the end of World War I and now sought to make permanent their wartime gains. US Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer invoked the Lever Act, a wartime measure that made it a crime to interfere with the production or transportation of necessities. Ignoring the court order 400,000 coal workers walked out. The coal operators played the radical card, saying Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky had ordered the strike and were financing it, and some of the press echoed that language.[76]

Lewis, facing criminal charges and sensitive to the propaganda campaign, withdrew his strike call. Lewis did not fully control the faction-ridden UAW and many locals ignored his call.[77] As the strike dragged on into its third week, supplies of the nation's main fuel were running low and the public called for ever stronger government action. Final agreement came after five weeks with the miners getting a 14 percent raise.[78][79]

Women telephone operators win strike in 1919 edit

One important strike was won by labor. Moved to action by the rising cost of living, the president of the Boston Telephone Operator's Union, Julia O'Connor, asked for higher wages from the New England Telephone Company. Wages of operators averaged a third less than women in manufacturing.[80] In April, 9,000 women operators in New England went on strike, shutting down most telephone service. The company hired college students as strikebreakers, but they came under violent attack by men supporting the strikers. In a few days a settlement was reached giving higher wages. After the success O'Connor began a national campaign to organize women operators.[80]

Weakness of organized labor, 1920–1929 edit

The 1920s marked a period of sharp decline for the labor movement. Union membership and activities fell sharply due to many factors including generalized economic prosperity, a lack of leadership within the movement, and anti-union sentiments from employers, governments and the general population. Labor unions were much less able to organize strikes. In 1919, more than 4 million workers (or 21 percent of the labor force) participated in about 3,600 strikes. In contrast, 1929 witnessed about 289,000 workers (or 1.2 percent of the labor force) stage only 900 strikes.[81] The aftermath of the 1910 Los Angeles Times Bombing also contributed to a widespread decline in unionization. The bombing, one of dozens of terrorist sabotage events nationwide organized by members of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers, killed 21 and injured over 100. The guilty verdicts "devastated the American labor movement, virtually paralyzing it until the New Deal."[82]

After a short recession in 1920, the 1920s was a generally prosperous decade outside of farming and coal mining. The GNP growth 1921-29 was a very strong 6.0 percent, double the long-term average of about 3 percent.[83] Real annual earnings (in 1914 dollars) for all employees (deducting for unemployment) was $566 in 1921 and $793 in 1929, a real gain of 40 percent.[84] The economic prosperity of the decade led to stable prices, eliminating one major incentive to join unions.[85] Unemployment fell from 11.7 percent in 1921 to 2.4 percent in 1923 and remained in the range of 2 to 5 percent until 1930.[86]

The 1920s also saw a lack of strong leadership within the labor movement. Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor died in 1924 after serving as the organization's president for 37 years. Observers said successor William Green, who was the secretary-treasurer of the United Mine Workers, "lacked the aggressiveness and the imagination of the AFL's first president".[87] The AFL was down to less than 3 million members in 1925 after hitting a peak of 4 million members in 1920.[88]

Employers across the nation led a successful campaign against unions known as the "American Plan", which sought to depict unions as "alien" to the nation's individualistic spirit.[89] In addition, some employers, like the National Association of Manufacturers, used Red Scare tactics to discredit unionism by linking them to subversive activities.[90]

US courts were less hospitable to union activities during the 1920s than in the past. In this decade, corporations used twice as many court injunctions against strikes than any comparable period. In addition, the practice of forcing employees (by threat of termination) to sign yellow-dog contracts that said they would not join a union was not outlawed until 1932.[90]

Although the labor movement fell in prominence during the 1920s, the Great Depression would ultimately bring it back to life.

Battle of Blair Mountain edit

The Battle of Blair Mountain, August 25, 1921 – September 2, 1921, was the largest labor uprising in United States history. The conflict occurred in Logan County, West Virginia, as part of the Coal Wars, a series of early-20th-century labor disputes in Appalachia.

For five days from late August to early September 1921, some 10,000 armed coal miners confronted 3,000 lawmen and strikebreakers recruited and backed by coal mine operators during the miners' attempt to unionize the southwestern West Virginia coalfields. The battle ended after the United States Army, represented by the West Virginia Army National Guard, intervened by presidential order, and the miners, many of whom were veterans, declined to shoot at the soldiers. In the short term the battle was an overwhelming victory for coal industry owners and management. United Mine Workers of America membership plummeted from more than 50,000 miners to approximately 10,000 over the next several years.

New England Textile Strike of 1922 edit

The New England Textile strike was widespread textile mill strike throughout New England, starting on January 23. Anywhere from 40,000 to 68,000 workers struck and it lasted until around November for most mills. The immediate cause was a proposal for a 20% wage cut and increased working hours. The strike led to a reversal of the wage cut for most workers.[91][92][93]

Great Railroad Strike of 1922 edit

The Great Railroad Strike of 1922, a nationwide railroad shop workers strike, began on July 1. The immediate cause of the strike was the Railroad Labor Board's announcement that hourly wages for railway repair and maintenance workers would be cut by seven cents on July 1. This cut, which represented an average 12 percent wage decrease for the affected workers, prompted a shop workers vote on whether or not to strike. The operators' union did not join in the strike, and the railroads employed strikebreakers to fill three-fourths of the roughly 400,000 vacated positions, increasing hostilities between the railroads and the striking workers.[94]

On September 1, a federal judge issued the sweeping "Daugherty Injunction" against striking, assembling, and picketing. Unions bitterly resented the injunction; a few sympathy strikes shut down some railroads completely. The strike eventually died out as many shopmen made deals with the railroads on the local level. The often unpalatable concessions — coupled with memories of the violence and tension during the strike — soured relations between the railroads and the shopmen for years.[94]

Organized labor, 1929–1955 edit

 
Open battle between striking teamsters armed with pipes and the police in the streets of Minneapolis in June 1934

The Great Depression and organized labor edit

The stock market crashed in October 1929, and ushered in the Great Depression. By the winter of 1932–33, the economy was so perilous that the unemployment rate hit the 25 percent mark.[95] Unions lost members during this time because laborers could not afford to pay their dues and furthermore, numerous strikes against wage cuts left the unions impoverished: "one might have expected a reincarnation of organizations seeking to overthrow the capitalistic system that was now performing so poorly. Some workers did indeed turn to such radical movements as the Communist Party, but, in general, the nation seemed to have been shocked into inaction".[96]

Though unions were not acting yet, cities across the nation witnessed local and spontaneous marches by frustrated relief applicants. In March 1930, hundreds of thousands of unemployed workers marched through New York City, Detroit, Washington, San Francisco and other cities in a mass protest organized by the Communist Party's Unemployed Councils. In 1931, more than 400 relief protests erupted in Chicago and that number grew to 550 in 1932.[95]

The leadership behind these organizations often came from radical groups like Communist and Socialist parties, who wanted to organize "unfocused neighborhood militancy into organized popular defense organizations".[95]

However the Great Depression spawned labor action in Harlan County, Kentucky, now known as the Harlan County War, when the Harlan County Coal Operators Association cut wages by 10% in the winter of 1931. This decision had caused the United Mine Workers to organize, leading to the eviction of the mine workers from the coal town. These evicted workers immigrated to the town of Evarts, Kentucky, where they would plan union activity. Sheriff J. H. Blair led a force of 140 deputies who were mostly paid by the coal company. Various skirmishes between striking miners and deputies ensued in Evarts. As the situation escalated, socialist organizations such as the Industrial Workers of the World sent aid to the miners, giving it national coverage.[97]

The Norris–La Guardia Anti-Injunction Act of 1932 edit

Organized labor became more active in 1932, with the passage of the Norris–La Guardia Act. On March 23, 1932, Republican President Herbert Hoover signed the Norris–La Guardia Act, marking the first of many pro-union bills that Washington would pass in the 1930s.[88] Also known as the Anti-Injunction Bill, it offered procedural and substantive protections against the easy issuance of court injunctions during labor disputes, which had limited union behavior in the 1920s.[98] Although the act only applied to federal courts, numerous states would pass similar acts in the future. Additionally, the act outlawed yellow-dog contracts, which were documents some employers forced their employees to sign to ensure they would not join a union; employees who refused to sign were terminated from their jobs.[99]

The passage of the Norris–La Guardia Act signified a victory for the American Federation of Labor, which had been lobbying Congress to pass it for slightly more than five years.[88] It also marked a large change in public policy. Up until the passage of this act, the collective bargaining rights of workers were severely hampered by judicial control.[100]

FDR and the National Industrial Recovery Act edit

President Franklin D. Roosevelt took office on March 4, 1933, and immediately began implementing programs to alleviate the economic crisis. In June, he passed the National Industrial Recovery Act, which gave workers the right to organize into unions.[88] Though it contained other provisions, like minimum wage and maximum hours, its most significant passage was, "Employees shall have the right to organize and bargain collectively through representative of their own choosing, and shall be free from the interference, restraint, or coercion of employers."

This portion, which was known as Section 7(a), was symbolic to workers in the United States because it stripped employers of their rights to either coerce them or refuse to bargain with them.[98] While no power of enforcement was written into the law, it "recognized the rights of the industrial working class in the United States".[101]

For example, the now United Mine Workers of America were able to reignite the coal labor movement in Kentucky and West Virginia with Section 7(a) and eliminated compulsory residence in company towns for 350,000 miners.[102]

Although the National Industrial Recovery Act was ultimately deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1935 and replaced by the Wagner Act two months after that, it fueled workers to join unions and strengthened those organizations.[88]

In response to both the Norris–La Guardia Act and the NIRA, workers who were previously unorganized in a number of industries—such as rubber workers, oil and gas workers and service workers—began to look for organizations that would allow them to band together.[101] The NIRA strengthened workers' resolve to unionize and instead of participating in unemployment or hunger marches, they started to participate in strikes for union recognition in various industries".[103] In 1933, the number of work stoppages jumped to 1,695, double its figure from 1932. In 1934, 1,865 strikes occurred, involving more than 1.4 million workers.[104]

The elections of 1934 might have reflected the "radical upheaval sweeping the country", as Roosevelt won the greatest majority either party ever held in the Senate and 322 Democrats won seats in the United States House of Representatives versus 103 Republicans. It is possible that "the great social movement from below thus strengthened the independence of the executive branch of government".[101]

Despite the impact of such changes on the United States' political structure and on workers' empowerment, some scholars have criticized the impacts of these policies from a classical economic perspective. Cole and Ohanian (2004) find that the New Deal's pro-labor policies are an important factor in explaining the weak recovery from the Great Depression and the rise in real wages in some industrial sectors during this time.[105]

The American Federation of Labor: craft unionism vs. industrial unionism edit

The AFL was growing rapidly, from 2.1 million members in 1933 to 3.4 million in 1936. But it was experiencing severe internal stresses regarding how to organize new members.[106] Traditionally, the AFL organized unions by craft rather than industry, where electricians or stationary engineers would form their own skill-oriented unions, rather than join a large automobile-making union. Most AFL leaders, including president William Green, were reluctant to shift from the organization's long-standing craft unionism and started to clash with other leaders within the organization, such as John L. Lewis.[98]

The issue came up at the annual AFL convention in San Francisco in 1934 and 1935, but the majority voted against a shift to industrial unionism both years. After the defeat at the 1935 convention, nine leaders from the industrial faction led by Lewis met and organized the Committee for Industrial Organization within the AFL to "encourage and promote organization of workers in the mass production industries" for "educational and advisory" functions.[98]

The CIO, which later changed its name to the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), formed unions with the hope of bringing them into the AFL, but the AFL refused to extend full membership privileges to CIO unions. In 1938, the AFL expelled the CIO and its million members, and they formed a rival federation.[107] The two federations fought it out for membership; while both supported Roosevelt and the New Deal, the CIO was further to the left, while the AFL had close ties to the big city machines.

John L. Lewis and the CIO edit

John L. Lewis (1880–1969) was the president of the United Mine Workers of America (UMW) from 1920 to 1960, and the driving force behind the founding of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). Using UMW organizers the new CIO established the United Steel Workers of America (USWA) and organized millions of other industrial workers in the 1930s.[108]

Lewis threw his support behind Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) at the outset of the New Deal. After the passage of the Wagner Act in 1935, Lewis traded on the tremendous appeal that Roosevelt had with workers in those days, sending organizers into the coal fields to tell workers "The President wants you to join the Union." His UMW was one of FDR's main financial supporters in 1936, contributing over $500,000.[109]

Lewis expanded his base by organizing the so-called "captive mines", those held by the steel producers such as US Steel. That required in turn organizing the steel industry, which had defeated union organizing drives in 1892 and 1919 and which had resisted all organizing efforts since then fiercely. The task of organizing steelworkers, on the other hand, put Lewis at odds with the AFL, which looked down on both industrial workers and the industrial unions that represented all workers in a particular industry, rather than just those in a particular skilled trade or craft.

Lewis was the first president of the Committee of Industrial Organizations. Lewis, in fact, was the CIO: his UMWA provided the great bulk of the financial resources that the CIO poured into organizing drives by the United Automobile Workers (UAW), the United Steelworkers of America, the Textile Workers Union and other newly formed or struggling unions. Lewis hired back many of the people he had exiled from the UMWA in the 1920s to lead the CIO and placed his protégé Philip Murray at the head of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee.

The most dramatic success was the 1936-7 sit-down strike that paralyzed General Motors. It enabled CIO unionization of GM and the main automobile firms (except the Ford Motor Company, which held out for a few years).[110] However it had negative ramifications, as the Gallup Poll reported, "More than anything else the use of the sit-down strike alienated the sympathies of the middle classes".[111]

The CIO's actual membership (as opposed to publicity figures) was 2,850,000 for February 1942. This included 537,000 members of the auto workers (UAW), nearly 500,000 Steel Workers, almost 300,000 members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, about 180,000 Electrical Workers, and about 100,000 Rubber Workers. The CIO also included 550,000 members of the United Mine Workers, which did not formally withdraw from the CIO until later in the year. The remaining membership of 700,000 was scattered among thirty-odd smaller unions.[112]

Historians of the union movement in the 1930s have tried to explain its remarkable success in terms of the rank and file—what motivated them to suddenly rally around leaders (such as John L. Lewis) who had been around for decades with little success. Why was the militancy of the mid-1930s so short lived?[113][114][115]

Union upsurge in World War II edit

Union membership grew very rapidly from 2.8 million in 1933 to 8.4 million in 1941, covering 23% of the non-farm workforce, reaching 14 million in 1945, about 36 percent of the work force. By the mid-1950s, the merged AFL-CIO still collected dues from over 15 million members, a third of the non-farm workforce. Unionization was strongest in large northern cities, and weakest across the south, where repeated mobilization efforts failed. The 1937 split off of the CIO cost the AFL over a million members, but it added 760,000 on its own. Between 1937 and 1945 the CIO recruited two million new members, but the AFL recruited nearly 4 million. After some bitter battles in the late 1930s, the AFL and CIO had relatively few jurisdictional disputes, each focusing on its own specialized industries. The CIO was strongest in large manufacturing industries especially auto, steel, meatpacking, coal, and electrical appliances. The AFL affiliates were strongest in construction trades, trucking, department stores, and public service. The railway brotherhoods continued their independent status.[116]

Both the AFL and CIO supported Roosevelt in 1940 and 1944, with 75 percent or more of their votes, after spending millions of dollars, and mobilizing tens of thousands of precinct workers.[117][118]

However, Lewis opposed Roosevelt on foreign policy grounds in 1940, but his members ignored his advice to voted against FDR and he resigned as CIO chief. During the 22 months 1939-1941 when Stalin and Hitler supported each other, the far-left opposed American aid to Britain's war against Germany. They called strikes in war industries that were supplying Lend Lease to Britain. The most dramatic case came in early June 1941, when a wildcat strike near Los Angeles closed the plant that produced a fourth of the fighter-planes. With the approval of CIO leadership, President Roosevelt sent in the national guard to reopen the plant. However, when Germany suddenly invaded the USSR in late June 1941, the Communist activists suddenly became the strongest supporters of war production; they crushed wildcat strikes.[119][120][121]

Lewis realized that he had enormous leverage over the nation's energy supply. In 1943, the middle of the war, when the rest of labor was observing a policy against strikes, Lewis led the coal miners out on a twelve-day strike for higher wages. The bipartisan Conservative coalition in Congress passed anti-union legislation over liberal opposition, most notably the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947.[122]

A statistical analysis of the AFL and CIO national and local leaders in 1945 shows that opportunity for advancement in the labor movement was wide open. In contrast with other elites, the labor leaders did not come from established WASP families with rich, well-educated backgrounds. Indeed, they closely resembled the overall national population of adult men, with fewer from the South and from farm backgrounds. The union leaders were heavily Democratic. The newer CIO had a younger leadership, and one more involved with third parties, and less involved with local civic activities. Otherwise the AFL and CIO leaders were quite similar in background.[123]

Women take new jobs in World War II edit

The war caused the military mobilization of 16 million American men, leaving a huge hole in the urban work force. (Men in farming were exempt from the draft.) In 1945, 37% of women were employed, encouraged by factors such as patriotism[124] and the chance for high wages.[125] One in 4 married women were working by 1945.[126] Many domestic workers took jobs that paid much better, especially in war factories.[127] During the war nearly 6 million women joined the workforce. They filled roles that men had monopolized, such as steel workers, lumber workers, and bus drivers.[68] By 1945 there were 4.7 women in clerical positions which was an 89% increase from 1940. Another 4.5 million women working in factories, usually in unskilled positions, up 112%.[127] The aviation industry saw the highest increase in female workers during the war. By 1943 310,000 women worked there, or 65% of the industry's workforce.[126]

While women's wages rose more relative to men's during this period, real wages did not increase due to higher wartime income taxes.[128] Although jobs that had been previously closed to women opened up, demographics such as African American women who had already been participating more fully experienced less change. Their husbands' income effect was historically even more positive than white women's. During the war, African American women engagement as domestic servants decreased from 59.9% to 44.6%, but Karen Anderson in 1982 characterized their experience as “last hired, first fired.”[129]

At the end of the war, most of the munitions-making jobs ended. Many factories were closed; others retooled for civilian production. In some jobs, women were replaced by returning veterans who did not lose seniority because they were in service. However, the number of women at work in 1946 was 87% of the number in 1944, leaving 13% left the labor force to become housewives.[130]

Walter Reuther and UAW edit

The Flint Sit-Down Strike of 1936–37 was the decisive event in the formation of the United Auto Workers Union (UAW). During the war Walter Reuther took control of the UAW, and soon led major strikes in 1946. He ousted the Communists from the positions of power, especially at the Ford local. He was one of the most articulate and energetic leaders of the CIO, and of the merged AFL-CIO. Using brilliant negotiating tactics he leveraged high profits for the Big Three automakers into higher wages and superior benefits for UAW members.[131]

PAC and politics of 1940s edit

New enemies appeared for the labor unions after 1935. Newspaper columnist Westbrook Pegler was especially outraged by the New Deal's support for powerful labor unions that he considered morally and politically corrupt. Pegler saw himself a populist and muckraker whose mission was to warn the nation that dangerous leaders were in power. In 1941 Pegler became the first columnist ever to win a Pulitzer Prize for reporting, for his work in exposing racketeering in Hollywood labor unions, focusing on the criminal career of William Morris Bioff. Pegler's popularity reflected a loss of support for unions and liberalism generally, especially as shown by the dramatic Republican gains in the 1946 elections, often using an anti-union theme.[132]

Strike wave of 1945 edit

With the end of the war in August 1945 came a wave of major strikes, mostly led by the CIO. In November, the UAW sent their 180,000 GM workers to the picket lines; they were joined in January 1946 by a half-million steelworkers, as well as over 200,000 electrical workers and 150,000 packinghouse workers. Combined with many smaller strikes a new record of strike activity was set.[133][134]

The results were mixed, with the unions making some gains, but the economy was disordered by the rapid termination of war contracts, the complex reconversion to peacetime production, the return to the labor force of 12 million servicemen, and the return home of millions of women workers. The conservative control of Congress blocked liberal legislation, and "Operation Dixie", the CIO's efforts to expand massively into the Southern United States, failed.[133]

The Republican Party exploited public anger at the unions in 1946, winning a smashing landslide. Labor responded afterwards by taking strong actions. The CIO systematically purged communists and far-left sympathizers from leadership roles in its unions.[135] The CIO expelled some unions that resisted the purge, notably its third-largest affiliate the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America (UE), and set up a new rival IUE to take away the UE membership.[136]

Meanwhile, the AFL in 1947 set up its first explicitly political unit, Labor's League for Political Education. The AFL increasingly abandoned its historic tradition of nonpartisanship, since neutrality between the major parties was impossible. By 1952, the AFL had given up on decentralization, local autonomy, and non-partisanship, and had developed instead a new political approach marked by the same style of centralization, national coordination, and partisan alliances that characterized the CIO.[137] After these moves, the CIO and AFL were in a good position to fight off Henry Wallace in the 1948 presidential election and work enthusiastically for Harry S. Truman's reelection. The CIO and AFL no longer had major points of conflict, so they merged amicably in 1955 as the AFL–CIO.[138]

Taft-Hartley Act edit

The Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, also known as the Taft–Hartley Act, in 1947 revised the Wagner Act to include restrictions on unions as well as management. It was a response to public demands for action after the wartime coal strikes and the postwar strikes in steel, autos and other industries that were perceived to have damaged the economy, as well as a threatened 1946 railroad strike that was called off at the last minute before it shut down the national economy. The Act was bitterly fought by unions, vetoed by President Harry S. Truman, and passed over his veto. Repeated union efforts to repeal or modify it always failed, and it remains in effect today.

The Act was sponsored by Senator Robert A. Taft and Representative Fred Hartley, both Republicans. Congress overrode the veto on June 23, 1947, establishing the act as a law. Truman described the act as a "slave-labor bill" in his veto, but after it was enacted over his veto, he used its emergency provisions a number of times to halt strikes and lockouts. The new law required all union officials to sign an affidavit that they were not Communists or else the union would lose its federal bargaining powers guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Board.[139] (That provision was declared to be an unconstitutional bill of attainder by a 1965 Supreme Court decision, United States v. Brown.)[140]

The Taft-Hartley Act amended the Wagner Act, officially known as the National Labor Relations Act, of 1935. The amendments added to the NLRA a list of prohibited actions, or "unfair labor practices", on the part of unions. The NLRA had previously prohibited only unfair labor practices committed by employers. It prohibited jurisdictional strikes, in which a union strikes in order to pressure an employer to assign particular work to the employees that union represents, and secondary boycotts and "common situs" picketing, in which unions picket, strike, or refuse to handle the goods of a business with which they have no primary dispute but which is associated with a targeted business. A later statute, the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act, passed in 1959, tightened these restrictions on secondary boycotts still further.

The Act outlawed closed shops, which were contractual agreements that required an employer to hire only union members. Union shops, in which new recruits must join the union within a certain amount of time, are permitted, but only as part of a collective bargaining agreement and only if the contract allows the worker at least thirty days after the date of hire or the effective date of the contract to join the union. The National Labor Relations Board and the courts have added other restrictions on the power of unions to enforce union security clauses and have required them to make extensive financial disclosures to all members as part of their duty of fair representation. On the other hand, a few years after the passage of the Act Congress repealed the provisions requiring a vote by workers to authorize a union shop, when it became apparent that workers were approving them in virtually every case.

The amendments also authorized individual states to outlaw union security clauses entirely in their jurisdictions by passing "right-to-work" laws. Currently all of the states in the Deep South and a number of traditionally Republican states in the Midwest, Plains and Rocky Mountains regions have right-to-work laws.

The amendments required unions and employers to give sixty days' notice before they may undertake strikes or other forms of economic action in pursuit of a new collective bargaining agreement; it did not, on the other hand, impose any "cooling-off period" after a contract expired. Although the Act also authorized the President of the United States to intervene in strikes or potential strikes that create a national emergency, the President has used that power less and less frequently in each succeeding decade.

Historian James T. Patterson concludes that:

By the 1950s most observers agreed that Taft-Hartley was no more disastrous for workers than the Wagner Act had been for employers. What ordinarily mattered most in labor relations was not government laws such as Taft-Hartley, but the relative power of unions and management in the economic marketplace. Where unions were strong they usually managed all right; when they were weak, new laws did them little additional harm.[141][neutrality is disputed]

Anti-communism edit

The AFL had always opposed communists inside the labor movement.[speculation?] After 1945 they took their crusade worldwide. The CIO had major communist elements who played a key role in organizational work in the late 1930s and war years. By 1949 they were purged. The AFL and CIO strongly supported the Cold War policies of the Truman administration, including the Truman Doctrine, the Marshall Plan and NATO.

Left-wing elements in the CIO protested and were forced out of the main unions. Walter Reuther of the United Automobile Workers purged the UAW of communist members. He was active in the CIO umbrella as well, taking the lead in expelling eleven communist-dominated unions from the CIO in 1949.[142]

As a leader of the anti-communist center-left, Reuther was a founder of the liberal umbrella group Americans for Democratic Action in 1947. In 1949 he led the CIO delegation to the London conference that set up the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions in opposition to the communist-dominated World Federation of Trade Unions. He had left the Socialist Party in 1939, and throughout the 1950s and 1960s was a leading spokesman for liberal interests in the CIO and in the Democratic Party.[143] James B. Carey also helped influence the CIO's pullout from the WFTU and the formation of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions dedicated to promoting free trade and democratic unionism worldwide. Carey in 1949 had formed the International Union of Electrical Workers, a new CIO union for electrical workers, because the old one, the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, was tightly held by the left.[144][self-published source]

Marxian economist Richard D. Wolff argues that anti-communism was part of a strategy by big business, Republicans and conservatives to single out and destroy the members of the coalition that forced through the New Deal, namely organized labor, socialist and communist parties.[145]

Union decline, 1955–2016 edit

 
Income inequality and union participation have had a distinctly inverse relationship, with the disparity increasing since the 1980s.[146]
 
Labor income as a share of GDP (vs. income from capital) has declined 1970 to 2016, measured based on total compensation as well as salaries & wages. All employment is included, not just union members.

Since its peak in the mid-20th century, the American labor movement has been in steady decline, with losses in the private sector larger than gains in the public sector. In the early 1950s, as the AFL and CIO merged, around a third of the American labor force was unionized; by 2012, the proportion was 11 percent, constituting roughly 5 percent in the private sector and 40 percent in the public sector. Organized labor's influence steadily waned and workers' collective voice in the political process has weakened. Partly as a result, wages have stagnated and income inequality has increased.[147] "Although the National Labor Relations Act was initially a boon for unions, it also sowed the seeds of the labor movement's decline. The act enshrined the right to unionize, but the system of workplace elections it created meant that unions had to organize each new factory or firm individually rather than organize by industry. In many European countries, collective-bargaining agreements extended automatically to other firms in the same industry, but in the United States, they usually reached no further than a plant's gates. As a result, in the first decades of the postwar period, the organizing effort could not keep pace with the frenetic rate of job growth in the economy as a whole".[147] On the political front, the shrinking unions lost influence in the Democratic Party, and pro-union liberal Republicans faded away.[3] Intellectuals lost interest in unions, focusing their attention more on the Vietnam War, minorities, women and environmental issues.[148]

By the 1970s, a rapidly increasing flow of imports (such as automobiles, steel and electronics from Germany and Japan, and clothing and shoes from Asia) undercut American producers.[149] By the 1980s there was a large-scale shift in employment with fewer workers in high-wage sectors and more in the low-wage sectors.[150] Many companies closed or moved factories to Southern states (where unions were weak).[151] The effectiveness of strikes declined sharply, as companies after the 1970s threatened to close down factories or move them to low-wage states or to foreign countries.[152] The number of major work stoppages fell by 97 percent from 381 in 1970 to 187 in 1980 to only 11 in 2010.[153][154] The accumulating weaknesses were exposed when President Ronald Reagan—a former union president—broke the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) strike in 1981, dealing a major blow to unions.[155]

Union membership among workers in private industry shrank dramatically, though after 1970 there was growth in employees unions of federal, state and local governments.[156][157] The intellectual mood in the 1970s and 1980s favored deregulation and free competition.[158] Numerous industries were deregulated, including airlines, trucking, railroads and telephones, over the objections of the unions involved.[159]

Republicans, using conservative think tanks as idea farms, began to push through legislative blueprints to curb the power of public employee unions as well as eliminate business regulations.[152]

Union weakness in the South undermined unionization and social reform throughout the nation, and such weakness is largely responsible for the anaemic US welfare state.[160]

AFL and CIO merger 1955 edit

The friendly merger of the AFL and CIO marked an end not only to the acrimony and jurisdictional conflicts between the coalitions, it also signaled the end of the era of experimentation and expansion that began in the mid-1930s. Merger became politically possible because of the deaths of Green of the AFL and Murray of the CIO in late 1952, replaced by George Meany and Reuther. The CIO was no longer the radical dynamo, and was no longer a threat in terms of membership for the AFL had twice as many members.[161]

Furthermore, the AFL was doing a better job of expanding into the fast-growing white collar sector, with its organizations of clerks, public employees, teachers, and service workers. Although the AFL building trades maintained all-white policies, the AFL had more black members in all as the CIO. The problem of union corruption was growing in public awareness, and CIO's industrial unions were less vulnerable to penetration by criminal elements than were the AFL's trucking, longshoring, building, and entertainment unions. But Meany had a strong record in fighting corruption in New York unions, and was highly critical of the notoriously corrupt Teamsters.[161]

Unification would help the central organization fight corruption, yet would not contaminate the CIO unions. The defeat of the New Deal in the 1952 election further emphasized the need for unity to maximize political effectiveness. From the CIO side the merger was promoted by David McDonald of the Steelworkers and his top aide Arthur J. Goldberg. To achieve the successful merger, they jettisoned the more liberal policies of the CIO regarding civil rights and membership rights for blacks, jurisdictional disputes, and industrial unionism. Reuther went along with the compromises and did not contest the selection of Meany to head the AFL-CIO.[161]

Fearing the fallout of a drawn-out negotiation process, the AFL and CIO leadership decided on a "short route" to reconciliation. This meant all AFL and CIO unions would be accepted into the new organization "as is," with all conflicts and overlaps to be sorted out after the merger.[162] Negotiations were conducted by a small, select group of advisors. The draft constitution was primarily written by AFL Vice President Matthew Woll and CIO General Counsel Arthur Goldberg, while the joint policy statements were written by Woll, CIO Secretary-Treasurer James Carey, CIO vice presidents David McDonald and Joseph Curran, Brotherhood of Railway Clerks President George Harrison, and Illinois AFL-CIO President Reuben Soderstrom.[163]

Conservative attacks edit

Labor unions were a whole high-profile target of Republican activists throughout the 1940s and 1950s, especially the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947. Both the business community and local Republicans wanted to weaken unions, which played a major role in funding and campaigning for Democratic candidates.[164] The strategy of the Eisenhower administration was to consolidate the anti-union potential inherent in Taft-Hartley.[165] Pressure from the Justice Department, the Labor Department, and especially from congressional investigations focused on criminal activity and racketeering in high-profile labor unions, especially the Teamsters Union. Republicans wanted to delegitimize unions by focusing on their shady activities. The McClellan Committee hearings targeted Teamsters president James R. Hoffa as a public enemy. Young Robert F. Kennedy played a major role working for the committee.[166] Public opinion polls showed growing distrust toward unions, and especially union leaders — or "labor bosses," as Republicans called them. The bipartisan Conservative Coalition, with the aid of liberals such as the Kennedy brothers, won new Congressional restrictions on organized labor in the form of the Landrum-Griffin Act (1959). The main impact was to force more democracy on the previously authoritarian union hierarchies.[167][168] However, in the 1958 elections, taking place during a sharp economic recession, the unions fought back especially against state Right to Work laws and defeated many conservative Republicans.[169][170]

The Teamsters union was expelled from the AFL for its notorious corruption under president Dave Beck. Its troubles gained national attention from highly visible Senate hearings.[171] The target was Jimmy Hoffa (1913–1975), who replaced Beck and held total power until he was imprisoned in 1964.

1960s: Liberal achievement in Civil Rights and backlash edit

The UAW under Reuther played a major role in funding and supporting the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s.[172] More traditional unions favored their white members and encountered federal court intervention.[173]

After the smashing reelection victory of President Lyndon B. Johnson in 1964, the heavily Democratic Congress passed a raft of liberal legislation. Labor union leaders claimed credit for the widest range of liberal laws since the New Deal era, including the Civil Rights Act of 1964; the Voting Rights Act of 1965; the War on Poverty; aid to cities and education; increased Social Security benefits; and Medicare for the elderly. The 1966 elections were an unexpected disaster, with defeats for many of the more liberal Democrats. According to Alan Draper, the AFL-CIO Committee on Political Action (COPE) was the main electioneering unit of the labor movement. It ignored the white backlash against civil rights, which had become a main Republican attack point. The COPE assumed falsely that union members were interested in issues of greatest salience to union leadership, but polls showed this was not true. The members were much more conservative. The younger ones were much more concerned about taxes and crime, and the older ones had not overcome racial biases. Furthermore, a new issue—the War in Vietnam—was bitterly splitting the New Deal coalition into hawks (led by Johnson and Vice-president Hubert Humphrey) and doves (led by Senators Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy).[174][175]

Hispanics edit

Chavez and the and United Farm Workers edit

Hispanics comprise a large fraction of the farm labor force, but due to the fact that agricultural workers were not protected under the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) of 1935,[176] there was little successful unionization before the arrival in the 1960s of Cesar Chavez (1927–1993) and Dolores Huerta (1930), who mobilized California workers into the United Farm Workers (UFW) organization.[177]

Chavez's use of non-violent methods combined with Huerta's organizational skills allowed for many of the bigger successes of the organization.[178]

A key success for the UFW was in partnering with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC), which primarily worked with Filipino farm workers, and creating the eventual United Farmworkers Union in 1972.[179] Together, they organized a worker strike and consumer boycott of the grape growers in California that lasted for over five years. Through collaboration with consumers and student protesters, the UFW was able to secure a three-year contract with the state's top grape growers to increase the safety and pay of farm workers.[180]

Chavez had a significant political impact; as Jenkins points out, "state and national elites no longer automatically sided with the growers." Thus, the political insurgency of the UFW was successful because of effective strategizing in the right kind of political environment.[181] In the decades following its early success, the UFW experienced a steep decline in membership due to purges of key organizational leaders by Chavez.[182] With Chavez unable to lead effectively, the Teamsters Union moved in and replaced the UFW.[183][184] In 2015 José-Antonio Orosco pointed out that the UFW, "devolved from a powerful labor union for farmworkers to a fragile organization that today draws most of its support from mailed donations and represents fewer than five thousand workers in an industry that employs tens of thousands." In her biography of Chavez, Miriam Powell blames one person for the collapse: Chavez himself.[185][186]

Hotels edit

Nationwide unions have been seeking opportunities to enroll Hispanic members. Much of their limited success has been in the hotel industry, especially in Nevada.[187]

Reagan era, 1980s edit

Dana Cloud argues, "the emblematic moment of the period from 1955 through the 1980s in American labor was the tragic PATCO strike in 1981."[188] Most unions were strongly opposed to Reagan in the 1980 presidential election, despite the fact that Reagan remains the only union leader (or even member) to become president. On August 3, 1981, the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO) union — which had supported Reagan — rejected the government's pay raise offer and sent its 16,000 members out on strike to shut down the nation's commercial airlines. They demanded a reduction in the workweek to 32 from 40 hours, a $10,000 bonus, pay raises up to 40 percent, and early retirement.[189]

Federal law forbade such a strike, and the United States Department of Transportation implemented a backup plan (of supervisors and military air controllers) to keep the system running. The strikers were given 48 hours to return to work, else they would be fired and banned from ever again working in a federal capacity. A fourth of the strikers came back to work, but 13,000 did not. The strike collapsed, PATCO vanished, and the union movement as a whole suffered a major reversal, which accelerated the decline of membership across the board in the private sector.[189]

Schulman and Zelizer argue that the breaking of PATCO, "sent shock waves through the entire U.S. labor relations regime. ... strike rates plummeted, and union power sharply declined."[190] Unions suffered a continual decline of power during the Reagan administration, with a concomitant effect on wages. The average first-year raise (for 1000-plus–worker contracts) fell from 9.8 percent to 1.2 percent; in manufacturing, raises fell from 7.2 percent to negative 1.2 percent. Salaries of unionized workers also fell relative to non-union workers. Women and blacks suffered more from these trends.[191][192]

 
Union cash advantage 2014[193]

Decline of private sector unions edit

By 2011 fewer than seven percent of employees in the private sector belonged to unions. The UAW's numbers of automobile union members are representative of the manufacturing sector: 1,619,000 active members in 1970, 1,446,000 in 1980, 952,000 in 1990, 623,000 in 2004, and 377,000 in 2010 (with far more retired than active members).[194]

By 2014, coal mining in the United States had largely shifted to open-pit mines in Wyoming, and there were only 60,000 active coal miners. The UMW has 35,000 members, of whom 20,000 were coal miners, chiefly in underground mines in Kentucky and West Virginia. By contrast it had 800,000 members in the late 1930s. However it remains responsible for pensions and medical benefits for 40,000 retired miners, and for 50,000 spouses and dependents.[195]

Rise in union activity (2016-present) edit

The number of union members nationwide increased from 2016 to 2017, and some states saw union growth for the first time in several years or decades.[196] Nearly half a million workers went on strike in 2018 and 2019, the largest numbers in three decades.[197] Union growth in 2017 was primarily millennial workers. For instance, about 76 percent of new UAW union members during their increase came from workers under the age of 35.[198] Although the total number of union members increased 1.7 percent in 2017, the Economic Policy Institute noted that year-to-year union membership often fluctuates due to hiring or layoffs in particular sectors, and cautioned against interpreting one-year changes as trends.[199] The percentage of the workforce belonging to unions was 10.7 percent in 2017, unchanged over the previous year, but down from 11.1 percent in 2015, and 12.1 percent in 2007.[200]

In recent years, efforts have also been made to extend the protections of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which excluded domestic workers and farm workers, to those groups on the state level. The National Domestic Workers' Alliance has successfully advocated for a Domestic Workers' Bill of Rights in New York, California, and Hawaii,[201] while several states have passed legislation expanding the rights of farm workers.[202]

On July 15, 2022, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) reported that the amount of union representation petitions filed with the board increased by 58% in the first three quarters of the 2022 fiscal year. This was more than the total amount of petitions filed in the entire 2021 fiscal year.[203]

Teacher strikes edit

In 2018, a series of statewide teacher strikes and protests happened garnering nationwide attention due to their success,[204] as well as the fact that several of them were in states where public-employee strikes are illegal. Many of the major strikes were in Republican majority state legislatures, leading to the name "Red State Revolt".[205] Protests were held in Arizona, Colorado,[206] North Carolina, Oklahoma,[207][208] and West Virginia.[209] Additional smaller protests were held in Kentucky and North Carolina. The protests spread to a bus driver strike in the suburbs of Atlanta, Georgia, where nearly 250 bus drivers participated.[210][211] The strikes included an adjunct faculty strike at Virginia Commonwealth University[212] in Richmond, Virginia, leading to an increase in adjunct wages.[213]

Unionization in the high tech sector edit

The relatively new high tech sector, typically dealing with the creation, design, development, and engineering of computer hardware and software products, has typically not been unionized as it is considered white-collar jobs, often with high pay rates and benefits. There has been worker activism to try to get the employer to change their practices related to labor, such as a November 2018 walkout at Google by 20,000 employees to make the company change its policy on sexual harassment.[214] However, these efforts have traditionally stopped short of the need for unionization, and achieving the scale of employee involvement to bring a union to their workplace can be difficult due to the numerous benefits these employees may already have and the blue-collar nature that union association may bring.[215]

One area where unionization efforts have become more intense is in the video game industry. Numerous publicized events since 2004 have revealed the excessive use of "crunch time" at some companies; where there is a reasonable expectation in the industry that employees may be needed to put in more time near the release of a game product, some companies were noted for using a "crunch time" approach through much longer periods or as a constant expectation of their employees; further, most of those employed in the video game market are exempt from overtime, compounding the issue. Major grassroots efforts through the game industry since 2018 have promoted the creation of a new union or working with an existing union to cover the industry.[216] One of the first high tech companies to establish a union was Kickstarter, whose employees voted in favor of unionizing in February 2020.[217]

On April 1, 2022, Amazon workers at the JFK8 warehouse in Staten Island, New York City voted in favor of a union, becoming Amazon's first unionized workplace in the United States.[218]

Hollywood labor disputes, 2023 edit

From May 2 to November 9, 2023, a series of long labor disputes within the film and television industries of the United States took place, mainly focused on the strikes of the Writers Guild of America and SAG-AFTRA.

Unionization in the food service and grocery industries edit

The food service industry has one of the lowest unionization rates in the United States, with just 1.2% of workers belonging to a union in 2020 and 2021.[219]

Starbucks edit

In late 2021, a Starbucks store located in Buffalo, New York, became Starbucks' only unionized location among 9,000 stores in the United States, joining Workers United of the Service Employees International Union.[220] A second location in Buffalo followed, winning an election certified by the NLRB in January 2022. During this time, the number of stores filing petitions to the NLRB grew to over ten locations, seven of them being outside of the Buffalo area.[221]

The number of Starbucks stores that have decided to vote on unionization has since grown significantly. As of August 2022, 209 Starbucks locations have voted for unionization, with another 45 locations voting against unionization.[222]

Trader Joe's edit

In late July 2022, workers at a Trader Joe's in Hadley, Massachusetts, voted to become the first unionized location in the grocery store chain.[223] Workers at this location chose to create an independent union called Trader Joe's United, and received administrative and legal support from already existing unions, but decided not to become a part of any larger established union.[224] Two locations, one in Boulder, Colorado, and one in Minneapolis, also filed for unionization around this time.[223] On August 12, 2022, the Minneapolis location went on to become the second store to unionize, joining Trader Joe's United.[225] Comparisons to the unionization efforts of Starbucks locations were made following the success of the Minneapolis vote, with workers of the two respective unions both publicly supporting one another.[226]

As of September 23, 2022, workers in Brooklyn, New York, have petitioned for unionization with the NLRB, and would potentially become the third unionized location out of over 500 Trader Joe's stores.

Chipotle edit

In late June 2022, a Chipotle Mexican Grill restaurant in Augusta, Maine, became the chain's first location to petition for a union election, looking to organize independently as Chipotle United, citing issues regarding understaffing as well as crew and food safety.[227] In that same month, Chipotle decided to permanently close the location, leading to workers filing a complaint with the NLRB and accusing Chipotle of union-busting. Chipotle has denied such claims, and have stated that the company was unable to provide enough staffing for the location.[228]

In late August 2022, workers at a Chipotle in Lansing, Michigan, voted to unionize, becoming the fast food chain's first union in the United States.[229] Workers at this location voted 11 to three, opting to unionize with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.[230]

Public-sector unions edit

Labor unions generally ignored government employees because they were controlled mostly by the patronage system used by the political parties before the arrival of civil service. Post Office workers did form unions. The National Association of Letter Carriers started in 1889 and grew quickly. By the mid-1960s it had 175,000 members in 6,400 local branches.[231]

Several competing organizations of postal clerks emerged starting in the 1890s. Merger discussions dragged on for years, until finally the NFPOC, UNMAPOC and others merged in 1961 as the United Federation of Postal Clerks. Another round of mergers in 1971 produced the American Postal Workers Union (APWU). In 2012 the APWU had 330,000 members.[232] The various postal unions did not engage in strikes.

Historian Joseph Slater, says, "Unfortunately for public sector unions, the most searing and enduring image of their history in the first half of the twentieth century was the Boston police strike. The strike was routinely cited by courts and officials through the end of the 1940s."[233] Governor Calvin Coolidge broke the strike and the legislature took control of the police away from city officials.[234]

The police strike chilled union interest in the public sector in the 1920s. The major exception was the emergence of unions of public school teachers in the largest cities; they formed the American Federation of Teachers (AFT), affiliated with the AFL. In suburbs and small cities, the National Education Association (NEA) became active, but it insisted it was not a labor union but a professional organization.[235]

New Deal era edit

In the mid-1930s efforts were made to unionize Works Progress Administration workers, but were opposed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[236] Moe points out that Roosevelt, "an ardent supporter of collective bargaining in the private sector, was opposed to it in the public sector."[237] Roosevelt in 1937 told the nation what the position of his government was: "All Government employees should realize that the process of collective bargaining, as usually understood, cannot be transplanted into the public service.... The very nature and purposes of government make it impossible for administrative officials to represent fully or to bind the employer in mutual discussions with government employee organizations.[238]

"Little New Deal" era edit

Change came in the 1950s. In 1958 New York mayor Robert Wagner, Jr. issued an executive order, called "the little Wagner Act," giving city employees certain bargaining rights, and gave their unions with exclusive representation (that is, the unions alone were legally authorized to speak for all city workers, regardless of whether or not some workers were members.) Management complained but the unions had power in city politics.[239]

By the 1960s and 1970s public-sector unions expanded rapidly to cover teachers, clerks, firemen, police, prison guards and others. In 1962, President John F. Kennedy issued Executive Order 10988, upgrading the status of unions of federal workers.[240]

Recent years edit

After 1960, public sector unions grew rapidly and secured good wages and high pensions for their members. While manufacturing and farming steadily declined, state- and local-government employment quadrupled from 4 million workers in 1950 to 12 million in 1976 and 16.6 million in 2009.[241]

In 2009, the US membership of public sector unions surpassed membership of private sector unions for the first time, at 7.9 million and 7.4 million respectively.[242]

In 2011, states faced a growing fiscal crisis and the Republicans had made major gains in the 2010 elections. Public sector unions came under heavy attack especially in Wisconsin, as well as Indiana, New Jersey and Ohio from conservative Republican legislatures.[243][244][245] Conservative state legislatures tried to drastically reduce the abilities of unions to collectively bargain. Conservatives argued that public unions were too powerful since they helped elect their bosses, and that overly generous pension systems were too heavy a drain on state budgets.[246][247]

A 2023 study published by Oxfam found that the United States ranks among the worst among developed countries for labor protections, including the right to organize, ranking 32 out of 38 among OECD countries.[248][249]

Analysis edit

 
Number of striking workers by year, Bureau of Labor Statistics

According to labor historians, the US has the most violent labor history of any industrialized nation.[250][251][252]

Some historians have attempted to explain why a labor party did not emerge in the United States, in contrast to Western Europe.[253] Historian Gary Gerstle asserts that organized labor in the US was strongest when the fear of communism reached its peak, and the former's decline coincided with the collapse of the latter. Gerstle argues that capitalist elites were much less willing to compromise with the working class once the threat of communism disappeared and neoliberal capitalism became the dominant global system. He emphasizes that this analysis is not meant to rehabilitate communist governments, which he describes as tyrannies.[254]

See also edit

Notes edit

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  • Rosenfeld, Jake (2014). What Unions No Longer Do. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674725115
  • Taft, Philip (1957). The AF of L in the Time of Gompers. online
  • Taft, Philip (1959). The AF Of L From the Death of Gompers to the Merger. online
  • Taillon, Paul Michel. Good, Reliable, White Men: Railroad Brotherhoods, 1877-1917 (U of Illinois Press, 2009).
  • Tomlins, Christopher L (1985). The state and the unions: labor relations, law, and the organized labor movement in America, 1880–1960.
  • Trotter Jr, Joe William. Workers on arrival: Black labor in the making of America (U of California Press, 2019).
  • van der Linden, Marcel. American Labor's Global Ambassadors: The International History of the AFL-CIO during the Cold War (Springer, 2013).
  • Vargas, Zaragosa. Proletarians of the North: A history of Mexican industrial workers in Detroit and the Midwest, 1917-1933 (Univ of California Press, 1993).
  • Wilentz, Sean. Chants democratic: New York City & the rise of the American working class, 1788-1850 (1984) online
  • Zieger, Robert H (1995). The CIO 1935–1955. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 9780807821824.

Historiography edit

  • Barrett, James R (2015). "Making and Unmaking the Working Class: E.P. Thompson and the 'New Labor History' in the United States". Historical Reflections. 41 (1).
  • Faue, Elizabeth. Rethinking the American labor movement (Routledge, 2017).
  • Fink, Leon. In Search of the Working Class: Essays in American Labor History and Political Culture (1984)
  • Fink, Leon. "'Intellectuals' versus 'Workers': Academic Requirements and the Creation of Labor History." American Historical Review 96.2 (1991): 395–421. online
    • Fitzpatrick, Ellen. "Rethinking the Intellectual Origins of American Labor History." American Historical Review 96.2 (1991): 422–428. online
  • Krueger, Thomas A. "American labor historiography, old and new." Journal of social history (1971): 277-285 online.
  • McCoy, Austin (2016). "Bringing the social back: rethinking the declension narrative of twentieth-century US labour history". Social History. 41 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1080/03071022.2015.1108705. S2CID 147426508.
  • Mapes, Kathleen; Storch, Randi (2016). "The Making and Remaking of a Labor Historian: Interview with James R. Barrett". Labor: Studies in Working-Class History of the Americas. 13 (2): 63–79. doi:10.1215/15476715-3460852. S2CID 147867327.
  • Pearson, Chad. "Twentieth century US labor history: Pedagogy, politics, and controversies Part 1" History Compass (Dec 2017) 15#2 doi:10.1111/hic3.12433 abstract
  • Shelton, Jon. "Labor and Working Class—A Historiographical Survey." in The Routledge History of the Twentieth-Century United States (Routledge, 2018) pp. 149–160.
  • Tomlins, Christopher (2013). "The State, the Unions, and the critical synthesis in labor law history: a 25-year retrospect". Labor History. 54 (2): 208–221. doi:10.1080/0023656X.2013.773148. S2CID 145335573.
  • Walkowitz, Daniel J.; Haverty-Stacke, Donna T., eds. (2010). Rethinking U.S. Labor History: Essays on the Working-Class Experience, 1756-2009. New York: Continuum. ISBN 9781441145758.
  • Zieger, Robert H. "Workers and scholars: Recent trends in American labor historiography." Labor History 13#2 (1972): 245–266. https://doi.org/10.1080/00236567208584204
  • Kessler-Harris, Alice. "Labor Movement in the United States." Shalvi/Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women. 31 December 1999. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on October 31, 2023) <https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/labor-movement-in-united-states>.
  • Herberg, Will. “Jewish Labor Movement in the United States: World War I to the Present.” Industrial and Labor Relations Review 6, no. 1 (1952): 44–66. https://doi.org/10.2307/2518609. https://www.jstor.org/stable/2518609?searchText=jewish+women+labor+movement&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Djewish%2Bwomen%2Blabor%2Bmovement&ab_segments=0%2Fbasic_search_gsv2%2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3A56697a756895c03441cb8dc8c51f751a
  • Yellowitz, Irwin. “Jewish Immigrants and the American Labor Movement, 1900–1920.” American Jewish History 71, no. 2 (1981): 188–217. JSTOR 23882031. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23882031?searchText=jewish+women+labor+movement&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Djewish%2Bwomen%2Blabor%2Bmovement&ab_segments=0%2Fbasic_search_gsv2%2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3Ab7c8a3ccea63c6b4f158ba3af8917c97
  • Hardman, J. B. S. “The Jewish Labor Movement in the United States: Jewish and Non-Jewish Influences.” American Jewish Historical Quarterly 52, no. 2 (1962): 98–132. JSTOR 23873714. https://www.jstor.org/stable/23873714?searchText=jewish+women+labor+movement&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3FQuery%3Djewish%2Bwomen%2Blabor%2Bmovement&ab_segments=0%2Fbasic_search_gsv2%2Fcontrol&refreqid=fastly-default%3A6590fd3b322530947636d947a810f7b0
  • Antler, Joyce. "The History of Jewish Women in the United States." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History. 24 May. 2023; Accessed 1 Nov. 2023. https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-1011. https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-1011?rskey=rkv7s1&result=1#acrefore-9780199329175-e-1011-div1-5
  • Walkowitz, Daniel. "The Jewish Working Class in America." Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History. 29 Nov. 2021; Accessed 1 Nov. 2023. https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-935. https://oxfordre.com/americanhistory/display/10.1093/acrefore/9780199329175.001.0001/acrefore-9780199329175-e-935?rskey=ysL3Ra&result=2#acrefore-9780199329175-e-935-div2-6

Primary sources edit

  • Dubofsky, Melvyn, and Joseph McCartin, eds. American Labor: A Documentary Collection (Palgrave Macmillan US), 2004 312pp
  • Rees, Jonathan, and Z. S. Pollack, eds. The Voice of the People: Primary Sources on the History of American Labor, Industrial Relations, and Working-Class Culture (2004), 264pp
  • Gompers, Samuel. Seventy Years of Life and Labor (1925, 1985 reprint) online
  • Gompers, Samuel. The Samuel Gompers Papers (1986– ) definitive multivolume edition of all important letters to and from Gompers. 9 volumes have been completed to 1917. The index is online September 23, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  • Powderly, Terence Vincent. Thirty years of labor, 1859–1889 (1890, reprint 1967). online

External links edit

  •   Media related to Labor history of the United States at Wikimedia Commons
  • Labor History Links

labor, history, united, states, nature, power, organized, labor, united, states, outcome, historical, tensions, among, counter, acting, forces, involving, workplace, rights, wages, working, hours, political, expression, labor, laws, other, working, conditions,. The nature and power of organized labor in the United States is the outcome of historical tensions among counter acting forces involving workplace rights wages working hours political expression labor laws and other working conditions Organized unions and their umbrella labor federations such as the AFL CIO and citywide federations have competed evolved merged and split against a backdrop of changing values and priorities and periodic federal government intervention In most industrial nations the labor movement sponsored its own political parties with the US as a conspicuous exception Both major American parties vied for union votes with the Democratic Party usually much more successful Labor unions became a central element of the New Deal coalition that dominated national politics from the 1930s into the mid 1960s during the Fifth Party System 1 Liberal Republicans who supported unions in the Northeast lost power after 1964 2 3 In recent decades an enduring alliance was formed between labor unions and the Democrats whereas the Republican Party has become hostile to unions and collective bargaining rights 4 The history of organized labor has been a specialty of scholars since the 1890s and has produced a large amount of scholarly literature focused on the structure of organized unions In the 1960s as social history gained popularity a new emphasis emerged on the history of workers including unorganized workers and with special regard to gender and race This is called the new labor history Much scholarship has attempted to bring the social history perspectives into the study of organized labor 5 By most measures the strength of organized labor has declined in the United States over recent decades 6 Contents 1 Organized labor prior to 1900 1 1 Legality and Hunt 1842 1 2 Early federations 1 3 Railroad brotherhoods 1 4 Knights of Labor 1 5 American Federation of Labor 1 6 Western Federation of Miners 1 7 Pullman Strike 2 Organized labor 1900 1920 2 1 Coal strikes 1900 1902 2 2 Women s Trade Union League 2 3 Industrial Workers of the World 2 4 Government and labor 2 5 Colorado Coalfield War 2 6 World War I 2 6 1 Women in the labor force during WWI 2 6 2 Women of Color in 20th Century Labor Movements 2 7 Strikes of 1919 2 7 1 Coal strike of 1919 2 7 2 Women telephone operators win strike in 1919 3 Weakness of organized labor 1920 1929 3 1 Battle of Blair Mountain 3 2 New England Textile Strike of 1922 3 3 Great Railroad Strike of 1922 4 Organized labor 1929 1955 4 1 The Great Depression and organized labor 4 2 The Norris La Guardia Anti Injunction Act of 1932 4 3 FDR and the National Industrial Recovery Act 4 4 The American Federation of Labor craft unionism vs industrial unionism 4 5 John L Lewis and the CIO 4 6 Union upsurge in World War II 4 7 Women take new jobs in World War II 4 8 Walter Reuther and UAW 4 9 PAC and politics of 1940s 4 9 1 Strike wave of 1945 4 10 Taft Hartley Act 4 11 Anti communism 5 Union decline 1955 2016 5 1 AFL and CIO merger 1955 5 2 Conservative attacks 5 3 1960s Liberal achievement in Civil Rights and backlash 5 4 Hispanics 5 4 1 Chavez and the and United Farm Workers 5 4 2 Hotels 5 5 Reagan era 1980s 5 6 Decline of private sector unions 6 Rise in union activity 2016 present 6 1 Teacher strikes 6 2 Unionization in the high tech sector 6 3 Hollywood labor disputes 2023 6 4 Unionization in the food service and grocery industries 6 4 1 Starbucks 6 4 2 Trader Joe s 6 4 3 Chipotle 7 Public sector unions 7 1 New Deal era 7 2 Little New Deal era 7 3 Recent years 8 Analysis 9 See also 10 Notes 11 Bibliography 11 1 Surveys 11 2 Specialized studies 11 3 Historiography 11 4 Primary sources 12 External linksOrganized labor prior to 1900 editThe history of labor disputes in America substantially precedes the Revolutionary period In 1636 for instance there was a fishermen s strike on an island off the coast of Maine and in 1677 twelve carmen were fined for going on strike in New York City 7 However most instances of labor unrest during the colonial period were temporary and isolated and rarely resulted in the formation of permanent groups of laborers for negotiation purposes Little legal recourse was available to those injured by the unrest because strikes were not typically considered illegal The only known case of criminal prosecution of workers in the colonial era occurred as a result of a carpenters strike in Savannah Georgia in 1746 7 Legality and Hunt 1842 edit Main article Commonwealth v Hunt By the early 19th century the career path for most artisans still involved apprenticeship under a master followed by moving into independent production 8 However over the course of the Industrial Revolution this model rapidly changed particularly in the major metropolitan areas For instance in Boston in 1790 the vast majority of the 1 300 artisans in the city described themselves as master workman By 1815 journeymen workers without independent means of production had displaced these masters as the majority By that time journeymen also outnumbered masters in New York City and Philadelphia 9 This shift occurred as a result of large scale transatlantic and rural urban migration Migration into the coastal cities created a larger population of potential laborers which in turn allowed controllers of capital to invest in labor intensive enterprises on a larger scale Craft workers found that these changes launched them into competition with each other to a degree that they had not experienced previously which limited their opportunities and created substantial risks of downward mobility that had not existed prior to that time 8 These conditions led to the first labor combination cases in America Over the first half of the 19th century there are twenty three known cases of indictment and prosecution for criminal conspiracy taking place in six states Pennsylvania Maryland New York Louisiana Massachusetts and Virginia 10 The central question in these cases was invariably whether workmen in combination would be permitted to use their collective bargaining power to obtain benefits increased wages decreased hours or improved conditions which were beyond their ability to obtain as individuals The cases overwhelmingly resulted in convictions However in most instances the plaintiffs desire was to establish favorable precedent not to impose harsh penalties and the fines were typically modest 11 One of the central themes of the cases prior to the landmark decision in Commonwealth v Hunt which settled the legality of unions was the applicability of the English common law in post revolutionary America Whether the English common law applied and in particular whether the common law notion that a conspiracy to raise wages was illegal applied was frequently the subject of debate between the defense and the prosecution 12 For instance in Commonwealth v Pullis a case in 1806 against a combination of journeymen cordwainers in Philadelphia for conspiracy to raise their wages the defense attorneys referred to the common law as arbitrary and unknowable and instead praised the legislature as the embodiment of the democratic promise of the revolution 13 In ruling that a combination to raise wages was per se illegal Recorder Moses Levy strongly disagreed writing that t he acts of the legislature form but a small part of that code from which the citizen is to learn his duties i t is in the volumes of the common law we are to seek for information in the far greater number as well as the most important causes that come before our tribunals 13 As a result of the spate of convictions against combinations of laborers the typical narrative of early American labor law states that prior to Hunt in Massachusetts in 1842 peaceable combinations of workingmen to raise wages shorten hours or ensure employment were illegal in the United States as they had been under English common law 12 In England criminal conspiracy laws were first held to include combinations in restraint of trade in the Court of Star Chamber early in the 17th century 14 The precedent was solidified in 1721 by R v Journeymen Tailors of Cambridge which found tailors guilty of a conspiracy to raise wages 15 Leonard Levy went so far as to refer to Hunt as the Magna Carta of American trade unionism 16 illustrating its perceived standing as the major point of divergence in the American and English legal treatment of unions which removed the stigma of criminality from labor organizations 16 However case law in America prior to Hunt was mixed Pullis was actually unusual in strictly following the English common law and holding that a combination to raise wages was by itself illegal More often combination cases prior to Hunt did not hold that unions were illegal per se but rather found some other justification for a conviction 17 After Pullis in 1806 eighteen other prosecutions of laborers for conspiracies followed within the next three decades However only one such case People v Fisher also held that a combination for the purpose of raising wages was illegal Several other cases held that the methods used by the unions rather than the unions themselves were illegal 17 For instance in People v Melvin cordwainers were again convicted of a conspiracy to raise wages Unlike in Pullis however the court held that the combination s existence itself was not unlawful but nevertheless reached a conviction because the cordwainers had refused to work for any master who paid lower wages or with any laborer who accepted lower wages than what the combination had stipulated The court held that methods used to obtain higher wages would be unlawful if they were judged to be deleterious to the general welfare of the community 18 Commonwealth v Morrow continued to refine this standard stating that an agreement of two or more to the prejudice of the rights of others or of society would be illegal 19 Another line of cases led by Justice John Gibson of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania s decision in Commonwealth v Carlisle held that motive of the combination rather than simply its existence was the key to illegality Gibson wrote Where the act is lawful for an individual it can be the subject of a conspiracy when done in concert only where there is a direct intention that injury shall result from it 18 Still other courts rejected Pullis rule of per se illegality in favor of a rule that asked whether the combination was a but for cause of injury Thus as economist Edwin Witte stated The doctrine that a combination to raise wages is illegal was allowed to die by common consent No leading case was required for its overthrow 20 Nevertheless while Hunt was not the first case to hold that labor combinations were legal it was the first to do so explicitly and in clear terms Early federations edit Main articles National Labor Union and Order of the Knights of St Crispin The Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen now part of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters was founded in May 1863 21 The National Labor Union NLU founded in 1866 was the first national labor federation in the United States It was dissolved in 1872 The regional Order of the Knights of St Crispin was founded in the northeast in 1867 and claimed 50 000 members by 1870 by far the largest union in the country A closely associated union of women the Daughters of St Crispin formed in 1870 In 1879 the Knights formally admitted women who by 1886 comprised 10 percent of the union s membership 22 but it was poorly organized and soon declined They fought encroachments of machinery and unskilled labor on autonomy of skilled shoe workers One provision in the Crispin constitution explicitly sought to limit the entry of green hands into the trade but this failed because the new machines could be operated by semi skilled workers and produce more shoes than hand sewing 23 Railroad brotherhoods edit nbsp The Great Southwest Railroad Strike of 1886 was a trade union strike involving more than 200 000 workers 24 With the rapid growth and consolidation of large railroad systems after 1870 union organizations sprang up covering the entire nation By 1901 17 major railway brotherhoods were in operation they generally worked amicably with management which recognized their usefulness 25 Key unions included the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers BLE Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Division BMWED the Order of Railway Conductors the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen 26 Their main goal was building insurance and medical packages for their members as well as negotiating work rules such as those involving seniority and grievance procedures 27 They were not members of the AFL and fought off more radical rivals such as the Knights of Labor in the 1880s and the American Railroad Union in the 1890s They consolidated their power in 1916 after threatening a national strike by securing the Adamson Act a federal law that provided 10 hours pay for an eight hour day At the end of World War I they promoted nationalization of the railroads and conducted a national strike in 1919 Both programs failed and the brotherhoods were largely stagnant in the 1920s They generally were independent politically but supported the third party campaign of Robert M La Follette in 1924 28 Knights of Labor edit Main article Knights of Labor The first effective labor organization that was more than regional in membership and influence was the Knights of Labor organized in 1869 The Knights believed in the unity of the interests of all producing groups and sought to enlist in their ranks not only all laborers but everyone who could be truly classified as a producer The acceptance of all producers led to explosive growth after 1880 Under the leadership of Terence V Powderly they championed a variety of causes sometimes through political or cooperative ventures 29 Powderly hoped to gain their ends through politics and education rather than through economic coercion The Knights were especially successful in developing a working class culture involving women families sports and leisure activities and educational projects for the membership The Knights strongly promoted their version of republicanism that stressed the centrality of free labor preaching harmony and cooperation among producers as opposed to parasites and speculators 29 One of the earliest railroad strikes was also one of the most successful In 1885 the Knights of Labor led railroad workers to victory against Jay Gould and his entire Southwestern Railway system In early 1886 the Knights were trying to coordinate 1 400 strikes involving over 600 000 workers spread over much of the country The tempo had doubled over 1885 and involved peaceful as well as violent confrontations in many sectors such as railroads street railroads and coal mining with demands usually focused on the eight hour day Suddenly it all collapsed largely because the Knights were unable to handle so much on their plate at once and because they took a smashing blow in the aftermath of the Haymarket Riot in May 1886 in Chicago 30 The Haymarket Riot started as a strike organized by the Knights at the McCormick Reaper Factory in Chicago Along with the McCormick strike on May 1 80 000 mostly immigrant workers led a general strike in Chicago along with 340 000 workers in the rest of the United States Attending the strike were a rising movement of armed anarchists formed as a result of the police violence of the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 While beginning relatively peacefully police and strikers began to clash 31 As strikers rallied against the McCormick plant a team of political anarchists who were not Knights tried to piggyback support among striking Knights workers A bomb exploded as police were dispersing a peaceful rally killing seven policemen and wounding many others The anarchists who had built the bomb were blamed Their spectacular trial gained national attention The Knights of Labor were seriously injured by the false accusation that the Knights promoted anarchistic violence Some Knights locals transferred to the less radical and more respectable AFL unions or railroad brotherhoods 32 American Federation of Labor edit Main article American Federation of Labor nbsp The American Federation of Labor union label c 1900 nbsp Samuel Gompers in 1894 he was the AFL leader 1886 1924 The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions began in 1881 under the leadership of Samuel Gompers Like the National Labor Union it was a federation of different unions and did not directly enroll workers Its original goals were to encourage the formation of trade unions and to obtain legislation such as prohibition of child labor a national eight hour day and exclusion of Chinese and other foreign contract workers 33 34 Strikes organized by labor unions became routine events by the 1880s There were 37 000 strikes between 1881 and 1905 By far the largest number were in the building trades followed far behind by coal miners The main goal was control of working conditions setting uniform wage scales protesting the firing of a member and settling which rival union was in control Most strikes were of very short duration In times of depression strikes were more violent but less successful because the company was losing money anyway They were successful in times of prosperity when the company was losing profits and wanted to settle quickly 35 The Federation made some efforts to obtain favorable legislation but had little success in organizing or chartering new unions It came out in support of the proposal traditionally attributed to Peter J McGuire of the Carpenters Union for a national Labor Day holiday on the first Monday in September It also threw itself behind the eight hour movement which sought to limit the workday by either legislation or union negotiation 36 In 1886 as the relations between the trade union movement and the Knights of Labor worsened McGuire and other union leaders called for a convention to be held at Columbus Ohio on December 8 The Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions merged with the new organization known as the American Federation of Labor or AFL formed at that convention 37 The AFL was formed in large part because of the dissatisfaction of many trade union leaders with the Knights of Labor an organization that contained many trade unions and that had played a leading role in some of the largest strikes of the era The new AFL distinguished itself from the Knights by emphasizing the autonomy of each trade union affiliated with it and limiting membership to workers and organizations made up of workers unlike the Knights which because of its producerist focus welcomed some who were not wage workers The AFL grew steadily in the late 19th century while the Knights all but disappeared Although Gompers at first advocated something like industrial unionism he retreated from that in the face of opposition from the craft unions that made up most of the AFL The unions of the AFL were composed primarily of skilled men unskilled workers African Americans and women were generally excluded The AFL saw women as threatening the jobs of men since they often worked for lower wages 38 Western Federation of Miners edit Main article Western Federation of Miners The Western Federation of Miners WFM was created in 1893 Frequently in competition with the American Federation of Labor the WFM spawned new federations including the Western Labor Union later renamed to the American Labor Union The WFM took a conservative turn in the aftermath of the Colorado Labor Wars and the trials of its president Charles Moyer and its secretary treasurer Big Bill Haywood for the conspiratorial assassination of Idaho s former governor Although both were found innocent the WFM headed by Moyer separated itself from the Industrial Workers of the World IWW launched by Haywood and other labor radicals socialists and anarchists in 1905 just a few years after that organization s founding convention In 1916 the WFM became the International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers which was eventually absorbed by the United Steelworkers of America 39 Pullman Strike edit Main article Pullman Strike During the major economic depression of the early 1890s the Pullman Palace Car Company cut wages in its factories Discontented workers joined the American Railway Union ARU led by Eugene V Debs which supported their strike by launching a boycott of all Pullman cars on all railroads ARU members across the nation refused to switch Pullman cars onto trains When these switchmen were disciplined the entire ARU struck the railroads on June 26 1894 Within four days 125 000 workers on twenty nine railroads had people quit work rather than handle Pullman cars 40 Strikers and their supporters also engaged in riots and sabotage 41 42 The railroads were able to get Edwin Walker general counsel for the Chicago Milwaukee and St Paul Railway appointed as a special federal attorney with responsibility for dealing with the strike Walker went to federal court and obtained an injunction barring union leaders from supporting the boycott in any way The court injunction was based on the Sherman Anti Trust Act which 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 other leaders of the ARU ignored the injunction and federal troops were called into action 43 The strike was broken up by United States Marshals and some 2 000 United States Army troops commanded by Nelson Miles sent in by President Grover Cleveland on the premise that the strike interfered with the delivery of US Mail During the course of the strike 13 strikers were killed and 57 were wounded An estimated 340 000 worth of property damage occurred during the strike Debs went to prison for six months for violating the federal court order and the ARU disintegrated Organized labor 1900 1920 edit nbsp New York City shirtwaist workers on strike taking a lunch break Australian historian Peter Shergold confirms the findings of many scholars who that the standard of living for US industrial workers was higher than in Europe He compares wages and the standard of living in Pittsburgh with Birmingham England He finds that after taking into account the cost of living which was 65 percent higher in the US the standard of living of unskilled workers was about the same in the two cities while skilled workers had about twice as high a standard of living The American advantage grew over time from 1890 to 1914 and there was a heavy steady flow of skilled workers from Britain to industrial America 44 Shergold revealed that skilled Americans did earn higher wages than the British yet unskilled workers did not while Americans worked longer hours with a greater chance of injury and had fewer social services 44 American industry had the highest rate of accidents in the world 45 46 The US was also the only industrial power to have no workman s compensation program in place to support injured workers 46 From 1860 to 1900 the wealthiest 2 percent of American households owned more than a third of the nation s wealth while the top 10 percent owned roughly three quarters of it 47 The bottom 40 percent had no wealth at all 48 In terms of property the wealthiest 1 percent owned 51 percent while the bottom 44 percent claimed 1 1 percent 48 Historian Howard Zinn argues that this disparity along with precarious working and living conditions for the working classes prompted the rise of populist anarchist and socialist movements 49 50 French economist Thomas Piketty notes that economists during this time such as Willford I King were concerned that the United States was becoming increasingly inegalitarian to the point of becoming like old Europe and further and further away from its original pioneering ideal 51 Nationwide from 1890 to 1914 the unionized wages in manufacturing rose from 17 63 a week to 21 37 and the average work week fell from 54 4 to 48 8 hours a week The pay for all factory workers was 11 94 and 15 84 because unions reached only the more skilled factory workers 52 Coal strikes 1900 1902 edit Main article Coal strike of 1902 The United Mine Workers was successful in its strike against soft coal bituminous mines in the Midwest in 1900 but its strike against the hard coal anthracite mines of Pennsylvania turned into a national political crisis in 1902 President Theodore Roosevelt brokered a compromise solution that kept the flow of coal going and higher wages and shorter hours but did not include recognition of the union as a bargaining agent 53 Women s Trade Union League edit Main article Women s Trade Union LeagueThe Women s Trade Union League formed in 1903 was the first labor organization dedicated to helping working women It did not organize them into locals its goal was to support the AFL and encourage more women to join labor unions It was composed of both working women and middle class reformers and provided financial assistance moral support and training in work skills and social refinement for blue collar women Most active in 1907 1922 under Margaret Dreier Robins it publicized the cause and lobbied for minimum wages and restrictions on hours of work and child labor Also under Dreier s leadership they were able to pass crucial legislation for wage workers and establish new safety regulations 54 55 56 In 1911 a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in Manhattan New York City Due to the lack of fire safety measures in the building 146 primarily female workers were killed in the incident This incident led to a movement to increase safety measures in factories It also was an opportunity for the Women s Trade Union League to open conversation for the conditions of women s workplaces in the labor movement 57 Industrial Workers of the World edit Main article Industrial Workers of the World nbsp Flyer distributed in Lawrence Massachusetts September 1912 The Lawrence textile strike was a strike of immigrant workers The Industrial Workers of the World IWW whose members became known as Wobblies was founded in Chicago in 1905 by a group of about 30 labor radicals Their most prominent leader was William Big Bill Haywood 58 The IWW pioneered creative tactics and organized along the lines of industrial unionism rather than craft unionism in fact they went even further pursuing the goal of One Big Union and the abolition of the wage system Many though not all Wobblies favored anarcho syndicalism 59 Much of the IWW s organizing took place in the West and most of its early members were miners lumbermen cannery and dock workers In 1912 the IWW organized a strike of more than twenty thousand textile workers and by 1917 the Agricultural Workers Organization AWO of the IWW claimed a hundred thousand itinerant farm workers in the heartland of North America 60 Eventually the concept of One Big Union spread from dock workers to maritime workers and thus was communicated to many different parts of the world Dedicated to workplace and economic democracy the IWW allowed men and women as members and organized workers of all races and nationalities without regard to current employment status At its peak it had 150 000 members with 200 000 membership cards issued between 1905 and 1916 61 but it was fiercely repressed during and especially after World War I with many citation needed of its members killed about 10 000 citation needed organizers imprisoned and thousands more deported as foreign agitators In 1927 the IWW also led a successful Colorado general coal strike for better conditions 62 The IWW proved that unskilled workers could be organized The IWW exists today but its most significant impact was during its first two decades of existence Government and labor edit See also National Civic Federation Injunction and Norris La Guardia Act of 1932 In 1908 the US Supreme Court decided Loewe v Lawlor the Danbury Hatters Case In 1902 the Hatters Union instituted a nationwide boycott of the hats made by a nonunion company in Connecticut Owner Dietrich Loewe brought suit against the union for unlawful combinations to restrain trade in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act The Court ruled that the union was subject to an injunction and liable for the payment of triple damages In 1915 Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes speaking for the Court again decided in favor of Loewe upholding a lower federal court ruling ordering the union to pay damages of 252 130 The cost of lawyers had already exceeded 100 000 paid by the AFL This was not a typical case in which a few union leaders were punished with short terms in jail specifically the life savings of several hundreds of the members were attached The lower court ruling established a major precedent and became a serious issue for the unions The Clayton Act of 1914 presumably exempted unions from the antitrust prohibition and established for the first time the Congressional principle that the labor of a human being is not a commodity or article of commerce However judicial interpretation so weakened it that prosecutions of labor under the antitrust acts continued until the enactment of the Norris La Guardia Act in 1932 Loewe v Lawlor 208 U S 274 1908 235 U S 522 1915 State legislation 1912 1918 36 states adopted the principle of workmen s compensation for all industrial accidents Also prohibition of the use of an industrial poison several states require one day s rest in seven the beginning of effective prohibition of night work of maximum limits upon the length of the working day and of minimum wage laws for women Colorado Coalfield War edit Main article Colorado Coalfield War On 23 September 1913 the United Mine Workers of America declared a strike against the Rockefeller owned Colorado Fuel and Iron in what is better known as the Colorado Coalfield War The peak of the violence came after months of back and forth murders that culminated in the 20 April 1914 Ludlow Massacre that killed over a dozen women and children when Colorado National Guard opened fire on a striker encampment at Ludlow The strike is considered the deadliest labor unrest in American history 63 World War I edit Main article United States home front during World War I Samuel Gompers and nearly all labor unions were strong supporters of the war effort They used their leverage to gain recognition and higher wages 64 They minimized strikes as wages soared and full employment was reached To keep factories running smoothly Wilson established the National War Labor Board in 1918 which forced management to negotiate with existing unions 65 The AFL unions and the railway brotherhoods strongly encouraged their young men to enlist in the United States Armed Forces They fiercely opposed efforts to reduce recruiting and slow war production by the anti war IWW and left wing Socialists President Wilson appointed Gompers to the powerful Council of National Defense where he set up the War Committee on Labor The AFL membership soared to 2 4 million in 1917 Anti war socialists controlled the IWW which fought against the war effort and was in turn shut down by legal action of the federal government 66 Women in the labor force during WWI edit During WWI large numbers of women were recruited into jobs that had either been vacated by men who had gone to fight in the war or had been created as part of the war effort The high demand for weapons and the overall wartime situation resulted in munitions factories collectively becoming the largest employer of American women by 1918 67 While there was initial resistance to hiring women for jobs traditionally held by men the war made the need for labor so urgent that women were hired in large numbers and the government even actively promoted the employment of women in war related industries through recruitment drives As a result women not only began working in heavy industry but also took other jobs traditionally reserved solely for men such as railway guards ticket collectors bus and tram conductors postal workers police officers firefighters and clerks 68 World War I saw women taking traditionally men s jobs in large numbers for the first time in American history 67 Many women worked on the assembly lines of factories producing trucks and munitions while department stores employed African American women as elevator operators and cafeteria waitresses for the first time The Food Administration helped housewives prepare more nutritious meals with less waste and with optimum use of the foods available 68 Morale of women remained high as millions joined the Red Cross as volunteers to help soldiers and their families and with rare exceptions women did not protest the draft 69 The United States Department of Labor created a Women in Industry group headed by prominent labor researcher and social scientist Mary van Kleeck 70 This group helped develop standards for women who were working in industries connected to the war alongside the War Labor Policies Board of which van Kleeck was also a member After the war the Women in Industry Service group developed into the US Women s Bureau headed by Mary Anderson 71 Women of Color in 20th Century Labor Movements edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Women of color played a significant role in the American labor movement of the 20th century helping to advance workers rights in a variety of workplace environments including fields factories and homes They used instruments including labor unions strikes and legislative campaigning to improve their working conditions pay and hours These women took part in neighborhood projects addressing labor rights in addition to being involved in the women s suffrage and civil rights movements Their principal battle was for equal treatment in society A particularly famous leader of the African American community was Ella Baker who helped organize the Young Negroes Cooperative League in the early 1930s a group that was help pool community resources and provide cheaper goods and services to members She later cofounded In Friendship an organization that raised money for the civil rights movement She went on to help form the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Two other important leaders Dorothy Height who worked to help improve opportunities for African American women and activist Dolores Huerta who lobbied on behalf of migrant farmers and eventually founded the United Farm Workers of America were also essential in promoting social justice and fair labor standards Their combined efforts made a big difference in creating a more diverse and equal workplace nbsp Picture of Rose Schneiderman Jewish Women in 20th Century Labor MovementsOne must also recognize the significant role Jewish women played in the American labor movement of the 20th century Jewish mass immigration came to the United States in the early twentieth century just as the ready made clothing industry skyrocketed In the Old Country most Jewish women were married off as quickly as possible in America that was no longer an option Families counted on women s wages sometimes sending that money back to their families in Europe or using it to pay the rent buy food and clothing bring relatives from Europe to America or keep the men in their family in school Most women learned to sew in the workshops of the Old Country and they utilized this skill to help them find jobs in the United States Unfortunately women who worked in garment factories were often subject to sexual harassment unsafe conditions exploitation and wage discrimination And yet as Jews who emerged from a left wing progressive tradition these female garment workers nurtured a commitment to social justice one that served as the catalyst for the labor organizing that these women later led A number of unions were created in the Lower East Side during the beginning of the 20th century Most were organized by the International Ladies Garment Workers Union an organization that was founded in 1900 and while initially founded by and only accessible to men went on to be run by many Jewish women who advocated for education as a means of shaping a society that could support the working class Strikes in the women s garment industry occurred almost yearly in one city or another A notable example took place in 1909 and was led by Rose Schneiderman Schneiderman worked as a cap maker in New York City and after encountering poor working conditions decided to organize a local union of the United Cloth and Cap Makers in New York City Soon after Schneiderman began serving as vice president of the New York Women s Trade Union League where she organized the Uprising of the 20 000 a landmark garment workers strike that took place from 1909 to 1910 and eventually led to basic improvements for workers Strikes of 1919 edit Main article US Strike wave of 1919See also First Red Scare and Red SummerThis article is missing information about the broader events amp cause of the strikes While the AFL did call some strikes many independent strikes occurred the AFL was not the cause it was the end of the war Please expand the article to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page August 2023 In 1919 the AFL tried to make their gains permanent and called a series of major strikes in meat steel 72 and many other industries Management counterattacked claiming that key strikes were run by Communists intent on destroying capitalism 73 Nearly all the strikes ultimately failed dubious discuss forcing unions back to positions similar to those around 1910 74 Coal strike of 1919 edit Main article UMW Coal Strike of 1919 nbsp Keeping Warm the Los Angeles Times a conservative newspaper demands federal action to stop the coal strike November 22 1919 The United Mine Workers under John L Lewis called a strike for November 1 1919 in all soft bituminous coal fields 75 They had agreed to a wage agreement to run until the end of World War I and now sought to make permanent their wartime gains US Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer invoked the Lever Act a wartime measure that made it a crime to interfere with the production or transportation of necessities Ignoring the court order 400 000 coal workers walked out The coal operators played the radical card saying Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky had ordered the strike and were financing it and some of the press echoed that language 76 Lewis facing criminal charges and sensitive to the propaganda campaign withdrew his strike call Lewis did not fully control the faction ridden UAW and many locals ignored his call 77 As the strike dragged on into its third week supplies of the nation s main fuel were running low and the public called for ever stronger government action Final agreement came after five weeks with the miners getting a 14 percent raise 78 79 Women telephone operators win strike in 1919 edit One important strike was won by labor Moved to action by the rising cost of living the president of the Boston Telephone Operator s Union Julia O Connor asked for higher wages from the New England Telephone Company Wages of operators averaged a third less than women in manufacturing 80 In April 9 000 women operators in New England went on strike shutting down most telephone service The company hired college students as strikebreakers but they came under violent attack by men supporting the strikers In a few days a settlement was reached giving higher wages After the success O Connor began a national campaign to organize women operators 80 Weakness of organized labor 1920 1929 editThe 1920s marked a period of sharp decline for the labor movement Union membership and activities fell sharply due to many factors including generalized economic prosperity a lack of leadership within the movement and anti union sentiments from employers governments and the general population Labor unions were much less able to organize strikes In 1919 more than 4 million workers or 21 percent of the labor force participated in about 3 600 strikes In contrast 1929 witnessed about 289 000 workers or 1 2 percent of the labor force stage only 900 strikes 81 The aftermath of the 1910 Los Angeles Times Bombing also contributed to a widespread decline in unionization The bombing one of dozens of terrorist sabotage events nationwide organized by members of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers killed 21 and injured over 100 The guilty verdicts devastated the American labor movement virtually paralyzing it until the New Deal 82 After a short recession in 1920 the 1920s was a generally prosperous decade outside of farming and coal mining The GNP growth 1921 29 was a very strong 6 0 percent double the long term average of about 3 percent 83 Real annual earnings in 1914 dollars for all employees deducting for unemployment was 566 in 1921 and 793 in 1929 a real gain of 40 percent 84 The economic prosperity of the decade led to stable prices eliminating one major incentive to join unions 85 Unemployment fell from 11 7 percent in 1921 to 2 4 percent in 1923 and remained in the range of 2 to 5 percent until 1930 86 The 1920s also saw a lack of strong leadership within the labor movement Samuel Gompers of the American Federation of Labor died in 1924 after serving as the organization s president for 37 years Observers said successor William Green who was the secretary treasurer of the United Mine Workers lacked the aggressiveness and the imagination of the AFL s first president 87 The AFL was down to less than 3 million members in 1925 after hitting a peak of 4 million members in 1920 88 Employers across the nation led a successful campaign against unions known as the American Plan which sought to depict unions as alien to the nation s individualistic spirit 89 In addition some employers like the National Association of Manufacturers used Red Scare tactics to discredit unionism by linking them to subversive activities 90 US courts were less hospitable to union activities during the 1920s than in the past In this decade corporations used twice as many court injunctions against strikes than any comparable period In addition the practice of forcing employees by threat of termination to sign yellow dog contracts that said they would not join a union was not outlawed until 1932 90 Although the labor movement fell in prominence during the 1920s the Great Depression would ultimately bring it back to life Battle of Blair Mountain edit Main article Battle of Blair Mountain The Battle of Blair Mountain August 25 1921 September 2 1921 was the largest labor uprising in United States history The conflict occurred in Logan County West Virginia as part of the Coal Wars a series of early 20th century labor disputes in Appalachia For five days from late August to early September 1921 some 10 000 armed coal miners confronted 3 000 lawmen and strikebreakers recruited and backed by coal mine operators during the miners attempt to unionize the southwestern West Virginia coalfields The battle ended after the United States Army represented by the West Virginia Army National Guard intervened by presidential order and the miners many of whom were veterans declined to shoot at the soldiers In the short term the battle was an overwhelming victory for coal industry owners and management United Mine Workers of America membership plummeted from more than 50 000 miners to approximately 10 000 over the next several years New England Textile Strike of 1922 edit Main article 1922 New England Textile Strike The New England Textile strike was widespread textile mill strike throughout New England starting on January 23 Anywhere from 40 000 to 68 000 workers struck and it lasted until around November for most mills The immediate cause was a proposal for a 20 wage cut and increased working hours The strike led to a reversal of the wage cut for most workers 91 92 93 Great Railroad Strike of 1922 edit Main article Great Railroad Strike of 1922 The Great Railroad Strike of 1922 a nationwide railroad shop workers strike began on July 1 The immediate cause of the strike was the Railroad Labor Board s announcement that hourly wages for railway repair and maintenance workers would be cut by seven cents on July 1 This cut which represented an average 12 percent wage decrease for the affected workers prompted a shop workers vote on whether or not to strike The operators union did not join in the strike and the railroads employed strikebreakers to fill three fourths of the roughly 400 000 vacated positions increasing hostilities between the railroads and the striking workers 94 On September 1 a federal judge issued the sweeping Daugherty Injunction against striking assembling and picketing Unions bitterly resented the injunction a few sympathy strikes shut down some railroads completely The strike eventually died out as many shopmen made deals with the railroads on the local level The often unpalatable concessions coupled with memories of the violence and tension during the strike soured relations between the railroads and the shopmen for years 94 Organized labor 1929 1955 edit nbsp Open battle between striking teamsters armed with pipes and the police in the streets of Minneapolis in June 1934 Further information Strikes in the United States in the 1930s The Great Depression and organized labor edit Main article Great Depression in the United States The stock market crashed in October 1929 and ushered in the Great Depression By the winter of 1932 33 the economy was so perilous that the unemployment rate hit the 25 percent mark 95 Unions lost members during this time because laborers could not afford to pay their dues and furthermore numerous strikes against wage cuts left the unions impoverished one might have expected a reincarnation of organizations seeking to overthrow the capitalistic system that was now performing so poorly Some workers did indeed turn to such radical movements as the Communist Party but in general the nation seemed to have been shocked into inaction 96 Though unions were not acting yet cities across the nation witnessed local and spontaneous marches by frustrated relief applicants In March 1930 hundreds of thousands of unemployed workers marched through New York City Detroit Washington San Francisco and other cities in a mass protest organized by the Communist Party s Unemployed Councils In 1931 more than 400 relief protests erupted in Chicago and that number grew to 550 in 1932 95 The leadership behind these organizations often came from radical groups like Communist and Socialist parties who wanted to organize unfocused neighborhood militancy into organized popular defense organizations 95 However the Great Depression spawned labor action in Harlan County Kentucky now known as the Harlan County War when the Harlan County Coal Operators Association cut wages by 10 in the winter of 1931 This decision had caused the United Mine Workers to organize leading to the eviction of the mine workers from the coal town These evicted workers immigrated to the town of Evarts Kentucky where they would plan union activity Sheriff J H Blair led a force of 140 deputies who were mostly paid by the coal company Various skirmishes between striking miners and deputies ensued in Evarts As the situation escalated socialist organizations such as the Industrial Workers of the World sent aid to the miners giving it national coverage 97 The Norris La Guardia Anti Injunction Act of 1932 edit Main article Norris La Guardia Act Organized labor became more active in 1932 with the passage of the Norris La Guardia Act On March 23 1932 Republican President Herbert Hoover signed the Norris La Guardia Act marking the first of many pro union bills that Washington would pass in the 1930s 88 Also known as the Anti Injunction Bill it offered procedural and substantive protections against the easy issuance of court injunctions during labor disputes which had limited union behavior in the 1920s 98 Although the act only applied to federal courts numerous states would pass similar acts in the future Additionally the act outlawed yellow dog contracts which were documents some employers forced their employees to sign to ensure they would not join a union employees who refused to sign were terminated from their jobs 99 The passage of the Norris La Guardia Act signified a victory for the American Federation of Labor which had been lobbying Congress to pass it for slightly more than five years 88 It also marked a large change in public policy Up until the passage of this act the collective bargaining rights of workers were severely hampered by judicial control 100 FDR and the National Industrial Recovery Act edit Main articles New Deal and National Industrial Recovery Act of 1933 President Franklin D Roosevelt took office on March 4 1933 and immediately began implementing programs to alleviate the economic crisis In June he passed the National Industrial Recovery Act which gave workers the right to organize into unions 88 Though it contained other provisions like minimum wage and maximum hours its most significant passage was Employees shall have the right to organize and bargain collectively through representative of their own choosing and shall be free from the interference restraint or coercion of employers This portion which was known as Section 7 a was symbolic to workers in the United States because it stripped employers of their rights to either coerce them or refuse to bargain with them 98 While no power of enforcement was written into the law it recognized the rights of the industrial working class in the United States 101 For example the now United Mine Workers of America were able to reignite the coal labor movement in Kentucky and West Virginia with Section 7 a and eliminated compulsory residence in company towns for 350 000 miners 102 Although the National Industrial Recovery Act was ultimately deemed unconstitutional by the Supreme Court in 1935 and replaced by the Wagner Act two months after that it fueled workers to join unions and strengthened those organizations 88 In response to both the Norris La Guardia Act and the NIRA workers who were previously unorganized in a number of industries such as rubber workers oil and gas workers and service workers began to look for organizations that would allow them to band together 101 The NIRA strengthened workers resolve to unionize and instead of participating in unemployment or hunger marches they started to participate in strikes for union recognition in various industries 103 In 1933 the number of work stoppages jumped to 1 695 double its figure from 1932 In 1934 1 865 strikes occurred involving more than 1 4 million workers 104 The elections of 1934 might have reflected the radical upheaval sweeping the country as Roosevelt won the greatest majority either party ever held in the Senate and 322 Democrats won seats in the United States House of Representatives versus 103 Republicans It is possible that the great social movement from below thus strengthened the independence of the executive branch of government 101 Despite the impact of such changes on the United States political structure and on workers empowerment some scholars have criticized the impacts of these policies from a classical economic perspective Cole and Ohanian 2004 find that the New Deal s pro labor policies are an important factor in explaining the weak recovery from the Great Depression and the rise in real wages in some industrial sectors during this time 105 The American Federation of Labor craft unionism vs industrial unionism edit The AFL was growing rapidly from 2 1 million members in 1933 to 3 4 million in 1936 But it was experiencing severe internal stresses regarding how to organize new members 106 Traditionally the AFL organized unions by craft rather than industry where electricians or stationary engineers would form their own skill oriented unions rather than join a large automobile making union Most AFL leaders including president William Green were reluctant to shift from the organization s long standing craft unionism and started to clash with other leaders within the organization such as John L Lewis 98 The issue came up at the annual AFL convention in San Francisco in 1934 and 1935 but the majority voted against a shift to industrial unionism both years After the defeat at the 1935 convention nine leaders from the industrial faction led by Lewis met and organized the Committee for Industrial Organization within the AFL to encourage and promote organization of workers in the mass production industries for educational and advisory functions 98 The CIO which later changed its name to the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO formed unions with the hope of bringing them into the AFL but the AFL refused to extend full membership privileges to CIO unions In 1938 the AFL expelled the CIO and its million members and they formed a rival federation 107 The two federations fought it out for membership while both supported Roosevelt and the New Deal the CIO was further to the left while the AFL had close ties to the big city machines John L Lewis and the CIO edit Main article Congress of Industrial Organizations John L Lewis 1880 1969 was the president of the United Mine Workers of America UMW from 1920 to 1960 and the driving force behind the founding of the Congress of Industrial Organizations CIO Using UMW organizers the new CIO established the United Steel Workers of America USWA and organized millions of other industrial workers in the 1930s 108 Lewis threw his support behind Franklin D Roosevelt FDR at the outset of the New Deal After the passage of the Wagner Act in 1935 Lewis traded on the tremendous appeal that Roosevelt had with workers in those days sending organizers into the coal fields to tell workers The President wants you to join the Union His UMW was one of FDR s main financial supporters in 1936 contributing over 500 000 109 Lewis expanded his base by organizing the so called captive mines those held by the steel producers such as US Steel That required in turn organizing the steel industry which had defeated union organizing drives in 1892 and 1919 and which had resisted all organizing efforts since then fiercely The task of organizing steelworkers on the other hand put Lewis at odds with the AFL which looked down on both industrial workers and the industrial unions that represented all workers in a particular industry rather than just those in a particular skilled trade or craft Lewis was the first president of the Committee of Industrial Organizations Lewis in fact was the CIO his UMWA provided the great bulk of the financial resources that the CIO poured into organizing drives by the United Automobile Workers UAW the United Steelworkers of America the Textile Workers Union and other newly formed or struggling unions Lewis hired back many of the people he had exiled from the UMWA in the 1920s to lead the CIO and placed his protege Philip Murray at the head of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee The most dramatic success was the 1936 7 sit down strike that paralyzed General Motors It enabled CIO unionization of GM and the main automobile firms except the Ford Motor Company which held out for a few years 110 However it had negative ramifications as the Gallup Poll reported More than anything else the use of the sit down strike alienated the sympathies of the middle classes 111 The CIO s actual membership as opposed to publicity figures was 2 850 000 for February 1942 This included 537 000 members of the auto workers UAW nearly 500 000 Steel Workers almost 300 000 members of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers about 180 000 Electrical Workers and about 100 000 Rubber Workers The CIO also included 550 000 members of the United Mine Workers which did not formally withdraw from the CIO until later in the year The remaining membership of 700 000 was scattered among thirty odd smaller unions 112 Historians of the union movement in the 1930s have tried to explain its remarkable success in terms of the rank and file what motivated them to suddenly rally around leaders such as John L Lewis who had been around for decades with little success Why was the militancy of the mid 1930s so short lived 113 114 115 Union upsurge in World War II edit Main article United States home front during World War II Union membership grew very rapidly from 2 8 million in 1933 to 8 4 million in 1941 covering 23 of the non farm workforce reaching 14 million in 1945 about 36 percent of the work force By the mid 1950s the merged AFL CIO still collected dues from over 15 million members a third of the non farm workforce Unionization was strongest in large northern cities and weakest across the south where repeated mobilization efforts failed The 1937 split off of the CIO cost the AFL over a million members but it added 760 000 on its own Between 1937 and 1945 the CIO recruited two million new members but the AFL recruited nearly 4 million After some bitter battles in the late 1930s the AFL and CIO had relatively few jurisdictional disputes each focusing on its own specialized industries The CIO was strongest in large manufacturing industries especially auto steel meatpacking coal and electrical appliances The AFL affiliates were strongest in construction trades trucking department stores and public service The railway brotherhoods continued their independent status 116 Both the AFL and CIO supported Roosevelt in 1940 and 1944 with 75 percent or more of their votes after spending millions of dollars and mobilizing tens of thousands of precinct workers 117 118 However Lewis opposed Roosevelt on foreign policy grounds in 1940 but his members ignored his advice to voted against FDR and he resigned as CIO chief During the 22 months 1939 1941 when Stalin and Hitler supported each other the far left opposed American aid to Britain s war against Germany They called strikes in war industries that were supplying Lend Lease to Britain The most dramatic case came in early June 1941 when a wildcat strike near Los Angeles closed the plant that produced a fourth of the fighter planes With the approval of CIO leadership President Roosevelt sent in the national guard to reopen the plant However when Germany suddenly invaded the USSR in late June 1941 the Communist activists suddenly became the strongest supporters of war production they crushed wildcat strikes 119 120 121 Lewis realized that he had enormous leverage over the nation s energy supply In 1943 the middle of the war when the rest of labor was observing a policy against strikes Lewis led the coal miners out on a twelve day strike for higher wages The bipartisan Conservative coalition in Congress passed anti union legislation over liberal opposition most notably the Taft Hartley Act of 1947 122 A statistical analysis of the AFL and CIO national and local leaders in 1945 shows that opportunity for advancement in the labor movement was wide open In contrast with other elites the labor leaders did not come from established WASP families with rich well educated backgrounds Indeed they closely resembled the overall national population of adult men with fewer from the South and from farm backgrounds The union leaders were heavily Democratic The newer CIO had a younger leadership and one more involved with third parties and less involved with local civic activities Otherwise the AFL and CIO leaders were quite similar in background 123 Women take new jobs in World War II edit The war caused the military mobilization of 16 million American men leaving a huge hole in the urban work force Men in farming were exempt from the draft In 1945 37 of women were employed encouraged by factors such as patriotism 124 and the chance for high wages 125 One in 4 married women were working by 1945 126 Many domestic workers took jobs that paid much better especially in war factories 127 During the war nearly 6 million women joined the workforce They filled roles that men had monopolized such as steel workers lumber workers and bus drivers 68 By 1945 there were 4 7 women in clerical positions which was an 89 increase from 1940 Another 4 5 million women working in factories usually in unskilled positions up 112 127 The aviation industry saw the highest increase in female workers during the war By 1943 310 000 women worked there or 65 of the industry s workforce 126 While women s wages rose more relative to men s during this period real wages did not increase due to higher wartime income taxes 128 Although jobs that had been previously closed to women opened up demographics such as African American women who had already been participating more fully experienced less change Their husbands income effect was historically even more positive than white women s During the war African American women engagement as domestic servants decreased from 59 9 to 44 6 but Karen Anderson in 1982 characterized their experience as last hired first fired 129 At the end of the war most of the munitions making jobs ended Many factories were closed others retooled for civilian production In some jobs women were replaced by returning veterans who did not lose seniority because they were in service However the number of women at work in 1946 was 87 of the number in 1944 leaving 13 left the labor force to become housewives 130 Walter Reuther and UAW edit Main article United Auto Workers The Flint Sit Down Strike of 1936 37 was the decisive event in the formation of the United Auto Workers Union UAW During the war Walter Reuther took control of the UAW and soon led major strikes in 1946 He ousted the Communists from the positions of power especially at the Ford local He was one of the most articulate and energetic leaders of the CIO and of the merged AFL CIO Using brilliant negotiating tactics he leveraged high profits for the Big Three automakers into higher wages and superior benefits for UAW members 131 PAC and politics of 1940s edit New enemies appeared for the labor unions after 1935 Newspaper columnist Westbrook Pegler was especially outraged by the New Deal s support for powerful labor unions that he considered morally and politically corrupt Pegler saw himself a populist and muckraker whose mission was to warn the nation that dangerous leaders were in power In 1941 Pegler became the first columnist ever to win a Pulitzer Prize for reporting for his work in exposing racketeering in Hollywood labor unions focusing on the criminal career of William Morris Bioff Pegler s popularity reflected a loss of support for unions and liberalism generally especially as shown by the dramatic Republican gains in the 1946 elections often using an anti union theme 132 Strike wave of 1945 edit Main article Strike wave of 1945 1946 With the end of the war in August 1945 came a wave of major strikes mostly led by the CIO In November the UAW sent their 180 000 GM workers to the picket lines they were joined in January 1946 by a half million steelworkers as well as over 200 000 electrical workers and 150 000 packinghouse workers Combined with many smaller strikes a new record of strike activity was set 133 134 The results were mixed with the unions making some gains but the economy was disordered by the rapid termination of war contracts the complex reconversion to peacetime production the return to the labor force of 12 million servicemen and the return home of millions of women workers The conservative control of Congress blocked liberal legislation and Operation Dixie the CIO s efforts to expand massively into the Southern United States failed 133 The Republican Party exploited public anger at the unions in 1946 winning a smashing landslide Labor responded afterwards by taking strong actions The CIO systematically purged communists and far left sympathizers from leadership roles in its unions 135 The CIO expelled some unions that resisted the purge notably its third largest affiliate the United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America UE and set up a new rival IUE to take away the UE membership 136 Meanwhile the AFL in 1947 set up its first explicitly political unit Labor s League for Political Education The AFL increasingly abandoned its historic tradition of nonpartisanship since neutrality between the major parties was impossible By 1952 the AFL had given up on decentralization local autonomy and non partisanship and had developed instead a new political approach marked by the same style of centralization national coordination and partisan alliances that characterized the CIO 137 After these moves the CIO and AFL were in a good position to fight off Henry Wallace in the 1948 presidential election and work enthusiastically for Harry S Truman s reelection The CIO and AFL no longer had major points of conflict so they merged amicably in 1955 as the AFL CIO 138 Taft Hartley Act edit Further information Taft Hartley Act The Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 also known as the Taft Hartley Act in 1947 revised the Wagner Act to include restrictions on unions as well as management It was a response to public demands for action after the wartime coal strikes and the postwar strikes in steel autos and other industries that were perceived to have damaged the economy as well as a threatened 1946 railroad strike that was called off at the last minute before it shut down the national economy The Act was bitterly fought by unions vetoed by President Harry S Truman and passed over his veto Repeated union efforts to repeal or modify it always failed and it remains in effect today The Act was sponsored by Senator Robert A Taft and Representative Fred Hartley both Republicans Congress overrode the veto on June 23 1947 establishing the act as a law Truman described the act as a slave labor bill in his veto but after it was enacted over his veto he used its emergency provisions a number of times to halt strikes and lockouts The new law required all union officials to sign an affidavit that they were not Communists or else the union would lose its federal bargaining powers guaranteed by the National Labor Relations Board 139 That provision was declared to be an unconstitutional bill of attainder by a 1965 Supreme Court decision United States v Brown 140 The Taft Hartley Act amended the Wagner Act officially known as the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 The amendments added to the NLRA a list of prohibited actions or unfair labor practices on the part of unions The NLRA had previously prohibited only unfair labor practices committed by employers It prohibited jurisdictional strikes in which a union strikes in order to pressure an employer to assign particular work to the employees that union represents and secondary boycotts and common situs picketing in which unions picket strike or refuse to handle the goods of a business with which they have no primary dispute but which is associated with a targeted business A later statute the Labor Management Reporting and Disclosure Act passed in 1959 tightened these restrictions on secondary boycotts still further The Act outlawed closed shops which were contractual agreements that required an employer to hire only union members Union shops in which new recruits must join the union within a certain amount of time are permitted but only as part of a collective bargaining agreement and only if the contract allows the worker at least thirty days after the date of hire or the effective date of the contract to join the union The National Labor Relations Board and the courts have added other restrictions on the power of unions to enforce union security clauses and have required them to make extensive financial disclosures to all members as part of their duty of fair representation On the other hand a few years after the passage of the Act Congress repealed the provisions requiring a vote by workers to authorize a union shop when it became apparent that workers were approving them in virtually every case The amendments also authorized individual states to outlaw union security clauses entirely in their jurisdictions by passing right to work laws Currently all of the states in the Deep South and a number of traditionally Republican states in the Midwest Plains and Rocky Mountains regions have right to work laws The amendments required unions and employers to give sixty days notice before they may undertake strikes or other forms of economic action in pursuit of a new collective bargaining agreement it did not on the other hand impose any cooling off period after a contract expired Although the Act also authorized the President of the United States to intervene in strikes or potential strikes that create a national emergency the President has used that power less and less frequently in each succeeding decade Historian James T Patterson concludes that By the 1950s most observers agreed that Taft Hartley was no more disastrous for workers than the Wagner Act had been for employers What ordinarily mattered most in labor relations was not government laws such as Taft Hartley but the relative power of unions and management in the economic marketplace Where unions were strong they usually managed all right when they were weak new laws did them little additional harm 141 neutrality is disputed dd Anti communism edit Main articles Anti communism United States and Socialist movement in the United States 20th Century The AFL had always opposed communists inside the labor movement speculation After 1945 they took their crusade worldwide The CIO had major communist elements who played a key role in organizational work in the late 1930s and war years By 1949 they were purged The AFL and CIO strongly supported the Cold War policies of the Truman administration including the Truman Doctrine the Marshall Plan and NATO Left wing elements in the CIO protested and were forced out of the main unions Walter Reuther of the United Automobile Workers purged the UAW of communist members He was active in the CIO umbrella as well taking the lead in expelling eleven communist dominated unions from the CIO in 1949 142 As a leader of the anti communist center left Reuther was a founder of the liberal umbrella group Americans for Democratic Action in 1947 In 1949 he led the CIO delegation to the London conference that set up the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions in opposition to the communist dominated World Federation of Trade Unions He had left the Socialist Party in 1939 and throughout the 1950s and 1960s was a leading spokesman for liberal interests in the CIO and in the Democratic Party 143 James B Carey also helped influence the CIO s pullout from the WFTU and the formation of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions dedicated to promoting free trade and democratic unionism worldwide Carey in 1949 had formed the International Union of Electrical Workers a new CIO union for electrical workers because the old one the United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America was tightly held by the left 144 self published source Marxian economist Richard D Wolff argues that anti communism was part of a strategy by big business Republicans and conservatives to single out and destroy the members of the coalition that forced through the New Deal namely organized labor socialist and communist parties 145 Union decline 1955 2016 edit nbsp Income inequality and union participation have had a distinctly inverse relationship with the disparity increasing since the 1980s 146 nbsp Labor income as a share of GDP vs income from capital has declined 1970 to 2016 measured based on total compensation as well as salaries amp wages All employment is included not just union members Since its peak in the mid 20th century the American labor movement has been in steady decline with losses in the private sector larger than gains in the public sector In the early 1950s as the AFL and CIO merged around a third of the American labor force was unionized by 2012 the proportion was 11 percent constituting roughly 5 percent in the private sector and 40 percent in the public sector Organized labor s influence steadily waned and workers collective voice in the political process has weakened Partly as a result wages have stagnated and income inequality has increased 147 Although the National Labor Relations Act was initially a boon for unions it also sowed the seeds of the labor movement s decline The act enshrined the right to unionize but the system of workplace elections it created meant that unions had to organize each new factory or firm individually rather than organize by industry In many European countries collective bargaining agreements extended automatically to other firms in the same industry but in the United States they usually reached no further than a plant s gates As a result in the first decades of the postwar period the organizing effort could not keep pace with the frenetic rate of job growth in the economy as a whole 147 On the political front the shrinking unions lost influence in the Democratic Party and pro union liberal Republicans faded away 3 Intellectuals lost interest in unions focusing their attention more on the Vietnam War minorities women and environmental issues 148 By the 1970s a rapidly increasing flow of imports such as automobiles steel and electronics from Germany and Japan and clothing and shoes from Asia undercut American producers 149 By the 1980s there was a large scale shift in employment with fewer workers in high wage sectors and more in the low wage sectors 150 Many companies closed or moved factories to Southern states where unions were weak 151 The effectiveness of strikes declined sharply as companies after the 1970s threatened to close down factories or move them to low wage states or to foreign countries 152 The number of major work stoppages fell by 97 percent from 381 in 1970 to 187 in 1980 to only 11 in 2010 153 154 The accumulating weaknesses were exposed when President Ronald Reagan a former union president broke the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization PATCO strike in 1981 dealing a major blow to unions 155 Union membership among workers in private industry shrank dramatically though after 1970 there was growth in employees unions of federal state and local governments 156 157 The intellectual mood in the 1970s and 1980s favored deregulation and free competition 158 Numerous industries were deregulated including airlines trucking railroads and telephones over the objections of the unions involved 159 Republicans using conservative think tanks as idea farms began to push through legislative blueprints to curb the power of public employee unions as well as eliminate business regulations 152 Union weakness in the South undermined unionization and social reform throughout the nation and such weakness is largely responsible for the anaemic US welfare state 160 AFL and CIO merger 1955 edit The friendly merger of the AFL and CIO marked an end not only to the acrimony and jurisdictional conflicts between the coalitions it also signaled the end of the era of experimentation and expansion that began in the mid 1930s Merger became politically possible because of the deaths of Green of the AFL and Murray of the CIO in late 1952 replaced by George Meany and Reuther The CIO was no longer the radical dynamo and was no longer a threat in terms of membership for the AFL had twice as many members 161 Furthermore the AFL was doing a better job of expanding into the fast growing white collar sector with its organizations of clerks public employees teachers and service workers Although the AFL building trades maintained all white policies the AFL had more black members in all as the CIO The problem of union corruption was growing in public awareness and CIO s industrial unions were less vulnerable to penetration by criminal elements than were the AFL s trucking longshoring building and entertainment unions But Meany had a strong record in fighting corruption in New York unions and was highly critical of the notoriously corrupt Teamsters 161 Unification would help the central organization fight corruption yet would not contaminate the CIO unions The defeat of the New Deal in the 1952 election further emphasized the need for unity to maximize political effectiveness From the CIO side the merger was promoted by David McDonald of the Steelworkers and his top aide Arthur J Goldberg To achieve the successful merger they jettisoned the more liberal policies of the CIO regarding civil rights and membership rights for blacks jurisdictional disputes and industrial unionism Reuther went along with the compromises and did not contest the selection of Meany to head the AFL CIO 161 Fearing the fallout of a drawn out negotiation process the AFL and CIO leadership decided on a short route to reconciliation This meant all AFL and CIO unions would be accepted into the new organization as is with all conflicts and overlaps to be sorted out after the merger 162 Negotiations were conducted by a small select group of advisors The draft constitution was primarily written by AFL Vice President Matthew Woll and CIO General Counsel Arthur Goldberg while the joint policy statements were written by Woll CIO Secretary Treasurer James Carey CIO vice presidents David McDonald and Joseph Curran Brotherhood of Railway Clerks President George Harrison and Illinois AFL CIO President Reuben Soderstrom 163 Conservative attacks edit Labor unions were a whole high profile target of Republican activists throughout the 1940s and 1950s especially the Taft Hartley Act of 1947 Both the business community and local Republicans wanted to weaken unions which played a major role in funding and campaigning for Democratic candidates 164 The strategy of the Eisenhower administration was to consolidate the anti union potential inherent in Taft Hartley 165 Pressure from the Justice Department the Labor Department and especially from congressional investigations focused on criminal activity and racketeering in high profile labor unions especially the Teamsters Union Republicans wanted to delegitimize unions by focusing on their shady activities The McClellan Committee hearings targeted Teamsters president James R Hoffa as a public enemy Young Robert F Kennedy played a major role working for the committee 166 Public opinion polls showed growing distrust toward unions and especially union leaders or labor bosses as Republicans called them The bipartisan Conservative Coalition with the aid of liberals such as the Kennedy brothers won new Congressional restrictions on organized labor in the form of the Landrum Griffin Act 1959 The main impact was to force more democracy on the previously authoritarian union hierarchies 167 168 However in the 1958 elections taking place during a sharp economic recession the unions fought back especially against state Right to Work laws and defeated many conservative Republicans 169 170 The Teamsters union was expelled from the AFL for its notorious corruption under president Dave Beck Its troubles gained national attention from highly visible Senate hearings 171 The target was Jimmy Hoffa 1913 1975 who replaced Beck and held total power until he was imprisoned in 1964 1960s Liberal achievement in Civil Rights and backlash edit Main articles 1964 United States elections 1966 United States elections and 1968 United States elections The UAW under Reuther played a major role in funding and supporting the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s 172 More traditional unions favored their white members and encountered federal court intervention 173 After the smashing reelection victory of President Lyndon B Johnson in 1964 the heavily Democratic Congress passed a raft of liberal legislation Labor union leaders claimed credit for the widest range of liberal laws since the New Deal era including the Civil Rights Act of 1964 the Voting Rights Act of 1965 the War on Poverty aid to cities and education increased Social Security benefits and Medicare for the elderly The 1966 elections were an unexpected disaster with defeats for many of the more liberal Democrats According to Alan Draper the AFL CIO Committee on Political Action COPE was the main electioneering unit of the labor movement It ignored the white backlash against civil rights which had become a main Republican attack point The COPE assumed falsely that union members were interested in issues of greatest salience to union leadership but polls showed this was not true The members were much more conservative The younger ones were much more concerned about taxes and crime and the older ones had not overcome racial biases Furthermore a new issue the War in Vietnam was bitterly splitting the New Deal coalition into hawks led by Johnson and Vice president Hubert Humphrey and doves led by Senators Eugene McCarthy and Robert Kennedy 174 175 Hispanics edit Chavez and the and United Farm Workers edit Main articles United Farm Workers and Cesar Chavez Hispanics comprise a large fraction of the farm labor force but due to the fact that agricultural workers were not protected under the National Labor Relations Act NLRA of 1935 176 there was little successful unionization before the arrival in the 1960s of Cesar Chavez 1927 1993 and Dolores Huerta 1930 who mobilized California workers into the United Farm Workers UFW organization 177 Chavez s use of non violent methods combined with Huerta s organizational skills allowed for many of the bigger successes of the organization 178 A key success for the UFW was in partnering with the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee AWOC which primarily worked with Filipino farm workers and creating the eventual United Farmworkers Union in 1972 179 Together they organized a worker strike and consumer boycott of the grape growers in California that lasted for over five years Through collaboration with consumers and student protesters the UFW was able to secure a three year contract with the state s top grape growers to increase the safety and pay of farm workers 180 Chavez had a significant political impact as Jenkins points out state and national elites no longer automatically sided with the growers Thus the political insurgency of the UFW was successful because of effective strategizing in the right kind of political environment 181 In the decades following its early success the UFW experienced a steep decline in membership due to purges of key organizational leaders by Chavez 182 With Chavez unable to lead effectively the Teamsters Union moved in and replaced the UFW 183 184 In 2015 Jose Antonio Orosco pointed out that the UFW devolved from a powerful labor union for farmworkers to a fragile organization that today draws most of its support from mailed donations and represents fewer than five thousand workers in an industry that employs tens of thousands In her biography of Chavez Miriam Powell blames one person for the collapse Chavez himself 185 186 Hotels edit Nationwide unions have been seeking opportunities to enroll Hispanic members Much of their limited success has been in the hotel industry especially in Nevada 187 Reagan era 1980s edit Further information Presidency of Ronald Reagan Labor Dana Cloud argues the emblematic moment of the period from 1955 through the 1980s in American labor was the tragic PATCO strike in 1981 188 Most unions were strongly opposed to Reagan in the 1980 presidential election despite the fact that Reagan remains the only union leader or even member to become president On August 3 1981 the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization PATCO union which had supported Reagan rejected the government s pay raise offer and sent its 16 000 members out on strike to shut down the nation s commercial airlines They demanded a reduction in the workweek to 32 from 40 hours a 10 000 bonus pay raises up to 40 percent and early retirement 189 Federal law forbade such a strike and the United States Department of Transportation implemented a backup plan of supervisors and military air controllers to keep the system running The strikers were given 48 hours to return to work else they would be fired and banned from ever again working in a federal capacity A fourth of the strikers came back to work but 13 000 did not The strike collapsed PATCO vanished and the union movement as a whole suffered a major reversal which accelerated the decline of membership across the board in the private sector 189 Schulman and Zelizer argue that the breaking of PATCO sent shock waves through the entire U S labor relations regime strike rates plummeted and union power sharply declined 190 Unions suffered a continual decline of power during the Reagan administration with a concomitant effect on wages The average first year raise for 1000 plus worker contracts fell from 9 8 percent to 1 2 percent in manufacturing raises fell from 7 2 percent to negative 1 2 percent Salaries of unionized workers also fell relative to non union workers Women and blacks suffered more from these trends 191 192 nbsp Union cash advantage 2014 193 Decline of private sector unions edit By 2011 fewer than seven percent of employees in the private sector belonged to unions The UAW s numbers of automobile union members are representative of the manufacturing sector 1 619 000 active members in 1970 1 446 000 in 1980 952 000 in 1990 623 000 in 2004 and 377 000 in 2010 with far more retired than active members 194 By 2014 coal mining in the United States had largely shifted to open pit mines in Wyoming and there were only 60 000 active coal miners The UMW has 35 000 members of whom 20 000 were coal miners chiefly in underground mines in Kentucky and West Virginia By contrast it had 800 000 members in the late 1930s However it remains responsible for pensions and medical benefits for 40 000 retired miners and for 50 000 spouses and dependents 195 Rise in union activity 2016 present editSee also Striketober and Amazon worker organization The number of union members nationwide increased from 2016 to 2017 and some states saw union growth for the first time in several years or decades 196 Nearly half a million workers went on strike in 2018 and 2019 the largest numbers in three decades 197 Union growth in 2017 was primarily millennial workers For instance about 76 percent of new UAW union members during their increase came from workers under the age of 35 198 Although the total number of union members increased 1 7 percent in 2017 the Economic Policy Institute noted that year to year union membership often fluctuates due to hiring or layoffs in particular sectors and cautioned against interpreting one year changes as trends 199 The percentage of the workforce belonging to unions was 10 7 percent in 2017 unchanged over the previous year but down from 11 1 percent in 2015 and 12 1 percent in 2007 200 In recent years efforts have also been made to extend the protections of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 which excluded domestic workers and farm workers to those groups on the state level The National Domestic Workers Alliance has successfully advocated for a Domestic Workers Bill of Rights in New York California and Hawaii 201 while several states have passed legislation expanding the rights of farm workers 202 On July 15 2022 the National Labor Relations Board NLRB reported that the amount of union representation petitions filed with the board increased by 58 in the first three quarters of the 2022 fiscal year This was more than the total amount of petitions filed in the entire 2021 fiscal year 203 Teacher strikes edit Main article 2018 19 education workers strikes in the United States In 2018 a series of statewide teacher strikes and protests happened garnering nationwide attention due to their success 204 as well as the fact that several of them were in states where public employee strikes are illegal Many of the major strikes were in Republican majority state legislatures leading to the name Red State Revolt 205 Protests were held in Arizona Colorado 206 North Carolina Oklahoma 207 208 and West Virginia 209 Additional smaller protests were held in Kentucky and North Carolina The protests spread to a bus driver strike in the suburbs of Atlanta Georgia where nearly 250 bus drivers participated 210 211 The strikes included an adjunct faculty strike at Virginia Commonwealth University 212 in Richmond Virginia leading to an increase in adjunct wages 213 Unionization in the high tech sector edit The relatively new high tech sector typically dealing with the creation design development and engineering of computer hardware and software products has typically not been unionized as it is considered white collar jobs often with high pay rates and benefits There has been worker activism to try to get the employer to change their practices related to labor such as a November 2018 walkout at Google by 20 000 employees to make the company change its policy on sexual harassment 214 However these efforts have traditionally stopped short of the need for unionization and achieving the scale of employee involvement to bring a union to their workplace can be difficult due to the numerous benefits these employees may already have and the blue collar nature that union association may bring 215 One area where unionization efforts have become more intense is in the video game industry Numerous publicized events since 2004 have revealed the excessive use of crunch time at some companies where there is a reasonable expectation in the industry that employees may be needed to put in more time near the release of a game product some companies were noted for using a crunch time approach through much longer periods or as a constant expectation of their employees further most of those employed in the video game market are exempt from overtime compounding the issue Major grassroots efforts through the game industry since 2018 have promoted the creation of a new union or working with an existing union to cover the industry 216 One of the first high tech companies to establish a union was Kickstarter whose employees voted in favor of unionizing in February 2020 217 On April 1 2022 Amazon workers at the JFK8 warehouse in Staten Island New York City voted in favor of a union becoming Amazon s first unionized workplace in the United States 218 Hollywood labor disputes 2023 edit Main article 2023 Hollywood labor disputes From May 2 to November 9 2023 a series of long labor disputes within the film and television industries of the United States took place mainly focused on the strikes of the Writers Guild of America and SAG AFTRA Unionization in the food service and grocery industries edit The food service industry has one of the lowest unionization rates in the United States with just 1 2 of workers belonging to a union in 2020 and 2021 219 Starbucks edit Further information Starbucks unions and List of Starbucks union petitions in the United States In late 2021 a Starbucks store located in Buffalo New York became Starbucks only unionized location among 9 000 stores in the United States joining Workers United of the Service Employees International Union 220 A second location in Buffalo followed winning an election certified by the NLRB in January 2022 During this time the number of stores filing petitions to the NLRB grew to over ten locations seven of them being outside of the Buffalo area 221 The number of Starbucks stores that have decided to vote on unionization has since grown significantly As of August 2022 209 Starbucks locations have voted for unionization with another 45 locations voting against unionization 222 Trader Joe s edit Further information Trader Joe s unions In late July 2022 workers at a Trader Joe s in Hadley Massachusetts voted to become the first unionized location in the grocery store chain 223 Workers at this location chose to create an independent union called Trader Joe s United and received administrative and legal support from already existing unions but decided not to become a part of any larger established union 224 Two locations one in Boulder Colorado and one in Minneapolis also filed for unionization around this time 223 On August 12 2022 the Minneapolis location went on to become the second store to unionize joining Trader Joe s United 225 Comparisons to the unionization efforts of Starbucks locations were made following the success of the Minneapolis vote with workers of the two respective unions both publicly supporting one another 226 As of September 23 2022 workers in Brooklyn New York have petitioned for unionization with the NLRB and would potentially become the third unionized location out of over 500 Trader Joe s stores Chipotle edit In late June 2022 a Chipotle Mexican Grill restaurant in Augusta Maine became the chain s first location to petition for a union election looking to organize independently as Chipotle United citing issues regarding understaffing as well as crew and food safety 227 In that same month Chipotle decided to permanently close the location leading to workers filing a complaint with the NLRB and accusing Chipotle of union busting Chipotle has denied such claims and have stated that the company was unable to provide enough staffing for the location 228 In late August 2022 workers at a Chipotle in Lansing Michigan voted to unionize becoming the fast food chain s first union in the United States 229 Workers at this location voted 11 to three opting to unionize with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters 230 Public sector unions editMain article Public sector trade unions in the United States Labor unions generally ignored government employees because they were controlled mostly by the patronage system used by the political parties before the arrival of civil service Post Office workers did form unions The National Association of Letter Carriers started in 1889 and grew quickly By the mid 1960s it had 175 000 members in 6 400 local branches 231 Several competing organizations of postal clerks emerged starting in the 1890s Merger discussions dragged on for years until finally the NFPOC UNMAPOC and others merged in 1961 as the United Federation of Postal Clerks Another round of mergers in 1971 produced the American Postal Workers Union APWU In 2012 the APWU had 330 000 members 232 The various postal unions did not engage in strikes Main article Boston Police Strike Historian Joseph Slater says Unfortunately for public sector unions the most searing and enduring image of their history in the first half of the twentieth century was the Boston police strike The strike was routinely cited by courts and officials through the end of the 1940s 233 Governor Calvin Coolidge broke the strike and the legislature took control of the police away from city officials 234 The police strike chilled union interest in the public sector in the 1920s The major exception was the emergence of unions of public school teachers in the largest cities they formed the American Federation of Teachers AFT affiliated with the AFL In suburbs and small cities the National Education Association NEA became active but it insisted it was not a labor union but a professional organization 235 New Deal era edit In the mid 1930s efforts were made to unionize Works Progress Administration workers but were opposed by President Franklin D Roosevelt 236 Moe points out that Roosevelt an ardent supporter of collective bargaining in the private sector was opposed to it in the public sector 237 Roosevelt in 1937 told the nation what the position of his government was All Government employees should realize that the process of collective bargaining as usually understood cannot be transplanted into the public service The very nature and purposes of government make it impossible for administrative officials to represent fully or to bind the employer in mutual discussions with government employee organizations 238 Little New Deal era edit Change came in the 1950s In 1958 New York mayor Robert Wagner Jr issued an executive order called the little Wagner Act giving city employees certain bargaining rights and gave their unions with exclusive representation that is the unions alone were legally authorized to speak for all city workers regardless of whether or not some workers were members Management complained but the unions had power in city politics 239 By the 1960s and 1970s public sector unions expanded rapidly to cover teachers clerks firemen police prison guards and others In 1962 President John F Kennedy issued Executive Order 10988 upgrading the status of unions of federal workers 240 Recent years edit After 1960 public sector unions grew rapidly and secured good wages and high pensions for their members While manufacturing and farming steadily declined state and local government employment quadrupled from 4 million workers in 1950 to 12 million in 1976 and 16 6 million in 2009 241 In 2009 the US membership of public sector unions surpassed membership of private sector unions for the first time at 7 9 million and 7 4 million respectively 242 In 2011 states faced a growing fiscal crisis and the Republicans had made major gains in the 2010 elections Public sector unions came under heavy attack especially in Wisconsin as well as Indiana New Jersey and Ohio from conservative Republican legislatures 243 244 245 Conservative state legislatures tried to drastically reduce the abilities of unions to collectively bargain Conservatives argued that public unions were too powerful since they helped elect their bosses and that overly generous pension systems were too heavy a drain on state budgets 246 247 A 2023 study published by Oxfam found that the United States ranks among the worst among developed countries for labor protections including the right to organize ranking 32 out of 38 among OECD countries 248 249 Analysis edit nbsp Number of striking workers by year Bureau of Labor Statistics According to labor historians the US has the most violent labor history of any industrialized nation 250 251 252 Some historians have attempted to explain why a labor party did not emerge in the United States in contrast to Western Europe 253 Historian Gary Gerstle asserts that organized labor in the US was strongest when the fear of communism reached its peak and the former s decline coincided with the collapse of the latter Gerstle argues that capitalist elites were much less willing to compromise with the working class once the threat of communism disappeared and neoliberal capitalism became the dominant global system He emphasizes that this analysis is not meant to rehabilitate communist governments which he describes as tyrannies 254 See also edit nbsp Organized labour portal American Federation of Labor AFL now AFL CIO Anti union violence in the United States Congress of Industrial Organizations 1935 to 1955 now AFL CIO Communists in the United States labor movement 1937 1950 Gilded Age History of labor law in the United States History of unfree labor in the United States Immigration policies of American labor unions International comparisons of labor unions Labor federation competition in the United States Labor unions in the United States List of strikes many in the United States List of US strikes by size List of worker deaths in United States labor disputes Minimum wage in the United States New Deal coalition Union violence in the United States 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Labor Review Oct 2015 Archived December 26 2016 at the Wayback Machine David Shepardson UAW membership up 6 percent Detroit News April 1 2011 Kris Maher Mine Workers Union Shrinks but Boss Fights On Wall Street Journal January 9 2014 p B1 Thomas Arthur January 19 2018 Wisconsin union membership grew by 11 000 in 2017 biztimes com Milwaukee BizTimes Retrieved May 13 2018 Raimonde Olivia October 21 2019 The number of workers on strike hits the highest since the 1980s CNBC Retrieved April 30 2020 Young Workers Lead Union Growth in 2017 uaw org February 15 2018 Retrieved May 13 2018 Mishel Lawrence January 19 2018 Overall union membership rises in 2017 union density holds steady epi org Economic Policy Institute Retrieved May 13 2018 US Bureau of Labor Statistics Databases Tables amp Calculators by Subject accessed May 19 2018 Hilgers Lauren February 21 2019 The New Labor Movement Fighting for Domestic Workers Rights The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 10 2019 When labor laws left farm workers behind and vulnerable to abuse PBS NewsHour September 18 2016 Retrieved March 10 2019 Correction First Three Quarters Union Election Petitions Up 58 Exceeding All FY21 Petitions Filed National Labor Relations Board Retrieved October 2 2022 Whaley Monte May 12 2018 Pueblo teachers reach tentative agreement with district for 2 percent pay hike The Denver Post Retrieved May 13 2018 Carlson Deven April 12 2018 Not just a red state revolt The story behind the Oklahoma teacher walkout brookings edu Brookings Institution Retrieved May 2 2018 Eason Brian May 1 2018 What s driving the latest wave of teacher strikes Pension problems some say pbs org PBS Retrieved May 2 2018 Weir Bill April 26 2018 Arizona teachers walk out of their poorly equipped classrooms CNN Retrieved May 2 2018 Jamieson Dave Waldron Travis April 7 2018 The Red State Teacher Revolt Has Been Brewing For Decades HuffPost Oath Inc Retrieved May 2 2018 Pearce Matt April 2 2018 Red state revolt continues Teachers strike in Oklahoma and protest in Kentucky Los Angeles Times Retrieved May 2 2018 More school buses on roads on day 2 of sickout WAGA TV Fox Television Stations April 20 2018 Retrieved May 2 2018 Terrell Ross April 19 2018 DeKalb County School Bus Drivers Protest In Sickout WABE National Public Radio Retrieved May 2 2018 Wilder Drew February 28 2018 VCUarts teachers protest for higher pay WWBT Raycom Media Retrieved May 7 2018 Mattingly Justin May 11 2018 VCU raises tuition 6 4 percent for 2018 19 The Richmond Times Dispatch Retrieved May 13 2018 Wakabayashi Daisuke Griffith Erin Tsang Amie Conger Kate November 1 2018 Google Walkout Employees Stage Protest Over Handling of Sexual Harassment The New York Times Retrieved February 18 2020 Conger Kate Scheiber Noam July 8 2019 Employee Activism Is Alive in Tech It Stops Short of Organizing Unions The New York Times Retrieved February 18 2020 Statt Nick January 7 2020 A massive telecom union just launched a new campaign to unionize game developers The Verge Retrieved February 18 2020 Hall Charlie February 18 2020 Kickstarter employees vote to unionize relieving tension among game developers Polygon Retrieved February 18 2020 O Brien Sara Ashley April 1 2022 Amazon workers at New York warehouse vote to form company s first US union CNN Retrieved April 1 2022 U S Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics January 20 2022 Union Members 2021 PDF Scheiber Noam December 9 2021 Starbucks workers at a Buffalo store unionize in a big symbolic win for labor The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 2 2022 Scheiber Noam January 10 2022 Union wins election at a second Buffalo area Starbucks The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 2 2022 Schoolov Katie August 5 2022 Unions are forming at Starbucks Apple and Google Here s why workers are organizing now CNBC Retrieved October 2 2022 a b Trader Joe s workers vote to unionize for the first time Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 2 2022 1st Trader Joe s union approved at Massachusetts store www boston com Retrieved October 6 2022 Scheiber Noam August 12 2022 Trader Joe s Workers Vote to Unionize at a Second Store The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 6 2022 Molla Rani August 13 2022 Trader Joe s could be the next Starbucks Vox Retrieved October 6 2022 Lucas Amelia June 23 2022 Chipotle restaurant in Maine becomes chain s first to file for union election CNBC Retrieved October 11 2022 Rogers Amelia Lucas Kate July 20 2022 Chipotle union files complaint with labor board after chain shutters Maine restaurant seeking to organize CNBC Retrieved October 11 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Michigan Chipotle outlet the chain s first to unionize Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved October 2 2022 Lucas Amelia August 25 2022 Chipotle restaurant in Michigan votes to unionize in a first for the chain CNBC Retrieved October 11 2022 Morris S Ogul May 15 1976 Congress Oversees the Bureaucracy U of Pittsburgh Press p 65 ISBN 9780822976097 Gary M Fink ed Labor Unions 1977 pp 291 94 Joseph Slater The Boston Police Strikein Aaron Brenner et al eds The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History 2011 1 Francis Russell A city in terror Calvin Coolidge and the 1919 Boston police strike Beacon Press 1975 Marjorie Murphy Blackboard Unions The AFT and the NEA 1900 1980 1992 Chad Alan Goldberg Contesting the Status of Relief Workers during the New Deal The Workers Alliance of America and the Works Progress Administration 1935 1941 Social Science History 2005 29 3 pp 337 371 Moe 2011 Special Interest Teachers Unions and America s Public Schools Brookings Institution Press p 33 ISBN 978 0815721307 see Letter on the Resolution of Federation of Federal Employees Against Strikes in Federal Service August 16 1937 Archived November 16 2015 at the Wayback Machine Anthony C Russo Management s View of the New York City Experience Proceedings of the Academy of Political Science Vol 30 No 2 Unionization of Municipal Employees Dec 1970 pp 81 93 in JSTOR David Schultz Encyclopedia of public administration and public policy 2004 p 143 US Census Bureau Census Bureau Reports State and Local Government Employment Remains at 16 6 Million press release Aug 10 2010 Archived August 11 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Trouble with Public Sector Unions nationalaffairs com Archived from the original on February 11 2018 Retrieved May 4 2018 John Logan Is this the end for organised labour in the US guardian co uk March 11 2011 Archived November 22 2015 at the Wayback Machine see New York Times Public employees see Washington Post Budget crisis Theda Skocpol Vanessa Williamson 2012 The Tea Party and the Remaking of Republican Conservatism Oxford UP p 192 ISBN 9780199912834 Richard B Freeman and Eunice Han The war against public sector collective bargaining in the US Journal of Industrial Relations 2012 54 3 pp 386 408 Ghilarducci Teresa June 14 2023 New Study U S Tops Rich Nations As Worst Place To Work Forbes Retrieved July 27 2023 Henderson Kaitlyn May 3 2023 Where hard work doesn t pay off An index of US labor policies compared to peer nations Oxfam Retrieved July 27 2023 Philip Taft and Philip Ross American Labor Violence Its Causes Character and Outcome The History of Violence in America A Report to the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence ed Hugh Davis Graham and Ted Robert Gurr 1969 p 221 Goldstein Robert Justin 2001 Political Repression in Modern America University of Illinois Press p 3 ISBN 978 0252069642 Lipold Paul F 2015 Striking Deaths at their Roots Assaying the Social Determinants of Extreme Labor Management Violence in US Labor History 1877 1947 Social Science History 38 3 4 541 575 doi 10 1017 ssh 2015 24 S2CID 142526387 Robin Archer Why Is There No Labor Party in the United States Princeton University Press 2007 Gerstle Gary 2022 The Rise and Fall of the Neoliberal Order America and the World in the Free Market Era Oxford University Press p 12 ISBN 978 0197519646 Bibliography editFor a more detailed guide see Labor unions in the United States References Surveys edit Arnesen Eric ed Encyclopedia of U S Labor and Working Class History 2006 2064pp 650 articles by experts excerpt and text search Beik Millie ed Labor Relations Major Issues in American History 2005 over 100 annotated primary documents excerpt and text search Boone Graham Labor law highlights 1915 2015 Monthly Labor Review 2015 online Boris Eileen Nelson Lichtenstein and Thomas Paterson eds Major Problems in the History of American Workers Documents and Essays 2002 primary and secondary sources Brenner Aaron Brenner et al eds The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History ME Sharpe 2009 789 pp Brody David In Labor s Cause Main Themes on the History of the American Worker 1993 excerpt and text search Commons John R and Associates History of Labour In The United States 1896 1932 4 vol 1921 1957 highly detailed classic to 1920 online Derks Scott Working Americans 1880 1999 The Working Class 2000 Dubofsky Melvyn Industrialism and the American worker 1865 1920 1975 online Dubofsky Melvyn Labor Leaders in America 1987 Dubofsky Melvyn and Foster Rhea Dulles Labor in America A History 8th ed 2010 wide ranging survey Dubofsky Melvyn ed American labor since the New Deal 1971 online Faue Elizabeth Rethinking the American Labor Movement 2017 excerpt Fink Gary M ed Labor Unions Greenwood Press 1977 online Fink Gary M ed Biographical Dictionary of American Labor Greenwood Press 1984 Kessler Harris Alice Out to work A history of wage earning women in the United States Oxford UP 1982 2003 online Loomis Erik 2020 A History of America in Ten Strikes The New Press ISBN 978 1620976272 Minchin Timothy J Labor under Fire A History of the AFL CIO since 1979 UNC Press 2017 Lichtenstein Nelson 2003 State of the Union A Century of American Labor Perlman Selig A theory of the labor movement 1928 online Taylor Paul F The ABC CLIO Companion To The American Labor Movement ABC CLIO 1993 an encyclopedia Zieger Robert H and Gilbert J Gall American Workers American Unions The Twentieth Century 2002 Specialized studies edit See also History of coal mining Coal miners and unions Archer Robin 2007 Why Is There No Labor Party in the United States Princeton NJ Princeton University Press Arnesen Eric Like Banquo s Ghost It Will Not Down The Race Question and the American Railroad Brotherhoods 1880 1920 American Historical Review 99 5 1994 1601 1633 online Arnold Andrew B Fueling the Gilded Age Railroads Miners and Disorder in Pennsylvania Coal Country 2014 Excerpt and text search Brenner Aaron et al The Encyclopedia of Strikes in American History 2009 Brody David Steelworkers in America The nonunion era U of Illinois Press 1960 Brody David Workers in Industrial America Essays on the Twentieth Century Struggle Campbell D Ann Women at War with America Private Lives in a Patriotic Era Harvard UP 1984 women workers in World War II DiGirolamo Vincent Crying the News A History of America s Newsboys 2019 Dubofsky Melvyn Time Warren Van 1986 John L Lewis best biography of key 20th century leader Foner Philip 1980 Women and the American Labor Movement from World War I to the Present Fraser Steve 1993 Labor Will Rule Sidney Hillman and the rise of American labor Fraser Steve 2015 The Age of Acquiescence The Life and Death of American Resistance to Organized Wealth and Power Little Brown and Company ISBN 0316185434 Frymer Paul 2008 Black and Blue African Americans the Labor Movement and the Decline of the Democratic Party Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0691134659 Greene Julie 1998 Pure and Simple Politics The American Federation of Labor and Political Activism 1881 1917 ISBN 9780521433983 Grossman Jonathan The Coal Strike of 1902 Turning Point in U S Policy Monthly Labor Review October 1975 online Gutman Herbert G Work culture and society in industrializing America 1815 1919 American Historical Review 78 3 1973 531 588 online Hazard Blanche E The organization of the boot and shoe industry in Massachusetts before 1875 Quarterly Journal of Economics 27 2 1913 236 262 online Hill Herbert The problem of race in American labor history Reviews in American History 24 2 1996 189 208 online Isaac Larry W Rachel G McKane and Anna W Jacobs Pitting the Working Class against Itself Solidarity Strikebreaking and Strike Outcomes in the Early US Labor Movement Social Science History 46 2 2022 315 348 online Josephson Matthew Sidney Hillman Statesman of American Labor 1952 online Kampelman Max M The Communist Party vs The CIO 1957 online Kersten Andrew E Labor s home front the American Federation of Labor during World War II NYU Press 2006 online Laslett John H M 1970 Labor and the Left a study of socialist and radical influences in the American labor movement 1881 1924 Lichtenstein Nelson Labor s War at Home The CIO in World War II 1987 Lipold Paul F and Larry W Isaac Striking deaths Lethal contestation and the exceptional character of the American labor movement 1870 1970 International Review of Social History 2009 54 2 167 205 Lipsitz George Rainbow at Midnight Labor and Culture in the 1940s U of Illinois Press 1994 Livesay Harold C 1993 Samuel Gompers and Organized Labor in America McCartin Joseph A Collision course Ronald Reagan the air traffic controllers and the strike that changed America 2011 online Milkman Ruth ed Women work and protest a century of US women s labor history Routledge 2013 Mink Gwendolyn 1986 Old labor and new immigrants in American political development union party and state 1875 1920 Cornell University Press ISBN 9780801418631 Montgomery David 1987 The Fall of the House of Labor The Workplace the State and American Labor Activism 1865 1925 Montgomery David Strikes in Nineteenth Century America Social Science History 1980 4 1 pp 81 104 in JSTOR Phelan Craig William Green Biography of a Labor Leader 1989 20th century AFL leader Reich Steven A A Working People A History of African American Workers since Emancipation 2015 Rodgers Daniel T The work ethic in industrial America 1850 1920 U of Chicago Press 2014 Rosenfeld Jake 2014 What Unions No Longer Do Harvard University Press ISBN 0674725115 Taft Philip 1957 The AF of L in the Time of Gompers online Taft Philip 1959 The AF Of L From the Death of Gompers to the Merger online Taillon Paul Michel Good Reliable White Men Railroad Brotherhoods 1877 1917 U of Illinois Press 2009 Tomlins Christopher L 1985 The state and the unions labor relations law and the organized labor movement in America 1880 1960 Trotter Jr Joe William Workers on arrival Black labor in the making of America U of California Press 2019 van der Linden Marcel American Labor s Global Ambassadors The International History of the AFL CIO during the Cold War Springer 2013 Vargas Zaragosa Proletarians of the North A history of Mexican industrial workers in Detroit and the Midwest 1917 1933 Univ of California Press 1993 Wilentz Sean Chants democratic New York City amp the rise of the American working class 1788 1850 1984 online Zieger Robert H 1995 The CIO 1935 1955 University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9780807821824 Historiography edit Barrett James R 2015 Making and Unmaking the Working Class E P Thompson and the New Labor History in the United States Historical Reflections 41 1 Faue Elizabeth Rethinking the American labor movement Routledge 2017 Fink Leon In Search of the Working Class Essays in American Labor History and Political Culture 1984 Fink Leon Intellectuals versus Workers Academic Requirements and the Creation of Labor History American Historical Review 96 2 1991 395 421 online Fitzpatrick Ellen Rethinking the Intellectual Origins of American Labor History American Historical Review 96 2 1991 422 428 online Krueger Thomas A American labor historiography old and new Journal of social history 1971 277 285 online McCoy Austin 2016 Bringing the social back rethinking the declension narrative of twentieth century US labour history Social History 41 1 1 13 doi 10 1080 03071022 2015 1108705 S2CID 147426508 Mapes Kathleen Storch Randi 2016 The Making and Remaking of a Labor Historian Interview with James R Barrett Labor Studies in Working Class History of the Americas 13 2 63 79 doi 10 1215 15476715 3460852 S2CID 147867327 Pearson Chad Twentieth century US labor history Pedagogy politics and controversies Part 1 History Compass Dec 2017 15 2 doi 10 1111 hic3 12433 abstract Shelton Jon Labor and Working Class A Historiographical Survey in The Routledge History of the Twentieth Century United States Routledge 2018 pp 149 160 Tomlins Christopher 2013 The State the Unions and the critical synthesis in labor law history a 25 year retrospect Labor History 54 2 208 221 doi 10 1080 0023656X 2013 773148 S2CID 145335573 Walkowitz Daniel J Haverty Stacke Donna T eds 2010 Rethinking U S Labor History Essays on the Working Class Experience 1756 2009 New York Continuum ISBN 9781441145758 Zieger Robert H Workers and scholars Recent trends in American labor historiography Labor History 13 2 1972 245 266 https doi org 10 1080 00236567208584204 Kessler Harris Alice Labor Movement in the United States Shalvi Hyman Encyclopedia of Jewish Women 31 December 1999 Jewish Women s Archive Viewed on October 31 2023 lt https jwa org encyclopedia article labor movement in united states gt Herberg Will Jewish Labor Movement in the United States World War I to the Present Industrial and Labor Relations Review 6 no 1 1952 44 66 https doi org 10 2307 2518609 https www jstor org stable 2518609 searchText jewish women labor movement amp searchUri 2Faction 2FdoBasicSearch 3FQuery 3Djewish 2Bwomen 2Blabor 2Bmovement amp ab segments 0 2Fbasic search gsv2 2Fcontrol amp refreqid fastly default 3A56697a756895c03441cb8dc8c51f751a Yellowitz Irwin Jewish Immigrants and the American Labor Movement 1900 1920 American Jewish History 71 no 2 1981 188 217 JSTOR 23882031 https www jstor org stable 23882031 searchText jewish women labor movement amp searchUri 2Faction 2FdoBasicSearch 3FQuery 3Djewish 2Bwomen 2Blabor 2Bmovement amp ab segments 0 2Fbasic search gsv2 2Fcontrol amp refreqid fastly default 3Ab7c8a3ccea63c6b4f158ba3af8917c97 Hardman J B S The Jewish Labor Movement in the United States Jewish and Non Jewish Influences American Jewish Historical Quarterly 52 no 2 1962 98 132 JSTOR 23873714 https www jstor org stable 23873714 searchText jewish women labor movement amp searchUri 2Faction 2FdoBasicSearch 3FQuery 3Djewish 2Bwomen 2Blabor 2Bmovement amp ab segments 0 2Fbasic search gsv2 2Fcontrol amp refreqid fastly default 3A6590fd3b322530947636d947a810f7b0 Antler Joyce The History of Jewish Women in the United States Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History 24 May 2023 Accessed 1 Nov 2023 https oxfordre com americanhistory view 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 001 0001 acrefore 9780199329175 e 1011 https oxfordre com americanhistory display 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 001 0001 acrefore 9780199329175 e 1011 rskey rkv7s1 amp result 1 acrefore 9780199329175 e 1011 div1 5 Walkowitz Daniel The Jewish Working Class in America Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History 29 Nov 2021 Accessed 1 Nov 2023 https oxfordre com americanhistory view 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 001 0001 acrefore 9780199329175 e 935 https oxfordre com americanhistory display 10 1093 acrefore 9780199329175 001 0001 acrefore 9780199329175 e 935 rskey ysL3Ra amp result 2 acrefore 9780199329175 e 935 div2 6 Primary sources edit Dubofsky Melvyn and Joseph McCartin eds American Labor A Documentary Collection Palgrave Macmillan US 2004 312pp Rees Jonathan and Z S Pollack eds The Voice of the People Primary Sources on the History of American Labor Industrial Relations and Working Class Culture 2004 264pp Gompers Samuel Seventy Years of Life and Labor 1925 1985 reprint online Gompers Samuel The Samuel Gompers Papers 1986 definitive multivolume edition of all important letters to and from Gompers 9 volumes have been completed to 1917 The index is online Archived September 23 2012 at the Wayback Machine Powderly Terence Vincent Thirty years of labor 1859 1889 1890 reprint 1967 onlineExternal links editLibrary resources about Labor history of the United States Online books Resources in your library Resources in other libraries nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Labor history of the United States nbsp Media related to Labor history of the United States at Wikimedia Commons Labor History Links Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Labor history of the United States amp oldid 1217682250, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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