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Margaret Haley

Margaret A. Haley (November 15, 1861 – January 5, 1939) was a teacher, unionist, and Georgist land value tax activist,[1] who was dubbed the "lady labor slugger".[2] Haley was the first business representative of the Chicago Teachers Federation and a pioneer leader in organizing schoolteachers. During her long career with the CTF, Haley fought to correct tax inequalities, increase the salaries of teachers, and expose unfair land leasing by the Chicago Board of Education.

Margaret A. Haley
Born(1861-11-15)November 15, 1861
DiedJanuary 6, 1939(1939-01-06) (aged 77)
Occupation(s)Business Representative of Chicago Teachers Federation; union organizer
Parent(s)Michael and Elizabeth (née Tiernan) Haley

Early life and teaching career edit

Haley was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1861 to Irish immigrant parents; her mother came from Dublin, Ireland and her father was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada to Irish immigrants from County Clare, Ireland. For the first six years of her life, she lived on a farm. Her parents supported agrarian activism, including the grange.[3] Economic upheaval in the 1880s and the depression of the 1890s contributed to her later activism. At the Illinois Normal School in Bloomington, Illinois. Haley imbibed the lessons of single-tax advocate Henry George. At the Cook County Normal School and the Buffalo School of Pedagogy, she received instruction from progressive educators Francis Wayland Parker and William James. Family financial troubles prompted Haley to begin teaching at age 16 at a country school in Grundy County, Illinois. She moved to Chicago in 1882 to teach in the Cook County school system. In 1884, she took a position as a sixth grade teacher at the Hendricks School in the Stockyards district on Chicago's South Side. She remained there until ending her career as a teacher in 1900.[citation needed]

Chicago Teachers' Federation edit

Haley joined the Chicago Teacher's Federation in 1898, and was one of the organization's first district vice-presidents. The fight against the Harper Commission in 1898 constituted Haley’s first major fight as a member of the Chicago Teachers' Federation. William Rainey Harper, president of the University of Chicago, headed a commission that proposed a complete restructuring of the Chicago school system.[4]

The Harper Report called for the superintendent’s increased power, the instilling of corporate-like efficiency in the schools, the reduction of the school board’s size, the increase of “experts” in educational leadership positions, and the introduction of a salary system based on merit that would favor male high school teachers and administrators over the largely female elementary school teachers. Perhaps most well known, the Harper Commission also proposed ninety-nine year leases, not subject to taxation, of school property for Chicago businesses.[citation needed]

 
An illustration in the Chicago Tribune from January 29, 1900, depicts Margaret Haley and Catharine Goggin as key figures in the fight against corporate tax dodgers

In late 1899, Haley also joined the “tax fight” to ensure that the public schools received due funding, and to keep teachers from having to beg for salary increases and security of pay when the Board of Education pursued inequitable tax and lease policies.[5] After the Harper Bill’s defeat, Haley and Catherine Goggin strengthened their rule over the CTF, thus purging any opposition within the union and making it one of the most prominent workers' organizations in America. Haley was hired as the CTF's permanent business representative in 1901 during her ongoing work investigating corporate tax evasion.[6] Cook County tax records indicated that over 2 million dollars in corporate taxes had gone uncollected. Haley and Goggin advocated that money be put into the school system; after years of advocacy, $600,000 was collected and directed towards teacher raises.[7]

During the time of the “tax battle,” 1900-1904, the Chicago Teachers’ Federation joined the Chicago Federation of Labor, headed by Margaret Haley’s friend John Fitzpatrick, which led the CTF to become Local 1 of the American Federation of Teachers. Historians debate to what degree labor accepted the teachers, and vice versa.[citation needed] The Chicago Board of Education used the teachers' affiliations with labor as a tool against them. During the 1915-1916 school year the Board of Education created the Loeb rule, which prohibited any alliance between teachers and organized labor.[8] To make matters worse, the Board refused to rehire 68 teachers (38 of whom were members of the CTF) in the aftermath of the decision. The fight went before the Illinois Supreme Court, which ruled against the teachers.[9] The CTF was required to disaffiliate with labor, and it continued as a quasi-legal organization until 1924.[citation needed]

The CTF also tied its fortunes to city politics; in 1905 it supported the mayoral bid of Edward Dunne.[10] Like Haley, Dunne favored the municipal ownership of streetcar lines and the principle of popular control. During Dunne's first two-year stint as mayor the power of “administrative progressives” over teachers diminished. As part of Dunne's “Kitchen Cabinet”, Haley advised the mayor on school issues. Dunne appointed women and CTF supporters to the school board to ensure that business interests did not dominate school policies.[citation needed]

Haley took a stand at the national level. In 1901, three years before Haley became president of the National Federation of Teachers, she became the first elementary school teacher to speak before the National Education Association at the St. Louis convention. She presented the famous speech, “Why Teachers Should Organize”. She pushed for greater numbers of women in leadership roles at the local and national levels of teachers' unionization. She played in instrumental role in Ella Flagg Young’s election to president of the National Education Association in 1910, which then paid greater attention to the needs of classroom teachers.[citation needed]

Death and legacy edit

Margaret Haley died of a heart attack at Englewood Hospital in Chicago on January 5, 1939, aged 77.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Arnesen, Eric. Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working-class History. New York: Routledge, 2007.
  2. ^ Lazerson, Marvin (1984). Reid, Robert L.; Haley, Margaret A.; Urban, Wayne J.; Wrigley, Julia (eds.). "Teachers Organize: What Margaret Haley Lost". History of Education Quarterly. 24 (2): 261–270. doi:10.2307/367959. ISSN 0018-2680.
  3. ^ Nolan, Janet (1995). "A Patrick Henry in the Classroom: Margaret Haley and the Chicago Teachers' Federation". Éire-Ireland. 30 (2): 104–117. doi:10.1353/eir.1995.0042. ISSN 1550-5162.
  4. ^ Public Workers in Service of America: A Reader. University of Illinois Press. 2023. doi:10.5406/jj.5610582.19. ISBN 978-0-252-04517-2.
  5. ^ Flanagan, Maureen A. (2002). Seeing with Their Hearts: Chicago Women and the Vision of the Good City, 1871-1933. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-09539-4.
  6. ^ "Chicago Teachers' Federation". chsmedia.org. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  7. ^ Hagopian, Jesse. "A people's history of the Chicago Teachers Union | International Socialist Review". isreview.org. Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  8. ^ Public Workers in Service of America: A Reader. University of Illinois Press. 2023. doi:10.5406/jj.5610582.19. ISBN 978-0-252-04517-2.
  9. ^ "The Courts vs. Teacher Unionism – LAWCHA". Retrieved 2023-12-09.
  10. ^ "Chicago Teachers' Federation". chsmedia.org. Retrieved 2023-12-09.

Sources edit

  • Haley, Margaret (1982). Battleground: the autobiography of Margaret Haley (edited by Robert L. Reid). Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
  • Hoffman, Nancy. Woman's True Profession: Voices from the History of Teaching, 1981
  • Herrick, M.J. (1971). The Chicago Schools: A Social and Political History. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
  • Lazerson, Marvin. "If All the World Were Chicago: American Education in the Twentieth Century," History of Education Quarterly 24 (Summer 1984): 165-179.
  • McCormick, Maureen Elizabeth (1988). "The Female Grade School Teacher and Equal Rights for Women: An Alternative View on the Meanings of Education and the Organization of the American School" (Ed. D. diss, University of Cincinnati).
  • Murphy, Marjorie (1990). Blackboard Unions: The AFT and the NEA, 1900-1980. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press.
  • Murphy, Marjorie. "Taxation and Social Conflict: Teacher Unionism and Public School Finance in Chicago, 1898-1914," Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 74 (Winter 1981): 242-260.
  • Nolan, Janet. "A Patrick Henry in the Classroom: Margaret Haley and the Chicago Teachers' Federation," Éire-Ireland (Samhradh/Summer, 1995): 104-117.
  • Pegram, Thomas R. (1992). Partisans and Progressives: Private Interest and Public Policy in Illinois, 1870-1922. Urbana, Illinois: University of Illinois Press.
  • Rousmaníere, Kate. (2005) Citizen Teacher: The Life and Leadership of Margaret Haley (State University of New York Press, 2005. 271 pp. a major scholarly biography.
  • Rousmaniere, Kate (1999). "Where Haley Stood: Margaret Haley, Teachers' Work, and the Problem of Teacher Identity" in Women's Lives: Narrative Inquiries in the History of Women's Education, eds. Kathleen Weiler and Sue Middleton. Philadelphia: Open University Press.
  • Schwartz, Kathleen Barker (1986). "Scientific Management and Administrative Reform in Education, 1900-1920: 'One Specializes in Science, the Other in Practice' (Bobbit, Follett, Taylor, Haley, Hoxie)" (Ed. D. diss, Harvard University).
  • Tegnell, Geoffrey Gordon (1997). "Democracy in Education: A Comparative Study of the Teachers' Council Movement, 1895-1968" (Ed. D. diss., Harvard University).
  • Tyack, David (1974). The One Best System: A History of Urban Education. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.
  • Tyack, David and Elizabeth Hansot. (1982) Managers of Virtue: Public School Leadership in America, 1820–1980. New York: Basic Books.
  • Urban, Wayne J. "Organized Teachers and Educational Reform During the Progressive Era: 1890-1920," History of Education Quarterly 16 (Spring 1976): 35-52.
  • Urban, Wayne J. (1982) Why Teachers Organized. Detroit: Wayne State University Press.
  • Wrigley, Julia. (1982). Class, Politics, and Public School: Chicago, 1900-1950. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press.

External links edit

  • History of Education at fcis.oise.utoronto.ca
  • NMWH website

margaret, haley, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, mar. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message Margaret A Haley November 15 1861 January 5 1939 was a teacher unionist and Georgist land value tax activist 1 who was dubbed the lady labor slugger 2 Haley was the first business representative of the Chicago Teachers Federation and a pioneer leader in organizing schoolteachers During her long career with the CTF Haley fought to correct tax inequalities increase the salaries of teachers and expose unfair land leasing by the Chicago Board of Education Margaret A HaleyBorn 1861 11 15 November 15 1861Joliet Illinois U S DiedJanuary 6 1939 1939 01 06 aged 77 Chicago Illinois U S Occupation s Business Representative of Chicago Teachers Federation union organizerParent s Michael and Elizabeth nee Tiernan Haley Contents 1 Early life and teaching career 2 Chicago Teachers Federation 3 Death and legacy 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 External linksEarly life and teaching career editHaley was born in Chicago Illinois in 1861 to Irish immigrant parents her mother came from Dublin Ireland and her father was born in Montreal Quebec Canada to Irish immigrants from County Clare Ireland For the first six years of her life she lived on a farm Her parents supported agrarian activism including the grange 3 Economic upheaval in the 1880s and the depression of the 1890s contributed to her later activism At the Illinois Normal School in Bloomington Illinois Haley imbibed the lessons of single tax advocate Henry George At the Cook County Normal School and the Buffalo School of Pedagogy she received instruction from progressive educators Francis Wayland Parker and William James Family financial troubles prompted Haley to begin teaching at age 16 at a country school in Grundy County Illinois She moved to Chicago in 1882 to teach in the Cook County school system In 1884 she took a position as a sixth grade teacher at the Hendricks School in the Stockyards district on Chicago s South Side She remained there until ending her career as a teacher in 1900 citation needed Chicago Teachers Federation editHaley joined the Chicago Teacher s Federation in 1898 and was one of the organization s first district vice presidents The fight against the Harper Commission in 1898 constituted Haley s first major fight as a member of the Chicago Teachers Federation William Rainey Harper president of the University of Chicago headed a commission that proposed a complete restructuring of the Chicago school system 4 The Harper Report called for the superintendent s increased power the instilling of corporate like efficiency in the schools the reduction of the school board s size the increase of experts in educational leadership positions and the introduction of a salary system based on merit that would favor male high school teachers and administrators over the largely female elementary school teachers Perhaps most well known the Harper Commission also proposed ninety nine year leases not subject to taxation of school property for Chicago businesses citation needed nbsp An illustration in the Chicago Tribune from January 29 1900 depicts Margaret Haley and Catharine Goggin as key figures in the fight against corporate tax dodgersIn late 1899 Haley also joined the tax fight to ensure that the public schools received due funding and to keep teachers from having to beg for salary increases and security of pay when the Board of Education pursued inequitable tax and lease policies 5 After the Harper Bill s defeat Haley and Catherine Goggin strengthened their rule over the CTF thus purging any opposition within the union and making it one of the most prominent workers organizations in America Haley was hired as the CTF s permanent business representative in 1901 during her ongoing work investigating corporate tax evasion 6 Cook County tax records indicated that over 2 million dollars in corporate taxes had gone uncollected Haley and Goggin advocated that money be put into the school system after years of advocacy 600 000 was collected and directed towards teacher raises 7 During the time of the tax battle 1900 1904 the Chicago Teachers Federation joined the Chicago Federation of Labor headed by Margaret Haley s friend John Fitzpatrick which led the CTF to become Local 1 of the American Federation of Teachers Historians debate to what degree labor accepted the teachers and vice versa citation needed The Chicago Board of Education used the teachers affiliations with labor as a tool against them During the 1915 1916 school year the Board of Education created the Loeb rule which prohibited any alliance between teachers and organized labor 8 To make matters worse the Board refused to rehire 68 teachers 38 of whom were members of the CTF in the aftermath of the decision The fight went before the Illinois Supreme Court which ruled against the teachers 9 The CTF was required to disaffiliate with labor and it continued as a quasi legal organization until 1924 citation needed The CTF also tied its fortunes to city politics in 1905 it supported the mayoral bid of Edward Dunne 10 Like Haley Dunne favored the municipal ownership of streetcar lines and the principle of popular control During Dunne s first two year stint as mayor the power of administrative progressives over teachers diminished As part of Dunne s Kitchen Cabinet Haley advised the mayor on school issues Dunne appointed women and CTF supporters to the school board to ensure that business interests did not dominate school policies citation needed Haley took a stand at the national level In 1901 three years before Haley became president of the National Federation of Teachers she became the first elementary school teacher to speak before the National Education Association at the St Louis convention She presented the famous speech Why Teachers Should Organize She pushed for greater numbers of women in leadership roles at the local and national levels of teachers unionization She played in instrumental role in Ella Flagg Young s election to president of the National Education Association in 1910 which then paid greater attention to the needs of classroom teachers citation needed Death and legacy editMargaret Haley died of a heart attack at Englewood Hospital in Chicago on January 5 1939 aged 77 See also editChicago Teachers Union Chicago Public SchoolsReferences edit Arnesen Eric Encyclopedia of U S Labor and Working class History New York Routledge 2007 Lazerson Marvin 1984 Reid Robert L Haley Margaret A Urban Wayne J Wrigley Julia eds Teachers Organize What Margaret Haley Lost History of Education Quarterly 24 2 261 270 doi 10 2307 367959 ISSN 0018 2680 Nolan Janet 1995 A Patrick Henry in the Classroom Margaret Haley and the Chicago Teachers Federation Eire Ireland 30 2 104 117 doi 10 1353 eir 1995 0042 ISSN 1550 5162 Public Workers in Service of America A Reader University of Illinois Press 2023 doi 10 5406 jj 5610582 19 ISBN 978 0 252 04517 2 Flanagan Maureen A 2002 Seeing with Their Hearts Chicago Women and the Vision of the Good City 1871 1933 Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 09539 4 Chicago Teachers Federation chsmedia org Retrieved 2023 12 09 Hagopian Jesse A people s history of the Chicago Teachers Union International Socialist Review isreview org Retrieved 2023 12 09 Public Workers in Service of America A Reader University of Illinois Press 2023 doi 10 5406 jj 5610582 19 ISBN 978 0 252 04517 2 The Courts vs Teacher Unionism LAWCHA Retrieved 2023 12 09 Chicago Teachers Federation chsmedia org Retrieved 2023 12 09 Sources edit Haley Margaret 1982 Battleground the autobiography of Margaret Haley edited by Robert L Reid Chicago University of Illinois Press Hoffman Nancy Woman s True Profession Voices from the History of Teaching 1981 Herrick M J 1971 The Chicago Schools A Social and Political History Beverly Hills CA Sage Publications Lazerson Marvin If All the World Were Chicago American Education in the Twentieth Century History of Education Quarterly 24 Summer 1984 165 179 McCormick Maureen Elizabeth 1988 The Female Grade School Teacher and Equal Rights for Women An Alternative View on the Meanings of Education and the Organization of the American School Ed D diss University of Cincinnati Murphy Marjorie 1990 Blackboard Unions The AFT and the NEA 1900 1980 Ithaca New York Cornell University Press Murphy Marjorie Taxation and Social Conflict Teacher Unionism and Public School Finance in Chicago 1898 1914 Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 74 Winter 1981 242 260 Nolan Janet A Patrick Henry in the Classroom Margaret Haley and the Chicago Teachers Federation Eire Ireland Samhradh Summer 1995 104 117 Pegram Thomas R 1992 Partisans and Progressives Private Interest and Public Policy in Illinois 1870 1922 Urbana Illinois University of Illinois Press Rousmaniere Kate 2005 Citizen Teacher The Life and Leadership of Margaret Haley State University of New York Press 2005 271 pp a major scholarly biography Rousmaniere Kate 1999 Where Haley Stood Margaret Haley Teachers Work and the Problem of Teacher Identity in Women s Lives Narrative Inquiries in the History of Women s Education eds Kathleen Weiler and Sue Middleton Philadelphia Open University Press Schwartz Kathleen Barker 1986 Scientific Management and Administrative Reform in Education 1900 1920 One Specializes in Science the Other in Practice Bobbit Follett Taylor Haley Hoxie Ed D diss Harvard University Tegnell Geoffrey Gordon 1997 Democracy in Education A Comparative Study of the Teachers Council Movement 1895 1968 Ed D diss Harvard University Tyack David 1974 The One Best System A History of Urban Education Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press Tyack David and Elizabeth Hansot 1982 Managers of Virtue Public School Leadership in America 1820 1980 New York Basic Books Urban Wayne J Organized Teachers and Educational Reform During the Progressive Era 1890 1920 History of Education Quarterly 16 Spring 1976 35 52 Urban Wayne J 1982 Why Teachers Organized Detroit Wayne State University Press Wrigley Julia 1982 Class Politics and Public School Chicago 1900 1950 New Brunswick New Jersey Rutgers University Press External links editHistory of Education at fcis oise utoronto ca NMWH website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Margaret Haley amp oldid 1189010247, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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