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Labor Force Distribution 1870-1900
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The Changing American Labor Force
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“Galley Labor”
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Labor Unrest: 1870-1900
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Management vs. Labor “Tools” of Management “Tools” of Labor “scabs” P. R. campaign Pinkertons lockout blacklisting yellow-dog contracts court injunctions open shop boycotts sympathy demonstrations informational picketing closed shops organized strikes “wildcat” strikes
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The Corporate “Bully-Boys”: Pinkerton Agents
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A Striker Confronts a SCAB!
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Knights of Labor (1869) Terence V. Powderly An injury to one is the concern of all! ù Sought to unite all of America’s workers ù Accepted Farm hands Farm hands Factory workers Factory workers Women Women African Americans African Americans Immigrants Immigrants ù Excluded Gamblers Lawyers Bankers Doctors Liquor dealers
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Goals of the Knights of Labor ù Eight-hour workday. ù Workers’ cooperatives. ù Worker-owned factories. ù Abolition of child and prison labor. ù Increased circulation of greenbacks. ù Equal pay for men and women. ù Safety codes in the workplace. ù Prohibition of contract foreign labor. ù Abolition of the National Bank.
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The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 First nationwide strike Baltimore & Ohio RR cut wages by 10% BUT gave a 10% dividend to stockholders Brakemen in WV walked out on strike Strike spread quickly along the rail routes Strikers halted all train traffic Unemployed and workers in other industries joined the protest Mobs defied militia sent to disperse them Rioting persisted for about a week President Hayes called out the army to suppress the strike Federal troops fired into a crowd in Pittsburg, killing 20 By the end of the strike over 100 were dead Result: Weakened railroad unions Damaged reputation of labor unions because of the disruption and failure
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Haymarket Riot (1886) McCormick Reaper workers demand 8hr workdayMcCormick Reaper workers demand 8hr workday Police harassment of workers/strikers killed 4 strikers the day before, called for a meeting in Haymarket SquarePolice harassment of workers/strikers killed 4 strikers the day before, called for a meeting in Haymarket Square Police ordered people to disperse, bomb was thrown (killed 6 officers, 67 injured)Police ordered people to disperse, bomb was thrown (killed 6 officers, 67 injured) 8 anarchists convicted of murder, unjust trial, they were scapegoats8 anarchists convicted of murder, unjust trial, they were scapegoats –7 sentenced to death 1 suicide, 4 executed, 2 terms to life in prison
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Haymarket Riot (1886) McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. Workers McCormick Harvesting Machine Company of Chicago go on strike (spring) Workers demanded an 8hr workday 60-hour work weeks were common. The company locked out the workers and hired strikebreakers, a common practice at the time.
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Haymarket Riot (1886) May 1, 1886 – nationwide general strike for 8hr day 45,000 workers parade down Michigan Ave in support May 3 – protest outside the McCormick plant resulted in violence May 4 – A mass meeting to protest what was seen as brutality by the police Number of radical and anarchist speakers addressed a crowd of approximately 1,500 people. Meeting = peaceful, BUT the mood became confrontational when the police tried to disperse the crowd. Bomb thrown at police Police fired into crowd
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Haymarket Aftermath Provoke fear & anger toward: Anarchist Labor unions Strikers Immigrants Working class Eight men tried = ALL guilty 4 executed 1 suicide 3 prison sentences
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The American Federation of Labor (1886) ù Loose federation of 100+ craft unions Organized skilled worker. Organized skilled worker. ù Represented workers in matters of national legislation. ù Used strike to gain higher pay & better working conditions ù Maintained a national strike fund. ù Mediated disputes between management and labor. ù Pushed for closed shops.
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Big Corporate Profits!
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Homestead Steel Strike (1892) The Amalgamated Association of Iron & Steel Workers Carnegie want to crush Union Refuses to allow Union to negotiate for non-union workers Workers strike Frick builds a fence, locks strikers out & hires Pinkertons Conflict b/w workers & Pinkertons led to violence PA governor send in national guard
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Attempted Assassination! Henry Clay Frick Alexander Berkman Public attention turned against workers Linked anarchism & unions Workers gave up Union leaders blackballed 12hr day, lower wages and 500 fewer jobs
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The Pullman Strike of 1894
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A “Company Town”: Pullman, IL A “Company Town”: Pullman, IL Wages cut by 28% Pullman refused to lower rents 90% of Pullman workers strike American Railway Union (ARU) joins boycott of Pullman cars Boycott spread to 15 RRs & 27 states
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President Grover Cleveland If it takes the entire army and navy to deliver a postal card in Chicago, that card will be delivered! Cleveland called in Army Violence erupted Troops killed 25 workers and wounded 60+ Debs arrested for violating court injunction ARU, boycott & strike defeated Significance Courts & gov’t side with industrialists
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International Workers of the World (“Wobblies”) Violence was justified to overthrow capitalism.
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The Hand That Will Rule the World One Big Union
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Mother Jones: “The Miner’s Angel” Mary Harris. Organizer for the United Mine Workers. Founded the Social Democratic Party in 1898. One of the founding members of the I. W. W. in 1905.
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Lawrence, MA Strike: 1912
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The “Bread & Roses” Strike DEMANDS: ù15¢/hr. wage increase. ùDouble pay for overtime. ùNo discrimination against strikers. ùAn end to “speed-up” on the assembly line. ùAn end to discrimination against foreign immigrant workers.
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Lawrence, MA Strike: 1912
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The “Formula” Unions +v+v+v+violence +s+s+s+strikes +s+s+s+socialists +i+i+i+immigrants Anarchists
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Labor’s Weaknesses ù Principal labor organizations represented only a small percentage of the industrial work force. ONLY 4% of industrial workers belonged to a Union in 1900. ù Reasons for not organizing: Immigrants — make some money in America and return home American workers —believed they were not going to be part of a permanent working class They or their children would become a higher position in society. They or their children would become a higher position in society. ù People rather low paying jobs than no jobs ù Middle Class resented unions = believed radical workers at heart of all problems
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Labor Union Membership
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Workers Benefits Today
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The Rise & Decline of Organized Labor
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Right-to-Work States Today
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Unionism & Globalization?
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