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WORKERS & UNIONS
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While industrial growth produced wealth for the owners of factories, mines, railroads, and large farms, people who performed work in these industries struggled to survive. To maximize profits, people who owned the means of production looked for the cheapest labor: Immigrants, women, and children. FACTORY WORK
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Worked long hours, 6 days each week, in poor conditions (sweatshops) Owners and managers enforced strict rules to maximize productivity Demand for work was larger than supply of jobs, so owners could pay very little and easily replace workers At the turn of the 20 th century, 20% of children ages 10-16 worked instead of attending school FACTORY WORK
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Mines for coal and other natural resources typically weren’t near population centers, so companies built housing for their workers Companies charged high rents to live in these towns and segregated them by race/ethnicity Companies also set up stores that sold goods on credit at high interest rates COMPANY TOWNS
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Rent and store purchases were taken out of workers’ paychecks, so by the end of the pay period, workers sometimes owed their employers money. Workers could be arrested for leaving their jobs before paying back the money, so workers were trapped in “wage slavery.” COMPANY TOWNS
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Formed by Uriah Smith Stephens in 1869, included workers of all trades, skill levels, genders, ages, and races with the goal of replacing capitalism with workers’ cooperatives. In 1881 Terence V. Powderly became the leader. Under his leadership, the Knights of Labor grew to 700,000 members by 1885. KNIGHTS OF LABOR
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Organized a national strike for an 8-hour workday on May 1, 1886 (“May Day”). Violence broke out between striking workers and those hired to replace them. Conflict escalated over the following days and police got involved. KNIGHTS OF LABOR
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On May 4 in Haymarket Square in Chicago, strikers staged a protest. Some anarchists (who oppose all government) joined in. A protester threw a bomb, killing a policeman. A riot broke out and resulted in the deaths of protesters and policemen. Several anarchists were tried for murder, some of whom were executed. THE HAYMARKET RIOT
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Formed by Samuel Gompers in 1886 to represent skilled craftsman by uniting small unions that each represented a specific craft or trade. Local unions remained independent but were supported in their efforts by their affiliation with the AFL. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR
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Charged union dues, which were pooled to support striking workers and a pension fund. Focused on specific issues instead of broad social change. Specifically excluded women and many local chapters found ways to exclude racial minorities, so AFL membership never matched the Knights of Labor. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR
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In 1892 a Carnegie Steel Plant in Homestead, PA cut workers’ wages. When a strike was called, Carnegie’s business partner, Henry Frick, called the Pinkertons, a private security agency, to break it up. THE HOMESTEAD STRIKE
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The Pinkertons killed and wounded strikers during a two-week standoff. An anarchist who had joined the protest tried to assassinate Frick and the public associated his actions with the union. With the loss of public support, the union called off the strike after several more months. THE HOMESTEAD STRIKE
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In 1893, the Pullman Palace Car Company laid off workers and reduced wages by 25%. Workers, who were required to live in a company town, went tried to negotiate with the owner George Pullman in May of 1894. He fired three workers and shut down their plant. THE PULLMAN STRIKE
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Workers turned to the American Railway Union (ARU) leader, Eugene Debs. The ARU was an industrial union that united all workers in the railroad industry, regardless of which type of job they held. The ARU called for a national strike and by June nearly 300,000 workers had joined the effort, halting rail traffic and mail delivery. THE PULLMAN STRIKE
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Railroad owners went to court citing the Sherman Antitrust Act in their argument that the union was disrupting free trade. A federal court issued an injunction against the ARU and President Grover Cleveland sent in federal troops to end the strike on July 4. Debs challenged the injunction in court, but the Supreme Court upheld the decision in the case In re Debs. THE PULLMAN STRIKE
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