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Published byKory Parks Modified over 9 years ago
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Ch.14; Sect. 3 STD: 2.4
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Grim working conditions in many industries led workers to form unions and stage labor strikes.
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Sherman Antitrust Act Def pg. 473 Government policies had little effect on business Unbalanced distribution of wealth ▪ Rich were exceedingly rich
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Workforce European immigrants White Americans from rural areas Working conditions 10 hr days Six days a week No paid vacation Sweatshops Cramped workshops in shabby tenement buildings
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Lacked the skills to work elsewhere Needed the jobs to survive
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Early organizing 1794: Philadelphia shoemakers formed a trade union to protect their interests Carpenters, printers, blacksmiths soon followed National Unions Knights of Labor ▪ Leader- Terence V. Powderly ▪ Hoped to achieve their ends without strikes by using boycotts and negotiating with employers
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Great Railroad strike- 1877 1 st railroad strike Haymarket Riot- 1886 Haymarket Square in Chicago Foreign-born unionists blamed Xenophobia ▪ Fear of foreigners
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American Federation of Labor (FAL)-1886 Founder ▪ Samuel Gompers Blacklists ▪ Lists of people perceived as troublemakers
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Homestead Strike- 1892 Carnegie Steel Company ▪ Homestead, Pennsylvania Workers refused to work faster ▪ Manager tried to lock them out Pullman Strike-1893 Pullman Company Union supporter ▪ Eugene V. Debs ▪ Urged members not to work on any trains that included Pullman cars
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Critical Thinking Pg. 476; # 4
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