Transcript Slide 1

Ms. Susan M. Pojer
Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY
Labor Force Distribution
1870-1900
The Changing American
Labor Force
Child Labor
Child Labor
“Galley Labor”
Labor Unrest: 1870-1900
The Molly Maguires
(1875)
James
McParland
The Corporate
“Bully-Boys”: Pinkerton
Agents
Management vs. Labor
“Tools” of
Management
“Tools” of
Labor
 “scabs”
 boycotts
 P. R. campaign
 sympathy
demonstrations
 Pinkertons
 lockout
 blacklisting
 yellow-dog contracts
 informational
picketing
 closed shops
 court injunctions
 organized
strikes
 open shop
 “wildcat” strikes
A Striker Confronts a
SCAB!
Knights of Labor
Terence V. Powderly
An injury to one is the concern of all!
Knights of Labor
Knights of Labor trade card
GOALS OF THE KNIGHTS OF LABOR: WORKERS AS
OWNERS
ù
It did not accept a permanent division between capital
and labor.
ù
Open to all those who “produced” – skilled and unskilled,
men and women, blacks and whites, businessmen. Closed
only to “parasites” such as gamblers, lawyers, stock
speculators.
ù
Eight-hour workday.
ù
Workers’ cooperatives: Worker-owned factories.
ù
Abolition of child and prison labor.
ù
Increased circulation of greenbacks (paper money).
ù
Equal pay for men and women.
ù
Safety codes in the workplace.
ù
Prohibition of contract foreign labor.
ù
Prohibition (alcohol)
ù
Elect own political candidates
Cardinal James Gibbons,
and Pope Leo XIII – Rerum
Novarum
•
When men know they are working on what belongs to them,
they work with far greater eagerness and diligence. Nay, in a
word, they learn to love the land cultivated by their own
hands, whence they look not only for food but for some
measure of abundance for themselves and their dependents.
(#66)
•
The oppressed workers, above all, ought to be liberated from
the savagery of greedy men, who inordinately use human
beings as things for gain. Assuredly, neither justice nor
humanity can countenance the exaction of so much work
that the spirit is dulled from excessive toil and that along with
it the body sinks crushed from exhaustion. The working
energy of a man, like his entire nature, is circumscribed by
definite limits beyond which it cannot go. (#59)
Rerum Novarum (cont.)
•
Workingmen's unions, for these virtually include all the rest.
History attests what excellent results were brought about by
the artificers' guilds of olden times. Such unions should be
suited to the requirements of this our age - an age of wider
education, of different habits, and of far more numerous
requirements in daily life. It is gratifying to know that there are
actually in existence not a few associations of this nature,
consisting either of workmen alone, or of workmen and
employers together, but it were greatly to be desired that they
should become more numerous and more efficient.
It must not be supposed that the Church so
concentrates her energies on caring for souls as to
overlook things which pertain to mortal and earthly life.
(#42)
The Great Railroad Strike
of 1877
The 1877 Railway Strike:
Violence and Destruction
The Great Railroad Strike
of 1877
The Tournament of Today:
A Set-to Between Labor and
Monopoly
Anarchists Meet on the
Lake Front in 1886
Haymarket Riot (1886)
McCormick Harvesting Machine Co.
Haymarket Martyrs
Governor John Peter Altgeld
Image of the “Anarchist”
The American Federation
of Labor: 1886
Samuel Gompers
AF of L
Accepted division between capital and labor
Focus on “bread and butter issues”
ù
Catered to the skilled worker.
ù
Focused on bread and butter issues: wages, hours,
working conditions.
ù
Represented workers in matters of national legislation.
ù
Maintained a national strike fund.
ù
Evangelized the cause of unionism.
ù
Prevented disputes among the many craft unions.
ù
Mediated disputes between management and labor. Urged
Collective bargaining but was willing to engage in boycotts
and strikes.
ù
Did not run its own candidates for political office.
Instead, threw its support to candidates most friendly to
labor.
ù
Pushed for closed shops.
Homestead Steel Strike
(1892)
Homestead Steel
Works
The Amalgamated
Association of
Iron & Steel Workers
Big Corporate Profits!
Attempted Assassination!
Henry Clay Frick
Alexander Berkman
A
“Company
Town”:
Pullman,
IL
Pullman Cars
A Pullman porter
Eugene Debs attempted to organize all of the
workers (skilled and unskilled) in the railway
industry into his industrial union known as the
American Railway Union. The workers at Pullman
appealed to the ARU for support.
The Pullman Strike of 1894
In Re Debs
President Grover Cleveland
If it takes the entire army and navy to
deliver a postal card in Chicago, that card
will be delivered!
The Pullman Strike of 1894
Government by injunction!
The Socialists
Eugene V. Debs
International Workers of the
World (“Wobblies”)
The IWW
grew out of
the Western
Federation
of Miners
and favored
the anarchosyndicalist
philosophy
of direct
action that
could result
in violence.
IWW aka “Wobblies”
“Big Bill” Haywood, head
of the IWW
 Violence was justified to
overthrow capitalism.
The Hand That Will Rule the
World One Big Union
“PAINT ‘ER RED”
Tune: “Marching through Georgia”
Come with us you workingmen, and join the revel [merry]
band –
Come you discontented ones, and give a helping hand,
We march against the parasite to drive him from the land,
With One Big Industrial Union.
Chorus:
Hurrah! Hurrah! We’re going to paint ‘er red!
Hurrah! Hurrah! The way is clear ahead •–
We’re gaining shop democracy and liberty and bread
With One Big Industrial Union.
We hate their rotten system more than any mortals do,
Our aim is not to patch it up but build it up anew,
And what we’ll have for government, when finally we’re
through,
Is One Big Industrial Union!
I W W & the Internationale
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.
Lawrence, MA Strike:
1912
The “Bread & Roses”
Strike
DEMANDS:
ù 15¢/hr. wage increase.
ù Double pay for overtime.
ù No discrimination against strikers.
ù An end to “speed-up” on the
assembly line.
ù An end to discrimination against
foreign immigrant workers.
Lawrence, MA Strike: 1912
The
“Formula”
unions + violence + strikes + socialists + immigrants =
anarchists
Image of the “Anarchist”
Labor Union Membership
“Solidarity Forever!”
by Ralph Chapin (1915)
When the union's inspiration
through the workers‘ blood shall run,
There can be no power greater
anywhere beneath the sun;
Yet what force on earth is weaker
than the feeble strength of one,
But the union makes us strong!
CHORUS:
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
For the union
makes us strong!
Come On and
Sing Along!!
“Solidarity Forever!”
Is there aught we hold in common
with the greedy parasite,
Who would lash us into serfdom
and would crush us with his might?
Is there anything left to us
but to organize and fight?
For the union makes us strong!
CHORUS:
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
For the union
makes us strong!
“Solidarity Forever!”
* * * *
Through our sisters and our brothers
we can make our union strong,
For respect and equal value,
we have done without too long.
We no longer have to tolerate
injustices and wrongs,
Yes, the union makes us strong!
CHORUS:
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
Solidarity forever,
For the union
makes us strong!
Workers Benefits Today
The Rise & Decline of
Organized Labor
Right-to-Work States Today
Unionism & Globalization?