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Chapter 5 – “Industrialization”. Labor Unions and Industrialization. The BIG Picture! . Low wages , long hours and difficult working conditions caused resentment among workers and led to efforts to organize unions…
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Chapter 5 – “Industrialization” Labor Unions and Industrialization
The BIG Picture! • Low wages, long hours and difficult workingconditions caused resentment among workers and led to efforts to organize unions… • Workers began to form unions to fight for better wages and working conditions but had few successes… • The Knights of Labor, AFL, IWW and ARU fought for both skilled and unskilled workers!
Total Membership: 444,000 Total Membership: 2,647,000
Working in the U.S. • Machines were replacing skilled labor… • Skilled Laborers – higher wages • Un-skilled Laborers – few skills, lower wages • Working conditions unhealthy & dangerous • By 1900… • $.22 per hour, 60 hours per week • 675 deaths PER WEEK *** To improve working conditions – workers attempted to organize into Unions! ***
Early Unions in the United States • Trade Unions protected craft workers… • Machinists, stonecutters, shoemakers, printers; “skilled workers” • By 1873, 32 national trade unions in the U.S… • Industrial Unions begin to unite workers across an entire industry (1860s and on…) • Example: American Railway Union, Eugene Debs
Industry’s Opposition to Unions • Employees would use anti-union methods to prevent “organizers” from being hired… • “Yellow-Dog Contracts” • “Blacklists” • “Lockouts” • “Strikebreakers” or “Scabs”
Political and Social Opposition to Unions • “Laissez-faire” approach extended to ALL aspects of industry… • No laws protected workers or their right to “organize” • U.S. courts ruled that “strikes were conspiracies in restraint of trade” • Americans were suspicious of Labor Unions… • Associated them with immigrants, revolution, anarchy and MARXISM
Marxism, Socialism and the IWW • Karl Marx and Marxism spread to the U.S., 1860s • Exploitation of the working class (proletariat), class struggle, revolution! • Some unionists turned to Socialism: • Government control of business and property… • Equal distribution of wealth among all citizens… (socialist society) • The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), Wobblies, was one such socialist union!
The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 • United States’ first national labor protest! (wage cuts) • Workers strike – halt service… • 80,000 workers, 11 states • U.S. Federal judge: • “A strike or other unlawful interference with the trains will be a violation of the United States law, and the court will be bound to take notice of it and enforce the penalty” • President Rutherford B. Hayes… • Federal troops to Baltimore, Pittsburgh, Philly, Illinois, Missouri
Effects of the Great Railroad Strike • Anti-Union effects: • Immigrants, Marxists and Anarchists were blamed… • States passed anti-union and anti-conspiracy laws… • Anti-union sentiment grew! • Pro-Union effects: • Unions grew after incident… • Unions became more organized… • Strikes increased!
The Knights of Labor • Created in 1869… • First NATIONAL “industrial union” (ALL workers, too!) • Fought for: • 8 hour work day • Equal pay for women • End to child labor • Worker owned factories • Used boycotts and arbitration… NOT strikes!
FIRST, what was the “bread and butter” issue for labor unions?
1.) The Haymarket Riot of 1886 • Labor leaders continued to push for change… • May 4, 1886 – 3,000 people gathered at Chicago’s Haymarket Square to protest police treatment of striking workers • A bomb exploded near the police line – killing 7 officers and several workers… • Union leaders and radicals were arrested and executed for the crime! • “unions dominated by dangerous radicals”
2.) The Homestead Steel Strike of 1892 • Even Andrew Carnegie could not escape a workers strike! • Henry Clay Frick proposes 20% wage cut… • Workers picket and surround factory • Carnegie hired Pinkerton Detectives to guard the plant and allow scabs to work… • Detectives and strikers clashed – 3 detectives and 9 strikers died! • The National guard restored order – “Scabs” returned to work…
3.) Pullman Railroad Strike of 1894 • Pullman Palace Car Company – Pullman, Illinois (Chicago) • 1893, cut wages – but did not cut rent, food prices, etc. • “Company scrip” • Eugene V. Debs, ARU • ARU workers boycotted Pullman cars… but, railroad managers are tricky! (U.S. Mail) • Grover Cleveland sends in troops! Pullman, Illinois
New Unions Emerge in the United States • The Knights of Labor had fallen apart after the Haymarket Riot… • The American Federation of Labor (AFL), 1886 *** • Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), 1905 • Labor union with an emphasis on Socialism • American Railway Union (ARU), 1893
Samuel Gompers, AFL • Began working as a cigar maker at the age of 10! • 1877, became president of the Cigar Makers Union… • Stayed away from politics, socialism (early on)… • Focused on LABOR issues! • 1886, creates the AFL… • “Show me a country in which there are no strikes and I will show you that country in which there is no liberty!”
The Rise of the American Federation of Labor (AFL), 1886 • Longest lasting labor union in the U.S. (still today) • FEDERATION of various trade unions… • Cigar-makers, shoemakers, carpenters, etc. • ONLY skilled workers and NO diversity! (problems? YUP!) • “Bread and Butter” goals: • Higher wages, shorter hours and better working conditions • Stayed away from politics…
Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), 1905 • Founded as opposition to AFL! • Socialists, Anarchists and radicals, Chicago… • “An injury to one is an injury to all” • IWW goal: overthrow the working class! • Organize into one big union – skilled and un-skilled! • Advocated “workplace democracy”
Women begin to “Organize” • Although women were barred from most unions, they did organize behind powerful leaders such as Mary Harris Jones… • She organized the United Mine Workers of America, 1890 • Mine workers gave her the nickname, “Mother Jones” • Pauline Newman organized the International Ladies Garment Workers Union at the age of 16!