РефератыИностранный языкLaLabor Unions Essay Research Paper Labor UnionsGROWTH

Labor Unions Essay Research Paper Labor UnionsGROWTH

Labor Unions Essay, Research Paper


Labor Unions


GROWTH OF THE FACTORY


In colonial America, most of the manufacturing was done by hand in a home. Labor


took place in workshops attached to the side of a home. As towns grew into


cities, the demand for manufactured goods increased. Some workshop owners began


hiring helpers to increase production. Relations between the employer and helper


were generally harmonious. They worked side by side, had the same interests and


held similar political views.


The factory system that began around the mid 1800’s brought great changes. The


employers no longer worked beside their employees. They became executives and


merchants who rarely saw their workers. They were less concerned with their


welfare than with the cost of their labor. Many workers were angry about the


changes brought by the factory system. In the past, they had taken great pride


in their handicraft skills, and now machines did most of the work, and they were


reduced from the status of craft workers to common laborers. The were also


replaced by workers who would accept lower wages. The Industrial Revolution


meant degradation rather than progress.


As the factory system grew, many workers began to form labor unions to protect


their interests. The first union to hold regular meetings and collect dues was


organized by Philadelphia shoemakers in 1792. Soon after, carpenters and


leather workers in Boston and printers in New York also organized unions.


Labor’s tactics in those early times were simple. Members of a union would


agree on the wages they thought were fair. They pledged to stop working for


employers who would not pay that amount. They also sought to compel employers


to hire only union members.


CONSPIRACY LAWS


Employers found the courts to be an effective weapon to protect their interests.


In 1806, eight Philadelphia shoemakers were brought to trial after leading an


unsuccessful strike. The court ruled that any organizing of workers to raise


wages was an illegal act. Unions were “conspiracies” against employers and the


community. In later cases, courts ruled that almost any action taken by unions


to increase wages might be criminal. These decisions destroyed the


effectiveness of the nation’s early labor unions.


Not until 1842 was the way opened again for workers to organize. That year


several union shoemakers in Boston were brought to trial. They were charged


with refusing to work with non-union shoemakers. A municipal court judge found


the men guilty of conspiracy. But an appeal to a higher court resulted in a


victory for labor unions generally. Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw ruled that it was


not unlawful for workers to engage peacefully in union activity. It was their


right to organize, he said. Shaw’s decision was widely accepted. For many years


following this decision, unions did not have to fear conspiracy charges.


UNION STRUGGLES


In the next two decades, unions campaigned for a 10-hour working day and against


child labor. A number of state legislatures responded favorably. In 1851, for


example, New Jersey passed a law calling for a 10-hour working day in all


factories. It also forbade the employment of children under 10 years old.


Meanwhile trade unions were joining together in cities to form federations. A


number of skilled trades organized national unions to try to improve their


wages and working conditions. The effort to increase wages brought about


hundreds of strikes during the 1850s. None was as extensive, however, as a


strike of New England shoemakers in 1860. The strike started in Lynn,


Massachusetts, when factory workers were refused a three-dollar increase in


their weekly pay. It soon spread to Maine and New Hampshire. Altogether, about


20,000 workers took part in the strike. It ended in a victory for the


shoemakers. Similar victories were soon won by other trade unions. These


successes led to big increases in union membership. Yet most American workers


were generally better off than workers in Europe and had more hope of improving


their lives. For this reason, the majority did not join labor unions.


In the years following the Civil War (1861-1865), the United States was


transformed by the enormous growth of industry. Once the United States was


mainly a nation of small farms. By 1900, it was a nation of growing cities, of


coal and steel, of engines and fast communications. Though living standards


generally rose, millions of industrial workers lived in crowded, unsanitary


slums. Their conditions became desperate in times of business depressions. Then


it was not unusual for workers to go on strike and battle their employers.


Between 1865 and 1900, industrial violence occurred on numerous occasions.


Probably the most violent confrontation between labor and employers was the


Great Railway Strike of 1877. The nation had been in the grip of a severe


depression for four years. During that time, the railroads had decreased the


wages of railway workers by 20 percent. Many trainmen complained that they


could not support their families adequately. There was little that the trainmen


could do about the wage decreases. At that time, unions were weak and workers


feared going on strike; there were too many unemployed men who might take their


jobs. Yet some workers secretly formed a Trainmen’s Union to oppose the


railroads.


Then, in 1877, four big railroads announced that they were going to decrease


wages another 10 percent. In addition, the Pennsylvania line ordered freight


train conductors to handle twice as many cars as before. On July 16, a strike


began on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in West Virginia. The strike quickly


spread to other lines. On July 19, Pennsylvania Railroad workers at Pittsburgh


refused to let freight trains move. (The strikers let passenger trains move


freely because they carried United States mail.) The next day the governor sent


statemilitiamen to oust the strikers from the freight yard. But these men were


from Pittsburgh. They had many friends and relatives among the strikers. Soon


they were mingling with the crowd of men, women and children at the freight yard.


The next day 600 militiamen arrived from Philadelphia. They were ordered to


clear the tracks at the freight yard. The soldiers advanced toward the crowd


and shooting erupted. In the aftermath, 20 people in the crowd lay dead. Many


more were wounded. News of the killings triggered rioting and fires in the


Pittsburgh railyards. President Rutherford Hayes ordered federal troops to


Pittsburgh to end mob violence. When they arrived, the fighting had already


ended. In the smoking ruins, they found the wrecks of more than 2,000 railroad


cars. Dozens of buildings lay in ashes.


Many strikers were sent to jail and others lost their jobs. A large part of the


public was shocked by the violence in Pittsburgh and other cities. Some people


were convinced that miners, railroad workers and other laborers were common


criminals. Legislatures in many states passed new conspiracy laws aimed at


suppressing labor. But the Great Railway Strike of 1877 helped the workers in


some ways. A few railroads took back the wage cuts they had ordered. More


important was the support given to the strike by miners, iron workers and


others. It gave labor an awareness of its strength and solidarity.


KNIGHTS OF LABOR


The Railway Strike led many workers to join a growing national labor


organization. It had a grand name–the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of


Labor. It was founded in 1869 by a small group of Philadelphia clothing workers.


Their union had been unable to organize effectively. The reason, they believed,


was that its members were too well-known. Employers fired them and then put


their names on a “blacklist.” Other employers would not hire anyone whose name


appeared on the list. The garment workers came to two conclusions:


Secrecy was needed to protect union members against employer spies.


Labor organizations would fail if they were divided into separate craft unions.


Instead, labor should be organized in one big union of both skilled and


unskilled workers.


Membership in the Knights of Labor was open to wage earners over 18 years of age


regardless of race, sex or skill. New members had to take an oath of secrecy.


They swore that they would never reveal the name of the order or the names of


its members.


The program of the Knights of Labor called for: an eight-hour working day, laws


establishing a minimum weekly wage, the use of arbitration rather than strikes


to settle disputes, laws to protect the health and safety of industrial workers,


equal pay for equal work, an end to child labor under 14 years of age and


government ownership of railroads, telegraphs and telephones.


It was impossible for the Knights to operate in complete secrecy. Rumors of


their activities reached the press. Newspaper stories usually exaggerated the


strength of the order. Under pressure from public opinion, the Knights began to


operate openly. But they were still forbidden to reveal the name of any member


to an employer.


Membership in the Knights increased slowly. By 1884, the order had only 52,000


members. But that year workers led by Knights of Labor organizers went on


strike against two big railroad companies. Both strikes ended in complete


victories for the Knights. Now workers everywhere rushed to join the order.


Within two years membership in the Knights rose to 150,000. Newspapers warned


their readers about the power of the Knights. One of them said, “Their leaders


can shut most of the mills and factories, and disable the railroads.” Many


people associated the order with dangerous radicals.


Later railroad strikes by the Knights met with defeat. The order was not nearly


as powerful as it had seemed. Workers began to leave it in great numbers.


Within 10 years of its greatest victories, the Knights of Labor collapsed.


“BREAD AND BUTTER” UNIONISM


As the Knights declined, a new labor organization began to challenge it for


supremacy. This was the American Federation of Labor (AFL). It was formed in


1886 by Samuel Gompers, a leader of the Cigarmakers’ Union.


Gompers believed that craft unions of skilled workers were the best kind.


Unskilled workers were easily replaced when they went on strike. Craft workers


could not be replaced easily. Gompers had no use for the Knights of Labor,


which combined all workers in one big union.


The American Federation of Labor began with a core of six craft unions. They


were cigarmakers, carpenters, printers, iron molders, steel molders and


glassmakers. The new organization was not an immediate success. For 10 years,


the AFL and the Knights battled each other. They invaded each other’s territory,


encouraged revolts and welcomed each other’s members into their own ranks. They


even supplied strikebreakers against each other. But the tide was running


against the Knights. The AFL, led by Gompers, grew steadily in size and power.


By 1904, it had 1.75 million members and was the nation’s dominant labor


organization.


At this time, many workers in Europe were joining revolutionary labor movements


which advocated the abolition of capitalism and the establishment of a new


socialist economic system. Most American workers, however, followed the lead of


Gompers, with his highly pragmatic approach to problems of labor. They strove


to organize strong unions so that they could demand a greater share in the


wealth that they helped to produce. They were not interested in destroying the


economic structure of the country but in making it work more effectively for


their benefit.


Gompers believed that unions should be primarily concerned with the day-to-day


welfare of their members and should not become involved in politics. He also


was convinced that socialism would not succeed in the United States but that


practical demands for higher wages and fewer working hours could achieve the


goal of a better life for working people. This was known as “bread and butter”


unionism.


There was one outstanding exception to the pragmatic “bread and butter” approach


to unionism which characterized most of American labor. This was the Industrial


Workers of the World (IWW), a revolutionary labor union launched in Chicago in


1905 under the leadership of Eugene V. Debs. The IWW the overthrow of


capitalism through strikes, boycotts and sabotage. Particularly strong among


textile workers, dock workers, migratory farmers and lumberjacks, the union


reached its peak membership of 100,000 in 1912. The IWW had practically


disappeared by 1918, because of federal prosecutions and a national sentiment


against radicalism which began in 1917.


In the early years of the 20th century, a powerful reform movement called


Progressivism swept the country. Its leaders were college professors, ministers,


journalists, physicians and social workers. Their goal was to improve


conditions for all Americans. They wanted to make the political system more


egalitarian. They also wanted to make the nation’s economic system more


democratic. Those who owned the nation’s resources, they said, should share


some of their wealth with the less fortunate. The movement appealed to farmers,


small businessmen, women and laborers. It cut across political party and


regional lines. The Progressive Movement had the support of three United States


presidents: Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft and Woodrow Wilson.


The Progressives were concerned about labor’s problems. They were alarmed by the


growing use of court rulings to halt strikes. In 1890, for example, Congress


passed the Sherman Anti-trust Act. Its purpose was to punish big business


corporations that combined to prevent competition. Yet more and more it was


being used as a weapon against unions. The Progressives were unhappy about the


use of federal troops and state militia against strikers. They were outraged by


inhuman conditions in factories and mines.


The Progressives and the AFL pressured state governments for laws to protec

t


wage earners. Almost all states passed laws forbidding the employment of


children under 14 years old. Thirty-seven states forbade children under 16


years old to work between 7p.m. and 6a.m. Nineteen states established the


eight-hour day for children under 16 in factories and stores.


The Progressives were also concerned with the hours worked by women in industry.


Forty-one states wrote new or improved laws to protect women workers. Most


limited the work day to nine hours, or the work week to 54 hours.


One of the greatest concerns of the Progressives was the problem of industrial


accidents. They wanted workers to be paid for accidents regardless of cause.


The cost of insurance to cover accidents, they said, should be paid by


employers. By 1917, 13 states had passed workers’ compensation laws. Many


states passed laws to improve safety regulations.


The alliance of Progressives and the AFL also campaigned for federal laws to aid


labor. In response, Congress passed laws to protect children, railroad workers


and seamen. It established a Department of Labor in the president’s Cabinet.


Most important of all, Congress passed the Clayton Act of 1914. Its purpose was


to halt the use of antitrust laws and court injunctions against unions.


During World War I, organized labor made great advances. The federal government


created the War Labor Board to settle disputes by arbitration. Generally the


Board was favorable to wage increases, the eight-hour day and collective


bargaining. This led to a big increase in union membership. In January 1917,


the AFL had 2,370,000 members. By January 1919, it had 3,260,000 members.


RED SCARES AND DEPRESSION


As the 1920s began, organized labor seemed stronger than ever. It was successful


in getting Congress to pass laws that restricted immigration to the United


States. Unions believed that a scarcity of labor would keep wages high. But


events that took place in Europe were already threatening labor’s gains. In


1917, a communist revolution overthrew the government of Russia. Communists also


attempted revolutions in Germany, Hungary and Finland.


Immigrants entering the United States at this time were primarily from southern


and eastern Europe. Many of them, in response to the economic hardship and


social inequality which they found in America’s industrial cities, were


attracted to the utopian promises of socialist, communist and other radical


political groups which advocated a drastic change in American society. There


was widespread fear–almost hysteria–among more established Americans that a


revolution might break out in the United States. In response to this fear, the


federal government launched a series of raids which resulted in the arrest and


sometimes the deportation of aliens who were members of socialist, anarchist or


communist organizations. About 500 aliens, including Russian-born anarchist


“Red Emma” Goldman, were deported during this period. A number of them, like


Goldman, rejected Bolshevism as they experienced it in the Soviet Union and


later returned to the United States.


Meanwhile, workers were striking for higher wages all over the United States.


Many Americans believed that these strikes were led by communists and


anarchists. During the Progressive era, the public had sympathized with labor.


Now the public became hostile to it. Employers encouraged anti-union movements,


or created company unions that they sought to control. Courts found legal


openings in the Clayton Act and issued rulings against union activity. The


courts also found ways to use the Sherman Anti-trust Act against unions.


Opposed by public opinion, business and the courts, union membership fell. The


number of AFL members dropped to 2,770,000 by 1929. This decline took place even


though the number of workers in industry rose by almost seven million.


For most Americans, the 1920s were prosperous years. But in October 1929, the


New York stock market “crashed,” and the value of stocks went way down. The


crash, part of a worldwide economic decline, led to the worst economic


depression in the nation’s history. People lost their jobs, their farms and


their businesses. By 1932, 13 million men and women were unemployed. This was


one out of every four in the work force. Many more workers had only part-time


jobs. In the cities, jobless men stood on long lines for a handout of bread and


soup. Many of them lived in shanties near garbage dumps. Men and boys roamed


the country, hoping to find work.


In the past, depressions had usually hurt unions. Unemployment meant a sharp


drop in workers’ dues. Then unions became almost powerless to prevent decreases


in wages or long working hours. But in the Great Depression of the 1930s,


unions actually benefited. In 1932, Franklin D. Roosevelt, a Democrat, promised


Americans a “New Deal.” He pledged to help the “forgotten man”–the worker who


had lost his job, or the farmer who had lost his land.


Under Roosevelt, Congress passed laws to revive business and create jobs. To


help labor, Congress passed the Wagner Act. It guaranteed workers the right to


join unions and bargain collectively. The law created a powerful National Labor


Relations Board (NLRB). The Board could order elections in which workers voted


for the union they wanted to represent them. (Workers could vote against joining


any union, if they wished.) The NLRB could also order a stop to unfair


practices used by employers against unions.


Union leaders hailed the Wagner Act. It provided a great opportunity to increase


union membership. But the drive was delayed at first by a dispute within the


American Federation of Labor. The AFL was made up mainly of skilled workers


organized into craft unions. But millions of unskilled workers were in giant


industries like steel, autos, rubber and textiles. Some labor leaders believed


that a single union should represent all the workers, skilled and unskilled.


One big industrial union would be much stronger than a dozen different craft


unions, they said.


FROM THE CIO TO TAFT-HARTLEY


Most leaders of the AFL were opposed to the idea of industrial unions. They made


no effort to organize them. Finally Lewis and other union leaders broke away


from the AFL. They formed a new labor organization that became the Congress of


Industrial Organizations (CIO).


One of the first targets of the CIO was the auto industry. Workers at the


General Motors factories in Flint, Michigan, eagerly joined the CIO’s United


Automobile Workers (UAW) union. They demanded that the company recognize the


UAW. But officers of General Motors refused to meet with union representatives.


This was a violation of the Wagner Act. In January 1937, the UAW called a strike


against the company.


The tactics used by the auto workers took the company by surprise. The workers


refused to leave the factories. Instead, they put away their tools and sat down.


They did this to prevent strikebreakers from taking their jobs. At night the


men slept on the seats of new cars. Food was passed to them through windows by


their families.


General Motors tried to force the workers out. The company shut off the heat in


the factories. It was winter, but the workers stayed. Police tried to break


into one of the factories. The strikers drove them back by throwing soda


bottles, coffee mugs and iron bolts. Then the police charged with tear gas bombs.


This time the workers drove them back by turning fire hoses on them.


Finally General Motors went to court and got a ruling against the strikers. The


workers were ordered to leave the GM factories by February 3. The National


Guard (militiamen) was alerted to enforce the order. Everyone expected a big


battle on February 3, but it didn’t happen. Governor Frank Murphy refused to


order an attack on the strikers. Instead, he ordered General Motors officers to


hold peace talks with the UAW. President Roosevelt also asked for a peaceful


end to the strike. A week later General Motors recognized the union and agreed


to bargain with it. The UAW and the CIO had won a major victory.


Within two years, the CIO organized 3,750,000 industrial workers. The AFL met


the challenge of the CIO with an organizing drive of its own. By the end of


1937, the AFL had 3,400,000 members.


During the 1930s, Congress enacted other reforms that benefited labor:


The Social Security Act of 1935 created a system of government-sponsored


unemployment insurance and old-age pensions.


The Fair Labor Standards Act regulated wages and hours. Minimum wages were


established to help workers maintain a decent standard of living. Hours were


shortened to give them more time for leisure. The law also forbade the labor of


children under 16 in most occupations.


Unemployment in the United States remained high until the United States entered


World War II in 1941. Then, defense industries boomed, and millions of men


entered the armed forces. By 1943, unemployment ended and industry was faced


with a shortage of labor. During the Great Depression, women were urged not to


take jobs. Now they were encouraged to go to work. Before long, one out of four


workers in defense industries was a woman.


During World War II, labor cooperated with government and industry. Its spirit


was expressed by John L. Lewis, president of the CIO. “When the nation is


attacked,” he said, “every American must rally to its defense.”


When peace came, a wave of strikes for higher wages swept the nation. Employers


became alarmed. They said that the Wagner Act had given labor too much power. A


majority in the United States Congress agreed with them. In 1947, Congress


passed the Taft-Hartley Act. It contained a number of provisions to limit


organized labor. One of them outlawed the “closed shop” agreement which required


employers to hire only union members. It also permitted the states to pass


“right to work” laws. These laws forbade agreements that required workers to


join a union after they were hired.


Labor leaders bitterly denounced the Taft-Hartley Act. They said it was meant to


destroy unions. Despite their fears, membership in unions continued to grow. By


1952, it had increased to 17 million.


Leaders of the AFL and the CIO merged their organizations in 1955. The combined


organization became the AFL-CIO.


LABOR TODAY


In recent years there has been a steady decline in the percentage of workers who


belong to labor unions. In 1945, 35 percent of the work force were union


members. In 1988, less than 17 percent of the labor force–or 17 million


workers–were unionized. There are several reasons for this, including:


The decline of heavy industry (once a stronghold of unionism) and the increase


of advanced-technology industries.


Automation and other technological changes that have displaced many blue-collar


workers. Foreign competition, which has depressed some United States industries


and increased unemployment.


The transition to a “post-industrial” economy in the United States. Ever


increasing numbers of workers are employed in service-providing businesses,


such as hotels, restaurants and retail stores.


Despite the decline in members, organized labor in the United States remains


strong and conditions of America’s labor force have steadily improved. The


length of the work day has been shortened. Many agreements between employers


and wage earners now call for less than 40 hours of work a week. Most agreements


have generous “fringe” benefits. These include and seasonal farm workers.


By the early 1990s, the work force was changing. First. the pool of workers was


no longer expanding as rapidly as in the past. And, second, the composition of


the labor force was different, consisting of a larger percentage of minorities


and women than before. Employers are adapting to this work force diversity in


several ways. Some sponsor education and training programs for potential


recruits. Many, in an attempt to attract and accommodate insurance, pensions and


health care plans. As the number of union members has decreased as a percentage


of the total work force, unions have responded by broadening their organizing


efforts to include employees of federal, state and local governments as well as


other professionals. Organizers have also waged long campaigns to unionize and


win better conditions for such diverse groups as public school teachers women


workers, provide on-site child care, and flexible hours. Others make special


arrangements so they can hire more handicapped workers. One hotel chain, for


example, uses lighted telephones and vibrating beepers so they can hire more


hearing-impaired people.


As the work force has changed, so have some–but not all–labor-management


issues. Unions now want laws to strengthen their right to strike by prohibiting


companies from hiring permanent replacements for striking workers. Employers


want the right to test workers for drug use. There is also growing sentiment


that all employers should be required to provide adequate health insurance to


their workers–which most, but not all, already do. Many workers are fighting


for the right to take unpaid leave when they have babies or when a family member


is ill and needs extensive care. And, as the unemployment rate has climbed


(over 6 percent in 1990), there is growing sentiment that the government should


help create jobs–through public works programs, job training programs and tax


credits for employers in areas of high unemployment.


Suggestions for Further Reading


Brody, David. Workers in Industrial America: Essays on the Twentieth Century


Struggle. New York: Oxford University Press, 1980.


Fink, Gary M., ed. Biographical Dictionary of American Labor. 2nd ed. Westport,


CT: Greenwood Press, 1984.


Fink, Gary M., ed. Labor Unions. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1977.


Kessler-Harris, Alice. Out to Work: A History of America’s Wage-Earning Women.


New York: Oxford University Press, 1982.


Morris, Richard B., ed. A History of the American Worker. Princeton, NJ:


Princeton University Press, 1983.

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