Title: Labor in the Gilded Age
1Labor in the Gilded Age
- Lecture 1
- The Great Strikes and Demonstrations
2Administrative
- Reading for next time
- Montgomery Work Rules and Manliness
- Haymarket AnarchistFights for Freedom
- Reading for class after movie
- George Pullman Defends Managerial Paternalism
- Samuel Gompers Defends the Right to Strike
- Movie in class next time snacks!
3Review
- Working conditions and relations among different
parts of the working class from the Civil War to
1880 - Development of unions, especially national labor
federations, especially the Knights of Labor
4Today
- I- Period of great strikes
- II- The Haymarket Square Riot
5I- Period of Great Labor Upheavals
- Great labor wars between workers and the monopoly
capitalists - Demonstrations that employers and their allies in
government were determined to crush - Employer claim that strikes and unions were the
work of anarchists, communists, and were
un-American
6Focus of Strikes Heart of American Industry
- Railroads
- Railroad Strike of 1877
- Strikes against Goulds railways in 1885 and 1886
by the Knights - Strike by American Railway Union against Pullman
in 1894 - Mining
- Metal Miners, Coeur DAlene Idaho
- Coal Miners, Tennessee
- Steel The Homestead Strike - 1892
7Government and Strikes
- In many of these cases, the union was poised to
win a great victory - In most of those, government intervention on the
side of the employers turned the tide - Some took the lesson that workers needed
political influence - Others took the lesson that unions should stay
out of politics in the hope that government would
then stay out of union business
8II- Haymarket Square Riot
- May 1886
- Began with the demand that workers implement the
8-hour day on May 1, 1886 - On May 3, lockout at McCormick Harvester works
turned violent
9Chicago Central Labor Council
- Led by Anarcho-Syndicalists
- One was Albert Parsons, who was told to get out
of town during the 1877 railway strike - Called demonstration downtown to protest the
police action at McCormick the previous day
10(No Transcript)
11The Demonstration
- Series of fiery speakers
- The Mayor left, stopping at the local police
station to tell the police chief it was a
peaceful meeting and there was no problem - Police arrived
12The Riot
- Bomb thrown, no one knows by whom, into the
police ranks - One killed immediately (several died later) and
many injured - Police began shooting and clubbing wildly
- No one knows how many died but over 200 injured
13Aftermath
- Group of men charged
- Included Parsons and his associate August Spies
- Both had left the demonstration around the same
time the mayor did
14Aftermath
- States Attorney said, Convict these men, make
examples of them, hang them, and you save our
institutions. - Chicago police instituted reign of terror against
dissident groups - Same States Attorney told the police to, Make
the raids first and look up the law afterwards.
15Trial
- Parsons went into hiding
- Candidates for the jury chosen by a special
bailiff instead of at random - One was a relative of a police victim
- Others admitted prejudice but were permitted to
serve anyway - Evidence filled with contradictory and unclear
statements and obvious lies
16Trial
- Jury was inundated with anarchist and socialist
literature - Really defendants ideology that was on trial
- All 8 convicted and five sentenced to death
- Executed November 1887
- Others pardoned in 1894
17Impact
- Haymarket Square set back the labor movement for
years - Simultaneously associated by the press with the
Molly Maguires, the Anarchists, and the Knights - 1886 200,000 workers had achieved 8 hours. By
one year later, only 15,000 still had it - Still has an impact now
18Next Time
- Film next class
- Following class well talk about the Pullman
Strike
19Labor in the Gilded Age
- Lecture 2
- Film- The River Ran Red
20Labor in the Gilded Age
- Lecture 3
- The Pullman Strike
21Administrative
- Reading finish this topic
- Essay reminder
22Review
- Period of great strikes
- Railroad 1877 Railway Strike
- Mining
- Steel Homestead Strike
- The Haymarket Square Riot
- Riot blamed on Anarchist-led unionists but
clearly not their doing - Major setback for unionism
23Today
- The Pullman Strike of 1894
- Eugene V. Debs and Industrial Unionism
- The Pullman Company
- Causes of the strike
- Conduct of the strike
- The Aftermath
24I. Eugene Debs and Industrial Unionism
- Born in Indiana 1855
- Had worked as Fireman and as Engineer
- Popular and influential
- Believed strikes not an effective labor weapon,
advocated arbitration - Same time as he changed his mind about strikes,
he began to doubt the effectiveness of craft
unionism
25I. Debs and Industrial Unionism
- June 1893 American Railway Union founded
- Early success in strike against Great Northern
Railroad - Result was dramatic growth
26II. The Pullman Company
- George M. Pullman came from working class family
- Developed idea for sleeping cars on trains
- Success led to need for large factory which he
built in Chicago in 1880 - Decided to build a model community for his
workshops and workers
27The Model Community
- Rents 25 higher than in neighboring communities
- Gas had to be bought from the company
- Spies
- In 1892 Pullman made 4,000,000
28III. Causes of the Strike
- Summer 1893, in midst of panic, Pullman decided
to cut costs - Refused to reduce rents or cost of utilities
- December 1893 strike
- Result was that the men began to form branches of
the ARU
29III. Causes of the Strike
- May 1894 elected committee to bring grievances to
management - Next morning, three of the committee members were
fired - Meeting of the full committee that evening
decided on a strike unless the men were rehired
30IV. Conduct of the Strike
- Pullman went on vacation
- Workers formed strike committee
- For a month, strike remained local and peaceful
- June 12, 1894 ARU opened its first national
convention, in Chicago - Debs predicted boycott would become national
strike
31IV. Conduct of the Strike
- After 4 days 125,000 workers on strike
- Initially quite peaceful
- Widespread support by workers of all kinds
- Mail cars moved fine and almost no violence at
all in Chicago - Clearly the workers were winning
32IV. Conduct of the Strike
- Media turned against strike once it spread beyond
Pullman - Still clearly the workers were winning
- Of the 24 rail lines feed Chicago, 13 were
virtually immobilized
33IV. Conduct of the Strike
- Intervention of the Federal Government
- Key was Attorney General Richard Olney
- Olney wired US Attorneys to protect mail
- Federal marshals ordered to protect mail
- Debs publicly offered to assign union work crews
to any mail train that did not have a sleeper car
attached
34Intervention of the Federal Government
- Olney wanted Cleveland to send troops
- Interference with the mail provided the excuse
- June 30, Olney appointed a special federal
counsel in Chicago - His main function was to help railroads secure
injunctions against the strike
35Intervention of the Federal Government
- Application for injunction immediately granted
- One of the most wide-ranging injunctions ever
issued before or since - Debs and other officers enjoined
- US Strike Commission
- US Supreme Court upheld the injunction later
- Debs decided to flout the injunction
36Intervention of the Federal Government
- July 3, Walker and others sent telegram to
President requesting troops - Requested to protect federal property, mail, and
enforce injunctions - Cleveland now ordered federal troops to Chicago
- July 5 Debs offered again to end the boycott if
the employer would agree to arbitrate the dispute
37Intervention of the Federal Government
- Major conflicts as well in Denver, San Francisco
and several other places - Cleveland issued order against assemblages of any
kind in Illinois - Still widespread public support for strikers
- Judge Grosscup now called into session a grand
jury to investigate the insurrection against
the state of Illinois
38IV. Conduct of Strike
- July 8, Debs sent out call for support
- Chicago Trades and Labor Council met
- July 11, city-wide strike attracted only 25,000
supporters - July 12, AFL Executive met
- Debs then proposed calling the strike off
39IV. Conduct of Strike
- July 17, four ARU officers rearrested
- Bail set at 10,000 each
- This time they decided to remain in jail
- July 20 federal troops withdrawn
- By August 1, the railroads had enough men and the
trains were running again - August 2, ARU held meeting and declared the
strike over
40V. Aftermath
- Widespread firing and blacklisting of strikers
- No one ever prosecuted for violence against the
strikers - Strikers frequently prosecuted
- Debs convicted of contempt
- Pullman Strike Repression was a Public Relations
Disaster for Cleveland and the Democrats
41V. Aftermath
- Debs became a Socialist at the expense of US tax
payers - Eventually became leader of the American
Socialist Party - Ran for President five times
- Labor Day
42Next time
- New craft unionism
- American Federation of Labor
- Industrial Workers of the World
43Labor in the Gilded Age
- Lecture 4
- The New Craft Unionism and Workers Before the
Turn of the Century
44Administrative
- Quiz Reminder
- Mid-term Reminder
- Second Essay Reminder
45Review
- Railroad Strike of 1877
- The Haymarket Square Riot - 1886
- The Homestead Strike 1892
- The Pullman Strike 1894
- In each case, the government intervened to
suppress dissent and to crush the workers
46Today
- I- The New Craft Unionism
- II- Origins and Founding of the American
Federation of Labor - III- The World of the Workers, 1880-1900
47I- The New Craft Unionism
- Decline of the Knights following the unsuccessful
strike against Goulds railways and Haymarket
Square Riot in 1886 - The Cigar Makers model of unionism
- Why might cigar makers be among the intellectual
leaders of the labor movement?
48Cigar Makers Reorganization
- Union reorganized by Adolph Strasser, who became
president in 1877 - Aided by his ally, Samuel Gompers
- In 1867 cigar makers had already become the first
national union to admit women and admitted
African-Americans at same time
49Cigar Makers New Model
- Centralization
- Even more, entire emphasis on a narrow agenda
- Wages
- Hours
- Working Conditions
- Why did this narrow agenda work?
- Adoption of this model seemed to breathe new life
and vitality into the union movement
50II- Origins and Founding of the American
Federation of Labor
- Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions
- Craft union federation founded in 1881
- Gompers chosen to lead it in 1882
- Compromise structure that had little impact
- 1886 decided to dissolve itself and turn its
funds over to a new organization, the American
Federation of Labor
51AFL Structure
- A union of union's - individual workers did not
belong - Issued exclusive jurisdiction charters to each
constituent union - Established State Federations and City Centrals
52AFL Functions
- Settle jurisdictional disputes
- Adopt limited legislative program
- Assist in supporting strikes - emphasis on
economic action - no direct political
participation or supporting of candidates - This policy was called voluntarism
53Why Did AFL Succeed?
- AFL offered what unions wanted
- Coherent political voice in favor of limited
objectives - Protection from dual unionism - an obscenity in
the trade union lexicon - Support in periods of economic conflict without
interference
54Strengths of AFL
- Its focus on narrow industrial objectives pure
and simple unionism - Its weakness!
- Why was its weakness a strength?
55III- The World of the Workers, 1880-1900
- What did George Pullman have to say about his
willingness to use arbitration in the Pullman
strike? - Cannot arbitrate a fact that he knows to be true!
56Role of Government
- State legislatures or city councils occasionally
tried to intervene on behalf of workers - Courts responded by invalidating virtually all
such laws - Why?
- More frequently legislatures made strikes or
picketing illegal
57Injunctions
- Railway strikes of 1877 and 1894 led to heavy
reliance on injunctions to deter labor disputes - Again employers property rights paramount
- Injunctions often issued without union even being
heard - Prohibited any activity in support of strike
58Working Class
- 1880 more than one million workers under the age
of 16 - By 1900 ¾ of the population consisted of workers
and their families - Dramatic growth of immigration contributed to
growth of working class and its growing diversity
59Working Class
- Growing need of families to send their daughters
out to work - Craft unions largely benefited highly skilled
white male workers who already had relatively the
highest wages and best conditions - Segregation of the south
- Jim Crow system
- Lynching (2500 1885-1900)
60Discrimination
- Whites largely excluded African-Americans from
their unions and from skilled jobs - AFL initially tried to encourage or even require
unions to admit African-Americans - Eventually decided this was a hopeless task that
would have to wait
61Next Time
- Begin discussion of labor in the progressive era