A presentation by Gerrit Koepping
Employees and employers negotiate salaries and benefits individually
This sometimes meant that employers could play employees against each other (Oh, you want $10 an hour? Well, John will work for $9 an hour)
Would also employ women or children to drive down labor costs
Wages, hours, days off, job security, pensions, benefits were all less secure
Labor costs/prices were lower
Workers join together to collectively negotiate their wages, hours, benefits, working conditions, etc. . .
Once a union is established then a company’s employees must join the union to work for the company
Employees pay the union monthly dues
STRIKE!!! Workers stop working for the company
and try to stop the company from producing its goods
Hard to do if workers have specific skills Picket lines – factory entrances are
blocked by striking workers Publicity to try to pressure a company to
concede to union demands Violence – sometimes unions would attack
replacement workers (“scabs”) Sometimes companies would hire their own
thugs to attack strikers – sometimes the government would help
Labor in the 1800s
Post Civil-War Industrialization meant the skilled labor could be replaced with unskilled labor
The Knights of St Crispin was the first nationwide labor movement The Knights were bootmakers and shoemakers who organized in the 1870s to oppose competition from machine-made products made by unskilled labor
A successful (though violent) labor strike for railroad workers in 1885 encouraged other workers to unionize
First Labor Union to remain active for more than a few years
Were tailors who formed a secret society in 1869, and grew to a nationwide organization in 1880’s
Grew to include all types of workers Proposed laws to cut workday to eight hours,
and equal pay for men and women “Mother Jones”
Replaced the Knights of Labor in the 1880s as the leading union of its time
Tried to organize skilled workers Advocated for improved wages and
hours using strikes && boycotts
The Haymarket Riot
Following the death of four strikers at police hands about 1,000 factory workers protest in Haymarket Square in Chicago in May 1886
Someone in the crowd throws a bomb killing 7 police and injuring 67 bystanders
Police fire on crowd killing 10 and wounding 50
8 Radical strike leaders prosecuted, 4 executed
Turns public sympathy against strikers
Homestead Strike- 1892- Carnegie Steel Company reduced its wages- Violence between strikers and Pinkerton guards – strike fails when workers quit union
Coeur d’Alene Disputes between mine owners and miners (Coeur d’Alene was a mining region) – twice federal troops are called in to break up the strikes
The Pullman Strike- Pullman sleeping train company has a “model industrial village”
They strike when Pullman lowers wages and fires many workers
American Railway Workers refuse to handle trains that have Pullman Cars
US army disperses strikers, as requested by RR industry leaders – railway traffic comes to a halt in he Midwest
Supreme Court upholds President’s right to issue an injunction, an order to end a strike
Most unions didn’t include women, members of minority groups, and unskilled workers (only 1 in every 33 workers was a member of a union)
African Americans could only join separate, local unions
Hostility towards immigrants Exclusion act of 1882- halted immigration
of Chinese workers and gained wide support from American labor unions
Obstacles to Unity
Stood for restricted immigration Reformers believed that farmers and
workers should be freed from the exploitative practices of banks, railroads, and merchants.
Convert the US to the silver standard – to cause inflation
Largely a rural movement
Farmers and the populists
Improved farming technology meant that farmers produced more and more food – driving down prices
Individual farmers responded to falling prices by growing more food to cover the losses coming from falling prices
To buy more land, to grow more food they borrowed money – Banks become the enemy
To get that food to the urban markets they need the railroad – Railroads become the enemy
The Grange
By 1875 about 1 million members Demanded regulation of railroad rates Creation of agriculture colleges Formed cooperatives to pool goods, sell
to larger buyers, purchase seed and machinery in bulk, pooled credit
Populists political fate In 1892, gained 14 seats in Congress
and two governorships By 1896 election the populists had
faded especially when Democrats start demanding the coinage of silver – The Democratic Candidate William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska demands “free silver”
Republican William McKinley wins the cities and the presidency with his warnings against radicalism
1898 – Gold discovered in Alaska
Populists and race, class
Efforts to unite farmers under their economic interests ran into a problem in the South where whites feared empowering black farmers and sharecroppers
Also hindering the populists was a shift in political power and population from rural, agricultural America to urban, industrialized America