Top Banner
The Rise of Labor Unions
14

The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Dec 15, 2015

Download

Documents

Scarlett Hewell
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

The Rise of Labor Unions

Page 2: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Rich versus Poor

• By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth

• Many workers began to resent the lavish lifestyles of their rich owners, & began to organize in an effort to establish a better work system

Page 3: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

What Did Workers Want?

• Shorter workdays

• Higher wages

• Better working conditions

• End child labor

• Collective Bargaining – negotiate as a group w/ employers

Page 4: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

The Knights of Labor

• National Union• Recruited Skilled & Unskilled

Workers• Included Women & African

Americans• Emphasized Education

& Social Reform

Page 5: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

The American Federation of Labor (AFL)

• Led by Samuel Gompers

• Skilled Workers Only

• Used Collective Bargaining as a Strategy

Page 6: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Industrial Workers of the World (IWW)

• Unskilled Workers

• Radical Socialist Leaders

• Violent Strikes

Page 7: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Socialism

• Karl Marx—German Philosopher who wrote Communist Manifesto

• Denounced capitalism

Page 8: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Socialism

• Economic & political philosophy that favors public instead of private control of property & income.

• Socialists believe that society, not private individuals, should control a nation’s wealth. That wealth should be distributed equally to everyone.

Page 9: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Reaction of Employers

•forbid union meetings

•fired union organizers

•forced new employees to sign “yellow dog” contracts, making them promise never to join a union or participate in a strike

Page 10: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Reaction of Employers

• refused to bargain collectively when strikes occurred

• refused to recognize union representatives

Page 11: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

The Great Railroad Strike of 1877

• Workers protested wage cuts & unsafe conditions

• Violent & Unorganized

• Pres. Hayes sent federal troops to put down the strike

• Employers relied on federal & state troops to repress labor unrest

Page 12: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Haymarket Strike 1886

• National strike of all workers calling for an 8-hour workday

• During a demonstration in Chicago’s Haymarket Square a bomb exploded

• Rioting broke out & dozens were killed

• 4 anarchists were hanged

• The public began to associate unions w/ violence, anarchy & radicalism

Page 13: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Homestead Strike 1892• Carnegie Steel cut wages in

Homestead, PA

• Mngr. Henry Frick called in private guards to protect the plant

• Daylong gun battle ended w/ several strikers dead

• Again, the public condemned strikes & denounced unions as violent

Page 14: The Rise of Labor Unions. Rich versus Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to resent the.

Pullman Strike 1894• Strike of Pullman Palace Car

Factory Workers

• Tried to stop railroads from running

• Courts ruled illegal b/c it disrupted mail delivery

• The courts now supported owners as well