Warm-up 2/3/15 1. What kinds of conditions do workers face in the Gilded Age? 2. What was the Populist Movement and what were their goals? 3. What was the Gold V. Silver Standard debate about? How does this help us understand monetary policy today? 4. Do the Populists succeed in changing the conditions of society? Do they change the Gold Standard? Why?
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Warm-up 2/3/15 1.What kinds of conditions do workers face in the Gilded Age? 2.What was the Populist Movement and what were their goals? 3.What was the.
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Warm-up 2/3/15
1. What kinds of conditions do workers face in the Gilded Age?
2. What was the Populist Movement and what were their goals?
3. What was the Gold V. Silver Standard debate about? How does this help us understand monetary policy today?
4. Do the Populists succeed in changing the conditions of society? Do they change the Gold Standard? Why?
Pt. 3: Labor Unions
What is a Labor Union?
•An organization of wage earners formed for the purpose of serving the members' interests with respect to wages and working conditions.
People refuse to buy a company's product until the company meets
demands.
Boycott
Labor StrikeOne method for having demands met.
Workers stop working until the conditions are met. It is a very effective form of
attack.
Labor Union Workers who organize against their employers to seek better wages and working conditions for wage earners.
New immigrants who would replace strikers and work for less pay. Often
violence would erupt between strikers and scabs who were trying to cross picket
lines to work.
Scab Worker
A working establishment where only people belonging to the union are hired. It was done by the unions to protect their workers from
cheap labor.
Black ListList of people disliked by business
owners because they were leaders in the Union. Often would lose their jobs,
beaten up or even killed.
Type of negotiation between an employer and labor union where they sit down face to face and
discuss better wages, etc.
Collective Bargaining
Closed Shop
Yellow Dog Contracts
A written contract between employers and employees in which the employees
sign an agreement that they will not join a union while working for the
company
Lock OutOwner of industry would “lock
out” workers who were trying to form a union and replace them
with “scabs”.
CooperativesIndustry or business organization
owned by and operated for the benefit of those using its services
Populist Movement: First attempt of the people to reform capital and labor relationship.
Leads to…
Present Day Labor Reform
Read article and answer questions
“Solidarity Forever!”by Ralph Chapin (1915)
“Solidarity Forever!”by Ralph Chapin (1915)
When the union's inspiration through the workers‘ blood shall run,There can be no power greater anywhere beneath the sun;Yet what force on earth is weaker than the feeble strength of one,But the union makes us strong!
CHORUS:Solidarity forever,Solidarity forever,Solidarity forever,For the union makes us strong!
Union–At the time of the 1877 strike, railroad workers mainly organized into
various “brotherhoods,” which were basically craft
unions.–Eugene V. Debs proposed a
new industrial union for all railway workers called the American Railway Union
(A.R.U.).–The A.R.U. would replace all of the brotherhoods and unite all railroad workers,
skilled and unskilled.
Railroad Workers Organize
THE GREAT RAILROAD STRIKE OF 1877
The great Railroad Strike of 1877 began on July 16, when railroad workers for the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad staged a spontaneous strike after yet another wage cut. After President Rutherford Hayes sent federal troops to West Virginia to save the nation from “insurrection,” the strike spread across the nation. A picture of burned railroad cars during
the mass strike
Haymarket Square: Chicago 1886
= workers from McCormick Harvesting Machine Company struck for an 8 hour day (They wanted a reduction in the amount of hours they worked in a given day). However, the Knights of Labor (union) did not support their actions.
= police came - four strikers killed and several wounded.= next day at a rally in Haymarket Square- anarchists spoke up
against police & treatment of workers.= Thousands protest the killings and during the rally the police
break up the meeting - someone threw a bomb at police - 7 police die. In response the police spray the crowd with bullets and 10 more workers die with another 50 injured.
Result: Anti-Labor feelings sweep the nation and membership in the Knights of Labor Union fell drastically!
• Haymarket Riot• 1886: Chicago, Illinois• Workers went on strike
for an 8-hour workday
• Action of Industry?Tried to break the strikes, fights eventually broke out between strikers & strikebreakers
• Action of government?• Police intervention, some tried for murder• Effect?• Americans become wary of labor unions• Knights of Labor blamed
Homestead Steel Strike: Workers went on strike for higher wages. Management refused to negotiate and locked out the workers, however the workers broke in and took control of the mill. Management hired the Pinkerton Police, which is a private security force, to take control back. 300 Pinkertons arrived by barge and were greeted by the workers. For 12 hours a battle ensued. The end result was the Pinkertons surrendered.
Carnegie then requested help from the Pennsylvania National Guard to restore control over the strikers after the Pinkertons had failed. Carnegie replaced 1700 strikers with new workers called strike breakers (scabs).
• Homestead Strike• 1892, in Pennsylvania• Wages of steelworkers
cut• Action of Labor
Union?• Calls for a strike
• Action of Industry?Police force called the “Pinkertons” brought in to break up the strike
• Action of Government?• Troops & local militia sent in to calm the
situation
• Effect?• Steelworkers lose
power after calling off the strike
•Carnegie successfully broke up the attempt to organize a union.•No labor unions in steel industry
until the 1920’s.•Carnegie would be remembered
for events at Homestead.•His public image suffered
• Pullman Strike• 1893, in Chicago
• Wages of employees cut without a decrease in living costs in the company town
• Action of Labor Union?• Called Eugene V. Debs & the American
Railway Union (ARU)• Nationwide strike, halting railroad traffic
Strikes Rock the Nation
Pullman, 1893• Eugene Debs instructed strikers not to interfere with
the nation’s mail.• Railway owners turned to the government for help.
The judge cited the Sherman Antitrust Act and won a court order forbidding all union activity that halted railroad traffic.
• Court orders against unions continued, limiting union gains for the next 30 years.
• Actions of Industry?• Argued that the labor union was destroying
free trade• Actions of Government?• President Grover Cleveland sends in federal
troops; Eugene V. Debs is arrested• Effect?• Use of court system and military to limit power of labor unions
The Supreme Court Upholds Laissez-faire
• New York state passed the “Bakeshop Act” limiting the hours a bakery employee could work in one week to 60.
• Lochner, a bakery owner, was fined for allowing employees to exceed limitation.
• He sued protesting the constitutionality of the law under the 14th Amendment and his liberty of contract.
• Supreme Court overturned his conviction stating:• …this law interfered "with the right of contract between the
employer and employees.“ To the Court, the right to buy and sell labor through contract was a "liberty of the individual" protected under the 14th amendment .
► Lochner v. New York – 1905
“All persons born in the U.S. are citizens of this country and the state
they reside in. No state shall make or enforce any law which deprives any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law, nor deny to any person with its jurisdiction to the
equal protection of the laws.”
Industrialists would use the 14th Amendment as a way to defend a
corporation from the Sherman Anti-Trust Act.
14th amend
The Fourteenth Amendment • In your opinion, what values are reflected in the Fourteenth
Amendment? Are these values compatible with your ideas about a democracy? Why was this made in the first place?
• Section. 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
• Section. 5. The Congress shall have power to enforce, by appropriate legislation, the provisions of this article.
Back
Reaction of EmployersEmployers hated & feared unions. Why?
-European influences of socialism-Labor strikes always tended to be violent.
Some took steps to stop unions, such as:
-forbidding union meetings-firing union organizers-forcing new employees to sign “yellow dog” contracts, making them promise never to join a union or participate in a strike-refusing to bargain collectively when strikes did occur-refusing to recognize unions as their workers’ legitimate representatives
Evaluation: (Giving your point of view on something and providing reasons why you think that way!) What was the role of labor unions in trying to solve the problems of workers during industrialization?
Give your point of view of the helpfulness of unions during industrialization and in making changes for workers