Labor Unions & Strikes United States History.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
Advertisements

Industrialization and Workers
Labor Unions & Strikes United States History. Three Choices for Workers… 1.Continue in misery 2.Join a Union and possibly get fired or even killed 3.Become.
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. The Rich v. The Poor By 1890, the richest 9% of the of Americans held nearly 75% of the national wealth Many workers began to.
Chapter 13 Section 4 The Great Strikes.
The Rise of Unions & STRIKES September 29, s: Knights of Labor – Included ALL workers – Men and women – Skilled and Unskilled – Black/ White.
09/04 Bellringer 5+ sentences Conditions in the factories during the Gilded Age were horrible. Workers could expect to work between hours. There.
Labor Unions. Middle Class Emerges as industries rise Made up of individuals who work administrative jobs for companies Salaried employees Higher demand.
Organized Labor After 1865 Chapter 13 Section 3
American History Chapter 6: The Expansion of American Industry
Would You Strike. 1. What was the problem in 1890? 9% of Americans held 75% of the wealth.
Rise of Labor Unions in the 19 th Century Gilded Age.
Industrialization and Workers
SECTION 5-4. Working in the United States Deflation- rise in the value of money. Added tensions between workers and employers.
5:4 Two types of workers in the U.S. In the 1800's – Craft Workers: specialized skill and training – Common Laborers: few skills and lower wages ● As Industrialization.
Expansion of American Industry The Great Strikes
Mr. Hood U.S. History.  In factories, owners sought to maximize profit by cutting the wages of workers.  Some factories became known as sweatshops because.
URBAN LABOR -increased 400% by mostly unskilled labor -assembly line work.
The Rise of Labor Unions. Employers (Power) vs. Workers Yellow Dog Contracts Blacklisting Company Towns No Job Security Child Labor Working Conditions.
The Rise of Labor Unions. Employers (Power) vs. Workers Yellow Dog Contracts Blacklisting No Job Security Child Labor Working Conditions Long hours &
Labor Unions and Strikes Why join a union? Strength in numbers What were unions fighting against? 1) Exploitation a. Low Pay b. Long hours 2) Unsafe.
Labor in the 1890s. Widening gulf between rich and poor 1890 – richest 9% held 75% of the nation’s wealth Average working family made only a few hundred.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Organized Labor After 1865.
14-4: Workers of the Nation Unite 1.What conditions led to the formation of labor Unions? Dangerous working conditions Low wages Long hours Unequal pay.
Big Business and Labor The Workplace, Strikes, and the Rise of Labor Unions Topic 1.3.
Labor  Samuel Gompers  American Federation of Labor  Eugene Debs  Pullman Strike  Haymarket Affair  Homestead Strike.
Organized Labor After 1865.
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
TOPIC 2: Industry and Immigration ( )
The Rise of Unions Workers were against the increasing power of big business workers formed unions Unions were workers’ organizations designed to.
The Rise of Labor Unions
Workers of the Nation Unite
Monopolies - exclusive control of a commodity or service in a particular market, or a control that makes possible the manipulation of prices.
Monopolies - exclusive control of a commodity or service in a particular market, or a control that makes possible the manipulation of prices.
14.3: Labor Unions Share with your partner(s) what you already may know about labor unions: - examples of some - what they do or try to do - good or bad.
Organized Labor After 1865.
The Labor Movement.
The Rise of Labor Unions
Working Conditions, Unions, & Strikes
The Organized Labor Movement
Labor Movement.
Labor Unions & Strikes.
Workers of the Nation Unite
The Expansion of American Industry The Great Strikes Chapter 5
Knights of Labor American Federation of Labor Labor Disputes
The Organized Labor Movement
The Rise of Labor Unions
Rise of the labor movement
Labor Unions & Strikes Aim: How does the rise of labor unions better the working conditions in the new industrialized America?
Labor Unions Objective 5.03: Assess the impact of labor unions on industry and the lives of workers.
Objectives Assess the problems that workers faced in the late 1800s.
EQ: How can groups drive
Labor.
Labor Unions & Strikes United States History.
Why did labor unions form in the U.S.?
Unit 2 New Industry and Big Cities
The Industrial Revolution
Organized Labor After 1865.
Labor Movement Labor unions formed.
Chapter 13 Section 3: The Organized Labor Movement
The Rise of Labor Unions
Unions: Workers Organize
National Trades Union formed
American History Chapter 6: The Expansion of American Industry
Bell Ringer What do you think of Plainview? Do you like him? Why or why not? Do you think workers have a right to strike? Should striking workers be protected.
Why did labor unions form in the U.S.? Notes #32
The Labor Movement.
Rise of Labor Unions in the 19th Century Gilded Age
Workers Unite.
Presentation transcript:

Labor Unions & Strikes United States History

Three Choices for Workers… Continue in misery Join a Union and possibly get fired or even killed Become a communist and start a revolution

Socialism Public control of property & income Society should be in charge of wealth Wealth should be redistributed equally Karl Marx & Frederick Engels How to get this done? Workers revolution

Could This Happen In America? How could this help workers? Who would be against Socialism/Communism in America? This is radical—is there something less radical that would help workers?

Less Radical—Labor Unions Unions: improve working conditions (not overthrow the system) Collective Bargaining Strikes (last resort) Best—national strike Why was this appealing to workers?

Knights of Labor First important national union Terence Powderly founder Wanted to organize ALL workers: skilled, unskilled and of all backgrounds (no racial restrictions) Set the example: negotiate, then strike if needed Goals: 8 hour day; end of child labor Lost influence after violent strikes

Other Unions American Federation of Labor (AFL): Founder Samuel Gompers Smaller local unions with a national organization Wages, hours, conditions Strikes, collective bargaining Barred African-Americans Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) Founder Eugene V. Debs Wobblies Socialists

Wobblies View of the World

Employers’ Reaction No Union Meetings Union organizers fired Blacklisting Yellow Dog contracts: Employee promises not to join a union Would not bargain collectively Strikes met with violence

The Great Strikes Haymarket Riot (1896)—8 hour workday (national strike); scabs hired in Chicago (fights); rally—bombing & gunfight btw. Police & strikers; Ill. Law: help with murder, then you are a murderer: 4 anarchists hanged for murder (one blew himself up in prison). Never determined who threw the bomb. Homestead Strike (1892)—Carnegie Steelworkers called a strike (factory cut their wages) & were fired; management sent in “private” police force (fight with deaths); strike called off Pullman Strike (1894): Company town; wages cut 25% (Panic of 1893); food prices in town NOT cut; Pullman fired three negotiators; strike; all RR traffic halted; strike ordered illegal because mail couldn’t get through