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Populism and Protest: Section 4.3 Labor Violence.

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Presentation on theme: "Populism and Protest: Section 4.3 Labor Violence."— Presentation transcript:

1 Populism and Protest: Section 4.3 Labor Violence

2 Review What characterizes a market economy? What characterizes a command economy? What is Social Darwinism? What is a monopoly? What is horizontal integration? What is vertical integration?

3 Factory Work

4 By the end of this lesson you will be able to: Explain why laborers organized by identifying the condition under which they worked. Identify the significant labor unions, people who led them, and analyze their impact on the labor movement. Explain how several violent confrontations gave labor a bad and radical image and created a backlash against the movement.

5 Describe the working conditions endured by factory workers. Dangerous 12-14 hour 6 days a week Fired for any reason No sick days, health insurance, workers compensation Children from age 5

6 What options did the workers have? Can they appeal to their bosses? Can they petition the government? NO!!! They can UNITE Vote with ONE voice –Protest? –Go on strike?

7 What are unions? Union= Organization in which workers band together to form a collective voice to gain better pay, conditions, etc.

8 What methods do unions and employees use to fight each other? Unions Weapons Strike= a work stoppage Boycott= organized agreement not to buy from certain company Employer Weapons Lockout= when the employee closes his business to force workers to abide by his rule Scab= worker hired to break a strike Injunction- government order to stop strike

9 What was the American Federation of Labor (AFL)? Less radical labor union –Non violent methods –Strikes and boycotts Accepted capitalism Wanted “Piece of the Pie” Led by Samuel Gompers Where would the AFL fall on the political spectrum?

10 What happened at the Haymarket Riot (1886)? 1 thousand workers held rally at Haymarket square to protest murder of workers by police Bomb thrown killed 7 cops, injured dozens Cops killed 10 protesters, injured dozens 4 radical leaders hanged (with little evidence) How do you think the public viewed labor unions at this point?

11 Steel workers at Carnegie’s mill went on strike after wages were lowered Frick (Boss) hired 300 Pinkerton guards to protect scab workers Killed several workers Strike failed Tarnished Carnegie’s image Describe the Homestead Strike (1892).

12 Describe the Homestead Strike.

13 Describe the Pullman strike. George Pullman controlled all facets of his workers lives –Cut wages (by 33%) during Panic of 1893 Eugene V. Debs –Leader of American Railway Union –Ordered workers not to connect Pullman cars –AFL refused to join them Cleveland issued an injunction (order to stop strike) Where is Cleveland on the political spectrum?

14 Who was Big Bill Haywood?Big Bill Labor leader of the IWW (Industrial Workers of the World) or the Wobblies A radical socialist Called for “One Big Union” "Eight hours of work, eight hours of play, eight hours of sleep-- eight hours a day!" Fled US in 1921 during espionage trial to Russia

15 Which side of the economic spectrum is Haywood? Fellow Workers, this is the Continental Congress of the working-class. We are here to confederate the workers of this country into a working-class movement that shall have for its purpose the emancipation of the working-class from the slave bondage of capitalism. The aims and objects of this organization shall be to put the working- class in possession of the economic power, the means of life, in control of the machinery of production and distribution, without regard to capitalist masters

16 What factors are keeping unions from gaining power? Government –Laissez faire Public opinion –Viewed as violent radicals Exclusion of minorities Women, African Americans, immigrants, unskilled workers


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