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Monday, September 3, 2012
Labor Day
Conceived by America's labor unions as a testament to their cause,
the legislation sanctioning the holiday was shepherded through
Congress amid labor unrest and signed by President Grover Cleveland
as a reluctant election-year compromise. Pullman, Illinois was a
company town, founded in 1880 by George Pullman, president of the
railroad sleeping car company. Pullman designed and built the town to
stand as a utopian workers' community insulated from the moral (and
political) seductions of nearby Chicago.The town was strictly, almost
feudally, organized: row houses for the assembly and craft workers;
modest Victorians for the managers; and a luxurious hotel where
Pullman himself lived and where visiting customers, suppliers, and
salesman would lodge while in town. Its residents all worked for the
Pullman company, their paychecks drawn from Pullman bank, and their
rent, set by Pullman, deducted automatically from their weekly
paychecks. The town, and the company, operated smoothly and
successfully for more than a decade.But in 1893, the Pullman company
was caught in the nationwide economic depression. Orders for railroad
sleeping cars declined, and George Pullman was forced to lay off
hundreds of employees. Those who remained endured wage cuts, even
while rents in Pullman remained consistent. Take-home paychecks
plummeted. And so the employees walked out, demanding lower rents and
higher pay. The American Railway Union, led by a young Eugene V.
Debs, came to the cause of the striking workers, and railroad workers
across the nation boycotted trains carrying Pullman cars. Rioting,
pillaging, and burning of railroad cars soon ensued; mobs of
non-union workers joined in. The strike instantly became a national
issue. President Grover Cleveland, faced with nervous railroad
executives and interrupted mail trains, declared the strike a federal
crime and deployed 12,000 troops to break the strike. Violence
erupted, and two men were killed when U.S. deputy marshals fired on
protesters in Kensington, near Chicago, but the strike was doomed.
The strike instantly became a national issue. President Grover
Cleveland, faced with nervous railroad executives and interrupted
mail trains, declared the strike a federal crime and deployed 12,000
troops to break the strike. Violence erupted, and two men were killed
when U.S. deputy marshals fired on protesters in Kensington, near
Chicago, but the strike was doomed. On August 3, 1894, the strike was
declared over. Debs went to prison, his ARU was disbanded, and
Pullman employees henceforth signed a pledge that they would never
again unionize. Aside from the already existing American Federation
of Labor and the various railroad brotherhoods, industrial workers'
unions were effectively stamped out and remained so until the Great
Depression. It was not the last time Debs would find himself behind
bars, either. Campaigning from his jail cell, Debs would later win
almost a million votes for the Socialist ticket in the 1920
presidential race.The movement for a national Labor Day had been
growing for some time. In September 1892, union workers in New York
City took an unpaid day off and marched around Union Square in
support of the holiday. But now, protests against President
Cleveland's harsh methods made the appeasement of the nation's
workers a top political priority. In the immediate wake of the
strike, legislation was rushed unanimously through both houses of
Congress, and the bill arrived on President Cleveland's desk just six
days after his troops had broken the Pullman strike. 1894 was an
election year. President Cleveland seized the chance at conciliation,
and Labor Day was born. He was not reelected. In 1898, Samuel
Gompers, head of the American Federation of Labor, called it "the
day for which the toilers in past centuries looked forward, when
their rights and their wrongs would be discussed...that the workers
of our day may not only lay down their tools of labor for a holiday,
but upon which they may touch shoulders in marching phalanx and feel
the stronger for it."
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Andrea,
ReplyDeleteI found your post on Labor Day to be very informative but also I noticed some mistakes.
First, "1894 was an election year." is not a sentence.
Secondly, I can tell that you copied some parts because you inserted into your post twice. This also affects your word count.
word count 568 words
score 22/25
love
mommy