History of American LaborSimon and Schuster, 30. juni 2008 - 504 sider Joseph Rayback’s updated and comprehensive history of the American labor movement. Considered to be a foundational text for any readers interested in learning the important role of American labor union history, The History of American Labor delves into the history of labor in America from the colonial days until the mid-1950's. |
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Side 16
... demand for a free labor market . The colonies ' treatment of combinations in the licensed trades likewise failed to conform to the Code . American authorities , like the British , regarded the licensed trades as public utilities ...
... demand for a free labor market . The colonies ' treatment of combinations in the licensed trades likewise failed to conform to the Code . American authorities , like the British , regarded the licensed trades as public utilities ...
Side 19
... demand “ premiums " -a tuition fee- from a parent . Although terms of service varied , apprenticeship was normally terminated at the age of twenty - one ( sixteen or eighteen for girls ) regardless of how many years had been served ...
... demand “ premiums " -a tuition fee- from a parent . Although terms of service varied , apprenticeship was normally terminated at the age of twenty - one ( sixteen or eighteen for girls ) regardless of how many years had been served ...
Side 22
... demand a third or a half of the amount of wages earned up to the time a vessel reached any port at which cargo was discharged . · Theoretically , seagoing labor was given special legal protection . Seamen were entitled to relief from ...
... demand a third or a half of the amount of wages earned up to the time a vessel reached any port at which cargo was discharged . · Theoretically , seagoing labor was given special legal protection . Seamen were entitled to relief from ...
Side 24
... demand relief through a land bank designed to issue paper money backed by real estate . The alliance won control of the Massachusetts General Court and established its bank , which was later destroyed by the Board of Trade . For most of ...
... demand relief through a land bank designed to issue paper money backed by real estate . The alliance won control of the Massachusetts General Court and established its bank , which was later destroyed by the Board of Trade . For most of ...
Side 27
... demand , Boston merchants drew up a one - year nonim- portation agreement to become effective when New York and Phila- delphia approved . Although New York merchants complied , Phila- delphians , recognizing that they could readily pass ...
... demand , Boston merchants drew up a one - year nonim- portation agreement to become effective when New York and Phila- delphia approved . Although New York merchants complied , Phila- delphians , recognizing that they could readily pass ...
Innhold
3 | |
7 | |
23 | |
36 | |
45 | |
47 | |
The First Trade Unions and Labor Parties | 54 |
The Jackson PeriodLocofocoism | 75 |
The Labor Radicals | 226 |
The Federations Revival | 250 |
Progressive Labor Legislation | 260 |
TradeUnion Success | 273 |
The Attack on the Radicals | 280 |
A Decade of Decline | 290 |
The Impact of the Great Depression | 313 |
Labors New Deal | 320 |
The TenHour Day and Social Reform | 92 |
Pure and Simple UnionismSteps Toward Nationalization | 103 |
The Depression of 1873 | 129 |
The Knights of Labor and Their RivalsHaymarket | 142 |
The End of an Era | 168 |
The Modern | 185 |
The Triumph of the Machine | 187 |
The A F L s First DecadeHomestead and Pullman | 194 |
Advance and Regression | 207 |
The Rise of the C I O | 346 |
Political Action and Jurisdictional Warfare | 356 |
Labor and the Second World War | 373 |
The Truman Administration | 387 |
The Eisenhower Years | 413 |
Since 1960 | 443 |
Bibliography | 463 |
Index | 479 |
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
adopted affiliates American Railway Union announced antilabor areas assemblies Association attitude became began Board boycott campaign candidates cent Chicago coal collective bargaining colonies committee communists conflict Congress contract convention cooperative created delegates demand Democratic depression developed economic efforts eight-hour day election employers employment enacted established factory Federal force Gompers industrial union injunction issue Knights Knights of Labor labor leaders labor movement labor organizations Labor party Labor Union large number laws legislation Lewis manufacturing mechanics membership ment miners Molly Maguire National Labor National Labor Union operators organized labor Pennsylvania period Philadelphia political action President problem production promptly Pullman Strike railroads recognized refused Republican revealed Roosevelt secure skilled social socialists Sons of Liberty steel strike strikers Supreme Court Taft-Hartley Taft-Hartley Act teamsters textile tion trade unions United unskilled vote wage increases Wagner Act workingmen York City
Populære avsnitt
Side 211 - The rights and interests of the laboring man will be protected and cared for— not by the labor agitators, but by the Christian men to whom God in His infinite wisdom has given the control of the property interests of the country, and upon the successful Management of which so much depends.
Side 319 - ... full freedom of association, self-organization, and designation of representatives of his own choosing, to negotiate the terms and conditions of his employment, and that he shall be free from the interference, restraint, or coercion of employers of labor, or their agents, In the designation of such representatives or in self-organization or in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection...
Side 368 - It ill behooves one who has supped at labor's table and who has been sheltered in labor's house to curse with equal fervor and fine impartiality both labor and its adversaries when they become locked in deadly embrace.
Side 56 - A combination of workmen to raise their wages may be considered in a twofold point of view : one is ,to benefit themselves, the other is to injure those who do not join their society. The rule of law condemns both.
Side 197 - The collective ownership by the people of all means of production and distribution.
Side 211 - I do not know who you are. I see that you are a religious man; but you are evidently biased in favor of the right of the working man to control a business in which he has no other interest than to secure fair wages for the work he does.