May 15 -- Union Communications Services, Inc.
U.S. Supreme Court rules in favor of
Samuel Gompers and other union leaders for supporting a boycott at the
Buck Stove and Range Co. in St. Louis, where workers were striking for a
9-hour day. A lower court had forbidden the boycott and sentenced the
unionists to prison for refusing to obey the judge’s anti-boycott
injunction - 1906
The Library Employees’ Union is founded in New York City, the first
union of public library workers in the United States. A major focus of
the union was the inferior status of women library workers and their low
salaries - 1917
(Unions for Beginners: Written
and profusely illustrated in a user-friendly, accessible style, Unions
for Beginners lays down a simple presentation of the colorful epic story
of the struggle of working people to rise from lives dominated by toil
and underpaid work to becoming full-fledged participants in the American
dream they helped to build. Unions for Beginners presents the history
of unions and the labor movement, the principles underlying union
organizing, the decline of unions in the shadow of the rising corporate
state, and the resurgence in the 21st century of union activism.)
The first labor bank opens in Washington, D.C., launched by officers
of the Machinists. The Locomotive Engineers opened a bank in Cleveland
later that year - 1920
Death of IWW songwriter T-Bone Slim, New York City - 1942
Wall Street Journal reporter Jonathon Kwitney reports that
AFL-CIO President George Meany, Secretary-Treasurer Lane Kirkland and
other union officials are among the 60 leading stockholders in the
15,000-acre Punta Cana, Dominican Republic resort. When the partners
needed help clearing the land, the Dominican president sent troops to
forcibly evict stubborn, impoverished tobacco farmers and fishermen who
had lived there for generations, according to Kwitney’s expose - 1973
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