August 11 --
Federal troops drive some 1,200 jobless
workers from Washington D.C. Led by unemployed activist Charles "Hobo"
Kelley, the group's "soldiers" include young journalist Jack London and
William Haywood, a young miner-cowboy called "Big Bill" - 1884
One hundred "platform men" employed by the privately owned United
Railroads streetcar service in San Francisco abandon their streetcars,
tying up many of the main lines in and out of the city center - 1917
Int’l Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union receives CIO charter - 1937
August 10
The Air Line Pilots Association is founded at a meeting in Chicago attended by 24 activists from across the country - 1931
Hundreds of Transport Workers Union members descend on a New York
City courthouse, offering their own money to bail out their president,
Mike Quill, and four other union leaders arrested while making their way
through Grand Central Station to union headquarters after picketing the
IRT offices in lower Manhattan - 1935
President Roosevelt signs amendments to the 1935 Social Security Act,
broadening the program to include dependents and survivors' benefits -
1939
Construction on the St. Lawrence Seaway begins. Ultimately 22,000
workers spent five years building the 2,342-mile route from the Atlantic
to the northernmost part of the Great Lakes - 1954
I.W. Abel, president of the United Steel Workers of America from 1965 to 1977, dies at age 79 - 1987
President Barack Obama signs a $26 billion bill designed to protect
300,000 teachers, police and others from layoffs spurred by budgetary
crises in states hard-hit by the Great Recession - 2010
August 09
Knights of Labor strike New York Central railroad, ultimately to be defeated by scabbing - 1890
Nine men and one woman meet in Oakland, Calif., to form what was to
become the 230,000-member California School Employees Association,
representing school support staff throughout the state - 1927
A
fire and resultant loss of oxygen when a high pressure hydraulic line
was cut with a torch in a Titan missile silo near Searcy, Ark., kills 53
people, mostly civilian repairmen - 1965
United Papermakers & Paperworkers merge with Int'l Brotherhood of Pulp, Sulphite & Paper Mill Workers of the U.S. & Canada to become United Paperworkers Int’l Union, now a division of the Steelworkers Union - 1972
Some 73,000 Bell Atlantic workers end a successful two-day strike over wages and limits on contracting out of work - 1998
The United Steelworkers and Amicus, the largest manufacturing union
in the United Kingdom, announce formation of a strategic alliance to
work on a range of mutual concerns - 2005
Sunday, August 11, 2013
Today in Labor History
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