3. Unions late 19th century Flashcards

1
Q

Knights of Labour (KOL)

  1. founded?
  2. successful strike?
  3. lost influence?
A
  1. 1869
  2. against Wabash Railroad in 1885 = encouraged workers to join
  3. following Haymarket affair of 1886
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2
Q

American Federation of Labour (AFL)

  1. what did it replace
  2. what did it attempt
  3. how many members by 1914
A
  1. KOL
  2. unite all unions
  3. 2 million
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3
Q

Industrial workers of the world

  1. when set up?
  2. reputation?
  3. what did it attempt?
  4. drawbacks?
A
  1. 1905
  2. violence and militancy
  3. fight for rights of poorer workers and immigrants
  4. violence = constantly under pressure from authorities
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4
Q

what did increasing industrialisation result in

A

development and growth of a number of unions

most notably KOL and AFL

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5
Q

KOL membership before and after successful strike against the Wasbash Railroad in 1885

  1. 1881
  2. 1886
A
  1. 20,000

2. 700,000

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6
Q

KOL membership

  1. before violence of Haymarket affair in 1886
  2. membership by 1890
A
  1. 700,000

2. 100,000

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7
Q

why was Industrial Workers of the World less effective

A

militancy and violence = disliked by employers

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8
Q

membership of industrial workers of the world

A

100,000 members by 1923 but went in decline thereafter

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9
Q

why is the membership of unions important

A

more membership = more influence / ability to exert pressure on employer

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10
Q

what affected membership of unions other than unsuccessful strikes

A

divisions within workforce

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11
Q

during this period why did white workers no longer enjoy a monopoly of the labour market

A

abolition of slavery/end of civil war = arrival of AA workers
often accepted lower rates of pay = white workers laid off and replaced with AA

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12
Q

as well as influx of AA into available pool of workers there were new immigrants from

A

Europe and Asia

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13
Q

why did unions not allow AA and immigrants to join

A

saw arrival as a challenge

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14
Q

why was a divided workforce bad

A

easier for employers to exploit them

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15
Q

what other 2 strikes weakened the progress in obtaining rights for workers (not the Haymarket affair)

A

Homestead strike of 1892

Pullman strike of 1894

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16
Q

The Homestead strike of 1892

1. what did it result in?

A
  1. bankrupted the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steel workers
17
Q

The Homestead strike of 1892

2. how did it affect membership? 1881 vs 1909?

A
  1. decline in union membership.
    24,000 in 1881
    6300 by 1909
18
Q

The Pullman Strike 1894

1. why did it develop

A
  1. refusal of employers to recognise collective bargaining

shows difficulties unions faced in trying to gain recognition

19
Q

what was achieved by the outbreak of WW1 in 1914

2 things

A
  1. union membership grown to 2 million members

2. unions had begun to put pressure on candidates in elections to support workers rights

20
Q

what factors suggest position of organised labour was no stronger by 1914 than in 1865
(5 things)

A
  1. unions represented only 20% of work force (non-agricultural)
  2. many industries still no unions (steel & car manufacturing)
  3. many unions not legally recognised = lacked real power over decisions
  4. workers divided by ethnicity, gender and level of skill (exploited by employers)
  5. gains often limited to white, male, skilled workers.