American Industrialization and Radical Labor: Exploring History and Themes

 
History 350
May 26, 2015
 
Announcements
 
The final exam is scheduled for Monday, June 8 at 12:30. I’ll
have instructions and potential essay questions by the end of
this week.
The exam will emphasize the second half of the course but will be
comprehensive.
There will be a take-home option. The take-home will be due by the
start of the in-class version. If you’re not finished with the take-
home, you must take the in-class exam.
The take-home will be all essay. The in-class will be essays plus IDs.
The third discussion forum question (on Cady Stanton and
the women’s rights movement) is now available on
Blackboard. The deadline for posts is 11:59 p.m. Thursday
May 28.
 
Announcements (continued)
 
Study questions on Martin Duberman, Haymarket are
now online 
here
.
The paper is due by class time on 
May 26 
 
NEW! This
Thursday, 
May 28
. The topic options and instructions
are available on Blackboard. Late papers will be
accepted through June 4 but penalized one grading
notch (e.g. from a B to a B-) for every weekday it’s late.
Submit hard copy to me or Feather. If you need to
submit it electronically, let me know why and get my
authorization. Follow up as soon as possible with hard
copy.
 
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Some Websites of Interest
 
PBS 
American Experience
 documentary
Chicago: City of the Century 
website—note
the section on anarchists.
The 
Great Railroad Strike 
of 1877 video (12
min.)
Preamble and 
Declaration of Principles 
of the
Knights of Labor
Excerpts from 
Chicago: City of the Century
 on
Haymarket affair: 
part 1
 
 
part 2
   
part 3
(about 15 min. total)
 
American Industrialization and Radical
Labor
 
We start our fourth section of the course here, on radical
labor and the Haymarket events of 1886 and beyond. Here
are a few issues and themes we’ll consider in the unit:
1.
What role has violence played in the history of American
radicalism?
2.
What meaning did equality have for workers in late
nineteenth century America? How does it compare with other
forms of equality we’ve encountered this term?
3.
What role did race and ethnicity play in the labor movement?
4.
Politicians and others today often refer to “American
Exceptionalism,” the idea that the U.S. is fundamentally
different from other industrial or post-industrial capitalist
societies. Does the history of American workers we’ll study
support or challenge that view?
 
New Meanings for Independence and
Equality
 
Toward a “nation of immigrants”
A “Gilded Age” of wealth and
poverty
From family farmers to wage
laborers
Equality of opportunity? Inequality
of outcomes?
 
An 1886 Workers’ “Declaration of
Independence”
 
“We hold these truths to be self-evident: that
all men are created free and with equal rights;
that they are endowed by their creator with
certain inalienable rights, that among these
are Life and the means of living, Liberty and
the conditions essential to Liberty, Justice and
the weapons for its enforcement, and with the
right to the Pursuit of Happiness in all ways
not inconsistent with the equal rights of other
men.”
 
An 1886 Workers’ “Declaration of
Independence” (continued)
 
“The history of the Millionaires who control the
present government at Washington and their
aristocratic and monopolistic followers in the
states and territories is a history of repeated
injuries and usurpations, all having in direct
object the establishment of an absolute tyranny
over the people of this republic.
        “To prove this let facts be submitted to a
candid world.” . . .
 
An 1886 Workers’ “Declaration of
Independence” (continued)
 
“We therefore, the representatives of the wage
workers and producers in this republic,…solemnly
publish and declare:
       “That the People of these Untied States of right ought
to be FREE AND INDEPENDENT OF CLASS DOMINATION;
that they are absolved from all moral allegiance to such
laws and institutions as maintain and permit class slavery
and public corruption; that to secure in fact the practice
and enforcement of the principles of American Liberty is
the FIRST duty of all honest men and women.”
 
The Rise of Big Business
 
Railroads United the Nation
Manufacturing: Size, Speed and Scope
 
McCormick Reaper works burns
in the great Chicago fire of 1871.
McCormick rebuilds a bigger
factory.
 
Giant Cities
 
U.S. Urban Population:
1860: 6 million
 
   20% of total
1900: 30 million  40% of total
[2010: 249 million or 81% of total]
Chicago Population
 
1840: 4470
 
1870: 298,977
 
1900: 1,698,575
     
[2010: 2, 695,598]
 
Chicago 1857          Chicago 1897
 
 
Immigration and a New Industrial
Labor Force
 
Immigrants to United States:
1860: 153,000
  
    1881: 669,000
1907 (Peak year): 1,285,000
 
Immigrants arrive
at Ellis Island, New
York, 1902
 
Immigration to Industrializing Chicago
 
1860: about half of Chicago’s population was
foreign-born or children of foreign-born
1900: 79% foreign born or children of foreign-
born
 
An 1895 map of different nationalities
in one working-class Chicago ward.
 
Chicago 1837
 
 
The Great Chicago Fire 1871
 
 
Center of Chicago
1900
 
 
Labor and “American Exceptionalism”
 
In 1905, German sociologist Werner Sombart
compared the lifestyles of American and German
workers in a book called 
Why Is There No Socialism
in the United States?
The answer to his question in the title: “Roast Beef
and Apple Pie”—American workers were too well off
to want to change the capitalist system.
Other “exceptional” features of working-class
America
Ethnic and racial divisions?
Equal citizens’ rights?
A frontier “safety valve”?
 
1877: The Great Railroad Strike
 
The Strike Begins: Martinsburg,
West Virginia
 
 
Strike Battle in Chicago
 
 
Unions in Gilded Age America
 
The Knights of Labor
(founded 1869)
Fraternity and Harmony
Membership excludes only
lawyers, doctors, bankers,
liquor sellers, professional
gamblers and stockbrokers
Demands "education,
cooperation and political
action and through these the
abolition of the wage system."
 
 
American Federation of Labor
 
The American Federation of
Labor (AFL) founded 1886
 
Accepting the capitalist
system
Demanding “More”
Trade (or crafts) unionism
Skilled workers
Strategy of controlling
supply of labor
 
AFL Declaration of Principles
 
“Whereas a struggle is going on in
the nations of the civilized world,
between the oppressors and oppressed
of all countries, a struggle between
capital and labor which must grow in
intensity from year to year and work
disastrous results to the toiling millions
of all nations, if not combined for mutual
protection and benefits.. . . To protect
the skilled labor of America from being
reduced to beggary and to sustain the
standard of American workmanship and
skill, the trades unions of America have
been established.”
 
The AFL and the Capitalist System
 
Samuel Gompers: Leader of the
American Federation of Labor
1886-1924
 
 
 
 “I have come to the conclusion
. . . that it is our duty  to live
our lives as workers in the
society in which we live, and
not to work for the downfall or
the destruction or the
overthrow of that society, but
for the fuller development and
evolution of the society in
which we live; to make life the
better worth living. “
 
“The American as Anarchist”
 
Individualist anarchism
“Disobedience is the true foundation of
liberty. The obedient must be slaves.”—
Henry David Thoreau
“The only security men can have for their
political liberty, consists in keeping their
money in their own pockets.”—Lysander
Spooner
“Aggression is simply another name for
government. Aggression, invasion,
government, are interconvertible terms.
The essence of government is control, or
the attempt to control.”—Benjamin Tucker
At right: Benjamin Tucker, Individualist Anarchist
author and journalist 1854-1939.
 
 
“The Alien as Anarchist”?
 
Marxism and Anarchism: Karl Marx vs. Mikhail
Bakunin
At right: Johan Most, German-American anarchist
Most called for “propaganda of the deed”—
attentats
in German—acts of violence aimed at
      provoking worker uprising.
New York Times 
describes him:“Most was seedy.  He
wore a black suit, the coat an abbreviated Prince
Albert, greasy and glossy and whitened with cigar
ashes, a buff waistcoat buttoned almost to his throat,
and a cheap ventilated white straw hat pushed back
from his bald forehead.  His puffed face was a dull,
dead red where it could be seen through his grizzled
beard.  He seemed to be more interested in the
settlement of the beer account than in anything that
developed during the day.”
 
 
The “Pittsburgh Manifesto” 1883
 
FELLOW-WORKMEN: The Declaration of Independence says:
“…But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing
invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them (the
people) under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to
throw off such government and provide new guards for their
future security.”
This thought of Thomas Jefferson was the justification for armed
resistance by our forefathers, which gave birth to our Republic, and
do not the necessities of our present time compel us to reassert
their declaration? . . .
Our present society is founded on the exploitation of the propertyless
classes by the propertied. This exploitation is such that the
propertied (capitalists) buy the working force body and soul of the
propertyless. . . .
 
“Pittsburgh Manifesto” continued
 
The political institutions of our times are the agencies of the
propertied class; their mission is the upholding of the privileges
of their masters; any reform in your own behalf would curtail
these privileges. To this they will not and cannot consent, for it
would be suicidal to themselves.
That they will not resign their privileges voluntarily we know;
that they will not make any concessions to us we likewise know.
Since we must then rely upon the kindness of our masters for
whatever redress we have, and knowing that from them no good
may be expected, there remains but one recourse - FORCE! Our
forefathers have not only told us that against despots force is
justifiable, because it is the only means, but they themselves
have set the immemorial example.
By force our ancestors liberated themselves from political
oppression, by force their children will have to liberate
themselves from economic bondage. “It is, therefore, your right;
it is your duty,” says Jefferson - “to arm!”
 
The Eight Hour Day Movement
 
 
Map: “Labor Unrest in Chicago, April
25-May 4, 1886”
 
[Link for the map:
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/
pages/1769.html
]
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Explore the dynamic relationship between the U.S. and Mexico, the impact of war and economic cooperation, and the changing interpretations over time. Dive into the history of American radicalism, including the Haymarket events of 1886, and discuss themes of violence, equality, race, and ethnicity in the labor movement. Discover the concept of American Exceptionalism and its relevance in modern discourse. Engage with study questions, announcements, and upcoming exam details in this insightful historical journey.

  • American history
  • labor movement
  • U.S.-Mexico relations
  • American exceptionalism
  • study questions

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  1. History 350 May 26, 2015

  2. Announcements The final exam is scheduled for Monday, June 8 at 12:30. I ll have instructions and potential essay questions by the end of this week. The exam will emphasize the second half of the course but will be comprehensive. There will be a take-home option. The take-home will be due by the start of the in-class version. If you re not finished with the take- home, you must take the in-class exam. The take-home will be all essay. The in-class will be essays plus IDs. The third discussion forum question (on Cady Stanton and the women s rights movement) is now available on Blackboard. The deadline for posts is 11:59 p.m. Thursday May 28.

  3. Announcements (continued) Study questions on Martin Duberman, Haymarket are now online here. The paper is due by class time on May 26 NEW! This Thursday, May 28. The topic options and instructions are available on Blackboard. Late papers will be accepted through June 4 but penalized one grading notch (e.g. from a B to a B-) for every weekday it s late. Submit hard copy to me or Feather. If you need to submit it electronically, let me know why and get my authorization. Follow up as soon as possible with hard copy.

  4. HIST 410 CRN 42135 6/22-7/19 12:00-1:50 mtwr The relationship between the U.S and Mexico has been shaped by war, influenced by economic cooperation, understood through racialization, and re-imagined in film, literature, and the lived experiences of immigrants. The two countries are bound together by a vast border and divided by differing interpretations of a shared history. How have this relationship, its interpretations, and its representations changed over time? Class themes include conquest, race, capitalism, and immigration.

  5. Some Websites of Interest PBS American Experience documentary Chicago: City of the Century website note the section on anarchists. The Great Railroad Strike of 1877 video (12 min.) Preamble and Declaration of Principles of the Knights of Labor Excerpts from Chicago: City of the Century on Haymarket affair: part 1 part 2 part 3 (about 15 min. total)

  6. American Industrialization and Radical Labor We start our fourth section of the course here, on radical labor and the Haymarket events of 1886 and beyond. Here are a few issues and themes we ll consider in the unit: 1. What role has violence played in the history of American radicalism? 2. What meaning did equality have for workers in late nineteenth century America? How does it compare with other forms of equality we ve encountered this term? 3. What role did race and ethnicity play in the labor movement? 4. Politicians and others today often refer to American Exceptionalism, the idea that the U.S. is fundamentally different from other industrial or post-industrial capitalist societies. Does the history of American workers we ll study support or challenge that view?

  7. New Meanings for Independence and Equality Toward a nation of immigrants A Gilded Age of wealth and poverty From family farmers to wage laborers Equality of opportunity? Inequality of outcomes?

  8. An 1886 Workers Declaration of Independence We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created free and with equal rights; that they are endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights, that among these are Life and the means of living, Liberty and the conditions essential to Liberty, Justice and the weapons for its enforcement, and with the right to the Pursuit of Happiness in all ways not inconsistent with the equal rights of other men.

  9. An 1886 Workers Declaration of Independence (continued) The history of the Millionaires who control the present government at Washington and their aristocratic and monopolistic followers in the states and territories is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over the people of this republic. To prove this let facts be submitted to a candid world. . . .

  10. An 1886 Workers Declaration of Independence (continued) We therefore, the representatives of the wage workers and producers in this republic, solemnly publish and declare: That the People of these Untied States of right ought to be FREE AND INDEPENDENT OF CLASS DOMINATION; that they are absolved from all moral allegiance to such laws and institutions as maintain and permit class slavery and public corruption; that to secure in fact the practice and enforcement of the principles of American Liberty is the FIRST duty of all honest men and women.

  11. The Rise of Big Business Railroads United the Nation Manufacturing: Size, Speed and Scope McCormick Reaper works burns in the great Chicago fire of 1871. McCormick rebuilds a bigger factory.

  12. Giant Cities U.S. Urban Population: 1860: 6 million 20% of total 1900: 30 million 40% of total [2010: 249 million or 81% of total] Chicago Population 1870: 298,977 1900: 1,698,575 [2010: 2, 695,598] 1840: 4470

  13. Chicago 1857 Chicago 1897

  14. Immigration and a New Industrial Labor Force Immigrants to United States: 1860: 153,000 1881: 669,000 1907 (Peak year): 1,285,000 Immigrants arrive at Ellis Island, New York, 1902

  15. Immigration to Industrializing Chicago 1860: about half of Chicago s population was foreign-born or children of foreign-born 1900: 79% foreign born or children of foreign- born An 1895 map of different nationalities in one working-class Chicago ward.

  16. Chicago 1837

  17. The Great Chicago Fire 1871

  18. Center of Chicago 1900

  19. Labor and American Exceptionalism In 1905, German sociologist Werner Sombart compared the lifestyles of American and German workers in a book called Why Is There No Socialism in the United States? The answer to his question in the title: Roast Beef and Apple Pie American workers were too well off to want to change the capitalist system. Other exceptional features of working-class America Ethnic and racial divisions? Equal citizens rights? A frontier safety valve ?

  20. 1877: The Great Railroad Strike The Strike Begins: Martinsburg, West Virginia Strike Battle in Chicago

  21. Unions in Gilded Age America The Knights of Labor (founded 1869) Fraternity and Harmony Membership excludes only lawyers, doctors, bankers, liquor sellers, professional gamblers and stockbrokers Demands "education, cooperation and political action and through these the abolition of the wage system."

  22. American Federation of Labor The American Federation of Labor (AFL) founded 1886 Accepting the capitalist system Demanding More Trade (or crafts) unionism Skilled workers Strategy of controlling supply of labor AFL Declaration of Principles Whereas a struggle is going on in the nations of the civilized world, between the oppressors and oppressed of all countries, a struggle between capital and labor which must grow in intensity from year to year and work disastrous results to the toiling millions of all nations, if not combined for mutual protection and benefits.. . . To protect the skilled labor of America from being reduced to beggary and to sustain the standard of American workmanship and skill, the trades unions of America have been established.

  23. The AFL and the Capitalist System Samuel Gompers: Leader of the American Federation of Labor 1886-1924 I have come to the conclusion . . . that it is our duty to live our lives as workers in the society in which we live, and not to work for the downfall or the destruction or the overthrow of that society, but for the fuller development and evolution of the society in which we live; to make life the better worth living.

  24. The American as Anarchist Individualist anarchism Disobedience is the true foundation of liberty. The obedient must be slaves. Henry David Thoreau The only security men can have for their political liberty, consists in keeping their money in their own pockets. Lysander Spooner Aggression is simply another name for government. Aggression, invasion, government, are interconvertible terms. The essence of government is control, or the attempt to control. Benjamin Tucker At right: Benjamin Tucker, Individualist Anarchist author and journalist 1854-1939.

  25. The Alien as Anarchist? Marxism and Anarchism: Karl Marx vs. Mikhail Bakunin At right: Johan Most, German-American anarchist Most called for propaganda of the deed attentats in German acts of violence aimed at provoking worker uprising. New York Times describes him: Most was seedy. He wore a black suit, the coat an abbreviated Prince Albert, greasy and glossy and whitened with cigar ashes, a buff waistcoat buttoned almost to his throat, and a cheap ventilated white straw hat pushed back from his bald forehead. His puffed face was a dull, dead red where it could be seen through his grizzled beard. He seemed to be more interested in the settlement of the beer account than in anything that developed during the day.

  26. The Pittsburgh Manifesto 1883 FELLOW-WORKMEN: The Declaration of Independence says: But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them (the people) under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such government and provide new guards for their future security. This thought of Thomas Jefferson was the justification for armed resistance by our forefathers, which gave birth to our Republic, and do not the necessities of our present time compel us to reassert their declaration? . . . Our present society is founded on the exploitation of the propertyless classes by the propertied. This exploitation is such that the propertied (capitalists) buy the working force body and soul of the propertyless. . . .

  27. Pittsburgh Manifesto continued The political institutions of our times are the agencies of the propertied class; their mission is the upholding of the privileges of their masters; any reform in your own behalf would curtail these privileges. To this they will not and cannot consent, for it would be suicidal to themselves. That they will not resign their privileges voluntarily we know; that they will not make any concessions to us we likewise know. Since we must then rely upon the kindness of our masters for whatever redress we have, and knowing that from them no good may be expected, there remains but one recourse - FORCE! Our forefathers have not only told us that against despots force is justifiable, because it is the only means, but they themselves have set the immemorial example. By force our ancestors liberated themselves from political oppression, by force their children will have to liberate themselves from economic bondage. It is, therefore, your right; it is your duty, says Jefferson - to arm!

  28. The Eight Hour Day Movement

  29. Map: Labor Unrest in Chicago, April 25-May 4, 1886 [Link for the map: http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/ pages/1769.html]

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