Episodes
Monday Jan 11, 2016
January 11, 2016 Bread Yes! But Roses Too
Monday Jan 11, 2016
Monday Jan 11, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1912. That was the day a strike launched one of the most iconic rallying cries of the U.S. Labor Movement. Twenty thousand, mostly women workers, in the Lawrence, Massachusetts textile mills began what came to be known as the “Bread and Roses” strike.
Sunday Jan 10, 2016
January 10, 2016 The Day the Mill Collapsed
Sunday Jan 10, 2016
Sunday Jan 10, 2016
On this day in Labor history the year was 1860. It was a day of tragedy as The Pemberton Mill collapsed in Lawrence, Massachusetts. The collapse of the five-story textile mill was one of the worst workplace disasters in U.S. history.
Saturday Jan 09, 2016
January 9, 2016 Keeping the Workers Safe
Saturday Jan 09, 2016
Saturday Jan 09, 2016
Do national security concerns outweigh the right of workers to form a union? That question was being debated On this day in Labor History The year was 2003. The head of the Transportation Security Administration, James Loy, made the case that collective bargaining would be an impediment to the war on terrorism.
Friday Jan 08, 2016
January 8, 2016 “Taking Care of Our Own”
Friday Jan 08, 2016
Friday Jan 08, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1939. That was the day a new radio show began on CBS radio.
The show featured some of the biggest names in Hollywood.
Thursday Jan 07, 2016
January 7, 2016 Chrysler Bailout
Thursday Jan 07, 2016
Thursday Jan 07, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1980. That was the day the President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Chrysler Corporation Loan Guarantee Act. The act allowed the federal government to guarantee up to one-and-a-half billion dollars in loans to aid the failing Chrysler corporation.
Wednesday Jan 06, 2016
January 6, 2016 The Four Freedoms
Wednesday Jan 06, 2016
Wednesday Jan 06, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1941. That was the day that President Franklin Delano Roosevelt gave a speech that would become one of the defining moments of his presidency. The world was embroiled in the Second World War.
Tuesday Jan 05, 2016
January 5, 2016 Embarking on a Great Creation
Tuesday Jan 05, 2016
Tuesday Jan 05, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1933.
That was the day that construction on one of the most iconic landmarks in the United States—the Golden Gate Bridge, began.
The bridge was built during the height of the Great Depression.
Monday Jan 04, 2016
January 4, 2016 “Rehabilitation, Not Humiliation”
Monday Jan 04, 2016
Monday Jan 04, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1965. That was the day that 8,000 social workers went on strike in New York City. For twenty-eight days that bitter cold January these workers marched on the picket lines. They were members of AFSCME District Council 37 union and the Social Service Employees Union.
Sunday Jan 03, 2016
January 3, 2016 Framed for Standing Up
Sunday Jan 03, 2016
Sunday Jan 03, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1917. That was the day the trial against labor leader Tom Mooney began.
Mooney stood accused of detonating a bomb at the "Preparedness Day," parade in San Francisco on July 22, 1916.
Saturday Jan 02, 2016
January 2, 2016 Another Deadly Tragedy
Saturday Jan 02, 2016
Saturday Jan 02, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 2006.
That was the day that a morning explosion at the Sago mine in West Virginia claimed the lives of twelve miners.
The federal Mine Safety and Health administration had cited the mine more than two hundred times the year before the disaster.