Episodes

Thursday Jun 30, 2016
June 30 The Making of a Strikebreaker
Thursday Jun 30, 2016
Thursday Jun 30, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1885. That was the day that streetcar workers went out on strike. The West Division Street Railway Company had reduced the number of trips it made each day. The workers asked for a wage increase to make up for the loss in earnings. In response, management fired fifteen union leaders.

Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
June 29 The Birth of a Working Class Hero
Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1917. That was the day that American folklorist Archie Green was born in Winnipeg, Canada. His father was a Ukrainian refugee, who had fought in the 1905 Russian revolution. As a young boy his family moved to Los Angeles. There he enjoyed listening to cowboy songs on the radio.

Tuesday Jun 28, 2016
June 28 An Important Step for Labor
Tuesday Jun 28, 2016
Tuesday Jun 28, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1936. That was the day that the U.S. Congress passed the Walsh-Healey Public Contracts Act. The bill had been proposed by the Secretary of Labor Francis Perkins. The act was part of the President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal effort to combat the ravages of the Great Depression.

Monday Jun 27, 2016
June 27 Helen Keller Stands with Labor
Monday Jun 27, 2016
Monday Jun 27, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1880. That was the day that Helen Keller was born in Tuscumbia, Alabama. Two years later she lost both her sight and hearing due to illness. With the help of a teacher by the name of Anne Sullivan, Helen learned how to communicate again.

Sunday Jun 26, 2016
June 26 Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld
Sunday Jun 26, 2016
Sunday Jun 26, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1893. That was the day that Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld pardoned Samuel Fielden, Oscar Neebe and Michael Swab who were imprisoned for their alleged role in the Haymarket bombing of 1886.

Saturday Jun 25, 2016
June 25 Haymarket Martyrs Monument
Saturday Jun 25, 2016
Saturday Jun 25, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1893. That was the day that Haymarket Martyrs Monument was dedicated at what is now Forest Home Cemetery, just west of Chicago. The Haymarket Martyrs were eight men convicted of throwing a bomb at a workers rally in Chicago during the 1886 fight for the eight-hour day.

Friday Jun 24, 2016
June 24 Cutting Corners Costs Lives
Friday Jun 24, 2016
Friday Jun 24, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1971. At 12:51 am Battalion 12 Chief Leo Najarian of Los Angeles heard that there had been a tunnel explosion. That February a 6.5 earthquake had killed 65 people in the area. Now it seemed tragedy had struck again. Just the night before Chief Najarian had been called out to the same address.

Thursday Jun 23, 2016
June 23 The Attack on Labor
Thursday Jun 23, 2016
Thursday Jun 23, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1947. That was the day that many labor historians mark as the beginning of a long decline of the US labor movement. The United States Congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act. The bill was named after Republican Senator Robert A. Taft from Ohio.

Wednesday Jun 22, 2016
June 22 The Cuyahoga River Burns
Wednesday Jun 22, 2016
Wednesday Jun 22, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1969. That was the day that the Cuyahoga River, which winds its way through Cleveland, Ohio caught on fire. Cleveland was once the sixth largest city in the nation. During the early twentieth century the city had a booming steel industry.

Tuesday Jun 21, 2016
June 21 The Day of the Rope
Tuesday Jun 21, 2016
Tuesday Jun 21, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1877. That was the day that ten Irish miners were hung in Pennsylvania. They were part of a group of twenty who had been sentenced to death for allegedly being part of the Molly Maguires, a group of alleged radical Irish miners. Miners were on strike in the Shuykill County anthracite coal region.

