Episodes

Thursday Oct 17, 2019
October 17 - The Making of a Monopoly
Thursday Oct 17, 2019
Thursday Oct 17, 2019
On this day in Labor History, the year was 1877. That was the day that John D. Rockefeller, and his company Standard Oil struck a deal with the Pennsylvania Railroad that would cement his monopoly on the nation’s oil refineries. In the early 1870s Rockefeller was building his oil empire out from its center in Cleveland, Ohio.

Wednesday Oct 16, 2019
October 16 - Striking a Blow at Slave Labor
Wednesday Oct 16, 2019
Wednesday Oct 16, 2019
On this day in Labor History, the year was 1859. That was the day that abolitionist John Brown led a raid at the armory in Harpers Ferry, in what is now West Virginia. His goal was to strike a blow toward ending slavery.

Tuesday Oct 15, 2019
October 15 - Labor’s Magna Carta
Tuesday Oct 15, 2019
Tuesday Oct 15, 2019
On this day in Labor History, the year was 1914. That was the day that President Woodrow Wilson signed the Clayton Antitrust Act. The act also became known as Labor’s “Magna Carta.”

Monday Oct 14, 2019
October 14 - Labor Standing in Solidarity Against the Nazis
Monday Oct 14, 2019
Monday Oct 14, 2019
On this day in Labor History, the year was 1933. That was the day the Executive Council of the American Federation of Labor decided to call for a boycott of Nazi Germany’s goods and services. Jewish labor leaders in the United States led the push for the boycott.

Sunday Oct 13, 2019
October 13 - Delivering a Better Future
Sunday Oct 13, 2019
Sunday Oct 13, 2019
On this day in Labor History, the year was 2000. That was the day the newspaper carriers for the San Jose Mercury News ended their walkout. Eighty percent of the newspaper carriers were Vietnamese immigrants to the United States. Many were elderly, or recent immigrants with families.

Saturday Oct 12, 2019
October 12 - Bury Me with My Boys in Mt. Olive
Saturday Oct 12, 2019
Saturday Oct 12, 2019
“Bury me with my boys in Mt. Olive, and let no traitor draw breath over my grave.” Such was the last wish of labor leader Mother Jones. She wanted her final resting to place to be alongside the coal miners who gave their lives in the struggle to bring fair wages and a safe working environment to Virden, Illinois.

Friday Oct 11, 2019
October 11 - Resting in Peace and with Dignity
Friday Oct 11, 2019
Friday Oct 11, 2019
On this day in Labor History the year was 1936. 50,000 people gathered in the small town of Mount Olive, in southern Illinois. They had come to commemorate a new memorial to renowned labor leader Mother Jones and to honor mine workers who had lost their lives. Five special trains and twenty-five Greyhound buses helped bring the crowd to the Union Miners Cemetery.

Thursday Oct 10, 2019
October 10 - Murder in the Fields
Thursday Oct 10, 2019
Thursday Oct 10, 2019
On this day in Labor History the year was 1933. That was the day that forty armed cotton growers shot at a group of striking workers in the small town of Pixley, California. That year a wave of labor unrest had swept through the fields of California’s agriculture industry. Nearly 50,000 workers participated in strikes throughout the year.

Wednesday Oct 09, 2019
October 9 - The United Hebrew Trades is Founded
Wednesday Oct 09, 2019
Wednesday Oct 09, 2019
On this day in Labor History the year was 1888. That was the day that the United Hebrew Trades was founded in New York City. The new effort was patterned after the United German Trades. The goal was to organize Yiddish speaking workers.

Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
October 8 - The Not So Friendly Skies for Women
Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
Tuesday Oct 08, 2019
On this day in Labor History the year was 1986. Female flight attendants won an important legal victory. Can you imagine losing your job because you decided to get married? It might have happened if you were a flight attendant working in the mid-Twentieth century.

