Episodes

Thursday Apr 28, 2016
April 28 Merging for Strength
Thursday Apr 28, 2016
Thursday Apr 28, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1965. That was the day that American Federation of Hosiery Workers merged with Textile Workers Union of America. Hosiery workers had begun organizing as early as 1909. By 1923 the American Federation of Full Fashioned Hosiery Workers, as the union was originally called, had affiliated with the American Federation of Labor.

Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
April 27 The Fight for a Life
Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1825. That was the day that saw what is widely considered the first strike for the ten-hour work day. It happened in Boston. Journeymen carpenters had grown tired of being required to work from sun up to sun down. They decided it was time to make a stand.

Tuesday Apr 26, 2016
April 26 In the Streets for Jobs
Tuesday Apr 26, 2016
Tuesday Apr 26, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1975. That was the day the AFL-CIO held a “Jobs Now” rally in Washington, D.C. A painful recession had pushed unemployment in United States to nine percent. Many workers across the nation thought that the Ford administration was not doing enough to address the problems facing working families.

Monday Apr 25, 2016
April 25 The Fight for Equality
Monday Apr 25, 2016
Monday Apr 25, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1978. That was the day of an important victory for any woman in the United States with a pension. The Supreme Court handed down its decision in a case known as Los Angeles Water Department versus Manhart. Manhart and a group of current and past female employees at the department had sued.

Sunday Apr 24, 2016
April 24 Standing Together Demanding Justice
Sunday Apr 24, 2016
Sunday Apr 24, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1999. A headline from the Los Angeles Times declared, “Dock Crews to Halt Work in Support of Death Row Inmate.” Up and down the west coast the ports stood silent. The International Longshoreman and Warehouseman’s Union had called their members off the job for a one-day strike.

Saturday Apr 23, 2016
April 23 Unity for Strength
Saturday Apr 23, 2016
Saturday Apr 23, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1956. That was the day of the founding of the Canadian Labour Congress. Today the Canadian Labour Congress is the largest labor organization in Canada representing some 3.3 million workers. During the early 1950s, labor leaders in Canada were becoming increasingly uneasy about the rising influence of big business in the country.

Friday Apr 22, 2016
April 22 It's Earth Day
Friday Apr 22, 2016
Friday Apr 22, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1970. That was the first observation of Earth Day. Across the United States, millions took to the streets and parks to demonstrate for clean air, water, a reduction in pollution and care for nature and the environment.

Thursday Apr 21, 2016
April 21 The Anaconda Road Massacre
Thursday Apr 21, 2016
Thursday Apr 21, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1920. That was the day remembered in Butte, Montana as “Bloody Wednesday” or the “Anaconda Road Massacre.” Butte was in the heart of copper mining country.

Wednesday Apr 20, 2016
April 20 The Bravest of Conductors
Wednesday Apr 20, 2016
Wednesday Apr 20, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1853. That was the day that Harriet Tubman led her first trip on the underground railroad, the clandestine network that helped enslaved people escape slavery and move north to freedom. One of the most remembered ‘conductors’ on the railroad, Tubman had herself escaped slavery in eastern Maryland.

Monday Apr 18, 2016
April 18 Labor's First Lawyer
Monday Apr 18, 2016
Monday Apr 18, 2016
On this day in Labor History the year was 1857. That was the day that Clarence Darrow was born in Kinsman, Ohio. Darrow was perhaps the original U.S. labor lawyer. Known to be a friend to underdogs, Darrow once supposedly said, “Lost causes are the only ones worth fighting for.”

