Episodes

Monday Nov 23, 2015
November 23 Strike like and Egyptian
Monday Nov 23, 2015
Monday Nov 23, 2015
On this day in labor history, we are going way, way, way back. The year was 1170 B.C. So the exact date is a bit of an estimate. Egyptian workers initiated what just might be the first recorded strike in world history. The workers were toiling on public works projects, including building tombs of the pharaohs, in the Valley of the Kings.

Sunday Nov 22, 2015
November 22 Clara Lemlich
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
Sunday Nov 22, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1909. That was the day that a young garment worker by the name of Clara Lemlich made a speech that would have a resounding impact on the labor movement in New York City. Lemlich was at a union meeting, where she sat listening to men discuss whether garment workers should call a general strike. Finally she asked to speak.

Saturday Nov 21, 2015
November 21 The Canuts
Saturday Nov 21, 2015
Saturday Nov 21, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1831. That was the day that silk workers went on strike in Lyon, France. It was one of several strikes, known as the Canut revolts. Canut was a term used to describe Lyonnais silk workers.

Friday Nov 20, 2015
November 20 The Scab
Friday Nov 20, 2015
Friday Nov 20, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1816. That was the day the Albany Typographical Society used the term “scab” to describe a strikebreaker. The word scab had been used in England for nearly three centuries as a slang meaning a rascal or scoundrel. By the late 1700s, laborers began to use the insult to refer to workmen who wouldn't join a union or a strike.

Thursday Nov 19, 2015
November 19 Joe Hill's Final Words
Thursday Nov 19, 2015
Thursday Nov 19, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1915. On that sad day, Industrial Workers of the World organizer and songwriter, Swedish-born Joe Hill, was executed in Utah. In 1914, Hill was framed for the murder of a grocer and his son in Salt Lake City. The evidence was circumstantial at best.

Wednesday Nov 18, 2015
November 18 Atlanta GM Workers Lead the GM Sit Down Strikes
Wednesday Nov 18, 2015
Wednesday Nov 18, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1936. That was the day workers at the General Motors plant in Atlanta, Georgia participated in a sit-down strike. This was part of a wave of labor organizing during the 1930s. Other GM plants in Kansas City, Mo. and Cleveland, Ohio went on strike.

Tuesday Nov 17, 2015
November 17 The Anti-Communist Witch Hunt
Tuesday Nov 17, 2015
Tuesday Nov 17, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1947. That was the day that the Screen Actors Guild voted to make all SAG members take an anti-Communist loyalty oath. The late 1940s were the dawn of the US Cold War with the Soviet Union. Anti-Communist hysteria swept the country.

Monday Nov 16, 2015
November 16 Using the Law to Crush Organizing
Monday Nov 16, 2015
Monday Nov 16, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1798. On that day Kentucky became the first state to nullify an act of the United States Congress. The federal government had passed the Alien and Sedition Acts during the presidency of John Adams.

Sunday Nov 15, 2015
November 15 Founding of the A.F. of L.
Sunday Nov 15, 2015
Sunday Nov 15, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1881. That was the day that trade unionists held the founding convention of the Federation of Trades and Labor Unions in Pittsburgh. This group later changed its name to the American Federation of Labor. During the 1880's it grew to replace the Knights of Labor as the most powerful labor union organization in the United States.

Saturday Nov 14, 2015
November 14 Founding of the National Women’s Trade Union League
Saturday Nov 14, 2015
Saturday Nov 14, 2015
On this day in Labor History the year was 1903. Working women from around the nation founded the National Women’s Trade Union League in Boston. The organizations founders included female reformers, working class women, as well as women from wealthy families.

