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The general textile strike of 1934 : from Maine to Alabama / John A. Salmond.

Lippincott Library HD5325.T42 1934 S35 2002
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Salmond, John A.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Textile Workers' Strike, Southern States, 1934.
Textile workers--United States.
Textile workers.
United States.
Textile industry--United States.
Textile industry.
Physical Description:
xii, 295 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Place of Publication:
Columbia : University of Missouri Press, [2002]
Summary:
In January 1933, The United Textile Workers of America was in danger of collapse. Its membership was no larger than 15,000; its attempts to organize southern workers had failed disastrously; and it was constantly under attack from rival organizations. Yet, barely eighteen months later, with 300,000 dues-paying members, with newly established or revived branches covering southern cotton textile workers, as well as northern woolen and worsted workers, silk and jacquard weavers, dyers and finishers, even rayon workers, and with locals in 208 cities, towns, and mill villages, the UTW was about to embark on what one historian has termed "the greatest single industrial conflict in the history of American labor." The General Textile Strike of 1934 is the story of that conflict.
The few historians who have concerned themselves at all with the 1934 textile strike have all concentrated on its southern aspect, presenting it as a southern event, a cotton textile event. No one argues that the South and cotton were not crucial to the strike's story. It was cotton mill workers' anger over the broken promises of the National Industrial Recovery Act that had forced a reluctant UTW leadership into supporting a strike vote. No industry leader was more devious in his dealings with the UTW leaders than George Sloan, the chair of the Cotton Code Authority and head of the Cotton Textile Institute. Nevertheless, the 1934 strike was a nationwide one, involving hundreds of thousands of silk, woolen, and rayon workers, all represented by the UTW and mostly living in states outside the South. Moreover, Peter Van Horn and Arthur Besse, head of the Silk and Woolen Code Authorities, respectively, lost little to Sloan in their intransigence toward labor's demands. And, though the great transfer of the cotton industry from New England to the South was almost complete, there were still little pockets left in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Maine.
In The General Textile Strike of 1934, John Salmond tells everyone's story. Looking at the strike from a national and an industrywide perspective, Salmond explains why workers were willing to risk protesting and describes the differences and similarities between southern and northern workers. Setting the strike within a New Deal context and focusing on its impact on the future of labor relations in the industry and on the lives of those who participated in it, The General Textile Strike of 1934 fills an important gap in American labor history.
Contents:
Part I The Strike: The National Dimension
1. The Textile Industry in 1933 1
2. The New Deal 25
3. The Strike 45
Part II The Strike: The Regional mosaic
4. New England 83
5. Mid-Atlantic States 121
6. The Carolinas 143
7. Georgia and Alabama 177
Part III The Strike: a Local Study
8. The Burlington Bombing
A Case Study 201
Part IV The Strike: Reflections.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 271-281) and index.
ISBN:
0826213952
OCLC:
49284205

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