Rise of the Labor Movement in Los AngelesUniversity of California Press, 1955 - 529 pages "Describing the development of the Los Angeles labor movement from its beginning in 1875 to the early part of 1912, this book is more than a history of union organization, of strikes and boycotts. It traces not only the economic but also the political and social evolution of the labor movement, as well as labor's relationship to the labor movements of California and of the nation. The history is confined geographically to the city of Los Angeles, though the early dependence of San Pedro and Pasadena on Los Angeles required the inclusion of their labor movements until approximately 1904. Although the first union was not organized until 1875, the author describes a period beginning approximately fifteen years earlier, in order to show the economic and political background for union organization and to discuss movements which had some influence on the later development and progress of the labor movement. The year 1884, however, saw the real genesis of the Los Angeles labor movement, for six unions then formed the First Trades Council. The consequent ebb and flow of the movement, depending in part on the prosperity or lack of it in the community, is thoroughly examined."--Jacket. |
Contents
Antecedents of the Labor Movement | 1 |
Labor Ventures into Politics | 13 |
Genesis of the Labor Movement | 32 |
The Noble Order | 53 |
Union against the Chinese | 60 |
53 | 68 |
Trouble on the Water Front | 81 |
Aftermath of the Boom | 88 |
Reawakening of the Labor Movement | 195 |
Labor and Socialism | 218 |
The Rising Tide of Conflict | 237 |
Labors Counteroffensive | 270 |
Upheaval on the Labor Front | 331 |
The Crime of the Century | 348 |
The Bombing of the Times | 366 |
The McNamara Case | 390 |
The Big Strike | 104 |
On to Washington | 154 |
Progress and Decline | 172 |
Reactions and Aftermath | 407 |
City of the Open Shop | 420 |
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Common terms and phrases
affiliated Alliance American Angeles labor Association August became began body boycott Building Trades California called campaign carpenters cause Central Labor Council Chinese Citizen close Coast committee Commons Company continued contract convention Council of Labor County craft December delegates demands early eight-hour election employed employers established Examiner Express Federation of Labor fight force formed groups Herald History increase industrial International issue January John Journal July June Knights of Labor labor movement later LATU leaders League March McNamara meeting membership Minutes months newspaper nonunion November October organized labor Otis Pacific Party period political president Press printers Proceedings Record Report representatives San Francisco Sept September signed Socialist southern strike thousand tion Trades Council Typographical Union Union Labor unionists United vote wage workers workingmen