This Day in Labor History: October 30, 1837. Nicholas Farwell, a train engineer toiling for the Boston and Worcester Rail Road Corporation fell off a train while at work and had his hand crushed. In 1842, the courts said he deserved no damages! Let's talk about this!
The 1842 decision by the Massachusetts Supreme Court set into place the doctrine of worker risk.
This decision set a vitally important precedent in American labor history that the worker voluntarily took on risk when he or she agreed to be employed on the job. Over the next century, tens thousands of Americans died on the job with employers doing nothing.
Farwell had done nothing wrong. While he was working, a switchman messed up and the train derailed, which is how Farwell was thrown.
Rather than accept his fate, which was not good as a disabled individual in a world without a social safety net, Farwell sued the company for $10,000. In his decision in Farwell v. Boston and Worcester Rail Road Corporation, Massachusetts Chief Justice Lemuel Shaw disagreed.
Shaw claimed that Farwell was personally responsible for the risk of work. Risk was what someone took on by taking a job as well as the opportunity of bettering oneself in the new industrial system.
Because Farwell was paid more than other railroad workers, he was already being compensated for the higher risk of his work. Shaw called the $2 a day Farwell made, a “premium for the risk which he thus assumes.”
Shaw might sue his “fellow servant” who made the mistake that led to his fall but the company was immune to lawsuits of this kind.
These ideas come back to the idea that American people were fundamentally independent operators, free labor who made economic choices as such.
He could have farmed, he could have apprenticed, he could have been a millionaire, but he chose to work on the railroad and was thus responsible for the choice.
The upside of higher wages and the downside of higher risk was something Farwell had to judge for himself, as did any worker, or so said the courts.
The Farwell case was part of a larger transformation in the American legal code to facilitate corporate growth at the expense of those it affected. It’s not just labor law either.
Citizens sued textile mills for damming rivers that ended eon-old fish runs people upstream relied upon. The courts consistently found in favor of the new corporations, broadly using ideas of progress to justify their decision.
This led to corporations having the right to pollute at will, timber companies to destroy the stream banks and land of farmers with nominal riparian rights, and dominate anyone who got in the way of their growth.
The Farwell decision directly led to tens of thousands of dead workers and hundreds of thousands (if not millions of workers) who suffered from occupational disease, tuberculosis, lead poisoning, electrocution, hands caught in unsafe saws....
..., hair pulled from their heads after it was caught in machinery, suffocation in coal mines, and endless other workplace hazards in world where corporations had no responsibility for their workers’ safety and health.
This terrible scenario finally began to change after 1900, when courts began ruling in favor of suing plaintiffs or their surviving families.
Many corporations were outraged at the sheer idea of responsibility for workers. The workplace reformer Alice Hamilton told a story about a paint manufacturer’s sheer incredulity when he realized she was telling him he should be responsible for his workers getting lead poisoning.
Others saw the writing on the wall and created the system of worker compensation beginning in 1911 that took the issue out of courts and gave corporations a consistent way out of large settlements,
That system was fundamentally pro-employer. It would provide workers some protection, however minimal and however lower the compensation was than their previous wages, but also meant they could not sue their employers.
Increased laws regulating corporate responsibility for workplace health eventually helped many companies decide to move their production facilities outside the United States where they could reproduce the days where they didn’t have to care about dead or sick workers.
Today, workers toil for American companies or subcontractors in Bangladesh, Mexico, Honduras, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, and other countries across the world and face many of the same problems of workplace safety and long-term health that Americans did 150 years ago.
This is not an accident. It’s an intentional choice by corporations who seek to recreate the Farwell doctrine.
You can read the Farwell decision here.

houseofrussell.com/legalhistory/a…
I primarily used the first chapter of Jonathan Levy’s 2012 book, Freaks of Fortune: The Emerging World of Capitalism and Risk in America to write this thread.
Back tomorrow to discuss the Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978.

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More from @ErikLoomis

30 Oct
I was very happy to be part of this @greenhousenyt article on the potential for a general strike if Trump tries to steal the election.

theguardian.com/us-news/2020/o…
As I said in the piece, if there ever is a general strike again, it's not out of some syndicalist fantasy. It will come straight from the established labor movement. And it very much can be effective. It may well be that only unions can save our democracy.
Moreover, if Trump or the courts steal this, there are going to be millions of pissed off people. But what's the organizational capability to organize these people into concrete action that's more than a one-off protest? It's pretty much only labor unions. It's sure not Democrats
Read 5 tweets
29 Oct
This Day in Labor History: October 29, 1889. Whites in Hawaii lynched the Japanese organizer and merchant Katsu Goto in Hawaii after opening a store to compete with the plantation company store and advocating for labor organizing! Let's talk about racism and labor in Hawaii!
This event would demonstrate how planters and other white migrants to Hawaii would use white supremacy and violence to establish control over the diverse labor force of those islands.
Nearly as soon as white missionaries arrived in Hawaii before the Civil War, they wrote back home about all the investment possibilities there.
Read 20 tweets
28 Oct
This Day in Labor History: October 28, 1793. Eli Whitney submitted a patent for his invention known as the cotton gin. Perhaps more than any technology in American history, this invention profoundly revolutionized American labor!!! Let's talk about it! Image
Creating the modern cotton industry meant the transition from agricultural to industrial labor in the North with the rise of the factory system and the rapid expansion and intensification of slavery in the South to produce the cotton.
The cotton gin went far to create the 19th century American economy and sharpened the divides between work and labor between regions of the United States, problems that would eventually lead to the Civil War.
Read 38 tweets
19 Oct
This Day in Labor History: October 19, 1935. John L. Lewis punches Carpenters president Big Bill Hutcheson in the face on the stage at the AFL Convention in Atlantic City. Let's talk about this bizarre moment and the creation of the CIO!
The United Brotherhood of Carpenters was the largest member of the AFL. It was also among the most politically conservative unions.
While, like much of the AFL, the UBC was technically nonpartisan in these years, Hutcheson was an active Republican and would remain so throughout his life, openly campaigning for Republican candidates against Franklin Roosevelt.
Read 28 tweets
18 Oct
This Day in Labor History: October 18, 1981. Workers at Brown and Sharpe, one of the nation’s largest machine tool companies, went on strike at its plant in North Kingstown, Rhode Island. This strike continued for...15 years! Let's talk about the longest strike in US history!
Brown and Sharpe was founded in 1833 a couple of miles from where I currently live in Providence, Rhode Island.
Over the decades, it became a large manufacturing firm making all sorts of goods in its large Rhode Island factories, helping to make the state one of the nation’s centers of American manufacturing.
Read 29 tweets
15 Oct
This Day in Labor History: October 15, 1914. President Wilson signs the Clayton Act, providing protections for unions from courts issuing injunctions against them. Yet this groundbreaking legislation would prove only moderately successful. Let's talk about why!
The Sherman Anti-Trust Act passed in 1890 and was intended to limit the monopolies that dominated the Gilded Age. But these laws required enforcement.
Not so different from today, when unions are subjected to First Amendment challenges and restrictions that no other institution in the United States have to deal with, the courts decided to find ways to use the Sherman Act to attack unions while ignoring it for corporations.
Read 30 tweets

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