This Day in Labor History: September 15, 1845. Women working in the Pittsburgh textile mills met in Market Square to discuss the necessity of fighting to cut their days from 12 to 10 hours without a reduction in pay. Let's talk about this battle and its suppression by capital! Image
As the textile industry expanded by the 1840s, the earlier visionary leadership to create a humane factory system at Lowell had been resoundingly defeated by capital in a competitive industry with low-capitalization and plentiful workers. That industry was rapidly expanding.
Originally focused in New England, by the 1830s, it was a major employer in New Jersey, where women struck for better conditions. And by the 1840s, it had spread west. Pittsburgh had become an important center of textile production. About 5000 workers labored in these mills
Like the rest of the textile industry, most of them were women and children, working in tremendously unsafe conditions for low wages. They worked 72 hour weeks, 12 hours a day for six days. Women made between $2.50 and $6 a week. Children topped out at $3 a week.
As competition came to define this industry, employers sought to take profit out of workers’ already meager wages. In 1843, this hit Pittsburgh and workers wages were slashed. This led to the first confrontation in a workers’ movement that culminated two years later.
In 1845, 5000 workers in Pittsburgh and nearby Allegheny City walked off their job. They had simple demands–a wage increase that would return them to what was passing for a livable wage before the 1843 cuts, as well as the ten-hour day.
On September 15, at the mass meeting, the workers decided to “turn out” until they received their 10 hour day. They sought solicitations from other workers in the Pittsburgh area.
Employers said no way, claiming it would make them uncompetitive with New England mills. The strike was on.
This was not a well-organized strike. There was no union and no sort of strike pay, except whatever pennies workers around the city donated. It was an act of desperation. They held on for about a month, which is pretty remarkable considering the dire straits of their lives.
They knew that if they had any chance to win, they would have to keep scabs out of the mills. Some women decided to use force to make that happen. Taking axes with them, they stormed factory doors to drive away the scabs and the hired guards. It sometimes worked.
But the American public throughout the 19th century, and really through the vast majority of American history, really abhorred the idea of workers organizing.
Because we tell stories of workers heroic struggles against employers in our memory of labor history, we leave out the general public. And the general public repeatedly turned harshly against even mild levels of worker organizing.
Sure, some of that was driven by employer-dominated media, but it also related to deep seated ideas of individualism and Jefferson agrarianism in American mythology that saw cities themselves as evil, partially because they spawned dirty factories, poverty, and unions.
Such was the case for the textile strike in Pittsburgh. At first, there was support for the workers in the local newspapers, who noted that 12 hours was too long for workers to labor. But this would be short-lived
Soon, popular support was firmly on the side of the employers, more so as time went on. They struck back too, having their hired goons beat the women and children fighting for a better life.
Given that the strikers were starting to break machines and burn company gates, this reaction probably isn’t too surprising.
In the Blackstock Mill, scabs were operating the machines. The women leading the strike had made common cause with the nascent union movement in Pittsburgh, the beginnings of one of the nation’s strongest union towns.
Together, on October 6, 1845, they decided to march on the Blackstock and evict the scabs working inside. The women did all the dirty work. They broke down the factory gates, marched inside, physically grabbed the workers, and threw them out of the mill.
The male unionists stood as their guard against the police and the company’s muscle. This was a brief victory, but also only exacerbated the public feeling against the workers.
Whatever feeling there was for the workers disappeared nearly overnight and the newspapers began calling for the end of the strike on October 7. Ultimately, for Americans, private property mattered more than workers’ rights.
Even supporters of the strike began to worry that the strikers were overturning the “harmony” between capital and labor that supposedly was the atmosphere in Pittsburgh.
You see these displays again and again in the 19th century, with many Americans ultimately believing fervently in the growing system of industrial capitalism and blaming workers when they took action against it.
In the New York Tribune, the famed journalist Horace Greeley began calling the women “The Amazons of Allegheny.” The strike soon collapsed and the women and children gained nothing. By October 20, the mills were all running once again on the 12 hour day.
The strike did however tap into larger reform efforts throughout the northeast that hoped to alleviate some of the worst exploitation in the mills.
In 1848, this led the Pennsylvania legislature to pass a law that prohibited employers from employing workers for more than ten hours a day.
However, in an era where both the idea of the contract was a god and the state found the idea of regulation repellent, employers soon pushed through a follow-up bill that allowed exceptions to the new 10-hour law if an employee signed a contract agreeing to the longer day.
Of course that immediately eviscerated the 10-hour law. All workers had to sign those contracts and the spirit of the law was destroyed. The workers of Pennsylvania and the United States would have to wait another 90 years for the law to require reasonable working hours.
Ultimately, the problem of wages and hours could not be handled locally in a mobile industry.
Even had Pennsylvania vigorously enforced the 10-hour law, in an industry like textiles, the competition from New England mills and the constant look for new production sites meant it would have been very hard for the Pittsburgh mills to remain competitive.
Like today, meaningful labor reform would require federal action that was not coming in 1845. Or in 2021, it seems.
This thread borrowed from Jason Martinek’s article “The Amazons of Allegheny: The Fire, the Riot, and the Textile Strike of 1845,” in the Spring 2011 issue of Western Pennsylvania History.
Back tomorrow to discuss the Farm Labor Organizing Committee's Mt. Olive Pickles campaign

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Erik Loomis

Erik Loomis Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @ErikLoomis

17 Sep
This Day in Labor History: September 17, 2011. Occupy Wall Street begins in New York. Ten years after, let's think of it from a historical perspective! Image
While it in itself did not lead to long-term victories, it spawned a new era in America’s fight for economic justice and began the careers of a new generation of activists that resonates throughout progressive and leftist movements today.
The 1980s and 1990s were years of go-go capitalism. The Reagan years were followed by the rise of the tech industry and the fall of the Soviet Union. It wasn’t just that America had a capitalist system. It was that CAPITALISM HAD WON!
Read 28 tweets
16 Sep
This Day in Labor History: September 16, 2004. Mt. Olive Pickles finally came to an agreement with the Farm Labor Organizing Committee, ending a lengthy boycott of the company. Let's talk about huge victory by one of the best farmworker unions in the USA! Image
When we think about farm labor organizing in the United States, our thoughts almost immediately go to Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers in California. There is of course a good reason for that.
But both before and after the UFW, there has been significant organizing of some of the nation’s most exploited labor forces. In the Midwest and South, one of the leading movements involved in this is the Farm Labor Organizing Committee.
Read 35 tweets
14 Sep
This Day in Labor History: September 14, 1959. President Dwight Eisenhower signed the Landrum-Griffin Act after actively lobbying for its passage. Let's talk about how anti-union forces used union corruption to launch a broad-based attack on all union power!
The passage of this bill was another major blow to organized labor in the early years of the Cold War that moved power away from unions and back to corporations.
There is a widescale public perception of union corruption. Mostly, this is false and a corporate promoted narrative to turn people off of organizing themselves to improve their lives. But with some unions, corruption was (and occasionally still today, is) all too real.
Read 34 tweets
11 Sep
I hate nostalgia with great passion. But there's also no question that even without the virus, present parents are unbelievably overprotective in an era where children (outside of guns in schools) are far safer than they were for the entire 20th century.
I mean, mass murders is not exactly an exception that can be handwaved away. But the fact of the matter is that kids are really really safe on a day to day basis today.
This is not a commentary on the response to COVID in schools--that's a different issue entirely.
Read 4 tweets
10 Sep
This Day in Labor History: September 10, 1897. Luzerne County sheriff deputies slaughtered 19 unarmed coal miners striking outside of Hazleton, Pennsylvania. Let's talk about the Lattimer Massacre!
The strikers, primarily German, Polish, Lithuanian, and Slovak immigrants, were fighting for decent wages and working conditions in the one of the most brutal industries in the nation.
The Lattimer Massacre was a touchstone event in the history of the United Mine Workers of America, who used it to organize workers across the region.
Read 33 tweets
9 Sep
This Day in Labor History: September 9, 1985. The largely Latina workforce in the large frozen food processing facilities in Watsonville, California walked out on strike after employers cut their wages. Let's talk about this hard-fought and very tough victory for workers!
After a long, brutal nearly two year strike, the workers won, one of the few major labor victories of the 1980s and a sign that the future of the labor movement would center women of color.
The food processing industry has long been a race to the bottom. It’s a fairly low capital industry that allows capitalists to open new factories wherever they want.
Read 35 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(