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- 1 Trade unions can be defined as: the various labor organizations in the United
- States, each of which serves to consolidate, represent, and protect the rights of workers in
- a specific occupation or trade. They can be dated back to as early as the twelfth century
- when craft guilds were formed. These craft guilds only included in their membership
- those who practiced a particular craft, so there were many guilds at this time. Labor
- unions stayed this way for the next few centuries, until the Civil War in the United States
- brought attention to workers and their families. Towards the latter part of the eighteenth
- century, unions of carpenters and shoemakers began forming in Philadelphia, while
- tailors in Baltimore, Maryland and printers in New York City also started unions. The
- main actions of these unions were to band the workers together to get a strike started and
- then they were almost immediately dissolved. These strikes were few because the strike
- leaders were often imprisoned and fined on charges of "conspiracy to raise wages."
- The first union in the United States to include members of different trades was the
- Mechanics' Union of Trade Associations, which was started in 1827. This organization's
- main emphasis was to raise wages and improve working conditions, this union also
- championed social reforms, such as free public education, eradication of imprisonment
- for debt, and the adoption of universal manhood suffrage. The National Trade Union,
- which was founded in 1834, was the first nationwide federation. Despite wide attempts to
- ally over the next few years, the economic crisis of 1837 and a depression following
- unfortunately halted the membership, and led to a sharp decline in the organization's
- current membership, which finally suspended the movement temporarily.
- Trade unions began to grow in membership after businesses began a revival in the
- late 1840's and early 1850's. A Massachusetts court also helped with union membership
- when it made a landmark decision that stated that labor unions had the right to strike
- because strikes were lawful and not criminal conspiracies (Commonwealth v. Hunt,
- 1842). This lead to a nationwide growth in trade unions. Unlike the first growth this
- second growth concentrated on making many unions consisting of workers of only one
- trade. The continued growth of the unions was subsequently stopped in 1857 because of
- another economic crisis that dissolved the base of many of the new trade unions.
- In 1881, numerous trade unions combined to form the Federation of Organized
- Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and Canada. This union was short lived,
- and by 1886 it was in decline. By December of 1886 though, members of affiliates from
- this union and another prominent union on the decline met in Columbus, Ohio to start a
- new trade union that would meet the needs of the American worker like no other union
- did to that date. Their solution was the American Federation of Labor (AFL). It elected
- Samuel Gompers, who was president of the Cigarmakers International Union and the
- Federation of Oraganized Trades and Labor Unions, as its first president. The
- membership was estimated at about 316,000 workers grouped in twenty-five national
- unions. Although the AFL was a broad group of individuals, it allowed it's different
- unions to deal with the workers and the employers in their own field. Instead of
- campaigning for sweeping reforms like many unions did before them, the AFL wanted the
- unalienable rights and attainable goals of higher wages and shorter working hours for all
- employees. It also cut all ties with any political organization for the purpose of voting for
- candidates who were considered to be friendly to labor, regardless of their party
- affiliation, and vote against those regarded as hostile to the labor movement. During the
- 1890's, some of the AFL unions such as the printers and the building trade workers
- acheived their long sought goal of an eight-hour day.
- By 1935 some of the union leaders within the AFL wanted a revision of craft
- union principles to assist organization of workers in the mass production industries. With
- the support of eight of the leaders of the AFL unions the president of the United Mine
- Workers of America, John L. Lewis, the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO)
- was begun to help the unionization campaign in the mass production industries.
- Subsequently, the CIO unions were suspended from the AFL in August 1936 and finally
- expelled in May 1938. Then, a few months later the CIO changed its initials to mean the
- Congress of Industrial Organizations in order to become a permanent fixture in American
- labor union history. After a twenty year hiatus, the AFL and the CIO joined forces so that
- they could combat the new problems facing labor unions in the 1950's. The main
- problems faced by the AFL-CIO was the elimination of racketeers from trade unions.
- Then, in 1967 Walter Reuther, president of the United Automobile Workers, resigned as
- vice-president of the AFL-CIO, declaring that it was "the comfortable, complacent
- custodian of the status quo." Then the UAW stopped paying its dues and was kicked out
- of the AFL-CIO. debt, and the adoption of universal manhood suffrage. The National Trade Union,
- which was founded in 1834, was the first n to a nationwide growth in trade unions. Unlike the first growth this
- second growth concentrated on making many un