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Today in Labor History Sept 17 Susan B. Anthony calls for the formation of a Working Women's Assn.

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Omaha Steve Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-17-10 07:30 PM
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Today in Labor History Sept 17 Susan B. Anthony calls for the formation of a Working Women's Assn.

September 17

75 workers die in explosion at Allegheny Arsenal, Pittsburgh, Penn. - 1862

At a New York convention of the National Labor Congress, Susan B. Anthony calls for the formation of a Working Women's Association. As a delegate to the Congress, she persuaded the committee on female labor to call for votes for women and equal pay for equal work. But male delegates deleted the reference to the vote - 1868

One hundred thousand Pennsylvania anthracite coal miners go on strike. Their average annual wage is $250. They are paid by the ton, defined by Pennsylvania as 2,400 pounds but which mine operators have increased to as much as 4,000 pounds - 1900

National Federation of Federal Employees (NFFE) formed at a convention in Washington, D.C. - 1917

Some Depression-era weekly paychecks around the New York area: physician, $55.32; engineer, $40.68; clerk, $22.15; salesman, $25.02; laborer, $20; typist, $15.09 - 1933

Southern employers meeting in Greenville, N.C. ready their big counter-offensive to break the textile labor strikes that have hit the Eastern seaboard. Ultimately they deploy 10,000 national guardsmen and 15,000 deputies, but fail to drive hundreds of thousands of strikers back to work - 1934

A Southern Pacific train loaded with sugar beets strikes a makeshift bus filled with 60 migrant workers near Salinas, Calif., killing 32. The driver said the bus was so crowded he couldn't see the train coming - 1963


Ninety-eight United Mine Workers of America members and a minister occupy the Pittston Coal Company's Moss 3 preparation plant in Carbon, Va., beginning a year-long strike. Among other issues: management demands for drastic limitations in health and pension benefits for retired and disabled miners and their dependents and beneficiaries - 1989

And this:
September 17, 1989 - Ninety-eight miners and a minister occupied the the Pittston Coal Company's Moss 3 preparation plant in Carbo, Virginia, beginning a year-long strike against Pittston Coal. While a month-long Soviet coal strike dominated U.S. news broadcasts, the year-long Pittston strike garnered almost no mainstream press coverage whatsoever. Ultimately, the United Mine Workers were successful and the Pittston strike became one of the few labor victories of the 1980s.

Labor history found here: http://www.unionist.com/today-in-labor-history & here:

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Taverner Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Sep-17-10 07:34 PM
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1. Funny how the fundies only like her anti-choice side
Because besides that, she was a progressive
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