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July 18, 2023

The Importance of the 1959 Steel Strike

The Importance of the 1959 Steel Strike

  1. Based on your reading of Jack Metzgar’s Striking Steel chapter 2, why was the 1959 steel strike significant?  Why were work rules the main issue in the strike, rather than wages?  Why was the union able to prevail over the steel companies, despite Pres. Eisenhower’s use of a Taft-Hartley injunction to end the strike?
  2. Based on your reading of Jason Russell’s “Operation Dixie” in the Encyclopedia of Labor and Working Class History, why did the CIO struggle to organize workers in the South in the late 1940s and early 1950s?  Based on your viewing of Ginger Jolly and Jack DaSilva’s short film, also named “Operation Dixie,” why have unions continued to face difficulties in organizing workers in the South?
  3. Based on your reading of the articles from The Dispatcher, why did the ILWU agree to the Mechanization and Modernization Agreement in 1960? (Note: the agreement was negotiated in the late 1950s). Why would the union give up work rules it had won over the previous decades?  What did the union gain in return?  Based on your viewing of “Part III: The War Within” in Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union, why did rank and file longshoremen become disillusioned with the Mechanization and Modernization Agreement and the leadership of Harry Bridges?
  4.  Currently, there is much debate about the present and future of work and workers in the United States.  Based on your understanding (or a quick Google search), what is one of the major issues facing workers in the U.S. in 2018 or beyond?  Do workers have the ability to resist changes in work practices, like the United Steel Workers did during the 1959 steel strike?  Do workers have the ability to shape the future of work, as the ILWU tried with the Mechanization and Modernization Agreement in 1960?  If workers do have the ability to do these things, what gives them the power to do so?  If not, is there any way for workers to gain the power to resist changes or shape the future of work?

 

For a brief overview of “Operation Dixie” and the difficulties unions had in organizing workers in the South, read Jason Russell, “Operation Dixie,” Encyclopedia of U.S. Labor and Working Class History. preview the document

To understand the importance of the 1959 Steel Strike, read Jack Metzgar, Striking Steel, Chapter 2.preview the document

To explore the rationale and terms of the Mechanization and Modernization Agreement between the International Longshoremen’s and Warhousemen’s Union and the Pacific Maritime Association, check out articles from the October 21, 1960 of The Dispatcher (the ILWU’s newspaper). You should read the page 1 cover article, “5 Million a Year For the Machine,” the page 2 “On the Beam”  column by ILWU president Harry Bridges, and the text of the “Memorandum of Agreement on Mechanization and Modernization” on page 5: http://archive.ilwu.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/19601021.pdf (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.

Listen/Watch:
Prof. Brucher’s “Labor in the Golden Age” presentation in the Media Gallery (31 minutes).

Ginger Jolly and Jack DaSilva’s short student film on the ongoing difficulties of organizing unions in the South, “Operation Dixie.” (10 minutes):
Operation Dixie (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.
Operation Dixie

“Part III: The War Within” in Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union.  This part of the film, starting at minute 38:24, documents the role of ILWU President Harry Bridges in negotiating the Mechanization and Modernization Agreement and the issues and divisions it caused within the union.  The first 38 minutes of the film is worth watching in order to understand who Bridges was and how the ILWU grew (20 minutes).
https://youtu.be/Kkbo7svtgp8?t=2298 (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.

Forum overview:
The discussion topics in this forum address three rather different events in 1950s labor history, though each event may have some bearing on the present and future of labor in the U.S.

Question 2:

The CIO was manned by people from the northern states which posed a great challenge since they were not able to understand and integrate into the social and cultural norms of the South. Such was associated with racial discrimination whereby the white textile workers were willing to organize but could not be allowed to join a union with the African-American workers. The south people clearly expressed an opposition to be led by the northern people hence could not show corporation in the working place.

Differences in social class was also a major challenge. The employers had a significant influence on the lives of the workers. The workers were supposed to express a deferential attitude towards the mill owners and other people in authority. The local clergy ensured that the mill owners still held leadership positions in the community. Such a co-operation between the mill owners, clergy, politicians, and the community was a great threat to affect the Operation Dixie (White, 2016). Due to the failure of the Operation Dixie, the south has continued to experience difficulties in organizing workers. Such is due to the continuous low-wage and nonunion status. The low-wage workers in the south have continued to attract investors from other countries, who still face the challenge of integrating to the cultural beliefs of the south.

Question 4:

Workers are facing the lack of skills relevant to work in the companies. According to the National Federation of Independent Business, there are about 6 million job opportunities which are not filled as the companies lack the right workers with the right skills (Mosoetsa et al, 2012). Such a scenario is mostly created by the invention of new technologies and diverse market demands. Most of the workers in the US depend on salaries for upkeep hence, probably lack the ability to resist whichever changes are integrated into the workplace for fear of getting fired.  The workers tend to strive to abide by the changes, however, hurting or inconvenient they may be. Thus, they lack the means to shape the future of work by just following the rules and regulations set before them. However, if workers could establish strong unions and demand for workers’ rights, it would help to shape their future.

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