Chicago's Progressive Alliance: Labor and the Bid for Public StreetcarsNorthern Illinois University Press, 2006 - 202 trang By the turn of the twentieth century, Chicago, site of the Haymarket affair and the Pullman strike, had acquired a reputation as the bastion of labor unions. At the same time, Progressive-era Chicago was known as the laboratory of social reform--the city where muckraking journalists, college-trained professionals, and civic-minded millionaires worked together to rebuild the slums, improve sanitation, and eradicate political corruption. When union workers and middle-class reformers united, the combination of labor militancy and astute politics was truly a force to be reckoned with. In Chicago's Progressive Alliance, Leidenberger tells the story of the coalition of reformers and workers advocating municipal control of Chicago's streetcars. Why streetcars? At the time, streetcars were the main mode of transportation for Chicago's diverse population, so common interest certainly played a factor. Workers also shared the reformers' ideology, and issues surrounding streetcars encompassed a host of Progressive concerns: the debate over the extent of state power over private service enterprises, the crusade against corruption, and the uses and public nature of city spaces. Most important, the alliance embodied Progressivism's central ideal--overcoming class conflict and defining the public interest. By examining the alliance's formation, political tactics, and ultimate demise, Leidenberger offers new insights on the history of labor, class relations, and political culture in urban America. Dramatic photos of streetcars and of union laborers and their supporters accentuate this study of Progressivism in action. Chicago's Progressive Alliance will appeal to those interested in American political history, labor history, urban history, and transportation history. |
Từ bên trong sách
Kết quả 1-3 trong 13
... strikes , when black workers offered their services as strikebreakers . In the building trades lockout of 1900 , the street railway strike of 1903 , and the teamster strike of 1905 ( just to mention the strikes discussed in this book ) ...
... strikebreakers and the police over control of the city's thoroughfares . For the first time in an industrial dis- pute , the employers equipped strikebreakers with firearms , to shoot at blockading crowds . In specially headed daily ...
... strikebreakers with white ones . 19 Although some trade union leaders , most notably John Fitzpatrick , advo- cated ... strike- breakers . The Labor Advocate considered the " question of the negro's equal right to work . . . foreign to ...
Nội dung
Service Workers and the New Metropolitan Unionism | 13 |
Private Streetcars Public Utopias and the Construction | 45 |
The Movement for Municipal Ownership | 78 |
Bản quyền | |
4 phần khác không được hiển thị