Almost one hundred and forty-two years ago, on September
5, 1882, workers in New York City celebrated the first Labor Day holiday with a
parade. The parade almost didn’t happen: there was no band, and no one wanted
to start marching without music. Once the Jewelers Union of Newark Two showed
up with musicians, the rest of the marchers, eventually numbering between
10,000 and 20,000 men and women, fell in behind them to parade through lower
Manhattan. At noon, when they reached the end of the route, the march broke up
and the participants listened to speeches, drank beer, and had picnics. Other
workers joined them.
Their goal was to emphasize the importance of workers in the
industrializing economy and to warn politicians that they could not be
ignored.
Less than 20 years before, northern men had fought a war to
defend a society based on free labor and had, they thought, put in place a
government that would support the ability of all hardworking men to rise to
prosperity. But for all that the war had seemed to be about defending men
against the rise of an oligarchy that intended to reduce all men to a life of
either enslavement or wage labor, the war and its aftermath had pushed workers’
rights backward.
The drain of men to the battlefields and the western mines
during the war resulted in a shortage of workers that kept unemployment low and
wages high. Even when they weren’t, the intense nationalism of the war years
tended to silence the voices of labor organizers. “It having been resolved to
enlist with Uncle Sam for the war,” one organization declared when the war
broke out, “this union stands adjourned until either the Union is safe, or we
are whipped.”
Another factor working against the establishment of labor
unions during the war was the tendency of employers to claim that striking
workers were deliberately undercutting the war effort. They turned to the
government to protect production, and in industries like Pennsylvania's
anthracite coal fields, government leaders sent soldiers to break budding
unions and defend war production.
During the war, government contracting favored those
companies that could produce big orders of the mule shoes, rifles, rain
slickers, coffee, and all the other products that kept the troops supplied. The
owners of the growing factories grew wealthy on government contracts, even as
conditions in the busy factories deteriorated. While wages were high during the
war, they were often paid in greenbacks, which were backed only by the
government’s promise to pay.
While farmers and some entrepreneurs thrived during the war,
urban workers and miners had reason to believe that employers had taken
advantage of the war to make money off them. After the war, they began to
strike for better wages and safer conditions. In August 1866, 60,000
people met as the National Labor Union in Baltimore, Maryland, where they
called for an eight-hour workday. Most of those workers calling for
organization simply wanted a chance to rise to comfort, but the resolutions
developed by the group’s leaders after the convention declared that workers
must join unions to reform the abuses of the industrial system.
To many of those who thought the war would create a country
where hard work would mean success, the resolutions seemed to fly in the face
of that harmony, echoing the southern enslavers by dividing the world into
people of wealth and workers, and asking for government intervention, this time
on the side of workers. Republicans began to redefine their older, broad
concept of workers to mean urban unskilled or semi-skilled wage laborers
specifically.
Then in 1867, a misstep by Senator Benjamin Wade of Ohio made
the party step back from workers. Wade had been a cattle drover and worked on
the Erie Canal before studying law and entering politics, and he was a leader
among those who saw class activism as the next step in the party’s commitment
to free labor. His fiery oratory lifted him to prominence, and in March
1867 the Senate chose him its president pro tempore, in effect making him
the nation’s acting vice president in those days before there was a process for
replacing a vice president who had stepped into the presidency.
Wade joined a number of senators on a trip to the West, and
in Lawrence, Kansas, newspapers reported—possibly incorrectly—that Wade
predicted a fight in America between labor and capital. “Property is not
equally divided,” the reporter claimed Wade said, “and a more equal
distribution of capital must be worked out.” Congress, which Wade now led, had
done much for ex-slaves and must now address “the terrible distinction between
the man that labors and him that does not.”
Republican newspapers were apoplectic. The New York
Times claimed that Wade was a demagogue. Every hard worker could
succeed in America, it wrote. “Laborers here can make themselves sharers in the
property of the country, —can become capitalists themselves, —just
as nine in ten of all the capitalists in the country have
done so before them, —by industry, frugality, and intelligent enterprise.”
Trying to get rich by force of law would undermine society.
Congress established an eight-hour day for federal employees
in June 1868, but in that year’s election, voters turned Wade, and others
like him, out of office. In 1869, Republican president Ulysses S. Grant issued
a proclamation saying that the eight-hour workday of "laborers, workmen,
and mechanics" would not mean cuts in wages.
Then, in spring 1871, in the wake of the Franco-Prussian War,
workers took over the city of Paris and established the Paris Commune. The
transatlantic cable had gone into operation in 1866, and American newspapers
had featured stories of the European war. Now, hungry for dramatic stories,
they plastered details of the Commune on their front pages, describing it as a
propertied American’s worst nightmare. They highlighted the murder of priests,
the burning of the Tuileries Palace, and the bombing of buildings by crazed
women who lobbed burning bottles of newfangled petroleum through cellar
windows.
The Communards were a “wild, reckless, irresponsible,
murderous mobocracy” who planned to confiscate all property and transfer all
money, factories, and land to associations of workmen, American newspapers
wrote. In their telling, the Paris Commune brought to life the chaotic world
the elite enslavers foresaw when they said it was imperative to keep workers
from politics.
Scribner’s Monthly warned in italics: “the interference of ignorant
labor with politics is dangerous to society.” Famous reformer Charles
Loring Brace looked at the rising numbers of industrial workers and the
conditions of city life, and warned Americans, “In the judgment of one who has
been familiar with our ‘dangerous classes’ for twenty years, there are just the
same explosive social elements beneath the surface of New York as of Paris.”
At the same time, it was also clear that wealthy
industrialists were gaining more and more control over both state and local
governments. In 1872 the Credit Mobilier scandal broke. This was a complicated
affair, and what had actually happened was almost certainly misrepresented, but
it seemed to show congressmen taking bribes from railroad barons, and Americans
were ready to believe that they were doing so. Then, in July 1877, after
the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad cut wages 20 percent and strikers shut down
most of the nation’s railroads, President Rutherford B. Hayes sent U.S.
soldiers to the cities immobilized by the strikes. It seemed industrialists had
the Army at their beck and call.
By 1882, factories and the fortunes they created had swung
the government so far toward men of capital that it seemed there was more room
for workingmen to demand their rights. By the 1880s, even the staunchly
Republican Chicago Tribune complained about the links between
business and government: “Behind every one of half of the portly and
well-dressed members of the Senate can be seen the outlines of some corporation
interested in getting or preventing legislation,” it wrote. The Senate, Harper’s
Weekly noted, was “a club of rich men.”
The workers marching in New York City in the first Labor Day
celebration in 1882 carried banners saying: “Labor Built This Republic and
Labor Shall Rule it,” “Labor Creates All Wealth,” “No Land Monopoly,” “No Money
Monopoly,” “Labor Pays All Taxes,” “The Laborer Must Receive and Enjoy the Full
Fruit of His Labor,” ‘Eight Hours for a Legal Day’s Work,” and “The True Remedy
is Organization and the Ballot.”
Two years later, workers helped to elect Democrat Grover
Cleveland to the White House. A number of Republicans crossed over to support
the reformer, afraid that, as he said, “The gulf between employers and the
employed is constantly widening, and classes are rapidly forming, one
comprising the very rich and powerful, while in another are found the toiling
poor…. Corporations, which should be the carefully restrained creatures of the
law and the servants of the people, are fast becoming the people's masters.”
In 1888, Cleveland won the popular vote by about 100,000
votes, but his Republican opponent, Benjamin Harrison, won in the Electoral
College. Harrison promised that his would be “A BUSINESSMAN’S ADMINISTRATION”
and said that “before the close of the present Administration businessmen will
be thoroughly well content with it….”
Businessmen mostly were, but the rest of the country wasn’t.
In November 1892 a Democratic landslide put Cleveland back in office,
along with the first Democratic Congress since before the Civil War. As soon as
the results of the election became apparent, the Republicans declared that the
economy would collapse. Harrison’s administration had been “beyond question the
best business administration the country has ever seen,” one businessmen’s club
insisted, so losing it could only be a calamity. “The Republicans will be
passive spectators,” the Chicago Tribune noted. “It will not
be their funeral.” People would be thrown out of work, but “[p]erhaps the
working classes of the country need such a lesson….”
As investors rushed to take their money out of the U.S. stock
market, the economy collapsed a few days before Cleveland took office in
early March 1893. Trying to stabilize the economy by enacting the
proposals capitalists wanted, Cleveland and the Democratic Congress had to
abandon many of the pro-worker policies they had promised, and the Supreme
Court struck down the rest (including the income tax).
They could, however, support Labor Day and its indication of
workers’ political power. On June 28, 1894, Cleveland signed Congress’s bill
making Labor Day a legal holiday. Each year, the first Monday in September would
honor the country’s workers.
In Chicago the chair of the House Labor Committee, Lawrence
McGann (D-IL), told the crowd gathered for the first official observance: “Let
us each Labor Day, hold a congress and formulate propositions for the
amelioration of the people. Send them to your Representatives with your
earnest, intelligent indorsement [sic], and the laws will be changed.” Happy
Labor Day.
—Heather Cox Richardson
Notes:
https://www.dol.gov/general/laborday/history-daze
New York Times, July 1, 1867, p. 4.
New York Times, July 9, 1867, p. 4.
New York Times, September 6, 1882, p. 8.
New York Times, September 6, 1882, p. 4.
New York Daily Tribune, September 7, 1882, p. 4.
https://blogs.loc.gov/law/files/2011/09/S-730.pdf
https://history.house.gov/Historical-Highlights/1851-1900/The-first-Labor-Day/
Grace Palladino, Another Civil War: Labor, Capital,
and the State in the Anthracite Regions of Pennsylvania, 1840–1868 (Fordham
University Press, 2006).
Mark Wilson, The Business of Civil War: Military
Mobilization and the State, 1861–1865 (Johns Hopkins, 2006).
Brace quotation is from Robert M. Fogelson, America’s
Armories: Architecture, Society and Public Order (Harvard University
Press, 1989).
Frank Norton, “Our Labor System and the Chinese,” Scribner’s
Monthly 2 (May 1871).
Chicago Tribune quoted in Harper’s Weekly, February 9,
1884, p, 86.
New York Times, November 10, 1892, p. 8.
Statement from the Commercial Travelers’ Republican Club, quoted in Chicago
Tribune, November 1, 1892, p. 2. Chicago Tribune, November
14, 1892, p. 2. Senator Teller, quoted in New York Times, November
15, 1892, p. 1. Washington Post, February 16, 1893, p.
7. Chicago Tribune, November 21, 1892, p. 4. Chicago
Tribune, November 11, 1892, p. 4. Chicago Tribune, November
13, 1892, p. 4.
Grover Cleveland, Fourth Annual Message, December 3,
1888, at https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/fourth-annual-message-first-term
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.