The United Hebrew Trades joined Ladies Waist and Pressers Union in this funeral parade for Triangle Shirtwaist Fire victims. |
It was the beginning of the height
of unrestricted European immigration. Tens of thousands of Jews, mostly impoverished and from Eastern Europe instead of the highly educated and assimilated German, Dutch, and French Jews who had established thriving and successful communities,
sailed passed the Goddess of Liberty
still under construction. They tumbled
into crowed, filthy tenements and sought whatever work they could find. Much of that work was in the needle trades in
a garment industry largely owned by that already present Jewish elite.
As early as 1885 10,000 cloak and
skirt makers walked out in a spontaneous strike protesting low piece rates,
long hours and abominable conditions.
They actually managed to win some concessions from surprised employers
who had assumed that “racial solidarity” would make their workers immune to
striking them.
But the workers failed to create any
union organization and were soon squabbling among themselves on lines of
regional or national origin, craft hierarchy, gender, and fiercely competing anarchist
and socialist ideologies. The gains they
had won quickly slipped away.
Two young immigrants became
convinced of the need to create and sustain a distinctive Jewish union labor
movement. On October 9, 1888 Bernard Weinstein,
a nineteen‑year‑old shirt maker and a recent Bundist activist in Russia and
Moishe Hillkowitz, from Rigga, Latvia and a sometimes garment
worker and rapidly rising start in the Socialist
Labor Party joined with others to found the United Hebrew
Trades as an umbrella organization
for craft unions in the garment and other industries. Weinstein represented the
SLP’s Yiddish
Branch 8 and Hillkowitz, who would soon change his name to Morris Hillquist, Russian Branch 17.
The
SLP was then America’s only national
socialist party. It was under the sway
of the brilliant, but ideologically rigid Daniel
DeLeon who advocated a two pronged approach of militant craft unionism and
electoral action. He also strongly
supported the use of ethnic federations
to spread socialism and build on common identity. The United Hebrew Trades fit perfectly into
his ideological template.
But
the infant American Federation of Labor
was also trying to organize craft unions, regardless of ethnic identification.
The two approaches were soon battling it out for supremacy in the garment
industry—an industry in which contracts and steady job shop representation was
already hard to come by. In addition,
there was a strong anarchist presence
in the Jewish community which advocated direct
action and the propaganda of the
deed—violence directed at employers and the exploiting classes.
Hillquist
was an avid disputant in both controversies.
He was the leading opponent of the anarchists, arguing that violence
would alienate Americans from the cause of labor. His forum for this battle was the pages of
the Arbeter zeitung, the Party’s Yiddish Language paper despite the fact that as a native German and
Russian speaker, he personally knew little Yiddish.
The rise of the AFL craft unions in the ‘90’s presented
a more difficult problem. Many of the
UHT affiliated unions dually affiliated with the AFL DeLeon decided to take
even greater control over the movement by the creation of the Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance as
a left wing alternative to the non-ideological pragmatism of Samuel Gompers. Disputes between the two wings of the New
York labor movement were mutually bitter.
Hillquist,
who had gone on to get his law degree from New
York University was originally an obedient champion of the UHT becoming an
affiliate of the STLA. But he would become increasingly disillusioned. When UHT union dually affiliated with the AFL
refused to obey DeLeon’s directives to sever connections, they quit the STLA in
1897 and set up a rival Federated Hebrew
Trades of Greater New York.
Hillquist and others found themselves in sympathy.
Soon
he alienated with the SLP, which under DeLeon’s drive for ideological purity
was in steep decline, and became attracted with the new Social Democratic Party led by Milwaukee
politician Victor Berger and
former American Railway Union president
Eugene V. Debs. In 1899 Hillquist and others led a formal
break between the UHT and the STLA which in turn led to the re-absorption of
the splinter Federated Hebrew Trades.
The
same year Hillquist led a convention which split a major portion of trade union
supporters formally from the SLP. In
1900 he led that faction into a merger with the Social Democrats creating a
new, broad based Socialist Party.
In
the new century the role of the UHT shifted.
Although a few small unions remained directly affiliated with it and
outside the AFL, the organization shifted to becoming more of a support arm of
the craft union movement. It provided ideological
education, a lively Yiddish press and pamphlet program, social cohesion, and a
fundraising base for direct organizing by AFL unions.
Despite
this change the UHT continued to thrive.
In 1900 it was a driving force behind the creation of the International Ladies Garment Workers Union,
an umbrella that allowed the old craft distinctions to continue in various
segments of the industry but provided broader solidarity and support. Together the UHT and ILGWU supported the often
bloody and contentious strikes that eventually led to the stable organization
of most of the garment industry.
By
1910 co-founder Weinstein could report that the UHT was associated with 106 representing
150,000 working men and women. By any
stretch of the imagination that made them a force to be reckoned with.
The
UHT and the union it supported were defiantly radical in the generally
conservative AFL. And they were also the
chief avenue for women to come into the craft and trade union movement and even
assume leadership roles.
After
the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire in 1911
the UHT provided a lot of the ideological muscle as well as the dollars to
support the stepped up organizing drives by the ILGWU and other garment
industry unions, swelling the ranks of shops under contract. When the UHT held
its 25th anniversary celebration at Carnegie
Hall in 1914 Gompers himself had to swallow his pride to address the
meeting jammed with radicals. He was
joined on the platform with the lawyer-hero of the far left, Clarence Darrow.
Despite
these successes, there were setbacks. In
1915 eight members of the UHT executive board were indicted by the District Attorney for allegedly hiring
gangster Benjamin “Dopey Benny” Fein to intimidate reluctant employers.
Fein and other sluggers ran gangs for hire to the highest bidder,
labor or management.
More stressful than a little labor racketeering,
however, were growing bitter ideological fractures in the Jewish labor
movement. Remnant supporters of
anarchism, and DeLeonism continued to fight the Social Democrats. Then the Socialist Party itself began to
fracture between conservative and left wing factions.
Hillquist, by this time out of the daily affairs of
the UHT, but still hugely influential as the lawyer for the ILGWU and a top
leader of the Socialist Party, was in the thick of the battle. He ardently opposed the left wing of the
Party which was coalescing around the syndicalism of the Industrial
Workers of the World represented on the SP executive board by IWW General
Secretary Treasurer William D. “Big Bill” Haywood. He opposed industrial unionism as an
alternative to craft unionism, but railed mostly about the “inflammatory”
revolutionary rhetoric of the IWW, it disdain of electoral political action,
and its refusal to make union demands secondary to Socialist political
gains. Despite the fact that probably a
majority of UHT members were sympathetic to the left of the party, Hillquist engineered
Haywood’s 1914 removal from the SP Executive Board and the subsequent departure
of most of the left wing from the Party.
During the First World War the UHT was
generally pacifistic and opposed to the draft.
That caused the suppression of some its publication and the periodicals
of associated organizations and their banishment from the mails. Hillquist, himself a pacifist, made brief
common cause with the left again and defended many of the publications, trying
to get their mailing status restored.
After the war the SP fractured over support of the Bolshevik
revolution between the moderate social democrats and two far left
factions--the Communist
Labor Party and the Communist Party
of America.
Membership
in the UHT included vocal supporters and caucuses of all of these positions as
well as older tendencies. Later,
significant support would arise for the new Trotskyite movement.
Internal battle for control of the UHT and of the ILGWU and other craft
unions were constant and fierce, although they only occasionally interfered with
strike solidarity on a practical level.
With the Great Depression and the launching of the New Deal, many UHT leaders advocated abandoning electoral loyalty
to the SP or the united Communist Party,
USA and shifting electoral support to the Democrats. They helped
thousands abandon old loyalties to become among the Democrats staunchest, if
most radical, supporters.
To facilitate this shift, in 1934
the UHT joined with other unions and Jewish organizations to create the new Jewish Labor Committee, which
largely focused on raising money for Democrats and lobbying for pro-labor and
worker safety reforms on the state and local level. The UHT remained, however, a separate organization
and reported membership 250,000 in its affiliates at its 50th Anniversary in
1938.
Shortly after the Second World War top UHT members and
organizers for the ILGWU came under twin investigations for ties to the
Communist Party and labor racketeering.
At the same time, technological changes and competition from foreign
producers was slashing jobs in the New York garment industry. Second and third generation Jews, elevated to
middle class income levels by the
very success of the labor movement and highly educated, largely refused to
follow their parents into the garment factories and were eventually replaced
with new immigrants. Then the factories
themselves began to disappear, first to non-union states in the South and then overseas.
In the second half of the 20th
Century in addition to divisions on sectarian grounds, Zionism and support of Israel
has been controversial. The Left
generally opposed Zionism as a form of nationalism, but after the Holocaust some became ardent supporters
of the Jewish state. The controversy has
never really gone away.
By the 1990’s the UHT gave up
independent status and became the New York State affiliate of the Jewish Labor
Committee that it once founded. Although
it maintains New York offices, holds meetings, and issues occasional press
releases on labor or political issues, the largely elderly leadership of the
UHT cannot even maintain a web page of its own.
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