Master shoemakers and coopers met in public houses like this to discuss their organizations. |
According to some sources the first labor unions in the English Colonies of North America were organized in Boston on this date in 1648.
Close but no cigar. In fact it is wrong on at least a couple of different
accounts.
First, it was not the date that shoemakers and coopers, first organized. That had happened earlier.
It was the first time any organizations
of craftsmen were legally
recognized with an official Charter to allow them to operate.
Second, these organizations were
not, in the modern sense trade unions, which consist of employees organized to bargain with their employers for wages, benefits, and over conditions on the
job like work rules and seniority.
These organizations mimicked the medieval guilds, companies of master
craftsmen organized to protect the
craft, set prices, and provide fraternal aid and benefits to their members. Guilds had played a powerful roll
in transitioning from a feudal system
to the emergence of cities, mercantile trade, and the burger class as a powerful new political force. They were
organizations of master craftsmen, who in turn were the employers of journeymen and apprentices.
Since its founding in 1630 as the capital and hub of the new colony of Massachusetts Bay by that “company of
saints,” the Puritans, civic
authorities had tried to suppress class
distinction. But after only 18 years Boston was a rapidly growing
port city and the trade center for an expanding arch of settlements stretching along the coast and reaching inland by
dozens of miles. Craftsmen had naturally emigrated from England and set up shops to make and
sell goods that did not have to be imported at enormous costs across the Atlantic. These crafts included
those related to ship building and
supplies; smiths of various types; carpenters, masons, thatchers, shingle makers, and other construction trades; and those who provided
needed personal items like tailors, hatters, drapers, and
shoemakers.
Colonial shoemaker and apprentice. |
These craftsmen were sometimes
relatively wealthy, but universally recognized as below the status of gentlemen or free holding farmers. They
yearned for the respect and mutual support that they had enjoyed in the mother country as members of
guilds. And in some cases there were now enough shops that competition
was driving down prices. They wanted to fix prices to preserve income, as well as to prevent others, not
properly steeped in the traditions of the crafts and who have not completed
training as apprentices and experience as journeymen from entering into competition.
The Puritan fathers on the General Court, the colony’s governing body, were highly suspicious.
The movement to gain official
sanction with charters was lead by the shoemakers and the coopers. Of all
of the trades, shoemakers probably had the lowest status because they did not
require much capital to open a
shop. They had generally small shops where the craftsman did most or all
of the work or employing only one or two journeymen and apprentices.
Coopers on the other hand, were essential for the colonies burgeoning
trade. So many things, solids
as well as liquids, were shipped in barrels
in those days—grain from the
countryside and beer, the universal
beverage of choice where potable water
was scarce, for instance. But perhaps most important—barrels made by
coopers were essential for exporting what was becoming the number one export of
the colony since local fur supplies had been depleted—salt cod.
What the shoemakers lacked in social
standing they made up for in numbers—there were several shops in Boston and
more in the surrounding villages—and a certain propensity to make themselves
heard in Town meetings and
elsewhere. The coopers had economic clout.
By comparison a cooperage was a larger and more complex operation. |
So it was to these two trades that
the General Court granted the first charters to The Company of Shoemakers and The
Company Coopers. But they placed severe restrictions on the fledgling organizations, barring them from many
of the privileges of English guilds. The Court approved the association solely
“for the suppression of inferior workmanship.” They were stripped of the
power to cooperate to provide education and fraternal benefits to their
members. Most importantly, they were forbidden to act “contrary to the
public interest” by fixing prices.
Despite the official limitations of
the charters, once organized the companies informally and secretly compelled
their members to adhere to agreed upon pricing. Within decades they were
doing so openly.
Shoemakers would continue to press
for more effective organization in other colonies and into the era of post Revolutionary independences.
A court suppressed an attempt by Philadelphia
shoemakers to organize to fix prices and set wages for journeymen and
apprentices in 1805 as late as 1805.
That was about the same time those
journeymen and apprentices began to organize separately from the associations
of the master craftsmen, their employers. These were the first proto-unions. In 1827 to protest debtor’s prison sentences in a time of
financial panic, Philadelphia
workers from several trades came together to launch the short lived Mechanics’ Union of Trade Association.
Although crushed within two years, they are generally viewed at the beginning
of a true trade union movement in the United
States.
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