The founding convention of the Colored National Labor Union from Haper's Weekly. |
Isaac Meyers did not want it
this way. Neither did William H. Sylvis. Myers was a Black 34 year old marine
caulker from Baltimore who had
organized a union of Black caulkers
in the Chesapeake ship yards and a cooperative association to market their
services to ship builders and dry docks.
Sylvis was a White 40
year old Philadelphia iron molder who
was the founder, visionary leading
light, and President of the National Labor Union (NLU), American labor’s first stab at a national federation uniting existing trade unions. In the wake of the recently concluded Civil War and the end of slavery, both men dreamed of a united working class undivided by race.
Alas, that was not to be.
William Sylvis of the National Labor Union. |
Sylvis
and other Philadelphia unionists had called a founding convention for the NLU
in New York City 1866. He was taken ill and unable to attend that
meeting, but the organization was launched and over the next two years had some
success in attracting local unions, municipal
Central Labor bodies, and a handful
of national or international trade unions.
When he NLU met in Baltimore for its convention in 1868 it was clear
that Sylvis would be elected the organization’s president.
Sylvis
had taken note of the work of Meyers and his Colored Caulkers Trade Union Society and invited him to address the
convention held in his home town. Meyer
reported on the progress of his union and of the co-operative shipyard and
railway, the Chesapeake Marine Railway
and Dry Dock Company. He also
appealed for membership in the NLU on behalf of his union and a handful of
other fledgling Back unions. Sylvis, who
also envisioned worker-owned cooperatives as a model to escape from exploitive wage slavery, endorsed the
application.
Aside
from Sylvis, Black unionists had some support.
Delegate A.C. Cameron told
the assembly, “…interests of the labor cause demand that all workingmen be
included within the ranks without regard to race or nationality…”
But it was not
enough. Many organizations in attendance
had Whites only rules embedded in
their constitutions and bi-laws. Others simply feared competition from Blacks
who the assumed would either undercut wages or replace their members. The convention voted overwhelmingly not to
extend membership to Black organizations, although those few local bodies that
accepted Black
membership would be allowed to continue to do so.
Meyers
was saddened, but likely not surprised.
He was also determined to find a way for Black unionists to unite
nationally. Acting quickly, Meyers and
associates called for a founding
convention of a new organization. On
January 5, 1869 214 Black mechanics,
engineers, artisans, tradesmen and trades-women, and their supporters from
21 states assembled in Washington, D.C.
Notably absent were common
laborers. The new organization would mirror the NLU
philosophically and structurally and be an organization of the skilled trades.
That
structure was not the only thing the new organization had in common with its
inspiration. In its founding documents
it called itself simply the National
Labor Union—the identical name to Sylvis’s organization. Perhaps this reflected a forlorn that once
established and up and running it might yet be allowed to merge. To avoid confusion newspapers covering the founding meeting called the organization
the Colored National Labor Union (CNLU).
The name stuck and quickly the organization was using that name as well.
Many
issues came before the founding body.
One was a resolution calling on the Federal
Government to stop “importation of contract
coolie labor” to prevent it from becoming a “system of slavery.” This was a slightly different take on Chinese exclusion passed by the NLU opposing,
“the importation of a servile race,
bound to fulfill contracts entered into on foreign
soil.”
The
wide-spread use of Chinese workers in the construction of the Southern Pacific Railroad and in
large-scale mining operations had made eliminating the Yellow peril the number one issue of White unionists in California and the west. There was a general fear that if it continued
successfully it would spread east.
The
CNLU, however, couched their resolution in far less racist terms than did the NLU
and did not oppose free Chinese worker,
unbound by servile contracts, and promised to include any who wished to join in
CNLU unions. In fact the CNLU
constitution opened the organization to Whites and any ethnicity as well as to women.
Delegate
John Mercer Langston, a former
employee of the Freedmen’s Bureau
and President of the National Equal Right League laid out
the expansive and inclusive vision of the new organization:
We know the
maxim, ‘in union there is strength.’ It has its significance in the affairs of
labor no less than in politics. Hence our industrial movement, emancipating
itself from every national and partial sentiment, broadens and deepens its
foundations so as to rear thereon a superstructure capricious enough to
accommodate at the altar of common interest the Irish, the negro and the German
laborer; to which, so far from being excluded, the ‘poor white’ native of the
South, struggling out of moral and pecuniary death into life ‘real and earnest’
the white mechanic and laborer of the North, so long ill-taught and advised
that his true interest is gained by hatred and abuse of the laborer of African
descent, as well as the Chinaman, whom designing persons, partially enslaving,
would make, in the plantation service of the South, the rival and competitor of
the former slave class of the country, having with us one and the same
interest, are all invited, earnestly urged, to join us in our movement, and
thus aid in the protection and conservation of their and our interests.
Among
the CNLU’s other resolves were for the extension and expatiation of the
Freedmen’s Bureau’s Forty Acres and a
mule policy to provide of farmland for the rural Southern poor, government aid for education, and new nondiscriminatory
legislation that would help black workers access the labor market. Items like this show that the organization
hoped to go beyond action over job issues to be the voice of Black labor as
part of a broader movement for full
emancipation and integration
into society.
Both
the NLU and CNLU after initial success would find troubled waters ahead. Sylvis died unexpectedly on July 27, just six
months after the CNLU’s founding. Without
his visionary leadership the NLU slowly foundered.
Efforts
at job action by CNLU member unions were met by the united opposition of not
only employers but the press and government, which was quick to provide police power to break any strikes. And all too often local White unions
joined that opposition. Unable to
produce improved conditions on the job, membership began to dwindle, affiliate
unions failed or disaffiliated when they could no longer afford to support a
national body.
In
1872 Meyers was replaced as President by the veteran abolitionist and leading voice of Black aspirations, Frederick Douglas whose newspaper, the New National Era became
the official organ of the
union. Douglas was an immensely talented
and energetic man, but he had no experience as a trade unionist or much
interest in the day-to-day administration of a labor federation. The use of his paper helped boost its
circulation. The CNLU became just
another platform for a broader Black agenda.
Within a couple of years it all but disappeared as a functioning union.
Both
the NLU and CNLU were supplanted by the rising Knights of Labor, which aimed to organized skilled and unskilled
labor together and which claimed, at least, to welcome members “without regard
to race or color.” Many of the NLU’s
local unions and some of the surviving CNLU chapters switched affiliation to
the Knights. In practice local Knights
assemblies often followed local custom in
regard to Black membership. But some
notable strikes, including the St. Louis
General Strike of 1877, a part of the broader Great Railway Strike, were notable for cooperation between Black
and White unionists.
As
for Meyers, he worked as a detective
at the Baltimore Post Office between
1872 and 1879 then operated a small Baltimore coal yard. In 1883 he was
rewarded for loyal service to the Republican
Party with a political appointment
as a Customs revenue officer for five years.
His public life continued as he organized and became President of the Maryland Colored State
Industrial Fair Association, the Colored
Business Men’s Association of Baltimore, the Colored Building and Loan Association, and the Aged Ministers Home of the African Methodist Episcopal Church. He died Baltimore in 1891.
Where did you get the sources for this article? I didn't see any citations.
ReplyDeleteSorry Raina, I specialize in what might be called historical popularizations, not academic articles. My aim is to bring history, especially the neglected history of struggling peoples, to attention and perhaps stir a broad interest. Because I try and maintain a sometimes grinding daily post schedule, I research on the fly from materials available on line and often finish my posts just before they are put up. I don't remember all of the sources for this, but they would have included Wikipedia articles on both unions, Meyers and Sylvis as well as labor history and black history sites. Sorry that I can't be more specific. The Wikipedia articles, however, should steer you to their sources.
DeleteOh, I've read the wikipedia article on this labor union and it's pitiful. I've actually been tasked with fixing it, which is how i came across your website. I may be able to cite you, but since this doesn't have any citations itself, it may not go over well.
Delete