Tomorrow is officially Labor Day in the United
States, a Federal Holiday
celebrated on the first Monday of September since 1894. For
most people it is just the last hurrah of summer, an occasion for
one last cookout and the gateway to fall and football
season. In most cities and towns,
the labor movement is not even perfunctorily acknowledged. The press uses the occasion to
annually either write the obituary of unions or to denounce them as powerful and greedy bullies,
depending on the political inclination of the outlet.
While most of us working schlumps are grateful for the day
off (if we get one), I for one, wish I could officially celebrate Labor Day
with virtually the whole rest of the world on May 1.
International Labor Day was proclaimed by the Second International in honor of the memory of Chicago’s Haymarket Martyrs at the suggestion of none other than American Federation of Labor (AFL) chief Samuel Gompers himself and which quickly spread around the
world. American unions celebrated it
too.
But within just a few years Gompers
was at the heart of a deal that substituted the September
observance for May Day, a few crumbs from the Boss’s table, and a pat on the head by the Civic Federation in exchange for a promise to oppose
labor radicalism and the growth of industrial style unionism in
rapidly expanding basic heavy and the extractive industries—mining,
forestry, agriculture, etc.
It is true that a September Labor
Day observance pre-dated the 1886 Haymarket
Affair. In 1882 the New York Central Labor Union, made up
of skilled craft unions belonging to a prototype of the AFL and lodges
of the rival Knights of Labor
cooperated in a call for a giant parade followed by picnics, games
and amusements, and educational talks. It was designed to showcase the pride
and power of the labor movement and also to press for the chief demand of labor reformers—the Eight Hour Day—the same cause
that would be marked by an attempted nationwide General Strike on May 1, 1886, an event that led up the attack
by police on a worker’s rally in Chicago’s
Haymarket on May 4 and the bomb blast blamed on the mostly German and anarchist leaders of the local labor movement.
New York City officials, eager to appease
workers after a number of local strikes were suppressed with violence,
gave their official approval to the parade. On September 5, 1882 an estimated 30,000
workers marched in military order behind elaborate banners representing
local unions of all of the trades, job shops, and Knights of Labor lodges. It was an impressive display, but despite
later claims by the AFL that observance of Labor Day spread quickly,
only a few other cities, mostly in New York, began holding September
celebrations.
In the meantime, huge May Day parades
and rallies spread across the country.
But the late 1880s and early 1890s were the beginning of a nearly 40
year period of virtual open class warfare with worker’s strikes being
violently suppressed by local, state, and federal authorities
and armies of private goons
and strikebreakers. And workers often fought back with
equal violence. Episodes like the Homestead Steel Strike with its running
gun battles between Pinkertons and
workers, the nationwide Pullman Strike of
1882, and virtually continuous battles in the coal fields and hard
rock mines nationwide, made many fear for revolution or civil war.
Democratic
President Grover Cleveland, who ordered
out the Army to crush the Pullman Strike, wanted a symbolic
peace offering to Labor without actually granting the movement any of
its demands.
Early Labor Day was wrapped in patriotic symbolism.
Republican
king pin Ohio Senator Marc Hanna, soon to anoint William McKinley as the next President, was even more
ambitious—he proposed a pact of cooperation between capital and
“responsible labor.” He offered Gompers,
the Cigar Roller’s Union chief who headed the AFL, a seat
in his new Civic Federation
alongside the robber barons and captains of industry. Hanna did not make the same offer to Grand Master Workman Terrance V. Powderly
of the Knights of Labor, who personally opposed strikes and advocated arbitration of disputes, because
the members of Knights lodges included unskilled workers clamoring for
recognition in heavy industry. Gompers
AFL would be allowed to pursue organizing skilled workers strictly by trade but
not organize the great mass of unskilled, largely immigrant
workers. Gompers would also be called on
to use his unions to oppose labor
radicalism, and even to break strikes led by unions outside the
grand agreement.
With Gompers in his pocket,
Hanna engineered enough Republican support in Congress to get Cleveland’s official Labor Day proposal
passed. Cleveland signed it in to
law just six days after Eugene V. Debs’s
industrial union of railroad workers was smashed in the end of the
Pullman Strike.
Within a few years all states either
aligned their existing Labor celebrations with the Federal holiday or enacted
state proclamations echoing the U.S. call.
Meanwhile authorities everywhere
tried to suppress May Day observances, which continued to be supported
by militant unionists and radicals of every sort—social democrats, anarchists,
and Marxists. The Knights of Labor withered away,
but aggressive industrial unions, especially in the mining industry, continued
to fight both the bosses and the AFL’s attempt
to divide the aristocracy of
labor from the mass rank and file.
In little more than a decade the radical Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) would be formed to intensify that battle.
During the Depression and the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Democrats became the party of labor. Labor Day became the official kick-off
of Democratic election campaigns.
Labor Day parades and rallies often seemed more of a platform to launch
candidacies than a labor union celebration.
Even that has faded as the
percentage of Americans in unions continued to shrink year after year
after a high tide in the early ‘60’s.
By the Clinton era, Democrats
continued to get support from labor, but seemed to try to disassociate
themselves from it, shunning identification as the party for of labor in favor
of being seen as the champion of the Middle Class.
As half-assed a holiday as Labor Day is, I hope we all will take a moment to thank the American Labor movement for largely creating that Middle Class.
The Old Man addressing a Labor Day rally on Woodstock Square in 2016 giving essentially the text of this blog entry.
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