On this day in labor history, the year was 1944.
That was the day seven employees at Detroit’s Dodge Truck plant stopped working to protest the firing of a union brother.
When five of the seven were fired for the stoppage, it sparked a wildcat strike.
Another 320 workers downed their tools and left the plant. It was World War II.
The Dodge Truck plant had been converted to wartime production.
Workers there built heavy trucks to ship to allies in China.
The unions had signed onto a no-strike pledge after Pearl Harbor was bombed.
President Roosevelt demanded labor peace to aid the war effort. Leaders of the AFL and CIO agreed to no strike, no lockout clauses.
The CIO went further and agreed to give up overtime pay.
Most union members were not consulted on the pledge and did not vote on it.
When they learned about the pledge after the fact, many workers, who had just come off victorious organizing drives, were in no mood to make concessions.
They witnessed surging wartime profits for their employers and no cap on executive salaries, while they had to deal with wage freezes and inflation.
Many were confronted with increasingly unsafe working conditions, violations of newly won contracts and arbitrary discipline and firings. Despite the no-strike pledge, wildcat strikes were common.
During the war, there were over 14,000 strikes involving more than 6 million workers. In 1944 alone, when workers walked out at Dodge Truck, there had been more strikes in auto plants than at any other time in the industry.
Workers found that short, spontaneous walkouts quickly resolved their grievances, regardless of the no-strike pledge
September 19 - The End of My Sweet Jennie
September 18 - The Atlanta Compromise
September 17 - Striking in the South
September 16 - NHL Managers Lock Out Players
September 15 - The Invergordon Mutiny
September 14 - The Murder of Ella Mae Wiggins
September 13 - Attica!
September 12 - The Making of a National Treasure
September 11 - The Christiana Riot
September 10 - Minneapolis Printers Organize
September 9 - The Hanapepe Massacre
September 8 - Defying Nazi Occupation
September 7 - The Federal Employees Compensation Act
September 6 - Jane Addams is Born
September 5 - The First Labor Day Parade
September 4 - The Peekskill Riots
September 3 - Locked in to Die
September 2 - Protecting Pensions
September 1 - The Boilermakers
August 31 - The Battle of Blair Mountain
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