On this day in labor history, the year was 1908.
That was the day the United States Supreme Court decided the case, Muller v. Oregon.
It was a landmark decision in the realm of protective labor legislation.
It restricted the workday to 10 hours for women.
Laundry owner, Curt Muller, required his female employees to work more than 10 hours a day, against Oregon labor laws.
The Supreme Court upheld his conviction and fine.
Protective labor legislation was a product of the reform social movements of the Progressive Era.
Reformers like Jane Addams worked to protect women from industrial dangers that bred physical and moral harm to women.
The decision drove a class-based wedge within the women’s movement that lasted for much of the 20th century.
Working class women generally supported protective labor legislation like Muller.
But Equal Rights Advocates like Alice Paul opposed it.
They argued that protective legislation like Muller rested on stereotypes regarding differences between men and women.
These differences often fueled anti-woman discrimination, state control and financial dependency.
As well, critics remarked the ruling set a precedent for women’s biology as child-bearers, as a basis for separate legislation.
Only later would working class critics note that the ruling did not cover domestics, agricultural workers, or white-collar workers.
The 1938 Fair Labor Standards Act would supplant some parts of Muller with its guarantees for workers of both sexes.
Many working class women later welcomed the passage of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act in 1965, which prohibited employment discrimination.
Some would concede the many flaws of protective labor legislation that held women back.
But women’s rights advocates would continue to debate protective legislation and the Equal Rights Amendment well into the 1970s.
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May 17 - Striking for Dignity and Respect
May 16 - Minneapolis Teamsters Lead the Way
May 15 - The Winnipeg General Strike Begins
May 14 - Wobblies On the Waterfront
May 13 - Women Strike Tolteca Foods
May 12 - Of ICE Raids & Union Busting
May 11 - Organizing in the Fields
May 10 - Bankruptcy Bonanza for Big Bankers
May 9 - The Historic ‘34 West Coast Maritime Strike Begins
May 8 - Mary Marcy is Born
May 7 - Popeye The Union Man
May 6 - FDR Rolls Out the WPA
May 5 - The Bay View Massacre
May 4 - UE Beats Back HUAC in Dayton
May 3 - First Workers Compensation Law is Passed
May 2 - Our Thing is DRUM!
May 1 - Mayday Marchers Attacked in Cleveland
April 30 - Refinery Workers Walk Off the Job
April 29 - Allis-Chalmers and the Road to Taft-Hartley
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