On this day in labor history, the year was 1937.
That was the day whistles blowing and the call to strike could be heard through the aisles of Woolworth in downtown Detroit.
108 saleswomen walked away from their workstations and cash registers.
The eight-day sit-down had begun.
The young women saw from the experience in Flint that sit-down strikes could win.
They evicted management, barricaded the doors and found 200 or so customers still inside the store, wanting to join them.
The strikers issued their demands: a 10 cent an hour raise, an eight-hour day, union recognition and a union hiring hall, free uniforms and laundering and more.
Kresge department stores immediately gave their workers a raise in order to prevent similar stoppages.
The striking women at Woolworth made themselves comfortable and the sit-down soon spread to a second store.
Leaders from Local 705 of the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees threatened a national strike if demands were not met.
Union cooks provided meals and union musicians provided entertainment. Hotel workers from across the city picketed in front of the store to show solidarity.
After seven days, Woolworth’s management caved and agreed to most of the strikers demands.
High turnover in the workforce would undo contract gains at area Woolworth stores soon after the sit-down.
But the victory electrified retail workers across the country.
The sit-down spread to retailers in St. Louis, New York, San Francisco, Minnesota and Washington.
In Three Strikes: Miners, Musicians, Salesgirls, and the Fighting Spirit of Labor’s Last Century, Dana Frank notes that, “over 60 years later, unions today in department stores all over the country owe their existence in part to the Woolworth strike.”
November 17 - Resisting Impressment
November 16 - NFL Players End Strike
November 15 - The IWW is Raided
November 14 - The Origins of CWA
November 13 - The Holland Tunnel Opens
November 12 - Striking Against Privatization
November 11 - Haymarket Martyrs are Executed
November 10 - Suicide or Murder?
November 9 - Remembering Philip Murray
November 8 - Dorothy Day is Born
November 7 - Eisenhower Wields Taft-Hartley
November 6 - The Fight for Equality
November 5 - The Everett Massacre
November 4 - Will Rogers is Born
November 3 - The Greensboro Massacre
November 2 - Sixteen Tons
November 1 - The Deadly Consequences of Scabbing
October 31 - Happy Union Made Halloween
October 30 - Wall St. Lays an Egg
October 29 - Alice Doesn’t Day
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