On this day in labor history, the year was 1882.
That was the day trade union leader and suffragist Rose Schneiderman was born.
She arrived from Poland and settled in New York City with her family as a child.
Her father died soon after, and Rose entered the workforce at the age of 13.
She sewed caps and organized with the United Cloth and Cap Makers.
Rose became a chief organizer with the New York Women’s Trade Union League and played a prominent role in the 1909 Uprising of the 20,000.
While touring Ohio to rally support for women’s suffrage in 1912, Schneiderman said “What the woman who labors wants is the right to live, not simply exist–the right to life as the rich woman has the right to life, and the sun and music and art.
You have nothing that the humblest worker has not a right to have also. The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too.”
She grew frustrated with the privileged middle class women of the New York WTUL and began organizing with ILGWU.
But she soon quit, aggravated by the leadership’s indifference toward organizing women workers.
Schneiderman devoted her energies to women’s suffrage.
She would soon return to the WTUL.
By 1926, she served as its national president and became close friends with Eleanor Roosevelt.
President Roosevelt appointed her to the National Advisory Board where she wrote NRA codes for industries with women workers.
Labor historian Annelise Orleck noted “Schneiderman attacked sexual segregation in the workplace, tried to unionize women… called for state regulation of working conditions… She argued for comparable worth laws, government-funded childcare, and maternity insurance... Those ideas and dreams are the legacy of Rose Schneiderman.”
December 29 - The Day Work Was Made Safer
December 28 - Heroes in Space
December 27 - Musicians Fight Back
December 26 - Garment Workers Rise Up
December 25 - Debs Released; Real Gift is His Message
December 24 - A Christmas Eve Beating for Striking Workers
December 23 - The High Cost of Low Wages
December 21 - Red Scare Deportations Begin
December 20 - THE UNION IS DISSOLVED!!!
December 19 - Solidarity Gets the Goods!
December 18 - No More Beer
December 17 - Unraveling Anti-Japanese Hysteria
December 16 - No Justice, No Bagels!
December 15 - Troops Put Down the Mother’s March
December 14 - Another Hard Fought Victory
December 13 - The Beginning of the End of Apartheid
December 12 - We Disaffiliate!
December 11 - Right to Work is a Lie!
December 10 - August Spies is Born
December 9 - The Cordiner Doctrine
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