On this day in labor history, the year was 1937.
That was the day the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union was founded.
After the victorious strike of 1934 that established the union hiring hall,
West Coast union leaders embarked on an inland campaign to organize the thousands of warehouse workers who handled shipped goods.
But West Coast dockworkers overwhelmingly chose to join the CIO after it was expelled from the AFL earlier that year.
They found the ILA planned to abandon the warehouse workers they had worked so hard to organize.
They also opposed dues assessments to fight the CIO and disagreed with the ILA’s hostility to minimum wage laws, social security and unemployment insurance.
Radicals like Harry Bridges and others had established themselves not only as workers leaders but also led attacks on Jim Crow racism in the ranks and in the industry.
The success of the 1934 strike was due in part to the welcoming of blacks into the ranks of the union.
In his Workers on the Waterfront, historian Bruce Nelson notes that, “the ILWU’s well-known opposition to racial discrimination was an important factor in the union’s expansion into Hawaii, not only on the waterfront but among sugar and pineapple plantation workers. The triumph of the ILWU in Hawaiian agriculture brought about a degree of fraternization across racial lines that few had thought possible.”
Since then, the union has beat back numerous Taft–Hartley and McCarthy era attacks.
More recently, the ILWU has been in the forefront of broader social justice struggles, leading walkouts and work stoppages for various political causes.
Today it represents close to 60,000 workers, including those locals that initially refused to affiliate.
November 30 - Angel of the Stockyards is Born
November 29 - The Fight for $15 & A Union
November 28 - Disaster in the Mines
November 27 - Death Trap in Newark
November 26 - The Birth of William Sylvis
November 25 - Chicago Printers Walk Off the Job
November 24 - The Hollywood Ten
November 23 - The Thibodaux Massacre
November 22 - Uprising of the 20,000
November 21 - Autoworkers Join the Postwar Strike Wave
November 20 - Birth of the Time Clock
November 19 - Joe Hill’s Final Words
November 18 - Accident or Murder?
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
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