Wayne State history PhD candidate, archivist, and former Reuther Library staff member Allie Penn talks with Tales from the Reuther Library podcast host Dan Golodner about the Housewives League of Detroit.
Plus, Labor History in 2 tells the story of Oscar Neebe, one of eight men convicted of inciting violence at a workers rally at Haymarket Square in Chicago in 1886. And, from our own archives, the former union building right in downtown DC that you’ve probably passed many times without realizing the key role it played in American labor history.
Produced by Chris Garlock; edited by Patrick Dixon. To contribute a labor history item, email laborhistorytoday@gmail.com
Labor History Today is produced by the Metro Washington Council’s Union City Radio and the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor at Georgetown University.
The Irish Immigrant Miners’ Memorial
City Workers Strike Song
“America Works” launches new season
The Bread Uprising
MLK at the AFL-CIO in 1961
Who was Zelda D’Aprano?
Women in the coal mines; Billionaires in Space
Labor’s Untold Stories
Striketober & The Great Resignation: Take this job and shove it!
The first pay equity strike; Massachusetts’ longest strike
Founding the American Federation of Labor
Long live Mother Jones!
Murder, Race and (In)Justice
Tom Morello holds the line
Communists and community in wartime Detroit
From the Necropolis Strike to Striketober
Voices of Guinness
“It Didn’t Start with Amazon: A Conversation About the History of Organized Labor in the South”
The Battle of Virden
Sharecroppers’ struggles for rights and power
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