On this day in Labor History the year was 1938.
That was the day that the National Federation of Telephone Workers was founded in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Today the union is known as the Communication Workers of America, and represents 700,000 workers in a wide range of communication fields.
Attempts to organize the telephone industry began as early as 1910, by the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
Yet the women who worked as telephone operators were not included in the union until two years later.
By the end of the decade, the IBEW had more than 200 telephone unions.
Growth in the number of union members in the telephone industry was great impeded due to World War I.
During the war, President Woodrow Wilson issued an order to “herby take possession and assume control and supervision of each and every telegraph and telephone system, and every part thereof, within the jurisdiction of the United States.”
He placed control of the industry under the authority of the Postmaster General.
After the war ended, telephone companies increasingly installed company unions as a way to control workers organizing efforts.
Their aim was stave off unionism from outside organizations.
Nearly all of the IBEW locals lost their membership to the company unions.
But when Congress passed the Wagner Act in 1935, supporting the rights of workers to join and form independent unions, a new surge of independent unionism began in the telephone industry.
In 1938, thirty-one organizations joined together in New Orleans to form the National Federation of Telephone workers.
It was a loose association of locally independent unions.
By 1947, it became clear that the union would have to form a strong national presence to negotiate with nation-wide companies, and the Communication of Workers of America was born.
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
December 8 - The American Federation of Labor is Founded
December 7 - Strong Arming Goldminers
December 6 - Breaking Through the Racial Divide
December 5 - Striking in Solidarity
December 4 - Organizing to End Slavery
December 3 - Learning & Labor at Oberlin
December 2 - 21st Century Corporate Greed
December 1 - Standing Up for Themselves and Their Patients
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
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