Blood in the Streets, photographer Chuck Avery’s illustrated history of American labor struggles, and Kurt Stand shares an excerpt from his essay, Peekskill, 1949: What Was Lost, What Remained, What It Means Today.
On this week’s Labor History in Two: the year was 1918; that was the day that 101 leaders of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) or Wobblies were convicted in a Chicago Federal Court.
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Labor History Today is produced by the Labor Heritage Foundation and the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor.
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A tale of two Detroit murals
The lost labor artist
The Bootleg Coal Rebellion
Together We Can Move Mountains
A Wild Woman Sings the Blues
Remembering the West Virginia Mine Wars
“The Union’s Inspiration”
Bill Pancoast’s Road to Matewan
What Can We Learn From the Great Depression?
Bill Lucy on Black power
The Disney Revolt (Encore)
Hamilton Nolan and “The Hammer”
Shift Happens
A labor walk in Wheeling
Throwing a working man's party
The 1934 Minneapolis trucker’s strike
The AAUP and the Black Freedom Struggle, 1955–1965
Smash Fascism
A farewell to BJR
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