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Paperback The Great Labor Uprising of 1877 Book

ISBN: 0913460575

ISBN13: 9780913460573

The Great Labor Uprising of 1877

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The first generalized confrontation between labor and capital in the United States, which effectively shut down the entire railway system.Engravings from newspapers, chronology, notes, bibliography,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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The first great labor battle in the U.S.

In 1877 the great robber barons of steel and rail-Vanderbilt, Fisk, Gould, and others-appeared to have consolidated their rule over land and labor in the post-Civil War period. In their quest for infinitely expanding wealth, they subjected the workers under their command to ever-increasing demands for more work and reduced their wages time and again to below starvation levels. As thousands were laid off in the economic downturn of the 1870s, protests developed among the workers, and police were mobilized to quell the disturbances. It was not the greed and brutality of the capitalist overlords that provoked a mass rebellion. It was that they made life virtually impossible for the working people. The great strike was centered in rail and began in the summer of 1877 in response to yet another wage cut. A group of bold rail workers in West Virginia walked off the job. With no union, no organization, and nothing but a desperate urge to reclaim their humanity, their initiative spread like wildfire to thousands of other rail workers from Baltimore to St. Louis in a rolling surge of strikes, mass mobilizations and confrontations with the armed minions of capital. Ultimately general strikes of all workers were precipitated in St. Louis, San Francisco and other cities. The rail barons sought to put down the uprising with military force, mobilizing state militias, police and national guard troops, firing into the crowds, killing dozens. For them it was only a question of forcing the masses to do their bidding. They believed that they were the rulers, the workers were there to serve them. This great labor battle awakened the true spirit of liberty and solidarity among the laboring masses. In their struggle against the tyranny of capital they became the one true embodiment of democracy and the only hope of progress for toiling humanity. They laid the foundation stone for the worker's movement in the U.S. It gave a huge impetus to the organization of labor unions as well as the beginnings of labor political action: the formation of a workers party. Reading this book brings home the reality of the class struggle in the U.S. and helps us to understand how and why it developed as it did. It also helps us understand why this class struggle won't go away as long as capitalism exists. It helps us to appreciate the organized struggle of the workers as the only way forward for humanity in its quest for a truly livable planet.

Exciting history of workers struggles in capitalist America

1877: the naked face of capitalism in America. In the midst of a deep-going economic depression, bosses imposed massive layoffs and deep pay cuts, and workers responded. From Chicago to St. Louis to New York to Philadelphia, rail workers, iron workers, carpenters, meatpackers and others launched a wave of massive strikes and street protests. The bosses and their government mobilized all their forces against the workers: courts, the press, police, the national guard and federal troops. While the workers were eventually beaten in these battles, the lessons learned helped forge political class consciousness and lay the basis for further struggles. Foner's book is an exciting history of these days. He quotes extensively from labor and capitalist press of the day, from speeches and declarations by workers' leaders, and from government reports and documents to give a real feel of the roots of the uprising and the conflicting interests that lay behind it. I particularly found useful the description of what different workers leaders did at the time-- from conservative trade union presidents to militant socialists. Also the challenge and experiences of native-born and immigrant workers fighting together against their common exploiters. There is a lot to learn from this book today! While this book gives a rich detail of the day-to-day struggles in 1877, two others will help get a broader perspective on the key issues political posed: American Labor Struggles 1877-1934, by Samuel Yellen, and Revolutionary Continuity, Marxist Leadership in the U.S. 1948-1917, by Farrell Dobbs.

first nationwide strike and first general strike

The summer of 1877 saw both the first nationwide strike and the first general strike. Massive cutbacks over several preceding years led to this resistance.Yet because the government necessarily represents and supports the domination of capital over human beings - the ups and downs of its luck displace thousands and in its crises when it prefers to do nothing at all it condemns whole populations to hunger and war - every strike necessarily grows over into politics as an instinctive, just measure of self-defense. The larger the strike, the more acute the politics become.At that time, a party existed that challenged the "justice" and logic of capital's rule. Its partisans learned that each of its two factions were correct in what they stood for. Both the trade union struggle and the ballot box contention are valid ways for working people to put forth their strength, and to learn first hand about the limitations of U.S. "freedom."As we live in a period of falling profit rates, not unlike 1873-5, the lessons of previous struggles are of first importance.Pathfinder Press is sometimes jestingly referred to as "the martyr's" publisher, because so many of its titles print verbatim the words of working class heroes. In the chapter on Chicago, we can witness the agitational power of Albert Parsons, who ten years later earned the title of Haymarket Martyr in the fight for the eight hour day.
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