S (general) [1922] 1930-45
Scope and Contents
Sidney Hillman and the ACWA played crucial roles in founding the CIO. Hillman's correspondence with Walter Reuther and George Addes of the United Automobile Workers (UAW) and Emil Rieve of the Textile Workers' Organizing Committee reflects that effort.
The Roosevelt era brought both increased visibility and power to Hillman and the union. In 1933, Hillman was chosen to serve on the National Recovery Administration's Labor Advisory Board. The materials from this NRA period describe the Roosevelt administration's attempts to draw up codes of fair competition to determine production quotas and fix wages and hours in order to bring about economic recovery. The NRA records also contain Hillman's correspondence with government officials as well as leaders of labor unions and of private firms. There are also some reports and raw data used by the NRA in developing its codes.
In 1940, as U.S. involvement in World War II became increasingly likely, Roosevelt organized the National Defense Advisory Commission (NDAC) to coordinate economic mobilization for the war. Hillman was named to the Commission; later he was tapped to be associate director of the War Production Board. The NDAC materials in this collection document Hillman's experiences and include correspondence with William Knudsen. There are also some reports and directives prepared by the War Production Board.
Other notable topics include: aid to free labor organizations in Europe during World War II; anti-fascist efforts by U.S.labor organizations; civil rights; the clothing trade in the U.S. and Canada; economic conditions during the depression, particularly in the U.S. garment industry; international labor activities; Jewish workers in Palestine; labor organizing in the U.S. and Canada; relations with other unions; the Spanish Civil War, including labor aid to and participation in the Republican cause; union involvement in politics and government in the U.S.; the role of women and minorities in the labor movement; and worker education.
Notable individuals represented in the collection include: Mary Anderson; John B. Andrews; August Bellanca; Dorothy Bellanca; George Berry; S.M. Blinken; Louis Brandeis; Harry Bridges; John Brophy; Max Danish; Clarence Darrow; Gladys Dickason; David Dubinsky; Lillian Hellman; Charles J. Hendley; Arturo Giovannitti; Henry Green; William Green; J.B.S. Hardman; Bessie Hillman; Horace Kallen; Paul Kellogg; Philip La Follette; Robert La Follette; Fiorello LaGuardia; Herbert H. Lehman; John L. Lewis; Sinclair Lewis; Jay Lovestone; Homer Martin; Lucy Mason; Tom Mooney; Reinhold Niebuhr; Frances Perkins; Charles Poletti; Lee Pressman; Walter Reuther; Emil Rieve; Eleanor Roosevelt; Franklin D. Roosevelt; Rose Schneiderman; Upton Sinclair; Harry Truman; B.C. Vladeck; Robert F. Wagner; Henry Wallace; Walter White; and Matthew Woll.
Additional organizations of significance represented include: local unions and joint boards of the ACWA; the American Civil Liberties Union; American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee; American League Against War and Fascism; the AFL; the CIO; the Fur and Leather Workers' Union; Hart, Schaffner, and Marx; Hickey Freeman and Company; the Jewish Daily Forward; the Journeymen Tailors Union; Labor's Non-Partisan League; the NAACP; the NRA; the Socialist Party (U.S.); the Steel Workers' Organizing Committee; the Textile Workers Organizing Committee; the Textile Workers Union of America; the UAW; the U.S. Department of Labor and its Women's Bureau; the Urban League; the Women's Trade Union League; and the Workmen's Circle.
The papers from the early 1930s are extremely fragmentary; consequently, little material documenting the devastating effect of the early Depression years on the ACWA remains. The campaign to organize shirt and pants workers during the mid- to late 1930s is somewhat better documented, and is described by Hillman's correspondence with organizers in Rochester (N.Y.), Cincinnati, and Philadelphia.
Dates
- 1914-1980
- 1920-1950 (bulk)
Creator
- From the Collection: Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America (creator, Organization)
Language of Materials
Collection material in English
Conditions Governing Access
Access to some portions of the collection is restricted; contact Kheel Center reference archivist for further details.
Extent
208.33 cubic feet
Abstract
Information relating to S.O.S. (Stop Organized Slaughter); Rennie Smith's (Secretary, Friends of Europe) lecture tour; Hugh Grant Straus' resignation from the Council of the Jewish Agency for Palestine; telegram to Hon. Hatton W. Sumners (Chairman, House Judiciary Committee) urging "favorable action" on the Healy Bill H. R. 11554; Scheuer & Company's "Year End Review" (6pp); invitation to the "Musical Yiddish Talking Picture (with English titles) `Yiddle with the Fiddle'"; Harry Spass' letter thanking Hillman for his artificial leg; Harry Simon's (former pants presser) account of being beaten by Jake Silver (representative, New York Joint Board), his letter to the Mayor requesting an investigation, and the Chief Inspector's reply; Abraham Shohan's possible placement on the NLRB; information relating to New York City Committee for Public Adult Education; Julian Schuman's (18 yrs.) discussion of discrimination in hiring, based on race, religion and ethnic background; Frank K. Suter and Wage and Hour legislation; news release, "Grand Opera Choral Alliance Decides To Picket Center Theater When San Carlo Opera Company Locks Out The Chorus" forwarded by Leon Savage (Counsel, Grand Opera Choral Alliance); proposed budget, plans and purposes of the Southern Conference for Human Welfare; S. 215 (relates to profit sharing); birthday greetings to Ellen Gates Starr; excerpt from International Textile Apparel Analysis, relating to the "Fall 1940 men's clothing outlook" by A.W. Zelomek (economic counselor, International Statistical Bureau, Inc.); Stephen J. Smithney's opposition to Owen D. Young working in National Defense; affidavit relating to the admittance of Beatrice Spitz's mother to the U.S.; Fanny Sherry's request for assistance getting Dr. Esther Matis Glikman and family out of "unoccupied France"; Raymond Gram Swing's request that Jennie Lee (member, British Labor Party) be allowed to speak to labor union audiences; "General comment on the Nickerson protest" from Monroe Sweetland; Society for the Prevention of World War III, Inc.'s concern over a plan exiling German military officers to the U.S., Britain and the U.S.S.R.
Repository Details
Part of the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives Repository
227 Ives Hall
Ithaca NY 14853