President's Commission on the Status of Women/ Committee on Protective Legislation (1960-63)
Scope and Contents
The correspondence covers a number of political, social, union, and personal matters. There are letters from women organizers in the South; from leaders of locals and regional joint boards; from ACWA officials such as Jacob Potofsky and Joseph Schlossberg; and memoranda from the ACWA General Executive Board, reflecting Bessie Hillman's long service to the union as executive, organizer, and mentor, particularly to women. Correspondents also include union leaders outside of the ACWA, among them David Dubinsky, A. Philip Randolph, Walter Reuther, and Leonard Woodcock. There is Hillman's reminiscence of Rose Schneiderman of the Women's Trade Union League.
Letters from a number of leading political, cultural, and social figures, including Mary Anderson, Mary McLeod Bethume, Jacqueline Kennedy, Arthur Goldberg, Irving Ives, Lady Bird Johnson, Averell Harriman, Herbert Lehman, William O'Dwyer, Esther Peterson, Harry Truman, Eleanor Roosevelt, and Robert F. Wagner, Jr. make up another significant portion of the collection. These items reflect Bessie Hillman's long-standing involvement in social causes and political campaigns, particularly in civil rights issues, within the City and State of New York and throughout the United States.
Other individuals and organizations represented in the collection include: Cornell ILR School professor Maurice F. Neufeld; Carl Sandberg; Chaim Weizmann; local unions and joint boards of the ACWA; the American Labor Education Service; the Democratic National Committee; the Hudson Shore School; the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions; the National Consumers League; the Women's Bureau of the U.S. Dept. of Labor; and the Women's Trade Union League.
Topics include: administrative matters within the ACWA; civil rights; descriptions and reminiscences of travel to Israel; labor legislation at the local and national levels; political campaigns and activities, chiefly through the Democratic Party; union organizing; women in the union; and worker education.
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
Routine committee documents; Executive Order 10980 Establishing the President's Commission on the Status of Women; Information Paper on Federal and State Laws Governing Employment of Women; letter welcoming Bessie Hillman to the commission from Eleanor Roosevelt (See also box 115, file folder 11, for other Eleanor Roosevelt correspondence;) biographical sketches of members of the Committee on Protective Legislation; minimum wage laws; article entitled "The Role of Protective Legislation" from Women Today: Trends and Issues by Dr. Caroline F. Wise; U.S. Department of Labor publications; drafts and final Report of the Committee on Protective Labor Legislation to the President's Commission on the Status of Women; advanced copy and final bound edition of American Women, the Report of the President's Commission on the Status of Women.
Repository Details
Part of the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives Repository