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Papers of the President's Mediation Commission on Microfilm

 Collection
Identifier: 5751 mf

Scope and Contents

Included are all of the Commission's records housed in the National Archives; these are, however, incomplete and officially described as fragmentary. This collection consists mainly of testimony of witnesses before the Commission in hearings held in Globe, Clifton, and Bisbee, Arizona and in Salt Lake City, Utah. Also included are reports, correspondence, and other general materials of the Commission.

Witnesses include representatives of various trades as well as local businessmen, mine operators, and citizens' groups, notably the Loyalty League and the Citizens' Protective League. The testimony includes discussions of labor relations and strikes, primarily involving western mining companies, the Bisbee, Arizona deportation of IWW members, longshoremen, lumbering, farm labor, and railroads, as well as legislation and union relations with law enforcement agencies.

Dates

  • 1917-1919

Language of Materials

Collection material in English

Conditions Governing Access

Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference archivist for access to these materials.

Conditions Governing Use

This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.

Biographical / Historical

The President's Mediation Commission represented a partial federal response to two vital aspects of wartime labor policy: 1) the spreading wave of strikes which interfered with the production of goods deemed vital to the war effort, and 2) the growth of labor radicalism associated with the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), which precipitated widespread state and local repression of labor's rights and murderous vigilantism. Samuel Gompers, the president of the AFL, feared both the growth of the IWW and the ensuing vigilantism, which threatened AFL unions. Gompers desired a federal policy that would simultaneously curb the IWW and protect "legitimate" trade unions. As vigilantism against labor spread throughout the American West in July-August 1917, Gompers used his influence in Washington to urge the appointment of a special presidential commission to investigate labor-capital relations. In August, William B. Wilson, the secretary of labor, began to urge the same policy on President Wilson. The secretary desired a commission that would effectively mediate the substantive issues causing labor discontent and would also eliminate the IWW. To cloak his proposed commission's true purposes, which included the destruction of the IWW, W.B. Wilson suggestd that it investigate labor disputes unrelated to IWW strikes. On August 31, he recommended to the president a five-person commission to consist of the following members: J.L. Spangler, a Pennsylvania Dutch coal mine operator with a reputation for dealing fairly with the United Mine Workers (UMW); Verner Z. Reed, a Colorado enrepreneur and liberal Roman Catholic; John H. Wlaker, a former UMW official and then president of the Illinois State Federation of Labor; E.P. Marsh, a conservative AFL unionist and president of the Washington State Federation of Labor; and William B. Wilson as the chair. More important than any of the five suggested commission members was the person Wilson selected as his secretary, Felix Frankfurter.



Officially appointed by President Wilson on September 19, 1917, the President's Mediation Commission operated on the basis of guidelines set by Frankfurter. Those guidelines recommended the promotion of AFL-style trade unionism, the elimination of subversvie IWW locals, and the encouragement of industrial democracy. The Commission began its formal investigations and hearings in the Arizona copper mining districts on October 6, 1917. Its members later traveled to the Butte, Montana, copper district; the forest district of the Pacific Northwest; San Francisco, where they investigated a dispute affecting telephone operators; and Chicago, where they studied labor discontentment in the packinghouses. In January, 1918, the Commission presented its findings and recommendations to the president, which largely followed the original Frankfurter guidelines and which were subsequently published as a special bulletin by the Department of Labor.

Extent

0.33 cubic feet

Abstract

Included are all of the Commission's records housed in the National Archives; these are, however, incomplete and officially described as fragmentary. This collection consists mainly of testimony of witnesses before the Commission in hearings held in Globe, Clifton, and Bisbee, Arizona and in Salt Lake City, Utah. Also included are reports, correspondence, and other general materials of the Commission.

Arrangement

Series Sessions at Globe, Arizona, 1914

Sub-Series Introduction, 1915 Sub-Series Witnesses Appearing before the Commission on behalf of Striking Miners, 1917 Sub-Series Witnesses Appearing before the Commission on behalf of Men Working during the Strike, 1917 Sub-Series Witnesses Appearing before the Commission on behalf of Different Crafts' Union, 1917 Sub-Series Mine Managers' Presentation, 1917 Sub-Series Committee Representing Businessmen of Globe, Arizona, 1917 Sub-Series Committee Representing Businessmen of Globe, not Members of the Loyalty League, 1917

Series Sessions at Clifton, Arizona, 1917

Sub-Series Introduction, 1917 Sub-Series Miners' Representatives, 1917 Sub-Series Mine Managers and Representatives, 1917 Sub-Series Shift Bosses, 1917 Sub-Series Citizens, 1917 Sub-Series Railroad Employees, 1917

Series Sessions at Bisbee, Arizona, 1917

Sub-Series Introduction, 1917 Sub-Series Witnesses Appearing before the Commission, 1917 Sub-Series Committee from Warren District Commercial Club and Citizens Protective League, 1917

Series Sessions at Bisbee, Arizona (continued), 1917

Sub-Series Witness Appearing before the Commission, 1917 Sub-Series Mine Managers' Statements, 1917 Sub-Series Employees' Committee of Copper Queen Consolidated Mining Company, 1917 Sub-Series Witness Appearing before the Commission, 1917 Sub-Series Mine Managers' Statements, 1917

Series Sessions at Salt Lake City, Utah, 1918

Sub-Series Introduction, 1918 Sub-Series State Industrial Commission of Utah Testimony, 1918 Sub-Series Testimony of Labor Representatives, 1918 Sub-Series Correspondence and General Materials, 1917-1918

Quantity:

3 microfilm reels

Forms of Material:

Microfilm, records (documents) .

General

Contact Information:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives Martin P. Catherwood Library 227 Ives Hall Cornell University Ithaca, NY 14853 (607) 255-3183 kheel_center@cornell.edu http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel-center
Compiled by:
Kheel Staff, September 26, 2012
EAD encoding:
Kheel Staff, April 02, 2019
Title
Papers of the President's Mediation Commission on Microfilm
Status
Completed
Author
Compiled by Kheel Staff
Date
April 02, 2019
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Revision Statements

  • 02/23/2024: This resource was modified by the ArchivesSpace Preprocessor developed by the Harvard Library (https://github.com/harvard-library/archivesspace-preprocessor)

Repository Details

Part of the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives Repository

Contact:
227 Ives Hall
Ithaca NY 14853