Scope and Contents
The collection consists of records and files for the locals, districts, and departments within Pennsylvania. There is executive board material for the various locals including rosters and tally sheets, as well as meeting minutes. Also available is general local material such as correspondence, notes and memos, newsletters and publications, and finances. Another aspect of the collection illustrates the activities of the locals with information on events and dinners, charity balls, anniversary dinners, dances, plays and revues that were put on by drama departments, and material from the ILGWU chorus from Local 295 and the Wyoming Valley District.
There are clippings and articles of local interest. Well documented is the Leslie Fay Company, a large employer and manufacturer in the Wilkes-Barre area. Included are sewing manuals for pattern pieces, and detailed instructions for linings, facings, piping, zippers, joining pieces, adding darts, pleats, gussets, and piece rates. Also available and of importance is all the correspondence, meeting memos and clippings from the 1990s when the Leslie Fay Company decided to move operations out of the country, effecting 2,000 jobs, the 1994 strike, and the subsequent union campaign to get the company to stay.
Another component of the collection is the files of Lois Hartel, district manager of the Hazleton-Wyoming District. Aside from correspondence and union business, there are oversize posters of voting machine instructions for the primary on April 10, 1984, of which Lois Hartel was a candidate for delegate for the Democratic National Convention from the 11th Congressional District.
Over time, many of the locals merged to form districts, and ones that are represented in the collection include: Local 249 Wilkes-Barre; Local 295 Pittston; Local 327 Nanticoke; Wyoming Valley District-249, 295 &327; Central Pennsylvania District 108; Local 196; Local 170; Easton District; Hazleton District (225 Hazleton, PA and 575 Berwick, PA); Local 351; the Northeast, Western Pennsylvania and Ohio Department; Shamokin-Sunbury District; Reading-Pottstown District; Scranton-Shamokin-Sunbury-Pottsville District; Wilkes-Barre Locals 327-295-249.
Dates
- 1951-1999
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 International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union was once one of the largest labor unions in the United States founded in 1900 by local union delegates representing about 2,000 members in cities in the northeastern United States. It was one of the first U.S. Unions to have a membership consisting of mostly females, and it played a key role in the labor history of the 1920s and 1930s. The union is generally referred to as the "ILGWU" or the "ILG". The ILGWU grew in geographical scope, membership size, and political influence to become one of the most powerful forces in American organized labor by mid-century. Representing workers in the women's garment industry, the ILGWU worked to improve working and living conditions of its members through collective bargaining agreements, training programs, health care facilities, cooperative housing, educational opportunities, and other efforts. The ILGWU merged with the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union in 1995 to form the Union of Needle trades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE). UNITE merged with the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union (HERE) in 2004 to create a new union known as UNITE HERE. The two unions that formed UNITE in 1995 represented only 250,000 workers between them, down from the ILGWU's peak membership of 450,000 in 1969.
Biographical / Historical
The ILGWU's extensive work to organize garment workers in Pennsylvania (outside of Philadelphia) resulted in the formation of several district councils throughout the state and especially in central Pennsylvania.
Beginning in 1957 as the Central and Western Pennsylvania District, the Central Pennsylvania District was an affiliate within the ILGWU's Northeast Region. With the affiliate into two and renamed the Central Pennsylvania District and the Western Pennsylvania District by 1962, Central Pennsylvania District Council included four local unions (108, 170, 196, and 197) until 1987. From 1988 until the ILGWU's merger with ACTWU in 1995, the affiliate was reorganized as the Central and Western Pennsylvania and Reading District Council. During this period, the council included as many as eight local unions (98, 108, 170, 196, 197, 217, 424, and 445).
Throughout its existence, the Central Pennsylvania District Council worked closely with other affiliates in the Northeast Department, including local unions in Easton, Hazleton, Reading, Scranton, Shamokin, Sunbury, Pottstown, and Pottsville. By the 1960s, the ILGWU had established district councils in Scranton and Easton. In the 1970s, additional local unions were organized into the Shamokin-Sunbury District Council (185, 306), Hazleton District Council (225, 575), and the Wyoming Valley District Council (249, 327).
With the decline of manufacturing in the region in the 1980s and 1990s, these affiliates began to merge. The year 1986 saw the creation of the Shamokin-Sunbury-Pottsville District Council, and in 1990, the Scranton District Council was included in this affiliate. After 1988, the Hazleton and Wyoming Valley District merged.
Extent
2.94 cubic feet
Abstract
Contains files on several local unions, district councils, and district departments in Pennsylvania. Especially well-documented are the organizing efforts of Northeastern Pennsylvania's Stakeholder Alliance and the 1994 strike of Leslie Fay in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Records relating to the ILGWU chorus may be found in the files on local union 295 and the Wyoming Valley District. Also contains meeting minutes of local union 295, local 249 and 327, and the Hazleton District Council.
Quantity:
2.9 linear ft.
Forms of Material:
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, May 17, 2011
- EAD encoding:
- Kheel Staff, April 16, 2019
- Title
- ILGWU Pennsylvania Records
- Status
- Completed
- Author
- Compiled by Kheel Staff
- Date
- April 16, 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
227 Ives Hall
Ithaca NY 14853