1 / 23

Please:

Please:. -Be Seated and ready to start -Open Unipacs to Page 20 - Turn off all electronic devices. Thanks!!!!!!. Strikes. The workers protest for a voice during the Industrial Revolution. What is a strike?. Protest by workers. Workers refuse to work until their requests/demands are met.

kory
Download Presentation

Please:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Please: -Be Seated and ready to start -Open Unipacs to Page 20 - Turn off all electronic devices. Thanks!!!!!!

  2. Strikes The workers protest for a voice during the Industrial Revolution.

  3. What is a strike? • Protest by workers. • Workers refuse to work until their requests/demands are met. • Result could be to slow down, stop working, or walk off of the job.

  4. Why Go On Strike? • Poor working conditions. • Workers want “8 , 8 , 8” • “8 hour day 10 hours pay” • There was a need for higher wages. • Workers were not allowed to organize.

  5. Famous Strikes • The Railroad Strike of 1877 • Haymarket Riot of 1886 • The Homestead Strike of 1892 • The Pullman Strike of 1894

  6. Green Bay Packer Fan Strike of 2008

  7. Railroad Strike of 1877 Causes: • U.S. still recovering from 1873 Depression. • Railroad owners cut workers wages. • Workers let loose with pent-up frustration across the country.

  8. Railroad Strike of 1877 (cont.) Actions Taken: • President Rutherford B. Hayes calls in Federal Troops to take control and open up Railroads. • Railroads re-open with soldiers help after several months of destruction.

  9. Great Railroad Strike of 1877 Results: • Over 100+ people killed across the country. • The city of Chicago had been shut down. • Anarchistunions get a “black eye” in terms of public reaction.

  10. Haymarket Riot – 1886 Causes: • Workers at the McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. in Chicago protest for an 8 hour work day – Go on strike May 1st. • May 3rd protest between strikers and temporary hires (Scabs) turns violent. • The Chicago Police kill several Strikers trying to restore order.

  11. Haymarket Riot of 1886 Actions Taken: • Organizers (Knights of Labor) call for a rally to keep the peace – May 3rd. • May 4th 3,000 workers show up in the evening to hear protest speeches. • The police showed up to control the crowd. • A bomb exploded in the ranks of the police killing seven.

  12. Haymarket Riot - 1886 Results: • American Public is outraged. • Union membership across the country drops drastically. • Several Union leaders are put on trial and hanged for inciting the crowd.

  13. Dedicated plaque in Chicagofor the Haymarket Riot

  14. The Homestead Strike of 1892 Carnegie Steel Company in Homestead, PA. Causes: • Plant manager (Henry Clay Frick) refused to renegotiate a new union contract. • Frick cut wages and refused to deal with the union. (Carnegie agrees and backs Frick) • By late June 1892 workers call for a STRIKE!

  15. Homestead Strike gets ugly! Actions Taken: • Frick tries to “lockout” the Strikers – hires “scabs”. • Pinkertonsare hired by Frick to protect “scabs”. • Pinkertons – mill workers clash – July 6, 1892.

  16. Battle for the Homestead Mill – July 6, 1892

  17. Homestead Strike gets ugly! Actions Taken: • Frick tries to “lockout” the Strikers. • Pinkertonsare hired by Frick to protect “scabs”. • Pinkertons – mill workers clash – July 6, 1892. • Pennsylvania Governor calls in State Militia to restore order.

  18. Homestead Strike fades away……. Results: • Workers wages had dropped from an average of $2.25 to $1.89 per day average. • It would be 45 years before a Union would receive another contract in a Carnegie Steel Mill.

  19. The Pullman Strike of 1894 Causes: • George Pullman – Company Town. • A recession in 1893 caused Pullman to lay-off workers and cut the wages. • When the recession was over he re-hired workers, but at the reduced wage 25-40% less. • When Pullman listened to the grievances of several workers they were fired. • Workers go on strike!!!A.R.U. –Eugene Debs

  20. What happens next……. Actions Taken: • Rail workers refused to touch or hook-up Pullman cars to others. • Railroad owners get an injunction. • All U.S. Mail cars must be attached to Pullman Cars.

  21. Pullman Strike Results: - Workers return for lower wages. - Negative reaction by most people in the U.S. towards UNIONS!!!!!!

  22. So what do we know about The Strikes of the Industrial Revolution? • Most strikes were very unsuccessful. • The American public in general did not like or trust the “Anarchist Unions”. • Strikes were often violent and did not create a positive result for the workers. • The economy suffered when major strikes occurred.

  23. Thank You!

More Related