L2 organized labor

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Transcript of L2 organized labor

• Pretend you are a child laborer working in a factory in 1905. Write a description of what you SEE, SMELL, HEAR, TOUCH and FEEL as you work.

Hello! Today is 11/14/13

What we’re going to do today

Agenda– Warm Up– Investigation: Working Conditions – Labor vs. The Company – Closure: What would you do?

By the end of class, you will be able to describe the working conditions in factories during Industrialization and explain how workers organized to fight for reform.

By the end of class, you will be able to describe the working conditions in factories during Industrialization and explain how workers organized to fight for reform.

Homework & Announcements

* Take out your agenda!

. . . to think like a historian.

What were working conditions like during

Industrialization?

What were working conditions like during

Industrialization?

During Industrialization, working in a factory. . . During Industrialization, working in a factory. . .

Name: Period:

SCHNIDER – U.S. History II

Thinking like a HistorianWhat were working conditions like during Industrialization?

Source A: Taping Coils, Westinghouse Works (Video)

B: Steel Worker in Mill as molten steel spills from vat (Image)

C: The Bitter Cry of Children by John Spargo (Text)

What evidence do you see or read that will help you answer the historical question?

What can we learn from this image: What were working conditions like during Industrialization?

During Industrialization, working in a factory. . .

During Industrialization, working in a factory. .

During Industrialization, working in a factory. .

A: Taping Coils, Westinghouse Works (Video)

B: Steel Worker in

Mill as molten steel spills from

vat (Image)

C: The Bitter Cry of

Children by John

Spargo (Text & Images)

Labor vs. The Company

THE COMPANY• What they wanted:

• How they fought for it

LABOR• What they wanted:

• How they fought for it: VS. VS.

Name: Period:

SCHNIDER – U.S. History IILabor Reform

Unions: A group of workers that unite to fight for better working

conditions and pay

Unions: A group of workers that unite to fight for better working

conditions and pay

Labor: How did they fight?VS. VS.

Example: American Federation of Labor

Strike: When workers refuse to work (stop working) as a form of

protest

Strike: When workers refuse to work (stop working) as a form of

protest

Labor: How did they fight?VS. VS.

Labor: How did they fight?

Union LabelUnion Label

Boycott: asking consumers not to buy goods from a

business that is mistreating workers

Boycott: asking consumers not to buy goods from a

business that is mistreating workers

VS. VS.

Labor: How did they fight?

Picketing: marching outside a company's property to stop

others from entering

Picketing: marching outside a company's property to stop

others from entering

VS. VS.

Lock Out: when a company stops work (which means no

pay for the workers); an employer-forced strike

Lock Out: when a company stops work (which means no

pay for the workers); an employer-forced strike

The Company: How did they fight?VS. VS.

Strikebreakers: people who work during a strike, called

“scabs” by the union

Strikebreakers: people who work during a strike, called

“scabs” by the union

The Company: How did they fight?VS. VS.

• strikebreakers Private police: officers hired by the company to enforce

company rules

Private police: officers hired by the company to enforce

company rules

The Company: How did they fight?VS. VS.

Example: Homestead Strike of 1892

• Background– Working conditions– Carnegie & Frick

• How did it end?

• If you were working in a factory or mine in the late 1800s, would you join a union? Why or why not?

What would you do?What would you do?