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1
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0041117851
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Labor, liberty, and the law: Trade unionism and the problem of the American constitutional order
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December
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Leon Fink, "Labor, Liberty, and the Law: Trade Unionism and the Problem of the American Constitutional Order," Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 907.
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(1987)
Journal of American History
, vol.74
, pp. 907
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Fink, L.1
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2
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0003489775
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New York: Cambridge University Press
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Christopher Tomlins, The Stale and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985). Although they appeared in book form only after Fink's essay, preliminary statements of the following works had already appeared as articles: William Forbath, Law and the Shaping of the Labor Movement (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991); Victoria Hattam, Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993); and Karen Orren, Belated Feudalism: Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
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(1985)
The Stale and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960
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Tomlins, C.1
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3
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0003953108
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Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press
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Christopher Tomlins, The Stale and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985). Although they appeared in book form only after Fink's essay, preliminary statements of the following works had already appeared as articles: William Forbath, Law and the Shaping of the Labor Movement (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991); Victoria Hattam, Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993); and Karen Orren, Belated Feudalism: Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
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(1991)
Law and the Shaping of the Labor Movement
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Forbath, W.1
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4
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0003914632
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Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press
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Christopher Tomlins, The Stale and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985). Although they appeared in book form only after Fink's essay, preliminary statements of the following works had already appeared as articles: William Forbath, Law and the Shaping of the Labor Movement (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991); Victoria Hattam, Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993); and Karen Orren, Belated Feudalism: Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
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(1993)
Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States
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Hattam, V.1
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5
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0003519624
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New York: Cambridge University Press
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Christopher Tomlins, The Stale and the Unions: Labor Relations, Law, and the Organized Labor Movement in America, 1880-1960 (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1985). Although they appeared in book form only after Fink's essay, preliminary statements of the following works had already appeared as articles: William Forbath, Law and the Shaping of the Labor Movement (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1991); Victoria Hattam, Labor Visions and State Power: The Origins of Business Unionism in the United States (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993); and Karen Orren, Belated Feudalism: Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
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(1991)
Belated Feudalism: Labor, the Law, and Liberal Development in the United States
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Orren, K.1
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9
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84963041652
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quotes at 2, fn. 3
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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Law
, pp. 7-8
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Forbath1
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10
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84985345721
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Courts, constitutions, and labor politics in England and America
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Winter esp. 19
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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(1991)
Law and Social Inquiry
, vol.16
, pp. 1-34
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Forbath1
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11
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84963041652
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Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, passim
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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(1994)
The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926
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Clark, T.1
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12
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84963041652
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passim
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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Belated Feudalism
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Orren1
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13
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84963041652
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Republicanism: The career of a concept
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June
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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(1992)
Journal of American History
, vol.79
, pp. 11-38
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Rodgers, D.1
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14
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84963041652
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Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press
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Forbath, Law, quotes at 2, fn. 3, 7-8; id. "Courts, Constitutions, and Labor Politics in England and America," Law and Social Inquiry 16 (Winter 1991): 1-34, esp. 19. Tomlins, Fink, and Hattam each claim that labor's encounters with the law contributed to the erosion of labor's "republican" ideology, but Forbath is the most explicit in arguing that these encounters led to labor's paradigmatic shift from a "republican" to a "liberal" ideology. This argument rests on the assumption that labor embraced a liberal language of the law because liberalism was the language of the courts. However in California, as I argue elsewhere, labor embraced a "liberal" language not because it was the language of the courts, but to strategically highlight what it considered to be the "ancient" and pre-liberal foundations of "judge-made law." Labor leaders in California would have agreed with Karen Orren's claim that, when it came to labor law, judges spoke not a liberal language, but a feudal language of master and servant law. Labor leaders in California could, and did, make both liberal-and republican-sounding arguments when highlighting judicial feudalism. See Thomas Clark, "The Limits of Liberty: Courts, Police, and Labor Unrest in California, 1890-1926" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1994), passim. A revised version of this dissertation, currently under review at University of California Press, addresses this issue more directly. On the persistence of feudalism in labor relations law, see Orren, Belated Feudalism, passim. On the problems with extending the "liberalism vs. republicanism" debate into the nineteenth century, see Daniel Rodgers, "Republicanism: The Career of a Concept" Journal of American History 79 (June 1992): 11-38. For background on the liberalism-republicanism debate see the several essays in Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992).
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(1992)
Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination
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Appleby, J.1
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16
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0009583838
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Arlington Heights: Harlan-Davidson
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Perhaps the surest indication of the influence of this recent attention to the law in American labor history is the extent to which it informs the standard surveys that we use in our classrooms. In the most recent edition of Industrialism and the American Worker, 1865-1920-a contribution to the popular Harlan-Davidson series - Melvyn Duboksy has added a section entitled "Labor Confronts the Law," which draws heavily on the work of Hattam and Forbath. Placing this section just before a discussion of the shift from the reform unionism of the Knights of Labor to the trade unionism of the AFL, Dubofsky links legal hostility to the turn-of-the-century transformation of the American labor movement. As Dubofsky concisely summarizes in the book's bibliographic essay, the recent works on labor and the law suggest "that a hostile judiciary and its antiunion rulings prompted the AFL and its affiliated unions to turn away from political actions, adopt 'voluntarism' as the ideology of trade unionism, and practice 'business unionism.'" Dubofsky, Industrialism and the American Worker, 3d. (Arlington Heights: Harlan-Davidson, 1996), 174.
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(1996)
Industrialism and the American Worker, 3d.
, pp. 174
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Dubofsky1
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18
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0041186810
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Sacramento
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California Bureau of Labor Statistics [hereafter CBLS], Biennial Repart[s], 1900-1912 (Sacramento, 1901-1913); on strike success rates through 1905, see esp. CBLS, Twelfth Biennial Report (1905-1906), 184-211; United States. Commissioner of Labor, Twenty First Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor: Strikes and Lockouts (Washington, D.C., 1907), passim.
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(1901)
Biennial Repart[s], 1900-1912
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19
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0040592669
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California Bureau of Labor Statistics [hereafter CBLS], Biennial Repart[s], 1900-1912 (Sacramento, 1901-1913); on strike success rates through 1905, see esp. CBLS, Twelfth Biennial Report (1905-1906), 184-211; United States. Commissioner of Labor, Twenty First Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor: Strikes and Lockouts (Washington, D.C., 1907), passim.
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Twelfth Biennial Report (1905-1906)
, pp. 184-211
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20
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0039407435
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Washington, D.C., passim
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California Bureau of Labor Statistics [hereafter CBLS], Biennial Repart[s], 1900-1912 (Sacramento, 1901-1913); on strike success rates through 1905, see esp. CBLS, Twelfth Biennial Report (1905-1906), 184-211; United States. Commissioner of Labor, Twenty First Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor: Strikes and Lockouts (Washington, D.C., 1907), passim.
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(1907)
Twenty First Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor: Strikes and Lockouts
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21
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A corner in labor: What's happening in San Francisco where labor holds undisputed sway
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February
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1904)
McClures Magazine
, vol.22
, pp. 366-378
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Baker, R.S.1
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22
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Los Angeles: A militant anti-union citadel
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1913)
Survey
, vol.29
, pp. 607-617
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Fitch, J.1
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23
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General Otis: The storm center of the unpacific coast
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January
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1912)
Current Literature
, vol.52
, pp. 35-38
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24
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Otistown of the open shop
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January
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1911)
Hampton 's Magazine
, vol.26
, pp. 29-44
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Palmer, F.1
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25
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0041186807
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1903)
Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention
, pp. 72-73
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Palmer, F.1
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26
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0039407433
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1904)
Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention
, pp. 107-108
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Palmer, F.1
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27
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0040592700
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1907)
Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention
, pp. 99
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Palmer, F.1
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28
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0041186805
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1908)
Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention
, pp. 98-99
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Palmer, F.1
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29
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0040592699
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hereafter, CFL Proceedings
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For two popular accounts, see Ray Stannard Baker, "A Corner in Labor: What's Happening in San Francisco Where Labor Holds Undisputed Sway," McClures Magazine 22 (February 1904): 366-78; John Fitch, "Los Angeles: A Militant Anti-Union Citadel," Survey 29 (1913): 607-17. See also, "General Otis: The Storm Center of the Unpacific Coast," Current Literature 52 (January 1912): 35-38; Frederick Palmer, "Otistown of the Open Shop," Hampton 's Magazine 26 (January 1911): 29-44. On the fear that the weakness of labor in Los Angeles threatened labor's strength elsewhere in California and the West, see American Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the . . . Annual Convention (1903), 72-73; id. (1904), 107-8; id., (1907), 99, 196, 321-22; id. (1908), 98-99; California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention [hereafter, CFL Proceedings] (1909), 15, 37.
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(1909)
Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Convention
, pp. 15
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30
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84968297805
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The 'great exception' revisited: Organized labor and politics in San Francisco and Los Angeles, 1870-1940
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August quote at 378 (original emphasis)
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Michael Kazin, "The 'Great Exception' Revisited: Organized Labor and Politics in San Francisco and Los Angeles, 1870-1940," Pacific Historical Review (August 1986): 371-402, quote at 378 (original emphasis).
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(1986)
Pacific Historical Review
, pp. 371-402
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Kazin, M.1
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31
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Kazin, The "'Great Exception' Revisited," 376. See also, Kazin, Barons of Labor: The San Francisco Building Trades and Union Power in the Progressive Era (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1987), on the urban political activism of San Francisco's powerful Building Trades unions.
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The "'Great Exception' Revisited,"
, pp. 376
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Kazin1
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33
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-
July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1901)
San Francisco Examiner
-
-
-
34
-
-
0041186814
-
-
July 24, 31, August 7
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
35
-
-
0039407434
-
-
August 10
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1901)
Organized Labor
-
-
-
36
-
-
0041186777
-
-
July 24, 30
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
37
-
-
0039999495
-
-
Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1977)
Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901
-
-
Tygiel, J.1
-
38
-
-
0041186769
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
(1960)
Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918
-
-
Knight, R.1
-
39
-
-
0041186811
-
-
San Francisco Examiner, July 15-19, 23-28, 30, August 1, 6, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 24, 31, August 7, 1901; Organized Labor, August 10, 1901; Chronicle, July 24, 30, 1901; Jules Tygiel, "Workingmen in San Francisco, 1870-1901" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1977); Robert Knight, Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960); Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 283-85.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 283-285
-
-
Clark1
-
40
-
-
0041186777
-
-
July 23-28
-
Chronicle, July 23-28, 1901; Examiner, July 23, 28-August 1, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 285-91.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
41
-
-
0041186797
-
-
July 23, 28-August 1
-
Chronicle, July 23-28, 1901; Examiner, July 23, 28-August 1, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 285-91.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
42
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Chronicle, July 23-28, 1901; Examiner, July 23, 28-August 1, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 285-91.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 285-291
-
-
Clark1
-
43
-
-
84882409182
-
-
July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
44
-
-
0038903364
-
-
August 4, 7, 9, 10
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
45
-
-
0040592666
-
-
August 12, 19, 26
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut
-
-
-
46
-
-
0039999517
-
-
August 1-3, 8
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
47
-
-
0038903364
-
-
August 8-10
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
48
-
-
84882409182
-
-
August 1
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
49
-
-
0040592697
-
-
August 7
-
On the "unusual calm" see all daily papers from August 2-15, 1901, but esp. Chronicle, July 31, August 3, 5, 9, 10, 12, 13, 15, 1901; Bulletin, August 4, 7, 9, 10, 1901. Even the conservative business weekly reported that violence was insignificant, Argonaut, August 12, 19, 26, 1901; on the "union patrols" see Call, August 1-3, 8, 1901; Bulletin, August 8-10, 1901; Chronicle, August 1, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
50
-
-
0041186806
-
-
August 7, 21
-
The Examiner printed labor's complaints on an almost daily basis throughout the strike; the most concise summary of these grievances appeared in the Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
51
-
-
0041186797
-
-
August 10
-
Examiner, August 10,1901; Chronicle, August 10, 1901; Call, August 10-11, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901; Argonaut, August 19, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
52
-
-
84882409182
-
-
August 10
-
Examiner, August 10,1901; Chronicle, August 10, 1901; Call, August 10-11, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901; Argonaut, August 19, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
53
-
-
0039999515
-
-
August 10-11
-
Examiner, August 10,1901; Chronicle, August 10, 1901; Call, August 10-11, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901; Argonaut, August 19, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
54
-
-
0038903364
-
-
August 14
-
Examiner, August 10,1901; Chronicle, August 10, 1901; Call, August 10-11, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901; Argonaut, August 19, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
55
-
-
0040592666
-
-
August 19
-
Examiner, August 10,1901; Chronicle, August 10, 1901; Call, August 10-11, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901; Argonaut, August 19, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut
-
-
-
56
-
-
0039407432
-
-
August 7, 21
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
57
-
-
0041186797
-
-
August 11-14
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
58
-
-
84882409182
-
-
August 14
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
59
-
-
0041186804
-
-
August 14-15
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
60
-
-
0040592666
-
-
August 12, 19
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut
-
-
-
61
-
-
0038903364
-
-
August 14
-
Coast Seamen's Journal, August 7, 21, 1901; Examiner, August 11-14, 1901; Chronicle, August 14, 1901; Call, August 14-15, 1901; Argonaut, August 12, 19, 1901; Bulletin, August 14, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
62
-
-
0041186797
-
-
August 15
-
Examiner, August 15, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 301-2. Rebecca Reed, "Private Employees/Public Badges: 'Additional Patrolman' in the Policing of Detroit" (unpublished paper presented to the Social Science History Association, 1986). On the fiscal conservatism of urban officials in San Francisco as elsewhere, see Terrence McDonald, The Parameters of Urban Fiscal Policy: Socioeconomic Change and Political Culture in San Francisco, 1860-1906 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), passim.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
63
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Examiner, August 15, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 301-2. Rebecca Reed, "Private Employees/Public Badges: 'Additional Patrolman' in the Policing of Detroit" (unpublished paper presented to the Social Science History Association, 1986). On the fiscal conservatism of urban officials in San Francisco as elsewhere, see Terrence McDonald, The Parameters of Urban Fiscal Policy: Socioeconomic Change and Political Culture in San Francisco, 1860-1906 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), passim.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 301-302
-
-
Clark1
-
64
-
-
0040592692
-
-
unpublished paper presented to the Social Science History Association
-
Examiner, August 15, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 301-2. Rebecca Reed, "Private Employees/Public Badges: 'Additional Patrolman' in the Policing of Detroit" (unpublished paper presented to the Social Science History Association, 1986). On the fiscal conservatism of urban officials in San Francisco as elsewhere, see Terrence McDonald, The Parameters of Urban Fiscal Policy: Socioeconomic Change and Political Culture in San Francisco, 1860-1906 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), passim.
-
(1986)
Private Employees/Public Badges: 'Additional Patrolman' in the Policing of Detroit
-
-
Reed, R.1
-
65
-
-
85162701100
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press, passim
-
Examiner, August 15, 1901; Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 301-2. Rebecca Reed, "Private Employees/Public Badges: 'Additional Patrolman' in the Policing of Detroit" (unpublished paper presented to the Social Science History Association, 1986). On the fiscal conservatism of urban officials in San Francisco as elsewhere, see Terrence McDonald, The Parameters of Urban Fiscal Policy: Socioeconomic Change and Political Culture in San Francisco, 1860-1906 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), passim.
-
(1987)
The Parameters of Urban Fiscal Policy: Socioeconomic Change and Political Culture in San Francisco, 1860-1906
-
-
McDonald, T.1
-
66
-
-
0040592662
-
-
sect. 4, ch. 3, art. VIII, in San Francisco Charters File, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley
-
"Charter of the City and County of San Francisco" (1898), sect. 4, ch. 3, art. VIII, in San Francisco Charters File, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Examiner, August 12, 15, 1901.
-
(1898)
Charter of the City and County of San Francisco
-
-
-
67
-
-
0041186797
-
-
August 12, 15
-
"Charter of the City and County of San Francisco" (1898), sect. 4, ch. 3, art. VIII, in San Francisco Charters File, Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Examiner, August 12, 15, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
68
-
-
84970770177
-
-
On Board of Supervisors hearings and actions, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 313-20; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 21, 28, September 18, 1901; Examiner, August 20-27, September 4-12, 1901; Chronicle, August 23, September 12-13, 1901; Argonaut, August 26, September 9, 16, 1901.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 313-320
-
-
-
69
-
-
0039999501
-
-
August 21, 28, September 18
-
On Board of Supervisors hearings and actions, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 313-20; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 21, 28, September 18, 1901; Examiner, August 20-27, September 4-12, 1901; Chronicle, August 23, September 12-13, 1901; Argonaut, August 26, September 9, 16, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
70
-
-
0041186797
-
-
August 20-27, September 4-12
-
On Board of Supervisors hearings and actions, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 313-20; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 21, 28, September 18, 1901; Examiner, August 20-27, September 4-12, 1901; Chronicle, August 23, September 12-13, 1901; Argonaut, August 26, September 9, 16, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
71
-
-
84882409182
-
-
August 23, September 12-13
-
On Board of Supervisors hearings and actions, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 313-20; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 21, 28, September 18, 1901; Examiner, August 20-27, September 4-12, 1901; Chronicle, August 23, September 12-13, 1901; Argonaut, August 26, September 9, 16, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
72
-
-
0040592666
-
-
August 26, September 9, 16
-
On Board of Supervisors hearings and actions, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 313-20; Coast Seamen's Journal, August 21, 28, September 18, 1901; Examiner, August 20-27, September 4-12, 1901; Chronicle, August 23, September 12-13, 1901; Argonaut, August 26, September 9, 16, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut
-
-
-
73
-
-
0041186797
-
-
July 7, August 7, 28, September 26, October 2
-
Examiner, July 7, August 7, 28, September 26, October 2, 1901; Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
74
-
-
0040592694
-
-
September 4, 6
-
Examiner, July 7, August 7, 28, September 26, October 2, 1901; Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
75
-
-
0041186777
-
-
July 27
-
Examiner, July 7, August 7, 28, September 26, October 2, 1901; Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
76
-
-
0039999513
-
-
July 31, October 30
-
Examiner, July 7, August 7, 28, September 26, October 2, 1901; Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen 's Journal
-
-
-
77
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 323-329
-
-
Clark1
-
78
-
-
0041186777
-
-
September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
79
-
-
0040592666
-
-
September 9, 16, 30
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut
-
-
-
80
-
-
0039999504
-
-
September 18
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
81
-
-
0041186777
-
-
September 21, 25-28
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
82
-
-
0041186801
-
-
September 30
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 323-29; Chronicle, September 2, 11, 14, 15, 17-21, 1901; Argonaut, September 9, 16, 30, 1901. Around mid-September some businessmen talked of starting a vigilante committee if Phelan did not step up policing or call upon the state militia. See Call, September 18, 1901; Chronicle, September 21, 25-28, 1901. However, not all businessmen thought this a good idea; see the Argonaut 's opposition, September 30, 1901.
-
(1901)
Argonaut 's Opposition
-
-
-
83
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 314f.; Walton Bean, Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions (Berkeley: University of California, 1952), 20. On the Union Labor Party platform, see Examiner, September 8, 1901. On urban reform politics in San Francisco see Robert Cherny and William Issel, San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development (Berkeley: University of California, 1986), chap. 6; George Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951), chap. 2.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 314
-
-
Clark1
-
84
-
-
0003704068
-
-
Berkeley: University of California
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 314f.; Walton Bean, Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions (Berkeley: University of California, 1952), 20. On the Union Labor Party platform, see Examiner, September 8, 1901. On urban reform politics in San Francisco see Robert Cherny and William Issel, San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development (Berkeley: University of California, 1986), chap. 6; George Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951), chap. 2.
-
(1952)
Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions
, pp. 20
-
-
Bean, W.1
-
85
-
-
0041186797
-
-
September 8
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 314f.; Walton Bean, Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions (Berkeley: University of California, 1952), 20. On the Union Labor Party platform, see Examiner, September 8, 1901. On urban reform politics in San Francisco see Robert Cherny and William Issel, San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development (Berkeley: University of California, 1986), chap. 6; George Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951), chap. 2.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
86
-
-
0004081498
-
-
Berkeley: University of California, chap. 6
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 314f.; Walton Bean, Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions (Berkeley: University of California, 1952), 20. On the Union Labor Party platform, see Examiner, September 8, 1901. On urban reform politics in San Francisco see Robert Cherny and William Issel, San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development (Berkeley: University of California, 1986), chap. 6; George Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951), chap. 2.
-
(1986)
San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development
-
-
Cherny, R.1
Issel, W.2
-
87
-
-
85179299346
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press, chap. 2
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 314f.; Walton Bean, Boss Reuf's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecutions (Berkeley: University of California, 1952), 20. On the Union Labor Party platform, see Examiner, September 8, 1901. On urban reform politics in San Francisco see Robert Cherny and William Issel, San Francisco, 1895-1932: Power, Politics, and Urban Development (Berkeley: University of California, 1986), chap. 6; George Mowry, The California Progressives (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1951), chap. 2.
-
(1951)
The California Progressives
-
-
Mowry, G.1
-
88
-
-
0041186797
-
-
July 2, 15
-
Examiner, July 2, 15, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 10, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
89
-
-
0041186803
-
-
July 10
-
Examiner, July 2, 15, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 10, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen 's Journal
-
-
-
90
-
-
0038903364
-
-
October 18
-
Examiner, July 2, 15, 1901; Coast Seamen 's Journal, July 10, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
91
-
-
0041186797
-
-
July 28, August 12, 18, 21, September 4
-
Examiner, July 28, August 12, 18, 21, September 4, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
92
-
-
0039999503
-
-
September 4, 6
-
Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Examiner, July 7, 27, August 7, 15, 28, September 26, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901.
-
(1901)
Call
-
-
-
93
-
-
0041186797
-
-
July 7, 27, August 7, 15, 28, September 26
-
Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Examiner, July 7, 27, August 7, 15, 28, September 26, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
94
-
-
0041186778
-
-
July 31, October 30
-
Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Examiner, July 7, 27, August 7, 15, 28, September 26, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Seamen's Journal
-
-
-
95
-
-
0041186777
-
-
July 27
-
Call, September 4, 6, 1901; Examiner, July 7, 27, August 7, 15, 28, September 26, 1901; Coast Seamen's Journal, July 31, October 30, 1901; Chronicle, July 27, 1901.
-
(1901)
Chronicle
-
-
-
97
-
-
0039999502
-
-
October 30
-
Ibid., October 30, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901; Examiner, October 28-29, 1901.
-
(1901)
Coast Stamen's Journal
-
-
-
98
-
-
0038903364
-
-
October 18
-
Ibid., October 30, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901; Examiner, October 28-29, 1901.
-
(1901)
Bulletin
-
-
-
99
-
-
0041186797
-
-
October 28-29
-
Ibid., October 30, 1901; Bulletin, October 18, 1901; Examiner, October 28-29, 1901.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
100
-
-
0041186796
-
-
On the close relationship between Phelan and the BTC's McCarthy, see Kazin, Barons of Labor, 36-45; Issel, "Class and Ethnic Conflict in San Francisco Politics: The 1898 Charter Reform," Labor History 18 (Summer 1977): 341-59.
-
Barons of Labor
, pp. 36-45
-
-
Kazin1
-
101
-
-
0041186771
-
Class and ethnic conflict in San Francisco politics: The 1898 charter reform
-
Summer
-
On the close relationship between Phelan and the BTC's McCarthy, see Kazin, Barons of Labor, 36-45; Issel, "Class and Ethnic Conflict in San Francisco Politics: The 1898 Charter Reform," Labor History 18 (Summer 1977): 341-59.
-
(1977)
Labor History
, vol.18
, pp. 341-359
-
-
Issel1
-
102
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 349-51; Tygiel, "Workingmen," 369, table 7.1; id, "'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway': A Reappraisal of San Francisco's Union Labor Party," California History 62 (September 1983), 207.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 349-351
-
-
Clark1
-
103
-
-
0041186794
-
-
table 7.1
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 349-51; Tygiel, "Workingmen," 369, table 7.1; id, "'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway': A Reappraisal of San Francisco's Union Labor Party," California History 62 (September 1983), 207.
-
Workingmen
, pp. 369
-
-
Tygiel1
-
104
-
-
84968283755
-
'Where unionism holds undisputed sway': A reappraisal of San Francisco's union labor party
-
September
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 349-51; Tygiel, "Workingmen," 369, table 7.1; id, "'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway': A Reappraisal of San Francisco's Union Labor Party," California History 62 (September 1983), 207.
-
(1983)
California History
, vol.62
, pp. 207
-
-
Tygiel1
-
105
-
-
0040592688
-
-
Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA
-
Steven Erie, "The Development of Class and Ethnic Politics in San Francisco, 1870-1910: A Critique of the Pluralist Interpretation" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1975), 213; Tygiel, "'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway,'" 207.
-
(1975)
The Development of Class and Ethnic Politics in San Francisco, 1870-1910: A Critique of the Pluralist Interpretation
, pp. 213
-
-
Erie, S.1
-
106
-
-
0039407429
-
-
Steven Erie, "The Development of Class and Ethnic Politics in San Francisco, 1870-1910: A Critique of the Pluralist Interpretation" (Ph.D. dissertation, UCLA, 1975), 213; Tygiel, "'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway,'" 207.
-
Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway
, pp. 207
-
-
Tygiel1
-
107
-
-
84968118615
-
-
October 13
-
Examiner, October 13, 1901; Organized Labor, November 9, 1901; Argonaut November 11, 1901. Schmilz 's conservatism, and the later charges of corruption, have prompted many historians to see the ULP as a party of opportunists, rather than a genuine working-class or labor party. However, Jules Tygiel argues that whatever the merits of the ULP record and its leadership, most trade unionists and working-class voters saw the ULP as a party that served labor and working-class interests, and they voted accordingly. See Tygiel, " 'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway ,'" passim. The polarized voting behavior that Tygiel found in the ULP period (1901-1911) continued into the Progressive era. See Thomas Clark, "Labor and Progressivism 'South of the Slot': The Voting Behavior of the San Francisco Working Class, 1912-1916," California History 66 (September 1987); 197-207,214-16. On the restraint shown by subsequent mayoral administrations in San Francisco, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," chaps. 6-7, passim.
-
(1901)
Examiner
-
-
-
108
-
-
84968118615
-
-
November 9
-
Examiner, October 13, 1901; Organized Labor, November 9, 1901; Argonaut November 11, 1901. Schmilz 's conservatism, and the later charges of corruption, have prompted many historians to see the ULP as a party of opportunists, rather than a genuine working-class or labor party. However, Jules Tygiel argues that whatever the merits of the ULP record and its leadership, most trade unionists and working-class voters saw the ULP as a party that served labor and working-class interests, and they voted accordingly. See Tygiel, " 'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway ,'" passim. The polarized voting behavior that Tygiel found in the ULP period (1901-1911) continued into the Progressive era. See Thomas Clark, "Labor and Progressivism 'South of the Slot': The Voting Behavior of the San Francisco Working Class, 1912-1916," California History 66 (September 1987); 197-207,214-16. On the restraint shown by subsequent mayoral administrations in San Francisco, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," chaps. 6-7, passim.
-
(1901)
Organized Labor
-
-
-
109
-
-
84968118615
-
-
Examiner, October 13, 1901; Organized Labor, November 9, 1901; Argonaut November 11, 1901. Schmilz 's conservatism, and the later charges of corruption, have prompted many historians to see the ULP as a party of opportunists, rather than a genuine working-class or labor party. However, Jules Tygiel argues that whatever the merits of the ULP record and its leadership, most trade unionists and working-class voters saw the ULP as a party that served labor and working-class interests, and they voted accordingly. See Tygiel, " 'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway ,'" passim. The polarized voting behavior that Tygiel found in the ULP period (1901-1911) continued into the Progressive era. See Thomas Clark, "Labor and Progressivism 'South of the Slot': The Voting Behavior of the San Francisco Working Class, 1912-1916," California History 66 (September 1987); 197-207,214-16. On the restraint shown by subsequent mayoral administrations in San Francisco, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," chaps. 6-7, passim.
-
Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway
-
-
Tygiel1
-
110
-
-
84968118615
-
Labor and progressivism 'south of the slot': The voting behavior of the San Francisco working class, 1912-1916
-
September
-
Examiner, October 13, 1901; Organized Labor, November 9, 1901; Argonaut November 11, 1901. Schmilz 's conservatism, and the later charges of corruption, have prompted many historians to see the ULP as a party of opportunists, rather than a genuine working-class or labor party. However, Jules Tygiel argues that whatever the merits of the ULP record and its leadership, most trade unionists and working-class voters saw the ULP as a party that served labor and working-class interests, and they voted accordingly. See Tygiel, " 'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway ,'" passim. The polarized voting behavior that Tygiel found in the ULP period (1901-1911) continued into the Progressive era. See Thomas Clark, "Labor and Progressivism 'South of the Slot': The Voting Behavior of the San Francisco Working Class, 1912-1916," California History 66 (September 1987); 197-207,214-16. On the restraint shown by subsequent mayoral administrations in San Francisco, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," chaps. 6-7, passim.
-
(1987)
California History
, vol.66
, pp. 197-207
-
-
Clark, T.1
-
111
-
-
84968118615
-
-
chaps. 6-7, passim
-
Examiner, October 13, 1901; Organized Labor, November 9, 1901; Argonaut November 11, 1901. Schmilz 's conservatism, and the later charges of corruption, have prompted many historians to see the ULP as a party of opportunists, rather than a genuine working-class or labor party. However, Jules Tygiel argues that whatever the merits of the ULP record and its leadership, most trade unionists and working-class voters saw the ULP as a party that served labor and working-class interests, and they voted accordingly. See Tygiel, " 'Where Unionism Holds Undisputed Sway ,'" passim. The polarized voting behavior that Tygiel found in the ULP period (1901-1911) continued into the Progressive era. See Thomas Clark, "Labor and Progressivism 'South of the Slot': The Voting Behavior of the San Francisco Working Class, 1912-1916," California History 66 (September 1987); 197-207,214-16. On the restraint shown by subsequent mayoral administrations in San Francisco, see Clark, "Limits of Liberty," chaps. 6-7, passim.
-
Limits of Liberty
-
-
Clark1
-
112
-
-
84970770177
-
-
I discuss the policing of strikes in Los Angeles before 1910 at greater length in "Limits of Liberty," 389-420. Zeehandelaar quote in "Testimony of F.J. Zeehandelaar," United States Commission on Industrial Relations [hereafter USCIR], Final Report and Testimony, 6: 5496-98. See also Grace Stimson, The Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California, 1955), for a general overview of Los Angeles labor during these years.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 389-420
-
-
-
113
-
-
0039407428
-
"Testimony of F.J. Zeehandelaar," United States commission on industrial relations
-
hereafter USCIR
-
I discuss the policing of strikes in Los Angeles before 1910 at greater length in "Limits of Liberty," 389-420. Zeehandelaar quote in "Testimony of F.J. Zeehandelaar," United States Commission on Industrial Relations [hereafter USCIR], Final Report and Testimony, 6: 5496-98. See also Grace Stimson, The Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California, 1955), for a general overview of Los Angeles labor during these years.
-
Final Report and Testimony
, vol.6
, pp. 5496-5498
-
-
Zeehandelaar1
-
114
-
-
85180789701
-
-
Berkeley: University of California
-
I discuss the policing of strikes in Los Angeles before 1910 at greater length in "Limits of Liberty," 389-420. Zeehandelaar quote in "Testimony of F.J. Zeehandelaar," United States Commission on Industrial Relations [hereafter USCIR], Final Report and Testimony, 6: 5496-98. See also Grace Stimson, The Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California, 1955), for a general overview of Los Angeles labor during these years.
-
(1955)
The Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles
-
-
Stimson, G.1
-
115
-
-
0039999509
-
-
chap. 2
-
On labor and reform in California, see George Mowry, The California Progressives, chap. 2; Spencer Olin, California's Prodigal Sons: Hiram Johnson and the Progressives, 1910-1917 (Berkeley: University of California, 1968);
-
The California Progressives
-
-
Mowry, G.1
-
118
-
-
0039407424
-
Progressivism and the California electorate
-
September
-
Michael Rogin, "Progressivism and the California Electorate," Journal of American History 55 (September 1968): 297-314;
-
(1968)
Journal of American History
, vol.55
, pp. 297-314
-
-
Rogin, M.1
-
119
-
-
0040592665
-
The California progressives: Labor's point of view
-
Winter
-
Mary Ann Mason Burki, "The California Progressives: Labor's Point of View," Labor History 17 (Winter 1976): 24-37;
-
(1976)
Labor History
, vol.17
, pp. 24-37
-
-
Burki, M.A.M.1
-
121
-
-
0041186772
-
Progressive reform in Los Angeles, 1901-1913
-
Spring
-
On the reform movement in Los Angeles see Martin Schiesl, "Progressive Reform in Los Angeles, 1901-1913," California Historical Quarterly 54 (Spring 1975): 37-56. On labor and Alexander, see Citizen, March 5, December 3, 1909; Times, December 9, 1909. See also, Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1955), 323-25.
-
(1975)
California Historical Quarterly
, vol.54
, pp. 37-56
-
-
Schiesl, M.1
-
122
-
-
0041186780
-
-
March 5, December 3
-
On the reform movement in Los Angeles see Martin Schiesl, "Progressive Reform in Los Angeles, 1901-1913," California Historical Quarterly 54 (Spring 1975): 37-56. On labor and Alexander, see Citizen, March 5, December 3, 1909; Times, December 9, 1909. See also, Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1955), 323-25.
-
(1909)
Citizen
-
-
-
123
-
-
0039407383
-
-
December 9
-
On the reform movement in Los Angeles see Martin Schiesl,
-
(1909)
Times
-
-
-
124
-
-
85180789701
-
-
Berkeley: University of California Press
-
On the reform movement in Los Angeles see Martin Schiesl, "Progressive Reform in Los Angeles, 1901-1913," California Historical Quarterly 54 (Spring 1975): 37-56. On labor and Alexander, see Citizen, March 5, December 3, 1909; Times, December 9, 1909. See also, Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1955), 323-25.
-
(1955)
Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles
, pp. 323-325
-
-
Stimson1
-
125
-
-
0041186811
-
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 455-58; Citizen, June 3, 10, 17, August 12, 1910. On the role of San Francisco unions see General Campaign Strike Committee [GCSC], Final Report, 5, in "Los Angeles File," San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Times, June 2-5, 18, 1910; Citizen, June 24, 1910.
-
Limits of Liberty
, pp. 455-458
-
-
Clark1
-
126
-
-
0039999510
-
-
June 3, 10, 17, August 12
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 455-58; Citizen, June 3, 10, 17, August 12, 1910. On the role of San Francisco unions see General Campaign Strike Committee [GCSC], Final Report, 5, in "Los Angeles File," San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Times, June 2-5, 18, 1910; Citizen, June 24, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
127
-
-
0041186786
-
-
San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 455-58; Citizen, June 3, 10, 17, August 12, 1910. On the role of San Francisco unions see General Campaign Strike Committee [GCSC], Final Report, 5, in "Los Angeles File," San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Times, June 2-5, 18, 1910; Citizen, June 24, 1910.
-
Los Angeles File
-
-
-
128
-
-
0041186761
-
-
June 2-5, 18
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 455-58; Citizen, June 3, 10, 17, August 12, 1910. On the role of San Francisco unions see General Campaign Strike Committee [GCSC], Final Report, 5, in "Los Angeles File," San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Times, June 2-5, 18, 1910; Citizen, June 24, 1910.
-
(1910)
Times
-
-
-
129
-
-
0039407427
-
-
June 24
-
Clark, "Limits of Liberty," 455-58; Citizen, June 3, 10, 17, August 12, 1910. On the role of San Francisco unions see General Campaign Strike Committee [GCSC], Final Report, 5, in "Los Angeles File," San Francisco Labor Council Records [SFLC Records], Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley. See also Times, June 2-5, 18, 1910; Citizen, June 24, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
130
-
-
0040592683
-
-
Baker Iron Works v. Metal Trades Council et al., Case No. 75559, and Lewellyn v. Metal Trades Council, Case No. 75647, Los Angeles County Archives, Los Angeles Superior Court Building; Citizen, June 24, July 1, 1910
-
Baker Iron Works v. Metal Trades Council et al., Case No. 75559, and Lewellyn v. Metal Trades Council, Case No. 75647, Los Angeles County Archives, Los Angeles Superior Court Building; Citizen, June 24, July 1, 1910. On Harriman's role, see "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, Final Report, 6:5796-98; Citizen, June 24, July 8, 1910. Harriman lists on six injunctions, omitting the Baker injunction. In addition, he claims that the injunctions were dismissed on various dates in August, 1910; this, however, is either an error on his part or a typographical error in the USCIR reports, for according to the casefiles in the County Archives, the Baker and Lewellyn injunctions were not formally ended until 1912.
-
-
-
-
131
-
-
0040592672
-
Testimony of job Harriman
-
Baker Iron Works v. Metal Trades Council et al., Case No. 75559, and Lewellyn v. Metal Trades Council, Case No. 75647, Los Angeles County Archives, Los Angeles Superior Court Building; Citizen, June 24, July 1, 1910. On Harriman's role, see "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, Final Report, 6:5796-98; Citizen, June 24, July 8, 1910. Harriman lists on six injunctions, omitting the Baker injunction. In addition, he claims that the injunctions were dismissed on various dates in August, 1910; this, however, is either an error on his part or a typographical error in the USCIR reports, for according to the casefiles in the County Archives, the Baker and Lewellyn injunctions were not formally ended until 1912.
-
USCIR, Final Report
, vol.6
, pp. 5796-5798
-
-
-
132
-
-
0040592675
-
-
June 24, July 8
-
Baker Iron Works v. Metal Trades Council et al., Case No. 75559, and Lewellyn v. Metal Trades Council, Case No. 75647, Los Angeles County Archives, Los Angeles Superior Court Building; Citizen, June 24, July 1, 1910. On Harriman's role, see "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, Final Report, 6:5796-98; Citizen, June 24, July 8, 1910. Harriman lists on six injunctions, omitting the Baker injunction. In addition, he claims that the injunctions were dismissed on various dates in August, 1910; this, however, is either an error on his part or a typographical error in the USCIR reports, for according to the casefiles in the County Archives, the Baker and Lewellyn injunctions were not formally ended until 1912.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
133
-
-
0040592690
-
Testimony of job Harriman
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5796-99; Citizen, June 3-July 8, 1907, June 24, 1910.
-
USCIR
, vol.6
, pp. 5796-5799
-
-
-
134
-
-
0039407417
-
-
June 3-July 8, 1907, June 24
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5796-99; Citizen, June 3-July 8, 1907, June 24, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
135
-
-
0039999479
-
-
July 2
-
Times, July 2, 1910; Citizen, July 1, 8, 1910. Text of ordinance reproduced in "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5799.
-
(1910)
Times
-
-
-
136
-
-
0039407413
-
-
July 1, 8
-
Times, July 2, 1910; Citizen, July 1, 8, 1910. Text of ordinance reproduced in "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5799.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
137
-
-
0040592672
-
Testimony of job Harriman
-
Times, July 2, 1910; Citizen, July 1, 8, 1910. Text of ordinance reproduced in "Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5799.
-
USCIR
, vol.6
, pp. 5799
-
-
-
138
-
-
0040592672
-
Testimony of job Harriman
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman" USCIR, 6:5795-800; Citizen, July 8, 22, 1910.
-
USCIR
, vol.6
, pp. 5795-5800
-
-
-
139
-
-
0040592682
-
-
July 8, 22
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman" USCIR, 6:5795-800; Citizen, July 8, 22, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
140
-
-
0040592672
-
Testimony of job Harriman
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5797-802; GCSC, Final Report, 4-5; Citizen, April 14, 21, 1911.
-
USCIR
, vol.6
, pp. 5797-5802
-
-
-
141
-
-
0041186793
-
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5797-802; GCSC, Final Report, 4-5; Citizen, April 14, 21, 1911.
-
GCSC, Final Report
, pp. 4-5
-
-
-
142
-
-
0040592687
-
-
April 14, 21
-
"Testimony of Job Harriman," USCIR, 6:5797-802; GCSC, Final Report, 4-5; Citizen, April 14, 21, 1911.
-
(1911)
Citizen
-
-
-
143
-
-
0039407414
-
-
July 1, 8, 15
-
Citizen, July 1, 8, 15, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
144
-
-
0040592679
-
-
July 1
-
Ibid., July 1, 1910.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
145
-
-
0039999508
-
-
August 5
-
Ibid., August 5, 1910; Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles, 346-47.
-
(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
147
-
-
0039407399
-
-
July 2, 6-8, 15-18
-
Times, July 2, 6-8, 15-18, 1910; see also, Citizen, August 5, 1910, for labor's rebuttal to the Times charge that the strike had been caused by "outside agitators." On the tendency of judicial language to equate labor's form of economic and moral pressure with physical forms of coercion, intimidation, and violence, see Diane Avery, "Images of Violence in Labor Jurisprudence: The Regulation of Picketing and Boycotts, 1894-1921," Buffalo Law Review 37 (Winter 1988/89): 1-117.
-
(1910)
Times
-
-
-
148
-
-
0040592676
-
-
Times, July 2, 6-8, 15-18, 1910; see also, Citizen, August 5, 1910, for labor's rebuttal to the Times charge that the strike had been caused by "outside agitators." On the tendency of judicial language to equate labor's form of economic and moral pressure with physical forms of coercion, intimidation, and violence, see Diane Avery, "Images of Violence in Labor Jurisprudence: The Regulation of Picketing and Boycotts, 1894-1921," Buffalo Law Review 37 (Winter 1988/89): 1-117.
-
(1910)
Citizen, August 5
-
-
-
149
-
-
0040592660
-
Images of violence in labor jurisprudence: The regulation of picketing and boycotts, 1894-1921
-
Winter
-
Times, July 2, 6-8, 15-18, 1910; see also, Citizen, August 5, 1910, for labor's rebuttal to the Times charge that the strike had been caused by "outside agitators." On the tendency of judicial language to equate labor's form of economic and moral pressure with physical forms of coercion, intimidation, and violence, see Diane Avery, "Images of Violence in Labor Jurisprudence: The Regulation of Picketing and Boycotts, 1894-1921," Buffalo Law Review 37 (Winter 1988/89): 1-117.
-
(1988)
Buffalo Law Review
, vol.37
, pp. 1-117
-
-
Avery, D.1
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150
-
-
0041186784
-
-
Grave's letter to Times reprinted in Citizen, August 19, 1910.
-
Times
-
-
Grave1
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151
-
-
0040592686
-
-
reprinted in August 19
-
Grave's letter to Times reprinted in Citizen, August 19, 1910.
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(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
152
-
-
0041186792
-
-
June 3, 17, 24, July 1, 8, 22, 29, August 12, 19, 26-September 23
-
The debate could be followed in the Los Angeles labor press throughout the strike, but see especially Citizen, June 3, 17, 24, July 1, 8, 22, 29, August 12, 19, 26-September 23, 1910. Quote from "Report of the Executive Council," California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Annual Convention [hereafter CFL Proceedings], 1910, 53-54.
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(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
153
-
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0040592667
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"Report of the executive council," California federation of labor
-
hereafter CFL Proceedings
-
The debate could be followed in the Los Angeles labor press throughout the strike, but see especially Citizen, June 3, 17, 24, July 1, 8, 22, 29, August 12, 19, 26-September 23, 1910. Quote from "Report of the Executive Council," California Federation of Labor, Proceedings of the Annual Convention [hereafter CFL Proceedings], 1910, 53-54.
-
(1910)
Proceedings of the Annual Convention
, pp. 53-54
-
-
-
154
-
-
0039999507
-
-
July 22, September 23
-
Citizen, July 22, September 23, 1910.
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(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
155
-
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0041186782
-
-
April 22
-
Ibid., April 22, 1910.
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(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
157
-
-
0040592677
-
-
CFL Proceedings, 1910, 14f.; Citizen, September 23, October 7, 14, 1910; Times, January 1, 1912.
-
(1910)
CFL Proceedings
, pp. 14
-
-
-
158
-
-
0040592674
-
-
September 23, October 7, 14
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CFL Proceedings, 1910, 14f.; Citizen, September 23, October 7, 14, 1910; Times, January 1, 1912.
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(1910)
Citizen
-
-
-
159
-
-
0039407385
-
-
January 1
-
CFL Proceedings, 1910, 14f.; Citizen, September 23, October 7, 14, 1910; Times, January 1, 1912.
-
(1912)
Times
-
-
-
160
-
-
0041186775
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Report of the vice president for district no. 1
-
"Report of the Vice President for District No. 1," CFL Proceedings, 1911, 59.
-
(1911)
CFL Proceedings
, pp. 59
-
-
-
162
-
-
0039999505
-
"President's report," and "report of the committee on reports of officers
-
Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles, 364; see also, "President's Report," and "Report of the Committee on Reports of Officers," in CFL Proceedings, 1911.
-
(1911)
CFL Proceedings
-
-
-
163
-
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0003413393
-
-
New York: Oxford
-
For the traditional view that the McNamara confessions cost Harriman the election, see Paul Starr, Inventing the Dream: California Through the Progressive Era (New York: Oxford, 1985), 269; Bean, California, 287; Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles, 400-6 and chap. 21, passim.
-
(1985)
Inventing the Dream: California Through the Progressive Era
, pp. 269
-
-
Starr, P.1
-
164
-
-
84887698576
-
-
For the traditional view that the McNamara confessions cost Harriman the election, see Paul Starr, Inventing the Dream: California Through the Progressive Era (New York: Oxford, 1985), 269; Bean, California, 287; Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles, 400-6 and chap. 21, passim.
-
California
, pp. 287
-
-
Bean1
-
165
-
-
0041186790
-
-
and chap. 21, passim
-
For the traditional view that the McNamara confessions cost Harriman the election, see Paul Starr, Inventing the Dream: California Through the Progressive Era (New York: Oxford, 1985), 269; Bean, California, 287; Stimson, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles, 400-6 and chap. 21, passim.
-
Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles
, pp. 400-406
-
-
Stimson1
-
166
-
-
0040592651
-
-
October 24, November 27, with November 1
-
On the Times shift from strongly opposing Alexander and the Good Government League in 1909 to strongly supporting them in 1911, compare the Times, October 24, November 27, 1909, with November 1, 1911.
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(1909)
Times
-
-
-
167
-
-
0039407422
-
-
December 8
-
See also Citizen, December 8, 1911;
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(1911)
Citizen
-
-
-
170
-
-
0039407420
-
The fall of job Harriman's socialist party: Violence, gender, and politics in Los Angeles, 1911
-
Spring
-
On the claim that women voters contributed to Harriman's defeat, see James Kraft, "The Fall of Job Harriman's Socialist Party: Violence, Gender, and Politics in Los Angeles, 1911," Southern California Quarterly (Spring 1988): 50; Citizen, December 8, 1911.
-
(1988)
Southern California Quarterly
, pp. 50
-
-
-
171
-
-
0041186788
-
-
December 8
-
On the claim that women voters contributed to Harriman's defeat, see James Kraft, "The Fall of Job Harriman's Socialist Party: Violence, Gender, and Politics in Los Angeles, 1911," Southern California Quarterly (Spring 1988): 50; Citizen, December 8, 1911.
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(1911)
Citizen
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-
-
172
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84937901299
-
-
Forbath, Law, 7-8, 128-35, 171. Forbath recognizes that liberal legal discourse was "plural and open-textured enough [to justify] broad based collective action . . . and even defiance of courts" (171). But he still believes that republicanism provided a more radical critique and a more likely vehicle of social transformation.
-
Law
, pp. 7-8
-
-
Forbath1
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173
-
-
0040592661
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Labor law as ideology: Toward a new historiography of collective bargaining law
-
Fall
-
See, for example, Karl Klare, "Labor Law as Ideology: Toward a New Historiography of Collective Bargaining Law," Industrial Relations Law Journal 4 (Fall 1981): 450-482; and Raymond Holger, "Labor History and Critical Labor Law," Labor History 30 (Spring 1989): 165-192. For a critique of Dawley's view of politics, see Bruce Laurie, Artisan into Worker: Labor in Nineteenth Century America (New York: Noonday Press, 1989), 8f.
-
(1981)
Industrial Relations Law Journal
, vol.4
, pp. 450-482
-
-
Klare, K.1
-
174
-
-
0039999488
-
Labor history and critical labor law
-
Spring
-
See, for example, Karl Klare, "Labor Law as Ideology: Toward a New Historiography of Collective Bargaining Law," Industrial Relations Law Journal 4 (Fall 1981): 450-482; and Raymond Holger, "Labor History and Critical Labor Law," Labor History 30 (Spring 1989): 165-192. For a critique of Dawley's view of politics, see Bruce Laurie, Artisan into Worker: Labor in Nineteenth Century America (New York: Noonday Press, 1989), 8f.
-
(1989)
Labor History
, vol.30
, pp. 165-192
-
-
Holger, R.1
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175
-
-
0040592680
-
-
New York: Noonday Press
-
See, for example, Karl Klare, "Labor Law as Ideology: Toward a New Historiography of Collective Bargaining Law," Industrial Relations Law Journal 4 (Fall 1981): 450-482; and Raymond Holger, "Labor History and Critical Labor Law," Labor History 30 (Spring 1989): 165-192. For a critique of Dawley's view of politics, see Bruce Laurie, Artisan into Worker: Labor in Nineteenth Century America (New York: Noonday Press, 1989), 8f.
-
(1989)
Artisan into Worker: Labor in Nineteenth Century America
, pp. 8
-
-
Laurie, B.1
-
176
-
-
0041186789
-
-
December
-
On the power of "rights consciousness" in a variety of political and social movements, see the several essays in a special edition of Journal of American History 74 (December 1987) commemorating the bicentennial of the Constitution. As David Thelan and Hendrik Hartog note in their respective introductory and concluding essays, the several articles showed that the appeal to rights could have both "limiting and emancipatory consequences." David Thelan, "Introduction," Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 797; Hendrik Hartog, "The Constitution of Aspiration and the 'Rights that Belong to all of Us,'" Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 1013-34.
-
(1987)
Journal of American History
, vol.74
-
-
-
177
-
-
0039999496
-
Introduction
-
December
-
On the power of "rights consciousness" in a variety of political and social movements, see the several essays in a special edition of Journal of American History 74 (December 1987) commemorating the bicentennial of the Constitution. As David Thelan and Hendrik Hartog note in their respective introductory and concluding essays, the several articles showed that the appeal to rights could have both "limiting and emancipatory consequences." David Thelan, "Introduction," Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 797; Hendrik Hartog, "The Constitution of Aspiration and the 'Rights that Belong to all of Us,'" Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 1013-34.
-
(1987)
Journal of American History
, vol.74
, pp. 797
-
-
Thelan, D.1
-
178
-
-
79957395843
-
The constitution of aspiration and the 'rights that belong to all of us
-
December
-
On the power of "rights consciousness" in a variety of political and social movements, see the several essays in a special edition of Journal of American History 74 (December 1987) commemorating the bicentennial of the Constitution. As David Thelan and Hendrik Hartog note in their respective introductory and concluding essays, the several articles showed that the appeal to rights could have both "limiting and emancipatory consequences." David Thelan, "Introduction," Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 797; Hendrik Hartog, "The Constitution of Aspiration and the 'Rights that Belong to all of Us,'" Journal of American History 74 (December 1987): 1013-34.
-
(1987)
Journal of American History
, vol.74
, pp. 1013-1034
-
-
Hartog, H.1
-
179
-
-
84928838076
-
Urban working class political behavior and theories of American electoral politics, 1870-1940
-
March
-
Richard Oestreicher, "Urban Working Class Political Behavior and Theories of American Electoral Politics, 1870-1940," Journal of American History 74 (March 1988): 1257-86. This essay does not try to explain labor's failure to sustain these episodic political challenges; however, a number of historians have pointed to the widespread obstacles to labor-based, independent political action. The most convincing studies stress the institutional constraints of the American party system and its tendency to mobilize voters along ethnic and regional lines; the timing of suffrage relative to economic development; and the fragmented nature of the American state. In addition to Oestreicher's essay, see Kirn Voss, "Disposition is Not Action: The Rise and Demise of the Knights of Labor," Studies in American Political Development 6 (Fall 1992); and the essays by Amy Bridges, Martin Shefter, and Ira Katznelson, in Working Class Formation: Nineteenth Century Patterns in Western Europe and the United States, ed. Katznelson and Zolberg (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1986).
-
(1988)
Journal of American History
, vol.74
, pp. 1257-1286
-
-
Oestreicher, R.1
-
180
-
-
0040592678
-
Disposition is not action: The rise and demise of the knights of labor
-
Fall
-
Richard Oestreicher, "Urban Working Class Political Behavior and Theories of American Electoral Politics, 1870-1940," Journal of American History 74 (March 1988): 1257-86. This essay does not try to explain labor's failure to sustain these episodic political challenges; however, a number of historians have pointed to the widespread obstacles to labor-based, independent political action. The most convincing studies stress the institutional constraints of the American party system and its tendency to mobilize voters along ethnic and regional lines; the timing of suffrage relative to economic development; and the fragmented nature of the American state. In addition to Oestreicher's essay, see Kirn Voss, "Disposition is Not Action: The Rise and Demise of the Knights of Labor," Studies in American Political Development 6 (Fall 1992); and the essays by Amy Bridges, Martin Shefter, and Ira Katznelson, in Working Class Formation: Nineteenth Century Patterns in Western Europe and the United States, ed. Katznelson and Zolberg (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1986).
-
(1992)
Studies in American Political Development
, vol.6
-
-
Voss, K.1
-
181
-
-
0041186787
-
-
ed. Katznelson and Zolberg Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press
-
Richard Oestreicher, "Urban Working Class Political Behavior and Theories of American Electoral Politics, 1870-1940," Journal of American History 74 (March 1988): 1257-86. This essay does not try to explain labor's failure to sustain these episodic political challenges; however, a number of historians have pointed to the widespread obstacles to labor-based, independent political action. The most convincing studies stress the institutional constraints of the American party system and its tendency to mobilize voters along ethnic and regional lines; the timing of suffrage relative to economic development; and the fragmented nature of the American state. In addition to Oestreicher's essay, see Kirn Voss, "Disposition is Not Action: The Rise and Demise of the Knights of Labor," Studies in American Political Development 6 (Fall 1992); and the essays by Amy Bridges, Martin Shefter, and Ira Katznelson, in Working Class Formation: Nineteenth Century Patterns in Western Europe and the United States, ed. Katznelson and Zolberg (Princeton, N.J., Princeton University Press, 1986).
-
(1986)
Working Class Formation: Nineteenth Century Patterns in Western Europe and the United States
-
-
Bridges, A.1
Shefter, M.2
Katznelson, I.3
-
182
-
-
0002088162
-
'The strike at the ballot box': The American federation of labor's entrance into election politics, 1906-1909
-
Spring
-
Julia Greene, "'The Strike at the Ballot Box': The American Federation of Labor's Entrance into Election Politics, 1906-1909" Labor History 32 (Spring 1991): 165-92.
-
(1991)
Labor History
, vol.32
, pp. 165-192
-
-
Greene, J.1
-
183
-
-
0039407419
-
-
The different political responses to legal hostility supports Greene's observation that "state and local leaders pursued a different political agenda than did their national counterparts." She adds that "the differing political approaches . . . often created . . . tensions at the heart of the AFL political program." Greene, "'Strike at the Ballot Box,'" 190-91.
-
Strike at the Ballot Box
, pp. 190-191
-
-
Greene1
|