Labor unions -- United States -- Officials and employees
Found in 6 Collections and/or Records:
American Federation of Labor Records, Part 2 on Microfilm
Documents in extensive detail the emergence of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in the 1930s and subsequent competition and cooperation between the CIO and American Federation of Labor (AFL) through the close of that decade, until the early 1950s.
CIO Files of John L. Lewis, Pt. II: CIO General Files on Microfilm
This collection documents the origins and early history of the CIO as well as the dynamics of working-class militancy in the era of the Great Depression. The collection also provides a substantial amount of information concerning workers and trade unionism before the creation of the CIO and also after the UMWA's separation from the CIO in 1942.
Inter-University Labor Education Committee Records
This accession consists generally of correspondence between the executive secretaries of the Inter-University Labor Education Committee (IULEC) and the staff of the participating universities, the Fund for Adult Education, and various labor unions; and reports and documents generated by the university projects and the administration of IULEC.
Local 1199 Oral History Project
The unedited oral history interviews of the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees discuss the evolution of the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union drugstore local (known as Local 1199 and District 1199), representing pharmacists and drug clerks in New York City, into an international union of professional and non-professional workers in voluntary and non-profit health institutions, including hospitals, clinics and nursing homes, as well as drug stores.
Samuel Gompers Project on Microfilm
This collection is a combination of two collections: 5632 A - titled - American Federation of Labor Records : The Samuel Gompers Era, 1877-1937, consisting of 144 microfilm reels and 5632 B - titled - The American Federation of Labor and the Unions: National & International Union Records From The Samuel Gompers Era and this consists of 5 microfilm reels.
William Green Papers on Microfilm
Correspondents of note include Mother Jones, George Meany, Matthew Woll, Daniel Tobin, President Woodrow Wilson, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and officers of the United Mine Workers of America.