• In Honor of Flint Sit Down Strike Victory 2-11-1937

    From ronda hauben@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 11 19:44:47 2022
    XPost: alt.amateur-comp, alt.society.labor-unions, sci.econ
    XPost: soc.culture.usa

    https://sci.econ.narkive.com/UrFJG5IA/in-celebration-of-
    feb-11-1937

    Note:
    This was posted on Usenet several years ago
    Today is Feb 11, 2022
    It is the 85th Birthday of the Flint Sit Down Strike
    I am reposting this post from the sci.econ.narkive.com
    Ronda

    sci.econ
    In Celebration of Feb 11, 1937

    Ronda Hauben16 years ago
    Permalink
    [Note: In honor of Feb 11, 1937, I want to repost
    something I originally
    posted a year ago.]

    The month of February is a special month for the pioneers
    of industrial
    unions in the UAW. It was on February 11, 1937 that the
    Flint sit down
    strikers marched out of the factories that they had
    occupied. They had
    won an important victory. The auto company, General
    Motors, recognized
    the workers right to organize a union. In honor of this
    victory February
    11 is celebrated as White Shirt Day, the day that workers
    wear white
    shirts.

    In honor of this important anniversary in the UAW, here
    are some urls
    that point to articles that describe the hard efforts both
    before,
    during and after the Flint Sit down Strike to organize the
    UAW.

    1) LEST WE FORGET: IN TRIBUTE TO THE PIONEERS
    OF THE GREAT FLINT SIT-DOWN STRIKE


    Remember when the `Sit Down' came?
    And all the papers laid the claim
    Against each Union Member's name?
    "SUBVERSIVE!"
    from the poem "Subversive"
    by Floyd Hoke-Miller*


    http://www.ais.org/~jrh/searchlight/lest.we.forget.txt


    2) IN CELEBRATION: A PAST TO REMEMBER, A FUTURE TO MOLD
    THE 50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FLINT SIT-DOWN STRIKE
    by Michael Hauben

    The conditions in the auto factories were so awful that
    workers
    had been trying to organize for many years. For example,
    the
    speed of the assembly line was inhuman; if a worker wanted
    to
    complain to the foreman, he would be shown the long line
    of unemployed
    people outside of the plant and told if he didn't like the
    conditions
    anyone out there would gladly replace him. The worker
    would be fired
    if there was any indication he was involved in union
    activities. The
    workers almost sruck against General Motores in 1934.

    http://www.ais.org/~ronda/new.papers/michael/flint.txt


    3) THE STORY OF THE SEARCHLIGHT: The Voice of the
    Chevrolet Worker


    If the Labor press does not try to give
    Labor the whole truth, where will
    Labor get it? This, of course, raises
    the question: Who is right about
    Labor's destiny? Certainly we can't
    rely on the capitalist press to tell
    us, for it is obvious that their
    interest is the opposite of Labor's
    interest. But who, from the ranks of
    Labor? Let them all speak -- that's
    what Free Speech was intended for! Let
    them all present their view in a forum.
    From that the reader will have a fair
    chance to decide.

    from the column, "Only More
    Democracy Can Save Democracy," The
    Searchlight, Oct. 29, 1949.


    http://www.ais.org/~jrh/searchlight/sl.1.txt http://www.ais.org/~jrh/searchlight/sl.2.txt http://www.ais.org/~jrh/searchlight/sl.3.txt http://www.ais.org/~jrh/searchlight/sl.4.txt

    There is also a printed version of this which included
    wonderful
    cartoons by the UAW cartoonist Doc Wilson.


    Ronda

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)