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Labor Unions

Submitted by AegnorMoonarrow on April 5, 2007

Category: American History
Words: 811 | Pages: 4
Views: 190
Popularity Rank: 42,554
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Following the Reconstruction, America was moved into a time period known as the “Guilded Age.” This age was known for the changes and advances made by the people within the country, and so much that even the presidents during this time period were known as the ‘no-name’ presidents. Laissez-faire was the primary philosophy for Americans in 1875-1990; little government involvement in people’s affairs, which included labor. Labor unions were amateur during this time, unorganized, and thrown together in the hopes of reaching for something more. Working conditions following the civil war had been terrible, wages were low, and technology and advanced machinery was getting rid of the need for workers in agriculture, creating a lot of unemployment. In order to try and fight back against this, workers began to form legally recognized groups of representatives within their positions; unions. Unions were established because people began to realize that if they stood together as a whole and demanded higher wages and better working conditions, they could for the most part receive them. However, between 1875-1990, they were amateur, most of the times exclusive, had brief life spans, and were sort of merely experimental for workers. That is why labor unions only had mild success during this time period for the workers, but laid down the stepping stones for the greater, more successful unions to come, and were therefore entirely important.
In the beginning of the formation of unions there was much more failure than success. Because corporations and big, blooming businesses during this time period possessed dominance in American society, it was intimidating at first to stand up against them. And the government, even from the very beginning, saw unions as violent nuisances. Strikes were often suppressed by troops and then the single most powerful weapon of unions would become disabled, but some of them stood together and just got stronger, giving unions some...

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