-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.utexas.edu/ftp/student/subtex/.web/Groups/crossborder/historybib.ht
ml

<A
HREF="http://www.utexas.edu/ftp/student/subtex/.web/Groups/crossborder/history
bib.html">Labor History Timeline
</A>
-----
A Labor History Timeline


This list comes from Labornet

Labor History Chronology
1636  Maine Indentured Servants' and Fishermen's Mutiny

1648  Boston Coopers and Shoemakers form guilds

1661  Virginia Indentured Servants' Plot

1663  Maryland Indentured Servants' Strike

1675  Boston Ship Carpenters' Protest

1676  Bacon's Rebellion in Virginia

1677  New York City Carters' Strike

1684  New York City Carters' Strike

1741  New York City Bakers' Strike

1768  Florida Indentured Servants' Revolt

      New York City Tailor's Strike

1770  Boston Massacre

1774  Hibernia, New Jersey, Ironworks Strike

1778  Journeymen printers in New York combine to increase their wages

1786  Shay's Rebellion in western Massachussettes

1791  Philadelphia carpenters carry out the first strike in the building
      trades

1792  Philadelphia shoemakers form the first local union organized for
      collective bargaining

1794  Federal Society of Journeymen Cordwainers formed in Philadelphia

      Whiskey Rebellion in western Pennsylvania

1800   Gabriel Prosser leads a slave revolt in Virginia

1805   A journeymen cordwainers' union in New York City includes a
       closed-shop clause in its constitution

1806   Philadelphia showmakers found guilty of criminal conspiracy after
       striking for higher wages

1819    Depression begins

1822    Denmark Vesey leads a slave rebellion in South Carolina

1824    Pawtucket, Rhode Island, Textile Strike

1825    The United Tailoresses of New York, a trade union organization for
        women, organized in New York City.

1827    The Mechanics Union of Trade Associations, made up of skilled
        craftsmen in different trades, formed in Philadelphia - first city
        central federation.

        Philadelphia Carpenters' Strike

1828    Depression begins

        The Workingmen's Party formed in Philadelphia

        Paterson, New Jersey, Textile Strike

1829    The Workingmen's Party of New York formed

        Carpenter Ebenezer Ford becomes the first trade unionist elected to
        public office in New York

1831    New England Association of Farmers, Mechanics and other
        Workingmen formed

        Nat Turner leads a slave rebellion in Virginia

        Lynn, Massachusetts, Shoebinders' Protest

1832    Boston Ship Carpenters' Ten Hour Strike

1833    Lynn, Massachusetts, Shoebinders' Protest begins.

        Manayunk, Pennsylvania, Textile Strike

        New York City Carpenters' Strike

1834    National Trades Union, first attempt at a national labor federation,

        formed in New York

        Lowell, Massachusetts, Mill Women's Strike

        Manayunk, Pennsylvania, Textile Strike

1835    Ten-Hour Movement among skilled workers

1835    Paterson, New Jersey, Textile Strike.

1836    National Cooperative Association of Cordwainers, the first national
        union of a specific craft, formed in New York City

        Lowell, Massachusetts, Mill Women's Strike

        New York City Tailors' Strike

        Philadelphia Bookbinders' Strike

1837    Depression begins

1840    President Martin Van Buren establishes the ten-hour day for
        employees on federal public works projects.

1842    Massachusetts Supreme Court, in Commonwealth v. Hunt, rules that
        labor unions, as such, are not illegal conspiracies.

        Anthracite Coal Strike

1844    Lowell Female Labor Reform Association formed

1847    New Hampshire passes first state law fixing ten hours as the legal
        workday

1848   Pennsylvania's child labor law makes twelve the minimum age for
       workers in commercial occupations

1850   New York City Tailors' Strike

1852   Typographical Union founded - first national union of workers to
       endure to present day

1855   Eugene V. Debs , US labor leader, is born

1859   Iron Molders' International Union founded

1860   New England Shoemakers' Strike

1861   Civil War Begins

       American Miners' Association , the first national coal miners' union
       is formed in St. Louis, Mo.

1862   Congress Passes the Homestead Act

1863   Emancipation Proclamation frees the slaves

       Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers founded

1864   Cigar Makers' Union founded

1865   Sixteenth Amendment ratified, abolishing slavery in the United
       States

1866   National Labor Union founded - an attempt at creating a national
       federation of unions

       Molders' Lockout

1867  Knights of St. Crispin founded - a union of factory workers in the
      shoe industry

1868  First federal eight-hour law passed - applied only to laborers,
      workmen, and mechanics employed by the government

      Anthracite Coal Strike

1869  Colored National Labor Union founded

      Knights of Labor organized in Philadelphia

      Troy, New York, Collar Laundresses' Strike

1870  First written contract between coal operators and coal miners signed

1872  National Labor Reform Party formed

1873  Depression begins

      Miners' National Association formed

1874  Tompkins Square Riot in New York City

1875  Conviction of Molly Maguires for anthracite coalfield murders -
      twenty are eventually hanged

      Anthracite Coal Strike

1876  Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers founded

      Workingmen's Party founded - first Marxist party in the United
      States. Later becomes Socialist Labor Party

      Greenback Party formed

1877  Federal and state troops are called out to crush the first nationwide
      strike in US history when railroad workers walk off their jobs


      Cigarmakers' Strike

      San Francisco Anti-Chinese Riots

      Members of the militant Molly Maguires, a rank and file anthracite
      coal miners' organization, are hanged after being framed by a
      Pinkerton spy

1878  Socialist Labor Party founded

1878  Greenback Labor Party organized

      International Labor Union founded

1879  Miners in Springhill, Nova Scotia, form Canada's first labor union -
      the Provincial Workingmen's Association

      Joe Hill, IWW organizer, songwriter and poet, born in Gavle, Sweden

1881  Federation of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United
      States and Canada founded - predecessor of the American
      Federation of Labor

      Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners founded

      Revolutionary Socialist Labor Party formed

1882  First Labor Day celebration held in New York City

      Congress passes Chinese Exclusion Act

      Cohoes, New York, Cotton Mill Strike

1883 International Working People's Association (anarchist) formed

      Cowboy Strike

      Lynchburg, Virginia, Tobacco Workers' Strike

      Molders' Lockout begins

1884  Federal Bureau of Labor established in the Department of the
      Interior

      Fall River, Massachusettsm Textile Strike

      Union Pacific Railroad Strike

1885  Congress passes Foran Acti to forbid immigration of laborers on
      contract

      Anti-Chinese Riots in the West

      Cloakmakers' General Strike

      McCormick Harvesting Machine Company Strike

      Southwest Railroad Strike

      Yonkers, New York, Carpet Weavers' Strike

1886  In Chicago, 350,000 workers demonstrate for the eight-hour
      workday, founding May Day as an international workers' holiday

      Eight-hour-day movement fails

      "Haymarket Massacre" Police attack Haymarket Square labor rally in
       Chicago, sparking violence and the frame up of eight labor leaders

       American Federation of Labor founded with Samuel Gompers as first
       president

       Anti-Chinese riots

       Augusta, Georgia, Textile Strike.

       Cowboy Strike

     Eight-Hour Day Strikes

     McCormick Harvesting Machine Company Strike

     Southwest Railroad Strike

     Troy, New York, Collar Laundresses' Strike

1887  Seven anarchists sentenced to death for the Haymarket bombing
      (five eventually executed).

      Port of New York Longshoremen's Strike

1888  First federal labor relations law enacted - applied only to railroads

      International Association of Machinists founded

      Burlington Railroad Strike

      Cincinnati Shoemakers' Lockout

1889  Baseball Players' Revolt begins

      Fall River, Massachusetts, Textile Strike

      A. Philip Randolph, labor and civil rights leader, born

1890  United Mine Workers of America founded in Columbus, Ohio

      Carpenters' Strike for the Eight-Hour Day

1891  People's (Populist) Party formed

      Savannah, Georgia, Black Laborers' Strike

      Tennessee Miners' Strike

1892  International Longshoremen's Association founded

      Seamen's Union founded

      Presdident Grover Cleveland elected

      Strike in Homestead, Pennsylvania, by iron and steel workers gains
      national attention

      Coeur d'Alene Miners' Strike

      New Orleans General Strike

1893  Depression begins

          American Railway Union founded

          Western Federation of Miners founded

          Federal court in Louisiana applies the Sherman Antitrust Act to
          unions for the first time in finding a sympathy strike to be in
          restraint of trade

          National Civic Federation formed

1894  Nationwide Rail Strike led by the American Railway Union in
          Pullman, Illinois paralyzes
          nation's transportation

          Coxey's Army of the unemployed marches on Washington, DC

          Cripple Creek, Colorado, Miners' Strike

          Great Northern Railroad Strike

          Labor Day becomes an official US holiday

1895  U.S. Supreme Court, in In re Debs, upholds an injunction restraining
          the Pullman strikers based on the power of the government to
          regulate interstate commerce.

          Socialist Trade and Labor Alliance founded

          Haverhill, Massachusetts, Shoe Strike

1896  President William McKinley elected

          Leadville, Colorado, Miners' Strike begins

1897  Lattimer, Pennsylvania, Massacre, a sheriff and deputies gun down
          19 striking miners and wound 40 others during a peaceful protest

1898  Spanish-American War begins

1898  Congress passes the Erdman Act providing for mediation and
          arbitration of railroad labor disputes.

          American Labor Union founded

          Marlboro, Massachusetts, Shoe Workers' Strike begins

1899  Brotherhood of Teamsters founded

          Buffalo, New York, Grain Shovelers' Strike

          Cleveland, Ohio, Street Railway Workers' Strike

          Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, Miners' Strike

          New York City Newsboys' Strike

1900  International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union founded

          Anthracite Coal Strike

          Machinists' Strike

1901  Socialist Party of America founded

          United Textile Workers founded

          Machinists' Strike

          National Cash Register Strike

          San Francisco Restaurant Workers' Strike

          Steel Strike

1902  Great Anthracite Coal Strike , miners walk off the job for 164 days

          Chicago Teamsters' Strike

1903  Department of Commerce and Labor created by Congress

          Women's Trade Union League founded

          Cripple Creek, Colorado, Miners' Strike begins

          Oxnard, California, Sugar Beet Strike

1903 Telluride, Colorado, Miners' Strike begins

         Utah Coal Strike begins

1904  New York City Interborough Rapid Transit Strike

         Packinghouse Workers' Strike

         Santa Fe Railroad Shopmen's Strike begins

1905  Industrial Workers of the World founded in Chicago

          New York Supreme Court, in Lochner v. New York, declares
          maximum hurs law for bakers unconstitutional

1906  Eight-hour day widely installed in the printing trades

1907  Goldfield, Nevada, Miners' Strike begins

          An explosion kills 361 miners in Monongah, West Virginia in the
          nation's worst mining disaster

1908  President William Howard Taft elected

         Federal court, in US v. Adair, finds section of the Erdman Act
banning
         yellow-dog contractrs unconstitutional

         US Supreme Court, in Danbury Hatters Case, holds a boycott by the
         United Hatters Union against a manufacturer to be a conspiracy in
         restraint of trade under the Sherman Antitrust Act

         US Supreme Court, in Muller v. Oregon, declares an Oregon law
         limiting working hours for women unconstitutional

         IWW Free-Speech Fight in Missoula, Montana

1909 National Association for the Advancement of Colored People founded

         Georgia Railroad Strike

         IWW Free-Speech Fight in Spokane, Washington

         McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, Steel Strike

         "Uprising of the 20,000" Garment Strike in New York

         Watertown, Conneticut, Arsenal Strike

          Canada establishes Department of Labour due to union pressure

1910  Bethlehem Steel Strike

1910  Cloakmakers' Strike

          Chicago Clothing Workers' Strike, led by fiften year old Bessie
          Noramowitz

          Los Angeles strike wave

          Philadelphia General Strike

1911  US Supreme Court, in Gompers v. Bucks Stove and Range Company,
          upholds an injunction ordering the AFL to remove the company
          from its unfair list and cease a boycott.

         Fire kills 146 workers at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New
         York City.

         Illinois Central and Harriman Lines Rail Strike begins

         Southern Lumber Operators' Lockout begins

1912  President Woodrow Wilson elected

         Massachusetts adopt the first minimum wage act for women and
         minors.

        Chicago Newspaper Strike

        Fur Workers' Strike

        IWW Free-Speech Fight in San Diego, California

        Lawrence, Massachusetts, Textile Strike , twenty thousand textile
        workers representing 26 different nationalities win the 60 day "Bread
        and Roses" strike

        Louisiana Timber Workers' Strike begins

        New York City Hotel Strike

        Pain Creek and Cabin Creek, West Virginia, Mine Strikes

1913 US Department of Labor established

        Ludlow, Colorado, Massacre

        Machinists Strike and Boycott

        Michigan Copper Strike

        Paterson, New Jersey, Textile Strike

        Rubber Workers' Strike

        Studebaker Motors Auto Workers' Strike

        Wheatland, California, Hop Riot

1914 Congress passes the Clayton Antitrust Act. Ostensibly limits the use
         of injuctions in labor disputes

        Amalgamated Clothing Workers founded

        Fulton Bag and Cotton Mill Strike begins

        Company gunmen attack a tent colony of striking UMWA families in
        Colorado and kill 19 men, women, and children in the Ludlow
        Massacre

1915 Congress passes the LaFollette Seamen's Act - regulates working
         conditions for seamen

        Standard Oil Strike

        Youngstown, Ohio, Steel Strike begins

        Joe Hill , IWW union organizer, executed in Salt Lake City on trumped
        up murder charge

1916 Congress passes Federal Child Labor Law - later declared
         unconstitutional

        Congress passes the Adamson Act establishing the eight-hour day for
        railroad workers

        Six killed and forty wounded in bombing of San Francisco
        preparedness parade - labor leaders arrested

        American Federation of Teachers founded

        Arizona Copper Strike

        Everett, Washington, Massacre

        Minnesota Iron Range Strike

        New York City Transit Strike

        New York Cloakmakers' Strike

        San Francisco Open Shop Campaign

        Standard Oil Strike

1917 United States enters World War I

         Supreme Court, in Hitchman Coal and Coke v. Mitchell, upholds the
         legality of yellow-dog contracts

         Green Corn Rebellion in Oklahoma

         Tom Mooney sentenced to death for role in San Francisco
         preparedness parade bombing in 1916

         Bisbee, Arizona, Miners' Strike

         Butte, Montana, Miners' Strike

         East St. Louis Race Riot

         Pacific Northwest Lumber Strike

1918  War Labor Board is created

         World War I ends

         First national conference of women trade unionists

1919  Huge postwar strike wave sweeps across the nation

          Communist Party of America founded

          Red Scare begins

          Actors' Strike

          Boston Police Strike

          Centralia, Washington, Massacre

          Chicago Race Riot

          New England Telephone Strike

          Seattle General Strike

          16,000 Silk Workers in Paterson, NJ strike for a shorter workweek

          Steel Strike

          Winnepeg General Strike in Canada

1920  President Warren Harding elected

          Trade Union Educational League founded

          Alabama Miners' Strike

          Clothing Workers' Lockout

          West Virginia Coal Wars begin, ten people killed in the Matewan
          Massacre in a battle over the right to organize the southern West
          Virginia coalfields

1921   Depression begins

          Supreme Court, in Duplex Printing Press v. Deering, rules that the
          Clayton Act notwithstanding, federal courts could enjoin unions for
          actions in restraint of trade

          Congress restricts immigration to the United States and establishes
          the national origin quota system

          Seamen's Strike

          West Virginia Coal Wars and Baldwin-Felts agents kill West Virginia
          unionists Sid Hatfield an Ed Chambers on the steps of the McDowell
          County Courthouse

         Battle of Blair Mountain, 2000 US troops block miners' attempt to
         organize in southern West Virginia

1922  Conference for Progressive Political Action founded

          Anthracite Coal Strike

          Bituminous Coal Strike

          Herrin, Illinois, Massacre

          Railroad Shopmen's Strike

1924  President Calvin Coolidge elected

          Samuel Gompers dies. William Green becomes president of the
          American Federation of Labor

1925  Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters founded

         Anthracite Coal Strike

1926  Congress passes the Railway Labor Act, which requires that
          employers bargain with unions and forbids discrimination against
          union members

          Passaic, New Jersey, Textile Strike

1927  Nicolo Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Massachussetts labor activists
          are executed

          Bituminous Coal Strike

1928  President Herbert Hoover elected

          New Bedford, Massachusetts, Textile Strike

          Convict-labor system for coal mining is outlawed in Alabama

1929  Stock market crash and the beginning of the Great Depression

          Trade Union Unity League founded

          Conference for Progressive Labor Action founded

          Gastonia, North Carolina, Textile Strike

1930  National Unemployed Council formed

          Imperial Valley, California, Farmworkers' Strike

1931  Congress passes Davis-Bacon Act providing for payment of
          prevailing wages to workers wmployed on public works projects

          "Scottsboro Boys" arrested in Alabama

           Harlan County, Kentucky, Miners' Strike

           Tampa, Florida, Cigar Workers' Strike

1932   President Franklin Delano Roosevelt elected

           Congress passes the Norris-LaGuardia Act, which prohibits federal
           injunctions in labor disputes and outlaws yellow-dog contracts

           Bonus March of World War I veterans on Washington, DC

           American Federation of Government Employees founded

           California Pea Pickers' Strike

           Century Airlines Pilots' Strike

           Davidson-Wilder, Tennessee, Coal Strike begins

           Ford Hunger March in Detroit, Michigan

           Four workers killed as protesters march on Ford Rouge Plant near
           Detroit seeking jobs during the Great Depression

           Vacaville, California Tree Pruners' Strike

1933  Congress passes the National Industrial Recovery Act, Section 7(a) of
          which guarantees rights of employees to organize and bargain
          collectively

           Frances Perkins becomes secretary of labor and the first woman
           named to a presidential cabinet

           Newspaper Guild founded

           Briggs Manufacturing Strike

           California Farmworkers' Strikes

           Detroit, Michigan, Tool and Die Strike

           Hormel, Iowa, Meat-Packing Strike

           New Mexico Miners' Strike

1934   Southern Tenant Farmers' Union founded

           Harlem, New York City, Jobs-for-Negroes Boycott

           Imperial Valley, California, Farmworkers' Strike

           Minneapolis Teamsters' Strike

           Newark Star-Ledger Newspaper Strike begins

           Rubber Workers' Strike

           San Francisco Longshoremen & General Strike

           Textile Workers' Strike

           Toledo, Ohio, Auto-Lite Strike

1935   US Supreme Court declares the National Industrial Recovery Act
           unconstitutional

           Congress passes the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA), which
           protects the rights of workers to organize and bargain
collectively.

           FD Roosevelt signs the labor-backed Social Security Act into law

           Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO) formed inside the
           American Federation of Labor

           Negro Labor Committee founded

           United Auto Workers founded

           Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri Metal Workers' Strike

           Pacific Northwest Lumber Strike

          Southern Sharecroppers' and Farm Laborers' Strike

1936   President Franklin Roosevelt reelected

           Steel Workers' Organizing Committee formed

           Atlanta, Georgia, Auto Workers' Sit-Down Strike

           Berkshire Knitting Mills Strike

           First sit-down strike by auto workers starts at Bendix Products in
           South Bend, Indiana

           General Motors Sit-Down Strike

           RCA Strike

           Rubber Workers' begin the nation's first major sit-down strike at
           the Firestone tire plant in Akron, Ohio

           Seamen's Strike

           Seattle Post-Intelligencer Newspaper Strike

1937   US Supreme Court declares the NLRA constitutional

           American Federation of Labor expels the CIO unions

           American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
           union founded

           General Motors Sit-Down Strikes in US and Canada - stikes end
after
           workers win first UAW contract

           Battle of the Overpass, Ford Motor Co. thugs beat Walter Reuther
           and other UAW organizers in Dearborn, Michigan

           Hershey, Pennsylvania, Chocolate Workers' Strike

           Little Steel Strike and Memorial Day Massacre, ten strikers shot
at
           Republic Steel in Chicago

            US Steel signs a first contract with the Steel Workers Organizing
            Committee

1938   Congress passes the Fair Labor Standards Act, which establishes the
           forty-hour work week, the minimum wage, and bans child labor in
           interstate commerce

          Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) is founded with John L.
          Lewis as president

          Chicago Newspaper Strike begins

          Hilo, Hawaii, Massacre

          Maytag Strike

          US Supreme Court issues decision permitting employers to
          permanently replace strikers

1939  Chrysler Auto Strike

          General Motors Tool and Diemakers' Strike

1940  President Franklin Roosevelt reelected

          Philip Murray replaces John L. Lewis as CIO president

          Ford Motor Strike

1941  United States enters World War II

          AFL and CIO give no-strike pledges for the duration of the war

          Allis-Chalmers Strike

          Captive Coal Mines Strike

          Detroit, Michigan, Hate Strike against black workers

          International Harvester Strike

          New York City Bus Strike

          North American Aviation Strike

1942  National War Labor Board is established - establishes the "Little
         Steel Formula" for wartime wage adjustments

          United Steel Workers of America founded

1943  Fair Employment Practices Committee is established

          Congress passes the Smith-Connally Act to restrict strikes and
union
          political activity during the war

          Bituminous Coal Strike, UMWA strike which triggered a US
          government takeover of the mines ends with a contract providing
          portal-to-portal pay and other benefits

          Detroit, Michigan, Hate Strikes against black workers

          Detroit, Michigan, Race Riot

1944  President Franklin Roosevelt reelected

          Philadelphia Transit Strike

1945  President Franklin Roosevelt dies

          Vice-President Harry S. Truman becomes President

          World War II ends

1945  Kelsey-Hayes Strike

          New York City Longshoremen's Strike

          Montgomery Ward Strike

          Oil Workers' Strike

1946  Huge postwar strike wave sweeps across the nation

          United Mine Workers win a health and welfare fund in bargaining
         with the coal operators

          Nationwide coal strike prompts US government to seize the mines to
          continue production

          Electrical Manufacturing Strikes

          General Motors Strike

          Pittsburgh Power Strike

          Railroad Strike

          Steelworkers launch 30 state strike against US Steel

1947  Congress passes the Taft-Hartley Act (Labor Management Relations
          Act) restricting union practices and permitting the states to ban
          union security agreements.

          RJ Reynolds Tobacco Company Strike

         Telephone Strike

1948  President Harry S. Truman is reelected

          Progressive Party formed

1949  CIO expels two unions for alleged Communist domination

          Hawaii Dock Strike

1950  United States enters Korean War

          CIO expels nine unions for alleged Communist domination

          United Auto Workers and General Motors sign a contract that
          provides for pensions, automatic cost-of-living wage adjustments,
          and guaranteed
          increases over the life of the contract

1950  "Salt of the Earth" Strike of New Mexico Miners begin

1951  UAW president Walter Reuther elected president of CIO

1952  President Truman seizes the steel industry when the steel
          companies reject the Wage Stabilization Board recommendations.
          Supreme Court rules the action unconstitutional

          George Meany becomes president of the AFL

          Walter Reuther becomes president of the CIO

           President Dwight D. Eisenhower is elected

           Steel Strike

1953   AFL and CIO agree to a "no raiding" pact. AFL expels the
           International Longshoremen's Association for corruption

           Louisiana Sugar Cane Workers' Strike

1954   Kohler Strike begins

1955   United Auto Workers win supplementary unemployment benefits
           in bargaining with Ford

           AFL and CIO merge with George Meany as first president, UMWA
           remains independent

           Southern Telephone Strike

1956   President Dwight D. Eisenhower is reelected

           East Coast Longshoremen's Strike

           Steel Strike

           Canadian Labour Congress founded

1957  AFL-CIO expels Teamsters, Bakery Workers, and Laundry Workers,
          and Laundry Workers for corruption

1959  Congress passes the Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure
         Act (Landrum-Griffin), which regulates the internal affairs of unions

         Steel Strike

1960  President John F. Kennedy is elected

          Civil rights sit-in begins at Woolworth's lunch counter in
Greensboro,
          North Carolina

          Negro American Labor Council founded

          General Electric Strike

          Seamen's Strike

          Mother Jones , UMWA organizer, dies at age 100

1962  Presidential executive order gives federal employee's unions the
          right to bargain with government agencies

          New York City Newspaper Strike begins

          East Coast Longshoremen's Strike

1963  President John F. Kennedy is assassinated

          Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson becomes President

          Congress passes Equal Pay Act prohibiting wage differentials based
          on sex for workers covered by the Fair Labor Standards Act

1964  President Lyndon B. Johnson is reelected

          Title VII of the Civil Rights Act bars discrimination in employment
          on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin

1965  United Farm Workers Organizing Committee formed

         California Grape Workers' Strike

1966  New York City Transportation Strike

1967  Copper Strike begins

1968  President Richard M. Nixon is elected

          Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr., is assasinated while
          supporting  a strike by Memphis, Tennessee, sanitation workers.

          New York City Teachers' Strikes

1969  Charleston, South Carolina, Hospital Workers' Strike

          Black Lung compensation bill passes in West Virginia after mass
          demonstrations by UMWA members

1970  Postal strike is first nationwide strike of public employees

          Hawaii becomes the first state to allow local and state government
          employees the right to strike

          Congress passes the Occupational Safety and Health act

1970  General Motors Strike

          Postal Workers' Strike , President Nixon declares a national
          emergency and orders 30,000 troops to New York City to break the
          first nationwide postal strike

          Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act takes effect after passing
          Congress December 30, 1969

1971  New York City Police Strike

1972  President Richard M. Nixon is reelected

          Farah Clothing Workers' Strike and Boycott

          Lordstown, Ohio, Auto Workers' Strike

          Philadelphia Teachers' Strike begins

          Quebec workers general strike

1973  United Farm Workers, led by Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta, is
         chartered by the AFL-CIO

1974  Coalition of Labor Union Women is founded (CLUW)

          Congress passes the Employment Retirement Income Security Act
          regulating all private pension plans

          Baltimore Police Strike

          Oil, Chemical, and Atomic Workers union activist Karen Silkwood is
          killed during investigation of Kerr-McGee nuclear plant in Oklahoma

1975  First legal statewide public employees' strike in nation's history
          occurs in Pennsylvania

          Congress defeats a union-sponsored attempt to reform the nation's
          basic labor law

          Washington Post Pressmen's Strike begins

1976  President Jimmy Carter is elected

          Congress defeats a union-sponsored attempt to have a law enacted
          that would improve the ability of construction unions to organize
          and carry out effective strikes

          More than 1 million Canadian workers demonstrate against wage
          controls

1977  Bituminous Coal Strike begins

          Coors Beer Strike and Boycott begins

          J.P. Stevens Boycott begins

          Willmar, Minnesota, Bank Workers' Strike

1978  Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, Newspaper Strike begins

1979  Lane Kirkland becomes president of the AFL-CIO

1979  Independent Truckers' Strike

1980  President Ronald Reagan is elected

          Joyce Miller of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union
          becomes the first woman to sit on the AFL-CIO executive board

1981  President Ronald Reagan fires most of the nation's air traffic
          controllers for striking illegally and orders their union, the
          Professional Air Traffic Controllers Association, decertified.

          400,000 unionists, he largest labor rally in American history takes
          place in Washington in protest against the policies of the Reagan
          administration

          Baseball Players' Strike

1983  Phelps-Dodge Copper Strike begins

1984  President Ronald Reagan is reelected

          Yale University Clerical Workers' Strike

1985  Hormel Meatpackers' Strike begins

          Los Angeles County Sanitation District Strike

          Yale University Clerical Workers' Strike

1986  Trans World Airlines Flight Attendants' Strike

          USX (United States Steel) Lockout begins

1987  Paperworkers' Strike and Lockout begins

          Professional Football Players' Strike

1988  President George Bush is elected

1989  Eastern Airlines Workers' Strike

          Mine Workers' Strike against Pittston Coal Company

1990  UMWA Pittston Strike ends, miners ratify a new contract

1991  Three hundred thousand unionists march in Washington, DC to
          demand workplace fairness and health care reform

          Twenty five workers die in a fire at the nonunion Imperial Food
          plant in Hamlet, North Carolina , which had never been inspected by
          federal or state agencies

-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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