August 17, 1861 – Coal miners in Australia refused to accept a 20% wage cut and walk out. (From the Daily Bleed)
Striking garment workers, New York, 1909 Shirt waist strike |
August- 17, 1910
– Women strikers broke through police lines and demolished a New York
garment factory that tried to open in defiance of a strike. Garment
workers were toiling as much as 15 hours per day for as little as 50
cents. They tossed sewing machines out the windows and smashed
furniture. The industry-wide strike had begun in June and quickly
spread, with 60,000 striking up and down the east coast. (From the Daily Bleed)
IWW anti-conscription poster from Australia, 1916 |
August 17, 1918
– 95 Wobblies (members of the IWW—Industrial Workers of the World) were
sent to prison for up to 20 years for resisting the war. (From the Daily Bleed)
August 17, 1985
– Members of the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) in Austin,
Minnesota, went on strike against Hormel, makers of SPAM. They ignored
the advice of their national union and struck anyway. Workers continued
to strike even after the company tried to reopen the plant with
replacement workers, including some union members who crossed the picket
lines. After ten months the strike ended, with no gains for union
members. (From Shmoop Labor History)
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