Labor History Web Resources June 8 & 9, 2006
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Website
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Description
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Illinois Labor History
Society
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Includes labor history
sites, a curriculum for teachers, labor history articles, and more. The curriculum includes a timeline of
various eras in labor history, with a list of important names and a
bibliography for further research.
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http://www.kentlaw.edu/ilhs/majones.htm
Illinois Labor History
Society
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Some called her ÒThe
greatest woman agitator of our times.Ó Mary Harris ÒMotherÓ Jones lived in Chicago for much of her life, and
helped and organized union workers. This is a nice biography of her from the Illinois Labor History
Society.
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http://www.afscme.org/otherlnk/whlinks.htm#genlabor
AFSCME Labor Links
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A long list of links for
various aspects of womenÕs labor history: WomenÕs Trade Union League, Mother Jones, women in the
textile and garment industries, and biographies of famous women in labor
history.
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http://www.afscme.org/about/aframlink.htm
AFSCME Labor Links
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Links for various aspects
of African American labor history: biographies, trade union information, and a section about African
American labor history books and films.
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http://www.history.umd.edu/Gompers/index.htm
The Samuel Gompers Papers,
University of Maryland College Park
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This website has some very
helpful descriptions of Samuel Gompers, the AFL, the Knights of Labor, and
the IWW. There is a timeline
with links to quotes of Gompers about the reasons for his activism. Click on ÒdocumentsÓ to find primary
sources of correspondence between Gompers and other individuals interested in
the AFL.
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http://digital.lib.msu.edu/collections/index.cfm?CollectionID=23
Michigan State University
Libraries
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This is a part of the
Michigan State LibraryÕs ÒAmerican Radicalism Collection.Ó You will find links to digitalized
primary sources of the IWW.
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http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/chinese-boycott/
National Archives and
Records Administration
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ÒAs Chinese workers who
remained in the United States migrated eastward for work, discriminatory
legislation and a poor economic climate accompanied them. Thus, they continued to be scapegoats
for anti-immigrant labor organizations.Ó Labor unions in Butte, Montana ordered Chinese immigrants
to leave town. In 1891 and again
in 1896, the unions boycotted Chinese-owned businesses. Use these documents and lesson plans
to teach about the boycott and the court case that followed.
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http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/hine-photos/
National Archives and
Records Administration
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Lewis Hine, a New York
City teacher and photographer, believed that photos could tell a powerful
story about child labor in the early 1900s. He photographed children in coal mines, meatpacking
houses, textile mills, and canneries. He interviewed the children to provide the captions for the photos,
and made sure that every photograph was carefully documented. This lesson from the National
Archives not only teaches students a great deal about child labor but it also
relates to First Amendment rights.
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http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/memphis-v-mlk/
National Archives and
Records Administration
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This lesson is an
excellent way to connect the civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s with
labor history issues. In 1968,
two black sanitation workers were crushed to death at work. Others that day were sent home
without pay while their white supervisors were paid for their work that
day. Martin Luther King, Jr.
gave his support to the workers as they began their strike in February. Three months later he was
assassinated.
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http://www.chicagohs.org/hadc/
Chicago Historical Society: The Haymarket Affair Digital
Collection
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This site includes
background information on the Haymarket Affair, a detailed timeline, and many
digitized primary sources from the trial.
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Industrial Workers of the
World: A Union for All Workers
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The official IWW
website. Find links for IWW
news, information about how to organize, forums, and blogs about the IWWÕs
goals. They also sell a wide
variety of books on IWW and general labor history.
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http://www.historyplace.com/unitedstates/childlabor/index.html
The History Place: Child Labor in America 1908-1912
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Photographs and the original captions by Lewis W. Hine | ||
http://edsitement.neh.gov/view_lesson_plan.asp?id=430
National
Endowment for the Humanities Edsitement lesson plan
ÒThe
Industrial Age in America: Sweatshops, Steel Mills, and FactoriesÓ
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Lesson plan for grades 6-8
on the Haymarket Affair, Homestead Strike, and Triangle Shirtwaist Factory
Fire. All of EdsitementÕs lesson plans have every link youÕll need for
primary sources and background information for the teacher.
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http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5322
History Matters: The Musical Saga of Homestead
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Music has often helped
Òbind workers togetherÓ, and this website includes lyrics from four songs
that tell the story of the Homestead Strike. (This strike even had its own Homestead Strike Songster.)
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http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/trianglefire/
The Triangle Factory Fire
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According to this site,
the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire is considered one of the worst disasters
since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. Click on photos to enlarge them and read the captions;
many of them show the horrible conditions of this factory. If you click on ÒdocumentsÓ youÕll
find many primary sources – newspaper accounts and letters.
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http://www.chicagohs.org/dramas/
The Dramas of Haymarket
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This site is an online
project created by the Northwestern University and the Chicago Historical
Society. It uses the Chicago
Historical SocietyÕs Haymarket Affair Digital Collection and interprets them
in a historical context. There
is background information for the teacher in the ÒoverviewÓ section, and then
the page is divided into five ÒActs.Ó In each act there is a narrative of
the events of the time as well as primary sources that can be enlarged for
student use.
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http://www.questgarden.com/16/49/1/060430172711/task.htm
Webquest on John
SteinbeckÕs Of Mice and Men
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Students read about
migrant workers and create a PowerPoint presentation to illustrate and
describe their history.
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