United Steelworkers Join

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Text on Button UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA Join AFL-CIO·CLC
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The United Steelworkers is a general trade union founded in 1942. It has come to represent workers in different industries including metal, paper, chemicals, glass, rubber, heavy-duty conveyor belting, tired, transportation, and utility industries in the U.S. and around the world. The organization started as the Steelworkers’ Organizing Committee SWOC) of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in June 17, 1936 in an effort to organize steel makers, who had been mostly nonunion since the Homestead Lockout of 1892. SWOC had its first win against U.S. Steel, who had set up company unions during the Great Depression created and controlled by management in order to keep independent companies out of the company. SWOC convinced many U.S. Steel workers to support independent unions leading to talks with U.S. Steel chairman Myron Taylor that resulted in a contract between the SWOC and U.S. Steel. The SWOC was later renamed to the United Steel Workers of America in 1942, gaining strong membership during WWII in part due to decisions not to strike in exchange for government mandates to employers that spurred organizing. The USWA fought the steelworking industry over wages, benefits and working condition in the postwar era, and led five nationwide strikes between 1946 and 1959, resulting in negotiated pensions for workers. By 1960, steelworkers were among the best paid manufacturing workers in America. The cost of these victories contributed to the collapse of the American steel industry, leading to layoffs and devastating USWA membership. The USWA brought in other industries to its jurisdiction, such as mill workers, stone workers, rubber and plastic workers, aluminum, brick and glass workers. The USWA has grown to become the U.S.'s largest industrial union, coming to represent 1.2 million workers in the U.S., Canada and the Caribbean. It also has an international presence in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Scotland, Mexico and other places around the world, representing workers in nearly every industry there is.

Sources

Heron, C. (2004). steelworkers' union. In The Oxford Companion to Canadian History. Oxford University Press. https://www-oxfordreference-com.libaccess.sjlibrary.org/view/10.1093/ac… Our history. (n.d.). United Steelworkers. Retrieved from https://www.usw.org/union/history Rees, J. (2003). United Steelworkers of America. In S. I. Kutler (Ed.), Dictionary of American History (3rd ed.). Charles Scribner's Sons. https://link-gale-com.libaccess.sjlibrary.org/apps/doc/CX3401804353/GVR…

Catalog ID CL0596