United Mine Workers (UMW)
UNITED MINE WORKERS (UMW)
Organized in 1890, the United Mine Workers (UMW) is a labor union founded as an affiliate of the American Federation of Labor (AFL). By the late 1880s, Midwestern mine owners were grossly exploiting workers, including numerous immigrants: conditions in the mines ranged from deplorable to dangerous, wages had dropped by as much as 20 percent, and mining families lived in squalor. During its first decade, the UMW came under the leadership of Illinois native John Mitchell (1870–1919). (Mitchell had begun working in coal mines at age twelve and was a member of the Knights of Labor (1885–1890), before joining the UMW and quickly ascending its ranks.) As president of the union after 1898, Mitchell undertook a massive organization drive, espousing the gospel of unionism and the dignity of man. Through Mitchell's efforts, diverse workers became the unified front of the UMW and a force to be reckoned with. In the early 1900s the UMW staged a series of successful strikes, calling attention to unfair labor practices and resulting in increased wages, reduced hours, and improved conditions. Mitchell became a national hero. He suffered health problems and was replaced as leader of the UMW in 1906.
For the next two decades, the coal industry was marked by increased competition; the UMW's tactics became radical. During the 1910s, a series of coal strikes were marked by violence, ending in the deaths of workers as well as government officials. In 1922 U.S. coal miners stages a six-month long strike to protest wage cuts. The massive demonstration paralyzed American industry and began a period of chronic depression in the coal mining industry. What resulted was cutthroat competition, which further hurt the cause of the workers.
The Great Depression (1929–1939), the severe economic downturn of the 1930s, saw the country's laborers joining unions in great numbers, particularly boosting the memberships of industrial (versus craft) unions such as the UMW. In 1935 dynamic UMW leader John Llewellyn Lewis (1880–1969) worked with other industrial unions to form an alliance, the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO). The UMW's parent organization, the AFL, which was founded on the principles of craft unions, expelled the UMW and other CIO activists, who reorganized as the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). In the 1940s the unions again became controversial: A UMW strike in 1946 stopped soft coal production, then the nation's primary source of energy. The strike severely impacted the steel and automotive industries, the rail service, and the average American, as people in twenty-two states were required to observe "dim-outs" to conserve coal. Consumers faulted the unions for shortages of consumer goods, suspension of services, and inflated prices.
Passage of the Taft-Hartley Act (1947) limited the impact of unions. The UMW has remained active on the national labor scene since its founding, though it struggled through controversy again in the 1970s when its leadership was found to be corrupt.
See also: American Federation of Labor, Congress of Industrial Organizations, Labor Movement, Labor Unionism, John Llewellyn Lewis, John Mitchell
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The Spartacist uprising in Berlin: Jan 5 1919.(MONTHS PAST)
Magazine article from: History Today; 1/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...liking of the Marxist leaders Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, who believed...to Germany and across Europe. Liebknecht, whose ambition was to be the...quickly declared illegal and Liebknecht was sent to the eastern front...
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Art as expression: Kathe Kollwitz. (appreciation of the late German artist and printmaker)
Magazine article from: School Arts; 2/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...expressive effects. Kollwitz' Karl Liebknecht Memorial is a dramatic black...Though she did not agree with Liebknecht politically, she was horrified...German military's murders of Liebknecht and Rosa Luxembourg, another...
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Leaving Prints Behind; A DEMOCRATIC MEDIUM FOR UN-DEMOCRATIC TIMES
Newspaper article from: Pittsburgh City Paper; 8/4/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Meanwhile, in her breathtaking woodcut Memorial Sheet for Karl Liebknecht (1919-1920), Kollwitz depicts the funeral of slain union leader Karl Liebknecht, who was one of a thousand protesters killed during...
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Frank Mecklenberg and Manfred Stassen, eds., German Essays on Socialism in the Nineteenth Century.(Book review)
Magazine article from: Nineteenth-Century Prose; 6/22/1992; ; 700+ words
; ...following headings: Karl Marx and Friedrich...Engels, Wilhelm Liebknecht, Ferdinand Lassalle...Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Kautsky ("The...Women"); Liebknecht and Luxemburg...237-41). Karl Liebknecht's and Rosa Luxemburg...
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Ana Torfs
Magazine article from: Artforum; 12/1/2006; ; 697 words
; ...the trial for the murders of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, the pacifist...rifleman. "I don't think I got Liebknecht." Since no one was convicted...executed criminals, who, like Liebknecht and Luxemburg, were killed with...
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Ana Torfs: Daadgalerie.
Magazine article from: Artforum International; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...the trial for the murders of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg, the pacifist...rifleman. "I don't think I got Liebknecht." Since no one was convicted...executed criminals, who, like Liebknecht and Luxemburg, were killed with...
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16 JANUARY 1919 ; Days like these
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 1/16/2007; ; 340 words
; ...Berlin, writes in his diary: "Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg [leading...with a dreadful end. Last night Liebknecht was shot while being taken in...the civil war, which she and Liebknecht plotted, they had so many lives...
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37 DISSIDENTS ALLOWED OUT OF EAST GERMANY
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 1/24/1988; ; 430 words
; ...17 honoring Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht, the leaders who founded the...from writings by Luxemburg and Liebknecht, and criticized policies of...marks the deaths of Luxemburg and Liebknecht, who were killed by soldiers...
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Berlin: Neil Taylor suggests that the starting point from which to explore the full and varied history of Berlin is the apparently empty space at its centre.
Magazine article from: History Today; 6/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...nobody actually founded a regime on the square, for Karl Liebknecht, this was not through lack of trying. He proclaimed...doubt where the new centre should be. It had to be where Karl Friedrich Schinkel designated it; he was after all Berlin...
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A City of Heroes and Saxon allure Visitors drawn to a rebounding Leipzig
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 1/11/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...s center circle (the Zentrum) or abutting the Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse along the south (sud) side of the city...city center sits the Hotel Markgraf, right off the Karl-Liebknecht-Strasse, at Kornerstrasse 36, (49-341) 3030...
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Karl Liebknecht
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Karl Liebknecht , 1871-1919, German socialist, leader...German Communist party. In Jan., 1919, Liebknecht led an uprising against the government...prison. Bibliography: See K. W. Meyer, Karl Liebknecht (1957).
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Liebknecht, Karl
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Liebknecht, Karl (1871–1919) German communist revolutionary, son of Wilhelm Liebknecht . He vigorously opposed Germany's...x2013;18). With Rosa Luxemburg , Liebknecht was a leader of the communist group...
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Liebknecht, Wilhelm
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Liebknecht, Wilhelm (1826–1900) German revolutionary, father of Karl Liebknecht . After taking part in the Revolutions...he associated with Marx . In 1869, Liebknecht and August Bebel founded the Social...
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Wilhelm Liebknecht
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Wilhelm Liebknecht , 1826-1900, German...became associated with Karl Marx . Although greatly...his return to Germany, Liebknecht initially joined the socialist...North German Reichstag, Liebknecht, a confirmed pacifist...
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Rosa Luxemburg
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...international socialist movement. With Karl Kautsky, Luxemburg headed the...revolutionary Spartacus Union with Karl Liebknecht. When she again emerged from prison...and drafted its program. She and Liebknecht urged revolution against the Ebert...
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