Harry Bridges

Home > ... > Social Sciences and the Law > Economics, Business, and Labor > Labor: Biographies > ...

Harry Bridges

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Harry Bridges (Alfred Renton Bridges), 1901-90, American labor leader, b. Melbourne, Australia. Arriving (1920) as an immigrant seaman in San Francisco, he became a longshoreman and militant labor organizer. Bridges led (1934) the West Coast maritime workers' strike, which expanded into an abortive general strike, and in 1937 he set up the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union (ILWU), and became West Coast director of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). Proceedings in 1939 to deport him as a Communist alien ended when he was officially absolved of Communist affiliation. The U.S. House of Representatives passed (1940) a bill to deport him, but it was ruled (1945) illegal by the Supreme Court. He became a citizen in 1945. His support of Henry A. Wallace for President in 1948 resulted in his ouster as CIO regional head. He was convicted and sentenced (1950) to a five-year prison term for swearing falsely at his 1945 naturalization hearing that he had never been a member of the Communist party. In 1953, the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed the indictment for perjury against Bridges, thus voiding his prison sentence. He was reindicted on similar charges, but in 1955 a federal district judge ruled that the government had failed to prove that he was a Communist or that he had concealed that fact when he was naturalized. Shortly thereafter the U.S. Justice Dept. announced it had given up its long fight to deport Bridges. In 1958 he was granted a U.S. passport. In 1971 and 1972 Bridges led the ILWU in a strike that tied up the West Coast waterfront for several weeks.

Bibliography: See study by C. P. Larrowe (1972).

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1E1-BridgesH" title="Facts and information about Harry Bridges">Harry Bridges</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Harry Bridges." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. 16 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Harry Bridges." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Encyclopedia.com. (November 16, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-BridgesH.html

"Harry Bridges." The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Retrieved November 16, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-BridgesH.html

Learn more about citation styles

Harry A.R. Bridges

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Harry A.R. Bridges

The American labor leader Harry A.R. Bridges (1901-1990) became one of the best known radical trade unionists during the 1930s and was thereafter a subject of political controversy. He devoted most of his life and career to the cause of maritime industry workers on the Pacific Coast.

For more than 40 years (1934 to 1979) Harry Bridges earned a reputation as one of the most radical, astute, and successful leaders in the American labor movement. He first came to national attention during the combined waterfront and general strikes which paralyzed San Francisco in 1934. Bridges emerged from this labor conflict as the dominant leader and spokesperson for Pacific Coast waterfront workers. Then, and for many years afterward, his enemies accused him of serving Communist purposes and the federal government several times tried unsuccessfully to deport Bridges. Bridges built his union, the International Longshoremen and Warehousemen's Union (ILWU), into one of the most militant and successful in the nation. Before he retired from active union service in 1979, Bridges also won plaudits from employers for his role as a labor statesman, which meant accepting technological innovations and less total employment on the waterfront in return for union and job security.

Harry Bridges was born in Melbourne, Australia, on July 28, 1901, the oldest of six children in a solidly middle-class family. His father, Alfred Earnest, was a successful suburban realtor, and his mother, Julia Dorgan, was a devout Catholic. Harry received a firm Catholic upbringing, serving four years as an altar boy and attending parochial schools from one of which he earned a secondary diploma in 1917. After leaving school he tried his hand at clerking but was bored by white-collar work.

The sea, however, enthralled Bridges. In late 1917, he found employment as a merchant seaman and remained at sea for the next five years. As a sailor Bridges saw the world, experienced exploitation, became friendly with his more radical workmates, and, for a time, even joined the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), a left-wing, syndicalist American labor organization. When one of his ships made port in the United States in 1920, Bridges decided to become an immigrant. He even took out his first papers as part of the process of establishing U.S. citizenship. But Bridges' carelessness in meeting the statutory timetable for filing final citizenship papers (as well as his alleged links to communism) became the basis for the government's later attempts to deport him.

Having settled in the United States, Bridges left the sea in 1922 and took up work as a longshoreman in San Francisco. He labored for more than ten years in one of the nation's most exploitative job markets and in a city whose waterfront employers had established a closed-shop company union. During that decade (1922 to 1933) Bridges lived in relative obscurity as an ordinary longshoreman, marrying for the first time in 1923 (he was to be divorced twice and married a third time) and leading a conventional working-class life.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal changed all that. The labor upheaval of the 1930s lifted Bridges from obscurity to prominence. When discontent erupted among West Coast waterfront workers in 1933 and 1934, Bridges seized the moment and became a militant union agitator. In 1934 when labor conflict spread up and down the Pacific Coast and culminated in the San Francisco general strike, Bridges acted as the waterfront strikers' most effective leader. He led his followers to a great victory in 1934. The longshoremen in San Francisco won not only union recognition but also a union hiring hall to replace the traditional shape-up in which workers obtained jobs in a demeaning and discriminatory manner.

Building on this success, Bridges next tried to unite all the maritime workers of the Pacific Coast in the Maritime Federation of the Pacific (1935). His plans for waterfront labor solidarity were disrupted by the outbreak of a union civil war between the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). Bridges chose the CIO side, took his union members out of the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA)-AFL, and reorganized them as the ILWU. John L. Lewis, president of the CIO, appointed Bridges to the new union federation's executive board and also as regional director for the entire Pacific Coast. By 1939 Bridges had won a deserved reputation as one of the CIO's new labor men of power.

He had also won many more enemies. Employers found the ILWU to be an especially militant and demanding negotiating partner. Foes in the AFL, among public officials, and even within the CIO used Bridges' links to communism to undercut his influence as a labor leader. Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins tried to deport him in 1939. Through votes and investigations, Congress sought to accomplish the same goal. Not until 1953 when the Supreme Court ruled in Bridges' favor did the government cease its deportation efforts. The charges against Bridges were dropped, and the Supreme Court said, "Seldom, if ever, in the history of this nation has there been such a concentrated and relentless crusade to deport an individual because he dared to exercise the freedom that belongs to him as a human being, and is guaranteed to him under the Consistution." While different branches of the federal government hounded Bridges, Lewis, in 1939, limited Bridges' sphere as a CIO leader to the state of California.

Despite his enemies inside and outside the CIO, Bridges led his union from victory to victory. The labor shortages associated with World War II, the Korean War, and the war in Vietnam, combined with the strategic importance of Pacific Coast ports in the shipping of war-related goods, provided the ILWU with enormous bargaining power which Bridges used to the fullest. He used the power his union amassed on the West Coast as a base from which to organize waterfront and plantation workers in Hawaii. The ILWU brought stable mass unionism to the islands for the first time in their history and thus transformed Hawaii's economic and political balance of power.

Bridges meantime initiated a long strike among Pacific Coast waterfront workers in 1948 that would win them the best labor contract such workers had ever had. But that was to be the last strike Bridges led as a militant labor leader. Shortly after that success for the ILWU, the CIO in 1949-1950 expelled Bridges' union as one of eleven charged with being under communist control and serving the interests of the Soviet Union. By 1960, however, Bridges won a new reputation for himself as a labor statesman. In that year he negotiated a contract with the Pacific Maritime Association which eliminated many union work rules, accepted labor-saving machinery, and tolerated a reduced labor force in return for either guaranteed jobs or annual earnings for more senior union members. A decade later, in 1971-1972, Bridges led his last long strike of 135 days, but it aimed mostly to ratify and strengthen the agreement of 1960, rather than to dilute it. Bridges had made his peace with employers and relished his role as a labor statesman.

In 1968, Bridges was appointed to a city Charter Commission, and then in 1970 he was appointed to the San Francisco Port Commission. In 1977 he retired as ILWU president. During his last eight years as a union leader, Bridges had left far behind the radicalism and controversy that marked his earlier career. But both Bridges and his union remained distinctive. In an era of highly-paid union officials, many of whom lived ostentatious private lives, Bridges remained as abstemious as ever, living frugally on an atypically modest union salary; he had earned only 27,000 dollars a year. In an age of more conservative trade unionism, the ILWU still behaved as a union with a social conscience, promoting racial solidarity, opposing the war in Vietnam, and supporting disarmament and world peace. The ILWU built by Bridges was a legacy in which any trade unionist could take pride, but he always downplayed his role. In 1985 he said, "I just got the credit I just happened to be around at the right time." Bridges died on March 30, 1990, in San Francisco.

Further Reading

The standard biography is Charles P. Larrowe, Harry Bridges, The Rise and Fall of Radical Labor in the United States (1972). The same author's Shape-Up and Hiring Hall (1955) is the best scholarly treatment of labor on the West Coast waterfront. Irving Bernstein, Turbulent Years: A History of the American Worker, 1933-1941 (1969) includes a fine brief sketch of Bridges. Gary M. Fink, editor, Biographical Dictionary of American Labor Leaders (1984) provides essential facts.

Hide all research tools
Print this article Print all entries for this topic Cite this article Link to this article
Link to this article

CloseClose

Create a link to this page

Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:

<a href="http://www.encyclopedia.com/topic/.aspx#1G2-3404700890" title="Facts and information about Harry Bridges">Harry Bridges</a>

Add this article to Del.icio.usBookmark this article on DiigoShare this article on FacebookSubmit this article to RedditGive this article a thumbs-up on StumbleUpon
Show all research tools

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

"Harry A.R. Bridges." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 16 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

"Harry A.R. Bridges." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (November 16, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404700890.html

"Harry A.R. Bridges." Encyclopedia of World Biography. Thomson Gale. 2004. Retrieved November 16, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404700890.html

Learn more about citation styles

Facts and information from other sites

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, and more

Harry Bridges, RIP. (obituary)
Magazine article from: National Review; 4/30/1990; 700+ words ; HOW that Harry Bridges is dead, the city of San Francisco rises...was no man in California as critical as Harry Bridges to the life of San Francisco...point the question seriously arose whether Harry Bridges would permit the use of U.S...
Marxist Harry Bridges, 88, led longshoremen's union
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 3/31/1990; ; 700+ words ; SAN FANCISCO - Harry Bridges, an ardent Marxist and supporter of...Danny Beagle, spokesman for Mr. Bridges' longshoremen's union, said its...decades, died of emphysema. Mr. Bridges was once one of the most feared and...
Film screening honors Harry Bridges
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze; 9/3/2005; ; 405 words ; ...homage to dockworkers' union pioneer Harry Bridges will screen Sunday at the Warner...Longshore and Warehouse Union and the Harry Bridges Institute organized the screening...resolution proclaiming Sept. 4 as Harry Bridges Day. Other port cities such...
Scally caps and Harry Bridges inspire some longshore lore
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze; 4/22/2002; 647 words ; Scally caps and Harry Bridges inspire some longshore lore A quarterback...speaking of longshoremen, let's discuss Harry Bridges. I was at Oceanfront Donuts...that included one from Feb. 28, 1960. Harry Bridges was telling stories. When a...
ASK US | Q: Harry Bridges monument
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze; 6/3/2003; ; 458 words ; DAILY BREEZE Q: Harry Bridges monument On the corner of Neptune and Harry Bridges Boulevard there was a monument to Harry Bridges, the honored longshoreman, and I noticed driving down the road that the monument is not there. What happened to...
Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union.
Magazine article from: Cineaste; 6/22/1995; ; 700+ words ; ...Thankfully, Berry Minott's film, Harry Bridges: A Man and His Union, is the kind...through three bracketed periods of Bridges's life. This device makes particular...Warehousemen's Union (ILWU), Bridges is never portrayed as above or beyond...
Marxist Harry Bridges, 88; led longshoremen's union
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 4/1/1990; ; 574 words ; SAN FRANCISCO Harry Bridges, an ardent Marxist and supporter of...Danny Beagle, spokesman for Mr. Bridges' longshoremen's union, said its...decades, died of emphysema. Mr. Bridges was once one of the most feared and...
[ What it is: Harry Bridges Institute. ... ]
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze; 2/12/2005; 384 words ; What it is: Harry Bridges Institute. What it does: The institute...educate the community about unions and Harry Bridges, who founded the International...about the benefits of working union. Harry Bridges formed the ILWU in 1937, serving...
[ What it is: Harry Bridges Institute... ]
Newspaper article from: Daily Breeze; 1/20/2007; 368 words ; What it is: Harry Bridges Institute What it does: The institute...educate the community about unions and Harry Bridges, who founded the International...the benefits of working in a union. Harry Bridges formed the ILWU in 1937, serving...
OBITUARIES;Longshoremen's Union Leader Harry Bridges Dies
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 3/31/1990; ; 700+ words ; Harry Bridges, 88, the powerful and contentious leader...yesterday at his home in San Francicso. Mr. Bridges, a militant and radical, was outspokenly...organizer and an impassioned orator, Mr. Bridges was among the last of the legendary labor...

Pictures from Google Image Search

Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture
Click to see an enlarged picture

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Current Harry Bridges News:

How Reid Rescued the Public Option

(10/27/2009 10:29:00 AM)