Terence Vincent Powderly

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Terence Vincent Powderly

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

Terence Vincent Powderly 1849-1924, American labor leader, b. Carbondale, Pa. Apprenticed in a machine shop, he joined (1871) the Machinists and Blacksmiths National Union, becoming its president in 1872. He joined the Knights of Labor in 1874 and served as grand master workman from 1879 to 1893, when he resigned because of disagreement with the officers on policy. He was elected mayor of Scranton, Pa., three times (1878, 1880, 1882). In 1894 he was admitted to the bar in Lackawanna co., Pa. He served (1897-1902) as U.S. commissioner general of immigration and was (1907-21) chief of the division of information in the U.S. Bureau of Immigration.

Bibliography: See his Thirty Years of Labor, 1859 to 1889 (1890, repr. 1967) and his autobiography, The Path I Trod (1940, repr. 1967).

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Terence Vincent Powderly

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

Terence Vincent Powderly

American labor leader Terence Vincent Powderly (1849-1924) presided over the Knights of Labor during the union's remarkable growth and rapid decline in the 1880s.

Terence V. Powderly was born in Carbondale, Pa., on Jan. 22, 1849. His parents were Irish immigrants. At 13 he began work in a railroad yard. At 17 he apprenticed himself to a machinist and began to practice the trade in 1869 in the shops of the Delaware and Western Railroad in Scranton, Pa. Interested in labor unionism, he joined the International Union of Machinists and Blacksmiths in 1871 and, in 1874, was an organizer for the Industrial Brotherhood. That year he was initiated into the Noble and Holy Order of the Knights of Labor, a small secret society centered on Philadelphia. Powderly organized the Knights' local assembly in Scranton and was elected its master workman in 1876; he was also an officer in district assembly no. 5.

In 1878, at the age of 29, Powderly was elected mayor of Scranton on the Greenback-Labor ticket. He was reelected three times. Meanwhile, in 1879, he was elected the Knights' grand master workman (general master workman after 1883). His accession marked a significant departure in Knights' policy. His predecessor, a Baptist, had been indifferent to the Catholic Church's opposition to the Knights. Powderly, although a Mason, was also a Roman Catholic and realized that the American Catholic hierarchy must be placated if the Knights were to flourish among Catholic workers. He persuaded the union to abandon its secrecy and to remove scriptural references from its ritual.

Powderly disapproved of strikes, considering them too costly for the small benefits gained. He was a humanitarian visionary, interested in the long-term goals of abolishing the wage system and instituting a cooperative society rather than in short-term gains. With his approval, various local assemblies of the Knights set up 135 producers' and consumers' cooperatives, including a coal mine.

However, as head of the union (1879-1893), Powderly had to devote much time to settling strikes the various locals became involved in. "Just think of it!" he wrote, "Opposing strikes and always striking battling with my pen in the leading journals and magazines of the day for the great things we are educating the people on and fighting with might and main for the little things."

The Knights were involved in a series of dramatically successful strikes during the early 1880s. The most notable involved a strike against the railroads of financier Jay Gould. Such victories resulted in an incredible growth: in mid-1885 there were about 100, 000 Knights in 1, 610 local assemblies; a year later membership stood at 700, 000 in almost 6, 000 locals. Powderly was uncomfortable with such rapid growth, and his lack of enthusiasm in another strike against Gould (1886) contributed to the Knights' defeat and, ultimately, their decline. By 1893, when Powderly was ousted from his position, there were only 75,000 dues-paying members.

Part of Powderly's weakness as the union's leader was his interest in other than union affairs. During his first 6 years as grand master workman, he was also mayor of Scranton. He studied law, served as a county health officer, partly owned and managed a grocery store, served as vice president of the Irish Land League, tried to become the first U.S. commissioner of labor in 1884, took great interest in political campaigns, and was an active prohibitionist. Frequently complaining about the Knights' demand upon his time, he resigned once and threatened to resign several times.

In addition, Powderly was temperamentally unsuited to the industrial turmoil of the 1880s. Disliking strikes and other conflicts, he constantly looked forward to an age of cooperation. Nor did he look the part of a labor organizer. Slender, even frail, he wore delicate spectacles and a magnificent drooping mustache and dressed impeccably. His manners were formal, even haughty. He was considered something of a snob. Ultimately these qualities neutralized his competence as an organizer and administrator, his considerable abilities as a speaker and correspondent, and his tact and diplomacy.

After retiring from leadership of the Knights, Powderly practiced law and was named commissioner general of immigration (1897). He became chief of the Division of Information in the Immigration Bureau in 1907. He died on Jan. 24, 1924.

Further Reading

The basic sources for studying Powderly are his autobiographical Thirty Years of Labor, 1849-1924 (1889; rev. ed. 1890) and The Path I Trod: The Autobiography of Terence V. Powderly (1940). The most comprehensive discussion of Powderly is in Norman J. Ware, The Labor Movement in the United States, 1860-1895 (1929). Information on Powderly can be found in any standard labor history of the period; the best is probably Foster Rhea Dulles, Labor in America (1949; 3d ed. 1966).

Additional Sources

Falzone, Vincent J., Terence V. Powderly, middle class reformer, Washington: University Press of America, 1978.

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Powderly, Terence

The Oxford Companion to United States History | 2001 | | © The Oxford Companion to United States History 2001, originally published by Oxford University Press 2001. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Powderly, Terence (1849–1924), organizer and leader of the Knights of Labor.Born in Carbondale, Pennsylvania, to Irish Catholic immigrants, Powderly apprenticed as a machinist before taking a job in a railroad shop. He joined the Knights of Labor in 1876 and rose quickly through this secret order's ranks, becoming secretary for a district assembly in 1877. In 1878, running on the Greenback Labor party ticket, he was elected mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania. A charismatic orator, Powderly replaced Uriah Stephens as the Knights’ grand master workman in 1879.

Within three years, Powderly transformed a 10,000‐member organization into a thriving movement that welcomed virtually all toilers. Under Powderly, the Knights abandoned secrecy in 1882, sparking further rapid growth. After victorious railroad strikes in 1884–1885, the Knights’ membership rose as high as 750,000. Powderly's vision of labor organization and his articulate opposition to the wage system fostered this growth. His advocacy of producers’ cooperatives and arbitration, disdain for strikes and craft unionism, and support for educational agitation and inclusive labor organization proved popular.

Yet Powderly was an erratic administrator. After 1886, the Knights descended into factionalism and chaos, hastened by his vanity and vague ideas. Driven from leadership in 1893, Powderly subsequently served as the U.S. commissioner of immigration in 1897 and held other federal posts before his retirement. Powderly's leadership of the Knights in their heyday left behind a vision of inclusive labor unionism that subsequent generations would seek to fulfill.
See also Gilded Age; Labor Movements; Strikes and Industrial Conflict.

Bibliography

Norman J. Ware , The Labor Movement in the United States, 1860–1895, 1929.
Harry J. Carman, Henry David, and Paul N. Guthrie, eds., The Path I Trod: The Autobiography of Terence V. Powderly, 1940, reprint 1967.
David Montgomery , The Fall of the House of Labor: The Workplace, the State, and American Labor Activism, 1865–1925, 1987.
Kim Voss , The Making of American Exceptionalism: The Knights of Labor and Class Formation in the Nineteenth Century, 1993.

Joseph A. McCartin

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Paul S. Boyer. "Powderly, Terence." The Oxford Companion to United States History. Oxford University Press. 2001. Retrieved November 24, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O119-PowderlyTerence.html

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