THE GEORGE MEANY MEMORIAL ARCHIVES

Labor's Heritage
Back Issues


Volume I | Volume II | Volume III | Volume IV | Volume V | Volume VI
Volume VII | Volume VIII | Volume IX | Volume X | Volume XI | Volume XII
Volume I, Number 1 (January 1989)
  • Mark Wyman, "Railroaders' Town: Bloomington's Shopmen Look Back," pp. 4-25.
  • Eric Arnesen, "Learning the Lessons of Solidarity: Work Rules and Race Relations on the New Orleans Waterfront, 1880-1901," pp. 26-45.
  • Frances K. Pohl, "Ben Shahn and Fortune Magazine: Representations of Labor in 1946," pp. 46-55.
  • Nancy Gabin, "Women and the United Automobile Workers in the 1940s and 1950s: Reconstructing Their Story," pp. 56-67.
  • John A. Brennan and Cassandra M. Volpe, "Sources for Studying Labor at the Western Historical Collections of the University of Colorado, Boulder," pp. 68-74.
Volume I, Number 2 (April 1989)
  • Robert C. McMath, Jr., "History by a Graveyard: The Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills Records," pp. 4-9.
  • Gary M. Fink, "Labor Espionage: The Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills Strike of 1914-1915," pp. 10-35.
  • Harry R. Rubenstein, "Symbols and Images of American Labor: Badges of Pride," pp. 36-51.
  • Joseph DePlasco, "The University of Labor vs. The University of Letters in 1904: Frank K. Foster Confronts Harvard University President Charles W. Eliot," pp. 52-65.
  • Lester E. Engelbrecht, "Lillian Herstein: Teacher and Activist," pp. 66-75.
Volume I, Number 3 (July 1989)
  • Todd Alexander Postol, "Hearing the Voices of Working Children: The NRA Newspaperboy Letters," pp. 4-19.
  • George N. Green, "Discord in Dallas: Auto Workers, City Fathers, and the Ford Motor Company, 1937-1941," pp. 20-33.
  • Harry R. Rubenstein, "Symbols and Images of American Labor: Dinner Pails and Hard Hats," pp. 34-49.
  • Robert E. Skinner, "The Black Man in the Literature of Labor: The Early Novels of Chester Himes," pp. 50-65.
  • Archie Green, "Working with Laborlore," pp. 66-75.
Volume I, Number 4 (October 1989)
  • Priscilla Long, "The Voice of the Gun: Colorado's Great Coalfield War of 1913-1914," pp. 4-23.
  • Nick Salvatore, "'Lest We Forget': The Paintings of Ralph Fasanella," pp. 24-31.
  • "Paintings of Ralph Fasanella: A Portfolio," pp. 32-45.
  • Darryl Holter, "Wisconsin's 'Labor Disputes' Files, 1937-1939: A Profile of State Intervention in Labor Relations," pp. 46-57.
  • Robert D. Reynolds, Jr., "A Career at Labor Headquarters: The Papers of Boris Shishkin," pp. 58-75. [TOP]
Volume II, Number 1 (January 1990)
  • Lou Athey, "The Company Store in Coal Town Culture," pp. 4-23.
  • Ben Stahl, "The End of Segregation in Teacher Training in Delaware: Recollections of a Union Struggle, 1942-1946," pp. 24-33.
  • Daniel B. Cornfield, "From Craft to Industry: Organizing Furniture Workers in the 1930s," pp. 34-49.
  • Charles A. Scontras, "Maine Lobstermen and the Labor Movement: The Lobster Fishermen's International Protective Association, 1907," pp. 50-63.
  • Steve Rosswurm, "Sources for the Study of Labor History at the Chicago Historical Society," pp. 64-75.
Volume II, Number 2 (April 1990)
  • Martha Stone Asher, "Recollections of the Passaic Textile Strike of 1926," pp. 4-23.
  • Jonathan D. Bloom, "Brookwood Labor College: The Final Years, 1933-1937," pp. 24-43.
  • Kenneth M. Casebeer, "Clashing Views of the Wagner Act: Leon Keyserling's Files," pp. 44-55.
  • Scott Molloy, "Collecting Labor," pp. 56-69.
  • Stanley Nadel, "Those Who Would be Free: The Eight-Hour Strikes of 1872," pp. 70-77.
Volume II, Number 3 (July 1990)
  • Richard A. Greenwald, "Work, Health and Community: Danbury, Connecticut's Struggle with an Industrial Disease," pp. 4-21.
  • Phil H. Goodstein, "The Rise of the Rocky Mountain Labor Movement: Militant Industrial Unionism and the Western Federation of Miners," pp. 22-39.
  • Warner W. Pflug, "'The Strategy is All Reuther's, Damn Him': Two Letters from the Reuther Library," pp. 40-47.
  • Michael Musuraca, "The 'Celebration Begins at Midnight': Irish Immigrants and the Celebration of Bunker Hill Day," pp. 48-61.
  • Sally M. Miller, "Different Accents of Labor," pp. 62-75.
Volume II, Number 4 (October 1990)
  • Franklin Folsom, "Jobless Jack-Tars (1808)," pp. 4-17.
  • Charles D. King, "The Home of Eugene V. Debs: A Shrine to Labor and Social Reform Movements," pp. 18-25.
  • Edwin M. Schmidt, "Labor on Stamps," pp. 26-43.
  • Bruce Nelson, "J. Vance Thompson, the Industrial Workers of the World & the Mood of Syndicalism, 1914-1921," pp. 44-65.
  • Barbara Floyd, Richard Oram, and Nola Skousen, "The City Built of Glass," pp. 66-75. [TOP]
Volume III, Number 1 (January 1991)
  • Susan E. Wilson, "President Theodore Roosevelt's Role in the Anthracite Coal Strike of 1902," pp. 4-23.
  • Hope Nisly, "A Mennonite Woman in 'Thanksgiving Town': Edith Swartzendruber Nisly's Work Experience, 1935-1941," pp. 24-33.
  • Judith Ayre Schomer, "New Workers in a New World: Painting American Labor, 1830-1913," pp. 34-53.
  • Robert Asher, "Organized Labor and the Origins of the Occupational Safety and Health Act," pp. 54-76.
Volume III, Number 2 (April 1991)
  • Ray Denison, "The Seafarers Union Remembered: A Retrospective Log, 1946-1963," pp. 4-23.
  • Doug Reynolds, "Hardball Paternalism, Hardball Politics: Blackstone Valley Baseball, 1925-1955," pp. 24-41.
  • Gregg D. Kimball, "The Working People of Richmond: Life and Labor in an Industrial City, 1865-1920," pp. 42-65.
  • Joyce Ray, "Documenting Workers and Health: Federal Sources," pp. 66-77.
Volume III, Number 3 (July 1991)
  • Howard B. Rock, "'All Her Sons Join in One Social Band': Visual Images of New York's Artisan Societies in the Early Republic," pp. 4-21.
  • Greg LeRoy, "The Founding Heart of A. Philip Randolph's Union: Milton P. Webster and Chicago's Pullman Porters Organize, 1925-1937," pp. 22-43.
  • Ottilie Markholt, "Boom Town Labor: Tacoma's Early Union Movement, 1883-1892," pp. 44-61.
  • Ken Fones-Wolf, "Labor History Sources at the West Virginia and Regional History Collection: West Virginia University," pp. 62-75.
Volume III, Number 4 (October 1991)
  • Grace Palladino, "Forging a National Union: Electrical Workers Confront Issues of Craft, Race, and Gender, 1890-1902," pp. 4-19.
  • Gail Malmgreen, "Labor and the Holocaust: The Jewish Labor Committee and the Anti-Nazi Struggle," pp. 20-35.
  • Israel Kugler, "A Life in the Workmen's Circle: Reminiscence and Reflection," pp. 36-49.
  • Janice A. Petterchak, "Resources for the Study of Labor History at the Illinois State Historical Library," pp. 50-55.
  • Index, January 1989 to October 1991, pp. 56-79. [TOP]
Volume IV, Number 1 (Spring 1992)
  • Toni Gilpin, "'New Feet Under the Table': International Harvester's Industrial Council Plan," pp. 4-27.
  • Colleen R. Callahan, "Dressed for Work: Women's Clothing on the Job, 1900-1990," pp. 28-49.
  • Michael Honey, "Fighting on Two Fronts: Black Trade Unionists in Memphis in the Jim Crow Era," pp. 50-69.
  • Index to Collections, January 1989 to October 1991, pp. 70-77.
Volume IV, Number 2 (Summer 1992)
  • Charles McCollester, "Turtle Creek Fights Taylorism: The Westinghouse Strike of 1914," pp. 4-27.
  • Moe Foner, "Images of Labor at Gallery 1199," pp. 28-53.
  • Donald Winters, "Covington Hall: The Utopian Vision of a 'Wobbly' Poet," pp. 54-63.
  • F.G. Gosling, "Dial Painters Project: Argonne National Laboratory's Documentation of Radium Hazards to Workers," pp. 64-77.
Volume IV, Number 3 (Fall 1992)
  • Edwin Gabler, "Gilded Age Labor in Massachusetts and Illinois: Statistical Surveys of Workingmen's Families," pp. 4-21.
  • Jervis Anderson, "A. Philip Randolph, 1889-1979," pp. 22-33.
  • Rob Rosenthal, "Nothing Moved But the Tide: The Seattle General Strike of 1919," pp. 34-53.
  • David Bartine and Constance Coiner, "Seattle 1919: A Critique," pp. 54-59.
  • Bryant Simon, "'I Believed in the Strongest Kind of Religion': James Evans and Working-Class Protest in the New South," pp. 60-77.
Volume IV, Number 4 (Winter 1992)
  • Alan Draper, "Claude Ramsay, the Mississippi AFL-CIO, and the Civil Rights Movement," pp. 4-19.
  • Frank R. Annunziato, "'Made in New Haven': Unionization and the Shaping of a Clothing Workers' Community," pp. 20-33.
  • James Cassedy, "A Bond of Sympathy: The Life and Tragic Death of Fannie Sellins," pp. 34-47.
  • David Skeele, "Steel/City: Docudrama of an Industry and Its City," pp. 48-63.
  • Index, pp. 64-71.
  • Index to Collections, pp. 72-76. [TOP]
Volume V, Number 1 (Spring 1993)
  • Gary R. Mormino and George E. Pozzetta, "'The Reader Lights the Candle': Cuban and Florida Cigar Workers' Oral Tradition," pp. 4-27.
  • John P. Beck, "Highlander Folk School's Junior Union Camps, 1940-1944," pp. 28-41.
  • John Gladstone, "Working Class Imagery in Harper's Weekly, 1865-1895," pp. 42-61.
  • Donald G. Sofchalk, "The Iron Miners' Struggle for Collective Bargaining, 1941-1943," pp. 62-77.
Volume V, Number 2 (Summer 1993)
  • James Green, "Democracy Comes to 'Little Siberia': Steel Workers Organize in Aliquippa, Pennsylvania, 1933-1937," pp. 4-27.
  • Edmund F. Wehrle, "'For a Healthy America': Labor's Struggle for National Health Insurance, 1943-1949," pp. 28-45.
  • Dennis East, "Vistas and Visions of Ohio Labor," pp. 46-63.
  • Robert M. Smith, "Spies Against Labor: Industrial Espionage Agencies, 1855-1940," pp. 64-77.
Volume V, Number 3 (Winter 1994)
  • John Schacht, "Labor History in the Academy: A Layman's Guide to a Century of Scholarship," pp. 4-21.
  • Tracy Sugarman, "Echoes on Paper: Reflections on My Garment Workers Sketchbook, 1958," pp. 22-49.
  • William C. Pratt, "Divided Workers, Divided Communities: The 1921-22 Packinghouse Strike in Omaha and Nebraska City," pp. 50-65.
  • E. Paul Durrenberger, "The History of Shrimpers' Unions in Mississippi, 1915-1955," pp. 66-76.
Volume V, Number 4 (Spring 1994)
  • Patricia Evridge Hill, "Real Women and True Womanhood: Grassroots Organizing Among Dallas Dressmakers in 1935," pp. 4-17.
  • James J. Lorence, "Controlling the Reserve Army: The United Automobile Workers and Michigan's Unemployed, 1935-1941," pp. 18-37.
  • Esther Peterson, edited by Joyce L. Kornbluh and Brigid O'Farrell, "You Can't Giddyup by Saying Whoa: Esther Peterson Remembers Her Organized Labor Years, 1930-1960," pp. 38-59.
  • "The Frank Morrison Letterbooks, 1904-1925," pp. 60-65.
  • Index, pp. 66-74.
  • Index to Collections, pp. 75-77. [TOP]
Volume VI, Number 1 (Summer 1994)
  • Elizabeth Fones-Wolf, "Contested Play: Company, Union, and Industrial Recreation, 1945-1960," pp. 4-21.
  • David L. Parker, "Stolen Dreams: Portraits of the World's Working Children," pp. 22-45.
  • Michael Szpak, "Removing the 'Mark of the Beast': The Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) and Organized Labor, 1908-1934," pp. 46-61.
  • Fred Greenbaum, "Ambivalent Friends: Progressive Era Politicians and Organized Labor, 1902-1940," pp. 62-76.
Volume VI, Number 2 (Fall 1994)
  • James C. Foster, "A True Blue Labor Organizer: Edward Crough and the Western Federation of Miners, 1907-1920," pp. 4-21.
  • John Dean, "The Pageant of the Paterson Strike" A Share of Life," pp. 22-29.
  • Mark Priest, "Memories on Track: Paintings of a Railway Artist," pp. 30-63.
  • Ken Young, "The Way We Were: Organizing and Other Matters, 1951-1963," pp. 64-77.
Volume VI, Number 3 (Winter 1995)
  • John B. Jentz and Richard Schneirov, "Chicago's Fenian Fair of 1864: A Window into the Civil War as a Popular Political Awakening," pp. 4-19.
  • Landon R.Y. Storrs, "An Independent Voice for Unorganized Workers: The National Consumers' League Speaks to the Blue Eagle," pp. 20-39.
  • Michael Jacobson-Hardy, "The Changing Landscape of Labor: Workers and Workplace," pp. 40-57.
  • Ralph Scharnau, "Streetcar Strike 1903: Dubuque Walks," pp. 58-77.
Volume VI, Number 4 (Spring 1995)
  • Joseph Bedford, "Samuel Gompers and the Caribbean: The AFL, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, 1898-1906," pp. 4-25.
  • Archie Green, "Labor Landmarks: Past and Present," pp. 26-53.
  • "What Is a Landmark? Inventory of American Labor Landmarks & National Park Service Theme Study of Labor Landmarks," pp. 54-63.
  • David L. Perlman, "In Search of the Mechanics' Bell," pp. 64-71.
  • Index to Collections, pp. 72-76. [TOP]
Volume VII, Number 1 (Summer 1995)
  • Gilbert Gall, "The CIO & the Hatch Act: The Roosevelt Court and the Divided New Deal Legacy of the 1940s," pp. 4-21.
  • Catherine A. Christen, "'We Miners Say We Have No Nationality': Photographs from Milton Rogovin's 'Family of Miners,'" pp. 22-51.
  • Bruce A. Olson and Jack L. Howard, "Armed Elites Confront Labor: The Texas Militia and the Houston Strikes of 1880 & 1898," pp. 52-63.
  • Index, Volume 6, pp. 64-77.
Volume VII, Number 2 (Fall 1995)
  • Paula O'Connor, "Grade-School Teachers Become Labor Leaders: Margaret Haley, Florence Rood, and Mary Barker of the AFT," pp. 4-17.
  • Peter Liebhold, "Seeking 'the One Best Way': Frank and Lillian Gilbreth's Time-Motion Photographs, 1910-1924," pp. 18-33.
  • Nora Chapa Mendoza, "Trabajo de la Tierra -- Work of the Land: Images of the Migrant Worker," pp. 34-61.
  • Alex Lichtenstein, "'A Constant Struggle Between Interest and Humanity': Convict Labor in the Coal Mines of the New South," pp. 62-77.
Volume VII, Number 3 (Winter 1996)
  • Bonnie Stepenoff, "'Papa on Parade': Pennsylvania Coal Miners' Daughters and the Silk Worker Strike of 1913," pp. 4-21.
  • Marie Jenkins Schwartz, "One Thing, Then Another: Slave Children's Labor in Alabama," pp. 22-33.
  • Lewis Rubenstein, "Travels with Sketch Pads and Paint Brushes: The 1930s Labor Artwork of Lewis Rubenstein," pp. 34-61.
  • Ben Yomen, "'Congressman Dripp': Lampooning Reactionary Legislators in the 1940s," pp. 62-75.
Volume VII, Number 4 (Spring 1996)
  • Aaron Brenner, "Striking Against the State: The Postal Wildcat of 1970," pp. 4-27.
  • Rudolph J. Vecoli, "Primo Maggio: May Day Observances Among Italian Immigrant Workers, 1890-1920," pp. 28-41.
  • Eric Breitenbach, "Not Palm Trees on Picture Postcards: Photographs of Workers in Florida, 1981-1995," pp. 42-53.
  • James P. Quigel, Jr., "IUE Archives at Rutgers University: Documenting the International Union of Electronic, Electrical, Salaried, Machine and Furniture Workers," pp. 54-77. [TOP]
Volume VIII, Number 1 (Summer 1996)
  • Kenneth C. Burt, "Latino Empowerment in Los Angeles: Postwar Dreams and Cold War Fears, 1948-1952," pp. 4-25.
  • Harry R. Rubenstein, "In Pursuit of the Labor Vote: Presidential Campaign Material at the National Museum of American History," pp. 26-45.
  • Sherrie Tucker, "Working the Swing Shift: Women Musicians During World War II," pp. 46-66.
  • Index, Volume 7, pp. 67-75.
  • Index to Collections, Volume 7, pp. 76-78.
Volume VIII, Number 2 (Fall 1996)
  • Fred Glass, "'We Called It a Work Holiday': The Oakland General Strike of 1946," pp. 4-25.
  • Tom Dalzell, "Linemen's Lingo: The Colloquial Speech of Electrical Power Line Workers," pp. 26-33.
  • Ellen Griesedieck, "Their Energy Flows into My Paintings: An Artist's Vision of Working America," pp. 34-55.
  • Dexter Arnold, "Ethnic Diversity and Labor Unity: Reflections on the Lowell Textile Strike of 1912," pp. 56-77.
Volume VIII, Number 3 (Winter 1997)
  • Grace Palladino, "Telling Labor's Story: Stuart B. Kaufman's Legacy," pp. 4-17.
  • Kathleen Banks Nutter, "Organizing Women During the Progressive Era: Mary Kenney O'Sullivan and the Labor Movement," pp. 18-37.
  • OyamO, "Theater Isn't Just for Sitting There: OyamO Reflects on His Play I Am a Man," pp. 38-57.
  • Beverly Conley, "Work Culture in a Changing World: Images of London's Smithfield Market and of Massachusetts' Cranberry Bogs," pp. 58-77.
Volume VIII, Number 4 (Spring 1997)
  • Jerry Curley, "Navajo Railroad Worker: My Father's Quest for the American Dream," pp. 4-13.
  • Larry Peterson, "Pullman Strike Pictures: Molding Public Perceptions in the 1890s by New Visual Communication," pp. 14-33.
  • Jeff Huebner, "Labor Mural Art of Kathleen Farrell," pp. 34-57.
  • Gloria Garrett Samson and Richard Magat, "Grants for Labor: The Record of the Garland Fund and the Ford Foundation," pp. 58-77. [TOP]
Volume IX, Number 1 (Summer 1997)
  • John B. Jentz, "Citizenship, Self-Respect, and Political Power: Chicago's Flat Janitors Trailblaze the Service Employees International Union, 1912-1921," pp. 4-23.
  • Teresa Bill, "Into the Marketplace: Working-Class Women in 20th Century Hawai'i," pp. 24-45.
  • Lauren Brown, Anne Foster and Timothy Mahoney, "Treasures of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America: Memorabilia and Historical Records at the University of Maryland," pp. 46-59.
  • Index, Volume 8, pp. 60-75.
  • Inext to Collections, Volume 8, pp. 76-77.
Volume IX, Number 2 (Fall 1997)
  • Israel Kugler, "The 1966 Strike at St. John's University: A Memoir," pp. 4-19.
  • Jonathan Rees, "'Giving with One Hand & Taking Away with the Other': The Failure of Welfare Capitalism at United States Steel, 1901-1937," pp. 20-31.
  • Marla Hughes, "'I Paint What I Know': The Work of Former Miner Thomas Elmo Williams," pp. 32-57.
  • Michael Gordon, "Staging The Line: The Creation of a Play About the Patrick Cudahy Meat Packing Strike of 1987-1989," pp. 58-77.
Volume IX, Number 3 (Winter 1998)
  • Melissa Dabakis, "The Samuel Gompers Memorial: Monument to AFL Ideals in the Era of CIO Workers," pp. 4-21.
  • Joe Glazer, "Singing the Gospel of Brotherhood and Sisterhood: Reflections of Labor's Troubadour," pp. 22-37.
  • Slobadan Dimitrov, "Pilebutts: Portrait Documentary of Pile Drivers, Bridge, Dock and Wharf Builders," pp. 38-57.
  • Michael S. Shull, "Silent Agitators: Militant Labor in the Movies, 1909-1919," pp. 58-77.
Volume IX, Number 4 (Spring 1998)
  • Peter Liebhold and Harry R. Rubenstein, "Between a Rock and a Hard Place: The National Museum of American History's Exhibition on Sweatshops, 1820-Present," pp. 4-25.
  • Barb Kucera and Peter Rachleff, "Unbroken Mirror: One Hundred Years of the St. Paul Union Advocate," pp. 26-45.
  • Thomas Dublin (editor) and George Harvan (photographs), "When the Mines Closed: One Worker's Oral History," pp. 46-59.
  • Kathleen Purcell Munley, "Shopfloor Memories of Organizing: Bethlehem Steel, 1936-1942," pp. 60-77. [TOP]
Volume X, Number 1 (Summer 1998)
  • George Everett, "'The Gibraltar of Unionism': The Labor Heritage of Butte, Montana," pp. 4-19.
  • Stephen H. Norwood, "Reclaiming Working-Class Activism: The Boston Women's Trade Union League, 1930-1950," pp. 20-35.
  • Moe Foner and Esther Cohen, "Beyond Textbooks -- Working: Bread and Roses' Exhibit of Student Photographs"; Tenement Museum and City Lights, "Beyond Textbooks: The Origins Project"; National History Day, "Beyond Textbooks: National History Day Competition," pp. 36-63.
  • Index, Volume 9, pp. 64-75.
  • Index to Collections, Volume 9, pp. 76-77.
Volume X, Number 2 (Fall 1998/Winter 1999)
  • Lesley L. Humphreys, "Diamond Mines: Players Organize in the Major Leagues Exhibit at the National Baseball Hall of Fame," pp. 4-21.
  • Robert D. Reynolds, Jr., "Organized Labor and Organized Baseball: Missed Opportunities, 1899-1917," pp. 22-33.
  • Barbara Savan, "Blue Plate Specials: Paintings of East St. Louis Restaurant Workers," pp. 34-57.
  • Virginia Warner Brodine, "Excavating Canal Workers' Lives: The Research Odyssey of a Novelist," pp. 58-75.
Volume X, Number 3 (Spring/Summer 1999)
  • "Labor Museums & Working-Class Culture Sites: Selected Locations in North America," pp. 4-33.
  • Archie Green, "Tin Men on Parade: The Art of Sheet-Metal Workers," pp. 34-47.
  • Karen Lane, "Old Labor Hall, Barre, Vermont: Preserving a Working-Class Icon," pp. 48-61.
  • Jane Latour, "Putting Labor on the Map: The New York State Project," pp. 62-75.
Volume X, Number 4 (Fall 1999/Winter 2000)
  • Wendell E. Pritchett, "A Northern Civil Rights Movement: Community Race Relations in Brooklyn and the Beth-El Hospital Strike of 1962," pp. 4-23.
  • "Labor History and Community Reconciliation": Robert R. Weyneth, "Perspective on a Pardon: Centralia Confronts Its Past"; Esther Barnett Goffinet, "My Father Eugene Barnett Deserves a Long Overdue Pardon"; Helen Lee, "Continuing the Dialogue in Centralia: The Union Mural Project and Beyond," pp. 24-43.
  • Marla Hughes, "The Strength of Steel, the Fragility of Glass: The Steelworkers' Stained Glass Memorial," pp. 44-53.
  • "The Lonaconing Silk Mill Project: Students Research Their Community's Labor History": Anne Failing, "The Lonaconing Silk Mill, 1907-1957: An Allegany High School, Maryland, Student Service Alliance Oral History" and "Oral History Interview: Rev. Thomas Staup," pp. 54-75. [TOP]
Volume XI, Number 1 (Spring/Summer 2000)
  • Daniel Katz, "Race, Gender, and Labor Education: ILGWU Locals 22 and 91, 1933-1937," pp. 4-19.
  • Robert M. Smith, "King of the Strikebreakers: The Notorious Career of James A. Farley, 1895-1913," pp. 20-37.
  • Earl Dotter, "Pictures that Save a Thousand Lives: The Photographs of Earl Dotter," pp. 38-57.
  • Mark Walker, "Labor History at the Ground Level: Colorado Coalfield War Archaeology Project," pp. 58-75.
Volume XI, Number 2 (Fall 2000/Winter 2001)
  • Saul Schniderman, "Mother Jones' Final Sojourn: My Search for the House Where 'the Miners' Angel' Died," pp. 4-17.
  • Wilson J. Warren, Bruce Fehn, and Marianne Robinson, "They Met at the Fair: UPWA and Farmer-Labor Cooperation, 1944-1952," pp. 18-35.
  • Richard Steven Street, "Life in the Canyons: Photographs of San Diego's Immigrant Shantytown Communities," pp. 36-59.
  • Moe Foner, "Beauty, Laughter, Song, and Wisdom: My Life with the Bread and Roses Cultural Project," pp. 60-73.
Volume XI, Number 3 (Spring/Summer 2001)
  • Mike Matejka, "Beneath the Celtic Cross: Irish Immigrants Who Built the Railroads of Central Illinois," pp. 4-13.
  • Greg Koos, "Museum and Labor Partnerships in McLean County, Illinois," pp. 14-17.
  • Anthony J. Silva, "Dots, Dashes, and Tyranny: Western Union's Company Union Remembered," pp. 18-35.
  • David Bacon, "Every Worker Is an Organizer: California Farm Labor and the Resurgence of the United Farm Workers," pp. 36-57.
  • Lisa M. Litterio, "Bread and Roses Strike of 1912: Lawrence, Massachusetts, Immigrants Usher in a New Era of Unity, Labor Gains, and Women's Rights," pp. 58-73.
Volume XI, Number 4 (Winter/Spring 2002)
  • Michael Merrill, "Why Labor Goes to War: Securing and Defending the Conditions of Freedom," pp. 6-23.
  • Grace Palladino, "'Over Here!' Samuel Gompers, the AFL, and the First World War," pp. 24-35.
  • "Work -- Fight -- Give: Smithsonian World War II Posters of Labor, Government, and Industry," pp. 36-49.
  • Edmund F. Wehrle, "Labor's Longest War: Trade Unionists and the Vietnam Conflict," pp. 50-65. [TOP]
Volume XII, Number 1 (Winter/Spring 2003)
  • Dorothy Sue Cobble, "Lost Visions of Equality: The Labor Origins of the Next Women's Movement," pp. 6-23.
  • Addie Wyatt, "'An Injury to One Is an Injury to All': Addie Wyatt Remembers the Packinghouse Workers Union," pp. 24-33.
  • Robert D. Reynolds, Jr., "Changing the Faces of Labor's Leaders: The Knights of Labor Poster of 1886," pp. 34-37.
  • Betsy Kepes, "Leonora Barry: First Voice for Working Women," pp. 38-49.
Volume XII, Number 2 (Spring/Summer 2004)
  • Richard Schneirov, "Voting as a Class: Haymarket and the Rise of a Democrat-Labor Alliance in Late-Nineteenth-Century Chicago," pp. 6-21.
  • Rosanne Currarino, "'To Taste of Life's Sweets': The Eight-Hour Movement and the Origins of Modern Liberalism,"pp. 22-33.
  • Thomas T. Spencer, "Labor's Non-Partisan League, 1936-1944," pp. 34-47.
  • "Shaggy Flores, Nuyorican Poet: A Voice for the Voiceless," an Interview, pp. 48-52. [TOP]


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