Chapter 14
Tenement
A building in which several families rent rooms or apartments with little sanitation or safety
Anarchist
A person who opposes all forms of government
Working Class
A social class broadly composed of people working in blue collar, or manual, occupations.
Labor Union
An organization of workers that tries to improve working conditions, wages, and benefits for its members
Child Labor
Children working in factories to make a living for their families
Division of Labor
Division of work into a number of separate tasks to be performed by different workers (management, workers, assembly line)
American Federation of Labor
Founded in 1886 by Samuel Gompers, focused on recruiting skilled workers (higher wages, shorter hours, better conditions)
Collective Bargaining
Process by which a union representing a group of workers negotiates with management for a contract
Pullman Strike, Chicago 1894
Pullman cut wages, angry workers shut down railroads, president sent in federal troops to break the strike
Railroad Strike, West Virginia 1877
Railroad workers went on strike across the country, strikers burned and looted railroad property, police and militia could not control them so the army came and broke up the strike. 100 people dead, millions of dollars worth of property destroyed
Strike
Refusal to work in order to force an employer to meet certain demands
Sweatshop
Small factory where employees have to work long hours under poor conditions for little pay
Haymarket Riot, Chicago 1886
Strikers protested scabs, anarchists call meeting in Haymarket Square, 180 police break up gathering, bomb exploded near police. Four protesters dead, Several police dead
Socialism
a political theory advocating state ownership of industry
Bread and Butter Values
higher wages, shorter work day, better conditions