The Black worker during the era of the National Labor Union /

"Records central to grasping collective understandings of work, uplift, and racial progress as defined by Black leaders and ordinary Black workers during the late nineteenth century, when debates about racial politics were especially rich, fill the collection’s second volume. Proceedings of the...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Access full-text online via JSTOR
Other authors / contributors: Foner, Philip Sheldon, 1910-1994 (Editor), Lewis, Ronald L., 1940- (Editor), Ervin, Keona K. (Author of introduction, etc.)
Imprint: Philadelphia : Temple University Press, 2019.
Format: Electronic
Language:English
Subjects:
Series:Black worker ; v. 2.
Description
Summary:"Records central to grasping collective understandings of work, uplift, and racial progress as defined by Black leaders and ordinary Black workers during the late nineteenth century, when debates about racial politics were especially rich, fill the collection’s second volume. Proceedings of the Colored National Labor Union’s inaugural national conference, its second and third conventions, and meetings from local and state chapters come from records such as The Christian Recorder, The National Anti-Slavery Standard, and The New Era, while papers from Duke University’s Freedmen’s Bureau Project, and statistics from the National Bureau of Labor suggest the critical importance of labor to Black organizational and political life. State Black labor conventions in the late nineteenth century tell the story of what occurred in places such as Richmond, New York, Saratoga, and Alabama. Documenting the rise of local Black militancy immediately following the Civil War, the sources depict striking Black workers across the South, including, for instance, the Galveston Strike of 1877 and a strike led by Black washerwomen. Testimony from Black workers about racial terrorism in South Carolina show the centrality of Black labor to the activities of groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, while Black labor radicalism, perhaps defined narrowly as Black socialism or Black Marxism, finds articulation in a section that includes an 1877 speech by abolitionist and socialist Peter H. Clark"--From foreword.
Item Description:Reissued with foreword by Keona K. Ervinches.
Physical Description:1 online resource (402 pages)
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9781439917688
143991768X
Access:Open access.
Source of Description, Etc. Note:Print version record.