1934 West Coast waterfront strike

(Redirected from Maritime Strike of 1934)

The 1934 West Coast waterfront strike (also known as the 1934 West Coast longshoremen's strike, as well as a number of variations on these names) lasted 83 days, and began on May 9, 1934, when longshoremen in every US West Coast port walked out. Organized by the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA), the strike peaked with the death of two workers on "Bloody Thursday" and the subsequent San Francisco General Strike, which stopped all work in the major port city for four days and led ultimately to the settlement of the West Coast Longshoremen's Strike.[3]

1934 West Coast waterfront strike
  Confrontation between a policeman wielding a night    stick and a striker during the San Francisco General Strike, 1934
DateMay 9 – July 31, 1934 (84 days)[1]
Location
MethodsStrikes, protest, demonstrations
Parties
Lead figures
Casualties and losses
Deaths: 9,
Injuries:>1000,
Arrests: >500.[2]
Deaths:
Injuries:

The result of the strike was the unionization of all of the West Coast ports of the United States. The San Francisco General Strike of 1934, along with the Toledo Auto-Lite Strike of 1934 led by the American Workers Party and the Minneapolis Teamsters Strike of 1934 led by the Communist League of America, were catalysts for the rise of industrial unionism in the 1930s, much of which was organized through the Congress of Industrial Organizations.[1]

Background

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The 1916 West Coast waterfront strike was the first example of coastwide organizational unity among West Coast longshore workers. The strike resulted in a massive defeat for the ILA, and employers began an effort to eliminate the ILA's presence on the waterfront.[4]

Longshoremen on the West Coast ports had either been unorganized or represented by company unions since the years immediately after World War I, when the shipping companies and stevedoring firms had imposed the open shop after a series of failed strikes.[5] Longshoremen in San Francisco, then the major port on the coast, were required to go through a hiring hall operated by a company union, known as the "blue book" system for the color of the membership book.[6]

The Industrial Workers of the World had attempted to organize longshoremen, sailors and fishermen in the 1920s through their Marine Transport Workers Union.[7] Their largest strike, the 1923 San Pedro Maritime Strike, stalled shipping in that harbor, but was crushed by a combination of injunctions, mass arrests and vigilantism by the American Legion. Other Wobbly-led strikes occurred in Seattle in 1919 and Portland in 1922.[8] While the IWW was a spent force after that strike, syndicalist thinking remained popular on the docks.[9] Longshoremen and sailors on the West Coast also had contacts with an Australian syndicalist movement that called itself the "One Big Union" formed after the defeat of a general strike there in 1917.[10]

The Communist Party had also been active in the area in the late 1920s, seeking to organize all categories of maritime workers into a single union, the Marine Workers Industrial Union (MWIU), as part of the drive during the Third Period to create revolutionary unions.[11][12] The MWIU never made much headway on the West Coast, but it did attract a number of former IWW members and foreign-born militants.[13] Harry Bridges, an Australian-born sailor who became a longshoreman after coming to the United States, was repeatedly accused[further explanation needed] for his acknowledged Communist party membership.[14][15]

Militants published a newspaper, The Waterfront Worker, which focused on longshoremen's most pressing demands: more men on each gang, lighter loads and an independent union.[16][17] While a number of the individuals in this group were Communist Party members, the group as a whole was independent of the party: although it criticized the International Seamen's Union (ISU) as weak and the International Longshoremen's Association (ILA), which had its base on the East Coast, as corrupt, it did not embrace the MWIU, but called instead for creation of small knots of activists at each port to serve as the first step in a slow, careful movement to unionize the industry.[18]

Events soon made the MWIU wholly irrelevant. Just as the passage of the National Industrial Recovery Act had led to a spontaneous significant rise in union membership among coal miners in 1933, thousands of longshoremen now joined the fledgling ILA locals that reappeared on the West Coast.[19] The MWIU faded away as party activists followed the mass of West Coast longshoremen into the ILA.[18]

These newly emboldened workers first went after the "blue book" union, refusing to pay dues to it and tearing up their membership books. The militants who had published "The Waterfront Worker", now known as the "Albion Hall group" after their usual meeting place, continued organizing dock committees that soon began launching slowdowns and other types of job actions in order to win better working conditions.[18] While the official leadership of the ILA remained in the hands of conservatives sent to the West Coast by President Joseph P. Ryan of the ILA, the Albion Hall group started in March, 1934 to press demands for a coastwide contract, a union-run hiring hall and an industry wide waterfront federation.[20] When the conservative ILA leadership negotiated a weak "gentlemen's agreement" with the employers that had been brokered by the mediation board created by the administration of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bridges led the membership in rejecting it.[21]

The sticking point in the strike was recognition: the union demanded a closed shop, a coastwide contract and a union hiring hall. The employers offered to arbitrate the dispute, but insisted that the union agree to an open shop as a condition of any agreement to arbitrate. The longshoremen rejected the proposal to arbitrate.[22]

The Big Strike

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An engraved billy club commemorates police activity in the Battle of Smith Cove in Seattle.

The strike began on May 9, 1934, as longshoremen in every West Coast port walked out; sailors joined them several days later.[23] The employers recruited strikebreakers, housing them on moored ships or in walled compounds and bringing them to and from work under police protection.[24] Strikers attacked the stockade housing strikebreakers in San Pedro on May 15; police fired into the strikers, killing two and injuring many.[specify] The killing of Dick Parker created resentment up and down the coast.[25] Daily similar smaller clashes broke out in San Francisco and Oakland, California, Portland, Oregon,[26] and Seattle, Washington.[25] Strikers also succeeded in slowing down or stopping the movement of goods by rail out of the ports.[27]

The Roosevelt administration tried again to broker a deal to end the strike, but the membership twice rejected the agreements their leadership brought to them and continued the strike.[28] The employers then decided to make a show of force to reopen the port in San Francisco.[29] On Tuesday, July 3, fights broke out along the Embarcadero in San Francisco between police and strikers while a handful of trucks driven by young businessmen made it through the picket line.[30]

Some Teamsters supported the strikers by refusing to handle "hot cargo" – goods which had been unloaded by strikebreakers – although the Teamsters' leadership was not as supportive.[31] By the end of May, Dave Beck, president of the Seattle Teamsters, and Mike Casey, president of those in San Francisco, thought the maritime strike had lasted too long.[32] They encouraged the strikers to take what they could get from the employers and threatened to use Teamsters as strikebreakers if the ILA did not return to work.[33]

Shipping companies, government officials, some union leaders and the press began to raise fears that the strike was the result of communist agitation.[34][35] This "red scare" also helped ignite a controversy about the New Deal Public Works of Art Project murals that were at the time being completed in San Francisco's Coit Tower (on Telegraph Hill, close to the location of the strike in San Francisco), leading to the postponing of the tower's July 7 opening, and later to the removal of communist symbols from two of the American Social Realism style murals.[34][35]

Date Location Workers killed Notes
May 15, 1934 San Pedro, CA 2 When 500 strikers attacked and tried to set fire to a ship housing strikebreakers in San Pedro, police unsuccessfully tried to stop them with tear gas, then shot into the crowd, killing strikers Dick Parker and John Knudsen.[36][37]
June 30, 1934 Seattle, WA 1 Upon hearing that replacement crews were about to take two oil tankers out of the port, union members went to the dock. When the longshoremen tried to get past the dock's gates, they were ambushed by guards. Worker Shelvy Daffron was shot in the back and later died.
July 5, 1934 San Francisco, CA 2 When striking longshoremen surrounded a San Francisco police car and tried to tip it over, the police shot into the air, and then fired into the crowd, killing Nick Bordoise (originally named Nick Counderakis) and Howard Sperry.
August 20, 1934 Portland, OR 1 James Connor, a 22-year-old college student and newlywed working as a replacement worker on his vacation, was shot and killed in an altercation with striking longshoremen.[26] This was one of a string of violent incidents, including visiting Senator Robert F. Wagner coming under fire. A second replacement worker named R.A. Griffin was also wounded in the head.

"Bloody Thursday"

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San Francisco Coroner's Records of Death for Howard Sperry and Nicolas Bordoise

After a quiet Fourth of July, the employers' organization, the Industrial Association, tried to open the port of San Francisco even further on Thursday, July 5.[38] As spectators watched from Rincon Hill, the police shot tear gas canisters into the crowd, then followed with a charge by mounted police.[39] Picketers threw the canisters and rocks back at the police, who charged again, sending the picketers into retreat.[40] Each side then refortified and took stock.[41]

The events took a violent turn that afternoon, as hostilities resumed outside of the ILA strike kitchen.[42] Eyewitness accounts differ on the exact events that transpired next. According to some witnesses, a group of strikers first surrounded a police car and attempted to tip it over, prompting the police to fire shotguns in the air, and then revolvers at the crowd.[18] Other eyewitness accounts claim that police officers started shooting in the direction of the strikers, provoking strikers to defend themselves. Policemen fired a shotgun into the crowd, striking three men in intersection of Steuart and Mission streets. One of the men, Howard Sperry, a striking longshoreman, later died of his wounds. Another man, Charles Olsen, was also shot but later recovered from his wounds. A third man, Nick Bordoise – a Greek by birth (originally named Nick Counderakis) who was an out of work member of the cook's union volunteering at the ILA strike kitchen – was shot but managed to make his way around the corner onto Spear Street, where he was found several hours later. Like Sperry, he died at the hospital.[43]

Strikers immediately cordoned off the area where the two picketers had been shot, laying flowers and wreaths around it. Police arrived to remove the flowers and drive off the picketers minutes later. Once the police left, the strikers returned, replaced the flowers and stood guard over the spot. Though Sperry and Bordoise had been shot several blocks apart, this spot became synonymous with the memory of the two slain men and "Bloody Thursday".[44]

As strikers carried wounded picketers into the ILA union hall police fired on the hall and lobbed tear gas canisters at nearby hotels. At this point someone reportedly called the union hall to ask "Are you willing to arbitrate now?".[42]

Under orders from California Governor Frank Merriam, the California National Guard moved in that evening to patrol the waterfront.[45] Similarly, federal soldiers of the United States Army stationed at the Presidio were placed on alert. The picketers pulled back, unwilling to take on armed soldiers in an uneven fight, and trucks and trains began moving without interference. Bridges asked the San Francisco Labor Council to meet that Saturday, July 7, to authorize a general strike.[46] The Alameda County Central Labor Council in Oakland considered the same action. Teamsters in both San Francisco and Oakland voted to strike, over the objections of their leaders, on Sunday, July 8.[47]

Funerals and general strike

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The following day, several thousand strikers, families and sympathizers took part in a funeral procession down Market Street, stretching more than a mile and a half, for Nicholas Bordoise and Howard Sperry, the two persons killed on "Bloody Thursday".[48] The police were wholly absent from the scene. The march made an enormous impact on San Franciscans, making a general strike, which had formerly been "the visionary dream of a small group of the most radical workers, became ... a practical and realizable objective."[49] After dozens of Bay Area unions voted for a general strike over the next few days, the San Francisco Labor Council voted on July 14 to call a general strike.[50] The Teamsters had already been out for two days by that point.[51]

San Francisco Mayor Angelo Rossi declared a state of emergency.[52] Some federal officials, particularly Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins, were more skeptical.[53] Roosevelt later recalled that some persons were urging him to steer the USS Houston, which was carrying him to Hawaii, "into San Francisco Bay, all flags flying and guns double-shotted, and end the strike." Roosevelt rejected the suggestion.[54]

The general strike began on the 16th, involving some 150,000 workers.[18] On the 17th the police arrested more than 300 "radicals, subversives, and communists" while systematically smashing furniture and equipment of organizations related to the strike; the same day, General Hugh S. Johnson as head of the National Recovery Administration spoke at UC Berkeley to denounce the general strike as "a menace to the government".[55]

The strike lasted four days. Non-union truck drivers joined the first day; the movie theaters and night clubs closed down. While food deliveries continued with the permission of the strike committee, many small businesses closed, posting signs in support of the strikers.[56] Reports that unions in Portland and Seattle would also begin general strikes picked up currency.[57]

End of the strike

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The calling of a general strike had an unexpected result: it gave the General Strike Committee, whose makeup was far less militant than the longshoremen's strike committee, effective control over the maritime strike itself.[58] When the Labor Council voted to terminate the general strike it also recommended that the unions accept arbitration of all disputed issues.[59] When the National Longshore Board put the employer's proposal to arbitrate to a vote of striking longshoremen, it passed in every port except Everett, Washington.[citation needed]

That, however, left the striking seamen in the lurch: the employers had refused to arbitrate with the ISU unless it first won elections on the fleets on strike. While Bridges, who had preached solidarity among all maritime workers and scorned arbitration, apologized to the seamen for the longshoremen's vote, the President of the ISU urged them to hold out and to burn their "fink books", the membership records of the company union to which they had been forced to pay dues.[60]

On July 17, 1934, the California National Guard blocked both ends of Jackson Street from Drumm to Front with machine gun mounted trucks to assist vigilante raids, protected by SFPD, on the headquarters of the Marine Workers' Industrial Union and the ILA soup kitchen at 84 Embarcadero. Moving on, the Workers' Ex-Servicemen's League's headquarters on Howard between Third and Fourth was raided, leading to 150 arrests and the complete destruction of the facilities. The employer's group, the Industrial Association, had agents riding with the police.[61] Further raids were carried out at the Workers' Open Forum at 1223 Fillmore street and the Western Worker building opposite City Hall that contained a bookstore and the main offices of the Communist Party, which was thoroughly destroyed.[62] Attacks were also perpetrated on the 121 Haight Street Workers' School and the Mission Workers' Neighborhood House at 741 Valencia Street.[63] A police spokesperson suggested that "maybe the Communists staged the raids themselves for publicity".[64]

General Hugh S. Johnson, then head of the National Recovery Administration, gave a speech urging responsible labor leaders to "run these subversive influences out from its ranks like rats".[65] A lawyer for the American Civil Liberties Union was kidnapped and beaten, while vigilantes seized thirteen radicals in San Jose and turned them over to the sheriff of an adjoining county, who transported them to another county.[66] In Hayward in Alameda County someone erected a scaffold in front of the city hall with a noose and a sign stating "Reds beware".[67] In Piedmont, an upscale community surrounded by Oakland on all sides, the chief of police prepared for a reported attack by strikers on the homes of wealthy ship-owners.[68]

Aftermath

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While some of the most powerful people in San Francisco considered the strike's denouement to be a victory for the employers, many longshoremen and seamen did not. Spontaneous strikes over grievances and workplace conditions broke out as strikers returned to their jobs, with longshoremen and teamsters supporting their demands.[69] Employers conceded many of these battles, giving workers even more confidence in demanding that employers lighten unbearably heavy loads.[70] Longshoremen also began dictating other terms, fining members who worked more than the ceiling of 120 hours per month, filing charges against a gang boss for "slandering colored brothers" and forcing employers to fire strikebreakers.[71] Other unions went further: the Marine Firemen proposed to punish any member who bought a Hearst newspaper.[72]

The arbitration award issued on October 12, 1934, cemented the ILA's power.[73] While the award put the operation of the hall in the hands of a committee of union and employer representatives, the union was given the power to select the dispatcher. Since longshoremen were prepared to walk out if an employer did not hire a worker dispatched from the hall, the ILA soon controlled hiring on the docks. The employers complained that the union wanted to "sovietize" the waterfront.[74] Workers complained that the employers were exploiting them for cheap labor and forcing them to work in unsafe conditions without reasonable safety measures.[citation needed]

The union soon utilized the "quickie strike" tactic to force many concessions from employers such as safer working conditions and better pay.[8] Similarly, even though an arbitrator held that the 1935 Agreement prohibited sympathy strikes, the union's members nonetheless refused to cross other unions' picket lines. Longshoremen also refused to handle "hot cargo" destined for non-union warehouses that the union was attempting to organize.[75] The ISU acquired similar authority over hiring, despite the philosophical objection of the union's own officers to hiring halls. The ISU used this power to drive strikebreakers out of the industry.[76]

The rift between the seamen's and longshoremen's unions deepened and became more complex in the succeeding years, as Bridges continually fought with the Sailors' Union of the Pacific over labor and political issues, many of which came to the forefront in the 1936 Pacific Coast Maritime Strike two years later. The West Coast district of the ILA broke off from the International in 1937 to form the International Longshoremen's Union, later renamed the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union after the union's "march inland" to organize warehouse workers, then renamed the International Longshore and Warehouse Union (ILWU) in recognition of the number of women members.[citation needed]

The arbitration award also gave longshoremen a raise to ninety-five cents ($22 in 2023 dollars) an hour for straight time work, just shy of the dollar an hour it demanded during the strike. It was also awarded a contract that applied up and down the West Coast.[73] The strike also prompted union organizer Carmen Lucia to organize the Department Store Workers Union and the Retail Clerks Association in San Francisco.[77]

Legacy

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The ILWU continues to recognize "Bloody Thursday" by shutting down all West Coast ports every July 5 and honoring Nick Bordoise, Howard Sperry and all of the other workers killed by police during the strike.[78] The ILWU has frequently stopped work for political protests against, among other things, Italy's invasion of Ethiopia, fascist intervention in the Spanish Civil War, South Africa's system of apartheid and the Iraq War.[18][75]

Sam Kagel, the last surviving member of the original union steering committee, died on May 21, 2007, at the age of 98.[79]

Bloody Thursday, a documentary film that told the story of the strike, was broadcast on PBS stations across the nation and was awarded a Los Angeles Area Emmy for best historical film in 2010.[80]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Preis, Art (1974). Labor's giant step: twenty years of the CIO. Pathfinder Press. pp. 31–33. ISBN 9780873480246.
  2. ^ Kimeldorf, Howard (1988). Reds or Rackets?: The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront. University of California Press. p. 101. ISBN 9780520912779.
  3. ^ David F. Selvin, A terrible anger: The 1934 waterfront and general strikes in San Francisco (Wayne State University Press, 1996).
  4. ^ "International Longshore and Warehouse Union, Local 19 (Seattle) records - Archives West". archiveswest.orbiscascade.org. Retrieved March 6, 2024.
  5. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. pp. 85–86. ISBN 9780195118025.
  6. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 231. ISBN 9780520288409.
  7. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 60. ISBN 9780252061448.
  8. ^ a b Kimeldorf, Howard (1988). Reds or Rackets?: The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520912779.
  9. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 61–62. ISBN 9780252061448.
  10. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 64–65. ISBN 9780252061448.
  11. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 39. ISBN 9780717805044.
  12. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 79. ISBN 9780252061448.
  13. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 62. ISBN 9780252061448.
  14. ^ "Harry Bridges: Life and Legacy".
  15. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. p. 93. ISBN 9780195118025.
  16. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 232. ISBN 9780520288409.
  17. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. p. 90. ISBN 9780195118025.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Chretien, Todd (June 2012). "The Communist Party, the unions, and the San Francisco General Strike". International Socialist Review. 84.
  19. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 40. ISBN 9780717805044.
  20. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. pp. 94–95. ISBN 9780195118025.
  21. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 42–44. ISBN 9780717805044.
  22. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 41–42. ISBN 9780717805044.
  23. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. pp. 90–91. ISBN 9780195118025.
  24. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. p. 91. ISBN 9780195118025.
  25. ^ a b Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 50. ISBN 9780717805044.
  26. ^ a b Munk, Michael. "West coast waterfront strike of 1934". Oregon Encyclopedia. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  27. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 49–50. ISBN 9780717805044.
  28. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. pp. 100–101. ISBN 9780195118025.
  29. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 102. ISBN 9780717805044.
  30. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 103–105. ISBN 9780717805044.
  31. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 48–49. ISBN 9780717805044.
  32. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 80. ISBN 9780717805044.
  33. ^ Longshoreman's Strike of 1934 – ILWU
  34. ^ a b Depression-Era Murals of the Bay Area. Arcadia Publishing. 2014. ISBN 9781467131445. As the strike raged along the waterfront at the base of Telegraph Hill, many claimed that the labor unrest was influenced by members of the Communist Party. Simultaneously, the PWAP took notice of blatant communist references in the Coit Tower murals painted by Victor Arnautoff, John Langley Howard, Clifford Wight, and Bernhard Zakheim.
  35. ^ a b Kamiya, Gary (July 8, 2017). "How Coit Tower's murals became a target for anticommunist forces". www.sfchronicle.com. Retrieved February 4, 2019.
  36. ^ Selvin, David F. (1996). A Terrible Anger: The 1934 Waterfront and General Strikes in San Francisco. Wayne State University Press. p. 236. ISBN 0814326102. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
  37. ^ "Police Fire Into Ranks of Strikers". Hammond (Ind) Times. May 15, 1934. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
  38. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 110. ISBN 9780717805044.
  39. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 111. ISBN 9780717805044.
  40. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 112. ISBN 9780717805044.
  41. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. pp. 239–40. ISBN 9780520288409.
  42. ^ a b Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 113. ISBN 9780717805044.
  43. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. pp. 107–8. ISBN 9780195118025.
  44. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 119. ISBN 9780717805044.
  45. ^ Starr, Kevin (1997). Endangered Dreams: The Great Depression in California. Oxford University Press. p. 108. ISBN 9780195118025.
  46. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 122. ISBN 9780717805044.
  47. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 123. ISBN 9780717805044.
  48. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 240. ISBN 9780520288409.
  49. ^ words of Paul Eliel, Waterfront and General Strikes p. 128, quoted in Bruce, Nelson (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. p. 303. ISBN 9780252061448. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  50. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 138, 141. ISBN 9780717805044.
  51. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 133. ISBN 9780717805044.
  52. ^ Milton, David (1982). Politics of US Labor. NYU Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780853455707.
  53. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 142. ISBN 9780717805044.
  54. ^ Milton, David (1982). Politics of US Labor. NYU Press. p. 49. ISBN 9780853455707.
  55. ^ Carlsson, Chris. "The General Strike of 1934". Found SF. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  56. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 151. ISBN 9780717805044.
  57. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 173. ISBN 9780717805044.
  58. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. pp. 156–157. ISBN 9780717805044.
  59. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 176. ISBN 9780717805044.
  60. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 244. ISBN 9780520288409.
  61. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 160. ISBN 9780717805044.
  62. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 161. ISBN 9780717805044.
  63. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 162. ISBN 9780717805044.
  64. ^ Selvin, David F. (1996). A Terrible Anger: The 1934 Waterfront and General Strikes in San Francisco. Wayne State University Press. p. 200. ISBN 0814326102.
  65. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 243. ISBN 9780520288409.
  66. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 167. ISBN 9780717805044.
  67. ^ Quin, Mike (1979). The Big Strike. International Publishers Co. p. 166. ISBN 9780717805044.
  68. ^ An Exercise in Hysteria: San Francisco's Red Raids of 1934 – David F. Selvin – The Pacific Historical Review, Vol. 58, No. 3 (Aug., 1989), pp. 361–374
  69. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 156–157. ISBN 9780252061448.
  70. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 158. ISBN 9780252061448.
  71. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. pp. 244–45. ISBN 9780520288409.
  72. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 160. ISBN 9780252061448.
  73. ^ a b Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 245. ISBN 9780520288409.
  74. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 162–163. ISBN 9780252061448.
  75. ^ a b Kimeldorf, Howard (1988). Reds or Rackets?: The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront. University of California Press. p. 114. ISBN 9780520912779.
  76. ^ Nelson, Bruce (1990). Workers on the Waterfront: Seamen, Longshoremen, and Unionism in the 1930s. University of Illinois Press. pp. 164–166. ISBN 9780252061448.
  77. ^ O'Farrell, Brigid (1996). Rocking the Boat: Union Women's Voices, 1915–1975. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press. pp. 40. ISBN 9780813522692 – via Internet Archive.
  78. ^ Glass, Fred (2016). From Mission to Microchip: A History of the California Labor Movement. Univ of California Press. p. 246. ISBN 9780520288409.
  79. ^ Nolte, Carl (May 27, 2007). "Sam Kagel – arbitrator in major labor disputes (obit)". SF Gate. Retrieved April 15, 2017.
  80. ^ Coker, Matt (August 27, 2010). "KOCE Snags an LA Emmy for Bloody Thursday – OC Weekly". www.ocweekly.com. Retrieved January 1, 2023.

Further reading

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  • Workers on the Waterfront, Seamen, Longshoremen and Unionism in the 1930s, by Bruce Nelson, ISBN 0252061446
  • Cherny, Robert W. "The making of a labor radical: Harry Bridges, 1901–1934." Pacific Historical Review 64.3 (1995): 363–388 online.
  • A Terrible Anger: The 1934 Waterfront and General Strikes in San Francisco, by David F. Selvin. Wayne State University Press (1996). ISBN 0814326102.
  • Dock Strike: History of the 1934 Waterfront Strike in Portland, Oregon, by Roger Buchanan
  • Reds or Rackets, The Making of Radical and Conservative Unions on the Waterfront, by Howard Kimeldorf, ISBN 0520078861
  • The Big Strike, by Mike Quin, ISBN 0717805042
  • Harry Bridges, The Rise and Fall of Radical Labor in the U.S., by Charles Larrowe, ISBN 0882080016
  • Agitate, Educate, Organize: Portland, 1934, by William Bigelow & Norman Diamond, Oregon Historical Quarterly, Spring 1988
  • "1934 West Coast waterfront strike". The Oregon Encyclopedia.
  • 1934: The Great Strike, a multimedia section of the Waterfront Workers History Project, including film and photographs of the strike, a day-by-day account of the strike and digitized copies of newspaper articles and worker newsletters.

Archives

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