Northern Pacific Terminal Company of Oregon.

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Northern Pacific Terminal Company of Oregon.

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Northern Pacific Terminal Company of Oregon.

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1881

active 1881

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1969

active 1969

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Biographical History

Incorporated in 1882 under the state laws of Oregon, the company acquired land and terminal facilities at Portland, East Portland, and Albina, Oregon. NP was one of the lessees of the properties from 1883 onward. The company's name was changed to the Portland Terminal Railroad Comapny in September 1965.

From the description of Corporate records, 1881-1969. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 313866796

On December 7, 1940, the clerks and warehousemen at Ward's Portland plant struck over the terms of settlement in a labor dispute. When the negotiations over the terms of settlement broke down on December 20, the Teamsters Union, representing the warehousemen, called for a general boycott of the goods being shipped to and from the plant.

A contract clause in the Agreement between the Teamsters and the Carriers servicing Wards stated that the Union was not in favor of sympathetic strikes and further provided that the Union would not interfere with interstate commerce or in the intrastate commerce moving over the lines of the operator. Despite the language in this provision, there were innumerable instances of direct coercion of employers and employees to restrict handling of Ward's merchandise. After a brief period of struggle with the boycott, the carriers abandoned all attempts to service Wards.

In addition to the general boycott, a secondary boycott was developed against the Company which exhibited equal strength. Major oil companies refused to sell or deliver fuel oil to the struck plant, longshoremen refused to handle Ward's merchandise, the Post Office refused to handle any more goods than had been customary before the strike, and railroads did not switch cars onto Ward's sidings.

Only after hearings before the Interstate Commerce Commission did the carriers resume service. Soon afterward, Ward's entered suit against the carriers involved in the District Court for recovery of damages as a result of the strike and boycott.

Since the case was finally ruled upon in 1951 (approximately nine years after the occurance of the strike), the decision was more concerned with carrier liability than with the actual award of damages. The judge, Honorable J. Alger Fee, ruled on the basis of common law that the "carriers were each responsible for the acts and defaults of their own servants...and that 'tertiary' boycotts to isolate a single business from the facilities of commerce...(is) against the labor policy of the United States." As the carriers had consciously withheld their services from use by Wards, they were in violation of the law and, as such, "they should pay for the natural and probable consequences of having failed their duty."

From the guide to the Montgomery Ward and Co. vs. Northern Pacific Terminal Co. of Oregon, et al. Files, 1940., (Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.)

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Arbitration, Industrial

Railroads

Railroad terminals

Strikes and lockouts

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Oregon

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w6r86zc6

12441266