National Women's Trade Union League of America
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National Women's Trade Union League of America
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Name :
National Women's Trade Union League of America
National Women’s Trade Union League of America
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Name Components
Name :
National Women’s Trade Union League of America
National Women's Trade Union League
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Name Components
Name :
National Women's Trade Union League
National Women's Trade Union League.
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Name :
National Women's Trade Union League.
Women's Trade Union League of America
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Women's Trade Union League of America
Women's Trade Union League of America USA
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Name :
Women's Trade Union League of America USA
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Biographical History
The National Women's Trade Union League was founded in Boston, Mass., in 1903 to organize women workers into trade unions. The league also held training programs for workers, conducted research re: working conditions, and supported strikes.
The National Women's Trade Union League of America was founded in Boston, Mass., in 1903 to "assist in the organization of women wage workers into trade unions and thereby to help them secure conditions necessary for healthful and efficient work and to obtain a just reward for such work."
The Trade Union League was established in Boston in 1903 to organize women workers into unions, thereby helping them to "secure conditions necessary for healthful and efficient work and to obtain a just reward for such work." The League was dissolved in 1950.
The Women's Trade Union League was founded in 1903 during the annual convention of the American Federation of Labor. Local branches were organized within a year in Boston, Chicago and New York. In 1907 its name became the National Women's Trade Union League of America. The League sought to counter the exploitation of working women by organizing them into trade unions and by securing protective legislation regulating their hours and working conditions and setting minimum wage standards. Its dual membership of working and middle class women made the League unique among social reform organizations of its day.
As the League's president from 1907 to 1922, Margaret Dreier Robins, the well-to-do daughter of a Brooklyn businessman, guided it through the period of its most active work. Among her close associates were several working class women who served as officers of the national or local Leagues, including Leonora O'Reilly of New York and Agnes Nestor and Mary Anderson of Chicago. After 1922, working women took over the leadership; Rose Schneiderman, a veteran leader of strikes in the needle trades, served as national president from 1926 to 1950.
The Women's Trade Union League was founded in Boston in 1903 during the annual convention of the American Federation of Labor. In 1907 its name became the National Womens Trade Union League of America. Local branches were organized within a year in Boston, Chicago and New York. The League sought to counter the exploitation of working women by organizing them into trade unions and by securing protective legislation regulating their hours and working conditions and setting minimum wage standards. Its dual membership of working and middle class women made the WTUL unique among social reform organizations of its day.
As the League's president from 1907 to 1922, Margaret Dreier Robins, the well-to-do daughter of a Brooklyn businessman, guided it through the period of its most active work. Among her close associates were several working class women who served as officers of the national or local Leagues, including Leonora O'Reilly of New York and Agnes Nestor and Mary Anderson of Chicago. After 1922, working women took over the leadership; Rose Schneiderman, a veteran leader of strikes in the needle trades, served as national president from 1926 to 1950.
Organizational History
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/151607298
https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n81127510
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n81127510
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Languages Used
Subjects
Child labor
Civil rights
Clothing workers
Eight-hour movement
Federal aid to education
Feminists
Household employees
Labor and laboring classes
Labor and laboring classes
Labor and laboring classes
Labor and laboring classes
Labor laws and legislation
Labor unions
Lobbyists
Minimum wage
Quality of work life
Social legislation
Social security
Strikes and lockouts
Sweatshops
Textile workers
Wage-price policy
World War, 1914-1918
Women
Women
Women
Women labor union members
Women social reformers
Women's rights
Work environment
Working class women
Nationalities
Activities
Lobbyists
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
United States
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Danville (Va.)
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AssociatedPlace
United States
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AssociatedPlace
Chicago (Ill.)
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AssociatedPlace
United States
as recorded (not vetted)
AssociatedPlace
Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>