ILGWU. James Parrott papers, 1980-1991

ArchivalResource

ILGWU. James Parrott papers, 1980-1991

Correspondence, reprints, and congressional testimony ofJames Parrott, Executive Assistant to the President, International Ladies' GarmentWorkers' Union. Parrott's records consist primarily of subject files, many of whichpertain to ILGWU organizing around proposed changes on the regulation of homework,as well as around the New York City's apparel industry, especially the GarmentIndustry Development Corporation.

eng,

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SNAC Resource ID: 6399694

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International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6s867ct (corporateBody)

The ILGWU Archives were established in 1973 and transferred to the Kheel Center in 1987. From the description of ILGWU. Charles Zimmerman Collection of Radical Pamphlets, 1898-1978. (Cornell University Library). WorldCat record id: 748341343 The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, the most significant union representing workers in the men's clothing industry, was founded in New York City in 1914 as a breakaway movement from the United Garment Workers. Radic...

Parrott, James

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6sg6bvd (person)

The International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union was founded in New York City in 1900 by mostly Socialist immigrant workers who sought to unite the various crafts in the growing women’s garment industry. The union soon reflected changes in the sector and rapidly organized thousands of unskilled and semi-skilled women, mostly Jewish and Italian young immigrants. Exemplifying the “new unionism,” the ILGWU led two of the most widespread and best-known industrial strikes of the early Tw...