John L. Lewis

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John L. Lewis (1880-1969), was an American labor leader who dominated the coal miners union (the United Mine Workers), 1920-1960, and created the CIO. He played a major role in helping Franklin D. Roosevelt win a landslide in 1936, but as an isolationist broke with Roosevelt in 1940 on foreign policy. Lewis was known as an aggressive fighter and strike leader who gained high wages for his membership while steamrolling over his opponents. Lewis was one of the most controversial figures in the history of labor, and widely hated as he called nationwide coal strikes damaging the national economy in the middle of World War II.

Early career

Lewis was born at the coal mining town of Lucas, Iowa, the son of Thomas H. Lewis, a farm laborer and coal miner from Wales, and Ann Louisa Watkins. He attended the local public schools and at the age of 17 went to work in the coal mines. In 1906 he was elected a delegate to the United Mine Workers (U.M.W.) national convention, where he acquired prominence as a labor organizer and an advocate for safety and better working conditions in the mines. In 1909 he was elected president of the union local in Panama, Illinois he traveled throughout the Midwest as a union organizer.

In 1917 Lewis was elected a vice-president of the union. He called his first industry-wide coal strike, effective November. 1, 1919, and he rebuffed all attempts at conciliation in spite of a court restraining order. In 1920 Lewis was formally elected president of the United Mine Workers, an office that he held until 1960.

Lewis supported Republican Herbert Hoover for president in 1928; in 1932 as the Great Depression bore brutally on the mining camps, he backed Franklin D. Roosevelt, and in 1936 his union made the largest single contribution to Roosevelt's campaign for reelection.

Lewis was appointed a member of the Labor Advisory Board and the National Labor Board of the National Recovery Administration in 1933, and in the 1930's he became an influential figure in political circles. He was instrumental in securing the passage of the Guffey Coal Act in 1935, later declared unconstitutional, and exerted pressure for a second Guffey Act in 1937, both of them favorable to miners.

Lewis obtained from the American Federation of Labor, at its annual convention in 1934, an endorsement of the principle of industrial unionism, as opposed to limitations to skileld workers. With the leaders of nine other large industrial unions and the U.M.W., in 1935 Lewis formed the Committee for Industrial Organization to promote the organization of workers on an industry-wide basis. They were expelled from the AFL in November 1938; the committee became the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO]] with Lewis as the first president. In the 1940 presidential campaign, left-wiong supporters of the Soviet Union forced him to repudiate Roosevelt's foreign policy, and he supported Republican Wendell Willkie; few CIO members joined him, as they gave FDR over 85% of their votes. After Roosevelt's victory, he resigned as president of the CIO. but kept control of the UMW and withdrew it from the CIO.

Throughout World War II Lewis repeatedly called his miners out on strike, defying the government in many instances. In January 1946 Lewis led the UMW. back into the AFL (not the CIO). In the postwar years he continued his militantancy; his miners went on strikes or "work stoppages" annually. In response, industry, railroads and homeowners rapidly switched from coal to oil. In December 1946 a federal court injunction was issued against the UMW. enjoining them to stop striking; a fine of $3.5 million was levied upon the UMW. and one of $10,000 upon Lewis personally. In 1948 he was again fined $20,000 by a federal court for civil and criminal contempt.

After disagreeing with the AFL over signing non-Communist oaths required by the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act, Lewis disaffiliate. making the UMW independent. Lewis, never a Communist himself, refused to allow any of his officials to take the non-Communist oath required by the Taft-Hartley Act; the UMW was therefore denied legal rights protected by the National Labor Relations Board. He denounced Taft-Hartley as authorizing "government by injunction" and refused to follow its provisions, saying he would not be dictated to. Lewis made an outstanding achievement in the postwar years when he secured a welfare fund financed entirely by management but administered by the union. In May 1950 he signed a new contract with the coal operators, ending nine months of coal strikes. He retired in 1960.

Bibliography

Coal miners and unions

  • Baratz, Morton S. The Union and the Coal Industry (Yale University Press, 1955)
  • Dublin, Thomas and Walter Licht. The Face of Decline: The Pennsylvania Anthracite Region in the Twentieth Century (2005)
  • Dubofsky, Melvyn, and Warren Van Tine, John L. Lewis: A Biography (1977), leader of Mine Workers union, 1920-1960
  • Coal Mines Administration, U.S, Department Of The Interior. A Medical Survey of the Bituminous-Coal Industry. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1947. online
  • Fishback, Price V. Soft Coal, Hard Choices: The Economic Welfare of Bituminous Coal Miners, 1890-1930 (1992) [online edition
  • Jonathan Grossman "The Coal Strike of 1902 – Turning Point in U.S. Policy" Monthly Labor Review October 1975. online
  • Hinrichs, A. F. The United Mine Workers of America, and the Non-Union Coal Fields Columbia University, 1923 online
  • Laslett, John H.M. ed. The United Mine Workers: A Model of Industrial Solidarity? Penn State University Press, 1996.
  • Lynch, Edward A., and David J. McDonald. Coal and Unionism: A History of the American Coal Miners' Unions (1939) online edition
  • Seltzer, Curtis. Fire in the Hole: Miners and Managers in the American Coal Industry University Press of Kentucky, 1985, conflict in the coal industry to the 1980s.


See also