Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America

This thesis will argue that high levels of internal migration in Gilded Age America undermined the stability and growth of trade unions and labour-based parties. Most of the traditional ‘American Exceptionalist’ arguments which asserted a lack of class consciousness will be challenged. Significant...

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Main Author: Moody, Kimberly S.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31007/
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author Moody, Kimberly S.
author_facet Moody, Kimberly S.
author_sort Moody, Kimberly S.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis will argue that high levels of internal migration in Gilded Age America undermined the stability and growth of trade unions and labour-based parties. Most of the traditional ‘American Exceptionalist’ arguments which asserted a lack of class consciousness will be challenged. Significant weight will be given to the racial, ethnic, and gender divisions within the American working class as a source of relative organizational weakness. As archival sources reveal, however, despite their divisions, workers of all ethnic and racial groups drawn into wage-labour in the Gilded Age often displayed high levels of class consciousness and political radicalism through their actions, organizations, and hundreds of weekly labour papers. They also showed an awareness of the problems of frequent migration or ‘tramping’ in building stable organizations. Driven by the tumultuous conditions of uneven industrialization, millions of people migrated from state-to-state, country-to-city, and city-to-city at rates far higher than in Europe. A detailed analysis of the statistics on migration, work-related travelling, and union membership trends shows that this created a high level of membership turnover in the major organizations of the day—the American Federation of Labour and the Knights of Labour. Confronted in the 1880s with the highest level of migration in the period, the Knights of Labour saw rapid growth turn into continuous decline. The more stable craft unions also saw significant membership loss to migration through an ineffective travelling card system. The organizational weakness that resulted undermined efforts by American workers to build independent labour-based parties in the 1880s and 1890s. ‘Pure-and-simple’ unionism would triumph by the end of the century despite the existence of a significant socialist minority in organized labour.
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spelling nottingham-310072025-02-28T11:45:51Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31007/ Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America Moody, Kimberly S. This thesis will argue that high levels of internal migration in Gilded Age America undermined the stability and growth of trade unions and labour-based parties. Most of the traditional ‘American Exceptionalist’ arguments which asserted a lack of class consciousness will be challenged. Significant weight will be given to the racial, ethnic, and gender divisions within the American working class as a source of relative organizational weakness. As archival sources reveal, however, despite their divisions, workers of all ethnic and racial groups drawn into wage-labour in the Gilded Age often displayed high levels of class consciousness and political radicalism through their actions, organizations, and hundreds of weekly labour papers. They also showed an awareness of the problems of frequent migration or ‘tramping’ in building stable organizations. Driven by the tumultuous conditions of uneven industrialization, millions of people migrated from state-to-state, country-to-city, and city-to-city at rates far higher than in Europe. A detailed analysis of the statistics on migration, work-related travelling, and union membership trends shows that this created a high level of membership turnover in the major organizations of the day—the American Federation of Labour and the Knights of Labour. Confronted in the 1880s with the highest level of migration in the period, the Knights of Labour saw rapid growth turn into continuous decline. The more stable craft unions also saw significant membership loss to migration through an ineffective travelling card system. The organizational weakness that resulted undermined efforts by American workers to build independent labour-based parties in the 1880s and 1890s. ‘Pure-and-simple’ unionism would triumph by the end of the century despite the existence of a significant socialist minority in organized labour. 2016-03-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31007/1/MoodyThesisCorrectedMigration.pdf Moody, Kimberly S. (2016) Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Labour Knights of Labour Internal Migration geographic mobility Gilded Age
spellingShingle Labour
Knights of Labour
Internal Migration
geographic mobility
Gilded Age
Moody, Kimberly S.
Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title_full Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title_fullStr Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title_full_unstemmed Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title_short Tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in Gilded Age America
title_sort tramps, trade union travellers, and wandering workers: how geographic mobility undermined organized labour in gilded age america
topic Labour
Knights of Labour
Internal Migration
geographic mobility
Gilded Age
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/31007/