LaborHistory, Vol. 43, No. 1/ 2,2002

INDEXTO AUTHORS

ARTICLES,SYMPOSIA, NOTES ANDDOCUMENTS,ESSAY REVIEWS, AND MEDIAREVIEWS

Aaron, Daniel.“ GoodMorning and ‘ Art’ Arnesen,Eric. “ Race, Party, andPacking- Young:An Introductionand Appraisal.” house Exceptionalism.”[Halpern and 10:1,100– 104, Winter 1969. HorowitzSymposium] 40:2,207– 212, Aiken, JohnR. andJames R. McDonnell. May 1999. “WalterRauschenbusch andLabor Re- Aruga, Natsuki. “‘An’Finish School’: form: ASocialGospeller’ s Approach.” Child Labor DuringWorld War II.” 11:2,131– 150, Spring 1970. 29:4,498– 530, Fall 1988. Aiken, KatherineC. “‘WhenI Realized Asher, Robert. “Failureand FulŽ llment: How Close CommunismWas toKel- Agitationfor Employers’Liability Legis- logg,I Was Willingto Devote Day and lationand the Origins of Workmen’s Night’: Anti-Communism, Women, Compensationin New York State, CommunityValues, andthe Bunker Hill 1876–1910.” 24:2, 198– 222, Spring Strikeof 1960.”36:2, 165– 186, Spring 1983. 1995. Asher, Robert. “Radicalism andReform: Aldrich, Mark. “StateReports onWomen StateInsurance of Workmen’s Compen- andChild WageEarners, 1870–1908.” sation inMinnesota, 1910– 1933.” 14:1, 21:1,86– 90, Winter 1979– 80. 19–41, Winter 1973. Alexander,Robert J.“Schisms and Asher, Robert. “UnionNativism andthe UniŽcations in the American Old Left, ImmigrantResponse.” 23:3, 325– 348, 1923–1940.” 14:4, 536– 561, Fall 1973. Summer1982. Almaguer,Tomas. “Racial Domination Asher, Robert. “WhenWill They Ever andClass Conict in Capitalist Agricul- Learn?”15:2, 271– 275, Spring 1974. ture:The Oxnard Sugar Beet Workers’ Ashyk, Danand Wendy S. Greenwood. Strikeof 1903.”25:3, 325– 350, Sum- “Labor History Resourcesat the Ohio mer 1984. Historical Society.”31:1, 133– 138, Andrew, William D.“Factionalismand Winter–Spring 1990. Anti-Communism: FordLocal 600.” Auerbach, JeroldS. “Progressivesat Sea: 20:2,227– 255, Spring 1979. TheLaFollette Act of 1915.”2:3, 344– Argersinger,Jo Ann E.“Assisting the 360,Fall 1961. ‘Loafers’: TransientRelief inBaltimore, Auerbach, JeroldS. “SouthernTenant 1933–1937.” 23:2, 226– 245, Spring Farmers: SocialistCritics of theNew 1982. Deal.”7:1, 3– 18, Winter 1966. Argersinger,Jo Ann E.“TheArt andSci- Aurand, Harold W.“SocialMotivation enceof GettingWork.” [Symposium on of theAnthracite Mine Workers: ‘GettingWork’ by WalterLicht] 35:1, 1901–1920.” 18:3, 360– 367, Summer 93–96, Winter 1994. 1977. Armstrong, Thomas F.“TheTransform- Aurand, Harold W.“TheWorkingmen’ s ationof Work: TurpentineWorkers in BenevolentAssociation.” 7:1, 19– 34, Coastal Georgia,1865– 1901.” 25:4, Winter1966. 518–532, Fall 1984. Avrich, Paul.“ Conrad’s Anarchist Pro- Arnesen,Eric. “ History First: PuttingUrban fessor: An UndiscoveredSource.” 18:3, Povertyin Perspective.” [Sugrue Sympo- 397–402, Summer 1977. sium] 39:1,43– 47, February 1998. Babcock,Robert H.“‘WillYou Walk? Arnesen,Eric. “ ToRule or Ruin: New Yes, We’ll Walk’ : PopularSupport Orleans DockWorkers’ Struggle for for aStreetRailway Strikein Port- Control,1902– 1903.” 28:2, 139– 166, land, Maine.”35:3, 372– 398, Summer Spring1987. 1994.

ISSN0023-656Xprint/ ISSN1469-9702online/ 02/01/20089–40 Ó 2002Taylor & Francis Ltd onbehalfof The Tamiment Institute DOI: 10.1080/0023656022012962 90 Index toAuthors

Bailey,Gary L.“TheCommissioner of Bean,Ronald. “ANoteon the ’s ‘Strikesand Lockouts’ — ACau- Labor inLiverpool, 1889–90.” 13:1, tionary Note.”32:3, 432– 440, Summer 68–78, Winter 1972. 1991. Beatty,Bess. “TextileLabor inthe North Bain,Trevor. “InternalUnion Con ict: Carolina Piedmont:Mill Owner Images TheFlat Glass Workers, 1936–1937.” andMill Worker Response, 1830– 9:1,106– 109, Winter 1968. 1900.”25:4, 485– 503, Fall 1984. Baker,Bruce E. “The‘ Hoover Scare’in Becker,Ronald L.“Labor History Re- SouthCarolina, 1887:An Attemptto sourcesat the Rutgers University Li- OrganizeBlack Farm Labor.”40:3, braries.”31:1, 67– 70, Winter– Spring 261–282, August 1999. 1990. Baker,Mary Roys. “Anglo- Bedford,Henry F.“The‘ Haverhill Social TradeUnion Roots, 1130–1790.” 14:3, Democrat’: Spokesman for .” 352–396, Summer 1973. 2:1,82– 89, Winter 1961. Baker,Robert P.“Labor History, Social Bell,Daniel. “ TheModern Review: An Science,and the Concept of theWork- Introductionand Appraisal.” 9:3, 380– ingClass.” 14:1, 98– 105, Winter 1973. 383,Fall 1968. Barbash, Jack. “TheI.L.G.W.U. as an Or- Berkowitz,Edward D.“How toThink ganizationin the Age of Dubinsky.” About theWelfare State.”32:4, 489– 9:SpecialSupplement, 98– 115, Spring 502,Fall 1991. 1968. Bernhardt,Debra E.“Labor History Re- Barkin, Solomonand Michael Honey. sourcesat New York University: 2)The “‘OperationDixie’ : TwoViews.” 31:2, Robert F.WagnerLabor Archives.” 373–385, Summer 1990. 31:1,48– 58, Winter– Spring 1990. Barnard, John. “GettingRight With Bernstein,Barton J. “TheTruman Ad- Reuther.”[Lichtenstein Symposium] ministrationand Its ReconversionWage 37:3,336– 342, Summer 1996. Policy.”6:3, 214– 231, Fall 1965. Barnard, John. “Rebirth of theUnited Au- Bernstein,Irving. “SomeConcluding Re- tomobileWorkers: TheGeneral Motors marks.”37:1, 97– 99, Winter 1995– 96. Tooland Diemakers’ Strike of 1939.” Bernstein,Irving. “IrvingBernstein’ s 27:2,165– 187, Spring 1986. Labor History: ASymposium.”37:1, Baron,Ava. “Introduction.”[Boris Sym- 75–99, Winter 1995– 96. posium] 39:4,407– 408, November Bernstein,Irving. “TheGrowth of Ameri- 1998. canUnions, 1945–1960.” 2:2, 131– 157, Barron, Hal Sethand Walter Licht. Spring1961. “Labor’s Men:A CollectiveBiography Best,Gary Dean.“ PresidentWilson’ s Se- of UnionOfŽ cialdom During the New condIndustrial Conference, 1919– DealYears.” 19:4, 532– 545, Fall 1978. 1920.”16:4, 505– 520, Fall 1975. Basen,Neil K. “KateRichards O’Hare: Betten,Neil. “ TheGreat Depression and The‘ FirstLady’ of AmericanSocialism, theActivities of theCatholic Worker 1901–1917.” 21:2, 165– 199, Spring Movement.”12:2, 243– 258, Spring 1980. 1971. Baskin, Alex.“ TheFord Hunger March— Bicknell,Catherine. “ Detroit’s Capuchin 1932.”13:3, 331– 360, Summer 1972. Soup Kitchen.”24:1, 112– 124, Winter Bassett,W. Bruce.“ DoesIt Pay to 1983. Learn?”24:2, 254– 258, Spring 1983. Biles,Roger. “ EdCrump Versus the Battista,Andrew. “Labor andCoalition Unions: TheLabor Movementin Mem- Politics:the Progressive Alliance.” 32:3, phis Duringthe 1930s.” 25:4, 533– 552, 401–421, Summer 1991. Fall 1984. Battista,Andrew. “Labor andLiberalism: Blewett,Mary H.“TheUnion of Sexand TheCitizen Labor EnergyCoalition.” Craft inthe Haverhill ShoeStrike of 40:3,301– 321, August 1999. 1895.”20:3, 352– 375, Summer 1979. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 91

Blum,Albert A. “AReport onResearch in Borts,George. “ PhilipTaft, Memberof Progressin American Labor History.” theFaculty at Brown University.” 19:1, 7:1,78– 92, Winter 1966. 31–33, Winter 1978. Blum,Albert A.“LocalUnion Archives in Boylan, James. “TheNewspaper Work- Michigan.”3:3, 335– 340, Fall 1962. place: An OldCulture Passes.” 24:4, Blum,Albert A.“Research inProgress In 565–567, Fall 1983. AmericanLabor History.”3:2, 218– Boyle,Kevin. “TheTragedies of Walter 225,Spring 1962. Reuther.”[Lichtenstein Symposium] Blum,Albert A.“Sailor or Worker: A 37:3,342– 347, Summer 1996. ManpowerDilemma During the Second Boyle,Kevin. “‘ThereAre NoUnionSor- WorldWar.” 6:3, 232– 243, Fall 1965. rows That TheUnion Can’ t Heal’: The Blum,Albert A.“Why Unions Grow.” Strugglefor Racial Equality inthe 9:1,39– 72, Winter 1968. UnitedAutomobile Workers, 1940– Blumberg,Dorothy Rose. “‘DearMr. En- 1960.”36:1, 5– 23, Winter 1995. gels’: Unpublished Letters,1884– 1894, Boyle,Kevin. “Buildingthe Vanguard: of FlorenceKelley to Friedrich Engels.” WalterReuther and Radical Politicsin 5:2,103– 133, Spring 1964. 1936.”30:3, 433– 448, Summer 1989. Boal,William M.“Estimatesof Unionism Boyle,Kevin. “Riteof Passage: The1939 inWest Virginia Coal, 1900–1935.” GeneralMotors Tool and Die Strike.” 35:3,429– 441, Summer 1994. 27:2,188– 203, Spring 1986. Boccaccio,Mary. “Labor Resourcesat the Brazier,Richard. “TheMass I.W.W. Trial University of Maryland atCollege of 1918:A Retrospect.”7:2, 178– 192, Park.”23:4, 498– 501, Fall 1982. Spring1966. Brazier,Richard. “TheStory of the Bodnar,John E. “TheImpact of the‘ New I.W.W.’s ‘LittleRed Songbook.” ’ 9:1, Immigration’on the Black Worker: 91–105, Winter 1968. Steelton,Pennsylvania, 1880–1920.” Breen,William J.“TheLabor Market, 17:2,214– 229, Spring 1976. TheReform Impetus, andthe Great Bodnar,John. “Ware, U.S.A.: ADocu- War: TheReorganization of theState- mentaryFilm about a FactoryTown.” City EmploymentExchanges in Ohio, 31:3,476– 477, Fall 1990. 1914–1918.” 29:4, 475– 497, Fall 1988. BonŽeld, Lynn A. andLeon J. Sompolin- Breen,William J.“IndustrialTraining and sky. “TheLabor Archives andResearch Craft Dilutionin World War I:Unions, Centerat San FranciscoState Univer- Employers, andthe State, 1917– 1919.” sity.”31:1, 219– 226, Winter– Spring 37:1,50– 74, Winter 1995– 96. 1990. Breen,William J.“TheMobilization of Borden,Timothy G.“Maybe IShould SkilledLabor inWorld War I:‘Volun- Forgetthe Union and the Factory: Gen- tarism,’the U.S. PublicService Reserve, derand the Fight for Allegiancein andthe Department of Labor, 1917– UAW Local12, Toledo.” 41:2, 133– 1918.”32:2, 253– 272, Spring 1991. 151,May 2000. Brewer,Thomas B.“StateAnti-Labor Boris, Eileen.“ Backto the Future?” [Boris Legislation:Texas— A Case Study.” Symposium] 39:4,429– 433, November 11:1,58– 76, Winter 1970. 1998. Brickett,Margaret F. “Labor History Re- Boris, Eileen.“ Symposium onEileen sourcesin the U.S. Departmentof Boris: Home toWork.” 39:4, 407– 433, Labor Library.”2:2, 236– 240, Spring November1998. 1961. Boris, Eileen.“ TenementHomework on Brier,Stephen. “ Labor Politicsand Race: Army Uniforms: TheGendering of In- ABlackWorker’ s Life.”23:3, 416– 421, dustrialDemocracy During World War Summer1982. I.”32:2, 231– 252, Spring 1991. Brier,Stephen. “ TheCareer of Richard L. Boroff, Karen E.“ANoteon an Unpub- Davis Reconsidered:Unpublished Cor- lished Manuscriptby CWA LeaderA. respondencefrom the‘ NationalLabor Tommy Jones.”37:4, 516– 519, Fall Tribune.”’ 21:3,420– 429, Summer 1996. 1980. 92 Index toAuthors

Brody,David. “Introductionto the Gut- Brook,Michael. “ Annual Bibliography of man MemorialIssue.” 29:3, 295– 297, PeriodicalArticles on American Labor Summer1988. History: 1969.”12:1, 115– 131, Winter Brody,David. “Labor andthe Great De- 1971. pression: TheInterpretative Prospects.” Brooks, Frank H.“Ideology,Strategy, and 13:2,231– 244, Spring 1972. Organization:Dyer Lum and the Ameri- Brody,David. “TheOld Labor History canAnarchist Movement.”34:1, 57– 83, andthe New: In Search of An American Winter1993. WorkingClass.” 20:1, 111– 126, Winter Brophy, Jacqueline.“ Bibliography of British 1979. Labor andRadical Journals, 1880–1914.” Brody,David. “PhilipTaft: Labor 3:1,103– 126, Winter 1962. Scholar.”19:1, 9– 22, Winter 1978. Brown,Edwin L. “‘ToMake a ManFeel Brody,David. “Radical Labor History Good’: JohnHenry Mealing,Railroad And Rank-and-File Militancy:Rank and Caller.”27:2, 257– 264, Spring 1986. File:Personal Histories ByWorking Brown,Kathleen A. “TheCulture of Poli- Class Organizersby Aliceand ticsand the Politics of Culture.”[Den- StaughtonLynd.” 16:1, 117– 126, Win- ningSymposium] 39:3,314– 320, ter 1976. August1998. Brody,David. “Response.”[Brody Sym- Brown,Lauren. “ Labor UnionHistory posium] 34:3,509– 514, Fall 1993. andArchives, TheUniversity of Mary- Brody,David. “TheSocial Documentary landat College Park Libraries.”31:1, as History.”24:3, 294– 297, Summer 113–116, Winter– Spring 1990. 1983. Brown,Michael K. “Is RaceExperienced Brody,David. “Symposium onDavid as Class?”41:4, 513– 516, November Brody, Steelworkersin America: The 2000. Nonunion Era ,andthe Beginning of the Broyles, GlenJ. “TheSpokane Free ‘New’Labor History.”34:3, 457– 514, SpeechFight, 1909– 1910: A Studyin Fall 1993. IWW Tactics.”19:2, 238– 252, Spring Brody,David. “Timeand Work During 1978. Early AmericanIndustrialization.” 30:1, Brundage,David. “TheProducing Classes 5–46, Winter 1989. andthe Saloon: Denverin the 1880s.” Brommel,Bernard J. “Debs’s Cooperative 26:1,29– 52, Winter 1985. CommonwealthPlan for Workers.” Bruno,Robert. “Everyday Constructions 12:4,560– 569, Fall 1971. of Cultureand Class: TheCase of Brommel,Bernard J. andJohn T. Cum- YoungstownSteelworkers.” 40:2, 143– bler. “Debs andthe Social Democracv: 176,May 1999. An Exchange.”13:4, 615– 621, Fall Bruno,Robert. “The1946 Union of Elec- 1972. trical,Radio andMachinist Workers’ Brook,Michael. “ Annual Bibliography of StrikeAgainst the Phelps-Dodge Cop- PeriodicalArticles on American Labor per Company of Elizabeth, NewJersey.” History, 1965.”8:1, 71– 86, Winter 35:3,345– 371, Summer 1994. 1967. Bryant,Leith L. “Labor inPolitics: The Brook,Michael. “ Annual Bibliography of Oklahoma StateFederation of Labor PeriodicalArticles on American Labor Duringthe Age of Reform.”11:3, 259– History, 1966.”8:3, 316– 327, Fall 276,Summer 1970. 1967. Bubka, Tony. “TheHarlan CountyCoal Brook,Michael. “ Annual Bibliography of Strikeof 1931.”11:1, 41– 57, Winter 1970. PeriodicalArticles on American Labor Bucki,Cecelia F. “TheHistorical History: 1967.”10:1, 115– 131, Winter SigniŽcance of Rank-and-File Unionism 1969. Response.”[“ WeAre All Leaders”: A Brook,Michael. “ Annual Bibliography of Symposium ona Collectionof Essays PeriodicalArticles on American Labor Dealingwith Alternative Unionism in History: 1968.”10:4, 639– 655, Fall theEarly 1930s]38:2, 180– 183, 1969. Spring–Summer 1997. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 93

Buhle,Paul. “ InMemoriam: Debra Bern- Chambers, JohnW. “TheBig Switch: Jus- hardt, 1953–2001.” 42:2, 191– 192, ticeRoberts andthe Minimum-Wage May 2001. Cases.”10:1, 44– 73, Winter 1969. Bukowczyk,John J. “TheTransformation Champagne, Roger.“ LibertyBoys and of WorkingClass Ethnicity:Corporate Mechanicsof NewYork City, 1764– Control,Americanization and the Polish 1774.”8:2, 115– 135, Spring 1967. ImmigrantMiddle Class inBayonne, [Chapman, Herrick] andLisabeth Cohen. NewJersey, 1915–1925.” 25:1, 53– 82, “RecentDissertations in American and Winter1984. EuropeanLabor History.”29:4, 552– Bularzik,Mary J.“TheBonds of Belong- 558,Fall 1988. ing:Leonora O’ Reilly andthe Social Chiles, Frederic.“ GeneralStrike: San Reform.”24:1, 60– 83, Winter 1983. Francisco,1934— Historical Compi- Burgman,Verity. “ AntipodeanPeculiari- lationFilm Storyboard.” 22:3, 430– 465, ties:Comparing the Australian IWW Summer1981. withthe American.” 40:3, 371– 392, Au- Claeys, Gregory. “LewisMasquerier and gust 1999. theLater Development of American Burki,Mary Ann Mason. “TheCalifornia Owenism,1835– 1845.” 29:2, 230– 240, Progressives: Labor’s Pointof View.” Spring1988. 17:1,24– 37, Winter 1976. Clive, Alan. “WomenWorkers inWorld Burton,John F. Jr., Ronald Donovan, and War II: Michiganas aTestCase.” 10:1, GerdKorman. InMemoriam: James O. 44–72, Winter 1979. Morris. 27:4,542– 544, Fall 1986. Cobble, Dorothy Sue.“ AmericanLabor Bush, Gregory. “‘I’dPreferNot To’ : Re- PoliticsAFL-Style.” [Greene Sympo- sistanceof OfŽce Work inSome Ameri- sium] 40:2,189– 206, May 1999. canFilms.” 31:2, 361– 372, Summer Cobble, Dorothy Sue.“ ‘Practical 1990. Women’: Waitress Unionists andthe Bussel,Robert. “‘ALoveof Unionism Controversiesover GenderRoles inthe andDemocracy’ : Rose Pesotta,Powers FoodService Industry, 1900–1980.” Hapgood, andthe Industrial Union 29:1,5– 31, Winter 1988. Movement.”38:2, 202– 228, Spring– Cobble, Dorothy Sue.“ Self-Possessed Summer1997. Woman: AViewof FDR’s Secretaryof Carew, Anthony. “TheAmerican Labor Movementin Fizzland: the Free Trade Labor MadamePerkins.” 29:2, 225– UnionCommittee and the CM.” 39:1, 229,Spring 1988. 25–42, February 1998. Cobble, Dorothy Sue.“ Zieger’s CIO: ‘A Carliner, Lewis. “TheDispute That Never ModestDefense.” ’ 37:2,177– 183, Was.”12:4, 605– 613, Fall 1971. Spring1996. Carlisle, Rodney. “William Randolph CofŽn, JudithG. “Homework inCompar- Hearst’s Reactionto the American ativePerspective.” [Boris Symposium] Newspaper Guild:A Challengeto New 39:4,423– 425, November 1998. DealLabor Legislation.”10:1, 74– 99, Cohen,Isaac. “David L.Behncke,the Air- Winter1969. linePilots, and the New Deal: The Cartosio, Bruno.“ HerbertGutman in Strugglefor FederalLabor Legislation.” Italy: History andPolitics.” 29:2, 356– 41:1,47– 62, February 2000. 362,Spring 1988. Cohen,Isaac. “Workers’Control in Cary, LorinLee. “ TheBureau of Investi- theCotton Industry: AComparative gationand Radicalism inToledo, Ohio: Studyof Britishand American 1918–1920.” 21:3, 340– 440, Summer MuleSpinning.” 26:1, 53– 85, Winter 1980. 1985. Cary, LorinLee. “ InstitutionalizedCon- Cohen,Lizabeth. “BringingInstitutions servatism inthe Early C.I.O.: Adolph BackIn.” [Symposium on‘ Getting Germer,A Case Study.”13:4, 475– 504, Work’by WalterLicht] 35:1, 96– 98, Fall 1972. Winter1994. 94 Index toAuthors

Cohen,Lizabeth, “TheLegacy of Brody’s Corey, Esther. “LewisCorey (LouisC. Steelworkers ,”34:3,469– 473, Fall Fraina), 1892–1953: A Bibliography 1993. withAutobiographical Notes.”4:2, Cohen,Lizabeth and Herrick Chapman. 103–131, Spring 1963. “RecentDissertations in American and Cort, JohnC. “FatherRice, ACTU, and EuropeanLabor History.”34:3, 515– theCP.” 40:1, 59– 62, February 1999. 532,Fall 1993. Cotkin,George B. “TheSpencerian and Cohen,Lizabeth and Herrick Chapman. ComtianNexus in Gompers’ Labor Phi- “RecentDissertations in American and losophy: TheImpact of Non-Marxian EuropeanLabor History.”24:4, 546– Evolutionary Thought.”20:4, 510– 523, 564,Fall 1983. Fall 1979. Cohen,Lizabeth and Herrick Chapman. Crane, MauriceA. “Labor History Materi- “RecentDissertations in American and als inthe G. Robert VincentVoice Li- EuropeanLabor History.”25:4, 558– brary, MichiganState University.” 26:2, 564,Fall 1984. 288–290, Spring 1985. Cohen,Lizabeth and Herrick Chapman. Cresswell, Stephen.“ Grassroots Radical- “RecentDissertations in American and ism inthe Magnolia State: Mississippi’ s EuropeanLabor History.”26:4, 569– SocialistMovement at the Local Level, 576,Fall 1985. 1910–1919.” 33:1, 81– 101, Winter Cohen,Lizabeth and Herrick Chapman. 1992. “RecentDissertations in American and Critchlow,Donald T. “Communist EuropeanLabor History.”27:4, 545– Unions andRacism: AComparative 548,Fall 1986. Studyof theResponses of theUnited Collomp, Catherine.“ Unions, Civics, and ElectricalRadio andMachine Workers NationalIdentity: Organized Labor’ s andthe National Maritime Union to the Reactionto Immigration, 1881– 1897.” BlackQuestion During World War II.” 29:4,450– 474, Fall 1988. 17:2,230– 244, Spring 1976. Conlin,Joseph. “TheComrade: An Intro- Cross, Gary andPeter Shergold. “ ‘We ductionand Appraisal.” 12:2, 293– 296, Think WeAre TheOppressed’ : Gender, Spring1971. WhiteCollar Work, andGrievances of Connor,Valerie J. “‘TheMothers of the Late19th Century Women.” 28:1, 23– Race’in World War I:TheNational 53,Winter 1987. War Labor Boardand Women in Indus- try.”21:2, 31– 54, Winter 1979– 80. Cuff, Robert D.“ThePolitics of Labor Cook, Bernard.“ AReport from Friedrich AdministrationDuring World War I.” Sorgeto the General Council of the 21:2,546– 569, Fall 1980. I.W.A.: TheNew York Riot of 1871.” Cuff, Robert D.“SamuelGompers, Leon- 13:3,415– 417, Summer 1972. ard Woodand Military Preparedness.” Cooper, EileenMountjoy. “ Labor 12:2,280– 288, Spring 1971. Archives atIndiana University of Penn- Culbert,David. “Reds: Propaganda,Doc- sylvania.”31:1, 77– 80, Winter– Spring udrama, andHollywood.” 24:1, 125– 1990. 130,Winter 1983. Cooper, Jerry M.“TheArmy As Strike Cumbler, JohnT. “Labor, Capital, and Breaker:The Railroad Strikesof 1877 Community:The Struggle For Power.” and1894.” 18:2, 179– 196, Spring 15:3,395– 415, Summer 1974. 1977. Cumbler, JohnT. “ThreeGenerations of Cooper, PatriciaA. “WhateverHappened Poverty:A Noteon the Life of an Un- toAdolph Strasser?”20:3, 414– 419, skilledWorker’ s Family.”15:1, 78– 85, Summer1979. Winter1974. Cooper, Sarah. “Sourceson Labor History Cumbler, JohnT. andBernard Brommel. atthe Southern California Library for “Debs andthe : SocialStudies and Research.” 31:1, An Exchange.”13:4, 615– 621, Fall 208–212, Winter– Spring 1990. 1972. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 95

Currie,Harold W.“Allan L.Benson, Denning,Michael. “ TheFuture of the Salesman of Socialism, 1902–1916.” CulturalFront.” 39:3, 334– 336, August 11:3,285– 303, Summer 1970. 1998. Daitsman, George.“ Labor andthe Wel- Denning,Michael. “ MichaelDenning and fare Statein Early NewYork.” 4:3, 248– the‘ Laboring’of AmericanCulture: A 256,Fall 1963. Symposium.”39:3, 311– 336, August Daniel,Cletus E. “InDefense of the 1998. WheatlandWobblies: ACriticalAnaly- Derber,Milton. “ SomeFurther Thoughts sis of theIWW inCalifornia.” 19:4, onthe Historical Studyof Industrial 485–509, Fall 1978. Democracy.”14:4, 599– 611, Fall 1973. Daniels, Christine. “‘Withoutany limita- Derber,Milton. “ TheIdea of Industrial conof time’: DebtServitude in Colonial Democracyin America, 1898–1915.” America.”36:2, 232– 250, Spring 1995. 7:3,259– 286, Fall 1966. Daniels, Roger.“ Workers’Education and Derber,Milton. “ TheIdea of Industrial theUniversity of California, 1921– Democracyin America, 1915–1935.” 1941.”4:1, 32– 50, Winter 1963. 8:1,3– 29, Winter 1967. Danky, James P.andHarold Miller. Derickson,Alan. “FromCompany Doc- “Sourcesfor theStudy of theLabor tors toUnion Hospitals: theFirst Movementat the State Historical So- DemocraticHealth Care Experimentsof cietyof Wisconsin.”31:1, 176– 184, theUnited Mine Workers of America.” 33:3,325– 342, Summer 1992. Winter–Spring 1990. Derickson,Alan. “IndustrialRefugees: Dark, Taylor E.“DebatingDecline: The TheMigration of Silicoticsfrom the 1995Race for theAFL-CIO Presi- Minesof NorthAmerica andSouth dency.”40:3, 323– 343, August 1999. Africa inthe Early 20thCentury.” 29:1, Davidson, JanetF. “TheGoosing of Violet 66–89, Winter 1988. Nyeand Other Tales: WhiteWomen Derickson,Alan. “‘TakeHealth from the andSexual Respectability onthe Penn- Listof Luxuries’: Labor andthe Right sylvania Railroad.”41:4, 437– 452, toHealth Care, 1915–1949.” 41:2, November2000. 171–187, May 2000. Davies, J.Kenneth.“ Mormonismand the Destler,Chester M. “ACofŽn Workerand ClosedShop.” 3:2, 169– 187, Spring theLabor Problem:Ethelbert Stewart 1962. andHenry DemarestLloyd.” 12:3, Davis, AllenF. “TheWomen’ s Trade 409–434, Summer 1971. UnionLeague: Origins and Organiza- Destler,Chester M. “Onthe Eve of the tion.”5:1, 3– 17, Winter 1964. AnthraciteCoal StrikeArbitration: Davis, ColinJ. “BitterCon ict: the 1992 Henry DemerestLloyd at United Mine Railroad Shopmen’s Strike.”33:4, 433– Workers Headquarters.”13:2, 279– 295, 455,Fall 1992. Spring1972. Davis, StephenP. “TheConcept of Pov- Diamond,Sigmund, “ Onthe Road to ertyin the Encyclopaedia Britannica Camelot,”21:2, 279– 290. Spring 1980. From1810 to 1975.” 21:1, 91– 101, DiRoma, Edward. “Noteson Resources Winter1979– 80. for Research inLabor History inthe Dawley, Alan. “Prefaceto Synthesis.” ReferenceDepartment of theNew York 29:1,363– 377, Spring 1988. PublicLibrary.” 4:1, 93– 99, Winter Dawley, Alan andJoe William Trotter,Jr. 1963. “Raceand Class.” 35:4, 486– 494, Fall DiGirolamo, Vincent.“ TheWomen of 1994. Wheatland:Female Consciousness and Dawson, Andrew. “TheParadox of Dy- the1913 Wheatland Hop Strike.”34:2, namicTechnological Change and the 236–255, Spring– Summer 1993. Labor Aristocracy inthe United States, Dinwiddie,Robert C.andLeslie S. 1880–1914.” 20:3, 325– 351, Summer Hough. “TheSouthern Labor 1979. Archives.”23:4, 502– 512, Fall 1982. 96 Index toAuthors

Dinwiddie,Robert andLeslie S. Hough. Dublin,Thomas. “TheMerrimack Valley “TheSouthern Labor Archives.”31:1, TextileMuseum— An Appreciation.” 124–132, Winter– Spring 1990. 25:2,240– 242, Spring 1984. Dodd,Jill Seigel. “ TheWorking Classes Dublin,Thomas. “APersonalPerspective andthe Temperance Movement in onthe Ten Hour Movementin New Ante-bellumBoston.” 19:4, 510– 531, England.”24:3, 398– 403, Summer Fall 1978. 1983. Dodd,Martin H. “Marlboro, Massachu- Dublin,Thomas. “Women,Work, and settsand the Shoeworkers’ Strike of ProtestIn the Early LowellMills: ‘The 1898–1899.” 20:3, 376– 397, Summer Oppressing Hand of Avarice WouldEn- slave Us.”’ 16:1,99– 116, Winter 1975. 1979. Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ FilmAs History: His- Doeringer,Peter B. “PieceRate Wage tory as Drama—Some Comments on Structuresin the Pittsburgh Iron and TheWobblies ,aPlay by StewardBird SteelIndustry— 1880– 1900.” 9:2, 262– andPeter Robilotta, and TheWobblies , a 274,Spring 1968. Žlmby StewardBird and Deborah Shaf- Doherty,Robert E.“Thomas J.Hagerty, fer.”22:1, 136– 140, Winter 1981. theChurch, andSocialism.” 3:1, 39– 56, Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Give Us That Old Winter1962. TimeLabor History: PhilipS. Foner Dolnick,Norman. “PackingHouse Work- andthe American Workers.” 26:1, 118– ers Facethe Cold War: AMemoir.” 137,Winter 1985. 38:3,492– 507, Fall 1997. Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Introductionto Fall Dolnick,Norman. “Saga ofaBroadSpec- 1988Issue.” 29:4, 411– 415, Fall 1988. trumUnion.” [Halpern andHorowitz Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ TheIndustrial Union Symposium] 40:2,212– 216, May 1999. Bulletin:An Introductionand Ap- Dondertman,Anne and Scan Purdy. “ The praisal.”12:2, 289– 292, Spring 1971. Robert S.KennyCollection on Com- Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ TheI.W.W.— An Ex- munismand Radicalism atthe Thomas changeof Views.”Reply toVernon Fisher Rare BookLibrary, University of Jensen’s BookReview of WeShall Be Toronto.”39:4, 397– 406, November All—A History of theIndustrial Workers 1998. of theWorld. 11:3,355– 372, Summer Draper, Alan. “Dothe Right Thing: the 1970. Desegregationof UnionConventions in Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Lostin a Fog:Labor theSouth.” 33:3, 343– 356, Summer Historians’Unregulated Search for a 1992. Synthesis.”32:2, 295– 300, Spring 1991. Draper, Alan. “Labor andthe 1966 Elec- Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Matewan.”32:3, tions.”30:1, 76– 92, Winter 1989. 478–480, Fall 1990. Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ OrganizedLabor and Draper, Hal. “’s ‘Dic- theImmigrant in , 1900– tatorship of theProletariat’ .” 3:2,208– 1918.”2:2, 182– 201, Spring 1961. 213,Spring 1962. Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ TheOrigins of West- Drescher,Nuala McGann.“ Organized ernWorking Class Radicalism, 1890– Labor andthe Eighteenth Amend- 1905.”7:2, 131– 154, Spring 1966. ment.”8:3, 280– 299, Fall 1967. Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ StartingOut in the Drescher,Nuala McGann.“ ‘ToPlay the Fifties: TrueConfessions of aLabor Hypocrite’: TerenceV. Powderlyon the Historian.”[Brody Symposium] 34:3, Anarchists.”13:1, 60– 62, Winter 1972. 473–479, Fall 1993. Dreyfus, PhilipJ. “IWW andLimits of Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Successand Failure Inter-EthnicOrganizing: Reds, Whites, of Socialism inNew York City, 1900– andGreeks inGrays Harbor, Washing- 1918:A Case Study.”9:3, 361– 375, ton,1912.” 38:3, 450– 470, Fall 1997. Fall 1968. Drinnon,Richard. “TheBlast: An Intro- Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Symposium on ductionand Appraisal.” 11:1, 82– 88, MelvynDubofsky: WeShall BeAll.” Winter1970. 40:3,345– 369, August 1999. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 97

Dubofsky, Melvyn.“ Wobblies Pastand Edsforth, Ronald. “Can WeAll BeLead- Present:A Response.”40:3, 365– 369, ers?”[“ WeAre All Leaders”: ASympo- August1999. sium ona Collectionof Essays Dealing Dudden,Faye. “Small TownKnights: withAlternative Unionism inthe Early TheKnights of Labor inHomer, New 1930s]38:2, 173– 179, Spring– Summer York.”28:3, 307– 327, Summer 1987. 1997. Dunlop,John T., etal. “Comments:Bern- Edsforth, Ronald. “TheFragmentation of stein’s ‘Growth of AmericanUnions: WorkingClass America.”32:4, 599– 1945–1960.” ’ 2:3,361– 380, Fall 1961. 603,Fall 1991. Duram, James C.“AlgernonLee’ s Corre- Eggert,Gerald G.“AMissedAlternative: spondencewith Karl Kautsky: An ‘Old FederalCourt Arbitration of Railway Guard’Perspective of theFailure of Labor Disputes, 1877–1895.” 7:3, 287– AmericanSocialism.” 20:3, 420– 434, 306,Fall 1966. Summer1979. Egolf, JeremyR. “TheLimits of Shop Duram, James C.“TheLabor UnionJour- FloorStruggle: Workers vs. TheBedaux nals andthe Constitutional Issues of the System atWillapa Harbor Lumber NewDeal.” 15:2, 216– 238, Spring Mills, 1933–35.” 26:2, 195– 229, Spring 1974. 1985. Durr, Kenneth.“ WhenSouthern Politics Ehrlich, Richard L.“ImmigrantStrike- Came North:The Roots of White breakingActivity: ASamplingof Opin- Working-Class Conservatism inBalti- ionExpressed in the National Labor more,1940– 1964.” 37:3, 309– 331, Tribune,1878– 1885.” 15:4, 528– 542, Summer1996. Fall 1974. Dwyer, Richard E.“OrganizedLabor and Embardo, Robert J.“SummerLightning, theControl of AdultEducation for 1907:The Wobblies inBridgeport.” Workers: TheIgnored Lessons of the 30:4,518– 535, Fall 1989. Campaign for aNationalLabor Exten- Emmons, David. “An Aristocracy of sion Service.”33:1, 126– 143, Winter Labor: TheIrish Minersof Butte,1880– 1992. 1914.”28:3, 275– 306, Summer 1987. Dyson, B.Patriciaand Lowell K. “An Engelmann,Larry D.“‘WeWere the HonestLight.” 23:3, 422– 423, Summer PoorPeople.’ The Hormel Strikeof 1982. 1933.”15:4, 483– 510, Fall 1974. East, Dennis.“ Labor History Resourcesin Englander,Ernest J. “TheInside Contract theOhio Historical Society.”23:4, 513– Systemof Productionand Organization: 515,Fall 1982. ANeglectedAspect of theHistory of the East, Dennis.“ SocialWelfare Case Firm.”28:4, 429– 446, Fall 1987. Records: Valuable or Valuelessfor Ensley, PhilipC. “TheInterchurch World WorkingClass History?”17:3, 416– 421, Movementand the Steel Strike of Summer1976. 1919.”13:2, 217– 230, Spring 1972. East, Dennis.“ UnionLabels andBoy- Erickson, NancyS. “‘Mullerv. Oregon’ cotts:Cooperation of theKnights of Reconsidered:The Origins of aSex- Labor andthe Cigar Makers Inter- BasedDoctrine of Libertyof Contract.” nationalUnion, 1885– 6.” 16:2, 266– 30:2,228– 250, Spring 1989. 271,Spring 1975. Erlich, Mark. “PeterJ. McGuire’s Ebner,Michael H. “‘Desertingthe Poor’ : TradeUnionism: Socialism of aTrades ThreeDocuments on a Church inan UnionKind.” 24:2, 165– 197, Spring ExpandingCity— 1893.” 12:4, 596– 1983. 602,Fall 1971. Ernst, DanielR. “Homework andthe Po- Ebner,Michael H. “‘INeverDied’ : The licePower from Jacobs toAdkins.” Case of JoeHill v. theHistorians.” 12:1, [Boris Symposium] 39:4,417– 422, 139–143, Winter 1971. November1998. Ebner,Michael H. “ThePassaic Strikeof Ernst, Daniel.“ TheYellow Dog Contract 1912and the Two I.W.W.’ s.” 11:4, andLiberal Reform, 1917–1932.” 30:2, 452–466, Fall 1970. 251–274, Spring 1989. 98 Index toAuthors

Estes, Steve.“ ‘IAM AMAN!’: Race, Fenton,Edwin. “ Italian Immigrantsin the Masculinity,and the 1968 Memphis Stoneworkers’Union.” 3:2, 188– 207, SanitationStrike.” 41:2, 153– 170, May Spring1962. 2000. Ferrell,Jeff. “‘TheSong the Capitalist Estey, Marten.“ Early Closing:Em- NeverSings’ : TheBrotherhood of Tim- ployer-OrganizedOrigin of theRetail ber Workers andthe Culture of Labor Movement.”13:4, 560– 570, Fall Conict.” 32:3, 422– 431, Summer 1972. 1991. Faherty, William B.“TheClergyman and Ficken,Robert E.“TheWobbly Horrors: Labor Progress:Cornelius O’ Leary and PaciŽc NorthwestLumbermen and the theKnights of Labor.”11:2, 175– 189, IndustrialWorkers of theWorld, 1917– Spring1970. 1928.”24:3, 325– 341, Summer 1983. Faler,Paul. “ CulturalAspects of theIn- Filardo, PeterM. “Annual Bibliography dustrialRevolution: Lynn, Massachu- onAmerican Labor History, 1992.” settsShoemakers andIndustrial 35:1,106– 115, Winter 1994. Morality, 1826–1860.” 15:3, 367– 394, Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ TheCounterattack Summer1974. Research Fileson American Commu- Farr, Ray. “ADifŽcult Experiment: ‘ The nism: TamimentInstitute Library, New Songof theShirt.” ’ 25:3,431– 436, York University.”39:2, 189– 191, May Summer1984. 1998. Faue,Elizabeth. “BlurredSubŽ elds: Irving Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Bernsteinand the History of theWorker liography, 1993.”36:1, 52– 62, Winter as U.S. History.”37:1, 77– 83, Winter 1995. 1995–96. Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Faue,Elizabeth. “Class andCultural Citi- liography, 1994.”37:1, 100– 110, Win- zenship.”[Denning Symposium] 39:3, ter1995– 96. 311–314, August 1998. Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Faue,Elizabeth. “Genderand the Recon- liography, 1995.”37:4, 500– 509, Fall structionof Labor History, An Intro- 1996. duction.” 34:2, 169–177, Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Spring–Summer 1993. liography, 1996.”38:3, 471– 491, Fall Faue,Elizabeth. “Newsnotes.”35:1, 156– 1997. 159,Winter 1994; 35:2, 318– 320, Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Spring1994; 35:3, 495– 496, Summer liography, 1997.”39:4, 435– 472, 1994;35:4, 625– 628, Fall 1994; 36:1, November1998. 157–158, Winter 1995; 36:2, 334– 336, Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Spring1995; 36:4, 678– 680, Fall 1995; liography, 1998.”40:4, 483– 537, 37:1,149– 150, Winter 1995– 96; 37:2, November1999. 302–303, Spring 1996; 37:3, 450– 452, Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Summer1996. liography, 1999.”41:4, 465– 500, Fehn,Bruce. “ ‘ChickensCome Home to November2000. Roost’: IndustrialReorganization, Se- Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Townand Gown: niority,and Gender Con ict in the Excerptsfrom theBloomington, Indiana UnitedPackinghouse Workers ofAmer- Memoirof KennethNeill Cameron, ica, 1956–1966.” 34:2, 324– 341, CommunistAcademic in the Working Spring–Summer 1993. Class Movement.”36:4, 612– 624, Fall Feldberg,Michael. “ TheCrowd in 1995. Philadelphia History: AComparative Filardo, PeterMeyer. “ Labor History Bib- Perspective.”15:3, 323– 336, Summer liography, 2000.”42:4, 397– 425, 1974. November2001. Felt,Jeremy P. “TheChild Labor Provi- Filardo, Peter.“ Annual Bibliography on sions of theFair Labor Standards Act.” AmericanLabor History, 1988.”30:4, 11:4,467– 481, Fall 1970. 585–594, Fall 1989. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 99

Filippelli,Ronald L.“LuigiAntonini, the Finzsch,Norbert. “ TheConvergence of Italian-American Labor Council,and SocialHistory andTechnology.” 35:3, Cold-War Politicsin Italy, 1943–1949.” 424–428, Summer 1994. 33:1,120– 125, Winter 1992. Fishback, PriceZ. “An AlternativeView of Filippelli,Ronald L.“Labor Manuscripts Violencein Labor Disputesin the Early inthe Pennsylvania State University Li- 1900s:The Bituminous Coal Industry, brary.”13:1, 79– 88, Winter 1972. 1890–1930.” 36:3, 426– 456, Summer Filippelli,Ronald L.“UE: TheFormative 1995. Years, 1933–1937.” 17:3, 351– 371, Fishbein, Leslie.“ ‘Peopleof theCumber- Summer1976. land’(1938): A Dialecticin Perplexity.” Filippelli,Ronald L.andAlice Hoffman. 25:4,565– 576, Fall 1984. “Labor Sourcesat Penn State Univer- Fishbein, MeyerH. “Labor History Re- sity.”23:4, 516– 519, Fall 1982. sourcesin the National Archives.” 8:3, Fine,Lisa M.“OurBig Factory Family: 330–351, Fall 1967. Masculinityand Paternalism at the Reo Flug,Michael. “ OrganizedLabor and MotorCar Company of Lansing,Michi- theCivil Rights Movementof the gan.”34:2, 274– 291, Spring– Summer 1960’s: TheCase oftheMaryland Free- 1993. domUnion.” 31:2, 322– 346, Summer Fine,Sidney. “ Frank Murphy, theThorn- 1990. hill Decision,and Picketing as Free Flynt,Wayne. “FloridaLabor andPoliti- Speech.”6:2, 99– 120, Spring 1965. cal‘ Radicalism’, 1919–1920.” 9:1, 73– Fine,Sidney. “ JohnL. LewisDiscusses 90,Winter 1968. theGeneral Motors Sit-Down Strike: A Fogarty,Robert S.“Oneida:A Utopian Document.”15:4, 563– 570, Fall 1974. Searchfor ReligiousSecurity.” 14:2, Fine,Sidney. “ TheNational Erectors’ As- 202–227, Spring 1973. sociationand the Dynamiters.” 32:1, 5– Foner,Eric. “ RedeŽning the Past: Time 41,Winter 1991. On The Cross by Robert Fogeland Stan- Fink,Gary M.“F.Ray Marshall: Sec- leyEngerman.” 16:1, 127– 138, Winter retary of Labor andJimmy Carter’s Am- 1975. bassador toOrganized Labor.” 37:4, Foner,Henry. “Saul Millsand the 463–479, Fall 1996. GreaterNew York IndustrialUnion Fink,Leon. “ Culture’s Last Stand?Gen- Council,CIO.” 31:2, 347– 360, derand the Search for Synthesis in AmericanLabor History.”34:2, 178– Summer1990. 189,Spring– Summer 1993. Foner,Philip S. “An AdditionalShort Fink,Leon. “ ‘Irrespectiveof Party, Color Noteon the Alabama StateFederation or SocialStanding’ : TheKnights of of Labor.”18:1, 120– 121, Winter 1977. Labor andOpposition Politicsin Rich- Foner,Philip S. “An Early Trades Union mond,Virginia.” 19:3, 325– 349, Sum- andIts Fate.”14:3, 423– 434, Summer mer 1978. 1973. Fink,Leon. “ JohnR. Commons, Herbert Foner,Philip S. “Journalof an Early Gutman,and the Burden of Labor His- Labor Organizer.”10:2, 205– 227, tory.”29:3, 313– 322, Summer 1988. Spring1969. Fink,Leon. “ AMemoirof SeligPerlman Foner,Philip S. “AMartyr toHis Cause: andHis Life atThe University of Wis- TheScenario of theFirst Labor Filmin consin:Based on an Interviewof Mark theUnited States.” 24:1, 103– 111, Perlman.”32:4, 503– 525, Fall 1991. Winter1983. Fink,Leon (Editorial Introduction). Pages Foner,Philip S. “SamuelGompers to from an Organizer’s Life:Don McKee FrederickEngels: A Letter.”11:2, 207– Confronts Southern Millworkers—and 211,Spring 1970. Himself.An Excerptfrom Don McKee’s Foner,Philip S. “Songsof theEight- UnpublishedAutobiography . 41:4, 453– Hour Movement.”13:4, 571– 588, Fall 464,November 2000. 1972. 100 Index toAuthors

Foner,Philip S. “UnitedStates of America Frank, Miriamand Martin Glaberman. vs. Wm. D.Haywood, etal.: The “FriedrichA. Sorgeon the American I.W.W. Indictment.”11:4, 500– 533, Labor Movement.”18:4, 592– 606, Fall Fall 1970. 1977. Foner,Philip S. andJames O.Morris. Fraser, Steve.“ Fromthe ‘ NewUnionism’ “PhilipFoner and the Writing of theJoe tothe New Deal.” 25:3, 405– 430, Sum- Hill Case: An Exchange.”12:1, 81– 114, mer 1984. Winter1971. Freedman,Paul. TheOrigins of Peasant Fones-Wolf, Elizabethand Ken Fones- Servitudein MedievalCatalonia. Re- Wolf. “Conversionat Bethlehem: Re- viewedby I.M.W.Bean.34:3, 418– ligionand Union Building in Steel, 419,Spring– Summer 1993. 1930–42.” 39:4, 381– 395, November Freeman,Joshua. “DeliveringThe Goods: 1998. IndustrialUnionism DuringWorld War Fones-Wolf, Elizabethand Ken Fones- II.”19:4, 570– 593, Fall 1978. Wolf. “Knightsversus theTrade Union- Freeman,Joshua B.“Structureand Cul- ists: TheCase of theWashington, D.C. turein the Labor Market.”[Symposium Carpenters, 1881–1896.” 22:2, 192– 212,Spring 1981. on‘ GettingWork’ by WalterLicht] Fones-Wolf, Elizabethand Ken Fones- 35:1,98– 100, Winter 1994. Wolf. “Rank-and-File Rebellionsand Freeman,Joshua B.andSteve Rosswurm. AFL Interferencein the Affairs of Na- “TheEducation of an Anti-Communist: tionalUnions: TheGompers Era.” FatherJohn F. Croninand the Balti- 35:2,237– 259, Spring 1994. moreLabor Movement.”33:2, 217– Fones-Wolf, Ken.“ FromCraft toIndus- 247,Spring 1992. trial Unionism inthe Window-Glass In- Freiburger,William. “War Prosperity dustry: Clarksburg, WestVirginia, andHunger: The New York Food 1900–1937.” 37:1, 28– 49, Winter Riots of 1917.”25:2, 217– 239, Spring 1995–96. 1984. Fones-Wolf, Ken.“ Labor History Sources Friday, Chris. “Asian AmericanLabor and atthe University of Massachusetts at Historical Intepretation.”35:4, 524– Amherst.”31:1, 31– 38, Winter– Spring 546,Fall 1994. 1990. Friedberg,Gerald. “Sourcesfor theStudy Fones-Wolf, Ken.“ Sourcesfor theStudy of Socialism inAmerica, 1901–1919.” of Labor History inthe Urban Archives, 6:2,159– 165, Spring 1965. TempleUniversity.” 23:4, 520– 525, Friedheim,Robert L.“Prologueto a Fall 1982. GeneralStrike: The Seattle Shipyard Forbath, William E.“NotSo Simple.” Strikeof 1919.”6:2, 121– 142, Spring [GreeneSymposium] 40:2,189– 206, 1965. May 1999. Frisch, Michael.“ Ladders, Racingand Foster,Harold. “Employers’Strike In- ForestTrails.” 15:3, 461– 466, Summer surance.”12:4, 483– 529, Fall 1971. 1974. Foster,James C.“1954:A CIO Victory?” Gabin, Nancy.“ Biography andthe Social 12:3,392– 408, Summer 1971. Foster,James C.“TheWestern Dilemma: History of Labor inthe 20th Century.” Miners,Silicosis, andCompensation.” [LichtensteinSymposium] 37:3,332– 26:2,268– 287, Spring 1985. 336,Summer 1996. Foster,Jim. “TheTen Day Tramps.” Gabin, Nancy.“ Collision Course: Labor 23:4,608– 623, Fall 1982. andManagement at the Crossroads.” Frank, Dana. “IrvingBernstein’ s Lean 31:3,473– 475, Fall 1990. Years.”37:1, 83– 89, Winter 1995– 96. Gabin, Nancy.“ Racial Boundariesand Frank, Dana. “TheLabor Historian’s New Class Designsin the Urban North.” Clothes.”[Hunter Symposium] 39:2, [SugrueSymposium] 39:1,47– 50, 169–171, May 1998. February 1998. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 101

Gabin, Nancy.“ WomenWorkers andthe Gibson, GeorgeH. “Labor Piracyon the UAW inthe Post-World War IIPeriod: Brandywine.”8:2, 175– 182, Spring 1945–1954.” 21:1, 5– 30, Winter 1979– 1967. 80. Gietschier,Steven P. “‘Detained.J. B. GafŽeld, Chad. “BigBusiness, TheWork- McNamara’: TwoLetters from the ing-Class, andSocialism inSchenec- ConvictedLos AngelesBomber.” 23:1, tady, 1911–1916.” 19:3, 350– 372, 79–89, Winter 1982. Summer1978. Gilbert, James. “TheAmerican Fabian: Gall, GilbertJ. “HebertBlankenhorn, the An Introductionand Appraisal.” 11:3, La FolletteCommittee, and the Irony of 347–350, Summer 1970. IndustrialRepression.” 23:2, 246– 253, Gilbert, Vic.“ BritishTheses andDisserta- Spring1982. tionson American Labor History, 1970– Gall, GilbertJ. “ANoteon Lee Pressman 1986.”28:1, 89– 90, Winter 1987. andthe F.B.I.” 32:4, 551– 561, Fall Gildemesiter,Glen A. “TheFounding of 1991. theAmerican Federation of Labor.” Gall, GilbertJ. “‘Rights Which Have 22:2,262– 268, Spring 1981. Meaning’: ReconceivingLabor Gilreath, James. “Labor History Sources inthe 1940s.” 39:3, 273– 290, August inthe Library of CongressRare Book 1998. andSpecial Collections Division.” 25:2, Gallaway, LowellE. “TheOrigin and 243–251, Spring 1984. Early Years of theFederation of Flat Ginger,Ray andVictoria Ginger. Glass Workers of America.”3:1, 92– “Feministand Family History: Some 102,Winter 1962. Pitfalls.”12:4, 614– 618, Fall 1971. Gamble, Robert A.andGeorge Green. Ginger,Victoria and Ray Ginger. “Labor Archives atthe University of “Feministand Family History: Some Texasat Arlington.” 23:4, 526– 527, Pitfalls.”12:4, 614– 618, Fall 1971. Fall 1982. Ginger,Ray. “AmericanWorkers: Views Garraty, JohnA. “UnemploymentDuring Fromthe Left.” 14:3, 425– 428, Sum- TheGreat Depression.” 17:2, 133– 159, mer 1973. Spring1976. Gitelman,Howard M.“Adoph Strasser Garraty, JohnA. “TheUnited States Steel andthe Origins of Pureand Simple Corporation Versus Labor: TheEarly Unionism.”6:1, 71– 83, Winter 1965. Years.”1:1, 3– 38, Winter 1960. Gitelman,H. M.“Beingof TwoMinds: Gates, Francis. “Labor Resourcesin the AmericanEmployers Confrontthe University of California (Berkeley)Li- Labor Problem,1915– 1919.” 25:2, braries.”1:2, 196– 205, Spring 1960. 189–216, Spring 1984. Geary, Dan. “The‘ Unionof thePower Gitelman,Howard M.“NoIrish Need andthe Intellect’ : C.WrightMills and Apply: Patternsof andResponses to theLabor Movement.”42:4, 327– 345, EthnicDiscrimination in the Labor November2001. Market.”14:1, 56– 68, Winter 1973. Genizi,Haim. “TheModern Quarterly, Gitelman,Howard M.“TheWaltham 1923–1940.” 15:2, 199– 215, Spring Systemand the Coming of theIrish.” 1974. 8:3,227– 253, Fall 1967. Gerber, Larry G.“TheUnited States and Gitelman,H. M.“Welfare Capitalism Re- Canadian NationalIndustrial Confer- considered.”33:1, 1– 31, Winter 1992. encesof 1919:A Comparative Analy- Glaberman, Martinand George Rawick. sis.”32:1, 42– 65, Winter 1991. “TheChampion of Youth: An Introduc- Gersuny, Carl. “ABiographicalNote on tionand Appraisal.” 11:3, 351– 354, SethLuther.” 18:2, 239– 248, Spring Summer1970. 1977. Glaberman, Martinand Miriam Frank. Gersuny, Carl. “IndustrialCasualties in “FriedrichA. Sorgeon the American Lowell,1890– 1905.” 20:3, 435– 442, Labor Movement.”18:4, 592– 606, Fall Summer1979. 1977. 102 Index toAuthors

Glenn,Evelyn Nakano. “IndustrialHome- Gonzalez,Gilbert O. “TheMexican Cit- work: ACriticalLens on Work, Mother- rus PickerUnion, the Mexican Consul- hood, andthe State.” [Boris ate,and the Orange County Strike of Symposium] 39:4,409– 413, November 1936.”35:1, 48– 65, Winter 1994. 1998. Gordon, Max.“ TheCommunists andthe Glenn,Evelyn Nakano. “Protest,Resist- Driveto Organize Steel, 1936.” 23:2, ance,and Survival inthe Jim Crow 254–265, Spring 1982. South.”[Hunter Symposium] 39:2, Gordon, MichaelA. “TheLabor Boycott 172–175, May 1998. inNew York City, 1880–1886.” ’ 16:2, Glickman, Lawrence.“ Inventingthe 184–229, Spring 1975. ‘AmericanStandard of Living’: Gender, Gottlieb,Amy Zahl. “TheIn uence of Race, andWorking Class Identity, BritishTrade Unionists onthe Regu- 1880–1925.” 34:2, 221– 235, Spring– lationof theMining Industry in Illinois, Summer1993. 1872.”19:3, 397– 415, Summer 1978. Glickman, LawrenceB. “TheLaboring of Gottlieb,Peter. “ BlackMiners and the History andCulture.” [Denning Sym- 1925–28 Bituminous Coal Strike:The posium] 39:3,320– 324, August 1998. ColoredCommittee of Non-Union Gobel, Thomas. “BecomingAmerican: Miners,Montour Mine No. 1, Pitts- EthnicWorkers andthe Rise of the burghCoal Company.”28:2, 233– 241, CIO.”29:2, 173– 198, Spring 1988. Spring1987. Gottlieb,Peter and Diana L.Shenk. Godfried, Nathan. “Strugglingover Poli- “Historical Collectionsand Labor ticsand Culture: Organized Labor and Archives, PennState University.” 31:1, Radio StationWEVD during the 81–85, Winter– Spring 1990. 1930s.”42:4, 347– 370, November Gowaskie, Joe.“ JohnMitchell and the An- 2001. thraciteMine Workers: Leadership Godson, Roy. “TheAFL ForeignPolicy Conservatism andRank-and-File Mili- MakingProcess from theEnd of World tancy.”27:1, 54– 84, Winter 1985– 86. War IItothe Merger.” 16:3, 325– 337, Graebner, William. “TheCoal-Mine Op- Summer1975. eratorand Safety: AStudyof Business Goldberg,Michael J. “TheTeamsters’ Reform inthe Progressive Period.” 14:4, Boardof Monitors:An Experimentin 483–505, Fall 1973. UnionReform Litigation.”30:4, 563– Graebner, William. “‘UncleSam Just 584,Fall 1989. Loves theLadies’ : SexDiscrimination in Goldschmidt,Eli. “Labor andPopulism: theFederal Government, 1917.” 21:1, NewYork City, 1891–1896.” 13:4, 75–85, Winter 1979– 80. 520–532, Fall 1972. Graymont, Barbara. “Aspects ofDeLeon.” Goldsmith, Larry. “‘ToProŽt by His Skill 15:4,559– 562, Fall 1974. andto TrafŽ c onHis Crime’: Prison Graziosi, Andrea. “CommonLaborers, Labor inEarly l9th-CenturyMassachu- UnskilledWorkers 1890–1915.” 22:4, setts.”40:4, 439– 457, November 1999. 512–544, Fall 1981. Goldstein,Robert Justin.“ PoliticalRe- Green,Archie. “ADiscography of Ameri- pression inModern American History canCoal Miners’Songs.” 2:1, 101– 115, (1870–Present): A SelectiveBibli- Winter1961. ography.”32:4, 526– 550, Fall 1991. Green,Archie. “TheDeath of Mother Golin, Steve.“ DefeatBecomes Disaster: Jones.”1:1, 68– 80, Winter 1960. ThePaterson Strike of 1913and the Green,George and Harold Lackman. Declineof theIWW.” 24:2, 223– 248, “Originand Progress of theTexas Spring1984. Labor Archives.”11:3, 341– 344, Sum- Gomberg,William. “UnionPolicy Exper- mer 1970. imentationin a VolatileIndustry.” Green,George N. “TheTexas Labor 9:SpecialSupplement, 69– 81, Spring Archives.”31:1, 202– 207, Winter– 1968. Spring1990. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 103

Green,James R.“Behavioralism andClass Grubbs, Frank L., Jr. “OrganizedLabor Analysis.”13:1, 89– 106, Winter 1972. andthe League to Enforce Peace.” 14:2, Greenbaum,Fred. “ TheSocial Ideas of 247–258, Spring 1973. SamuelGompers.” 7:1, 35– 61, Winter Guerin-Gonzales, Camille. “Conversing 1966. Across Boundariesof Race, Ethnicity, Greenberg,Brian. “ What David Brody Class, Gender,and Region: Latino and Wrought:the Impact of Steelworkersin LatinaLabor History.”35:4, 547– 563, America: TheNonunion Era .”34:3, 457– Fall 1994. 468,Fall 1993. Gutfeld,Arnon. “TheMurder of Frank Greene,Julie. “ ‘TheStrike at the Ballot Little:Radical Labor Agitationin Butte, Box’: TheAmerican Federation of Montana,1917.” 10:2, 177– 192, Spring Labor’s Entranceinto Election Politics, 1969. 1906–1909.” 32:2, 165– 192, Spring Gutman,Herbert G. “BlackCoal Miners 1991. andthe Greenback-Labor Partyin Re- Greene,Julie. “ Response: Reassessing deemer,Alabama, 1878–1879.” 10:3, Gompers andthe AFL.” [Greene Sym- 506–535, Summer 1969. posium] 40:2,201– 206, May 1999. Gutman,Herbert G. “Documentson Greene,Julie. “ Symposium onJulie NegroSeamen During the Recon- Greene: Pure andSimple Politics .” 40:2, structionPeriod.” 7:3, 307– 311, Fall 189–206, May 1999. 1966. Gregory, James N.“Southernizingthe Gutman,Herbert G. “EnglishLabor AmericanWorking Class: Post-war Viewsthe American Reconstruction.” Episodes of Regionaland Class Trans- 9:1,110– 112, Winter 1968. formation.”39:2, 135– 154, May 1998. Gutman,Herbert G. “FiveLetters of Im- “Commentaryand Response.” 39:2, migrantWorkers from Scotlandto the 155–168, May 1998.“ Response by UnitedStates, 1867– 1869.” 9:3, 384– James N.Gregory.”39:2, 166– 168, 408,Fall 1968. May 1998. Gutman,Herbert G. “TheKnights of Griffen, Clyde. “Christian Socialism In- Labor andPatrician Anti-Semitism: structedby Gompers.”12:2, 195– 213, 1891.”13:1, 63– 67, Winter 1972. Spring1971. Gutman,Herbert G. “Reconstructionin Grob, Gerald N.“OrganizedLabor and theNegro Worker, 1865–1900.” 1:2, Ohio: Negroesin the Hocking Valley 164–176, Spring 1960. Coal Minesin 1873 and 1874.” 3:3, Gross, James A.“Historians andthe 243–264, Fall 1962. Literatureof theNegro Worker.” 10:3, Gutman,Herbert G. “TheTompkins 536–546, Summer 1969. Square ‘Riot’in New York City onJan- Gross, James A. “TheMaking and Shap- uary 13,1874: A Re-examinationof Its ingof Unionism inthe Pulp and Paper Causes andIts Aftermath.”6:1, 44– 70, Industry.”5:2, 183– 208, Spring 1964. Winter1965. Grossman, Jonathan. “Who is theFather Gutman,Herbert G. “Troubleon the of Labor Day?”14:4, 612– 623, Fall Railroads in1873– 1874: Prelude to the 1973. 1877Crisis?” 2:2, 215– 235, Spring Grubb, Farley. “Labor, Markets, andOp- 1961. portunity:Indentured Servitude in Early Gutman,Herbert. “VictorMarkowitz: In America, aRejoinderto Salinger.” 39:2, Memoriam.”29:3, 391– 399, Summer 235–241, May 1998. 1988. Grubbs, DonaldH. “Preludeto Chavez: Gyory, Andrew. “PublishedWorks of Her- TheNational Farm Labor Unionin bertG. Gutman:A Bibliography.”29:3, California.”16:4, 453– 469, Fall 1975. 400–405, Summer 1988. Grubbs, Frank L., Jr. “Counciland Al- Hale, GraceElizabeth. “ANoteon Re- lianceLabor Propaganda,1917– 1919.” gion,Race, andVision.” 39:2, 155– 157, 7:2,156– 172, Spring 1966. May 1998. 104 Index toAuthors

Halker, Clark. “Jesus Was aCarpenter: Harris, HowellJohn. “Give Us Someof Labor Song-Poets,Labor Protest,and That Old-TimeCorporate History.” TrueReligion in Gilded Age America.” 28:1,75– 83, Winter 1987. 32:2,273– 289, Spring 1991. Harris, HowellJohn. “TheMaster Crafts- Halpern, Martin.“ The1939 UAW Con- man.”30:1, 93– 106, Winter 1989. vention:Turning Point for Communist Harris, HowellJohn. “Meatand Men.” Powerin the Auto Union?” 33:2, 191– [Halpern andHorowitz Symposium] 216,Spring 1992. 40:2,216– 219, May 1999. Halpern, Martin.“ Taft–Hartley andthe Harris, SheldonH. “Lettersfrom West Defeatof theProgressive Alternative in Virginia:Management’ s Versionof the theUnited Auto Workers.” 27:2, 204– 1902Coal Strike.”10:2, 228– 240, 226,Spring 1986. Spring1969. Halpern, Rick. “Gettingto Grips withthe Harris, William H.“FederalIntervention CIO: TheSigniŽ cance of thePacking- inUnion Discrimination: FEPC and houseExperience.” [Halpern and WestCoast Shipyards DuringWorld HorowitzSymposium] 40:2,226– 230, War II.”22:2, 325– 347, Spring 1981. May 1999. Harrison, JohnF. C.“TheOwenite Halpern, Rick andRoger Horowitz. SocialistMovement in Britain and the “Symposium onHalpern andHorowitz: UnitedStates.” 9:3, 323– 337, Fall Packinghouse Unionism .”40:2,207– 235, 1968. May 1999. Hartland-Thonberg, Penelope.“ Philip Ham, F.Gerald. “Labor Manuscriptsin Taft, TheTeacher.” 19:1, 24– 30, Win- theState Historical Societyof Wiscon- ter 1978. sin.”7:3, 313– 342, Fall 1966. Hartsough, Denis.“ FilmUnion Meets Hammett,Hugh B. “Labor andRace: The Television:IA OrganizingEfforts, GeorgiaRailroad Strikeof 1909.”16:4, 1947–1952.” 33:3, 357– 371, Summer 470–484, Fall 1975. 1992. Hanson, JoyceA. “FeminismDuring the Harvey, KatherineA. “TheKnights of ‘Doldrums.”’ 41:1,91– 92, February Labor inthe Maryland Coal Fields, 2000. 1878–1882.” 10:4, 555– 583, Fall 1969. Hardman, J.B.S.“David Dubinsky, Harvey, O.L.“Inventoryof Department Labor Leaderand Man.” 9:Special Sup- of Labor Archives.”4:2, 196– 198, plement,43– 54, Spring 1968. Hardman, J.B.S.“JohnL. Lewis, Labor Spring1963. Leaderand Man: An Interpretation.” Haynes, JohnE. “TheLudwig Donath 2:1,3– 29, Winter 1961. Filein the Joseph Rauh Papers: How Hareven, Tamara K.“TheLaborers of OneActor Got Off theAnti-Communist Manchester,New Hampshire, 1912– Blacklist.”30:3, 463– 470, Summer 1922:The Role of Family andEthnicity 1989. inAdjustment to Industrial Life.” 16:2, Haynes, JohnE. “Labor History Sources 249–265, Spring 1975. inthe Manuscript Division of theLi- Harley, Sharon. “Leisureand Labor: Sub- brary of Congress.”31:1, 89– 97, Win- versive atAll Levels.”[Hunter Sympo- ter–Spring 1990. sium] 39:2,175– 179, May 1998. Haynes, JohnE. andHarvey Klehr. Harring, SidneyL. “PoliceReports As “‘MoscowGold’ : ConŽrmed at Last?” Sourcesin Labor History.”18:4, 585– 33:2,279– 293, Spring 1992. 591,Fall 1977. Haynes, JohnEarl. “NewHistory of the Harrington,Michael. “ Catholics inthe CommunistParty in State Politics: The Labor Movement:A Case History.”1:3, Implications for MainstreamPolitical 231–263, Fall 1960. Theory.”27:4, 549– 563, Fall 1986. Harris, HowellJohn. “DurableGoods: Haynes, JohnEarl. “The‘ Rank andFile Steelworkersin America After Three Movement’In Private Social Work.” Decades.”34:3, 479– 489, Fall 1993. 16:1,78– 98, Winter 1975. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 105

Heath, FrederickM. “Labor andthe Pro- Higgens-Evenson,R. Rudy. “FromIndus- gressiveMovement in Connecticut.” trial Policeto Workmen’ s Compen- 12:1,52– 67, Winter 1971. sation: PublicPolicy and Industrial Heffron, PaulT. “ManuscriptSources in Accidentsin New York, 1880–1910.” theLibrary of Congressfor aStudyof 39:4,365– 380, November 1998. Labor History.”10:4, 630– 638, Fall Hill, Charles. “Fightingthe Twelve-Hour 1969. Day inthe American Steel Industry.” Helburn, I.B.“TradeUnion Response to 15:1,19– 35, Winter 1974. ProŽt-Sharing Plans: 1886–1966.” 12:1, Hine, William C.“BlackOrganized Labor 68–80, Winter 1970. inReconstruction Charleston.” 25:4, 504–517, Fall 1984. Helfand, Barry F.“Labor andthe Courts: Hobby, DanielT. “‘WeHave GotRe- TheCommon Law Doctrineof Crimi- sults’: ADocumenton theOrganization nal Conspiracy andits Application in of Domesticsin the .” theBuck’ s StoveCase.” 18:1, 91– 114, 17:1,103– 108, Winter 1976. Winter1977. Hoerder,Dirk. “AmericanLabor &Immi- Helfgott,Roy B.“TradeUnionism Among grationHistory: Reports onthe State of theJewish GarmentWorkers of Britain theHistoriography Since1945 in the andthe United States.” 2:2, 202– 214, EuropeanCountries, Part I.” 21:2, 261– Spring1961. 276,Spring 1980. Hembol, Lois Rita. “DownwardOccu- Hoerder,Dirk. “AmericanLabor &Immi- pational MobilityDuring the Great De- grationHistory: Reports onthe State of pression: Urban Blackand White theHistoriography Since1945, Part II.” WorkingWomen.” 29:2, 135– 172, 21:3,392– 419, Summer 1980. Spring1988. Hogler,Raymond L.“Labor History and Hendrickson,Kenneth E., Jr. “The CriticalLabor Law: An Interdisciplinary Pro-War Socialists, theSocial Demo- Approach toWorkers’ Control.” 30:2, craticLeague, and the Ill-Fated Drive 185–192, Spring 1989. for IndustrialDemocracy in America, Hold, Wythe. “TheNew American Labor 1917–1920.” 11:3, 304– 322, Summer Law History.”30:2, 275– 293, Spring 1989. 1970. Holt, James. “TradeUnionism inthe Henretta,James A.“TheStudy of Social Britishand U.S. SteelIndustries, 1888– Mobility:Ideological Assumptions and 1912:A Comparative Study.”18:1, 5– ConceptualBias.” 18:2, 165– 178, 35,Winter 1977. Spring1977. Holter,Darryl. “Sourcesof CIO Success: Henry, Sarah M.“TheStrikers andTheir TheNew Deal Years inMilwaukee.” Sympathizers: Brooklynin the Trolley 29:2,199– 224, Spring 1988. Hook, Sidney.“ ModernQuarterly, A Strikeof 1895.”32:3, 329– 353, Sum- Chapter inAmerican Radical History.” mer 1991. 10:2,241– 249, Spring 1969. Herreshoff, David. “TheSocialist Review: Horowitz, Roger.“ TheNational Versus An Introductionand Appraisal.” 11:2, theLocal: AResponse toCommenta- 223–225, Spring 1970. tors.”[Halpern andHorowitz Sympo- Hessen, Robert. “TheBethlehem Steel sium] 40:2,231– 235, May 1999. Strikeof 1910.”15:1, 3– 18, Winter Horowitz, Roger[and Halpern, Rick]. 1974. “Symposium onHalpern andHorowitz: Higbie,Toby. “Indispensable Outcasts: Packinghouse Unionism .”40:2,207– 235, Harvest Laborers inthe Wheat Belt of May 1999. theMiddle West, 1890– 1925.” 38:3, Horowitz, Roger.“ What DidWorkers 393–412, Fall 1997. Wantin the 1930s Anyway?” [“ WeAre Higginson,John. “Digginga Little All Leaders”: ASymposium ona Col- Deeper.”[Symposium onDaniel lectionof Essays Dealingwith Alterna- Letwin: TheChallenge of Interracial tiveUnionism inthe Early 1930s]38:2, Unionism]41:1,68– 71, February 2000. 169–172, Spring– Summer 1997. 106 Index toAuthors

Howard, J.Woodford, Jr. “Frank Murphy Isserman, Maurice.“ ‘GodBless Our andthe Sit-Down Strikes of 1937.”1:2, AmericanInstitutions’ : TheLabor His- 103–140, Spring 1960. tory of JohnR. Commons.”17:3, 309– Howard, WalterT. andBrett A. Gibble. 328,Summer 1976. “Valuesand Institutions in Con ict: Isserman, Maurice.“ ThreeGenerations: TheShotgun Merger of theAFL and Historians’Views— American Commu- CIO inFlorida.” 37:2, 189– 204, Spring nism.”26:4, 517– 545, Fall 1985. 1996. Jacoby, Dan. “Plumbingthe Origins of Huggins,Nathan I.“HerbertGutman and AmericanVocationalism.” 37:2, 235– Afro-American History.”29:3, 323– 272,Spring 1996. 335,Summer 1988. Jacoby, Sanford M.“TheDevelopment Hunnicutt,Benjamin Kline. “ TheEnd of of Cost-of-Living Escalators inthe ShorterHours.” 25:3, 373– 404, Sum- UnitedStates.” 28:4, 515– 533, Fall mer 1984. 1987. Hunter,Tera. “Dominationand Resist- Jacoby, Sanford M.“TheWorkplace as an ance:The Politics of Wages:Household Expressive Totality.”30:1, 106– 110, Labor inNew South Atlanta.” 34:2, Winter1989. 205–220, Spring– Summer 1993. Jaher, FredericC. “TheNew Nation: An Hunter,Tera. “Response.”[Hunter Sym- Introductionand Appraisal.” 9:3, 376– posium] 39:2,185– 188, May 1998. 379,Fall 1968. Hunter,Tera. “Symposium onTera James, EdwardT. “MoreCorn, Less Hell? Hunter: To ‘Joy My Freedom .” 39:2, AKnightsof Labor Glimpse of Mary 169–188, May 1998. ElizabethLease.” 16:3, 408– 409, Sum- Hurvitz, Haggai. “Ideologyand Industrial mer 1975. Conict: President Wilson’ s FirstIndus- Jameson, Elizabeth. “WeShall Be All : trial Conferenceof October,1919.” Thirty Years Later.”40:3, 349– 356, 18:4,509– 524, Fall 1977. August1999. Hutchinson,John. “JohnL. Lewis: To Janick,Herbert. “Yale Blue:Unionization ThePresidency of theUMWA.” 19:2, atYale University, 1931–1985.” 28:3, 185–203, Spring 1978. 342–369, Summer 1987. Huth, Geoffrey A.“Labor Archives inthe Jensen,Billie Barnes. “ WoodrowWilson’ s University Library, StateUniversity of Interventionin the Coal Strikeof 1914.” NewYork atAlbany.” 32:1, 130– 135, Winter1991. 15:1,63– 77, Winter 1974. Ickstadt,Heinz and Hartmut Keil. “AFor- Jentz,John B. “Labor, theLaw, andEco- gottenPiece of Working-Class Litera- nomics:the Organization of theChicago ture:Gustav Lyser’s Satireof theHewitt FlatJanitors Union,1902– 1917.” 38:3, Hearingof 1878.”20:1, 127– 140, 413–431, Fall 1997. Winter1979. Jimerson,Randall C.“TheConnecticut Ingalls, Robert P.“TheFlogging of Joseph Labor Archives.”31:1, 39– 43, Winter– Gelders:A Policeman’s View.”20:4, Spring1990. 576–578, Fall 1979. Johanningsmeier,Edward P. “TheTrade Ingalls, Robert P.“NewYork andthe UnionUnity League: American Com- Minimum-WageMovement, 1933– munistsand the Transition to Industrial 1937.”15:2, 179– 198, Spring 1974. Unionism: 1928–1934.” 42:2, 159– 177, Issel, William. “Class andEthnic Con ict May 2001. inSan FranciscoPolitical History: The Johanningsmeier,Edward P. “William Z. Reform Charter of 1898.”18:3, 341– Fosterand the Syndicalist League of 359,Summer 1977. NorthAmerica.” 30:3, 329– 353, Sum- Isserman, Maurice.“ An Exchangein the mer 1989. RochesterWorkingman’ s Advocate: Johnpoll, BernardK. “ManuscriptSources March, 1840.”20:1, 141– 146, Winter inAmerican Radicalism.” 14:1, 92– 97, 1979. Winter1973. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 107

Johnpoll, BernardK. “ANoteon Daniel Kaufman, BruceE. “TheCase for the DeLeon.”17:4, 606– 612, Fall 1976. Company Union.”41:3, 321– 350, Au- Johnson, Christopher H.“FrenchExcep- gust 2000. tionalism.”36:1, 95– 100, Winter 1995. Kazin, Michael.“ TheLimits of Union- Johnson, DanielJ. “‘NoMake-Believe CenteredHistory: Responses toKimel- Class Struggle’: TheSocialist Municipal dorf.”32:1, 104– 107, Winter, 1991. Campaign inLos Angeles,1911.” 41:1, Kazin, Michael.“ Limitsof theWork- 25–45, February 2000. place.”30:1, 110– 113, Winter 1989. Johnson, MichaelP. “Work, Culture,and Kazin, Michael.“ Strugglingwith the Class theSlave Community:Slave Occupa- Struggle: and the Search for a tionsin the Cotton Belt in 1860.” 27:3, Synthesis of U.S. Labor History.”28:4, 325–355, Summer 1986. 497–514, Fall 1987. Jones,Clifton. “TheSocialist Party of the Kazin, Michael.“ What DidGompers UnitedStates, A Bibliography of Sec- Start?”[Greene Symposium] 40:2,189– ondary Sources,1945– 1974.” 19:2, 206,May 1999. 253–279, Spring 1978. Keeran, RogerR. “CommunistIn uence Jones,Jacqueline. “ InterracialismAbove inthe Automobile Industry, 1920–1933: Ground,Jim Crow Below.”[Sympo- Pavingthe Way for an Industrial sium onDaniel Letwin: TheChallenge of Union.”20:2, 189– 225, Spring 1979. Interracial Unionism ]41:1,71– 73, Keeran, Roger.“ TheInternational Work- February 2000. ers Orderand the Origins of theCIO.” Jones,Jacqueline. “ ThePolitics of Pov- 30:3,385– 408, Summer 1989. erty:What’ s History Gotto Do with It?” Keil, Hartmutand Heinz Ickstadt. “ AFor- [SugrueSymposium] 39:1,50– 52, gottenPiece of Working-Class Litera- February 1998. ture:Gustav Lyser’s Satireof theHewitt Jones,Lamar B.andRay R. Marshall. Hearingof 1878.”20:1, 127– 140, “AgriculturalUnions inLouisiana.” 3:3, Winter1979. 287–306, Fall 1962. Keil, Hartmut. “Studiesof theAmerican Jones,Lamar B.“Labor andManagement Labor Movementin West Germany.” inCalifornia Agriculture,1864– 1964.” 18:1,122– 132, Winter 1977. 11:1,23– 40, Winter 1970. Keitel,Robert S.“TheMerger of theIn- Jones,William P.“BlackWorkers andthe ternationalUnion of Mine,Mill and CIO’s TurnToward Racial Liberalism: SmelterWorkers intothe United Steel OperationDixie and the North Carolina Workers of America.”15:1, 36– 43, LumberIndustry, 1946–1953.” 41:3, Winter1974. 279–306, August 2000. Keller,Kenneth W. “ThePhiladelphia Pi- Kahn, LawrenceM. “Unionand Internal lots’Strike of 1792.”18:1, 49– 70, Win- Labor Markets: TheCase of theSan ter 1977. FranciscoLongshoremen.” 29:3, 369– Kelley, Robin D.G.“ANewWar in 391,Summer 1980. Dixie:Communists andthe Unem- Kanarek, Harold K. “Disaster for Hard ployedin Birmingham,Alabama, 1930– Coal: TheAnthracite Strike of 1925– 1933.”30:3, 367– 384, Summer 1989. 1926.”15:1, 44– 62, Winter 1974. Kenneally,James J.“Womenand Trade Kann, Kenneth.“ TheKnights of Labor Unions, 1870–1920: The Quandary of andthe Southern Black Worker.” 18:1, theReformer.” 14:1, 42– 55, Winter 49–70, Winter 1977. 1973. Kannenberg,Lisa. “TheImpact of the Kenny, Kevin. “TheMolly Maguires and ColdWar onWomen’ s TradeUnion theCatholic Church.” 36:3, 345– 376, Activism: TheUE Experience.”34:2, Summer1995. 309–323, Spring– Summer 1993. Kerr, Thomas J., IV.“TheNew York Fac- Katznelson,Ira. “Cases andTheory.” tory InvestigatingCommission andthe [Halpern andHorowitz Symposium] Minimum-WageMovement.” 12:3, 40:2,219– 222, May 1999. 373–391, Summer 1971. 108 Index toAuthors

Kessler-Harris, Alice.“ TheLimits of Klehr, Harvey. “Leninism,Lewis Corey, Union-CenteredHistory: Responses to andthe Failure of AmericanSocialism.” Kimeldorf.”32:1, 107– 110, Winter 18:2,249– 256, Spring 1977. 1991. Klehr, Harvey. “SeeingRed ‘ Seeing Kessler-Harris, Alice.“ Treatingthe Male Red.”’ 26:1,138– 143, Winter 1985. as ‘Other’: Re-deŽning the Parameters Klehr, Harvey andWilliam Thompson. of Labor History.”34:2, 190– 204, “Self-Determinationin the Black Belt: Spring–Summer 1993. Originsof aCommunistPolicy.” 30:3, Kessler-Harris, Alice.“ Organizingthe Un- 354–366, Summer 1989. organizable:Three Jewish Womenand Kleinberg,Susan J.“Technologyand TheirUnion.” 17:1, 5– 23, Winter 1976. Women’s Work: TheLives of Working Kessler-Harris, Alice.“ Women’s Wage Class Womenin Pittsburgh, 1870– Work As Mythand History.” 19:2, 287– 1900.”17:1, 58– 72, Winter 1976. 307,Spring 1978. Koppes, Clayton R.“TheKansas Trial of Kessler-Harris, Alice.“ ‘Rosie theRiveter’ : theIWW, 1917–1919.” 16:3, 338– 358, Who Was She?”24:2, 249– 523, Spring Summer1975. 1983. Kornhauser, Ruth. “SomeSocial Determi- Kimeldorf, Howard. “WorldWar IIand nantsand Consequences of Union theDeradicalization of AmericanLabor: Membership.”2:1, 30– 61, Winter 1961. theILWU as aDeviantCase.” 33:2, Korth, PhilipA. “TheAuto-Lite Strike: 248–278, Spring 1992. Methodsand Materials.” 16:3, 412– 417,Summer 1975. Kimeldorf, Howard. “BringingUnions Kotkin, Stephen.“ ‘OneHand Clapping’: BackIn (or Why WeNeed a NewOld Russian Workers and1917.” 32:4, 604– Labor History).”32:1, 91– 104, Winter 620,Fall 1991. 1991.See also “TheLimits of Union- Kotler,Stanley I. “Labor, theClayton Act, CenteredHistory: Responses toKimel- andthe Supreme Court.” 3:1, 19– 38, dorf,”and Reply toComments. 32:1, Winter1962. 104–129, Winter 1991. Koziara, Edward. “Employers’Strike In- Kimeldorf, Howard. “Reply toCom- surance:A Comment.”13:3, 463– 465, ments.”32:1, 128– 129, Winter 1991. Summer1972. Kirkby, Diane.“ ‘TheWage-Earning Kraft, James P.“The‘ Pit’Musicians: Woman andthe State’ : TheNational Mechanizationin the Movie Theatre, Women’s TradeUnion League and Pro- 1926–1934.” 35:1, 66– 89, Winter 1994. tectiveLabor Legislation,1903– 1923.” Krause, Paul.“ TheLife andTime of 28:1,54– 94, Winter 1987. ‘Beeswax’Taylor: Originsand Para- Kirsch, Leonard.“ TheResuscitation of doxesof theGilded Age Labor Move- TradeUnions inthe U.S.S.R.” 12:1, ment.”33:1, 32– 54, Winter 1992. 154–162, Winter 1971. Krause, Paul.“ OnDavid Brodyand Steel- Klaczynska, Barbara. “Why Women workersin America: TheNonunion Era .” Work: AComparison of Various 34:3,489– 498, Fall 1993. Groups—Philadelphia, 1910–1930.” Kremm, Thomas W.andDiane Neal. 17:1,73– 87, Winter 1976. “ClandestineBlack Labor Societiesand Klehr, Harvey. “AmericanCommunism WhiteFear: Hiram F.Hoover andthe andthe United Auto Workers: NewEvi- ‘CooperativeWorkers of America’in the denceon an OldControversy.” 24:3, South.”19:2, 226– 237, Spring 1978. 404–413, Summer 1983. Kriger,Thomas J.“ and Klehr, Harvey andJohn E. Haynes. SpilledMilk: The Origins of Dairy “Communists andthe CIO Fromthe FarmerActivism inNew York State, SovietArchives.” 35:3, 442– 446. Sum- 1936–1941.” 38:2, 266– 286, Spring– mer 1994. Summer1997. Klehr, Harvey. “Leninon American Krislov, Joseph. “Organizing,Union SocialistLeaders and on Samuel Gom- Growth, andthe Cycle, 1949– 1966.” pers.”17:2, 265– 270, Spring 1976. 11:2,212– 222, Spring 1970. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 109

Kritzberg,Barry. “An UnŽnished Chapter Laslett,John H. M.“Socialism andthe inWhite-Collar Unionism: TheForma- AmericanLabor Movement:Some tiveYears of theChicago Newspaper NewRe ections.” 8:2, 136– 155, Spring Guild.”14:3, 397– 413, Summer 1973. 1967. Kruman, Mark W.“QuotasFor Blacks: Lasser, Carol. “TheDomestic Balance of ThePublic Works Administrationand Power:Relations betweenMistress and theBlack Construction Worker.” 16:1, Maidin 19th Century .” 37–51, Winter 1975. 28:1,5– 22, Winter 1987. Kugler,Israel. “TheTrade Union Career Latour, Jane.“ Live! FromNew York: of Susan B.Anthony.”2:1, 90– 100, WomenConstruction Workers inTheir Winter1961. OwnWords.” 42:2, 179– 189, May Lackman, Harold andGeorge Green. 2001. “Originand Progress of theTexas Laurie,Bruce. “ ‘Nothingon Impulse’ : Labor Archives.”11:3, 341– 344, Sum- Life Stylesof Philadelphia History: A mer 1970. Comparative Perspective.”15:3, 337– Lages,J. David andNeal Moore. “ The 366,Summer 1974. Ozarks Labor UnionArchives atSouth- Lause, Mark A.“TheAmerican Radicals westMissouri StateUniversity.” 31:1, andOrganized Marxism: theInitial Ex- 163–167, Winter– Spring 1990. perience,1869– 1874.” 33:1, 55– 80, LaGumina, Salvatore J.“VitoMarcanto- Winter1992. nio:A Studyin the Functional and Lause, Mark A.“The‘ Unwashed IdeologicalDynamics of aLabor Poli- lnŽdelity’ : Thomas Paineand Early tician.”13:3, 374– 399, Summer 1972. NewYork City Labor History.”27:3, Lane,A. T.“AmericanTrade Unions, 385–409, Summer 1986. Mass Immigrationand the Literacy Lawrence,James R.“TheAmerican Fed- Test:1900– 1917.” 25:1, 5– 25, Winter erationof Labor andthe Philippine In- 1984. dependenceQuestion, 1920– 1935.” 7:1, Lang,Jane and Harry N.Scheiber.“ The 62–69, Winter 1966. Wilson Administrationand the Wartime Lazar, Robert E.“TheInternational Mobilizationof BlackAmericans.” 10:3, Ladies GarmentWorkers’ Union 433–458, Summer 1969. Archives.”23:4, 528– 533, Fall 1982. Lapitsky, M.I.. “AmericanLabor in1980s SovietHistoriography.” 31:3, 441– 453, Lazerow, Jama. “‘TheWorkingman’ s Fall 1990. Hour’: The1886 Labor Uprising Larrowe, Charles P.“AMeteoron the inBoston.” 21:2, 200– 220, Spring IndustrialRelations Horizon: TheFore- 1980. man’s Association of America.”2:3, Lea, ArdenJ. “CottonTextiles and the 259–294, Fall 1961. FederalChild Labor Actof 1916.”16:4, Larrowe, Charles P.“TheGreat Maritime 485–494, Fall 1975. Strikeof ‘34.”11:4, 403– 451, Fall Leab, DanielJ. “EditorialNote.” 23:4, 1970. 485–486, Fall 1982. Larrowe, Charles P.“TheGreat Maritime Leab, DanielJ. “EditorialNote.” 39:1, 5, Strikeof ‘34:Part II.” 12:1, 3– 37, Win- February 1998. ter 1971. Leab, Dan. “EditorialNote.” 40:2, 141– Laslett,John H. M.“Endof an Alliance: 142,May 1999. SelectedCorrespondence Between Leab, Dan. “EditorialNote.” 41:3, 262, SocialistParty Secretary Adolph Germer August2000. andU.M.W. of A.Leadersin World Leab, DanielJ. “Fameis Fleeting.”40:4, War One.”12:4, 570– 595, Fall 1971. 481,November 1999. Laslett,John H. M.“SamuelGompers to Leab, DanielJ. “WritingHistory With FrederickEngels: An Excerptfrom the Film:Two Views of the1937 Strike 1890S.L.P.– A.F.L. Debate.”11:4, AgainstGeneral Motors by theUAW.” 531–535, Fall 1970. 21:1,102– 112, Winter 1979– 80. 110 Index toAuthors

Leab, DanielJ. “Toward Unionization: Letwin,Daniel. “ Symposium onDaniel TheNewark Ledger Strike of 1934–35.” Letwin: TheChallenge of Interracial 11:1,3– 22, Winter 1970. Unionism.”41:1, 63– 90, February Leab, DanielJ. “‘UnitedWe Eat’ : The 2000. Creationand Organization of theUn- Levenstein,Harvey. “LeninistsUndone by employedCouncils in 1930.” 8:3, 300– Leninism:Communism and Unionism 315,Fall 1967. inthe United States and Mexico, 1935– Leach,Eugene E. “Chainingthe Tiger: 1939.”22:2, 237– 269, Spring 1981. TheMob Stigma and the Working Levi, StevenC. “Labor History and Class, 1863–1894.” 35:2, 187– 215, Alaska.”30:4, 595– 607, Fall 1989. Spring1994. Levine,Bruce C. “ImmigrantWorkers, Leahey, PhilipJ. “‘TheBritish, Duff ‘Equal Rights,’and Anti-: The Green,the Rats andthe Devil’ : Custom, Germans of Newark, NewJersey.” 25:1, Capitalism, andCon ict in the Wash- 26–52, Winter 1984. ingtonPrinting Industry, 1834–36.” Levine,Lawrence W. “ImaginingFree- 27:1,5– 30, Winter 1985– 86. dom.”[Hunter Symposium] 39:2,179– Leahey, PhilipJ. “SkilledLabor andthe 182,May 1998. Rise of theModern Corporation: The Levy, Peter.“ TheNew Left and Labor: Case of theElectrical Industry.” 27:1, theEarly Years (1960–1963).” 31:2, 294–321, Summer 1990. 31–53, Winter 1985– 86. LeWarne,Charles P.“Labor andCom- Lefever, Harry G.“TheInvolvement of munitarianism, 1880–1900.” 16:3, 393– theMen and Religion Forward Move- 407,Summer 1975. mentin the Cause of Labor Justice.” LeWarne,Charles P.“Onthe Wobbly 14:4,521– 535, Fall 1973. Train toFresno.” 14:2, 264– 289, Leff, Mark. “TheHouse That Reuther Spring1973. Built:Assessing ‘Labor Liberalism.”’ Lewin,David. “LocalGovernment Rela- [LichtensteinSymposium] 37:3,347– tionsin Transition: The Case of 352,Summer 1996. Los Angeles.”17:2, 191– 213, Spring Lehning,Arthur. “Sourcesof Labor His- 1976. tory.”8:2, 183– 193, Spring 1967. Lewin,David. “PublicSector Labor Rela- Leidenberger,Georg. “ ‘ThePublic Is the tions.”18:1, 133– 144, Winter 1977. Labor Union’: Working-Class Progres- Lewis, Earl. “InvokingConcepts, Prob- sivism inTurn-of-the-Century lematizingIdentities: The Life of .”36:2, 187– 210, Spring 1995. Charles N.Hunterand the Implications Leinenweber,Charles. “TheClass and for theStudy of Genderand Labor.” EthnicBases of NewYork City Social- 34:2,292– 308, Spring– Summer 1993. ism, 1904–1915.” 22:1, 31– 56, Winter Lewis, Earl. “ToTell a FullStory: The 1981. Institutionalizationof theCIO andMat- Lemons,J. Stanley.“ SocialFeminism tersof Raceand Class.” 37:2, 171– 177, inthe 1920’ s.” 14:1, 83– 91, Winter Spring1996. 1973. Lewis, Ronald L.“TheUse andExtent of Leonard,Henry B.“EthnicCleavage and Slave Labor inthe Chesapeake Iron In- IndustrialCon ict in Late 19th Century dustry: TheColonial Era.”17:3, 388– America: TheCleveland Rolling Mill 405,Summer 1976. Company Strikesof 1882and 1885.” Lewis, Tab. “Labor History Sourcesin the 20:4,524– 548, Fall 1979. NationalArchives.” 31:1, 98– 104, Win- Leotta,Louis. “Abraham Epsteinand the ter–Spring 1990. Movementfor OldAge Security.” 16:3, Licht,Walter and Hal SethBarron. 359–377, Summer 1975. “Labor’s Men:A CollectiveBiography Letwin,Daniel. “ Challengeto What? of UnionOfŽ cialdom During the Challengefor Whom?”41:1, 80– 90, NewDeal Years.” 19:4, 532– 545, Fall February 2000. 1978. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 111

Licht,Walter. “ Response.”[Symposium Lipin, LawrenceM. “‘ThereWill Not Be on‘ GettingWork’ by WalterLicht] aMachanic(sic) Left’ : TheBattle 35:1,102– 105, Winter 1994. Against UnskilledLabor inthe San Licht,Walter. “ Symposium on Getting FranciscoHarness Trade,1880– 90.” Work by WalterLicht.” 35:1, 90– 105, 35:2,216– 236, Spring 1994. Winter1994. Lipschultz,Sybil. “Law, Feminismand Lichtenstein,Alex. “ Antiliberalism andthe theState: New Directions for Labor Working-Class Politicsof Nostalgia.” History.”[Boris Symposium] 39:4, 39:2,158– 161, May 1998. 413–417, November 1998. Lichtenstein,Alex. “ Exploringthe Local Litoff, H.andJudy Barrett Litoff. Worldof Interracialism.”[Symposium “WorkingWomen in Maine: A Noteon onDaniel Letwin: TheChallenge of Inter- Sources.”17:1, 88– 95, Winter 1976. racialUnionism ]41:1,63– 67, February Litoff, JudyBarrett and Hal Litoff. 2000. “WorkingWomen in Maine: A Note Lichtenstein,Alex. “ PuttingLabor’ s onSources.” 17:1, 88– 95, Winter House inOrder:the Transport Workers 1976. Unionand Labor Anti-Communism in Long,Durward. “‘La Resistencia’ Miamiduring the 1940s.” 39:1, 7– 23, Tampa’s ImmigrantLabor Union.”6:3, February 1998. 193–213, Fall 1965. Lichtenstein,Alex. “ Racial Conict and Long,Durward. “Labor Relations inthe Racial Solidarity inthe Alabama Coal Tampa Cigar Industry, 1885–1911.” Strikeof 1894:New Evidence for the 12:4,551– 559, Fall 1971. Gutman–Hill Debate.”36:1, 63– 76, Lopez,David E.“Cowboy Strikes Winter1995. andUnions.” 18:3, 325– 340, Summer Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ Ambiguous 1977. Legacy:The Union Security Problem Love, Richard. “InDeŽ ance of Custom DuringWorld War II.”18:2, 214– 238, andTradition: Black Tobacco Workers Spring1977. andLabor Unions inRichmond, Vir- Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ David Brody:Heir ginia,1937– 1941.” 35:1, 25– 47, Winter tothe Wisconsin School.” 34:3, 499– 1994. 503,Fall 1993. Lovett,Robert. “Labor History Materials Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ IrvingBernstein’ s inthe Harvard University Archives.” NewFrontier.” 37:1, 90– 97, Winter 1995–96. 4:3,273– 279, Fall 1963. Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ Labor andSocial Lubove, Roy. “Workmen’s Compensation History Recordsat the Catholic Univer- andthe Prerogatives of Voluntarism.” sity of America.”31:1, 105– 108, Win- 8:3,254– 279, Fall 1967. ter–Spring 1990. Lynd, Staughton.“ TheDownsizing of Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ NelsonLichten- America.”38:1, 85– 90, Winter 1996– stein’s WalterReuther :ASymposium.” 97. 37:3,332– 364, Summer 1996. Lynd, Staughton.“ TheMechanics in New Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ Rejoinder.”[Licht- York Politics,1774– 1788.” 5:3, 225– ensteinSymposium] 37:3,357– 364, 246,Fall 1964. Summer1996. Lynd, Staughton.“ ResistingPlant Lichtenstein,Nelson. “ TheView From Shutdowns.”30:2, 294– 300, Spring Jackson Place.”37:2, 166– 171, Spring 1989. 1996. Lynd, Staughton.“ ‘WeAre All Leaders’: Lida, Clara E.“RecentTrends in Spanish ASymposium ona Collectionof Essays Labor History.”12:1, 132– 138, Winter Dealingwith Alternative Unionism in 1971. theEarly 1930s.”38:2, 165– 201, Linton,David. “TheLuddites: How Did Spring–Summer 1997. Staughton Lynd. They GetThat BadReputation.” 33:4, “Response.”38:2, 183– 201, Spring– 529–537, Fall 1992. Summer1997. 112 Index toAuthors

Macdonald,Wendell D. “TheEarly Mason, PhilipP. “TheArchives of Labor History of Labor Statisticsin the History andUrban Affairs, WalterP. UnitedStates.” 13:2, 267– 278, Spring ReutherLibrary, Wayne StateUniver- 1972. sity.”31:1, 145– 155, Winter– Spring MacLean,Nancy. “ Race-ingClass, His- 1990. toricizingCategories.” [Symposium on Mason, PhilipP. “JoeHill— Cartoonist.” DanielLetwin: TheChallenge of Interra- 25:4,553– 557, Fall 1984. cialUnionism ]41:1,73– 77, February Mason, PhilipP. “Labor Archives in 2000. theUnited States: Achievements Mangum,Garth. “TheDevelopment of andProspects.” 23:4, 487– 497, Fall LocalUnion Jurisdiction in the Inter- 1982. nationalUnion of OperatingEngi- Mason, PhilipP. “Labor History Archives neers.”4:3, 257– 272, Fall 1963. inWayne StateUniversity.” 5:1, 67– 75, Marcus, Irwin M.“Labor Discontent Winter1964. inTioga County, Pennsylvania, Mason, PhilipP. “Labor Archives and 1865–1905.” 14:3, 414– 422, Summer Collectionsin the United States.” 31:1, 1973. 10–15, Winter– Spring 1990. Markowitz,Gerald] andDavid Rosner. Masson, Jackand Donald Guimary. “Deathand Disease inthe House “Asian Labor Contractorsin the of Labor.”30:1, 113– 117, Winter Alaskan CannedSalmon Industry: 1989. 1800–1937.” 22:3, 377– 397, Summer Marks, GeorgeP., III. “TheNew Orleans 1981. Screwmen’s BenevolentAssociation, Matthews,Glenna. “ An ImmigrantCom- 1850–1861.” 14:2, 259– 263, Spring munityin Indian Territory.” 23:3, 374– 1973. 394,Summer 1982. Marshall, F.Ray andLamar B.Jones. May, Martha. “The‘ GoodManagers’ : “AgriculturalUnions inLouisiana.” 3:3, MarriedWorking Class Womenand 287–306, Fall 1962. Family BudgetStudies, 1895– 1915.” Marshall, Robert G.“TheUrban Archives 25:3,351– 372, Summer 1984. Centerat California StateUniversity, Mayer, Thomas. “SomeCharacteristics of Northridge.”31:1, 213– 218, Winter– UnionMembers in the 1880’ s and Spring1990. 1890’s.” 5:1, 57– 66, Winter 1964. Martin,Charles H.“TheInternational Labor Defenseand Black America.” McCartin,Joseph A.“Power,Politics, and 26:2,165– 194, Spring 1985. ‘Pessimism of theIntelligence.” ’ Martin,Charles H.“WhiteSupremacy [Dubofsky Symposium] 40:3,345– 349, andBlack Workers: Georgia’s ‘Black August1999. Shirts’Combat TheGreat Depression.” McClurg,Donald J. “TheColorado 18:3,366– 381, Summer 1977. Coal Strikeof 1927—Tactical Leader- Martin,Christopher T.“NewUnionism at ship of theIWW.” 4:1, 68– 92, Winter theGrass Roots: TheAmalgamated 1963. ClothingWorkers of America in McCulloch,Mark. “TheUE/ Labor Rochester,New York, 1914–29.” 42:3, Archives, University of Pittsburgh.” 237–254, August 2001. 31:1,86– 88, Winter– Spring 1990. Mason, MatthewE. “‘TheHands Here McDonagh,Eileen L. “Liberalism at are Disposed tobe Turbulent’ : Unrest Home andin the Market: New Ques- Amongthe Irish Trackmenof the tionsabout Labor andWomen’ s Baltimoreand Ohio Railroad, 1829– Rights.”[Boris Symposium] 39:4,425– 1851.”39:3, 253– 272, August 1998. 428,November 1998. Mason, PhilipP. “TheArchives of Labor McDonnell.James R.andJohn R. Aiken. andUrban Affairs, WalterP. Reuther “WalterRauschenbusch andLabor Re- Library, Wayne StateUniversity.” 23:4, form: ASocialGospeller’ s Approach.” 534–545, Fall 1982. 11:2,131– 150, Spring 1970. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 113

McFarland,C. K.“Coalitionof Conve- Mendel,Ron. “CooperativeUnionism and nience:Lewis and Roosevelt, 1933– theDevelopment of Job Controlin New 1940.”13:3, 400– 414, Summer 1972. York’s PrintingTrades, 1886–1898.” McGirr,Molly. “Blackand White Long- 32:3,354– 375, Summer 1991. shoremenin the IWW: AHistory of the Mercier,Laurie. “ ‘Insteadof Fightingthe Philadelphia MarineTransport Workers CommonEnemy’ : MineMill versus the IndustrialUnion Local 8.” 36:3, 377– Steelworkersin Montana, 1950– 1967.” 402,Summer 1995. 40:4,459– 480, November 1999. McKee,Don K. “DanielDe Leon: A Meredith,H. L.“Agrarian Socialism and Reappraisal.”1:3, 264– 297, Fall 1960. theNegro in Oklahoma, 1900–1918.” McKee,Don. “ Pagesfrom an Organizer’s 11:3,277– 284, Summer 1970. Life: DonMcKee Confronts Southern Merrill,Michael. The Drinking, Sweating, Millworkers—and Himself.” 41:4, 453– Brawling,Hurting, Dying Mass. Are- 464,November 2000. viewessay of: Way, Peter. Common McKinley,Blaine. “ ‘AReligionof the Labour: Workersand the Digging of North NewTime’ : Anarchist Memorialsto the American Canals,1780– 1860 ; and Smith, Haymarket Martyrs, 1888–1917.” 28:3, Billy G. Lifein Early Philadelphia:Docu- 386–400, Summer 1987. ments from theRevolutionary andEarly McLaughlin,Doris B.“TheSecond Battle National Periods. 38:1,80– 84, Winter of BattleCreek— The Open Shop 1997. Movementin the Early TwentiethCen- Messer-Kruse, Timothy. “TheBest tury.”14:3, 323– 339, Summer 1973. DressedWorkers inNew York City: McLaurin,Melton A. “TheRacial Policies LiveriedCoachmen of theGilded Age.” of theKnights of Labor andthe Organi- 37:1,5– 27, Winter 1995– 96. zationof SouthernBlack Workers.” Messer-Kruse, Timothy. “EightHours, 17:4,568– 585, Fall 1976. Greenbacks and‘ Chinamen’: Wendell McMartin,Joseph A. “Using‘ theGun Phillips, Ira Steward,and the Fate of Act’: FederalRegulation and the Politics Labor Reform inMassachusetts.” 42:2, of theStrike Threat During World War 133–158, May 2001. I.”33:4, 519– 528, Fall 1992. Metz,Holly. “MiltonRogovin: APeople’s McMath,Robert C., Jr. “SouthernWhite Photographer.”38:3, 508– 524, Fall Farmers andthe Organization of Black 1997. Farm Workers: ANorthCarolina Docu- ment.”18:1, 115– 119, Winter 1977. Milkman,Ruth. “Backto the Future?” McNulty,Paul J. “Labor Problemsand 37:2,162– 166, Spring 1996. Labor Economics:The Roots of an Aca- Miller,Glenn W. andStephen B. Ware. demicDiscipline.” 9:2, 239– 261, Spring “OrganizedLabor inthe Political Pro- 1968. cess: ACase Studyof theRight-to-Work McQuaid,Kim. “Industryand the Co-Op- Campaign inOhio.”4:1, 51– 56, Winter erativeCommonwealth: William P. 1963. Hapgood andthe Columbia Conserve Miller,Harold L.“TheAmerican Bureau Company, 1917–1943.” 17:4, 510– 529, of IndustrialResearch andthe Origins of Fall 1976. the‘ WisconsinSchool’ of Labor His- McTighe,Michael J. “‘TruePhilan- tory.”25:2, 165– 188, Spring 1984. thropy’and the Limits of theFemale Miller,Harold L.“Labor Recordsin the SpherePoor Relief andLabor Organiza- StateHistorical Societyof Wisconsin.” tionsin Antebellum Cleveland.” 27:2, 23:4,546– 552, Fall 1982. 227–256, Spring 1986.[ Miller,J. G.“Labor Resourcesin the Cor- Meier,August and Elliott Rudwick. nellUniversity Libraries.”1:3, 319– 326, “CommunistUnions andthe Black Fall 1960. Community:The Case of theTransport Miller,Richard U.“AmericanRailroad Workers Union,1934– 1944.” 23:2, Unions andthe National Railways of 165–197, Spring 1982. Mexico.”15:2, 239– 260, Spring 1974. 114 Index toAuthors

Miller,Sally M.“OtherSocialists: Native- Montgomery,David. “TheLimits of Bornand Immigrant Women in the Union-CenteredHistory: Responses to SocialistParty of America, 1901–1917.” Kimeldorf.”32:1, 110– 116, Winter 24:1,84– 102, Winter 1983. 1991. Miller,Sally M.“PhilipFoner and ‘ Inte- Montgomery,David. “Morris, Industrial- grating’Women into Labor History and ism, andMaterialism.” [Commentary African AmericanHistory.” 33:4, 456– onChristopher Tomlins: “Why Waitfor 469,Fall 1992. Industrialism?”] 40:1,35– 39, February Miller,Sally M.“TheSocialist Party 1999. Schism of 1919:A LocalCase Study.” Montgomery,David. “ToStudyThe Peo- 36:4,599– 611, Fall 1995. ple: TheAmerican .” Mill,Herb andDavid Wellman. 21:4,485– 512, Fall 1980. “ContractuallySanction Job Actionand Montgomery,David. “TheWorking Worker’s Control:The Case of theSan Classes of thePre-Industrial American FranciscoLong shoreman.” 28:2, 167– City, 1780–1830.” 9:1, 3– 22, Winter 195,Spring 1987. 1968. Minchin,Timothy J.“‘Color Means Montgomery,David. “What Moreto be Something’: BlackPioneers, White Re- Done?”[Dubofsky Symposium] 40:3, sistance,and Interracial Unionism inthe 356–361, August 1999. SouthernTextile Industry, 1957–1980.” Montgomery,David. “Workers’Control 39:2,109– 133, May 1998. of MachineProduction in the 19th Cen- tury.”17:4, 485– 509, Fall 1976. Minchin,Timothy J.“PermanentReplace- Morgan,George T., Jr. “NoCompro- mentsand the Breakdown of the‘ Social mise—No Recognition: John Henry Accord’in Calera, Alabama, 1974– Kirby, theSouthern Lumber Operators’ 1999.”42:4, 371– 396, November Association, andUnionism inthe Piney 2001. Woods.”10:2, 193– 204, Spring 1969. Mitchell,Daniel J. B.“Townsendand Morley,Jane. “ GeorgeInness— Friend of Roosevelt: Lessons from theStruggle for Labor.”25:3, 405– 430, Summer 1984. ElderlyIncome Support.” 42:3, 255– Mormino,Gary. “‘WeWorked Hard and 276,August 2001. TookCare of Oar Own’: Oral History Mohl,Raymond A. “Poverty,Politics, and andItalians inTampa.” 23:3, 395– 415, theMechanics of NewYork City, Summer1982. 1803.”12:1, 38– 51, Winter 1971. Morris, James O.“TheAcquisitive Spirit Monroy,Douglas. “ Anarquismo yCom- of JohnMitchell, UMW President munismo: MexicanRadicalism andthe (1899–1908).” 20:1, 5– 43, Winter CommunistParty in Los AngelesDur- 1979. ingthe 1930s.” 24:1, 34– 59, Winter Morris, James O.] andPhilip S. Foner. 1983. “PhilipFoner and the Writing of theJoe Montgomery,Bruce P. “TheJoseph A. Hill Case: An Exchange.”12:1, 81– 114, BeirneMemorial Archives.” 31:1, 109– Winter1971. 112,Winter– Spring 1990. Morris, James M.“TheCincinnati Shoe- Montgomery,David. “TheConventional makers’Lockout of 1888.”13:4, 505– Wisdom.”13:1, 107– 136, Winter 1972. 519,Fall 1972. Montgomery,David. “Class, Capitalism, Morris, Richard B.“AmericanLabor His- andContent.” 30:1, 125– 137, Winter tory Priorto theCivil War: Sourcesand 1989. Opportunitiesfor Research.”1:3, 308– Montgomery,David. “Gutman’s Agenda 318,Fall 1960. for FutureHistorical Research.”29:3, Morrissey, Charles T.“TeamInterviewing 299–312, Summer 1988. andthe Merger of theAFL andCIO in Montgomery,David. “Gutman’s Nine- 1955:Notes on Some Options in Oral teenthCentury America.” 19:3, 416– History.”25:3, 448– 455, Summer 429,Summer 1978. 1984. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 115

Mosley, Eva. “Labor Holdingsat the Nash, Michael.“ Womenand the Pennsyl- SchlesingerLibrary, Radcliffe College.” vania Railroad: TheWorld War II 31:1,16– 24, Winter– Spring 1990. Years.”30:4, 608– 621, Fall 1989. Motley,Archie. “Labor History Nazzaro, Pellegrino.“ TheManifesto of Manuscriptsin the Chicago Historical theNorth American Anti-Fascist Al- Society.”32:2, 290– 294, Spring 1991. liance.”13:3, 418– 426, Summer 1972.[ Moynihan, DanielP. “TheWashington Neal,Diane and Thomas W.Kremm. Conferenceof theInternational Labor “ClandestineBlack Labor Societies Organization.”3:3, 307– 334, Fall 1962. andWhite Fear: Hiram F.Hoover and Mulligan,Theresa Baker.“ SugarHill: the‘ CooperativeWorkers of America’in TheWay ItWas.” 41:4, 501– 506, theSouth.” 19:2, 226– 237, Spring November2000. 1978. Munts,Mary Louiseand Raymond Nelli,Humbert S. “TheItalian Padrone Munts.“ Welfare History of the Systemin the United States.” 5:2, 153– I.L.G.W.U.”9:Special Supplement, 82– 165,Spring 1964. 97,Spring 1968. Nelli,Humbert S. “ThePadrone System: Munts,Raymond andMary Louise An Exchangeof Letters.”17:3, 406– Munts.“ Welfare History of the 412,Summer 1976. I.L.G.W.U.”9:Special Supplement, 82– Nellis,Eric Guest. “ Labor andCom- 97,Spring 1968. munityin Massachusetts Bay: 1630– Muraskin, William. “TheHarlem Boycott 1660.”18:4, 525– 544, Fall 1977. of 1934:Black Nationalism andthe Rise Nellis,Eric. “ TheWorking Lives of the of Labor-Union Consciousness.”13:3, Rural MiddleClass inProvincial Mas- 361–373, Summer 1972. sachusetts.”36:4, 505– 529, Fall 1995. Murphy, Michelle.“ Toxicityin the De- Nelson,Bruce. “ TheLimits of Union- tails: TheHistory oftheWomen’ s OfŽce CenteredHistory: Responses toKimel- Worker Movementand Occupational dorf.”32:1, 117– 125, Winter 1991. Health inthe Late-Capitalist OfŽce.” Nelson,Bruce. “ Zieger’s CIO: InDefense 41:2,189– 213, May 2000. of Labor Liberalism.”37:2, 157– 162, Nadel,Stanley. “ Fromthe Barricades of Spring1996. Paris tothe Sidewalks of NewYork: Nelson,Daniel. “ TheBeginning of the German Artisans andthe European Sit-DownEra: TheReminiscences of Roots of AmericanLabor Radicalism.” RexMurray.” 15:1, 89– 97, Winter 30:1,47– 75, Winter 1989. 1974. Nash, Al. “Local1707, CSAE: Facetsof a Nelson,Daniel. “ ACIO Organizerin Ala- Unionin the Non-ProŽ t Field.”20:2, bama, 1941.”18:4, 570– 584, Fall 1977. 256–277, Spring 1979. Nelson,Daniel. “ Findingand Keeping a Nash, Gary B.“TheFailure of Female Job inPhiladelphia.” [Symposium on FactoryLabor inColonial Boston.” ‘GettingWork’ by WalterLicht] 35:1, 20:2,165– 188, Spring 1979. 90–92, Winter 1994. Gary B.Nash, BillyG. Smithand Dirk Nelson,Daniel. “ How theUAW Grew.” Hoerder.“ Labor inthe Era of the 35:1,5– 24, Winter 1994. AmericanRevolution: An Exchange.” Nelson,Daniel. “ Labor andModern In- 24:3,414– 439, Summer 1983; Herman dustry: Betterthan Ever.”[Commentary Wellenreuther.24:3, 440– 454, Summer onChristopher Tomlins: “Why Waitfor 1983. Industrialism?”] 40:1,39– 42, February Nash, GeorgeH., III. “Charles Stelzle: 1999. Apostle toLabor.” 11:2, 151– 174, Nelson,Daniel. “ TheLimits of Union- Spring1970. CenteredHistory: Responses toKimel- Nash, Gerald D.“FranklinD. Roosevelt dorf.”32:1, 125– 127, Winter 1991. andLabor: TheWorld War IOriginsof Nelson,Daniel. “ AViewof theAmerican Early NewDeal Policy.” 1:1, 39– 52, Workplace: Pastand Present in the 20th Winter1960. Century.”24:4, 568– 571, Fall 1983. 116 Index toAuthors

Nelson,Daniel. “ TheNew Factory Sys- Olson, James S.“OrganizedBlack Leader- temand the Unions.” 15:2, 163– 178, ship andIndustrial Unionism: The Spring1974. Racial Response, 1936–1945.” 10:3, Nelson,Daniel. “ Originsof theSit-Down 475–486, Summer 1969. Era: WorkerMilitancy and Innovation Olssen, Erik. “TheCase of theSocialist inthe Rubber Industry, 1934–38.” 23:2, PartyThat Failed,or Further 198–225, Spring 1982. Reections on an AmericanDream.” Nelson,Daniel. “ ‘WhileWaiting for the 29:4,416– 449, Fall 1988. Government’: TheNeedle Trades Un- Olssen, Erik. “TheMaking of aPolitical employmentInsurance Plans.” 11:4, Machine:The Railroad Unions Enter 482–499, Fall 1970. Politics.”19:3, 373– 396, Summer 1978. Neufeld,Maurice F. “Portraitof the O’Neil,William L.“Labor Radicalism and Labor Historian as Boyand Young the‘ Masses.”’ 7:2,197– 208, Spring Man:Excerpts from theInterviews of 1966. PhilipTaft by MargaretHonig.” 19:1, O’Neill,Colleen. “ DomesticDeployed: 39–71, Winter 1978. Gender,Race, andthe Construction of Neufeld,Maurice F. “Realms of Thought Class Strugglein the Bisbee Deport- andOrganized Labor inthe Age of Jack- ation.”34:2, 256– 273, Spring– Summer son.”10:1, 5– 43, Winter 1969. 1993. Neufeld,Maurice F. “TheSize of the Onsi, PatriciaWilson. “Labor History Re- Jacksonian Labor Movement:A Cau- sourcesof theUniversity of Illinois.” 7:2,209– 215, Spring 1966. tionary Account.”23:4, 599– 607, Fall Orr, JohnA. “TheRise andFall of Steel’s 1982. Human Relations Committee.”14:1, Newman,Dale. “ Work andCommunity 69–82, Winter 1973. Life ina SouthernTown.” 19:2, 204– Ostrower, Gary B.“TheAmerican De- 225,Spring 1978. cisionto Join the International Labor Norwood,Stephen. “ Ford’s Brass Knuck- Organization.”16:4, 495– 504, Fall les: Harry Bennett,the Cult of Mas- 1975. culinity,and Anti-Labor Terror, Ozanne,Robert. “Trendsin American 1920–1945.” 37:3, 365– 391, Summer Labor History.”21:4, 513– 521, Fall 1996. 1980. Nugent,Angela. “ OrganizingTrade Ozanne,Robert. “Union–Management Unions toCombat Disease: TheWork- Relations: McCormickHarvesting Ma- ers’Health Bureau,1921– 1928.” 26:3, chineCompany, 1862–1886.” 4:2, 132– 423–446, Summer 1985. 160,Spring 1963. Oberdeck,Kathryn J.“‘NotPink Teas’ : Pahl, Thomas L.“TheG-String Con- TheSeattle Working Class Women’s spiracy, PoliticalReprisal or ArmedRe- Movement,1905– 1918.” 32:2, 193– volt?”8:1, 30– 51, Winter 1967. 230,Spring 1991. Painter,Nell Irvin. “Oneor TwoThings O’Brien,F. S.“The‘ Communist-Domi- About TheFall of theHouse of Labor.” nated’Unions inthe United States 30:1,117– 121, Winter 1989. Since1950.” 9:2, 184– 209, Spring Painter,Nell Irvin. “RememberingHerb 1968. Gutman.”29:3, 336– 343, Summer Oestreicher,Richard. “ANoteon Knights 1988. of Labor Membership Statistics.”25:1, Palladino,Grace. “WhenMilitancy Isn’ t 102–108, Winter 1984. Enough:The Impact of Automationon Oestreicher,Richard. “Socialism andthe NewYork City ServiceBuilding Work- Knightsof Labor inDetroit, 1877– ers, 1934–1970.” 28:2, 196– 220, Spring 1886.”22:1, 5– 30, Winter 1981. 1987. Oko, Dorothy Kuhn. “David Dubinsky Palmer,Bryan D.“‘BigBill’ Haywood’ s andthe I.L.G.W.U., ASelectedBibli- Defectionto Russia andThe IWW: ography.”9:Special Supplement, 116– TwoLetters.” 17:2, 271– 278, Spring 126,Spring 1968. 1976. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 117

Parnes,Brenda and Debra Bernhardt. Pfeffer, PaulaF. “TheWomen Behind the “Labor Archives RoundTable of the Union:Helena Wilson, Rosina Tucker, Societyof AmericanArchivists: ADirec- andthe Ladies’ Auxiliary totheBrother- tory andConcise Guide to Holdings.” hoodof SleepingCar Porters.”36:4, 33:4,538– 562, Fall 1992. 557–578, Fall 1995. Patmore,Greg. “ Australian Labor Histori- Phelan,Craig. “TheWarp of Fancy:The ography: TheIn uence of theUSA.” Knightsof Labor andthe Home Club 37:4,520– 534, Fall 1996. TakeoverMyth.” 40:3, 283– 299, Au- Patterson,James T.“Mary Dewsonand gust 1999. theAmerican Minimum Wage Move- Philips, Kimberly L.“DismemberingHer- ment.”5:2, 134– 152, Spring 1964. oicUnions.” [Halpern andHorowitz Patton,Randall L.“TextileOrganizing in Symposium] 40:2,222– 226, May 1999. aSunbeltSouthern Community: North- Pierce,Michael and R. F.Warren. “The westGeorgia’ s Carpet Industryin the Gutman–Hill DebateRevisited: The Early 1960s.”39:3, 291– 310, August NationalExecutive Board of theUnited 1998. MineWorkers.” 38:1, 76– 79, Winter Pawa, J.M.“TheSearch for BlackRadi- 1996–97. cals: Americanand British Documents Pierce,Michael. “ ThePopulist President Relativeto the 1919 .” 16:2, of theAmerican Federation of Labor: 272–284, Spring 1975. TheCareer of JohnMcBride, 1880– Pedersen,Vernon L. “GeorgeMink, the 1895.”41:1, 5– 24, February 2000. MarineWorkers IndustrialUnion, and Pintar,Laurie Caroline. “HerbertK. Sor- theComintern in America.” 41:3, 307– rellAs theGrade-B Hero: Militancyand 320,August 2000. Masculinityin the Studios.” 37:3, 392– Perlin,Terry M.“ andIdeal- 416,Summer 1996. ism: VoltarinedeCleyre (1886– 1912).” Piott,Steven L. “TheChicago Teamsters’ 14:4,506– 520, Fall 1973. Strikeof 1902:A CommunityConfronts Perline,Martin M. “TheTrade Union theBeef Trust.” 26:2, 250– 267, Spring Press: An Historical Analysis.”10:1, 1985. 107–114, Winter 1969. Pivar, David J.“TheHosiery Workers and Perrier,Hubert. “TheSocialists andthe thePhiladelphia Third PartyImpulse.” WorkingClass inNew York, 1890– 5:1,18– 28, Winter 1964. 1896.”22:4, 485– 511, Fall 1981. Pomper,Gerald. “Labor andCongress.” Perry,Elizabeth Israels. “IndustrialRe- 2:3,323– 343, Fall 1961. form inNew York City: BelleMoskow- Pomper,Gerald. “Labor Legislation:The itzand the Protocol of Peace, Revision of Taft–Hartley in1953– 1913–1916.” 23:1, 5– 31, Winter 1982. 1954.”6:2, 143– 158, Spring 1965. Pessen,Edward. “ShouldLabor Have Porter,Kenneth O. “NegroLabor inthe SupportedJackson?” 13:3, 427– 437, WesternCattle Industry, 1866–1900.” Summer1972. 10:3,346– 374, Summer 1969. Pessen,Edward. “TheWorking Men’ s Posadas, Barbara M.“TheHierarchy of PartyRevisited.” 4:3, 203– 226, Fall Color andPsychological Adjustment in 1963. an IndustrialEnvironment: Filipinos, Pessen,Edward. “AYoungIndustrial thePullman Company andthe Brother- Workerin Early WorldWar IIinNew hoodof SleepingCar Porters.”3:3, York City.”22:2, 269– 281, Spring 349–373, Summer 1982. 1981. Pratt,William C.“UsingFBI Recordsin Peterson,Joyce Shaw. “MatildaRobbins: WritingRegional Labor History.”33:4, AWoman’s Life inthe Labor Move- 470–482, Fall 1992. ment,1900– 1920.” 34:1, 33– 56, Winter Preston,Jo Anne. “ ‘ToLearn Me the 1993. Wholeof theTrade’ : Conict Between a Peterson,Joyce Shaw. “AutoWorkers and FemaleApprentice and a MerchantTai- TheirWork, 1900–1933.” 22:2, 213– lor inAnte-Bellum New England.” 236,Spring 1981. 24:2,259– 273, Spring 1983. 118 Index toAuthors

Preston,William. “Shall This BeAll? U.S. Reed,Merl E. “SomeAdditional Material Historians versus William D.Haywood, onthe Coal Strikeof 1943.”23:1, 90– etal.” 12:3, 435– 453, Summer 1971. 104,Winter 1982. Prude,Jonathan. “TheFamily inCon- Reinders,Robert C.“T.Wharton Collens text.”17:3, 422– 436, Summer 1976. andthe Christian Labor Union.”8:1, Quam-Wickham, Nancy.“ InSearch of 53–70, Winter 1967. Labor’s Culture.”[Denning Sympo- Reisler, Mark. “MexicanUnionization in sium] 39:3,324– 330, August 1998. California Agriculture,1927– 1936.” Quigel,James P.,Jr. “ChargedWith Elec- 14:4,562– 579, Fall 1973. tricity:The IUE Archives Project.” Repas, Bob.“ History of theChristian 38:2,287– 310, Spring– Summer 1997. Labor Association.”5:2, 168– 182, Rachleff, Peter.“ UnderstandingLegacies, Spring1964. UnderstandingPossibilities.” [Denning Reuss, Richard A.“TheRoots of Ameri- Symposium] 39:3,330– 333, August canLeft-Wing Interest in Folksong.” 1998. 12:2,259– 279, Spring 1971. Rajala, Richard A.“ADandyBunch of Wobblies: PaciŽc Northwest:Loggers Reuter,Frank T.“JohnSwinton’ s Paper.” andthe Industrial Workers of the 1:3,298– 307, Fall 1960. World, 1900–1930.” 37:2, 205– 234, Reynolds, Jack. TheGreat Paternalistic: Spring1996. Titus Sall(and theGrowth of the19th Raskin, A. H.“Dubinsky: Herald of Century Bradford). Reviewedby Paul Change.”9:Special Supplement, 14– 25, Johnson. 26:4,611– 612, Fall 1985. Spring1968. Reynolds, Robert D.,Jr. “Pro-War Social- Raucher, Alan. “EmployeeRelations at ists: Intolerantor Bloodthirsty?17:3, GeneralMotors: The ‘ MyJob’Contest, 413–415, Summer 1976. 1947.”28:2, 221– 232, Spring 1987. Rezler,Julius. “Labor Organizationat Du Raucher, Margaret.“ DocumentingLabor Pont:A Studyin Independent Local for aNewGeneration of Scholars.” Unionism.”4:2, 178– 195, Spring 1963. 38:1,67– 75, Winter 1996– 97. Rice,Monsignor Charles Owen. Rawick, George.“ Modern Socialism : An “Confessions of an Anti-Communist.” Introductionand Appraisal.” 10:1, 105– 30:3,449– 463, Summer 1989. 106,Winter 1969. Rice,Monsignor Charles Owen. Rawick, Georgeand Martin Glaberman. “Response.”[Msr. RiceSymposium] “TheChampion of Youth :An Introduc- 40:1,66– 68, February 1999. tionand Appraisal.” 11:3, 351– 354, Rice,Monsignor Charles Owen. Summer1970. “Symposium on Fighterwith a Heart : Ray, Gerda. “‘WeCan Stay UntilHell Writingsof MonsignorCharles Owen FreezesOver’ : StrikeControl and the Rice.”40:1, 53– 68, February 1999. StatePolice in New York, 1919–1923.” Rich, J.C.“David Dubinsky: TheYoung 36:3,403– 425, Summer 1995. Years.”9:Special Supplement, 5– 13, Reed,Dale. “ Holdingson United States Spring1968. Socialism andCommunism at the Hoover Institutionon War, , Richter,Irving. “ CongressmanNixon andPeace.” 27:4, 506– 528, Fall 1986. ViewsLabor Relations, 1947.”21:2, Reed,Merl E. “TheAugusta Textile Mills 277–278, Spring 1980. andthe Strike of 1886.”14:2, 228– 246, Rischin, Moses. “TheJewish Labor Move- Spring1973. mentin America.” 4:3, 227– 247, Fall Reed,Merl E. “BlackWorkers, Defense 1963. Industries,and Federal Agencies in Rocha, Guy Louis. “Labor Resourcesat Pennsylvania, 1941–1945.” 27:3, 356– theNevada StateLibrary andArchives.” 384,Summer 1986. 31:1,197– 201, Winter– Spring 1990. Reed,Merl E. “Lumberjacks andLong- Roche, JohnP. “EntrepreneurialLiberty shoremen:The I.W.W. inLouisiana.” andthe Fourteenth Amendment.” 4:1, 13:1,41– 59, Winter 1972. 3–31, Winter 1963. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 119

Rock, Howard B.“Artisans and Rosenzweig,Roy. “‘Socialism inour Paradigms.”[Commentary on Christo- Time’: TheSocialist Party and the Un- pher Tomlins: “Why Waitfor Industri- employed,1929– 1936.” 20:4, 485– 509, alism?”] 40:1,42– 45, February 1999. Fall 1979. Rock, Howard B.“ThePerils of Laissez- Rosenzweig,Roy. “Sourcesof Stability Faire:The Aftermath of theNew York andSeeds of Subversion: David Brody Bakers’Strike of 1801.”17:3, 372– 387, andthe Making of theNew Labor His- Summer1976. tory.”34:3, 503– 509, Fall 1993. Roediger,David. “Americanism and Rosenzweig,Roy. “‘UnitedActions Fordism: AmericanStyle: Kate Richards MeansVictory’ : MilitantAmericanism O’Hare’s ‘Has Henry FordMade onFilm.” 24:2, 274– 288, Spring 1983. Good?”’ 29:2,241– 252, Spring 1988. Rosenzweig,Roy “TheUprising of ’34: A Roediger,David. “Ira Stewardand the Filmby GeorgeStoney” , 37:4,536– Anti-Slavery Originsof AmericanEight- 538,Fall 1966. Hour Theory.”27:3, 410– 426, Summer Ross, Hugh. “JohnL. Lewisand the Elec- 1986. Roediger,David. “To‘ Joy MyFreedom: tionof 1940.”17:2, 160– 190, Spring An Enthusiasm.”[Hunter Symposium] 1976. 39:2,182– 185, May 1998. Rosswurm, Stevenand Toni Gilpin. “The Rogers, William W.“NegroKnights of FBIandthe Farm EquipmentWorkers: Labor inArkansas: ACase Studyof the FBISurveillanceRecords as aSource ‘Miscellaneous’Strike.” 10:3, 498– 505, for CIO UnionHistory.” 27:4, 485– Summer1969. 505,Fall 1986. Rollins, Alfred B.“FranklinRoosevelt’ s Rosswurm, Steven.“ Introduction.”[Msr. Introductionto Labor.” 3:1, 3– 18, Win- RiceSymposium] 40:1,53– 55, Febru- ter 1962. ary 1999. Rose, Gerald A. “TheWestwood Lumber Rudolph J.Vecoli.“ Labor RelatedCollec- Strike.”13:2, 171– 199, Spring 1972. tionsin the Immigration History Re- Rose, Jim. “‘TheProblem Every Supervi- search Center.”23:4, 568– 574, Fall sor Dreads’: WomenWorkers atthe 1982. U.S. SteelDuquesne Works during Ryon, RoderickN. “Craftsmen’s Union WorldWar II.”36:1, 24– 51, Winter Halls, MaleBonding, and Female In- 1995. dustrialLabor: TheCase of Baltimore, Rose, Margaret.“ FromThe Fields to the 1880–1917.” 36:2, 211– 231, Spring PicketLine: Huelga, Women and the 1995. Boycott,1965– 1975.” 31:2, 271– 293, Salinger,Sharon V.“Colonial Labor in Summer1990. Transition: TheDecline of Indentured Rosemont,Henry P.“BenjaminFranklin Servitudein Late Eighteenth Century andthe Philadelphia Typographical Philadelphia.”22:2, 165– 191, Spring Strikers of 1786.”22:3, 398– 429, Sum- 1981. mer 1981. Salinger,Sharon V.“Labor, Markets, and Rosenbaum, RenePerez. “ Unionizationof Opportunity:Indentured Servitude in TomatoField Workers inNorthwest Early America.”38:2, 311– 338, Spring– Ohio, 1967–1969.” 35:3, 329– 344, Summer1994. Summer1997. Rosenberg,Daniel. “ TheIWW andOrga- Salvatore, Nick.“ Railroad Workers and nizationof Asian Workers inEarly 20th theGreat Strike of 1877:The View CenturyAmerica.” 36:1, 77– 87, Winter FromA Small MidwestCity.” 21:2, 1995. 522–545, Fall 1980. Rosenberg,David. “Riceas Icon.”40:1, Sanders, Bernard.“ VermontLabor Agita- 62–64, February 1999. tor.”15:2, 261– 270, Spring 1974. Rosenzweig,Roy. “Radicals andthe Job- Santos, MichaelW. “Communityand less: TheMusteites and the Unem- Communism: The1928 New Bedford ployedLeagues, 1932– 1936.” 16:1, TextileStrike.” 26:2, 230– 249, Spring 52–77, Winter 1975. 1985. 120 Index toAuthors

Santos, Michael.“ BetweenHegemony Scheinberg,Stephen J. “TheodoreRoo- andAutonomy: TheSkilled Iron Work- seveltand the A. F.of L.’s Entryinto ers’Search For Identity, 1900– 1930.” Politics,1906– 1908.” 3:2, 131– 148, 35:3,399– 423, Summer 1994. Spring1962. Sautter,Udo. “NorthAmerican Govern- Schneider,Dorothee. “ TheNew York mentLabor AgenciesBefore World War Cigarmakers Strikeof 1877.”26:3, 325– One:A Curefor Unemployment.”24:3, 352,Summer 1985. 366–393, Summer 1983. Schneider,Linda. “TheCitizen Striker: Savel’eva, I.M.andN. V.Sivachev. Workers’Ideology in the Homestead “AmericanLabor inRecent Soviet His- Strikeof 1892.”23:1, 47– 66, Winter toriography.”18:3, 407– 432, Summer 1982. 1977. Schneirov,Richard. “PoliticalCultures Saville, John. “TheRadical LeftExpects andthe Role of theState in Labor’ s thePast to Do Its Duty.”18:2, 267– Republic: TheView from Chicago, 274,Spring 1977. 1848–1877.” 32:3, 376– 400, Summer Saxton,Alexander. “ AShieldAgainst the 1991. Powerof IndustrialCapitalism.” [Sym- posium onDanielLetwin: TheChallenge SchoŽeld, Ann. “MotherJones in Kansas: of Interracial Unionism ]41:1,77– 80, An Archival Note.”27:3, 431– 442, February 2000. Summer1986. Scanlan, EleanorH. “TheLabadie Collec- Schrecker,Ellen. “ TheLegacy of Charles tion.”6:3, 244– 248, Fall 1965. OwenRice.” 40:1, 64– 66, February Scarpaci, JeanAnn. “Immigrantsin the 1999. NewSouth: Italians inLouisiana’ s Schwartz, BonnieFox. “ NewDeal Work SugarParishes, 1880–1910.” 16:2, 165– Relief andOrganized Labor: TheCWA 183,Spring 1975. andthe AFL BuildingTrades.” 17:1, Schacht,John N. “Labor History Re- 38–57, Winter 1976. sourcesin the University of Iowa Li- Schwartz, Stephen.“ Holdingson the 1934 braries, theState Historical Societyof WestCoast MaritimeStrike in the San Iowa/Iowa City, andthe Herbert FranciscoHeadquarters Archive Sailor’s Hoover PresidentialLibrary.” 31:1, Unionof thePaciŽ c.” 27:3, 427– 430, 168–175, Winter– Spring 1990. Summer1986. Schacht,John N. “Toward Industrial Scruggs,Otey M. “TheBracero Program Unionism: BellTelephone Workers and Underthe Farm SecurityAdministra- Company Unions, 1919–1937.” 16:1, tion,1942– 1943.” 3:2, 149– 168, Spring 5–36, Winter 1975. 1962. Scharnau, Ralph. “ElizabethMorgan, Seager,David R.“Barre,Vermont Granite Crusader for Labor Reform.”14:3, Workers andthe Struggle Against Silico- 340–351, Summer 1973. sis, 1890–1960.” 42:1, 61– 79, February Schatz,Ronald W.“Connecticut’s Work- 2001. ingClass inthe 1950s: Catholic Per- Seidman,Joel. “ TheI.L.G.W.U. inthe spective.”25:1, 83– 101, Winter 1984. Dubinsky Period.”9:Special Sup- Schatz,Ronald W.“Faithand Action: Reections on Monsignor Charles plement,55– 68, Spring 1968. OwenRice.” 40:1, 55– 59, February Seretan,L. Glen.“ ThePersonal Style and 1999. PoliticalMethods of DanielDe Leon: A Schechter,Patricia A. “Freeand Slave Reconsideration.”14:2, 163– 210, Labor inthe Old South: The Tredegar Spring1973. Ironworkers’Strike of 1847.”35:2, Shammas, Carole. “BlackWomen’ s Work 165–186, Spring 1994. andthe Evolution of PlantationSociety Scheiber,Harry N.J.andJane Lang. “ The inVirginia.” 26:1, 5– 28, Winter 1985. Wilson Administrationand the Wartime Shapiro, Stanley.“ ‘Hand andBrain’ : The Mobilizationof BlackAmericans.” 10:3, Farmer-Labor Partyof 1920.”26:3, 433–458, Summer 1969. 405–422, Summer 1985. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 121

Shapiro, Stanley.“ ‘TheGreat War and Skeels,Jack W. “TheBackground of Reform: Liberals andLabor, 1917–19.” UAW Factionalism.”2:2, 158– 181, 12:3,323– 344, Summer 1971. Spring1961. Shaughnessy, D.F.“Labor inthe Oral Skeels,Jack W. “Oral History Projecton History Collectionof Columbia Univer- theDevelopment of Unionism inthe sity.”1:2, 177– 195, Spring 1960. AutomobileIndustry.” 5:2, 209– 212, Shelton,Brenda K. “TheBuffalo Grain Spring1964. ShovelIers’Strike of 1899.”9:2, 210– Skeels,Joyce G. “TheEarly American 238,Spring 1968. Federationof Labor andMonetary Re- Shenk, Diana L.“‘TheLight at the End form.”12:4, 530– 550, Fall 1971. of theTunnel’ : TheUnited Mine Work- Slater,Joseph. “PublicWorkers: Labor ers of America Archive atPenn State.” andthe Boston Police Strike of 1919.” 37:4,510– 515, Fall 1996. 38:1,7– 27, Winter 1996– 97. Shergold,Peter R. “WageDifferentials Slavin, Richard H.“The‘ FlintGlass Basedon Skill inthe United States, Workers’Union’ vs. theGlassware In- 1889–1914: A Case Study.”18:4, 485– dustry: Union–Management Policies in 508,Fall 1977. aDecliningIndustry.” 5:1, 29– 39, Win- Sheridan, Clare M.“Labor Materialin the ter 1964. Collectionsof theMuseum of American Smith, JohnS. “OrganizedLabor and TextileHistory.” 31:1, 25– 30, Winter– Governmentin the Wilson Era, 1913– Spring1990. 1921:Some Conclusions.” 3:3, 265– Shirom, Arie. “TheIndustrial Relations 286,Fall 1962. Systems of IndustrialCooperatives in Sofchalk, DonaldG. “TheChicago Mem- theUnited States, 1880– 1935.” 13:4, orial Day Incident:An Episodeof Mass 533–551, Fall 1972. Action.”6:1, 3– 43, Winter 1965. Shofner, JerrellH. “ThePensacola Work- Sofchalk, DonaldG. “OrganizedLabor ingman’s Association.”13:4, 555– 559, andthe Iron OreMiners of Northern Fall 1972. Minnesota,1907– 1936.” 12:2, 214– Shover, JohnL. “TheProgressives and the 242,Spring 1971. WorkingClass Votein California.” Soffer, Benson.“ TheRole of UnionFore- 10:4,584– 601, Fall 1969. menin the Evolution of theInter- Shumsky, NeilL. “Frank Roney’s San nationalTypographical Union.”2:1, Francisco—His Diary: April, 1875– 62–81, Winter 1961. March, 1876.”17:2, 245– 264, Spring Soffer, Benson.“ ATheory of Trade 1976. UnionDevelopment: The Role of the Silvia, PhilipT., Jr. “ThePosition of ‘Autonomous’Workman.” 1:2, 141– Workers ina TextileCommunity: Fall 163,Spring 1960. River inthe Early 1880’s.” 16:2, 230– Soltow,Martha Jane.“ TwentyYear 248,Spring 1975. CumulativeIndex to Labor History, Sims, Robert C.“Idaho’s Criminal Syndi- Vol.1, No. 1 (Spring1960) Vol. 20, calism Act:One State’ s Response to No.4, (Fall, 1979).” 22:1, 57– 135, Radical Labor.”15:4, 511– 527, Fall Winter1981. 1974. Soyer, Daniel.“ Class-Conscious Workers Singer,Alan J.“Class-Conscious Coal as ImmigrantEntrepreneurs: The Ambi- Miners:Nanty-glo Versus theOpen guityof Class amongEastern European Shop inthe Post World War IEra.” Jewish Immigrantsto the United States 29:1,56– 65, Winter 1988. atthe Turn of theTwentieth Century.” Sivachev, N.V.andI. M.Savel’eva. 42:1,45– 59, February 2001. “AmericanLabor inRecent Soviet His- Stead,Peter. “ TheDetails of History— toriography.”18:3, 407– 432, Summer B.B.C.’s ‘Yesterday’s Witness.”’ 26:3, 1977. 447–453, Summer 1985. Sivachev, Nikolai. “TheRise of Statismin Steele,Richard W.“‘NoRacials’ : Dis- 1930sAmerica: ASovietView of the criminationAgainst Ethnics in Ameri- Socialand Political Effects of theNew canDefense Industry, 1940–42.” 32:1, Deal.”24:4, 500– 525, Fall 1983. 66–90, Winter 1991. 122 Index toAuthors

Steffen, Charles G.“ThePre-Industrial Stricker,Frank. “Repressing theWorking Iron Worker: NorthamptonIron Works, Class: Individualism andthe Masses in 1780–1820.” 20:1, 89– 110, Winter Frank Capra’s Films.”31:3, 454– 467, 1979. Fall 1990. Stein,Bruno. “ WageStabilization in the Stromquist, Shelton.“ Enginemenand Korean War Period:The Role of the Shop Men:Technological Change and Subsidiary WageBoards.” 4:2, 161– theOrganization of Labor inan Era of 177,Spring 1963. Railroad Expansion.”24:4, 485– 499, Stein,Judith. “ Openingand Closing Fall 1983. Doors.”[Sugrue Symposium] 39:152– Suggs,George G., Jr. “Religionand Labor 57,February 1998. inthe Rocky MountainWest: Bishop Steinisch,Irmgard. “Studiesof American Nicholas C.Matzand the Western Fed- Labor History inWest Germany.” 29:4, erationof Miners.”11:2, 190– 206, 531–541, Fall 1988. Spring1970. Stepenoff, Bonnie.“ Keepingit in the Sugrue,Thomas J.“TheIncredible Disap- Family: MotherJones and the Pennsyl- pearingSoutherner?” 39:2, 161– 166, vania Silk Strike,1900– 1901.” 38:3, May 1998. 432–449, Fall 1997. Sugrue,Thomas J.“Responsibility tothe Stevens,Errol Wayne. “Labor andSocial- Past, Engagementwith the Present.” ism inan Indiana MillTown, 1905– [SugrueSymposium] 30:160– 69, 1921.”26:3, 353– 383, Summer 1995. February 1998. Stevenson,James A.“Lettersto DanielDe Sugrue,Thomas J.“Symposium on Leon:The Intra-Party Constituencyfor Thomas J.Sugrue:The Origins of the his Policyof StrictParty Discipline, Urban Crisis.”39:1, 43– 69, February 1896–1904.” 18:3, 382– 396, Summer 1998. 1977. Summers, JohnH. “TheFuture of Labor’s Stieber,Jack. “Labor’s WalkoutFrom The Past: AmericanLabor History onthe Korean War WageStabilization Board.” WorldWide Web.” 40:1, 69– 80, Febru- 21:2,239– 260, Summer 1980. ary 1999. Storr, Richard. “BritishImmigrants and Sutton,William R.“Tiedto theWhipping theAmerican ‘ Work Ethic’in the Mid- Post:New Labor History andEvangeli- NineteenthCentury.” 26:1, 86– 102, calArtisans inthe Early Republic.” Winter1985. 36:2,251– 281, Spring 1995. Strassberg, Richard. “Labor History Re- Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography sourcesin the Martin P. Catherwood of PeriodicalArticles on American Library of theNew York StateSchool of Labor History, 1972.”14:4, 580– 598, Labor andIndustrial Relations atCor- Fall 1973. nellUniversity.” 23:4, 553– 561, Fall Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography 1982. of PeriodicalArticles on American Strassberg, Richard. “Sourceson Labor Labor History, 1973.”15:4, 543– 558, History inthe Martin P. Catherwood Fall 1974. Library.”31:1, 59– 66, Winter– Spring Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography 1990. onAmerican Labor History, 1974.” Straw, Richard. “An Actof Faith: South- 16:4,521– 540, Fall 1975. easternOhio Minersin the Coal Strike Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography of 1927.”21:2, 221– 238, Spring 1980. onAmerican Labor History, 1975.” Street,Richard Steven.“ The1903 Ox- 17:4,586– 605, Fall 1976. nard SugarBeet Strike: A NewEnding.” Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography 39:2,193– 199, May 1998. onAmerican Labor History, 1976.” Stricken,Frank. “Afuence for Whom? 18:4,545– 569, Fall 1977. AnotherLook atProsperity and the Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography WorkingClasses in1920s.” 24:1, 5– 33, onAmerican Labor History, 1977.” Winter1983. 19:4,546– 569, Fall 1978. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 123

Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “Dubinsky andthe Labor onAmerican Labor History, 1978.” Movement.”9:Special Supplement, 26– 20:4,549– 572, Fall 1979. 42,Spring 1968. Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “TheFederal Trials of the onAmerican Labor History, 1979.” IWW.”3:1, 57– 91, Winter 1962. 21:4,570– 596, Fall 1980. Taft, Philip. “TheHarvest Hand Passes, Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography TheSunday Cardinal ,April 27,1930.” onAmerican Labor History, 1980.” 19:1,76– 81, Winter 1978. 22:4,545– 572, Fall 1981. Taft, Philip. “TheI.W.W. inthe Grain Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Belt.”1:1, 53– 67, Winter 1960. Taft, Philip. “Labor History andthe Labor onAmerican Labor History, 1981.” MovementToday.” 7:1, 70– 77, Winter 23:4,582– 598, Fall 1982. 1966. Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “TheLabor Turnover,Indus- onAmerican Labor History, 1982.” trial Solidarity, May 19,1923.” 19:1, 24:4,526– 545, Fall 1983. 72–74, Winter 1978. Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “TheLimits of Labor Unity: onAmerican Labor History, 1983.” TheChicago Newspaper Strikeof 26:1,103– 117, Winter 1985. 1912.”19:1, 100– 129, Winter 1978. Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “Mayor Short andthe onAmerican Labor History, 1984.” I.W.W. AgriculturalWorkers.” 7:2, 26:4,546– 568, Fall 1985. 173–177, Spring 1966. Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Taft, Philip. “ANoteon ‘ General’ onAmerican Labor History, 1985.” Mosby.”13:4, 552– 554, Fall 1972. 27:4,529– 541, Fall 1986. Taft, Philip. “TheParty Organizer : An In- Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography troductionand Appraisal.” 11:1, 89– 92, onAmerican Labor History, 1986.” Winter1970. 28:4,484– 496, Fall 1987. Taft, Philip. “AShort Noteon the Ala- Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography bama StateFederation of Labor.”16:3, onAmerican Labor History,1987.” 410–411, Summer 1975. 29:4,542– 551, Fall 1988. Taft, Philip. “SomeProblems of theNew Swanson, Dorothy. “Annual Bibliography Unionism inthe United States, Ameri- onAmerican Labor History: 1990.” canEconomic Review, June,1939.” 33:1,144– 157, Winter 1992. 19:1,84– 99, Winter 1978. Swanson, Dorothy. “Labor History Re- Taft, Philip. “SubstitutingSewing Ma- sourcesat New York University: 1)The chinesfor BakeShops, IndustrialSoli- TamimentInstitute/ BenJosephson Li- darity, August4, 1923.” 19:1, 74– 75, Winter1978. brary.”31:1, 48– 58, Winter 1992. Taft, Philip. “Transitions, TheDaily Car- Swanson, Dorothy. “TamimentInstitute/ dinal, May 2,1930.”19:1, 81– 83, Win- BenJosephson Library andRobert F. ter 1978. WagnerLabor Archives.”23:4, 562– Takaki, Ronald. “‘An EnteringWedge’ : 567.Fall 1982. TheOrigins of theSugar Plantation and Sweeney,Eugene T. “TheA.F.L.’ s Good aMultiethnicWorking Class in Citizen,1920– 1940.” 13:2, 200– 216, Hawaii.”23:1, 32– 46, Winter 1982. Spring1972. Tamplin, JohnC. “Mary HeatonVorse, Sylvers, Malcolm.“ SicilianSocialists in Journalist: Victimof StrikeViolence?” Houston, Texas,1896– 98.” 11:1, 77– 28:1,84– 88, Winter 1987. 81,Winter 1970. Tarrow, SidneyG. “Lochnerversus New Taft, Philip. “TheBisbee Deportation.” York: APoliticalAnalysis.” 5:3, 277– 13:1,3– 40, Winter 1972. 312,Fall 1964. Taft, Philip. “Differencesin the Executive Taylor, Anthony. “NewViews of An Old Councilof theAmerican Federation of MoralWorld: An Appraisal of Robert Labor.”5:1, 40– 56, Winter 1964. Owen.”36:1, 88– 94, Winter 1995. 124 Index toAuthors

Throckmorton,H. Bruce.“ ANoteon Tripp, Joseph F.“ProgressiveJurispru- Labor Banks.”20:4, 573– 575, Fall dencein the West: The Washington Su- 1979. premeCourt, Labor Law, andthe Tobin, EugeneM. “DirectAction and Problemof IndustrialAccidents.” 24:3, Conscience:The 1913 Paterson Strike 342–365, Summer 1983. as Exampleof theRelationship Between Trotter,Joe William, Jr. “Race, Public Labor Radicals andLiberals.” 20:1, 73– Policy,and History: TheQuestion of 88,Winter 1979. Priorities.”[Sugrue Symposium] 30:1, Tomlins, Christopher. “Commentaryand 57–60, February 1998. Response toTomlins: ‘Why Waitfor Trotter,Joe William, Jr. “African-Ameri- Industrialism?”’ 40:1,35– 52, February canWorkers: NewDirections in U.S. 1999. Labor Historiography.”35:4, 495– 523, Tomlins, Christopher L.“InNat Turner’ s Fall 1994. Shadow: Reections on theNorfolk Dry Troy, Leo.“ Labor Representationon DockAffair of 1830–31.” 33:4, 494– AmericanRailways.” 2:3, 295– 322, Fall 518,Fall 1992. 1961. Tomlins, Christopher L.“Criminal Con- Tucker,Barbara M.“TheFamily andIn- spiracy andEarly Labor Combinations: dustrialDiscipline in Ante-bellum New Massachusetts, 1824–1840.” 28:3, 370– England.”21:2, 55– 74, Winter 1979– 385,Summer 1987. 80. Tomlins, Christopher. “NotJust Another Turrini,Joseph M.“TheNewton Steel Brickin the Wall: AResponse toRock, Strike:A Watershedin the CIO’ s Fail- Nelson,and Montgomery.” 40:1, 45– ureto Organize ‘ LittleSteel.” ’ 38:2, 52,February 1999. 229–265, Spring– Summer 1997. Tomlins, Christopher. “ReconsideringIn- Tuttle,William M.,Jr. “Labor Conict denturedServitude: European Mi- andRacial Violence:The Black Worker grationand the Early AmericanLabor inChicago, 1894– 1919.” 10:3, 408– Force,1600– 1775.” 42:1, 5– 43, Febru- 432,Summer 1969. ary 2001. Tuttle,William M.,Jr. “SomeStrike- Tomlins, Christopher L.“TheTies That breakers’Observations of Industrial Bind:Master and Servant in Massachu- Warfare.”7:2, 193– 196, Spring 1966. setts,1800– 1850.” 30:2, 193– 227, Spring1989. Tuttle,William M.,Jr. “Thirty-Five Years Tomlins, Christopher. “Why Waitfor In- Over-due:Note on a BelatedUp from dustrialism? Work, LegalCulture, and Slavery.”15:1, 86– 88, Winter 1974. theExample of Early America—An His- Tygiel,Jules. “ TrampingArtisans: The toriographicalArgument.” 40:1, 5– 34, Case of theCarpenters inIndustrial February 1999. America.”22:3, 325– 376, Summer Toplin, Robert Brent.“ Norma Rae, 1981. Unionism inan Ageof Feminism.” Tyler, Gus. “TheLeon Stein I Knew.” 36:2,282– 298, Spring 1995. 32:3,468– 472, Fall 1990. Torigian,Michael. “ NationalUnity on the Valdes, DennisNodin. “ Betabeleros:The Waterfront:Communist Politics and the Formationof an AgriculturalProletariat ILWU Duringthe Second World War.” inthe Midwest, 1897– 1930.” 30:4, 30:3,409– 432, Summer 1989. 536–562, Fall 1989. Tripp, Joseph F.“An Instanceof Labor Vander Linden, Marcel and Gregory andBusiness Cooperation: Workmen’ s Zieren.“ German Contemporary Studies Compensationin Washington State of AmericanLabor, 1865–1914.” 36:4, (1911).”17:4, 530– 550, Fall 1976. 579–587, Fall 1995. Tripp, Joseph F.“Law andSocial Control: Vander Linden, Marcel. “ Onthe Import- Historians’Views of Progressive-Era anceof Crossing Borders.”[Dubofsky Labor Legislation.”28:4, 447– 483, Fall Symposium] 40:3,362– 365, August 1987. 1999. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 125

Vancil,David E.], Robert L.Carterand Wandersee,Winifred D. “‘I’dRather Pass Charles D.King.“ TheDebs Collection aLaw than Organizea Union’: Frances atIndiana StateUniversity.” 31:1, 139– Perkinsand the Reformist Approach to 144,Winter– Spring 1990. OrganizedLabor.” 34:1, 5– 32, Winter Vogel,Katharine. “TheGeorge Meany 1993. MemorialArchives.” 31:1, 117– 123, Wang,Xinyang. “ EconomicOpportunity, Winter–Spring 1990. Artisan Leadership, andImmigrant Vogel,Lise. “‘Humorous Incidentsand Workers’Labor Militancy:Italian and SoundCommon Sense’ : Moreon the ChineseImmigrant Workers inNew NewEngland Mill Women.” 19:2, 280– York City, 1890–1970.” 37:4, 480– 499, 286,Spring 1978. Fall 1996. Volpe,Cassandra M.“Labor Collections Ward, David C.“IndustrialWorkers inthe inthe Western Historical Collectionsat Mid-19thCentury South: Family and theUniversity of Colorado, Boulder.” Labor inthe Graniteville (SC) Textile 31:1,192– 196, Winter– Spring 1990. Mill,1845– 1880.” 28:3, 328– 348, Sum- Wagstaff, Thomas. “Call Your OldMas- mer 1987. ter—‘Master’ : SouthernPolitical Lead- Ware, StephenB. andGlenn W. Miller. ers andNegro Labor During “OrganizedLabor inthe Political Pro- PresidentialReconstruction.” 10:3, cess: ACase Studyof theRight-to-Work 323–345, Summer 1969. Campaign inOhio.”4:1, 51– 56, Winter Wakstein, AllenM. “TheNational Associ- 1963. ationof Manufacturersand Labor Rela- Way, Peter.“ Shovel andShamrock: Irish tionsin the 1920’ s.” 10:2, 163– 176, Workers andLabor Violencein the Dig- Spring1969. gingof theChesapeake andOhio Waldbauer, Ivan. “PhilipTaft, Human- Canal.”30:4, 489– 517, Fall 1989. ist.”19:1, 34– 38, Winter 1978. Weber,Edward C. “TheLabadie Collec- Walker, JohnT. “Socialism inDayton, tionin the University of MichiganLi- Ohio, 1912to 1925: Its Membership, brary.”23:4, 576– 581, Fall 1982. Organization,and Demise.” 26:3, 384– Weber,Edward C. “TheLabadie Collec- 404,Summer 1985. tionin the University of MichiganLi- Walker, Joseph E.“AComparison of Ne- brary.”31:1, 155– 162, Winter– Spring groand White Labor ina Charcoal Iron 1990. Community.”10:3, 487– 497, Summer Wegg-Prosser,Victoria. “ ATwentieth 1969. CenturyStory: TheB.B.C. Television Walker, Joseph E.“Labor–Management Series,‘ All OurWorking Lives.” ’ 26:4, Relations atHopewell Village.” 14:1, 577–582, Fall 1985. 3–18, Winter 1973. Wehrle,Edmund F. “‘NoMore Pressing Walker, RogerW. “TheA.F.L. andChild- Task than Organizationin Southeast Labor Legislation:An Exercisein Frus- Asia’: TheAFL-CIO Approaches the tration.”11:3, 323– 340, Summer 1970. VietnamWar, 1947–64.” 42:3, 277– Walker, Samuel.“ TerenceV. Powderly, 295,August 2001. Machinist:1866– 1877.” 19:2, 165– 184, Weinberg,David M.“Labor Collectionsat Spring1978. theUrban Archives Center,Temple Walkowitz, DanielJ. “Statisticsand the University Libraries.”31:1, 71– 76, Win- Writingof WorkingClass Culture:A ter–Spring 1990. StatisticalPortrait of theIron Workers Weiner,Lynn. “‘Who Are Wantedin inTroy, NewYork, 1860–1880.” 15:3, Minnesota’: Workers as Describedin 416–460, Summer 1974. Antebellum‘ BoosterLiterature.” ’ 18:3, Walsh, FrancisR. “TheFilms WeNever 403–406, Summer 1977. Saw: AmericanMovies View Organized Weinstein,James. “BigBusiness and the Labor, 1934–1954.” 27:4, 564– 580, Originsof Workmen’s Compensation.” Fall 1986. 8:2,156– 174, Spring 1967. 126 Index toAuthors

Weinstein,James. “Labor andSocialism in Wilentz,Robert Sean.“ Industrializing America.”14:3, 429– 434, Summer America andthe Irish: Towards the 1973. NewDeparture.” 20:4, 579– 595, Fall Weir,Rob. “Blindin One Eye Only: West- 1979. ernand Eastern Knights of Labor View Wilentz,Sean. “ Conspiracy, Power,and theChinese Question.” 41:4, 421– 436, theEarly Labor Movement:The People November2000. v. James Melvin,et al, 1811.”24:4, Weir,Robert. “‘Here’s ToTheMen Who 572–579, Fall 1983. Lose!’: theHidden Career of Victor Wilentz,Sean and Christine Stansell. Drury.”36:4, 530– 556, Fall 1995. “Gutman’s Legacy.”29:3, 378– 390, Weir,Robert. “Powderlyand the Home Summer1988. Club: TheKnights of Labor Joust Williams, Gerald O.“Share Croppers At AmongThemselves.” 34:1, 84– 122, Sea:TheWhaler’ s ‘Lay,’and Events in Winter1993. theArctic, 1905– 1907.” 29:1, 32– 55, Weisz, Morris. “TheLabor Diplomacy Winter1988. Oral History Project.”36:4, 588– 598, Williams, William A.“An Ambiguous Fall 1995. Weitz,Eric D. “Class Formationand Alternative:An Introductionto Alterna- Labor Protestin the Mining Communi- tive.”11:2, 226– 228, Spring 1970. tiesof SouthernIllinois andthe Ruhr, Winters,Stanley B. “Trendsin Labor His- 1890–1925.” 27:1, 85– 105, Winter toriography inCzechoslovakia.” 10:4, 1985–86. 602–629, Fall 1969. Wellenreuther,Hermann. “Labor inThe Witkowski, Mary K.“Sourcesfor Business Era of theAmerican Revolution: A Dis- andLabor History inthe Bridgeport cussionof RecentConcepts and Theo- PublicLibrary.” 31:1, 44– 47, Winter– ries.”22:4, 573– 600, Fall 1981. Spring1990. Wells, Carol A. “Solidarity Forever! Witwer,David. “LocalRank andFile Graphics onthe International Labor Militancy.The Battle for Teamster Movement.”41:4, 507– 511, November Reform inPhiladelphia inthe Early 2000. 1960s.”41:3, 263– 278, August 2000. Wesser, Robert F.“Conict and Compro- Woirol, GregoryR. “Observingthe mise: TheWorkmen’ s Compensation I.W.W. inCalifornia, May–July 1914.” Movementin New York, 1890’s– 1913.” 25:3,437– 447, Summer 1984. 12:3,345– 372, Summer 1971. Wolfe, Allis Rosenberg.“ Lettersof aLow- Wetzel,Kurt. “Railroad Management’s ellMill Girl andFriends.” 17:1, 96– Response toOperating Employees’ Ac- 102,Winter 1976. cidents,1890– 1913.” 21:2, 351– 368, Wolfe, Allis Rosenberg.“ Women,Con- Summer1980. sumerism, andthe National Consumers’ Weydemeyer,Joseph. “TheDictatorship Leaguein the Progressive Era, of theProletariat.” 3:2, 214– 217, Spring 1900–1923.” 16:3, 378– 392, Summer 1962. 1975. White,Earl Bruce.“ ANoteon the Wolters,Raymond. “Section7a and the Archives of theWestern Federation of Minersand the International Union of BlackWorker.” 10:3, 459– 474, Summer Mine,Mill and Smelter Workers.” 17:4, 1969. 613–617, Fall 1976. Worthman, PaulB. “BlackWorkers and Whittaker,William G.“SamuelGompers, Labor Unions inBirmingham, Alabama, Labor, andthe Mexican– American Cri- 1897–1904.” 10:3, 375– 407, Summer sis of 1916:The Carrizal Incident.” 1969. 17:4,551– 567, Fall 1976. Wright,Gavin. “GettingWork andEcon- Wick,Dorothy (Swanson).“ Annual Bibli- omicHistory.” . [Symposium on‘ Get- ography onAmerican Labor History: tingWork’ by WalterLicht] 35:1, 1991.”33:4, 483– 493, Fall 1992. 100–102, Winter 1994. Forty-YearCumulative Index toLabor History 127

Wright,Helena. “ Sarah G.Bagley:A Bio- Zanjani, Sally Springmeyer.“ TheMike graphical Note.”20:3, 398– 413, Sum- SmithCase: ANoteon High Gradingin mer 1979. GoldŽeld, Nevada, 1910.”24:4, 580– Wurl, Joel.“ TheImmigration History Re- 587,Fall 1983. search Centeras aSourcefor Labor Zeigler,Robert E.“TheLimits of Power: History Research.”31:1, 185– 191, Win- TheAmalgamated Association of Street ter–Spring 1990. Railway Employees inHouston, Texas, Yard, Alexander.“ CoerciveGovernment 1897–1905.” 18:1, 71– 90, Winter 1977. WithinA MinimalState: The Idea of Zieger,Gay P.andRobert H. Zieger. PublicOpinion in Gilded Age Labor “Unions onthe Silver Screen:A Review Essay on F.I.S.T., Blue Collar, and Reform Culture.”34:3, 443– 456, Fall Norma Rae.” 23:1,67– 78, Winter 1982. 1993. Zieger,Robert H.“BooksThat Didn’t Yellowitz,Irwin. “TheOrigins of Unem- Inuence Me.” 40:2, 177– 188, May ploymentReform inthe United States.” 1999. 9:3,338– 360, Fall 1968. Zieger,Robert H. “TheCIO onTrial.” Yellowitz,Irwin. “SkilledWorkers and 37:2,184– 188, Spring 1996. Mechanization:The Lasters inthe Zieger,Robert H.“TheCIO: ABiblio- 1890’s.” 18:2, 197– 213, Spring 1977. graphical Updateand Archival Guide.” Yoels, William C.“Chasing theFuture: 31:3,413– 440, Fall 1990. An Essay-Review of HerbertMarcuse’ s Zieger,Robert H.“FromHostility to An Essayon Liberation .”12:1,144– 153, Moderation:Railroad Labor Policyin Winter1971. the1920’ s.” 9:1, 23– 38, Winter 1968. Young,Alfred. “TheMechanics and the Zieger,Robert H.“Labor-Liberalism Jeffersonians: NewYork” , 1780.5:3, Lost.”[Lichtenstein Symposium] 37:3, 247–276, Fall 1964. 352–357, Summer 1996. Young,James D.“TheAmerican Civil Zieger,Robert H. “Leadership andBu- War andthe Growth of ScottishRepub- reaucracyin the late CIO.” 31:2, 253– licanism.”15:1, 98– 108, Winter 1974. 270,Summer 1990. Young,James D.“DanielDeLeon and Zieger,Robert H.“ALetterfrom JoLa- Anglo-AmericanSocialism.” 17:3, 329– badieto John R. Commons.”11:3, 345– 350,Summer 1976. 346,Summer 1970. Young,James D.“H. M.Hyndman and Zieger,Robert H.“TheMany Mansions DanielDe Leon: The Two Souls of of David Montgomery.”30:1, 121– 125, Socialism.”28:4, 534– 556, Fall 1987. Winter1989. Young,James D.“TheProblems and Zieger,Robert H.“TheOld New Labor History.”[“ WeAre All Leaders”: A Progressof theSocial History of the Symposium ona Collectionof Essays BritishWorking Classes, 1880–1914.” Dealingwith Alternative Unionism in 18:2,257– 266, Spring 1977. theEarly 1930s]38:2, 165– 168, Young,James D.“ScottishLabor andthe Spring–Summer 1997. AmericanRailway Strikeof 1877.”12:4, Zieger,Robert H.“OrganizedLabor: 603–604, Fall 1971. What Next?”41:4, 517– 520, November Yuji Ichioka. “Japanese ImmigrantLabor 2000. Contractorsand the Northern PaciŽ c Zieger,Robert H.“Robert Zieger’s His- andthe Great Northern Railroad Com- tory of theCIO: ASymposium.”37:2, panies, 1898–1907.” 21:2, 325– 350, 157–188, Spring 1996. Summer1980. Zieger,Robert H.“SenatorGeorge Whar- Zahavi, Gerald. “‘CommunismIs No tonPepper and Labor Issues inthe Bug-a-Boo’: Communismand Left- 1920’s.” 9:2, 163– 183, Spring 1968. WingUnionism inFulton County, New Zieger,Robert H.“Toward theHistory of York, 1933–1950.” 33:2, 165– 189, theCIO: ABiographicalReport.” 26:4, Spring1992. 485–516, Fall 1985. 128 Index toAuthors

Zieger,Robert H.“‘Which SideAre You Zieren,Gregory R. “TheIncidence of On?’Workers, Unions andCritics.” Strikesin the U.S., 1879–1880.” 32:1, 17:2,279– 290, Spring 1976. 136–142, Winter 1991. Zieger,Robert H.“Workers andScholars: Zonderman,David A.“FromMill Village RecentTrends in American Labor His- toIndustrial City: Lettersfrom Vermont toriography.”13:2, 245– 266, Spring FactoryOperatives.” 27:2, 265– 285, 1972. Spring1986.