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Bread and Roses: The Women Who Paralyzed the Looms: Poverty, Picket Lines, and the Defiant Immigrant Strike That Broke the American Woolen Monopoly, 1912

Bread and Roses: The Women Who Paralyzed the Looms: Poverty, Picket Lines, and the Defiant Immigrant Strike That Broke the American Woolen Monopoly, 1912 in Ottawa, ON

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Bread and Roses: The Women Who Paralyzed the Looms: Poverty, Picket Lines, and the Defiant Immigrant Strike That Broke the American Woolen Monopoly, 1912

By None

Bread and Roses: The Women Who Paralyzed the Looms: Poverty, Picket Lines, and the Defiant Immigrant Strike That Broke the American Woolen Monopoly, 1912 in Ottawa, ON

Current price: $7.99
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Size: Kobo eBook

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In the early 20th century, the textile mills of Lawrence, Massachusetts, were incredibly dangerous, deafeningly loud sweatshops powered by the desperate labor of exhausted immigrants. When the mill owners callously slashed wages by a few pennies in the dead of a freezing winter in 1912, they expected the women to quietly accept it. Instead, they sparked one of the most brilliant and successful labor uprisings in American history. Known as the "Bread and Roses" strike, this book analyzes the ingenious, decentralized tactics deployed by over 20,000 striking workers from fifty different countries. Because the police and state militia routinely beat stationary protesters, the women invented the "moving picket line," forming an endless, looping human chain around the mills that completely paralyzed operations without breaking the law against loitering. We explore the brutal corporate retaliation, the national outrage when police attacked children at a train station, and the profound strategic victory that forced the entire New England textile cartel to surrender. Study the blueprint of modern industrial defiance. Discover how a fractured group of impoverished immigrant women physically outmaneuvered the armed might of American capitalism.
In the early 20th century, the textile mills of Lawrence, Massachusetts, were incredibly dangerous, deafeningly loud sweatshops powered by the desperate labor of exhausted immigrants. When the mill owners callously slashed wages by a few pennies in the dead of a freezing winter in 1912, they expected the women to quietly accept it. Instead, they sparked one of the most brilliant and successful labor uprisings in American history. Known as the "Bread and Roses" strike, this book analyzes the ingenious, decentralized tactics deployed by over 20,000 striking workers from fifty different countries. Because the police and state militia routinely beat stationary protesters, the women invented the "moving picket line," forming an endless, looping human chain around the mills that completely paralyzed operations without breaking the law against loitering. We explore the brutal corporate retaliation, the national outrage when police attacked children at a train station, and the profound strategic victory that forced the entire New England textile cartel to surrender. Study the blueprint of modern industrial defiance. Discover how a fractured group of impoverished immigrant women physically outmaneuvered the armed might of American capitalism.

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