Object Details
Book Title
Electric railway journal.
Caption
Cincinnati strike -- One of the means used for publicitiy by the strikers.
Educational Notes
Strike! Sometimes, there is a problem so great that people decide they cannot continue on until its fixed. An example of this is takes place in the workplace: a strike action is when workers refuse to work until a problem is fixed. This kind of thing is also called a labor strike. It was a fairly common occurrence during the Industrial Revolution. During this time of history, huge factories and mines employed large groups of workers, and the conditions were often times very dangerous, very unsanitary, and very unfair to the workers. Mass labor, or the hiring of huge groups of people to work in one workplace, sometimes turned into massive strikes. This choices was made to put pressure on employers, or the government, to change certain policies. Most Western countries made striking legal by the late 19th century. Its important to note: Sometimes, strikes often happened in the midst of larger social movements, or even contributed to them. A big example of this is that strikes in Poland help lead to the fall of the Iron Curtain, which ended the communist party in Eastern Europe. Wow!
Date
1913
Publication Date
1913
Image ID
SIL-39088016292120_electricrailway411913newy_0915
Catalog ID
484258
Rights
No Copyright - United States
Type
Photographic prints
Place
Cincinnati
Publication Place
New York (New York)
Publisher
McGraw Hill Pub. Co.
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Data Source
Smithsonian Libraries
Topic
Strike
Industrial Revolution
Workers
Employers
Factories
Mines
Unsanitary
Mass Labor
Record ID
silgoi_103984