Gunfire rang out. Strikers and sympathizers fell to the
ground. Two people died at an entrance of the Republic Steel mill on Poland
Avenue in Youngstown, and many were wounded.
It was the third week in June of 1937, and steel workers had been on strike
against the “Little Steel” companies for about a month in a collection
of mills around the southern and western shores of the Great Lakes. Other
cities also saw shocking violence, including Chicago, where 10 people were
slain as police fired on a Republic Steel picket line.
These developments in the history of relations between American labor and
management took place 70 years ago this month on ground that was laden with
iron ore that, poured into iron and cast into steel, shaped the United States
into a robust industrial nation.
And, around the world, conditions were developing that, in just a few years,
would lead to the Second World War – a conflict that would rely on
the iron ore that would come from the Great Lakes region.
By all accounts, Big Steel consisted of the United States Steel Corp., and
by some accounts, Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. The Little Steel manufacturers
were so-named because they were smaller in output than Big Steel, but were
still major, independent steel companies. Locally Little Steel included Republic
Steel and Youngstown Sheet & Tube.
After Big Steel signed a labor agreement with the Steel Workers Organizing
Committee (the predecessor of the United States Steelworkers) in March 1937,
SWOC set it sights on Little Steel. The smaller companies were adamant in
their refusal to sign contracts with SWOC and decided to endure strikes instead – even
if the work stoppages proved deadly. Here, two died and 42 were injured in
violence June 21, 1937, at the main entrance to Republic Steel’s Poland
Avenue Plant in Youngstown.
TURMOIL IN THE 30’s – The story of the Little Steel Strike of
1937 is a story of management and labor that embroiled the Mahoning Valley
in tension and violence, but that eventually improved the lives of workers
and their families, firmly carving out a role for unions in American life.
The American steel worker became one of the best-paid laborers in the world,
as steel remained king throughout most of the 20th century.
“The most significant, direct result of the strike was the transformation
of the labor movement in not only the steel industry, but all heavy industries,
from basically local and ineffective organizations into all-encompassing,
nationwide collective bargaining representatives of American workers,” wrote
William Lawson, historian and executive director of the Mahoning Valley Historical
Society, in an academic analysis written in 1987. Besides wages and benefits,
labor contracts gave American steel workers previously unheard of safety
standards in the workplace.
In Youngstown, the Little Steel Strike was for many years memorialized on
Public Square with a historical marker until the renovations of Federal Street
uprooted it. The marker recently was relocated and rededicated on the grounds
of the Youngstown Historical Center of Industry and Labor at 151 West Wood
St. The marker recalls a time that workers took their grievances to the pavement
and shed blood to fight for a fair deal.
Indeed, Congressional hearings of 1938 revealed that the Little Steel companies
had stockpiles of weapons they were prepared to use against strikers. Youngstown
Sheet & Tube Co. officials testified that its arsenal contained $10,000
worth of tear gas, eight machine guns, 452 revolvers, 314 pistols and 190
shotguns, The Vindicator reported in an Associated Press story. Backed with
such firepower and the will to use it, Little Steel management stood its
ground.
BACKGROUND – The movement toward unionization of the steel industry
was begat in blood in the late 1800’s, when the Amalgamated Association
of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers was locked out of the Carnegie Co. Plant at
Homestead, Pa. The immediate issue was the intention of Andrew Carnegie to
cut employee wages. On July 6, 1892, a riot over the scheduled reopening
of the plant with non-union labor left 10 people dead and dozens injured.
On January 7, 1916, in East Youngstown, current-day Campbell, guards at Youngstown
Sheet & Tube’s mill opened fire on a crowd of striking steelworkers,
killing three and injuring 125. The crowd rioted and burned six blocks of
the business district. The next day, 2,000 National Guard troops arrived
to restore order.
Later steel strikes were fought in the halls of law more than on the streets.
For example, in 1952, in the case of Youngstown Sheet & Tube vs. Sawyer,
President Harry S. Truman ordered seizure of the nation’s steel mills.
His purpose was to fend off a strike he claimed would harm the U.S. during
the Korean War. The steel companies sued the president on behalf of Congress
saying that the presidential action had violated the constitutional doctrine
of the separation of powers. Six High Court Justices agreed.
In 1959, in a case that many believe led to the first significant import
of foreign steel, the United Steel Workers struck over management’s
ability to modify work rules. In a 116-day strike, the USW kept the contract
language and achieved minimal wage increases. Many believe that this strike
began the devastation of the American steel industry.