Other news …

2013

NYLHA Executive Board member Jane Latour published an essay on women in union leadership in the UK and US, in the September 2013 issue of the Industrial Worker, available here.

May is Labor History Month! Download the 2013 Labor History Calendar here:

MayIsLaborHistoryMonth2013

2012 and earlier

The New York Labor History Association awarded the 2012 Barbara Wertheimer Prize for the best essay by an undergraduate student on a topic in labor or work history to Ryan Tate of Hamline University. His essay is entitled “A House Divided: Women’s Activism in the Minnesota Labor Movement, 1900-1935.” For an abstract of this essay, follow the link.

The New York Labor History Association also awarded the first Bernard Bellush Prize for the best essay by a graduate student on a topic in labor or work history to William S. Cossen of Pennsylvania State University. His essay is entitled “The Rise and Decline of a Catholic Labor School: Hartford’s Diocesan Labor Institute and the Education of the American Worker.” For an abstract of this essay, follow the link.

The New York Labor History Association will present a forum on Epoch-making strikes in the U.S. — 1980s and 1990s. It will be held on Thursday, October 25, 2012, at 6 PM, at District Council 1707, 420 West 45th Street (between 9th and 10th Avenues), Manhattan. The speakers will be Joseph McCartin, Ray Rogers and Chris Rhomberg. Moderators will be Nell Geiser and Faron McLurkin. The event was planned by Jane LaTour of our Executive Board. For further information, follow the link.

The New York Labor History Association held its 26th annual John Commerford Labor Education Award Reception on Friday, November 30.

The honorees were Peter Yarrow, artist and activist, and Jane LaTour, labor journalist and author. Peter Yarrow is best known as a member of the folk music trio of Peter, Paul and Mary. However, he also has been an activist for many social causes. For the past ten years, his primary focus has been Operation Respect, which aims to free children while in school from the negative effects of bullying, ridicule and violence. Jane LaTour has a long career in the labor movement, including her present post as Associate Editor of DC 37’s Public Employee Press. She has devoted many years to a study of women who pioneered in blue collar trades, which culminated in a book, Sisters in the Brotherhoods: Working Women Organizing for Equality in New York City (2008).

For a fuller account of this highly successful event, follow the link to an account reprinted from Collective Endeavor, the publication of the Women’s Press Collective.

The Kheel Center of the Martin P. Catherwood Library, ILR School, Cornell University, has recently launched a website dedicated to the history of the ILGWU. Information contained on the site includes digitized material such as banners and broadsides, oral histories, pamphlets, photographs and videos. The finding aids for the ILGWU records, as well as collection guides and a selective bibliography are available at the site as well. http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/ilgwu/

In 2005, Robert Parmet, a member of the Executive Board of the New York Labor History Association, published the first full length scholarly study of David Dubinsky. That book, The Master of Seventh Avenue: David Dubinsky and the American Labor Movement, will be reissued this year in paperback by NYU Press.

American Labor Museum Plans 1913 Paterson Silk Strike Centennial.
The American Labor Museum/Botto House National Landmark is planning a year-long series of events for 2013 to commemorate the centennial of the 1913 Paterson Silk Strike. Events for 2013 include a year-long strike exhibit, a teachers’s workshop, historical bus tour, May Day Festival and Labor Day Parade. The museum is located at 83 Norwood Street in Haledon, New Jersey . For further information, please visit the museum’s website, www.labormuseum.net contact the Museum at (973) 595-7953, or email labormuseum@aol.com..

The New York Labor History Association mourns the loss of our former President, Professor Bernard Bellush, who died on December 30, 2011, at the age of 94. The NYLHA has established a Bernard Bellush Prize to be awarded for a student for a research paper in the fields of labor and work history. The rules for the prize will be established by the Prizes Committee of the NYLHA.

Bernie Bellush was a scholar of labor history, particularly for the book, Union Power and New York: Victor Gotbaum and District Council 37, written with his wife, Professor Jewel Bellush. Bernie was also an activist his entire life. He took a leading role in many organizations, including as first Chairman of the Faculty Senate at City College, CUNY, and with the Americans for Democratic Action. He was a stirring force in the classroom, and his dynamism and concern for students left a lasting impression on those he taught. Bernie was a man who sought leadership, and once in such a position knew how to work with people of all opinions to make things happen. He had strong views, but also had the ability to find a common ground on many issues. He was a unique person, and those of us fortunate enough to have worked with him over the years will always remember his accomplishments and personality. The Bernard Bellush Prize will help memorialize him well into the future.

To learn more about the life and work of Bernie Bellush and his wife, Jewel, See the Guide to the Bellush Papers at the Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at NYU. For an obituary, see www.dc37.net, Public Employee Press, March 2012, p. 26.

PBS and AOL have launched a video concerning the successful, but very difficult, efforts of Brenda Berkman to integrate into the New York City Fire Department by gender. The video offers a look at the struggle to make highly coveted civil service jobs available to women. It also makes amply clear the costs for pioneers such as Berkman. Access is at http://www.makers.com/brenda-berkman-0..

Joe Doyle and Rachel Bernstein have prepared a virtual exhibit on the Labor Arts website about the conditions for seamen, and the events of 1936, including a key strike, that were critical to the formation of the National Maritime Union (CIO). The images and text show the deplorable conditions in the industry, and how the leaders of the embryonic National Maritime Union challenged the existing unions in the industry, sought to organize seamen, and aimed to make dramatic changes in their lives, including breaking down existing racial barriers. To view the virtual exhibit, go to www.laborarts.org/exhibits/thefallstrike.

Longtime New York Labor History Association Board Member Connie Kopelov and her partner, Phyllis Siegel, had the distinction of being the first couple to be married under the new Marriage Equality Law on July 24, 2011. The ceremony at City Hall brought much publicity their way (see the enclosed article from the Public Employee Press, DC 37, AFSCME).
Kopelov spent her working life as a labor educator, working for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers. She was a founding member of the Coalition of Labor Union Women and held several positions in that organization. Her outstanding contributions to the NYLHA including overseeing production of the annual May Labor History Calendar and her walking tours of working women’s history in New York City. Connie is now retired and living in New York City. Congratulatory messages can be sent to her c/o the NYLHA, attn: Gail Malmgreen, Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, 70 Washington Square South, 10th Fl., New York, NY 10012.