UMW General coal strike (1922)

UMW General Coal Strike of 1922
Part of Coal Wars
Group of striking union miners and the families living in tents, Lick Creek, West Virginia. April 12, 1922
DateApril 1–September 11, 1922 (102 years ago)
Location
North America
GoalsRenewal of previous contract terms
Resulted inRenewal of previous contract terms
Parties
Striking coal miners
United Mine Workers
Coal and Mining Industry
Lead figures
Number
~510,000 UMW Miners
~100,000 Non-Union Miners
10,000 UMW Pump Operators

The 1922 UMW Miner strike or The Big Coal Strike[1] was a nationwide general strike of miners in the US and Canada[a] after the United Mine Worker's (UMW) trade union contract expired on March 31, 1922. The strike decision was ordered March 22, to start effective April 1. Around 610,000 mine workers struck.[2][3][4] About 100,000 of the striking miners were non-union or not associated with the UMW.

Background

Negotiations having failed to produce a contract, on March 22, 1922,[5] union president John L. Lewis ordered the strike to commence on April 1, the day after the expiration of the current contract.[6] More than 600,000 miners went on strike leaving 185,000 miners not on strike;[7][8] 10,000 of which were union members running the pumps so the mines didn't flood.[2] The Labor World at the time reported the following for many of the states,

"... of the 13,000 Kansas miners, but 1,000 are working ... Colorado, also, has a law which outlaws strikes under certain conditions, but only 4,000 of the 19,000 miners before the strike was called are working.

... Pennsylvania reports that not a man of the 155,000 anthracite miners are working, and but 20,000 of the 175,000 bituminous men are working.

Despite the terroristic policy of West Virginia coal owners, and the aid given them by the state, there are 40,000 of the 90,000 coal miners on strike.

The states that report a 100 per cent strike are: Illinois, 90,000 out; Ohio, 50,000 out; Indiana, 3000 out; Iowa, 15,000 out; Montana, 5,000, out; Michigan, 3,000 out.

Wyoming reports 7,000 on strike while 8,000 were employed before the strike. The same situation is reported by Virginia, Arkansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma and several other states."[2]

In June during the strike, the Herrin mine massacre occurred in Illinois. A month later, on July 1 the Great Railroad Strike of 1922 started. Political comics from the time suggest there was solidarity between the miners and rail workers.[9][10]

Aftermath

Mass meeting of more than 3,000 striking coal miners held near Windber, PA. in September 1922

A contract was reached on September 2, 1922, it covered members of the UMW extending the agreement terms of the previous contract to August 31,1923. The Federal Coal Commission was also formed as part of the agreement.[11] After ratification, mining resumed on September 11. The general coal strike lasted 163 days.[4] However non-unionized mining workers were not covered by the UMW contract.

After the UMW ended their strike, around 25,000 Windber, Pennsylvania miners[12] continued striking. Those miners voted to end their strike on August 14, 1923, after failing to gain a contract.[1][8]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Excluding Nova Scotia and Newfoundland

References

  1. ^ a b Zimand, Zavel. "Labor Age". pp. 4–7, 15–17. Retrieved March 2, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c "The labor world. [volume] (Duluth, Minn.) 1896-current". National Endowment for the Humanities. August 5, 1922 – via chroniclingamerica.loc.gov.
  3. ^ "Hellraisers Journal: U. S. Department of Labor Report States 610,000 Coal Miners Are Now Out on Strike Across the Nation". WE NEVER FORGET. August 10, 2022.
  4. ^ a b "The anthracite strike of 1922, a chronological statement of the communications and negotiations between the hard coal operators and the United Mine Workers of America" (PDF). Philadelphia: The Anthracite Bureau of Information. 1922.
  5. ^ "Windber Strike of 1922-1923". explorepahistory.com.
  6. ^ "Strike Order Calls 600,000 Miners Out; Violence Forbidden; Bituminous and Anthracite Coal Workers Will Quit on April 1. 10,000 to Guard Mines". The New York Times. March 22, 1922. Retrieved March 12, 2023.
  7. ^ "Eighth Week of Strike Shows the Miners Sticking to Win in Soft and Hard Coal Fields". United Mine Workers journal. 1922. p. 263. Retrieved April 2, 2023 – via commons.wikimedia.org.
  8. ^ a b "Coal Strike of 1922". heilwood.com.
  9. ^ Minor, Robert (May 1922). "Illustration of train and boat moving, each with a flag that reads "No Scab Coal" Text on the left: "Robert Minor in The Worker" Bottom Text:"Hoist the Flag"". Labor Age Magazine.
  10. ^ Labor Publication Society (March 1922). Labor Age. Vol. 11.
  11. ^ "Agreement by Anthracite Operators and United Mine Workers of America is Formally Ratified". United Mine Workers journal. Vol. 33. 1922. p. 420. Retrieved April 2, 2023 – via commons.wikimedia.org.
  12. ^ Kanarek, Harold K. (1975). "The Pennsylvania Anthracite Strike of 1922". The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography. 99 (2): 207–225. JSTOR 20090945.