The United Office and Professional Workers of America (UOPWA) (1937–1950) was a CIO-affiliated union[1] and one of the white-collar unions formed by the CPUSA-breakaway party of Lovestoneites.[2][3][4][5][6]
"The UOPWA held an unusual position in the newly formed CIO. In a federation committed to industrial unionism, here was a union with elements of both craft and industrial structure."[5]
In 1941, Maxwell Copelof, a New York State government official and private arbitrator, represented Amalgamated Bank in Amalgamated Bank of New York vs. United Office and Professional Workers of America, Local 16 (UOPWA) on the issue of job assignment.[8]
In 1947-1949, UOPWA leadership refused to sign non-Communist affidavits as required by the 1947 Taft-Hartley Act.[1] On November 25, 1948, Local 16 denounced CIO president Philip Murray for proposing dissolution of UOPWA's national leadership due to "Communist proclivities" of Union 16.[10]
Dissolution
In 1949-1950, the CIO expelled the UOPWA due to Communist domination.[1][4][6][11]
In April 1950, insurance workers followed Allan Haywood under a new Insurance and Allied Workers Organizing Committee; Richard T. Leonard succeeded Haywood. In 1953, these insurance workers held a convention in Cleveland to form a new union, the Insurance Workers of America.[6] The Insurance Agents' successor eventually merged with the United Food and Commercial Workers.
Some Consumers Union members protested the change to the Distributive, Processing, and Office Workers of America and narrowly (66 to 57 votes) won new membership under the Newspaper Guild of New York.[13]
UOPWA's membership was largely female and included people with small manufacturers, insurance, banks (e.g., Bankers Trust[9]), finance, and direct mail. It also included professional workers such as engineers[15] as well as more than 300 members of the Consumers Union.[13] Membership peaked in 1948 with 75,000 members in 100 locals in cities nationwide, though centered in New York City.[1] Insurance workers alone included 40,000 people, of whom 90% were insurance agents.[6]
Members included Vicki Garvin (1915-2007), a champion of African American and women's rights who served as UOPWA's research director and was also a member of the National Negro Congress (1945) and of the Communist Party USA (1947).[11]
Confusion with UPWA
UOPWA was not the same as the United Public Workers of America (UPWA) (1946–1952), a fellow CIO member, also expelled from the CIO in 1950.
Presidents
1937: Lewis Merrill
1947: James H. Durkin
Publications
"Summary of the proceedings of the convention of the United Office and Professional Workers of America" (1938)
You Can Get It: How White Collar Workers Can Win Higher Pay by Lewis Merrill (1946)
House We Built: UOPWA, How It Is Set Up, How It Is Run (1947)
Career (1948)
"The Facts of Life: An Economic Report" (1948) by Vicki Garvin[11]
^ abcd
Waters, Elinor (October 1954). "Unionization of Office Employees". The Journal of Business. 27 (4). University of Chicago Press: 285–292. doi:10.1086/294048. JSTOR2350479.
^Stetson, Damon. "Local Union of Retail Workers Is Near Split With Parent Body." New York Times. March 21, 1969; "New Union Is Formed." Associated Press. May 25, 1969.
Congress of Industrial Organizations - inventory of the Records of the Congress of Industrial Organizations at The American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives