Tramps & Trade Union Travelers: Internal Migration and Organized Labor in Gilded Age America, 1870-1900

Tramps & Trade Union Travelers: Internal Migration and Organized Labor in Gilded Age America, 1870-1900

by Kim Moody
Tramps & Trade Union Travelers: Internal Migration and Organized Labor in Gilded Age America, 1870-1900

Tramps & Trade Union Travelers: Internal Migration and Organized Labor in Gilded Age America, 1870-1900

by Kim Moody

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Overview

From the author of On New Terrain, a historical examination of why American workers never organized in early industrial America and what it means today.

Why has there been no viable, independent labor party in the United States? Many people assert “American exceptionalist” arguments, which state a lack of class-consciousness and union tradition among American workers is to blame. While the racial, ethnic, and gender divisions within the American working class have created organizational challenges for the working class, Moody uses archival research to argue that despite their divisions, workers of all ethnic and racial groups in the Gilded Age often displayed high levels of class consciousness and political radicalism.

In place of “American exceptionalism,” Moody contends that high levels of internal migration during the late 1800s created instability in the union and political organizations of workers. Because of the tumultuous conditions brought on by the uneven industrialization of early American capitalism, millions of workers became migrants, moving from state to state and city to city. The organizational weakness that resulted undermined efforts by American workers to build independent labor-based parties in the 1880s and 1890s. Using detailed research and primary sources, Moody traces how it was that “pure-and-simple” unionism would triumph by the end of the century despite the existence of a significant socialist minority in organized labor at that time.

“Terrific . . . An entirely original take on . . . why American labor was virtually unique in failing to build its own political party. But there’s much more: in investigating labor migration and the ‘tramp’ phenomenon in the Gilded Age, he discovers fascinating parallels with today's struggles of immigrant workers.” —Mike Davis, author of Prisoners of the American Dream


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781608467570
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Publication date: 11/04/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 407
Sales rank: 836,859
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Kim Moody was a founder of Labor Notes and author of several books on the U.S. labor movement, including On New Terrain: How Capitalism is Reshaping the Battleground of Class War (Haymarket Books, 2017), In Solidarity: Essays on Working-Class Organization in the United States (Haymarket Books, 2014) and U.S. Labor in Trouble and Transition (Verso, 2007). He has a PhD from the University of Nottingham.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

Chapter 1 Class Formation and Consciousness in Gilded-Age America 27

Chapter 2 The Missing Factor: Internal Migration 55

Chapter 3 Observations and Awareness of Labor Migration 89

Chapter 4 The Rise, Fall, and Revival of Organized Labor 117

Chapter 5 Why Independent Working-Class Politics Failed in the Gilded Age 153

Conclusion 177

Appendix 183

Bibliography 187

Notes 209

Index 249

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