Knights of Labor

   

Knights of Labor seal
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Knights of Labor seal

The Knights of Labor was a labor union founded in in December 1869, by a group of Philadelphia tailors led by Uriah S. Stephens. Labor Day can be traced to two Knights' parades in New York City in 1882 and 1884.

Structure and membership

Most unions organized workers by trade and skill level. The Knights grouped workers by industry, regardless of trade or skill.

With the motto "an injury to one is the concern of all", the Knights of Labor attempted to attain its goals of:

  • an 8-hour work day
  • the end of child labor
  • equal pay for equal work
  • the elimination of private banks.

The Knights had a reputation for being all-inclusive. Women, blacks (after 1883), and employers were accepted as members. Bankers, lawyers, gamblers, stockholders, doctors, and liquor manufacturers were excluded. The union dropped its secret status in 1881.

However, the Knights strongly supported the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the Contract Labor Law of 1885, as did many other labor groups. The Knights also made little headway toward organizing Irish-Americans due to the secretive Freemason-like beginnings of the organization.

The Knights of Labor grew rapidly after the collapse of the National Labor Union in 1873. The Knights aided various strikes and boycotts, winning the important Union Pacific Railroad strike in 1884 and the Wabash Railroad strike in 1885. By 1886, the Knights had over 702,000 members.

Leaders

In decline

There was widespread repression of labor unions in the late 1880s. In addition, the Knights were unsuccessful in the Missouri Pacific strike in 1886. Violence among strikers, including the Haymarket Riot, and, intensified disputes between the skilled trade unionists, also known as craft unionists, and the industrial unionists. The Knights lost many craft unionists in 1886 when the American Federation of Labor was founded.

Membership declined with the additional problems of an autocratic structure, mismanagement, and further unsuccessful strikes. By 1890, it had less than 100,000 members. By 1900, it was virtually nonexistent.

See also


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