Description
McGill describes her entry into union life, working conditions in the mills, public reception to union efforts, and the effects of the early union years on the strikes of the 1930s.Eula McGill was a textile mill worker and union organizer for the Amalgamated Clothing Workers Union.
Sound
Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd
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Record Contributed By
Georgia State UniversityRecord Harvested From
Digital Library of GeorgiaKeywords
- African Americans
- Amalgamated Clothing And Textile Workers Union
- Cannon Mills Company (Concord, N.C.)
- Coal Miners
- Coal Mines And Mining
- Collective Bargaining
- Community Organization
- Contracts For Work And Labor
- Dwight Manufacturing Company (Gadsden, Ala.)
- Elections
- Eviction
- Government
- Great Depression
- Grievance Arbitration
- Industrial Management
- Iron And Steel Workers
- Labor Leaders
- Labor Movement
- Labor Union Locals
- Labor Unions
- Labor Unions And Education
- Labor Unions, Black
- Medical Care
- Minimum Wage
- National Guard Association Of The United States
- Organizing
- Picketing
- Police
- Political Activity
- Public Relations
- Segregation
- State Governments
- Steel Industry And Trade
- Strike Benefits
- Strikebreakers
- Strikes And Lockouts
- Textile Industry
- Union Dues
- United States
- United States. National Recovery Administration
- United Textile Workers Of America
- Women
- Women In The Labor Movement