Daly, A. M. (Alexander M.)
Description
A witness for the union, spinner Minnie B. Ware discusses being out sick from work, and having wages withheld by the Mills.The Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills Exhibit is a joint project between the Georgia Tech Library and Information Center's Archives and Records Management, Digital Initiatives, and Systems departments.
Text
Ware, Minnie B
Record Contributed By
Georgia Institute of TechnologyRecord Harvested From
Digital Library of GeorgiaKeywords
- African Americans
- Age And Employment
- Atlanta
- Bags
- Child Labor
- Cotton Spinning
- Cotton Textile Industry
- Cotton Textiles
- Death
- Discrimination
- Discrimination In Employment
- Economic Conditions
- Employees
- Employment
- Eviction
- Fulton Bag And Cotton Mills
- Fulton Bag And Cotton Mills Strike, Atlanta, Ga., 1914 1915
- Georgia
- Government
- Governmental Investigations
- History
- Housing
- Industrial Housing
- Industrial Relations
- Infants
- Labor Unions
- Medical Care
- Mills And Mill Work
- Pay Equity
- Racism
- Racism In Language
- Sick Leave
- Social Conditions
- Spinning
- Strikes And Lockouts
- Tents
- Textile Industry
- Textile Workers
- United States
- United States. Commission On Industrial Relations
- United Textile Workers Of America
- Wages
- Women
- Women Textile Workers
- Work Environment