American Decades
Mitchell, John 1870-1919
LABOR LEADER
Background.
John Mitchell, a driving force behind the organization of America's coal miners, endured a difficult childhood that included being orphaned at age six and that mixed hard work with irregular schooling. Mitchell was born in Briadwood, Illinois, in 1870. He never finished school; instead he entered the mines at the age of twelve in 1882. For the next several years Mitchell traveled around the West and Midwest from mine to mine. At age fifteen Mitchell joined the Knights of Labor, which was attempting to organize both skilled and unskilled workers in industry, mining, and railroads. The young miner returned to Illinois in 1888, where he found the mining towns filled with immigrants and wages down by 20 percent. Mitchell felt the working conditions in the mines were equal to slavery. After a prolonged but futile strike in 1891, Mitchell returned to the West but only stayed one year. He returned to his...
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1910's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Big Business: The Modern Corporation
- Creating the Federal Reserve System
- Economic Diplomacy in the 1910s
- The Five-Dollar Day
- Labor in the 1910s
- The New Freedom and the Trusts
- Organized Labor and the Wilson Administration
- Postwar Labor Distress
- The Retail Industry
- Seamstresses and Strikes: Women Organizers and the Garment Industry
- Taxation, Tariffs, and the National Economy
- The War Industries Board
- World War I and the Economy
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1910–1919
