American Decades
Organized Labor and the Wilson Administration
Labor Growth.
The second decade of the twentieth century was a tumultuous time for organized labor. The labor issue frequently divided American society because trade unionism challenged the dominance of traditional economic and political institutions in the nation. Also, the unions contained numerous radical and socialist elements that frightened business owners and a sometimes timid middle class. Big business never willingly conceded to the demands of unions because the companies had consolidated their power under conservative principles, and unionism in any form threatened those values. Unions, however, were growing in the 1910s, and as the industrial conflict intensified, the battles spread into the larger national arena. Organized labor gained an avenue into nationwide political participation, thus forcing candidates at all levels to recognize their existence. Woodrow Wilson initially distrusted union activity but later became...
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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
