American Decades
Settlement of a Sit-Down Strike
"General Motors Agreement: February 11, 1937"
Agreement
By: United Automobile Workers (UAW), represented by Wyndham Mortimer, first vice president of UAW; and General Motors (GM), represented by William S. Knudsen, president of GM. The chief mediator was Frank Murphy, governor of Michigan.
Date: February 11, 1937
Source: United Automobile Workers. "General Motors Agreement: February 11, 1937." Walter Reuther Papers, Box 18-1, Walter Reuther Library of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich.
About the Authors: Wyndham Mortimer (1984–1966) was the chief United Auto Workers (UAW) representative in negotiating a settlement in the Flint sit-down strike. Mortimer, who was a Communist sympathizer, was also UAW vice president and a founder of the UAW. He initiated and led the Flint strike, and was backed by the more influential and dynamic John L....
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1930's Business and the Economy Primary Sources
- "Statement of James C. Garland, of Pineville, Ky."
- "On the Bank Crisis"
- "Code of Fair Competition for the Men's Clothing Industry, as Amended"
- "Statement of H.L. Lurie, Director of the Bureau of Jewish Social Research, New York City, New York"
- Securities Exchange Act of 1934
- "Redistribution of Wealth"
- The National Labor Relations Act
- Progress in Michigan
- Works Progress Administration Reports
- Settlement of a Sit-Down Strike
- "Armed Rebellion on the Right"
- Farmers on Relief and Rehabilitation
- John Maynard Keynes to President Roosevelt, February 1, 1938
- Copyright Page
- Acknowledgments
