American Decades
Meany, George 1894-1980
PRESIDENT OF THE AFL-CIO
Reunion of Labor.
To many Americans in the 1950s, the term organized labor meant George Meany, president of the American Federation of Labor (AFL) after his election in 1952. Meany orchestrated the reunification of that union with the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) in 1955. As president of the newly unified AFL-CIO, Meany led the campaign to rid the union of its gangster elements.
Early Career.
Organized labor was a part of Meany's life since his childhood. His father had been the president of the Bronx's local chapter of the Plumbers International union. Young Meany regularly spent Sunday afternoons watching the informal union meetings that took place in his home. After he left school, and against his father's wishes, Meany became an apprentice plumber. Before long he also followed his father into union affairs, and in 1922 he won election to a full-time post as...
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1950's Business and the Economy
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Advertising in the 1950s
- The AFL-CIO
- Air Travel in the 1950s
- Alcoa, Aluminum, and the End of a Monopoly
- Bank of America Leads a Financial Expansion
- Big vs. Small Businesses
- Creating the Computer
- Credit, Inflation, and Price Controls
- Energy
- Farming in the 1950s
- Housing in the 1950s
- Labor in the 1950s
- The Merger Wave
- The Military-Industrial Complex
- The National Highway Act and the Auto Industry
- The Railroad and its Decline
- Shopping Malls
- The Stock Market and Investment Trends
- The Sun Belt
- The Television Industry
- The Turbulent Teamsters
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Business and the Economy, 1950–1959
