American Decades
The Turbulent Teamsters
Teamsters and Crime.
Once a union that represented coach and wagon drivers, the Brotherhood of Teamsters dominated the trucking industry by the 1950s. Few industries were as vulnerable to under-the-table or illicit operations as was trucking. In the 1950s the connections between the Teamsters and gangsters became public and ultimately led to the ouster of the Teamsters union from the AFL-CIO.
Suspicions Build.
Trouble started when Teamsters president Dave Beck was accused by the AFL-CIO of abusing union funds. Such suspicions only brought the character of all union leadership into question. The first indication of the seriousness of Beck's activities, and its effect on the entire AFL-CIO, came in March 1957 when Labor Secretary James P. Marshall rejected George Meany's nomination of Beck to serve as a delegate to a committee of the United National International Labor Organization in Hamburg, Germany. On 9 April...
[The entire page is 819 words long]
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
