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The Black Worker to 1869—Volume I: Foreword

The Black Worker to 1869—Volume I
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Series page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Foreword
  7. Contents
  8. Acknowledgements
  9. Preface
  10. Part I: Black Labor in the Old South
    1. Part I: Black Labor in the Old South
      1. Blacks in the Crafts and Industries of the Old South
        1. 1. An Overview: Africa
        2. 2. An Overview: The American South
        3. 3. The Slave Mechanic
      2. Slave Craftsmen in America
        1. 4. Plantation Craftsmen
        2. 5. Fugitive Skills
        3. 6. Carpenters, Caulkers, Bricklayers
        4. 7. Sawyers
        5. 8. White Washer
        6. 9. Bricklayers
        7. 10. Cooper
        8. 11. Jack-of-all-Trades
        9. 12. Watchmaker
        10. 13. Painters
        11. 14. Goldsmith
        12. 15. A Slave Lot
        13. 16. Blacksmith's Apprentice I
        14. 17. Shoemaker
        15. 18. Blacksmith's Apprentice II
        16. 19. Seamstress
        17. 20. Carpenter
        18. 21. A Slave Lot
        19. 22. Article of Apprenticeship
        20. 23. Apprentice Ironworker
      3. Industrial Slavery
        1. 24. A Southerner's View
        2. 25. Ironworkers
        3. 26. Cotton Factory Slaves
        4. 27. Stevedores
        5. 28. Coal Miners
        6. 29. Cotton Factory Hands
        7. 30. Slave Labor Upon Public Works in the South
        8. 31. Slave Fishermen
        9. 32. Working at a Richmond Tobacco Factory
        10. 33. Lumbermen
        11. 34. Slave Ironworkers
        12. 35. Strikes on Attack Against Slave Ownership
        13. 36. Tredegar Advertisement for Slaves
        14. 37. Annual Maintenance Cost per Industrial Slave, 1820–1861
      4. Hiring-Out of Slave Mechanics
        1. 38. Slaves Hiring Themselves
        2. 39. Frederick Douglass Encounters Racial Violence in a Baltimore Shipyard
        3. 40. One Year in the Life of a Hired-Out Slave: William Wells Brown
      5. Self-Purchase by Slave Mechanics
        1. 41. Free Blacks Purchase Family Members
        2. 42. A Call for Financial Help
        3. 43. Another Slave Freed
        4. 44. A Founder Purchases His Family's Freedom
        5. 45. The Late W. H. Cromwell
      6. A Slave Mechanic's Escape to Freedom
        1. 46. The Escape from Slavery of Frederick Douglass, Black Ship-Caulker
      7. Occupations of Free Blacks in the South
        1. 47. The Free Negro and the South
        2. 48. The Gainful Occupations of Free Persons of Color
        3. 49. Occupations of Slaves and Free Blacks in Charleston, 1848
        4. 50. Occupations of Negroes in Charleston in 1850
        5. 51. Occupations of Negroes in St. Louis in 1850
        6. 52. Leading Negro Occupations in Baltimore in 1850 and 1860
        7. 53. Occupations of Free Negroes Over Fifteen Years of Age in New Orleans, 1850
        8. 54. The Case of Henry Boyd, A Freed Carpenter
        9. 55. "As High as a Colored Man Could Rise"
        10. 56. The Washerwoman
        11. 57. Observations of Samuel Ringgold Ward on Discrimination
        12. 58. Well Put -- The Colored Race at the North
  11. Part II: Race Relations in Old Southern Industries
    1. Part II: Race Relations in Old Southern Industries
      1. The Debate Over the Use of Free or Slave Mechanics
        1. 1. The Progress of Manufactures
        2. 2. "Fisher's Report"
        3. 3. James Hammond, "Progress of Southern Industry"
        4. 4. A Pro-Industrial Slavery Opinion
        5. 5. Letter From William P. Powell
      2. Petitions and Protests of White Mechanics Against Black Mechanics
        1. 6. Petition of Charleston Citizens to the State Legislature, 1822
        2. 7. White Artisans Claim Unfair Competition From Free Blacks
        3. 8. Negro Mechanics
        4. 9. Georgia Mechanics' Convention
        5. 10. Negro Mechanics
        6. 11. Petition of Texas Mechanics
      3. Free Black Workers and the Law
        1. 12. A Supplement to the Maryland Act of 1831 Relating to Free Blacks and Slaves
        2. 13. Incendiary Publications in Baltimore
        3. 14. Out of Jail
        4. 15. Free Colored Population of Maryland
        5. 16. Note From the Diary of a Free Black
        6. 17. Free Blacks in Virginia
        7. 18. State of Delaware vs Moses Mc Colly, Negro
        8. 19. Persecution in Delaware
        9. 20. 1845 Act of Georgia Legislature Directed Against Black Mechanics
        10. 21. The Condition of the Free Negro in Louisiana
        11. 22. Exodus of Free Negroes From South Carolina
        12. 23. Arrival of Free Colored People From South Carolina
      4. Labor Violence in Black and White
        1. 24. A Coal Mine -- Negro and English Miners
        2. 25. Trouble Among the Brickmakers
        3. 26. A Fiendish Outrage
      5. Observations on Race Relations
        1. 27. Southern Whites and Blacks Could Work Together
        2. 28. To the Contractors For Mason's and Carpenter's Work
        3. 29. A Visitor Comments on Race Relations in Virginia Coal Mines
        4. 30. Free and Slave Labor in Virginia
        5. 31. Slave-Labor vs. Free Labor
        6. 32. Response to the Strike of White Workers to Eliminate Black Competition at Tredegar Iron Works, 1847
        7. 33. A Foreign Traveller's Observations on Industrial Race Relations in the South
        8. 34. Two Black Foundrymen Prosper
        9. 35. Constitution of the Baltimore Society for the Protection of Free People of Colour, 1827
  12. Part III: Free Black Labor in the North
    1. Part III: Free Black Labor in the North
      1. Northern Free Black Occupations
        1. 1. Register of Trades of Colored People in the City of Philadelphia and Districts, 1838
        2. 2. Colored Inhabitants of Philadelphia
        3. 3. Trades and Occupations in Philadelphia, 1849
        4. 4. Occupations of Blacks in Philadelphia, 1849
        5. 5. The Colored People of Philadelphia, 1860
        6. 6. Advantageous Notice
        7. 7. Boot and Shoe Makers
        8. 8. An Artist
        9. 9. Occupations of Free Blacks Over Fifteen Years of Age in New York City, 1850
        10. 10. To Colored Men of Business
        11. 11. A Watchmaker and Jeweller
        12. 12. Employment of Colored Laborers in New York
        13. 13. The Problems Confronting Black Workers in New York, 1852
        14. 14. Black Workers in New York, 1859
        15. 15. Help! Help Wanted
        16. 16. David Walker's "Grog Shop"
        17. 17. Black Workers in Boston, 1831
        18. 18. Colored People of Boston
        19. 19. Occupations of Negroes in Boston, 1837
        20. 20. Occupations of Negroes in Boston, 1850
        21. 21. Colored Artisans
        22. 22. Negro Occupations in Massachusetts in 1860
        23. 23. The Colored People of Rhode Island
      2. Discrimination Against Free Black Workers in the North
        1. 24. Excerpt From Report of Pitty Hawkes on New York-African Free School, October 13, 1829
        2. 25. Ex-Slave Frederick Douglass Becomes a Free Black Worker
        3. 26. Black Carmen of New York
        4. 27. Henry Graves and His Hand Cart
        5. 28. New York City Corporation, vs Mr. Henry Graves and His Handcart
        6. 29. Henry Graves and His Handcart
  13. Part IV: Living Conditions and Race Relations in the North
    1. Part IV: Living Conditions and Race Relations in the North
      1. Pauperism
        1. 1. On Pauperism
        2. 2. Impediments to Honest Industry
        3. 3. Condition of the Free People of Color in Philadelphia
        4. 4. Poverty Among Blacks in Philadelphia
        5. 5. Education and Employment of Children
      2. Colorphobia
        1. 6. The Black Laws of Ohio
        2. 7. Inquiry into the Condition of Blacks in Cincinnati, 1829
        3. 8. The Difference Between the North and the South
        4. 9. Colorphobia in Philadelphia
        5. 10. The Racial Attitudes of a Leading White Labor Spokesman
      3. White Abolitionists and Jobs for Free Blacks
        1. 11. Abolitionists! Do Give a Helping Hand!
        2. 12. White Abolitionists and Colored Mechanics in Philadelphia, I
        3. 13. White Abolitionists and Colored Mechanics in Philadelphia, II
        4. 14. Colored Mechanics -- Free Labor Boots and Shoes
        5. 15. Martin R. Delaney Protests Job Discrimination Among White Abolitionists
        6. 16. "Is There Anything Higher Open to Us?"
      4. Anti-Black Labor Riots
        1. 17. The Late Riots in Providence
        2. 18. Letter From an Observer of the Providence Riot, 1831
        3. 19. Black Workers Assailed in Philadelphia
        4. 20. Committee Report on the Causes of the Philadelphia Race Riots, 1834
        5. 21. Robert Purvis' Reaction to the Philadelphia Riot, 1842
        6. 22. Pecuniary Cost of the Philadelphia Riots of 1838
        7. 23. The Columbia (Pa.) Race Riots, 1834
        8. 24. Abolition Riots in New York
        9. 25. Alleged Rioting of the Stevedores
        10. 26. Another Mob in Cincinnati
      5. Northern Free Blacks Kidnapped and Sold into Slavery
        1. 27. Boston Blacks Petition the General Court on Behalf of Three Victims
        2. 28. Caution! To the Colored People
        3. 29. Kidnapping in the City of New York
        4. 30. The Call at Lynn
        5. 31. Liability to be Seized and Treated as Slaves
        6. 32. Information Wanted
        7. 33. Rally in Boston
        8. 34. The Chivalrous James B. Gray
        9. 35. Association of Free Blacks to Aid Fugitive Slaves Freedmen Association, Boston, 1845
        10. 36. Kidnapping in Harrisburg
  14. Part V: Black Workers in Specific Trades
    1. Part V: Black Workers in Specific Trades
      1. Free Black Waiters
        1. 1. Meeting of the Hotel and Saloon Waiters -- Formation of a Protective Union
        2. 2. Advertisements of the Waiters Union
        3. 3. First United Association of Colored Waiters
        4. 4. Arouse Waiters: Traitors in the Camp
        5. 5. Meeting of the Waiters' Protective Union
      2. Black Seamen
        1. 6. Coloured Seamen -- Their Character and Condition, I
        2. 7. Coloured Seamen -- Their Character and Condition, II
        3. 8. Coloured Seamen -- Their Character and Condition, III
        4. 9. Coloured Seamen -- Their Character and Condition, IV
        5. 10. Coloured Seamen -- Their Character and Condition, V
        6. 11. Boarding House for Seamen
        7. 12. Coloured Sailors' Home
        8. 13. William P. Powell on the Coloured Sailor's Home
        9. 14. A Sensible Petition
        10. 15. Extract From a Letter of Wm. P. Powell, Dated on Board Packet Ship De Witt Clinton
        11. 16. Black Seamen and Alabama Law
        12. 17. Free Negroes in Louisiana
        13. 18. Colored Men in Louisiana
        14. 19. Resolutions Adopted at a Meeting of Boston Negroes, October 27, 1842
        15. 20. Free Black Seamen of Boston Petition Congress for Relief, 1843
        16. 21. "An Act for the Better Regulation and Government of Free Negroes and Persons of Color, and for Other Purposes," South Carolina, 1822
        17. 22. Laws of South Carolina Respecting Colored Seamen
        18. 23. Coloured Seamen in Southern Ports
        19. 24. The Law Regarding Colored Seamen
        20. 25. Imprisonment of British Seamen
        21. 26. The British Seamen at Charleston
        22. 27. The Case of Manuel Pereira
        23. 28. Coloured Seamen
        24. 29. The Colored Seamen Question in the House of Commons
        25. 30. Colored Seamen in South Carolina
        26. 31. Personal Account of a Black Seaman in the Port of Charleston
        27. 32. Appeal to the Public
      3. Black Caulkers
        1. 33. Strike on the Frigate Columbia
        2. 34. Black Caulkers Desert Baltimore
        3. 35. The Trouble Among the White and Black Caulkers
        4. 36. The Caulkers' Difficulty
        5. 37. The Difficulty Among the Caulkers
        6. 38. More Violence in the Baltimore Ship Yards
        7. 39. The Fell's Point Outrage
  15. Part VI: The Free Black Workers' Response to Oppression
    1. Part VI: The Free Black Workers' Response to Oppression
      1. Free Black Uplift: Unions, Cooperatives, Conventions, Schools
        1. 1. American League of Colored Laborers
        2. 2. Conventions of Colored People
        3. 3. The Quest for Equality
        4. 4. Introductory Address
        5. 5. School for Colored Youth
        6. 6. Program of the Phoenix Literary Society, New York City, 1833
        7. 7. Manual Labor School for Colored Youth
        8. 8. Committee on Education Report, 1848 National Colored Convention, Cleveland, Ohio
        9. 9. To Parents, Guardians and Mechanics
        10. 10. "Make Your Sons Mechanics and Farmers, Not Waiters, Porters, and Barbers"
        11. 11. Learn Trades or Starve
        12. 12. A Plan for an Industrial College Presented by Frederick Douglass to Harriet Beecher Stowe, March 8, 1853
        13. 13. Resolutions Adopted by Negro National Convention, Rochester, 1853
        14. 14. Report, Committee on Manual Labor, National Negro Convention, Rochester, New York, 1853
        15. 15. Plan of the American Industrial School
        16. 16. The Colored People's "Industrial College"
        17. 17. Colored National Council
      2. Integrate or Separate?
        1. 18. Editorial: The African Race in New York
        2. 19. Martin R. Delaney, "Why We Must Emigrate"
        3. 20. Frederick Douglass, "Why We Should Not Emigrate"
  16. Part VII: The Northern Black Worker During the Civil War
    1. Part VII: The Northern Black Worker During the Civil War
      1. The Worsening Status of Free Black Workers in the North
        1. 1. John S. Rock at the First of August Celebration, Lexington, Massachusetts
        2. 2. Rights of White Labor Over Black
        3. 3. "Rights of White Labor Over Black" (Rebuttal)
        4. 4. Butts and Pork-Packers and Negroes
        5. 5. Riot on the Cincinnati Levi
        6. 6. Further Rioting
        7. 7. White Fear of Emancipation
        8. 8. Black and Immigrant Competition for Jobs
        9. 9. "More Riotous and Disgraceful Conduct"
        10. 10. The Mob
        11. 11. The Disgraceful Riot in Brooklyn
        12. 12. Persecution of Negroes
        13. 13. Brutal and Unprovoked Assaults on Colored People
        14. 14. Bloody Riot in Detroit
        15. 15. Anti-Black Mob in Detroit
        16. 16. Eyewitness to the Detroit Riot
        17. 17. Strike Among the Negrophobists at the Navy Yard, Boston.
        18. 18. The Colored Sailor's Home in New York
        19. 19. Report of the Colored Sailor's Home
      2. Anti-Negro Riots in New York City
        1. 20. Trouble Among the Longshoremen
        2. 21. The Right to Work
        3. 22. Disgraceful Proceeding -- Colored Laborers, Assailed by Irishmen
        4. 23. Reign of Terror
        5. 24. "Report of the Committee of Merchants for the Relief of ColoredPeople, Suffering from the Late Riots in the City of New York"
        6. 25. Personal Recollections of the Draft Riots
        7. 26. A Personal Experience
        8. 27. The Longshoremen's Attitude Toward Blacks
        9. 28. The Colored Refugees at Police Headquarters
        10. 29. The Colored Sufferers by the Recent Riots -- Meeting of Merchants
        11. 30. "The Mob Exults"
        12. 31. The Colored Sailors' Home
        13. 32. Attempt to Drown a Negro
        14. 33. Fearful of Being Known
        15. 34. The Merchants Relief Committee
        16. 35. Employers Turn to Negroes Rather Than Irishmen Because of the Riots
        17. 36. How Blacks Should Meet the Rioters
        18. 37. Colored Orphan Asylum
      3. Blacks in the Union Army and Navy
        1. 38. Statistics of Enlisted Men
        2. 39. Occupations for Black Enlistees
        3. 40. Give Us Equal Pay and We Will Go to War
        4. 41. Twenty Per Cent Off the Wages of Colored Wagoners
        5. 42. Proscription in Philadelphia
        6. 43. Out of the Frying-Pan Into the Fire
      4. White Northerners Anticipate the Addition of Ex-Slaves to the Labor Force
        1. 44. General James S. Wadsworth to Henry J. Ramond
        2. 45. Gen. Wadsworth's Acceptance: An Editorial
        3. 46. Negro Apprenticeship
        4. 47. The Negro and Free Labor
  17. Part VIII: Condition of the Worker During Early Reconstruction
    1. Part VIII: Condition of the Black Worker During Early Reconstruction
      1. Reconstruction in the South
        1. 1. Dignity of Labor
        2. 2. Biographical Information on Black Leaders in New Orleans
        3. 3. General Schurz on Black Workers
        4. 4. Work Only for Good Employers
        5. 5. Whitelaw Reid's Observations on Newly Liberated Slaves in Selma, Alabama
        6. 6. To the Mass Meeting at the School of Liberty
        7. 7. The Labor Question
        8. 8. An Appeal to the Colored Cotton Weighers, Cotton Pressmen Generally, Levee Stevedores and Longshoremen
        9. 9. Appeal to Support the Universal Suffrage Party
        10. 10. Notice. Freedmen's Aid Association of New Orleans
        11. 11. Short Contracts
        12. 12. The Eight Hour System
        13. 13. A Typical Labor Contract
        14. 14. Constitution of the Commercial Association of the Laborers of Louisiana
        15. 15. Labor Notes
        16. 16. To the Editor of the Workingmen's Advocate
        17. 17. From Louisiana
        18. 18. Black Ship-Builders in North Carolina
        19. 19. A Louisiana Correspondent's View of Radical Reconstruction
        20. 20. The Need for a Second Emancipation Proclamation
        21. 21. Two Letters from the South by William H. Sylvis
        22. 22. Cooperation Among the Freedmen
      2. Labor Discontent in the South
        1. 23. Regulations for Freedmen in Louisiana, 1865
        2. 24. Resolutions of the Freedmen's Aid Association of New Orleans
        3. 25. Whitelaw Reid Witnesses a Plantation "Strike"
        4. 26. Chain-Gang for "Idle Negroes"
        5. 27. The Substitute for Slavery
        6. 28. Black Wages
        7. 29. Northern Laborers -- Attention!
        8. 30. Letter to a New York Editor from a Freedman
        9. 31. Why Freedmen Won't Work
        10. 32. Complaint of Tobacco Workmen
        11. 33. The Freedmen -- A Strike Expected
        12. 34. June 18, 1866, First Collective Action of Black Women Workers
        13. 35. Meeting of Planters to Regulate the Price of Labor
        14. 36. Freedmen's Bureau Meeting in Norfolk, Virginia
        15. 37. Southern Codes for Freedmen
        16. 38. An Appeal for Justice
        17. 39. White and Black Labor Unity in New Orelans, 1865
        18. 40. A Strike in Savannah
        19. 41. Discontent Among Negro Workers
        20. 42. "A Singular Case"
        21. 43. A Difficulty Between Workingmen and a Contractor
        22. 44. "Swearing" Mower
        23. 45. The City Workingmen
        24. 46. The British Consul in Baltimore Reports on Problems Created Over Integrated Ship Crews
        25. 47. Black Stevedores Strike in Charleston, S. C.
        26. 48. Strike of the Longshoremen
        27. 49. Another Longshoremen Strike
        28. 50. "The Colored Tailors on a Rampage"
      3. Condition of Black Workers in the North During Reconstruction
        1. 51. Home for "Colored Sailors"
        2. 52. Condition of the Colored Population of New York
        3. 53. A White View of the Black Worker
        4. 54. Estimated Number of Negroes in Selected Occupations in New York City, 1867
        5. 55. Characterization of Selected Occupations for Negroes in New York City, 1867
        6. 56. Coachmen's Union League Society, Inc.
  18. Part IX: Exclusion of Blacks from White Unions During Early Reconstruction
    1. Part IX: Exclusion of Blacks from White Unions During Early Reconstruction
      1. Race Discrimination in the Cooper's Union, 1868
        1. 1. "Birds of the Feather Flock Together"--A White Cooper's View of Race
        2. 2. Caste vs. Race
      2. Lewis H. Douglass and the Typographical Union
        1. 3. Mr. Douglass and the Printers
        2. 4. The Typographical Union -- Prejudice Against Color
        3. 5. Frederick Douglass on the Rejection of His Son, Lewis
        4. 6. The Typographical Union's Justification
        5. 7. The Typographical Union Denounced
        6. 8. "Colored Printers"
        7. 9. Lavalette's Defense
        8. 10. Editorial Response to Lavalette's Defense
      3. Exclusion of Blacks from Other Unions
        1. 11. The Bricklayers and the "Colored Question"
        2. 12. Excluding Negroes from Workingmen's Associations
  19. Part X: The Demand for Equality
    1. Part X: The Demand for Equality
      1. White Labor and Black Labor: The Black Viewpoint
        1. 1. Frederick Douglass on the Problems of Black Labor
        2. 2. The Chinese in California
        3. 3. The American Trades-Unions
      2. A White Labor Voice for Black Equality
        1. 4. "Justice"
        2. 5. Negro Labor in Competition with White Labor
        3. 6. The Boston Hod-Carriers' Strike, 1865
        4. 7. "Manhood Suffrage the Only Safety for Freedom"
        5. 8. "Our True Position"
        6. 9. "The Brotherhood of Labor is Universal"
        7. 10. Equal Rights for All
        8. 11. A Just Criticism
        9. 12. Movement to Bring Black Labor North
        10. 13. Eight-Hour Men in New Orleans Encounter a Stubborn Fact
        11. 14. "The Boston Voice Again"
        12. 15. Labor Strike at Washington
        13. 16. Can White Workingmen Ignore Colored Ones?
        14. 17. The Strike Against Colored Men in Congress Street
        15. 18. Work for Labor Reformers
        16. 19. Colorphobia
        17. 20. A Workingmen's Reminder
  20. Part XI: Black Response to Colorphobia
    1. Part XI: The Black Response to Colorphobia
      1. The National Labor Union and Black Labor, 1866–1869
        1. 1. The "Colored Question" at the National Labor Union Convention, 1867
        2. 2. The Labor Congress
        3. 3. "Shall We Make Them Our Friends, or Shall Capital Be Allowed to Turn Them as an Engine Against Us?"
        4. 4. Address to the Workingmen of the National Labor Union
        5. 5. The Present Congress
        6. 6. Elizabeth Cady Stanton Chides Black Unionists
      2. 1869 Convention of the National Labor Union
        1. 7. First Delegation of Black Unionists Admitted to a White Labor Convention
        2. 8. Philadelphia Labor Convention -- Address of the Colored Delegates
        3. 9. "They Gained the Respect of All"
        4. 10. Resolution Passed at the Women's Rights Convention in Cleveland, November 26, 1869
      3. THE FIRST BLACK LABOR LEADER: ISAAC MYERS, THE BALTIMORE CAULKERS, AND THE COLORED TRADES UNIONS OF MARYLAND
        1. 11. A Biographical Sketch of Isaac Myers Career
        2. 12. The Colored Men's Ship Yard
        3. 13. Condition of the Colored People
        4. 14. The Convention of the Colored Men of the Republic
        5. 15. Colored Trades' Union in Baltimore
        6. 16. Convention of Colored Mechanics
  21. Notes and Index
  22. Notes
  23. Index

FOREWORD

KEONA K. ERVIN

Philip S. Foner, Ronald L. Lewis, and Robert Cvornyek birthed a new generation of Black labor history scholarship with the publication of The Black Worker: From Colonial Times to the Present, eight substantial volumes of documentary history. Published over the course of six years, from the late seventies to the mid-eighties, the voluminous compilation of archival materials both anticipated and reflected its moment. Writing at a time of renewed interest in labor history, Black history, and social history, and no doubt deeply influenced by the upsurge of peace, Black freedom, women’s, anti-imperialist, and workers’ rights movements during the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s, Foner, Lewis, and Cvornyek helped to ensure that the emergent “history from below” included Black workers. This multi-volume documentary history is as wide as it is deep. It is the product of a massive, Herculean effort that involved compiling and organizing thousands of pages of primary source documents and making sense of the complicated and contradictory stories they tell. In the acknowledgements that open the first volume, Foner and Lewis thank no less than 23 libraries and historical societies across the United States. They, along with Cvornyek, would go on to thank many, many more in each successive book. Theirs was big, synthesis-style, social, political, intellectual, and institutional history that tried to capture as broadly as possible the patterns, trends, and themes that made race and class, and the Black labor experience, in particular, significant, shaping forces in United States history. With its compelling perspective on the salience of Black labor history along with its sheer breadth and depth, The Black Worker was and is required reading for students of labor and working-class history and African American history.

During the eras that preceded the publication of The Black Worker, a racially exclusive academic enterprise largely ignored the scholarship produced by Black labor scholars, preventing it from reaching a wider public audience. Mainstream (white) labor history’s “Black problem” may best be defied as, simply put, erasure. Black workers were largely absent from or mere footnotes in established histories; dominant narratives presented a “house of labor” occupied primarily if not exclusively by white, male, industrial workers. What’s more, these histories tended to frame the story of the making of the American working-class as one of American trade unionism, failing to provide a full examination of most unions’ widespread practice of racial exclusion and discrimination, much less attempts by Black workers to organize their own labor. Of course, the absence of Black scholarship in mainstream accounts did not mean that Black labor scholars did not exist or were not producing works about Black labor history. Beginning in the late nineteenth century, Black social scientists such as Gertrude McDougald, Elizabeth Haynes, W.E.B. Du Bois, Abram L. Harris, Carter G. Woodson, Robert C. Weaver, and Charles H. Wesley created the field of Black labor studies.1 But the Black scholars who used social science as a weapon against the racist ideologies of their time—ideologies, we should point out, that found their basis in pseudo-scientific arguments about the nature of Black labor—were largely overlooked, though not without significant resistance. Radical scholars like Foner, who were themselves confronting their own particular forms of marginal status within mainstream academic institutions, became key contributors to the opening of fields to marginalized voices. The Black Worker should be credited with playing an influential role in shaking up the “house of labor” such that its established residents had to, in some ways, make room for newcomers.

A deep and sustained examination of the history of Black workers was a fitting choice for the editors of The Black Worker because personal and professional commitments pushed them to challenge their field of study. Countering economist John R. Commons’s and the Wisconsin School’s theory of labor history, Foner and his co-editors argued that the history of the American working class was fundamentally one of class struggle: workers were aware of their oppression by capitalism; they should act in their own economic and political interests as a subjugated class; and trade unionism could be, with its potential fully realized, the most powerful engine of social democracy for the working classes.2 The Black Worker’s editors pushed industrial unionism over craft unionism, political unionism over non-partisanship or bipartisanship, and the fundamental antagonism between labor and capital over shared interest between the two. The historical experiences of African American laborers powerfully articulated the legitimacy of such an approach. In this vein, one of the central arguments that emerges in the volumes is Black workers’ militancy. From congressional committee hearings of the late nineteenth century in which Black workers discuss their living and working conditions and make a compelling case for national advocacy, to the labor organizing and economic activism of civil rights workers such as Coretta Scott King, A. Philip Randolph, Bayard Rustin, and Martin Luther King, Jr., The Black Worker shows that Black workers’ “class consciousness”—to borrow a term in vogue at the time of its publication—was an engine of social transformation. There was a “usable past” of working-class militancy starring American labor’s neglected members, they seemed to say.

The Black Worker is a documentary history spanning from “colonial times to the present.” At the opening of each new volume, the editors rightfully point out labor history’s resurgence during the 1970s and count their work as “the first compilation of original materials which encompasses the entire history of Afro-American labor.” Foner and Lewis were right to note that, while there had been a renaissance in Black history during the 1960s and 1970s, during which the field moved into the mainstream in unprecedented fashion, studies that explicitly emphasized the history of Black labor and reached similar magnitude as The Black Worker had yet to be published. In the introduction that opens the volumes, they state the clearly important and arguably undertheorized fact that “the vast majority of Afro-Americans are, and always have been ‘workers’,” and as such, were fundamentally central to the shaping of American labor history. An obvious point under even the most hasty of reviews of African American history, yes, but the statement was, in fact, hardly inconsequential. With this observation, Foner and Lewis, and others, issued a challenge to the field of American labor history, noting its glaring oversight of Black workers. One might also say that by pointing out the irony of the preponderance of Black laborers in American history, on the one hand, and the dearth of Black labor history in mainstream accounts, on the other, Foner, Lewis, and Cvornyek were making larger observations about and issuing challenges to the basic assumptions of their field. In other words, the presence of Black laboring bodies into the precious canon of (white) labor history would yield powerful new insights about the history of class in America in the broadest and most illuminating of ways.

Divided in two major parts, with the first four volumes dedicated to antebellum history through the end of the nineteenth century and the second four to the twentieth, The Black Worker’s central themes include, most principally, Black workers in industrial slavery and the skilled trades under slavery and following emancipation; free Black workers’ experiences in the labor marketplace; Black unionism and Black workers’ role in strikes; race relations in labor unions, particularly white workers’ racial hostility and intransigence and white labor leaders’ acquiescence to such reactionary behavior; and debates over the at times fractious civil rights–labor coalition following the mid-1950s when the AFL and CIO merged and as the struggle for Black citizenship took a decidedly influential turn. The volumes also include the writings of prominent Black male political and social leaders such as W.E.B. Du Bois, Kelly Miller, Ira De A. Reid, A. Philip Randolph, and Paul Robeson, for example, as well as proceedings from Black gatherings such at the influential Black Convention Movement and the Colored National Labor Union of the nineteenth century along with sizeable compilations of important twentieth-century Black labor organizations. Documents on AFL proceedings, the organization of the CIO, and Communist trade unions, especially during the 1930s, provide a window into the ways that race and trade unionism were inextricably connected throughout the history of American unionism.

Among its greatest strengths, The Black Worker’s rich collection of primary source materials makes possible the writing of many books on various topics within Black labor history. The history of Black labor during the antebellum period comes alive through articles pulled from local newspapers in, for example, New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Louisiana, and South Carolina, and data pulled from field-defining scholars of slavery such as W.E.B. Du Bois, Edmund S. Morgan, and Ulrich B. Phillips. One learns, for instance, about the costs of maintaining industrial enslaved populations from a 1970 article published in Business History Review and about the occupations of free people of color in Georgia in 1819 from data pulled from Phillips’ A Documentary History of the American Industrial Society (1910). Passages from famed abolitionists William Wells Brown and Frederick Douglass recount the experiences of the hiring out system and other firsthand accounts document the processes of escape and the means by which enslaved persons purchased their own freedom.

Records central to grasping collective understandings of work, uplift, and racial progress as defined by Black leaders and ordinary Black workers during the late nineteenth century, when debates about racial politics were especially rich, fill the collection’s second volume. Proceedings of the Colored National Labor Union’s inaugural national conference, its second and third conventions, and meetings from local and state chapters come from records such as The Christian Recorder, The National Anti-Slavery Standard, and The New Era, while papers from Duke University’s Freedmen’s Bureau Project, and statistics from the National Bureau of Labor suggest the critical importance of labor to Black organizational and political life. State Black labor conventions in the late nineteenth century tell the story of what occurred in places such as Richmond, New York, Saratoga, and Alabama. Documenting the rise of local Black militancy immediately following the Civil War, the sources depict striking Black workers across the South, including, for instance, the Galveston Strike of 1877 and a strike led by Black washerwomen. Testimony from Black workers about racial terrorism in South Carolina show the centrality of Black labor to the activities of groups such as the Ku Klux Klan, while Black labor radicalism, perhaps defined narrowly as Black socialism or Black Marxism, finds articulation in a section that includes an 1877 speech by abolitionist and socialist Peter H. Clark.

The documents that make up volumes three and four show the centrality of Black unionism to the debates about labor and capital that profoundly shaped national politics in the late nineteenth and turn of the twentieth centuries. They include, for example, the testimony of Black workers to the 1883 Senate Committee on Relations between Labor and Capital and debates within the Knights of Labor about whether Black workers were influential political participants. The formation of the Knights and Black workers’ organizing in the South is told through New Orleans local papers such as the Picayune and Weekly Louisianian. Also noteworthy are Frederick Douglass’ address to the National Convention of Colored Men in Louisville, Kentucky and the work of writers who crafted editorials for the New York Freeman, New York Age, and AME Church Review. The proceedings of Knights of Labor conventions are found in local and national papers, the papers of Knights leader Terrence V. Powderly, and excerpts from his account, Thirty Years of Labor (1889). The Colored Farmers’ National Alliance, a crucial organization that inserted Black farmers into the white-dominated and racially exclusive or discriminatory “southern alliances” such as the Farmers’ alliance and the Populist or People’s Party, holds a prominent place.

The fourth volume concerns itself primarily with the robust debate within the AFL over race and the inclusion of Black workers. The documents show just how racially exclusionary were the practices of AFL-affiliated unions. If Gomperism is proven limited in such accounts, then Black worker organizing and militancy, by contrast, is shown to play a decisive role. Key turn-of-the-century strikes, for example, the New Orleans General Strike of 1892 and the Galveston Longshoreman Strike of 1898, are depicted through local and national newspaper coverage. Documents about the United Mine Workers and their unique practice of including Black workers, Black coal miners and the debate around Black strikebreaking, as well as writings by labor leaders Albion W. Tourgee, Ignatius Donnelly, and Du Bois (in this case an excerpt from his important study The Philadelphia Negro), round out the list.

The collection aptly documents Black migration, including the Exodusters movement of the late nineteenth century and the better-known Great Migration of the early twentieth century. In this case, the editors draw upon records from the United States Department of Labor and studies included in the Journal of Negro History. Congressional committee reports on the East St. Louis Race Riot of 1917, records on the Chicago Race Riot of 1919 taken from the Chicago Commission on Race Relations study, and writings in the NAACP organ The Crisis and A. Philip Randolph and Chandler Owen’s The Messenger tell the story of the precarity of Black workers’ lives during the early twentieth century, but also the ways in which they organized to navigate and oppose it. The work of notable Black labor scholars in addition to Du Bois, finds a home in the middle volumes. For example, George E. Haynes, the first African American man to earn a Ph.D. from Columbia University and Director of Negro Economics for the United States Department of Labor, and Helen B. Irvin, an expert on Black women’s labor, have writings that yield social-scientific insight. On the subject of Black women’s labor history, volume six includes a rich collection, with studies on Black women industrial workers in Philadelphia from the U.S. Department of Labor and articles written by labor intellectuals including Helen Sayre, Mary Louise Williams, Nora Newsome, and Jean Collier Brown for publications such as the National Urban League’s Opportunity and The Messenger, as well as for the Women’s Bureau. The Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters has voluminous records dedicated to it. Numerous articles from The Messenger, The New Leader, The Chicago Defender, The Pittsburgh Courier, and records from the Chicago Historical Society capture the work of the historic Black-led labor union of Pullman Porters.

Volume seven is among the richest of the collection because of the high rates of labor union mobilization and worker self-organization that went on during the 1930s and 1940s. The Congress of Industrial Organizations and its mass organizing efforts that included Black workers receives considerable attention. The organizing efforts of the Steel Workers Organizing Committee, which we learn supported federal anti-lynching legislation, the National Negro Congress, and the Southern Tenant Farmers’ Union are documented through sources drawn from Black newspapers, Communist publications such as The Daily Worker, library archives, the records of civil rights organizations, and the papers of Franklin D. Roosevelt. A. Philip Randolph’s March on Washington Movement of the 1940s and the fight over the Fair Employment Practices Committee and the series of AFL conventions in which Randolph introduced multiple anti-discrimination resolutions, reveal organizing efforts in the watershed years of wartime mobilization and the influence of industrial democracy as a widespread political aspiration. The postwar period concerns the organization of the National Negro Labor Council, which played an important role in infusing an emphasis on jobs and economic justice into a national civil rights platform, and the work of the activist Paul Robeson and the illuminating publication Freedom, his radical newspaper. The final volume delves deeply into the relation between civil rights and labor during the 1950s and 1960s. A notable collection of speeches by civil rights leaders Vernon E. Jordan, Thurgood Marshall, Martin Luther King, Jr., Roy Wilkins, and Benjamin Hooks at AFL-CIO conventions is also included. It concludes with documentation of the organizing efforts of Black and Brown hospital workers, an effort widely supported by the civil rights movement and the Black Power movement.

We should measure the significance of The Black Worker, in part, as a function of the life and times of its principal editor. The author of over 100 published works, Philip Sheldon Foner was an avowed and unapologetic Marxist labor historian.3 The son of Russian immigrants, Foner earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in History at City College and a Ph.D. in History at Columbia University under the direction of Allan Nevins, the famed two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and historian. Foner landed his first professorship at his alma mater. In 1941, City College officials fired Foner, who was one of 50 faculty members to lose their positions, and his brothers, Jack, who also taught in the history department at City College, and Moe, who worked in City College’s registrar office. His brother, Henry, a teacher in the city’s public schools, was also blacklisted. This was a prelude to a time, during the Cold War, when leftist scholars were routinely charged with Communist conspiracy and subjected to investigations, committee hearings, and expulsions from their places of employment. Although he was banned from mainstream academic institutions for more than 25 years, Foner continued to research, write, and publish during this time. Forty years after the dismissal, City College leaders issued him a formal apology.4

Following his stint at City College, Foner became co-owner of Citadel Press, weathering the turbulent McCarthy period as a self-employed writer and editor. After 26 years of being banned from employment in the academic profession, Foner became a professor at Lincoln University in Lincoln, Pennsylvania, a Historically Black College and University, where he worked during the 1960s and 1970s until his retirement. Lincoln’s graduates included Black luminaries such as Horace Man Bond, Kwame Nkrumah, Melvin B. Tolson, Langston Hughes, Thurgood Marshall, Gil Scott-Heron, and Black Arts Movement architect Lawrence (Larry) Neal. For a historian of U.S. labor and working-class history and an exile of one the country’s most important public higher education institutions, Lincoln University was a welcome home. One notes in Foner’s body of work the influence of the Black educational institution, whose students were undeniably influenced by and participants in the civil rights and Black Power revolution. A 1994 recipient of the New York Labor History Association’s lifetime achievement award, Foner was also the author of the ten-volume History of the Labor Movement in the United States, Organized Labor and the Black Worker; Women and the American Labor Movement and The Life and Writings of Frederick Douglass. He is widely recognized by historians of American labor as a key thinker in the field.5

Although his co-editors’ public roles did not match that of their colleague, Lewis’s and Cvornyek’s contributions and professional accomplishments were no less important. After earning a bachelor’s degree in Political Science and Economics at Ohio University and a master’s and doctorate in History at the University of Akron, Lewis joined the faculty at the University of Delaware, holding a joint appointment in African American Studies and History. He taught courses in African American history and produced scholarship that became an influential part of an emerging canon on race and labor. Lewis worked at the University of Delaware for the duration of the publication of The Black Worker. His 1978 co-edited volume with James E. Newton, The Other Slaves: Mechanics, Artisans and Craftsmen, obviously influenced the structure and content of The Black Worker’s volume one, which succeeded in complicating the history of Black labor under slavery by focusing on workers laboring outside the plantation regime. Following the publication of The Black Worker, Lewis published books on the history of Black coal miners and Appalachian studies and history. Earning his bachelor’s in Political Science and History a year after Lewis’s arrival to the University of Delaware, Cvornyek received a master’s degree in History at Lewis’s alma mater, the University of Akron, and later earned a master’s of philosophy in History and a doctorate in History at Columbia University. After the publication of The Black Worker, Cvornyek published books and articles on African American sports history.

The desire of the editors of The Black Worker to promote research in Black labor history was realized. The volumes became a core contribution to the growth and development of the field of Black labor studies. The Black Worker, like other publications of its time, was an act of historical recovery that helped usher in and make possible the emergence of new, influential scholarship. It is commonplace for historians of marginalized persons to assert that telling the history of their subjects isn’t simply an act of incorporation but is rather one of revision in that conceptual frameworks are rethought. Reflection on the significance of The Black Worker shows this incorporation to be no small or insignificant task. Inserting the voices and actions of the marginal into the canon of history was of monumental importance, and was a defining task of the volume editors’ generation of envelope-pushing historians and progressive and radical intellectuals. By incorporating new voices into the standard chronology of American labor history, The Black Worker helped to push the field to revise its core keywords and conceptual underpinnings.

KEONA K. ERVIN is Associate Professor of African American History at the University of Missouri.

Notes

1. Francille Rusan Wilson, The Segregated Scholars: Black Social Scientists and the Creation of Black Labor Studies, 1890–1950 (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2006).

2. Melvyn Dubofsky, “Give Us That Old Time Labor History: Philip S. Foner and the American Worker,” Labor History 26 (1985): 119–120.

3. Lawrence Van Gelder, “Philip S. Foner, Labor Historian and Professor, 84,” New York Times, December 15, 1994.

4. Van Gelder, “Philip S. Foner, Labor Historian and Professor, 84,” December 15, 1994; Robin D.G. Kelley, foreword to Philip S. Foner, Organized Labor and the Black Worker, 1619–1981 (New York: Haymarket Books, 2017), xiv.

5. Kelley, xiv.

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