Summary[]
Leader of the American Federation of Labor
Exact Definition[]
An American labor union leader that was a key figure in American labor history. He founded the American Federation of Labor (AFL) and served as the group's president till his death in 1924.
Importance[]
He promoted harmony among the different unions that comprised the AFL, trying to minimize territorial battles. He also claimed workers should work with dignity and create fair opportunities. He helped secure shorter working hours and higher wages. He also encouraged members to be politically clever and elect people that would bring them closer to their objectives.
Helpful Links[]
Terms from Test 4 (Civil War and Post-War)
- Whiskey Ring
- Lincoln's 2nd Inaugural Address
- Sears and Roebuck
- Mugwumps
- “Robber Barons”
- Standard Oil
- Battle of Vicksburg
- Henry Clay Frick
- Horizontal integration
- Thomas Edison
- Bessemer Process
- Thomas Nast
- Gustavus Swift
- Thaddeus Stevens
- Black Codes
- Comstock Lode
- Haymarket Square Riot
- Tenure of Office Act
- Pinkertons
- Eugene V. Debs
- Scalawags
- Boss Tweed
- “New immigration”
- Promontory Point
- Chinese Exclusion Act, 1882
- Social Darwinism
- Gospel of Wealth
- Robert E. Lee
- Gettysburg
- Morrill Act, 1862
- Ulysses S. Grant
- Emancipation Proclamation
- John Wilkes Booth
- Appomattox Courthouse
- Sharecropping
- Sherman’s March
- 1863 Draft Riots
- Homestead Act, 1862
- 14th Amendment
- Scrip
- Freedmen’s Bureau
- Depression of 1893
- Credit Mobilier Scandal
- Compromise of 1877
- Kickbacks