History
of the Labor Movement in Oklahoma
The
legacy of working Oklahomans is as varied and broad as the people
whose skill and energy built our state. Their contributions are
something all Oklahomans can take pride in. After more than 100
years of playing an active role in virtually every aspect of our
state's history, Oklahoma's working men and women can look to
the future with a sense of accomplishment and hope.
By
the turn of the 20th century, organized workers were
playing an increasingly important role in territorial political
affairs, electing union men as mayors or city council representatives.
Labor
was to play a prominent role in Oklahoma's drive for statehood,
which resulted in the state entering the union with a reputation
of having some of the most progressive labor laws in the country.
The first session of the state legislature passed a number of
far-reaching measures, including laws establishing state mining
and factory inspectors, making school attendance compulsory for
children, regulating the use of strikebreakers during labor disputes,
and outlawing the blacklisting of unions sympathizers by employers.
Difficult
years lay ahead. Following World War I, unemployment soared in
Oklahoma and many workers were forced to accept wage cuts. Ethnic
and religious bigotry was fanned by the rise of the Ku Klux Klan.
Throughout the 1920s, advocates of the "open" or nonunion
shop slowly gained the upper hand and unionism became a dead letter
in many industries.
The
Great Depression hit Oklahoma's workers hard. By 1934, more than
300,000 Oklahomans were unemployed, which was 42 percent of the
total workforce. In 1936 a new force appeared on the Oklahoma
labor scene - the Committee for Industrial Organization (CIO).
In Oklahoma, the principal CIP unions included the miners, the
oil workers, the smelter workers, the glass workers, as well as
tenant farmers and farm workers. As a result of the aggressive
organizing drives by these and other unions, thousands of Oklahoma
workers joined unions for the first time. Butthe CIO's tactic
of organizing all the workers in an industry regardless of craft
eventually led its members to leave the American Federation of
Labor and form their own labor confederation.
In
the years since World War II, Oklahoma's economy has been transformed
from one based largely on the production of raw materials to one
that increasingly emphasized manufacturing. Throughout the 1950s
and 1960s, Oklahoma's urban workforce continued to grow while
employment in mining and agriculture underwent relative declines.
The
labor movement in Oklahoma has undergone changes as well. In 1957
the state affiliates of the AFL and the CIO were reunited as the
Oklahoma State AFL-CIO. New groups of white-collar workers such
as government employees, service workers and teachers have begun
to play a more active role in the labor movement. Labor organizations
have continued their traditional involvement in important social
questions such as civil rights and women's issues.