Rose Schneiderman

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Rose Schneiderman
Born(1882-04-06)April 6, 1882
DiedAugust 11, 1972(1972-08-11) (aged 90)
OccupationLabor union leader
PartnerMaud O'Farrell Swartz (d. 1937)

Rose Schneiderman (April 6, 1882 – August 11, 1972) was a Polish-born American

feminist, and one of the most prominent female labor union leaders. As a member of the New York Women's Trade Union League, she drew attention to unsafe workplace conditions, following the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire of 1911, and as a suffragist she helped to pass the New York state referendum of 1917 that gave women the right to vote. Schneiderman was also a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union and served on the National Recovery Administration's Labor Advisory Board under President Franklin D. Roosevelt. She is credited with coining the phrase "Bread and Roses
," to indicate a worker's right to something higher than subsistence living.

Early years

Rose Schneiderman was born Rachel Schneiderman on April 6, 1882,

trade unionism.[1] Her brother was communal worker and editor Harry Schneiderman.[2]

Career

She returned to New York in 1903 and, with a partner worker, started organizing the women in her factory. When they applied for a charter to the

United Cloth Hat and Cap Makers Union
, the union told them to come back after they had succeeded in organizing twenty-five women. They did that within days and the union then chartered its first women's local.

Schneiderman obtained wider recognition during a citywide capmakers' strike in 1905. Elected secretary of her local and a delegate to the New York City Central Labor Union, she came into contact with the New York

International Congress of Working Women of 1919, which aimed to address women's working conditions at the first annual International Labour Organization Convention.[1]

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire

Pre-1920 poster for a Rose Schneiderman event

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911, in which 146 garment workers were burned alive or died jumping from the ninth floor of a factory building, dramatized the conditions that Schneiderman, the WTUL and the union movement were fighting. The WTUL had documented similar unsafe conditions – factories without fire escapes or that had locked the exit doors to keep workers from stealing materials – at dozens of sweatshops in New York City and surrounding communities; twenty-five workers had died in a similar sweatshop fire in Newark, New Jersey, shortly before the Triangle disaster. Schneiderman expressed her anger at the memorial meeting held in the Metropolitan Opera House on April 2, 1911, to an audience largely made up of the well-heeled members of the WTUL:

I would be a traitor to these poor burned bodies if I came here to talk good fellowship. We have tried you good people of the public and we have found you wanting. The old Inquisition had its rack and its thumbscrews and its instruments of torture with iron teeth. We know what these things are today; the iron teeth are our necessities, the thumbscrews are the high-powered and swift machinery close to which we must work, and the rack is here in the firetrap structures that will destroy us the minute they catch on fire.

This is not the first time girls have been burned alive in the city. Every week I must learn of the untimely death of one of my sister workers. Every year thousands of us are maimed. The life of men and women is so cheap and property is so sacred. There are so many of us for one job it matters little if 143 of us are burned to death.

We have tried you citizens; we are trying you now, and you have a couple of dollars for the sorrowing mothers and brothers and sisters by way of a charity gift. But every time the workers come out in the only way they know to protest against conditions which are unbearable the strong hand of the law is allowed to press down heavily upon us.

Public officials have only words of warning to us – warning that we must be intensely orderly and must be intensely peaceable, and they have the workhouse just back of all their warnings. The strong hand of the law beats us back, when we rise, into the conditions that make life unbearable.

I can't talk fellowship to you who are gathered here. Too much blood has been spilled. I know from my experience it is up to the working people to save themselves. The only way they can save themselves is by a strong working-class movement.[3]

Despite her harsh words, Schneiderman continued working in the WTUL as an organizer, returning to it after a frustrating year on the staff of the male-dominated ILGWU. She subsequently became president of its New York branch, then its national president for more than twenty years until it disbanded in 1950.

In

1920, Schneiderman ran for the United States Senate as the candidate of the New York State Labor Party, receiving 15,086 votes and finishing behind the Prohibitionist Ella A. Boole (159,623 votes) and the Socialist Jacob Panken (151,246).[4]
Her platform had called for the construction of nonprofit housing for workers, improved neighborhood schools, publicly owned power utilities and staple food markets, and state-funded health and unemployment insurance for all Americans.

Schneiderman was a founding member of the American Civil Liberties Union, and became friends with Eleanor Roosevelt and her husband, Franklin D. Roosevelt. In 1926, she was elected president of the National WTUL, a post she retained until her retirement. In 1933, she was the only woman to be appointed on the National Recovery Administration's Labor Advisory Board by President Roosevelt, and was a member of Roosevelt's "brain trust" during that decade. From 1937 to 1944 she was secretary of labor for New York State, and campaigned for the extension of social security to domestic workers and for equal pay for female workers. During the late 1930s and early 1940s, she was involved in efforts to rescue European Jews, but could only rescue a small number. Albert Einstein wrote to her: "It must be a source of deep gratification to you to be making so important a contribution to rescuing our persecuted fellow Jews from their calamitous peril and leading them toward a better future."[5]

Women's suffrage

Beginning in 1907, at the First Convention of Women Trade Unionists, Schneiderman argued that the political enfranchisement of women was necessary to address their poor working conditions. Accordingly, she helped expand the women's suffrage movement – which was primarily associated with middle-class women – to include working-class women, especially factory workers, and to incorporate the issues they faced. She became a popular speaker with suffrage organizations that focused on working women, including Harriot Stanton Blatch's Equality League of Self-Supporting Women, and the American Suffragettes, a militant group based in New York City.[6]

In 1912, on behalf of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), she traveled throughout Ohio's industrial cities, giving lectures to working men to garner support for a state suffrage referendum. To win men's support, she emphasized how beneficial the enfranchisement of working women would be for labor issues. As she later explained, "My argument to them was that if their wives and daughters were enfranchised, labor would be able to influence legislation enormously."[7] While Schneiderman was hailed as a powerful speaker, the 1912 referendum did not pass, and it would not be until 1923 – after the passage of the federal Nineteenth Amendment that granted women the right to vote - that the phrase "white male," in reference to voting, would be removed from the Constitution of Ohio.[8]

In 1917, the same year that New York would vote on a women's suffrage referendum, Schneiderman was appointed head of the industrial section of the New York Women's Suffrage Association. In this capacity, she spoke at men's union meetings (though many employers had attempted to ban men from speaking to activists), distributed literature, and instituted a series of open letters that explained how suffrage could help women improve their own working conditions. On the day of the election, Schneiderman and several friends staffed three election districts – the first time, she later wrote, that they had seen the inside of a polling station.[9] The referendum passed, granting New York's women full enfranchisement.

After the passage of the

United States Constitution, which proposed equal rights for all citizens, regardless of sex. Like other female labor activists, however, Schneiderman opposed the ERA, fearing it would deprive working women of the special statutory protections for which the WTUL had fought so hard, including the regulation of wages and hours, and protection against termination and dangerous working conditions during pregnancy.[10]

Legacy

Schneiderman is credited with coining one of the most memorable phrases of the women's movement and the labor movement of her era:

What the woman who labors wants is the right to live, not simply exist — the right to life as the rich woman has the right to life, and the sun and music and art. You have nothing that the humblest worker has not a right to have also. The worker must have bread, but she must have roses, too. Help, you women of privilege, give her the ballot to fight with.[11]

Her phrase "

textile strike of largely immigrant, largely women workers in Lawrence, Massachusetts. It was later used as the title of a song by James Oppenheim[12] and was set to music by Mimi Fariña and sung by various artists, among them Judy Collins and John Denver.[13]

In 1949, Schneiderman retired from public life, making occasional radio speeches and appearances for various labor unions, devoting her time to writing her memoirs, which she published under the title All for One, in 1967.

Schneiderman never married, and treated her nieces and nephews as if they were her own children.[14] She had a long-term relationship with Maud O'Farrell Swartz (1879–1937), another working class woman active in the WTUL, until Swartz's death in 1937. It is unknown whether this relationship was romantic or not, but Swartz and Schneiderman were indeed work and travel partners, and were invited to events together and gave gifts together. According to Historian Annelise Orleck, "Schneiderman gives no more specific description of her feelings for Swartz than to say that 'she was a wonderful companion.' Euphemistic or not, that probably provides an emotionally accurate sense of their relationship."[15]

Rose Schneiderman died in New York City on August 11, 1972, at age ninety. In an obituary appearing in The New York Times, she was credited with teaching Eleanor and Franklin D. Roosevelt "most of what they knew about unions," and having an indirect influence on the passage of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935 (also known as the Wagner Act), the National Industrial Recovery Act, and other New Deal legislation. The obituary also declared that she had done "more to upgrade the dignity and living standards of working women than any other American."[16]

Maine mural controversy

In March 2011, almost 100 years to the day after the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire,

César Chávez, the farmworkers' leader; one after Rose Schneiderman, a leader of the New York Women's Trade Union League a century ago; and one after Frances Perkins, who became the nation's first female labor secretary and is buried in Maine."[18]

On April 1, 2011, it was disclosed that a federal lawsuit had been filed in US district court seeking "to confirm the mural's current location, insure that the artwork is adequately preserved, and ultimately to restore it to the Department of Labor's lobby in Augusta".[19] On March 23, 2012, US District Judge John A. Woodcock ruled that the removal of the mural was a protected form of government speech and that LePage removing it would be no different from his refusing to read aloud a history of labor in Maine.[20] A month later, supporters of the mural filed a notice of appeal in the First Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston.[21] The court rejected the appeal on November 28, 2012.[22] On January 13, 2013, it was announced that the mural had been placed in the Maine State Museum's atrium per an agreement between the Museum and the Department of Labor, and that it would be available for public viewing the next day.[23]

Notes

  1. ^ Listed as 1884 or 1886 in some sources.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Schrom Dye, Nancy, Rose Schneiderman Archived 2011-07-02 at the Wayback Machine, Papers of the Women's Trade Union League and Its Principal Leaders, Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe College, Research Publications, 1981
  2. ^ Landman, Isaac, ed. (1943). The Universal Jewish Encyclopedia. New York, N.Y.: The Universal Jewish Encyclopedia, Inc. pp. 412–413 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ "Responsibility Is on All Citizens". The Survey. Vol. 26, no. 2. New York: Charity Organization Society. 1911. pp. 84–85. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  4. ^ Brown 1922, pp. 347–348, 350.
  5. ^ Orleck 2009.
  6. OCLC 42854618
    .
  7. ^ Schneiderman, Rose (1967). All for One. New York: P.S. Eriksson. p. 122.
  8. ^ "Ohio Women's Suffrage, Amendment 23 (September 1912)". Ballotpedia. Retrieved 2018-12-18.
  9. ^ Schneiderman, Rose (1967). All for One. New York: P.S. Eriksson. pp. 124–125.
  10. ^ Schneiderman, Rose (1967). All for One. New York: P.S. Eriksson. p. 126.
  11. ^ Eisenstein 1983, p. 32.
  12. .
  13. ^ Morris, David (April 8, 2011). "When Unions are Strong, Americans Enjoy the Fruits of Their Labor". The Huffington Post. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  14. ^ a b Efrem, Maia (April 27, 2011). "An Aunt's Legacy Is Erased in Maine: A Century after Triangle Fire, Labor Activist's Name Is Purged". The Jewish Daily Forward. New York. Archived from the original on May 2, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  15. OCLC 42854618
    .
  16. ^ "Rose Schneiderman". New York Times. August 14, 1972.
  17. ^ "Mural of Maine's Workers". The New York Times. March 23, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  18. ^ Greenhouse, Steven (March 23, 2011). "Mural of Maine's Workers Becomes Political Target". The New York Times. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  19. ^ "Fed. Lawsuit Filed over Maine Labor Mural Removal". The Boston Globe. The Associated Press. April 1, 2011. Retrieved October 27, 2017.
  20. ^ Cover, Susan M. (March 24, 2012). "Judge Sides with LePage on Mural Removal". Kennebec Journal. Augusta, Maine: MaineToday Media. Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2012.
  21. ^ "Labor Mural Plaintiffs File Notice of Appeal". Kennebec Journal. Augusta, Maine: MaineToday Media. April 24, 2012. Retrieved July 12, 2012.
  22. ^ "1st Circuit Rejects Maine Labor Mural Appeal". Bangor Daily News. Bangor, Maine. The Associated Press. November 28, 2012. Retrieved November 28, 2012.
  23. ^ "Labor Mural LePage Had Removed to Get New Home at Maine State Museum". Bangor Daily News. Bangor, Maine. January 13, 2013. Retrieved January 14, 2013.

Works cited

Further reading

External links