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010 _a 67020752
040 _aDLC
_cDLC
_dDLC
050 0 0 _aHD 6515.C6
_bB5 1967
082 0 0 _a331.881/1/6870924
_aB
100 1 _aBisno, Abraham,
_d1866-1929.
_eauthor
_92208
245 1 0 _aAbraham Bisno, union pioneer :
_ban autobiographical account of Bisno's early life and the beginnings of unionism in the women's garment industry /
_cwith a foreword by Joel Seidman.
260 _aMadison,
_aMilwaukee,
_aLondon :
_bThe University of Wisconsin Press,
_c1967.
300 _a244 pages :
_billustrations ;
_c22 cm.
520 _a"Abraham Bisno (1866-1929) was, at the beginning of this century, one of the best-known labor leaders in the women's garment industry of Chicago. Having fled from the poverty and pogroms of Czarist Russia, the Bisno family settled in Chicago, where in 1882 Bisno began his career amidst a jungle of low wages, oppressively long hours, unsanitary conditions, and ruthless competition. He soon developed a keen and lasting interest in improving conditions for workers and took an active part in the struggle to establish a union that would be effective in meeting their needs. He served in 1890 as the first president of the Chicago Cloak Makers' Union, one of the forerunners of the International Ladies' Garment Worker's Union. His successful experience as a union leader in Chicago and his reputation as an honest and aggressive unionist led, in 1912, to his appointment as chief clerk of the Joint Board of the ILGWU in New York. Central to Bisno's thinking was the belief that the worker was entitled to economic security, decent treatment on the job, satisfactory working conditions, and an acceptable standard of living. Where he found industrial practices in conflict with his objectives, he urged reform, by legislation and by collective bargaining. Many of his ideas, considered impractical and visionary when he first broached them, have long since been incorporated into reform plans. A self-educated man, who worked in all kinds of jobs from manual labor to research on industrial working conditions, Bisno came to know people from all walks of life, from fellow immigrants and Chicago prostitutes to the leaders of Hull House and the eminent economist John R. Commons. Bisno's account of his early life, presented here as he dictated it sometime between the years 1924 and 1926, is oral history: he describes life in Russia in the 1870s, the deplorable conditions under which the Jewish immigrants lived and worked in Chicago, and the beginnings of unionism in the women's garment industry. This realistic and unsentimental record reflects the keen observation and the forceful personality of an unusual man; it is, in the words of Professor Jack Barbash, 'of major historical importance in understanding the development of the American labor movement and the problems of the immigrant worker.'" -- from the dust jacket.
600 1 0 _aBisno, Abraham,
_d1866-1929.
_92208
650 0 _aClothing workers
_xLabor unions
_zUnited States
_xHistory.
_92209
650 0 _aLabor leaders
_zUnited States
_xBiography.
_92210
700 1 _aSeidman, Joel
_eauthor of introduction, etc.
_92211
856 4 1 _uhttps://archive.org/details/abrahambisno0000unse
_zClick here to access online
906 _a7
_bcbc
_corignew
_du
_eocip
_f19
_gy-gencatlg
942 _2lcc
_cBOOKS