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Labor Heroines: Ten Women Who Led the STRUGGLE booklet

 Collection
Identifier: Mss-071

Scope and Contents Note

This item is a 31-page booklet titled "Labor Heroines: Ten Women Who Led The STRUGGLE," by Joyce Maupin, illustrated by Anne Garson, and published by the Union W.A.G.E. Educational Committee in Berkeley, California in 1974. It is a compilation of articles previously printed as part of a historical series in the Union W.A.G.E. newspaper. The articles within focus on the lives of Sarah Bagley, Augusta Lewis, Kate Mullaney, Leonora Barry, Hannah O’Day, Clara Lemlich, Rose Schneiderman, Mother Jones (Mary Harris Jones), Agnes Nestor, and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. The booklet is accompanied by a one-page flier advertising publications for sale by Union W.A.G.E., including this item. The flier also describes the purpose and goals of the organization.

Dates

  • Creation: 1974

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open for research.

Historical Note

The Union Women’s Alliance to Gain Equality (Union W.A.G.E.) was founded on International Women’s Day, March 8, 1971. It was a politically non-partisan organization of women trade unionists organized to fight discrimination on the job, in unions, and in society. Union W.A.G.E. was dedicated to achieving equal rights, pay, and opportunities for “working women," a broadly defined term that included housewives, unemployed and retired women, and women receiving government assistance. Although the organization considered itself to be national in scope, the majority of its membership as well as its headquarters were located in the San Francisco Bay Area in California. Union W.A.G.E. published a popular bi-monthly newspaper that focused on working women’s issues from a feminist and labor movement perspective and sponsored educational conferences and events. These events focused on issues such as organizing non-union workplaces, fighting sexism on the job and in the unions, preventing job-related health hazards, and promoting women’s labor history.

“Labor Heroines: Ten Women Who Led The STRUGGLE," was written by Joyce Maupin (1921-1998). Maupin was a lifelong activist and a founder of Union W.A.G.E. As editor of the organization’s newspaper, she authored regular columns on “labor heroines” in order to share with a younger generation the history of women in the labor movement.

Extent

0.04 Linear Feet (1 folder)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The Union Women’s Alliance to Gain Equality (Union W.A.G.E.) was a politically non-partisan organization of women trade unionists organized to fight discrimination on the job, in unions, and in society. This item is a 31-page booklet titled "Labor Heroines: Ten Women Who Led The STRUGGLE," by Joyce Maupin, published by the Union W.A.G.E. Educational Committee in Berkeley, California in 1974.

Title
Labor Heroines: Ten Women Who Led the Struggle
Status
Completed
Author
Laura Edgar
Date
2019
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
Finding aid written in English.

Repository Details

Part of the University of Puget Sound, Archives & Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Collins Memorial Library
1500 N. Warner Street #1021
Tacoma 98416-1021 United States us