Hopedale strike explained
The Hopedale strike was a labour dispute at the American loom manufacturer Draper Company in Hopedale, Massachusetts. It began in April 1913 and disintegrated after three months. The strike came amid a wave of regional strikes that year, as Draper's 2,000 employees walked out on April 1 for a nine-hour day, a 22-cent minimum hourly wage, and the end of piecework. After Draper's director, the former Massachusetts governor Eben Draper rejected their demands. The workers voted to continue their strike indefinitely, supported by the Industrial Workers of the World's Joseph Coldwell.[1]
Further reading
- Book: Chomsky . Aviva . Aviva Chomsky . The Draper Company . Linked Labor Histories: New England, Colombia, and the Making of a Global Working Class . 2008 . en . 978-0-8223-8891-3 . Duke University Press . mdy-all .
- Danker . Anita Cardillo . From Christian Utopia to Company Town: Communal Life and Corporate Paternalism in 19th and 20th Century Hopedale, Massachusetts . Utopian Studies . 4 . 72–78 . 1991 . 1045-991X . 20718950 . mdy-all .
Notes and References
- Book: Tejada . Susan . In Search of Sacco and Vanzetti: Double Lives, Troubled Times, and the Massachusetts Murder Case That Shook the World . 2012 . 978-1-55553-730-2 . Northeastern . 51–53 .