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For eight days in March 1970, over 200,000 postal workers staged an
illegal "wildcat" strike-the largest in United States history-for
better wages and working conditions. Picket lines started in New
York and spread across the country like wildfire. Strikers defied
court injunctions, threats of termination, and their own union
leaders. In the negotiated aftermath, the U.S. Post Office became
the U.S. Postal Service, and postal workers received full
collective bargaining rights and wage increases, all the while
continuing to fight for greater democracy within their unions.
Using archives, periodicals, and oral histories, Philip Rubio shows
how this strike, born of frustration and rising expectations and
emerging as part of a larger 1960s-1970s global rank-and-file labor
upsurge, transformed the post office and postal unions. It also led
to fifty years of clashes between postal unions and management over
wages, speedup, privatization, automation, and service. Rubio
revives the 1970 strike story and connects it to today's postal
financial crisis that threatens the future of a vital 245-year-old
public communications institution and its labor unions.
This book brings to life the important but neglected story of
African American postal workers and the critical role they played
in the U.S. labour and black freedom movements. Historian Philip
Rubio, a former postal worker, integrates civil rights, labour, and
left movement histories that too often are written as if they
happened separately. Centred on New York City and Washington, D.C.,
the book chronicles a struggle of national significance through its
examination of the post office, a workplace with facilities and
unions serving every city and town in the United States. Black
postal workers--often college-educated military veterans--fought
their way into postal positions and unions and became a critical
force for social change. They combined black labour protest and
civic traditions to construct a civil rights unionism at the post
office. They were a major factor in the 1970 nationwide postal
wildcat strike, which resulted in full collective bargaining rights
for the major postal unions under the newly established U.S. Postal
Service in 1971. In making the fight for equality primary, African
American postal workers were influential in shaping today's post
office and postal unions.
For eight days in March 1970, over 200,000 postal workers staged an
illegal "wildcat" strike-the largest in United States history-for
better wages and working conditions. Picket lines started in New
York and spread across the country like wildfire. Strikers defied
court injunctions, threats of termination, and their own union
leaders. In the negotiated aftermath, the U.S. Post Office became
the U.S. Postal Service, and postal workers received full
collective bargaining rights and wage increases, all the while
continuing to fight for greater democracy within their unions.
Using archives, periodicals, and oral histories, Philip Rubio shows
how this strike, born of frustration and rising expectations and
emerging as part of a larger 1960s-1970s global rank-and-file labor
upsurge, transformed the post office and postal unions. It also led
to fifty years of clashes between postal unions and management over
wages, speedup, privatization, automation, and service. Rubio
revives the 1970 strike story and connects it to today's postal
financial crisis that threatens the future of a vital 245-year-old
public communications institution and its labor unions.
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