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The
Beginnings of the ILA
The
Lumber Handlers
Dan Keefe
During
the time when the major unions of the late
19th century were battling
themselves into near extinction in the North
Atlantic, a new union was taking shape on
the banks of the Great Lakes. It was here,
in 1877, that an Irish tugboat worker from
Chicago named Dan Keefe formed the first
local of the Association of Lumber Handlers,
later to be known as the International
Longshoremen's Association.
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"Dan
Keefe formed the first local of the
Association of Lumber Handlers." |
That
Keefe was successful in his endeavors to
establish such a union on "The Lakes" is
truly impressive and is a monument to his
skill as an organizer and leader among men.
From the outset, Keefe faced significant
challenges, most notably the outright
hostility to unions of Chicago's
influential industrialists and the
traditional anti-union leanings of longshore
recruits from small Midwestern towns.
Nevertheless, Keefe successfully
expanded membership in the newborn union to
include large numbers of dockworkers. His
ability to accomplish what so few union
leaders in the past had been able to
do-make good on promises to improve
working conditions and wages - quickly
attracted new members to the union.
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