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KNIGHTS
OF LABOR
In 1869, Uriah Stephens and five
other members of the Philadelphia Garment
Cutters' Association founded the Noble
Order of the Knights of Labor. In its
beginning, the union practiced rituals and
ceremonies common to mystical cults and
fraternal orders of the time. As the
association increased in size, its
increasingly mainstream membership rejected
the more ritualistic elements of the
organization, and eventually adopted a more
business-like structure. The organization
was officially reorganized in 1886, and was
renamed the Knights of Labor.
In 1886 some of the groups members were
involved in a strikers' riot in Haymarket
Square, Chicago. The violent nature of this
riot severely tarnished the organization's
reputation for peaceful and practical
protest.
This, combined with competition from
other unions, notably the American
Federation of Labor, sent the organization
into permanent decline.
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