PHILIP DRAY is the author of "At the Hands of Persons Unknown: The Lynching of Black America," which won the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award and made him a Pulitzer Prize finalist, and "Stealing God's Thunder: Benjamin Franklin's Lightning Rod and the Invention of America," and the coauthor of the "New York Times "Notable Book "We Are Not Afraid: The Story of Goodman, Schwerner, and Chaney, and the Civil Rights Campaign for Mississippi. "He lives in Brooklyn.
PRAISE FOR THERE IS POWER IN A UNION "Kirkus Reviews"
(starred):
Exemplary history of the American labor movement, from its
time-shrouded beginnings to its murky present.
Working in the tradition of Eric Foner and Studs Terkel, Dray
("Capitol Men: The Epic Story of Reconstruction Through the Lives
of the First Black Congressmen," 2008, etc.) tells a story of
heroes and villains. At the dawn of the republic, he writes, came
the "country's fervent hope that its democratic virtues would forge
sufficient regard between labor and capital." Alas, it would not be
so, and the author locates the origins of a homegrown labor
movement in that early avatar of the Industrial Revolution, the
mill town of Lowell, Mass.--a movement that was launched by "an
unassuming young woman off the farm" who would not take being
oppressed by the bosses. As the narrative progresses, a few trends
become apparent: the continued recalcitrance of capital when it
came to sharing wealth and the increased militancy of labor,
especially when its ranks were swelled by immigrants who had been
oppressed enough in their home countries. During the nation's
centennial year, there were massive strikes and demonstrations. One
sterling example was a "standoff" in Susquehanna, Pa., over fair
pay, which showed to the workers how powerful they were in their
ability to halt commerce over vast distances--and showed to the
bosses how "clearing railroad tracks of belligerent people required
soldiers with guns." Dray revisits some of the usual stations on
labor's way, from Lowell to Ludlow, from Haymarket Square to the
ill-fated 1981 PATCO strike, but he also capably introduces
lesser-known incidents and characters into the picture, as well as
unexpected foes of organized labor, such as Bobby Kennedy.
In the end, Dray's account is evenhanded--not all bosses are bad,
not all activists good--but it is clear where his sympathies lie,
especially in his prescriptions for a renewed internation
ADVANCE PRAISE FOR THERE IS POWER IN A UNION
"Philip Dray’s big and bold history of organized labor in America
splendidly retells a story – or a multitude of stories – badly in
need of retelling. The labor movement’s decline in recent decades
has accompanied a great national amnesia about all that the
movement achieved for the nation. That amnesia threatens those
achievements, so Dray’s book is timely as well as gripping."
—Sean Wilentz, Sidney and Ruth Lapidus Professor of History at
Princeton University and author of "Chants Democratic: New York
City and the Rise of the American Working Class" and the
forthcoming "Bob Dylan in America."
"The unending struggle between unions and big business has never
been more vividly told. Philip Dray is a marvelous story teller who
brings history memorably alive, and you will not soon forget the
tales of murder and greed, commitment and sacrifice, that fill
these pages. But this is more than history
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