"Building a Union in the Hospitals: the Organization of Local 1199 at Montefoire Hospital,
1948-1958" Manuscript, 1948-1958
Collection Number: 5520m
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Cornell University Library
DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY
Title:
"Building a Union in the Hospitals: the Organization of Local 1199 at Montefoire Hospital,
1948-1958" Manuscript, 1948-1958
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Collection Number:
5520m
Abstract:
First part of a continuing study of the roots and impact of unionization in New York
City's voluntary hospitals.
Creator:
Fink, Leon
Greenberg, Brian
Quanitities:
1 folders
Language:
Collection material in English
This collection consists of the first part of a continuing study of the roots and
impact of unionization in New York City's voluntary hospitals, by Leon Fink and Brian
Greenberg.
Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference
archivist for access to these materials.
This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and
Procedures for Document Use.
INFORMATION FOR USERS
"Building a Union in the Hospitals: the Organization of Local 1199 at Montefoire Hospital,
1948-1958" Manuscript #5520m. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and
Archives, Cornell University Library.
Related Collections: 5206: Local 1199 Records 5510: Local 1199 Records
1199: The National Health Care Workers' Union was an American labor founded as the
Drug, Hospital, and Health Care Employees Union-District 1199 by Leon J. Davis for
pharmacists in New York City in 1932. The union organized all workers in drug stores
on an industrial basis, including pharmacists, clerks, and soda jerks. The union led
pioneering pickets and strikes against racial segregation and racially discriminatory
hiring in Harlem and elsewhere in New York City during the 1930s.
Since 1199 was a "left-led" union, its leadership was investigated by the House Un-American
Activities Committee in 1948 for Communist "infiltration." 1199 was a tiny local at
the time, however, and during the expulsions of large left-led unions from the Congress
of Industrial Organizations (CIO]) in the 1940s, 1199 as a local eventually found
shelter under the auspices of the Retail, Wholesale, and Department Store Union. In
the late 1950s, the drugstore-based union launched large-scale organizing drives at
voluntary hospitals in New York, mobilizing a heavily African-American and Puerto
Rican-American workforce in the first flush of the postwar Civil Rights Movement.
Martin Luther King, Jr. famously described 1199 as "my favorite union".[1] Coretta
Scott King became the honorary chair of 1199's organizing campaigns as it sought to
expand outside of New York City beginning the late 1960s.
The union's first campaign outside of New York City was the formation of District
1199B in Columbia, South Carolina in 1969. The union led a strike there that never
led to a contract, but had success in creating new 1199 districts in Upstate New York,
Philadelphia (and later other parts of Pennsylvania), Connecticut, Rhode Island, West
Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio, and elsewhere.
Serious faction fights broke out within the flagship New York local and among other
1199 locals after the retirement of the union's original leadership. 1199 eventually
left the Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union to form a short-lived National
Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees during the 1980s, but its constituent
locals soon thereafter sought mergers with other unions.
Most 1199 locals joined the Service Employees International Union to become 1199SEIU
United Healthcare Workers East; 1199C in Philadelphia became the largest 1199 local
to join the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. The large
flagship New York local remained independent, until joining SEIU in 1998. Dennis Rivera
led the union for many years.
Names:
Fink, Leon, 1948-
Greenberg, Brian
Mitchell, Theodore
Davis, Leon, 1907-
Foner, Moe, 1915-
Dubin, Marshall
Harris, Harold
Codero, Salvadore
Cruz, Emerito
Downes, Kenneth
Kosloski, Al
Cole, Annie
Montefiore Hospital and Medical Center
Subjects:
Medical personnel -- Labor unions -- United States
CONTAINER LIST
Container
|
Description
|
Date
|
|
Box 1 |
"Building a Union in the Hospitals: The Organization of Local 1199 at Montefiore Hospital,
1948-1958"
|
||
Scope and Contents
By Leon Fink and Brian Greenberg; 66 pages; undated.
|