Guide to the ACTWU's Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs Records,
1976-1995

Collection Number: 5619/025

Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives
Cornell University Library

Contact Information:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives
Martin P. Catherwood Library
227 Ives Hall
Cornell University
Ithaca, NY 14853
(607) 255-3183
kheel_center@cornell.edu
http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/library/kheel
Compiled by:
Kheel Staff
Date completed:
May 19, 2010
EAD encoding:
Randall Miles, July 2010

© 2010 Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library


DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title:
ACTWU's Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs Records, 1976-1995
Collection Number:
5619/025
Creator:
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs
Quantity:
4 linear feet
Forms of Material:
Correspondence, reports, publications.
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library
Abstract:
This collection consists of correspondence, reports, newspaper clippings, and files from the Office of Corporate and Financial Affiars of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textiles Workers' Union. There is also a small amount of material from ACWA's Office of Corpoarate and Financila Affairs scattered throughout the collections
Language:
Collection material in English


ACWA/ACTWU ORGANIZATIONAL HISTORY

The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, the most significant union representing workers in the men's clothing industry, was founded in New York City in 1914 as a breakaway movement from the United Garment Workers. Radical and immigrant workers in the tailors’ and cutters’ locals were the core of the seceding group, which advocated industrial unionism and economic strikes in opposition to the UGW’s craft organization, which they saw as conservative and timid. Their diverging views had come to the fore during the historic 1910 dispute at the Chicago firm Hart, Schaffner, and Marx. The opposition called the strike against the UGW leadership’s advice, and reached a path-breaking agreement with management that established an arbitration system to settle disputes.
Members flocked to the new union. Around 50,000 strong at its founding, by 1920 the ACWA counted about 170,000 members. Initially composed mostly of immigrants of Jewish European descent with Socialist leanings, the ACWA quickly welcomed members of a great number of nationalities and diverse backgrounds. Like in other garment unions, most workers and many members were women, but the leadership was predominantly male, a situation that did not change for many decades. Early on the union adopted a centralized administrative structure combined with industrial unionism, with the joint boards’ by-laws having precedence over those of locals.
Espousing a philosophy perhaps brought over by its early immigrant socialist members, the Amalgamated went beyond bread and butter issues and adopted a distinctive form of social unionism that was largely absent in the American labor movement. Starting in the 1920s, it provided educational opportunities and recreational facilities for its members, as well as services such as an insurance plan, banks offering personal loans at low interest rates, low-cost housing cooperatives, medical clinics, and even union-owned restaurants.
Sidney Hillman was the first president of the new union and the most important officer in its history. He applied his experience as bargaining representative in Chicago to the whole industry. Under his leadership the union made significant strides in securing better wages and working conditions for its members, and at the same time it consolidated gains and provided stability to the industry through the widespread adoption of the arbitration system tested at Hart, Schaffner, and Marx. Hillman paid close attention to industry issues, such as production, pricing, and marketing. In order to help management meet the competition of non-union firms, the union conducted studies of efficiency, work methods, and factory costs. Letters to the official publication of the union, Advance, document the controversy that ensued within the union over what was perceived to be collaboration with management.
Hillman also understood the importance of labor’s involvement in national affairs and political action. In the 1920s the ACWA sent delegates to the Conference for Progressive Political Action and to the Farmer-labor party conventions. Although many members and officers were Socialists, the union stopped short of officially endorsing the party. Communist attempts at gaining influence within the union were firmly curbed. Hillman’s participation in national affairs and politics became prominent during the New Deal, when he became a close advisor to Franklin D. Roosevelt on labor and economic issues. He also served on the board of the National Recovery Administration. Later, during World War II, he helped establish the Labor’s Non Partisan League. He was also named associate director of the Office of Production Management, which assisted in mobilizing the nation's resources for the war effort. Hillman’s prestige perhaps reflected the healthy condition of his union, which by the end of the conflict was strong and stable.
During the post World War II period the union faced a number of significant challenges. Membership continued to grow (peaking at 395,000 in 1968), but the union’s political influence and visibility in national affairs declined. In their never ending pursuit of lower production costs, many firms relocated to the South, forcing the union to engage in large organizing efforts. Simultaneously, signs began to appear of changes that would lead to the almost complete demise of the domestic apparel industry and, ultimately, to the erosion of union membership. Foreign imports of cheap clothing goods steadily grew in the 1950s and 1960s, and mushroomed in the following two decades, plunging employment in the apparel sector into a steady decline. Union efforts to stem the tide included Buy American campaigns and extensive lobbying in Congress, but they were to no avail. In 1976, the ACWA merged with the Textile Workers of America to become the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. Despite successful and much publicized nationwide actions such as the Farah boycott and the J.P. Stevens corporate campaign, the woes threatening the union’s existence continued unabated. The fate of the domestic industry was sealed in the late 1970s and the 1980s by the flight of firms chasing tax breaks and cheap labor abroad. By 1995, when ACTWU voted to merge with the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, their combined membership was 350,000. The new Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE!) seemed poised to infuse new life in a troubled union.

SUBJECTS

Names:
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union --Archives
Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America --Archives
Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union. Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs --Archives
Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America. Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs --Archives
Barrett Resources Corporation --Archives
Dixie Yarns --Archives
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. --Archives
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union --Archives
Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees --Archives
Union of Needletrades, Industrial, and Textile Employees. Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs --Archives
UNITE (Organization) --Archives
United States. Occupational Safety and Health Administration --Archives

Subjects:
Textile workers--Labor unions--New York (State)
Clothing workers--Labor unions--New York (State)

Form and Genre Terms:
Records
Correspondence


INFORMATION FOR USERS

Access Restrictions:
Access to the collections in the Kheel Center is restricted. Please contact a reference archivist for access to these materials.
Restrictions on Use:
This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.
Cite As:
ACTWU's Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs Records, #5619/025. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library.

RELATED MATERIALS

Related collections:
5619: Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America
All other 5619 collections.
And 6000/026: UNITE's Office of Corporate and Financial Affairs Records

CONTAINER LIST

Date
Description
Container
1991
Cannon Retirees for Full Pensions
Box 1 Folder 1
1991
Congressional Hearing on Insurance Company Failures
Box 1 Folder 2
Pension Plans
1986-1988
Political Contributions to Terry Sanford
Box 1 Folder 3
1991
North Carolina Activity on Pension Plans
Box 1 Folder 4
1990
Congressional Reports and Polls
Box 1 Folder 5
1990
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin, International Union of Electronic, Electrical, Salaried, Machine and Furniture Workers
Box 1 Folder 6
1990-1991
First Executive Corp.
Box 1 Folder 7
1991
Newspaper Articles on Pension Plans
Box 1 Folder 8
1985-1991
Insurance Forum, Critique
Box 1 Folder 9
1991
10-K Report
Box 1 Folder 10
1991
Senate Subcommittee on Labor, Retirement Issue
Box 1 Folder 11
1991
Insurance Commissioner of the State of California
Box 1 Folder 12
1991
North Carolina Life and Accident and Health Insurance Guaranty Association
Box 1 Folder 13
1991
Senator Terry Sanford Hearing
Box 1 Folder 14
1991
Annuity Information
Box 1 Folder 15
1986-1992
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.
Box 1 Folder 16
1984-1991
First Executive Fines
Box 1 Folder 17
1986
Insurance Company Records
Box 1 Folder 18
1991
8-K Report
Box 1 Folder 19
1990
Terry Sanford, Political Contributions
Box 1 Folder 20
1991
Cardiss Collins, Hearing
Box 1 Folder 21
1991
California Conservatorship Filings
Box 1 Folder 22
1988
The Insurance Forum Vol. 15, No. 10
Box 1 Folder 23
1991
Sanford Hearing, Testimony
Box 1 Folder 24
1990
First Executive Corp. Legal Documents
Box 1 Folder 25
1991
Press Release on Union Lies
Box 1 Folder 26
1991
FOIA Request and Response
Box 1 Folder 27
1991
Department of Labor Complaint
Box 1 Folder 28
1991
FOIA Information
Box 1 Folder 29
1991-1992
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Economic Benefits
Box 1 Folder 30
1987-1988
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Stock Ownership
Box 1 Folder 31
1984-1987
Uniform Commercial Code Filings
Box 1 Folder 32
1991
Insurance and Pension FOIAs
Box 1 Folder 33
1992
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Health and Safety Issues
Box 1 Folder 34
1990-1992
US District Court of Northern California, Kayes v. Pacific Lumber Co.
Box 1 Folder 35
EEOC, Americans with Disabilities Act
1986
First Annuity Corp. Proposal
Box 1 Folder 36
1993
Shop Floor Literature
Box 1 Folder 37
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Takeover Articles
Box 1 Folder 38
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Articles
Box 1 Folder 39
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Takeover
Box 1 Folder 40
1993
NLRB Complaint on Fieldcrest Cannon's Unfair Labor Practices
Box 1 Folder 41
1991
Newspaper Articles on the Cannon Retirement Issue
Box 1 Folder 42
1990
Cannon Retirement Program
Box 1 Folder 43
Notes on Meetings with Bob Giolito and Ian Lanoff
Box 1 Folder 44
1982-1991
Notes on Fieldcrest Documents
Box 1 Folder 45
1986
5310 Termination Notice
Box 1 Folder 46
1991
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Economic Benefits
Box 1 Folder 47
1986-1989
ACTWU v. David Murdock
Box 2 Folder 1
1991-1992
UFCW and Sweet Sue Kitchens, Inc.
Box 2 Folder 2
1993-1995
B&C Associates and Lee Apparel Co.
Box 2 Folder 3
1989-1994
B&C Associates, Tultex
Box 2 Folder 4
1986-1988
Robert Brown and South Africa
Box 2 Folder 5
1990-1991
NLRB, Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.
Box 2 Folder 6
1990-1997
B&C Associates and Robert Brown
Box 2 Folder 7
1988-1993
Rowan County Profile
Box 2 Folder 8
1985
Review of Haynesworth File
Box 2 Folder 9
1990-1991
Airplane Information
Box 2 Folder 10
1987-1990
Fitzgibbons' Businesses
Box 2 Folder 11
1991
Fitzgibbons' Union Connections
Box 2 Folder 12
1986
Navy Ships and Cannon Mills Co.
Box 2 Folder 13
1987-1991
Army Contracts
Box 2 Folder 14
1988-1991
Government Contracts, Terms and Conditions
Box 2 Folder 15
1985-1992
Government Contracts with Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.
Box 2 Folder 16
1987-1991
Navy Contracts
Box 2 Folder 17
1985-1987
Communication on Cannon Workers Pension Plans
Box 2 Folder 18
1993
B&C Associates, Ball and Chain pamphlet
Box 2 Folder 19
1991
Concerned Citizens, Payments to Publishing Companies
Box 2 Folder 20
1982-1993
Cannon Mills, Plant Closing
Box 2 Folder 21
1993
Confidentiality Agreement, Amoskeag Co. and Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.
Box 2 Folder 22
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Confidential Preliminary Offering of Stock Shares
Box 2 Folder 23
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Stock Shares
Box 2 Folder 24
1993
ACTWU Stock Ownership
Box 2 Folder 25
1993
Union Bid, ESOP
Box 2 Folder 26
Notes and Letters
1993
401(k) Plan Design
Box 2 Folder 27
1993
Legal Research on Fieldcrest Cannon and Amoskeag
Box 2 Folder 28
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Stockholders Annual Meeting
Box 2 Folder 29
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Collective Bargaining
Box 2 Folder 30
1992
Fieldcrest Cannon Stock Offering and Senior Debentures
Box 2 Folder 31
1993
Law Suit, Rand v. Fieldcrest Cannon
Box 2 Folder 32
1990
Coleman Co., Withdrawal of Annuity Plan
Box 2 Folder 33
1987-1995
Fieldcrest Cannon, Health and Safety Data
Box 2 Folder 34
1993
US District Court of Southern New York, ACTWU v. Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc.
Box 2 Folder 35
1994
Newspaper Articles, Court rules against Fieldcrest
Box 2 Folder 36
1991
Newspaper Articles, First Executive Insurance Cuts and Fieldcrest Protests
Box 2 Folder 37
1993
Newspaper Articles, Fieldcrest Cannon
Box 2 Folder 38
1991-1993
Newspaper Articles, Cannon Retirement Cuts
Box 2 Folder 39
1991
Anti-Union and Pro-Union Campaigns, Fieldcrest
Box 2 Folder 40
1990
Fieldcrest Cannon Employee, Retirement Plan Documents
Box 3 Folder 1
1989
Court Hearings, Recorded Testimonies
Box 3 Folder 2
1986
Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Communications on Pensions
Box 3 Folder 3
1992
ACTWU Law Suit Settlement Distribution
Box 3 Folder 4
1986
Murdock Lawsuit, Fieldcrest Filings
Box 3 Folder 5
1990-1991
Murdock Lawsuit, Settlement Documents
Box 3 Folder 6
1985-1991
Murdock Lawsuit Complaint
Box 3 Folder 7
1991
Fieldcrest Cannon, Settlement Distribution List
Box 3 Folder 8
1989
Murdock Lawsuit, Plaintiff's Request for Production of Documents
Box 3 Folder 9
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Strike Threat, Newspaper Articles
Box 3 Folder 10
1991
Pension Problem, Miscellaneous Documents
Box 3 Folder 11
1986
Letters Regarding Cannon Holding Corporation and the SEC Filing
Box 3 Folder 12
1989
ACTWU v. Murdock, Interrogatories
Box 3 Folder 13
1989
ACTWU v. Murdock, Deposition of R. Derwood Bost
Box 3 Folder 14
1989-1990
ACTWU v. Murdock, Answer of Defendants and Plaintiff's Memorandum
Box 3 Folder 15
1989
ACTWU v. Murdock, Deposition of Murdock
Box 3 Folder 16
1989
ACTWU v. Murdock, Request for Production Documents and Deposition of Messmer
Box 3 Folder 17
1979-1990
ACTWU v. Murdock, Deposition of Messmer and Other Documents
Box 3 Folder 18
1980-1986
ACTWU v. Murdock, Keystone Pension and Newspaper Articles
Box 3 Folder 19
1980-1989
ACTWU v. Murdock, Deposition of Brandon Jones and Trustee Documents
Box 3 Folder 20
1984
ACTWU v. Murdock, Kaiser Cement
Box 3 Folder 21
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Strike, Press
Box 3 Folder 22
1980-1991
Newspaper Articles on Murdock
Box 3 Folder 23
1982-1988
Fieldcrest Mills, Press Before Cannon
Box 3 Folder 24
1982-1987
Murdock, Press
Box 3 Folder 25
1993
Newspaper Articles on ACTWU Organizing Campaign, K-Town
Box 3 Folder 26
1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Organizing
Box 3 Folder 27
1993
ACTWU v. Fieldcrest Cannon, Inc. Lawsuit Complaint
Box 3 Folder 28
1986-1991
Battle over Trusts, Preparation Notes
Box 3 Folder 29
1992
Fieldcrest Cannon under the Securities Exchange Act, Form S-3
Box 3 Folder 30
1991
Cannon Pension Payments, Press Articles and Documents
Box 3 Folder 31
1991
Future Cannon Suit, Sigman and Lewis
Box 3 Folder 32
1985-1987
Reference Documents on Pensions
Box 3 Folder 33
1989-1997
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, Asbestos
Box 3 Folder 34
1993-1994
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, Asbestos in Columbus, GA
Box 3 Folder 35
1989-1996
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, North Carolina Plant, Employee Background
Box 3 Folder 36
1987-1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, Asbestos in Union Plants
Box 3 Folder 37
1987-1993
Fieldcrest Cannon, Asbestos
Box 3 Folder 38
OSHA regulations and fines
1995-1997
Fieldcrest Cannon, Worker Background
Box 3 Folder 39
1982-1984
Cannon Asbestos Survey
Box 4 Folder 1
1977-1983
Cannon, Compressed Air Violations
Box 4 Folder 2
1986-1993
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, Paul Gundlach
Box 4 Folder 3
1989-1993
Virginia Workers' Compensation
Box 4 Folder 4
1990-1992
Asbestos Reports, North Carolina Department of Environment, Health and Natural Resources
Box 4 Folder 5
1993-1995
North Carolina, OSHA Printout
Box 4 Folder 6
1976-1995
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 7
Plant 1
1975
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 8
Plant 4
1976
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 9
Plant 6
1974
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 10
Plant 5
1976
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 11
Plant 9
1983
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 12
Plant 10
1976
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 13
Plant 11
1983
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 14
Plant 15
Asbestos, Health Background Information
Box 4 Folder 15
1976
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 16
Plant 17
1982
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 17
East Stadium Dr.
1983
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 18
Draper Sheet
1977
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 19
Plant 14
1977
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 20
Karastan
1980
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 21
Greigg Mill
1973
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 22
Alexander Sheeting
1974
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 23
Greenville, NC
1974
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 24
Smithfield Auto-Blanket
1994
OSHA Citations
Box 4 Folder 25
Riverside Dr
1995
OSHA, Department of Labor Printout
Box 4 Folder 26
Alabama
1995
OSHA, Department of Labor Printout
Box 4 Folder 27
Georgia
1995
OSHA, Department of Labor Printout
Box 4 Folder 28
Virginia
1989
First Piedmont Report on Fieldcrest Cannon, Removal of Ceiling Tiles
Box 4 Folder 29
Fieldcrest Cannon Health and Safety, Photographs
Box 4 Folder 30
1988-1995
Summaries of Asbestos
Box 4 Folder 31
Status and Location
1986-1990
Fieldcrest Cannon Asbestos, Memos and Incidents
Box 4 Folder 32
1986-1990
Fieldcrest Cannon, Exposure to Cotton Dust and Swink Sheet
Box 4 Folder 33
1989
Fieldcrest Cannon, Dumping References
Box 4 Folder 34
1987-1994
Fieldcrest Cannon, Asbestos Monitoring Reports
Box 4 Folder 35
Maps of Plants and Facilities
Box 4 Folder 36
1995
S&ME, Inc. Report
Box 4 Folder 37
1982-1993
Plant 7 Surveys
Box 4 Folder 38
1982-1988
Plant 1 Surveys
Box 4 Folder 39
1982-1991
Swink Sheet Surveys
Box 4 Folder 40
1994
S&ME, Asbestos Survey on Mill #5
Box 4 Folder 41
1989-1996
United Paperworkers International Union and James River Corp.
Box 4 Folder 42
1997
Fieldcrest Cannon, Union Flyers
Box 4 Folder 43
1991-1993
Bangor & Arostoock
Box 4 Folder 44
1994
Podesta Associates, Inc.
Box 4 Folder 45
1992-1993
Walmart Court Decisions and Newspaper Articles
Box 4 Folder 46
1993
Walmart, Original Articles on Proxy Votes
Box 4 Folder 47
1993
Walmart Settlement Decisions
Box 4 Folder 48
1991
Walmart, Proxy and SEC Notes
Box 4 Folder 49
1991-1992
Walmart, EEO Lawsuit
Box 4 Folder 50
1981-1992
Walmart, EEO Research
Box 4 Folder 51
1992
Walmart, Lawsuit
Box 4 Folder 52
ACTWU, Jennifer Florin
1992
ACTWU v. Walmart, Lawsuit
Box 4 Folder 53
1988-1989
Walmart, SEC Form 10-K Annual Reports
Box 4 Folder 54
1989-1990
Walmart Annual Meeting, Lichtenberg
Box 4 Folder 55
1990
Walmart, Annual Meeting Reports and Documents
Box 4 Folder 56
1990-1993
Walmart Litigation Documents
Box 4 Folder 57
1992-1994
Walmart, SEC Form 10-Q and Form 10-K Annual Reports
Box 4 Folder 58
1990
ACTWU, ILGWU and Zensen, 6th Joint Conference
Box 4 Folder 59
Honolulu, HI