Guide to the ILGWU. Wilbur Daniels Papers,
1967-1973.

Collection Number: 5780/113

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:
June 2011
EAD encoding:
Cheryl Beredo, June 2011

© 2011 Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library


DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title:
ILGWU. Wilbur Daniels papers, 1967-1973.
Collection Number:
5780/113
Creator:
Wilbur Daniels, 1923-
Quantity:
2 linear feet
Forms of Material:
Records
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library
Abstract:
Contains files maintained by Wilbur Daniels while working as Associate General Counsel in the Legal Department, Assistant to the President, Director of the Master Agreements Department, Vice President, and Executive Vice-President. The bulk of the files pertain to the negotiation of agreements with companies and associations in the 1960s and 1970s.
Language:
Collection material in English


ILGWU ORGANIZATIONAL HISTORY

The International Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union was founded in New York City in 1900 by mostly Socialist immigrant workers who sought to unite the various crafts in the growing women’s garment industry. The union soon reflected changes in the sector and rapidly organized thousands of unskilled and semi-skilled women, mostly Jewish and Italian young immigrants. Exemplifying the “new unionism,” the ILGWU led two of the most widespread and best-known industrial strikes of the early Twentieth Century: the shirtwaist makers’ strike of 1909 in New York City and the cloak makers’ strike of 1910 in Chicago. The union also tried to adapt to the fragmented and unstable nature of the industry. It adopted the “protocol of peace,” a system of industrial relations that attempted to ensure stability and limit strikes and production disruption by providing for an arbitration system to resolve disputes.
The ILGWU exemplified the European-style social unionism of its founding members. They pursued bread and butter issues but provided educational opportunities, benefits, and social programs to union members as well. In 1919, the ILGWU became the first American union to negotiate an unemployment compensation fund that was contributed to by its employers. The ILGWU also pioneered in the establishment of an extremely progressive health care program for its members which included not only regional Union Health Centers but also a resort for union workers, known as Unity House. The Union also had an imaginative and pioneering Education Department which not only trained workers in traditional union techniques, but provided courses in citizenship and the English language.
David Dubinsky, an immigrant from Belarus who came to the US in 1911, provided strong leadership that led to unprecedented growth in the union during his presidency from 1932 to 1966. He led the union through successful internal anti-communist struggles, built on the ascendancy of industrial unionism by encouraging the formation of the Committee for Industrial Organization, and helped the union become an important political force in New York City and state politics, and in the national Democratic Party and Liberal Party as well.
In the period following the Second World War, the union suffered a decline in membership as manufacturers avoided unionization and took advantage of less expensive labor by moving shops from the urban centers in the northeast to the south, and later abroad. The ethnic and racial character of the ILGWU also changed as European immigrants were supplanted by Asians, Latin Americans, African- Americans, and immigrants from the Caribbean.
In July 1995 the ILGWU merged with the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU) at a joint convention, forming UNITE (Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees). At the time the new union had a membership of about 250,000 in the United States, Canada, and Puerto Rico.

BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE

Wilbur Daniels was born in Detroit in 1922. Daniels held several offices in the ILGWU over more than 40 years, including Research Association and Assistant Director of Research (1943-1950), Associate General Counsel in the Legal Department (1950-1959), Assistant to the President (1959-1961), Director of the Master Agreements Department (1965-1969?), Vice President (1969-1973), and Executive Vice-President (1973-1987). After leaving the ILGWU in 1987, Daniels was Executive Director of the S.H. and Helen R. Scheuer Foundation. He remained involved in New York City civic life, serving on the boards of the Lincoln Center, United Housing Foundation, New York Urban Coalition, and American Arbitration Association. He died in New York City in 1993.

COLLECTION DESCRIPTION

Contains files maintained by Wilbur Daniels while working as Associate General Counsel in the Legal Department, Assistant to the President, Director of the Master Agreements Department, Vice President, and Executive Vice-President. The bulk of the files pertain to the negotiation of agreements with companies and associations in the 1960s and 1970s.

SUBJECTS

Names:
Daniels, Wilbur,1923-
Daniels, Wilbur, 1923-
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union.

Subjects:
Women's clothing industry--United States.
Labor unions--Clothing workers--United States.
Clothing workers--United States.
Industrial relations--United States.

Form and Genre Terms:
Records.


INFORMATION FOR USERS

Access Restrictions:
The ILGWU Records, except for publications and materials produced for publication, are restricted. Materials created prior to twenty years from the current date are open to researchers only with prior written permission from the Director of the Kheel Center; materials created during the past twenty-years are closed; the minutes of the General Executive Board are closed. For more information contact the Kheel Center.
Cite As:
ILGWU. Wilbur Daniels papers. 5780/113. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.

RELATED MATERIALS

5780. ILGWU records
5780/084. ILGWU. Wilbur Daniels papers
5780/155. ILGWU. Wilbur Daniels papers

NOTES

"Permanent deposit"

CONTAINER LIST

Date
Description
Container
1967-1971
Associated Sportswear (Majestic Specialties): 1967-1971 [folder 1 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 1
1967-1971
Associated Sportswear (Majestic Specialties): 1967-1971 [folder 2 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 2
1963-1967
Associated Corset and Brassiere: Out-of-Town
Box 1 Folder 3
1966-1971
Corset and Brassiere Out-of-Town Negotiations [folder 1 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 4
1966-1971
Corset and Brassiere Out-of-Town Negotiations [folder 2 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 5
1972-1973
Articles and Newspaper Clippings
Box 1 Folder 6
Yiddish
1970-1972
Joyce, Andrea
Box 1 Folder 7
1968-1973
Associated Sportswear: Ridgefield Plant
Box 1 Folder 8
1967
Newspaper Clipping
Box 1 Folder 9
1970-1973
Associated Sportswear Company Canton: Supplement Signed
Box 1 Folder 10
1970-1973
Associated Sportswear Canton: Supplement
Box 1 Folder 11
1970-1973
Associated Sportswear Kelita: Supplement Signed
Box 1 Folder 12
1970
Atlantic Apparel
Box 1 Folder 13
1970- 1973
Associated Sportswear Supplement: Westland Manufacturing, Moreland Sportswear, Charland Sportswear
Box 1 Folder 14
1967-1972
Bali-Hialeah
Box 1 Folder 15
1970-1973
Berkshire Apparel: Negotiations [folder 1 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 16
1970-1973
Berkshire Apparel: Negotiations [folder 2 of 2]
Box 1 Folder 17
1953-1965
Barbizon Corporation: Dubinsky File
Box 1 Folder 18
1967-1970
Barbizon Corporation
Box 1 Folder 19
1965-1966
Barbizon Corporation: Working Papers
Box 1 Folder 20
1965-1972
Bobbie Brooks Incorporated: Knitwear
Box 1 Folder 21
1967-1970
Bobbie Brooks Incorporated, Washington Garment Company
Box 1 Folder 22
1968-1973
Bobbie Brooks Incorporated, Stretchini Incorporated
Box 1 Folder 23
1970
Bobbie Brooks Incorporated: Stacy Ames
Box 1 Folder 24
1968-1971
Stretchini Incorporated
Box 1 Folder 25
1973-1978
Imports: Speeches [folder 1 of 2]
Box 2 Folder 1
1973-1978
Imports: Speeches [folder 2 of 2]
Box 2 Folder 2
General Executive Board Committee
Box 2 Folder 3
1980-1982
New York State Association of Settlement Houses
Box 2 Folder 4
1973-1980
Wilbur Daniels
Box 2 Folder 5
1978-1980
Roger Webb: NCUC
Box 2 Folder 6
1979
New York Dress: Negotiations
Box 2 Folder 7
1979-1980
New York Salute to the Fashion Industry
Box 2 Folder 8
1978
Education
Box 2 Folder 9
1979-1981
General Executive Board
Box 2 Folder 10
Multifiber Arrangement
Box 2 Folder 11
1980
National Consumer Cooperative Bank
Box 2 Folder 12
1979
Apparel Jobs Training Corporation
Box 2 Folder 13
1980
Apparel Jobs Research Corporation
Box 2 Folder 14
1977-1978
Green-Dolmatch Incorporated
Box 2 Folder 15
1980
Advertising
Box 2 Folder 16
1979-1981
Apparel Job Training and Research Corporation
Box 2 Folder 17
1979-1980
Appeal Committee
Box 2 Folder 18
1980
Cardio Pulmonary Resuscitation
Box 2 Folder 19
1981
Correspondence
Box 2 Folder 20
1981
Unemployment Insurance
Box 2 Folder 21
1979
Wage Controls
Box 2 Folder 22
1978-1979
Unity House
Box 2 Folder 23
1977-1979
Koret
Box 2 Folder 24
1978
Labor Management Cooperation
Box 2 Folder 25
1982
Office and Professional Employs International Union
Box 2 Folder 26
1979
Indochinese Refugees
Box 2 Folder 27
1981-1984
Homework
Box 2 Folder 28
1980
Malden Mills Incorporated
Box 2 Folder 29
1980
Malden Mills Incorporated: 1980
Box 2 Folder 30
1978
Shop Chairperson's Manual
Box 2 Folder 31
1978
Trade Adjustment Assistance
Box 2 Folder 32
October 19, 1978
1975-1978
Unemployment Insurance
Box 2 Folder 33
1979
Mediation and Termination Notices
Box 2 Folder 34
1981
Master Agreements (Firms)
Box 2 Folder 35