AFT Executive Council Transcript of Hearing of Local 5, 1941
Collection Number: 5019

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


DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title:
AFT Executive Council Transcript of Hearing of Local 5, 1941
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Collection Number:
5019
Abstract:
Hearing of Local 5, the Teachers Union of the City of New York, on charges by the Executive Council and order to show cause why its charter should not be revoked: transcript of record.
Creator:
American Federation of Teachers (AFT)
Quanitities:
0.33 cubic feet
Language:
Collection material in English

Biographical / Historical

The American Federation of Teachers (AFT) was started in Chicago, with eight locals signing on as AFL president Samuel Gompers welcomed the union into its fold in 1916.
AFT grew quickly in the beginning, chartering 174 locals in its first four years. The years following World War I saw school boards pressuring and intimidating teachers to resign from the union.
As membership dropped in the 1920s, the union continued to fight for tenure laws and academic freedom of the teachers whose beliefs were being investigated by political committees during the 'Red scare" hysteria following WWI.
The Depression years were not much better, low salaries and economic insecurity were issues needing attention. Female teachers found themselves faced with "contracts which still stipulated that an employed teacher must wear skirts of certain lengths, keep her galoshes buckled, not receive gentleman callers more than three times a week and teach a Sunday School class," said the American Teacher magazine. In some cases teachers were dismissed for joining the AFT or for working on school board election campaigns.
By 1932, the Norris-La Guardia Act outlawed yellow dog contracts, which made teachers promise not to join the union.
Starting with WWII the AFT worked hard to push war bond sales, war relief and air raid programs in schools. After the war the AFT continued to fight to improve the conditions of the schools and their teachers.
In the 1950s, loyalty oaths started up again. The AFT continued work on the civil rights movement, filing an amicus curiae brief in the historic 1954 Supreme Court desegregation case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, and expelling locals that had not followed an earlier mandate to desegregate.
During the 1960s, besides fighting for civil rights, the AFT and its affiliates worked at getting collective bargaining agreements with stubborn school boards. Also the first major strike by university professors in the United States and a one-day walkout by the United Federation of Teachers in New York City took place. Over 300 teacher strikes occurred throughout the country during the 10 years following the UFT's walkout. The national AFT grew from less than 60,000 members in 1960 to over 200,000 by the end of the decade.

Hearing of Local 5, the Teachers Union of the City of New York, on charges by the Executive Council and order to show cause why its charter should not be revoked: transcript of record.
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INFORMATION FOR USERS

Preferred Citation

AFT Executive Council Transcript of Hearing of Local 5 #5019. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library.

Related Materials

Related Collections: 5015: Teachers Union of the City of New York Records 5020: AFT Executive Council Transcript of Hearing of Local 537

SUBJECTS

Names:
American Federation of Teachers.
American Federation of Teachers. Local 5 (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
Labor unions and communism - New York (State) - New York.
Teachers' unions - New York (State) - New York.
Teachers - New York (State) - New York.

CONTAINER LIST
Container
Description
Date
Box 1
Transcript of Record
1941
Scope and Contents
February 15-16, 1941.