ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board Minutes, 1924-1977
Collection Number: 5780/032
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Cornell University Library
DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY
Title:
ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board Minutes, 1924-1977
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Collection Number:
5780/032
Abstract:
Contains minutes of the New York Cloak Joint Board, as well as of several of the board's
committees (Retirement Fund, Pension, Executive, Finance, Investment, Rules, Administrative,
Appeals, and Special Investigating). Also contains minutes of the Russian Polish Cloak
Makers Union and monthly financial reports of the Cloak Joint Board.
Creator:
New York Cloak Joint Board
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union
Quanitities:
7 cubic feet
Language:
Collection material in English, Russian
The International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union was once one of the largest labor
unions in the United States founded in 1900 by local union delegates representing
about 2,000 members in cities in the northeastern United States. It was one of the
first U.S. Unions to have a membership consisting of mostly females, and it played
a key role in the labor history of the 1920s and 1930s. The union is generally referred
to as the "ILGWU" or the "ILG". The ILGWU grew in geographical scope, membership size,
and political influence to become one of the most powerful forces in American organized
labor by mid-century. Representing workers in the women's garment industry, the ILGWU
worked to improve working and living conditions of its members through collective
bargaining agreements, training programs, health care facilities, cooperative housing,
educational opportunities, and other efforts. The ILGWU merged with the Amalgamated
Clothing and Textile Workers Union in 1995 to form the Union of Needle trades, Industrial
and Textile Employees (UNITE). UNITE merged with the Hotel Employees and Restaurant
Employees Union (HERE) in 2004 to create a new union known as UNITE HERE. The two
unions that formed UNITE in 1995 represented only 250,000 workers between them, down
from the ILGWU's peak membership of 450,000 in 1969.
At the beginning in 1900 there was the Cloakmakers' Union of New York and Local 1
United Brotherhood of Cloakmakers of New York and vicinity. In the early years, membership
and meeting attendance was low. Local 9 Cloak and Suit Tailors, New York was soon
chartered, as well as Local 35 Cloak Pressers. Benjamin Schlesinger became manager
of the New York Joint Board of Cloak Makers' Union in 1904. By 1906, there was a movement
within the childrens' cloak and reefer makers industry to organize, so that by 1908,
the New York Joint Board of Cloak and Skirt Makers' Union was composed of Operators'
Local 1, Tailors' Local 9, Reefer Makers' Local 17, Skirt Makers' Local 23 and Pressers'
Local 35. From the convention of that year it was stated that "The object of the J.B.
is to agitate the principle of Trade Unionism among the working people engaged in
the Cloak and Skirt Trades and to transact their business in common, and to call,
conduct and settle strikes and disputes (Ninth Annual Convention of the International
Ladies' Garment Workers' Union, 1908, p. 31).
Between 1908 and 1910, the Joint Board enacted 77 strikes and lockouts, 57 of which
were settled favorably for the union. At the tenth convention in 1910, a resolution
was introduced for empowering the General Executive Board to make necessary preparation
and call a strike when appropriate. The Joint Board, now consisting of Cloak Operators
Local 1, Cloak and Suit Tailors Local 9, Amalgamated Ladies' Garment Local 10, Cloak
and Skirt Makers of Brownsville Local 11, Reefers Makers Local 17, Skirt Makers Local
23, Cloak Pressers Local 35, Buttonhole Makers Local 64, and Cloak and Suit Pressers
of Brownsville Local 68, began strike preparations, appointing committee members,
and renting halls, and calling a mass meeting that filled Madison Square Garden. A
vote was taken with 18,771 against 615 in favor of a general strike. On July 7, 1910
the workers left the shops and joined the picket lines. As workers continued to join
the strike, estimates varied from 50,000 to 60,000 strikers in the "Great Revolt."
With the industry paralyzed, manufacturers were looking to settle, and small shops
began signing agreements. It took until September 2 for a proposal to be accepted
by the Joint Board and the Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers' Protective Association,
known as "The Protocol of Peace." While not all demands were won, the workers gained
a 50 hour work week, double pay for overtime, and a higher minimum wage scale among
others. In January of 1913, the Joint Board appointed Isaac Hourwich to the position
of Chief Clerk of the Cloak and Skirt Makers' Union. In his new post, Hourwich sought
to reform the Protocol of Peace, a system set up by Louis Brandeis to resolve conflicts
in the garment industry between workers and manufacturers without arbitration. His
attempt to amend the protocol bothered the Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers' Association
and put him out of favor with the International office. While the union sought to
force Hourwich from his position, he instead decided to seek reappointment. A struggle
emerged between Hourwich and the workers and locals that supported him and the International.
This became known as the "Hourwich Affair" and concluded with Hourwich's resignation
in 1914.
After a lockout in May 1916, a general strike was declared and lasted fourteen weeks
and an amended agreement with a reduced week, wage increase, and a continuation of
the Joint Board of Sanitary Control (created earlier by the Protocol). In 1917 Morris
Sigman assumed the position of general manager of the Joint Board, and the relationship
between the Board and component locals continued to improve. Another general strike
occurred in May 1919 which brought the cloak industry to a standstill. In July 1922,
the Joint Board ordered a general stoppage in the cloak industry during negotiations
to reach a new agreement with the Protective Association. The controversy focused
on the "social" or small shop, a form of sweatshop that employed only two or three
workers. By the spring of 1923, a new department was created within the Joint Board
to monitor the work given out by jobbers to subordinate shops. It was the goal that
the work be sent to unions shops only and that jobbers be made responsible for the
observance of union standards in those shops. A series of conferences between the
union with the Cloak, Suit and Skirt Manufacturers' Protective Association (manufacturers),
American Cloak and Suit Manufacturers' Association (sub-manufacturers), and Merchants
Ladies' Garment Association (jobbers) in March 1924 led to a program of demands by
the General Executive Board which included: increase in minimum wage scale; establishment
of 40 hour week; adoption of a sanitary and union label; and unemployment insurance.
When no agreement could be reached by June 1924, New York Governor Alfred E. Smith
appointed a Special Advisory Commission which held hearings in City Hall. A final
report was rendered June 27 and recommendations submitted. Accepted by the union,
sub-manufacturers, and manufacturers, the jobbers refused until July 7, 1924 when
the Merchants' Association agreed to the terms of the Governors' Commission. (See
5780/161, 5780/165, 6036/009 for hearing transcripts) A general work stoppage in the
entire cloak trade occurred on July 8, 1924 and lasted four weeks. The Special Commission
established an Impartial Chairman for the whole cloak industry (Raymond Ingersoll,
6036/015) and organized a sanitary label division (the Prosanis Label) in the Joint
Board of Sanitary Control. Shortly after, the Joint Board organized a Label and Unemployment
Insurance office. After six months, in April 1925, a report was released from an investigation
into the conditions in the New York cloak industry comparing shops, workers and wages
from 1911 to 1924.
ILGWU rules had stipulated that no more than one local of the same craft exist in
a city. In 1924, the General Executive Board sought to merge cloak operators' Locals
1, 11, and 17. After a seven week struggle with much resistance from Local 17, the
three locals were amalgamated into Local 2 Cloak, Suit and Reefer Operators of Greater
New York. Problems also troubled the Joint Board beginning in 1925 with Locals 2,
9, and 22, and the Communist control of the locals. The infighting caused the resignation
of officers within the Joint Board to retain unity. A long battle resulted with charges
levied against members and officers of the locals, and the election of new leadership.
The hearings before the Governor's Commission continued into 1926, with a final report
issued in May. It was at this time that a general strike committee was formed to assess
the situation. Communists had been controlling the special committee of the Joint
Board and positioned themselves on crucial committees and posts during strike preparations.
The Communists leaders called a mass meeting in Madison Square Garden on June 29,
1928. To maintain unity, the GEB and International pledged support, though from the
beginning it was apparent that the strike was to be conducted for political purposes.
A strike call was set for July 1, and thus began a disastrous episode for the Joint
Board and union. The Communists in control of the strike mismanaged and mishandled
efforts for a productive and effective strike. From the beginning, the strike was
plagued by a failure to successfully organize for the strike, failure to provide financial
aid for strikers, a misappropriation for the money raised and collected, and a dismissal
of opportunities that would have led to an early and favorable settlement. An agreement
was reached on November 12, 1926 after 20 weeks of "strike, suffering and starvation."
The agreement was far below the recommendations of the Governor's Commission and caused
the union many losses; loss of the season and wages for the workers; loss of millions
of dollars in strike funds; loss of membership; and concessions that amounted to no
increases and no agreements with jobbers and sub-manufacturers. The union took a financial,
moral, and economic hit. Internal fighting between the Communist members and the union
continued to escalate. When the Communist leadership refused to submit to the demands
of the sub-manufacturers and enter into arbitration, thousands of workers in sub-manufacturing
shops were locked out on December 9, 1926, joining the others in strike halls. The
workers caught in the middle between the GEB and Communist leadership in the cloak
locals were desperate for assistance and appealed to the union. The International
formed provisional committees to take over power. In response, the Communist strike
leadership organized a mass-meeting in Madison Square Garden, excluding the non-communist
union members. At the mass-meeting, the Communists ordered all workers back to the
shops without a settlement. The GEB and the provisional Joint Board issued a registration
for all members in the Joint Board to receive new booksfinally choosing whether they
wanted to stand with the ILGWU or continue to follow the Communist Party. The process
of reconstruction began, with the union making settlements with the sub-manufacturers
and jobbers, and a renewal of the agreement in the dress industry. Registration back
into the union continued and new officers for the locals were elected and the Joint
Board had a long rebuilding process through 1927 to repair morale and financial damage.
By June 1927, the Joint Board and Locals 2, 3, 9, 22, 23 and 82 moved back into the
old building of the Joint Board.
1928 saw the establishment of a 40-hour, five-day week. Also beginning in 1928, vice
president Isidore Nagler served as the general manager for the Joint Board. The Cloak
Joint Board and the International issued a strike call and on July 2, 1929, and 28,000
cloakmakers stopped work. Ten days later, resolutions were adopted, and by July 16,
the new collective agreements were signed. While New York was the biggest market in
the country for cloak manufacturing, the industry did feel the effects of the Depression,
with massive unemployment, the Joint Board tried to curb overtime if there are vacancies
in shops. The Joint Board entered into a battle with manufacturers who wanted a return
to piece work and the union who wanted week-work. Strike preparations took place and
on July 13, 1932, a strike vote was approved if negotiations failed. At the last minute,
mediation reached a new agreement retaining week-work. A work stoppage still occurred
from July 27, 1932-August 18, 1932 hastening the conclusion of the negotiations. Another
cloak industry stoppage from August 14, 1933 lasted two weeks, with agreements with
cloak associations and the adoption of the NRA codes for the cloak industry. The NRA
label was to appear in garments to eliminate sub-standard and sweatshop conditions.
Labels were attached to every garment with a registration number assigned to each
employer verifying they complied with the standards of the Code. In 1937, jurisdiction
of the snowsuit shops was transferred to Cloak Joint Board which formed a new special
Snowsuit Department.
At the beginning of the 1940s, the Joint Board was composed of 9 local unions--Locals
9 (Finishers and Tailors), 10 (Cutters), 23 (Skirtmakers), 35 (Cloak Pressers), 48
(Italian Cloakmakers), 117 (Cloak Operators), 64 (Buttonhole Makers), 82 (Cloak Examiners),
30 (Coat and Suit Designers), and viewed as the "backbone" of the ILGWU since 1910.
The cloakmakers were the first to introduce and successfully support the practice
of collective bargaining on an industry-wide scale in New York, and still maintained
its position as a leader in change for the industry. General Manager Nagler declined
to be a candidate for reelection in 1939. In February 1939, a temporary administrative
committee was formed to manage affairs until August 1939, when vice-president Israel
Feinberg (ILGWU director on the Pacific Coast since 1933) became the new general manager
of the Cloak Joint Board, a position he held previously from 1920-1925. The Joint
Board was active in the affairs of the National Coat and Suit Industry Recovery Board
(formed in 1935 after the demise of the NRA) to help stabilize the industry and make
sure production was under decent standards of employment. In 1943 the Board established
an industry maintained Retirement fund that went into effect January 1944 providing
(at the time) $600 per year for the approximately 35,000 members in the ILGWU cloak
locals of New York who are 65 and older. An arbitrator award in June 1946 brought
a wage increase, as well as the creation of a health and vacation fund contributed
by the employers. Officially beginning operation January 1947, the health plan included
medical treatment, hospitalization, sick benefits, eye exams, and tuberculosis benefits.
Beginning in June 1947, cloakmakers would receive on weeks' vacation with pay. The
Cloak Joint Board outgrew its headquarters on West 33rd St. and purchased a new building
on West 38th St. between Fifth and Sixth Aves. to accommodate all the departments
of the Cloak Joint Board and Local 23.
In December 1951, general manager Feinberg became ill and Louis Hyman (Local 9) took
over as acting general manager. He officially retired in early 1952. In May 1952,
Isidore Nagler was once again appointed the general manager (1928-1939). Feinberg
(general manager from 1939-1952) died in September 1952. Towards the end of the decade,
there were changes in the industry after the war, with a rise of section work, and
for the first time, women were now majority of the workers. Local 102 Cloak and Dress
Drivers' joined the Joint Board. In September 1959, Nagler died, and Henoch Mendelsund,
who had been Nagler's assistant for six years, became the new manager of the Joint
Board. By 1965 the change in demographics continued and almost 70% of the cloak workforce
was now female. At the end of the 1960s, the Joint Board was composed of Local 117
Cloak Operators, Local 9 Cloak Finishers, Local 35 Cloak Pressers, Local 48 Italian
Cloakmakers, Local 23-25 Blouse, Skirt and Sportswear Workers (November 1963 merger
and name change), Local 82 Examiners, Local 64 Buttonhole Workers, and the cloak portion
of Cutters Local 10.
The 1970s saw the introduction of new materials not previously used in coat and suit
making, including fake fur, plastics, leather and suede. In January 1973, Mendelsund
appointed Local 48 manager and union first vice president E. Howard Molisani the associate
general manager for the Joint Board, and in July 1973, Mendelsund relinquished his
post after 20 years of service in the Joint Board. At that time, Molisani became the
general manager. The operations of the 1972 National Board of the Coat and Suit Industry
(name changed from National Coat and Suit Industry Recovery Board) were discontinued
in 1972. A restructure of cloak locals in New York City in 1972 precipitated by changes
in the industry (membership decline, decline in coat and suit production, diversification
of crafts and products, elimination of hand work), addressed locals based on outdated
craft divisions, language or ethnic origin. The new locals consisted of: Local 1 United
Coat, Suit and Allied Garment Workers' Union of Manhattan and the Bronx (operators,
finishers, sample tailors, examiners, floor workers and buttonhole makers), Local
35 Coat, Suit, Sportswear and Allied Garment Pressers' Union (pressers in the coat
and suit industry in Manhattan and the Bronx as well as pressers in sportswear shops),
Local 48 United Coat, Suit and Allied Garment Workers' Union of Brooklyn, Queens and
Staten Island (coat and suit workers in all crafts in Brooklyn, Queens and Staten
Island). Locals 10 (Cutters) and 23-25 (Blouse, Skirt and Sportswear) were not affected.
All assets and liabilities of the locals were transferred to the Joint Board and instituted
were uniform amounts of dues, initiation fees and assessments for the locals, with
the Joint Board handling the finances. The Cloak Joint Board name was officially changed
to Joint Board of Coat, Suit and Allied Garment Workers' Unions.
In November 1977, the executive committee of the ILGWU General Executive Board enacted
a resolution that merged the existing cloak, dress, rainwear and other affiliates
in New York, thus ending the separate existence of the New York Cloak and Dress Joint
Boards. The New York Cloak-Dress Joint Board and Affiliates consisted of Local 1-35
United Coat, Suit, Rainwear and Allied Workers Union of Manhattan; Local 10 Cutters;
Local 22 Dressmakers Union of Manhattan; Local 48 Coat, Suit, Dress, Rainwear and
Allied Workers Union of North Brooklyn; Local 77 Coat, Suit, Dress, Rainwear and Allied
Workers Union of Queens; Local 89 Coat, Suit, Dress, Rainwear and Allied Workers Union
of South Brooklyn; and Local 189 Coat, Suit, Dress, Rainwear and Allied Workers Union
of the Bronx. At the same time, sportswear locals previously under the Dress or Cloak
Joint Board were now a part of the new New York Sportswear and Allied Workers Joint
Board (Local 10 Cutters; Local 23-25 Blouse, Skirt and Sportswear Workers; Local 91
Children's Dressmakers; Local 105 Snowsuit, Infants, and Novelty Sportswear; and Local
155 Knitgoods Workers). The new resolution redrew existing locals' jurisdiction to
represent workers along geographic as well as industrial lines. The changes created
a more efficient and economical representation of the workers and provided greater
organizing ability and bargaining power. E. Howard Molisani, an ILGWU vice-president
and manager of the Cloak Joint Board, was elected to serve as the general manager
of the new organization. Following his retirement in July 1978, Samuel Nemaizer (formerly
manager of the Dress Joint Board) was appointed to succeed Molisani as general manager.
In late 1981, the Joint Board approved a measure to dissolve Locals 48, 77 and 189
to create a stronger financial foundation for the organization. Members were transferred
to Locals 22, 1-35 and 89. Local 89 was renamed Local 89-48 to honor the historic
significance of the Italian cloakmakers. An October 1984 meeting resulted in more
restructuring of the board and locals into a new Local 89-22-1. Changes in the garment
industry necessitated the dissolution of the Joint Board and Locals 22 and 89-48.
The charter of Local 1-35 was amended to create the new Local 89-22-1. With the consolidation
of staff and retirements of managers Samuel Nemaizer, Manuel Gonzalez and Frank Longo,
Samuel Byer, associate general manager of the New York Coat-Dress-Rainwear Joint Board
was elected manager of Local 89-22-1. The New York Sportswear Joint Board was renamed
the New York Joint Board in August 1985, and Locals 62-32 and 66-40 joined the existing
affiliates Locals 23-25, 155, 91-105 and 10 and managed by Edgar Romney. After the
retirement in 1993 of Samuel Byer, Barbara Laufman was elected manager of Local 89-
22-1. Local 89-22-1 was the successor to some of the oldest locals in the union from
the coat, dress, suite and rainwear industries, as well as both the New York Dress
and Cloak Joint Boards. In July 1922, the New York State District merged with Local
89-22-1.
The collection is composed of minutes of the New York Cloak Joint Board, as well as
several of the board's committees. The minutes of the Retirement Fund are for the
Board of Directors of the Retirement Fund of the Coat and Suit Industry. Other committees
for the Retirement Fund include the Administrative Committee (1944-1960), Appeals
Committee (1946-1962) and Special Investigating Committee (1952).
The Pension Committee minutes includes lists of individuals and local number who
were applying for Retirement Benefits. Individuals would be reviewed on the basis
of the Rules and Regulations of the Retirement Fund of the Coat and Suit Industry
and were subject to approval based on their merits. Cases before the Pension Committee
include disability cases for the years 1946-1964.
The Executive Committee Minutes encompass the years 1943-1963 and contain correspondence
from the Merchant Ladies Garment Association, reports of the Retirement Fund of the
Coat and Suit Industry as well as the minutes of the Executive Committee, and also
the rules and regulations. Monthly Financial Reports of the Retirement Fund of the
Coat and Suit Industry includes receipts, disbursements, and assets, from the years
1944-1964.
The Investment Committee of the Retirement Fund of the Coat and Suit Industry contains
meeting minutes (1944-1959) and information on purchasing bonds and opening new accounts.
The Rules and Regulations include information for the initial establishment of a Retirement
Fund on June 1, 1943 for the Joint Board Cloak, Suit, Skirt and Reefer Makers' Union
as well as resolutions and meeting minutes for the Rules Committee, 1943-1962. Additionally,
there are hand-written bound minute books from the Russian Polish Cloak Makers' Union
that are in Russian.
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
ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board Minutes #5780/032. Kheel Center for Labor-Management
Documentation and Archives, Cornell University Library.
Related Collections: 5780/031: ILGWU Local 35 Records 5780/033: ILGWU New York Dress Joint Board Minutes 5780/020: ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board Records 5780/041: ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board Payroll Analysis 5780/161: ILGWU New York Cloak Joint Board's Advisory Commission on the Cloak, Suit,
and Skirt Industry in New York Records
Names:
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. New York Joint Board of the Dressmakers'
Union
Subjects:
Women's clothing industry -- United States
Women's clothing industry -- New York (State) -- New York
Clothing workers -- Labor unions -- United States
Clothing workers -- Labor unions -- New York (State) -- New York
Clothing workers -- United States
Clothing workers -- New York (State) -- New York
Industrial relations -- United States
Industrial relations -- New York (State) -- New York
CONTAINER LIST
Container
|
Description
|
Date
|
|
Box 1 | Folder 1 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1926-1929 |
Box 1 | Folder 2 |
Joint Board Minutes from January 6, 1928
|
1928 |
Box 1 | Folder 3 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1929-1931 |
Box 1 | Folder 4 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1931-1933 |
Box 1 | Folder 5 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1933-1936 |
Box 2 | Folder 1 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1936-1939 |
Box 2 | Folder 2 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1939-1942 |
Box 2 | Folder 3 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1942-1945 |
Box 2 | Folder 4 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1945-1955 |
Box 3 | Folder 1 |
Joint Board Minutes
|
1955-1977 |
Box 3 | Folder 2 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee Minutes
|
1927 |
Box 3 | Folder 3 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee Minutes
|
1932 |
Box 3 | Folder 4 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2400-2465]
|
1951-1953 |
Box 3 | Folder 5 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2466-2530]
|
1953-1955 |
Box 3 | Folder 6 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2531A-2591]
|
1955-1956 |
Box 3 | Folder 7 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2592-2677]
|
1957 |
Box 3 | Folder 8 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2678-2740]
|
1958-1960 |
Box 3 | Folder 9 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2741-2799]
|
1960-1962 |
Box 3 | Folder 10 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2800-2880]
|
1962-1965 |
Box 3 | Folder 11 |
Joint Board Grievance Committee [cases 2881-2958]
|
1965-1973 |
Box 3 | Folder 12 |
Joint Board Appeal Committee Minutes
|
1927 |
Box 3 | Folder 13 |
Joint Board Appeal Committee [cases 949-1006]
|
1956-1966 |
Box 4 | Folder 1 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1924-1927 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 2 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1930-1934 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 3 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1935 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 4 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1935-1938 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 5 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1938 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 6 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1939-1940 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 7 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1940-1941 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 8 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1941 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 9 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1941-1942 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 10 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1943-1949 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 11 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1944-1949 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 12 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1949 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 4 | Folder 13 |
Russian Polish Cloak Makers Union Minutes
|
1957 |
Scope and Contents
Russian
|
|||
Box 5 | Folder 1 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1944-1948 |
Box 5 | Folder 2 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1944-1948 |
Box 5 | Folder 3 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1948-1950 |
Box 5 | Folder 4 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1948-1950 |
Box 5 | Folder 5 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1950-1952 |
Box 5 | Folder 6 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1950-1952 |
Box 5 | Folder 7 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1953-1954 |
Box 5 | Folder 8 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1953-1954 |
Box 5 | Folder 9 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1955-1956 |
Box 5 | Folder 10 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1955-1956 |
Box 5 | Folder 11 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1956-1959 |
Box 5 | Folder 12 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1956-1959 |
Box 5 | Folder 13 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1960-1964 |
Box 5 | Folder 14 |
Retirement Fund Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1960-1964 |
Box 5 | Folder 15 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1946-1950 |
Box 5 | Folder 16 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1946-1950 |
Box 5 | Folder 17 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1950-1952 |
Box 5 | Folder 18 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1950-1952 |
Box 5 | Folder 19 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 3]
|
1952-1955 |
Box 6 | Folder 1 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 3]
|
1952-1955 |
Box 6 | Folder 2 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 3 of 3]
|
1952-1955 |
Box 6 | Folder 3 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 3]
|
1956-1958 |
Box 6 | Folder 4 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 3]
|
1956-1958 |
Box 6 | Folder 5 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 3 of 3]
|
1956-1958 |
Box 6 | Folder 6 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 3]
|
1958-1964 |
Box 6 | Folder 7 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 3]
|
1958-1964 |
Box 6 | Folder 8 |
Pension Committee Minutes [folder 3 of 3]
|
1958-1964 |
Box 6 | Folder 9 |
Executive Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1943-1952 |
Box 6 | Folder 10 |
Executive Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1943-1952 |
Box 6 | Folder 11 |
Executive Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1952-1963 |
Box 6 | Folder 12 |
Executive Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1952-1963 |
Box 6 | Folder 13 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 1 of 2]
|
1944-1950 |
Box 6 | Folder 14 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 2 of 2]
|
1944-1950 |
Box 6 | Folder 15 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 1 of 3]
|
1951-1959 |
Box 6 | Folder 16 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 2 of 3]
|
1951-1959 |
Box 6 | Folder 17 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 3 of 3]
|
1951-1959 |
Box 6 | Folder 18 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 1 of 2]
|
1960-1964 |
Box 6 | Folder 19 |
Monthly Financial Reports [folder 2 of 2]
|
1960-1964 |
Box 6 | Folder 20 |
Finance Committee [folder 1 of 2]
|
1944-1961 |
Box 6 | Folder 21 |
Finance Committee [folder 2 of 2]
|
1944-1961 |
Box 7 | Folder 1 |
Investment Committee Minutes
|
1944-1951 |
Box 7 | Folder 2 |
Investment Committee Minutes
|
1951-1952 |
Box 7 | Folder 3 |
Investment Committee Minutes
|
1952 |
Box 7 | Folder 4 |
Investment Committee Minutes
|
1952-1959 |
Box 7 | Folder 5 |
Investment Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1959 |
Box 7 | Folder 6 |
Investment Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1959 |
Box 7 | Folder 7 |
Rules Committee Minutes
|
1943-1954 |
Box 7 | Folder 8 |
Rules Committee Minutes
|
1954-1956 |
Box 7 | Folder 9 |
Rules Committee Minutes
|
1956-1962 |
Box 7 | Folder 10 |
Administrative Committee Minutes
|
1944-1960 |
Box 7 | Folder 11 |
Appeals Committee Minutes
|
1946-1958 |
Box 7 | Folder 12 |
Appeals Committee Minutes
|
1958-1962 |
Box 7 | Folder 13 |
Special Investigating Committee Minutes [folder 1 of 2]
|
1952 |
Box 7 | Folder 14 |
Special Investigating Committee Minutes [folder 2 of 2]
|
1952 |