ILGWU. Local 66. Executive Board records., 1922-1959.
Collection Number: 5780/068

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


DESCRIPTIVE SUMMARY

Title:
ILGWU. Local 66. Executive Board records, 1922-1959.
Repository:
Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation & Archives
Collection Number:
5780/068
Abstract:
Collection consists primarily of minutes of Local 66's Executive Board and general membership meetings between 1922 and 1974. Also contains issues of the local's publication, Our Local 66, from 1942 to 1971, and meeting minutes for Local 30, Designers Guild of Ladies' Apparel.
Creator:
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Local 66 (New York, N.Y.)
Quanitities:
3 cubic feet
Language:
Collection material in English

Biographical / Historical

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 / Historical

Local 66 of the International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union (ILGWU), also known as the Bonnaz, Embroideries, Tucking, Pleating and Allied Crafts Union, was chartered as the Bonnaz, Singer, Hand Embroiderers' and Scallopers Union in 1913 and based in New York, New York. Local 41, which represented pleaters, tuckers, and stitchers, merged with Local 66 in 1932; Local 121, also known as the Covered Button Workers Union, merged with Local 66 in 1942.

Collection consists primarily of minutes of Local 66's Executive Board and general membership meetings between 1922 and 1974. Also contains issues of the local's publication, Our Local 66, from 1942 to 1971, and meeting minutes for Local 30, Designers Guild of Ladies' Apparel.
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.
Conditions Governing Use

This collection must be used in keeping with the Kheel Center Information Sheet and Procedures for Document Use.

INFORMATION FOR USERS

Preferred Citation

ILGWU. Local 66. Executive Board records. 5780/068. Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives, Martin P. Catherwood Library, Cornell University.

Related Materials

5780. ILGWU records
5780/068 PUBS. ILGWU. Local 66 publications

SUBJECTS

Names:
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union
International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union. Local 66 (New York, N.Y.)
Subjects:
Labor unions--Clothing workers--New York (State)--New York.
Clothing workers -- Labor unions -- United States
Textile workers--New York (State)--New York.
Textile workers--United States.

CONTAINER LIST
Container
Description
Date
Box 1 Folder 1
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1922-1925
Box 1 Folder 2
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1928-1929
Box 1 Folder 3
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1930-1932
Box 1 Folder 4
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1933-1935
Box 1 Folder 5
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1936-1938
Box 1 Folder 6
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1939-1941
Box 2 Folder 1
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1942-1943
Box 2 Folder 2
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1944-1945
Box 2 Folder 3
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1946-1947
Box 2 Folder 4
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1948-1949
Box 2 Folder 5
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1950-1951
Box 2 Folder 6
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1952-1954
Box 2 Folder 7
Minutes. Local 66, ILGWU
1955-1959
Box 3 Folder 1
"Our Local 66". Vol.I, No.1- Vol.IV, No.12
1942-1945
Box 3 Folder 2
"Our Local 66". Vol.V, No.1- Vol.XIII, No.6
1946-1954
Box 3 Folder 3
"Our Local 66". Vol.XIV, No.1- Vol.XVIII, No.12
1955-1960
Box 3 Folder 4
"Our Local 66". Vol. XIX, No.2- Vol.XXIII, No.19
1961-1968
Box 3 Folder 5
"Our Local 66". Vol.XXIII, No.20- Vol.XXIV, No.33
1968-1971
Box 3 Folder 6
Listing of Charges.
1934-1969
Box 3 Folder 7
Membership Meetings Minutes. Local 66.
1933-1956
Box 3 Folder 8
Membership Meeting Minutes. Local 66.
1966-1974
Box 3 Folder 9
Designer's Guild of Ladies' Apparel, Local 30
1932-1949
Box 3 Folder 10
Designer's Guild of Ladies' Apparel, Local 30
1949-1970
Box 3 Folder 11
Board of Governors Minutes. Local 30, ILGWU
1948-1963