Digital Labor History
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AFL-CIO Labor History on the WebLinks to Several Sites
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Bob Fitch Photography Archive (Stanford University Libraries)Includes United Farm Workers (UFW)/Cesar Chavez gallery,1968-1974.
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Bracero History Archive"The Bracero History Archive collects and makes available the oral histories and artifacts pertaining to the Bracero program, a guest worker initiative that spanned the years 1942-1964."
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Child Labor Coalition. History of Child Labor in the US.The history, causes, and results of child labor in the United States are documented in photographs, articles, and testimony by young workers, with study guides and links to other sites.
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CIRL (Community of Industrial Relations Libraries)The Community of Industrial Relations Librarians (formerly the Committee of Industrial Relations Librarians) is an international group of information professionals from academic, union, government, corporate, and nonprofit organizations in the field of industrial relations and human resource management who cooperate on projects, share resources and information, and learn from one another.
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DC Justice for Janitors: A Digital History (Georgetown Univ.)A project of the Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor at Georgetown University that aims to preserve the history of working people in Washington, D.C., and to make that history accessible to scholars, students, and the general public.
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Digital Collections (IRLE Library)Digital collections from the IRLE (Institute for Research on Labor and Employment) Library at UC Berkeley, including proceedings of the California Labor Federation, collective bargaining agreements, and the full run of IRLE publications.
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Digital Collections (Library of Congress)The Library of Congress has made available hundreds of photographs, texts, films and audio recordings from its archival collections. There are over 100 digitzied collections, including African American Odyssey, Voices from the Dustbowl, Votes for Women, Work and Leisure, Haymarket Affair" and New York City.
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Documenting the American South (Univ. of North Carolina)DocSouth is a digital publishing project providing Internet access to texts, images, and audio files related to southern history, literature, and culture. Currently DocSouth includes ten thematic collections of books, diaries, posters, artifacts, letters, oral history interviews, and songs.
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Ellis Island Oral History ProjectSince 1973, the National Park Service has interviewed more than 1,700 Ellis Island immigrants so that they could tell their own stories.
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Farmworker Movement Documentation Project (UC San Diego)"Primary source accounts: photographs, oral histories, videos, essays and historical documents from the United Farm Worker Delano Grape Strikers and the UFW Volunteers who worked with Cesar Chavez to build his farmworker movement."
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Hearth, Home Economics ArchiveHEARTH is a core digital collection of historic books and journals in Home Economics and related disciplines published between 1850 and 1950. It includes the full text of these materials, as well as bibliographies and essays on the wide array of subjects.
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History: Labor (U. of Washington)A research guide to primary and secondary sources for labor history.
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Kheel Center (DigitalCommons@ILR)Digitized collections from the Kheel Center, including ILGWU and Milton Konvitz lectures.
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Kheel Center ILGWU CollectionThis site presents highlights from the ILGWU's rich history and archives, from the extensive and heavily used collection at the Kheel Center
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Kheel Center Labor Photo DatabaseLabor photos available from the Kheel Center. Especially strong for needletrade workers.
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Labor Archives in the U.S. and CanadaDirectory prepared by the Labor Archives Roundtable of the Society of American Archivists (SAA).
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Labor & Working-Class History Association (LAWCHA)LAWCHA is an organization of scholars, teachers, students, and activists who seek to promote awareness of labor and working-class history. See the Resources section for links to online oral history projects, exhibits, talks & tours, journals, listservs, conference reports, and the web sites of museums and archives.
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Labor History Links (LAWCHA)This site offers one of the most comprehensive collections of bibliographies, documents, and links to other U.S. labor history sites available on the internet. It was developed by labor historian Rosemary Feurer for the Labor and Working Class History Association.
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Labor History TimelineA nice overview of the labor movement from 1600-2000. Produced by the AFL-CIO.
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New York State Historical LiteratureCollection of selected monographs, pamphlets and other material with expired copyrights chosen from the Cornell Library's extensive collection of New York State Literature.
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Political Posters from the Labadie Collection (Univ. of Michigan)A digital collection of over 2,000 posters from political movements including labor, anarchism, ecology, women, and youth.
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Southern Labor ArchiveGeorgia State University's Southern Labor Archives, established in 1971, is dedicated to collecting, preserving and making available the documentary heritage of Southern workers and their unions, as well as that of workers and unions having an historic relationship to the region.
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Trade Union Publications: The Official Journals, Convention Proceedings, and Constitutions of International Unions and Federations, 1850-1941Reynolds,Lloyd George and Charles C. Killingsworth (editors). Baltimore, The: Johns Hopkins Press, 1944.
Volume 1 contains a listing of trade unions and their publications. It also contains a brief chronology for the unions listed. Volumes 2 and 3 contain a subject listing to point to individual articles in trade union publications. The time period covered is 1850-1941. -
Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (Kheel Center, Cornell ILR School)Presented by the Kheel Center for Labor-Management Documentation and Archives in cooperation with the Union of Needletrades, Industrial and Textile Employees (UNITE!). Includes political cartoons, photographs, oral histories, bibliographies and more.
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Walter P. Reuther Library (Wayne State University)This major labor archives has mounted excellent digital exhibits on their web site, including: Brown v. Board of Ed. 50th Anniversary; SEIU District 925: Organizing for Raises, Rights and Respect; I AM A MAN-Honoring the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Worker's Strike; Sit-Down: A Brief History of the Flint Sit-down Strike; La Causa: A United Farm Workers Exhibition.
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WWW Virtual Library: Labour HistoryThe Labour History Virtual Library is maintained by the International Institute of Social History to assist historians and researchers. They have put together an extensive listing of scholarly and content-rich web sites from around the world.
Museums, Libraries and Archives
- Botto House/American Labor Museum (Haledon, NJ)The American Labor Museum is a private, non-profit organization dedicated to perpetuating the history of the labor movement, as well as the culture and ethnicity of working people in the United States. The museum operates the historic Botto House, a property listed on the state and national registers of historic places. The restored residence contains period rooms and contemporary gallery space for changing exhibits.
- Catherwood Library - Kheel Center (Cornell)The Kheel Center's main role is the preservation of original source materials relevant to the history of American labor unions, management theory as it applies to labor and industrial relations, and the history of employees at the workplace.
- Reuther Library - Wayne State University (Detroit)The site of the Walter P. Reuther Library. At this site, click on "Image Gallery", "Audio Clips" and "Selected Speeches" for on-line resources.
- Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives (NYU)An internationally-known center for scholarly research on Labor and the Left. The primary focus is the complex relationship between trade unionism and progressive politics and how this evolved over time. Archival, print, photograph, film, and oral history collections describe the history of the labor movement and how it related to the broader struggle for economic, social, and political change.
- The Tenement Museum (Manhattan)The Tenement Museum, located in Manhattan, tells the stories of immigrants who lived in 97 Orchard Street, a tenement built in 1863 on Manhattan's Lower East Side.
Historical Data
- Employment Research Data Center (Upjohn Institute)The Upjohn Institute serves as the data repository for many research and evaluation projects sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor. Data from these projects (along with specific information related to the data) and final reports are offered via download at no charge.
- Social ExplorerOnline research tool designed to provide quick and easy access to modern and historical census data and demographic information. Create fast, intuitive, and illustrative maps and reports to help visually analyze and understand demography and social change throughout history. Site currently includes data from the entire US Census from 1790 to 2000, all annual updates from the American Community Survey to 2008, original Census tract-level estimates for 2006 and 2007, the Religious Congregations and Membership Study from 1980 to 2000, and 2002 Carbon Emissions Data from the Vulcan Project.
- Statistical Abstract of the United States (U.S. Census Bureau)Find a wide range of government-produced statistical tables from 1789-2012. Be sure to look at the tables' footnotes for find the recording agency. After 2013, data published as ProQuest Statistical Abstract of the U.S., listed separately.
- Publications of the U.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsFind scanned copies of BLS catalogs that list BLS publications from 1886-1998. Full text of the publications described in the catalogs can be found in U. S. libraries as well as in some historical subscription databases.