Striking Steel: Solidarity Remembered

Striking Steel: Solidarity Remembered

by Jack Metzgar
Striking Steel: Solidarity Remembered

Striking Steel: Solidarity Remembered

by Jack Metzgar

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Overview

Having come of age during a period of vibrant union-centered activism, Jack Metzgar begins this book wondering how his father, a U.S> Steel shop steward in the 1950s and '60s, and so many contemporary historians could forget what this country owes to the union movement.

Combining personal memoir and historical narrative, Striking Steel argues for reassessment of unionism in American life during the second half of the twentieth century and a recasting of "official memory." As he traces the history of union steelworkers after World War II, Metzgar draws on his father's powerful stories about the publishing work in the mills, stories in which time is divided between "before the union" and since. His father, Johnny Metzgar, fought ardently for workplace rules as a means of giving "the men" some control over their working conditions and protection from venal foremen. He pursued grievances until he eroded management's authority, and he badgered foremen until he established shop-floor practices that would become part of the next negotiated contract. As a passionate advocate of solidarity, he urged coworkers to stick together so that the rules were upheld and everyone could  earn a decent wage.

Striking Steel's pivotal event is the four-month nationwide steel strike of 1959, a landmark union victory that has been all but erased from public memory. With remarkable tenacity, union members held out for the shop-floor rules that gave them dignity in the workplace and raised their standard of living. Their victory underscored the value of sticking together and reinforced their sense that they were contributing to a general improvement in American working and living conditions.

The Metzgar family's story vividly illustrates the larger narrative of how unionism lifted the fortunes and prospects of working-class families. It also offers an account of how the broad social changes of the period helped to shift the balance of power in a conflict-ridden, patriarchal household. Even if the optimism of his generation faded in the upheavals of the 1960s, Johnny Metzgar's commitment to his union and the strike itself stands as an honorable example of what a collective action can and did achieve. Jack Metzgar's Striking Steel is a stirring call to remember and renew the struggle.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439905326
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 01/19/2011
Series: Critical Perspectives On The P
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 997,362
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Jack Metzgar is Professor of Humanities at Roosevelt University.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Introduction

Part One: The 1959 Steel Strike
Prologue
1. Getting to 1959
2. No Backward Steps: The Biggest Strike in U.S. History

Part Two: Cause and Consequence
Prologue
3. 2-B or Not 2-B: A Battle for "Rigid Union Work Rules"
4. When the Wolf Finally Came: Union Power and the Demise of Steel

Part Three: Remembering or Not
Prologue
5. Steel Family Memories and the Culture of Unionism
6. The Contest for Official Memory

Appendix A: Histories of Postwar America
Appendix B: Interviews
Notes
Acknowledgments
Index

Photographs follow page 148
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