Location

Fisher 138

Start Date

12-4-2014 2:40 PM

End Date

12-4-2014 3:00 PM

Description

In the autumn of 1913, a small, remote Michigan mining community attracted national attention as miners and management found themselves embroiled in a conflict that would prove no easy victory for either side. The strike came as a shock to management, who, with the help of a nearly perfected paternal system, had come to expect a generally docile and compliant workforce. But what was even more shocking was the involvement of the miners’ wives in the strike effort, and the lengths they went to in order to keep men from crossing the picket line. This paper focuses on that effort, arguing that the women of the Michigan copper country developed strike strategies that were derived from their domestic experience, and justified their involvement through maternal arguments. However, these public actions allowed the management to disregard the respect and courtesy generally given to the domestic sphere as police and private agents perpetrated a number of home invasions in an attempt to break the strike.

The involvement of women in male dominated labor disputes (mining, steel productions) has been largely ignored in the literature due to their indirect connection to the company as wives and not workers. This paper seeks to remedy this gap, and gain a better understanding of that indirect relationship. Sources include newspaper articles, private correspondence, public investigation records, and oral histories, found largely in the Michigan Tech Archives and Copper Country Historical Collections, Michigan Technological University, Michigan.

Presenter Bio

Shannon Kirkwood is a symposium travel grant recipient, funded by The Friends of the Van Pelt Library.

Kirkwood is a Ph.D. student in the Transnational and Comparative joint program at Central Michigan University. She spent the last school year (12/13) earning a Master of Science in Historical Studies at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland. Her research focuses on the political expression and collective identities of working class women in Britain and the United States during the early twentieth century. Her Master’s Thesis is titled “Glasgow, 1915: The Tenement System, the Rent Strikes, and Female Working Class Consciousness.” She lives in Mount Pleasant with her husband and cat.

Share

COinS
 
Apr 12th, 2:40 PM Apr 12th, 3:00 PM

Gender on the Range: Feminine Strategies in the 1913 Michigan Copper Strike

Fisher 138

In the autumn of 1913, a small, remote Michigan mining community attracted national attention as miners and management found themselves embroiled in a conflict that would prove no easy victory for either side. The strike came as a shock to management, who, with the help of a nearly perfected paternal system, had come to expect a generally docile and compliant workforce. But what was even more shocking was the involvement of the miners’ wives in the strike effort, and the lengths they went to in order to keep men from crossing the picket line. This paper focuses on that effort, arguing that the women of the Michigan copper country developed strike strategies that were derived from their domestic experience, and justified their involvement through maternal arguments. However, these public actions allowed the management to disregard the respect and courtesy generally given to the domestic sphere as police and private agents perpetrated a number of home invasions in an attempt to break the strike.

The involvement of women in male dominated labor disputes (mining, steel productions) has been largely ignored in the literature due to their indirect connection to the company as wives and not workers. This paper seeks to remedy this gap, and gain a better understanding of that indirect relationship. Sources include newspaper articles, private correspondence, public investigation records, and oral histories, found largely in the Michigan Tech Archives and Copper Country Historical Collections, Michigan Technological University, Michigan.