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SOURCE: Jentz, John B. “The 48ers and the Politics of the German Labor Movement in Chicago during the Civil War Era: Community Formation and the Rise of a Labor Press.” In The German-American Radical Press: The Shaping of a Left Political Culture, 1850-1940, edited by Elliott Shore, Ken Fones-Wolf, and James P. Danky, pp. 49-62. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1992.
In the following essay, an earlier version of which was presented in 1988, Jentz describes the pivotal role of the leftist German-language press in the mid nineteenth-century American labor movement.
During the Civil War a vital interethnic labor movement emerged in Chicago, as in other major northern cities. The Chicago movement combined Irish, German, British, and native-born workers in numerous unions and created a city central body that published its own labor paper. After the war this labor movement made Chicago the center of a national campaign for the...
This section contains 5,984 words (approx. 20 pages at 300 words per page) |