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BREWERY WORKERS: Difference between revisions

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Labor1$beer-barrels.jpg

Beer barrels being worked on.

JUNE 1886: Brewery workers union formed among mostly socialist German workers, to resist the prevailing 16-18 hour workday. On July 22, 1886 breweries admitted defeat and gave in to union demands for FREE BEER, the closed shop, freedom to live anywhere for brewery workers (who had up until then typically lived in the brewery itself), a 10-hour day, six-day week, and a board of arbitration.

MARCH 26, 1888: Having broken the union everywhere except San Francisco during the previous two years, the National Brewer's Association issued a manifesto against unionism. The national organization ordered its affiliated San Francisco members to fire union workers and replace them with scabs, which led to a 9 month strike. During the strike, two union breweries, the Fredericksburg of San Jose and another in Sacramento, were prospering wildly, which helped the San Francisco boycott to hold and induced the Brewers' Association to capitulate on June 5, 1889.

1890s: Under Alfred Fuhrman, the brewery workers disaffiliated from their national union, which led to the suspension of the Federated Trades Council for refusing to expel the now-independent brewery workers.

--Chris Carlsson

Labor1$horse-drawn-beer-wagon.jpg

Horse-drawn Beer Wagon

Labor1$national-brewery.jpg

The National Brewery was large San Francisco brewery in the 19th century.

Labor1$beer-deliverymen.jpg

Beer deliverymen in San Francisco. The brewery workers were among the more militant in the 1880s.

Contributors to this page include:

San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer

San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer

San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer

San Francisco Public Library,San Francisco,CA - Publisher or Photographer

Carlsson,Chris - Writer

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