白人工人和美国内战

David A. Zonderman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

从1861年4月对萨姆特堡(Fort Sumter)的射击到1865年春天邦联投降,工人们——无论是北方还是南方——都在艰苦的条件下长时间工作,工资却很少能跟上战时通货膨胀的步伐。虽然许多工人最初对分裂国家的计划表示怀疑,但一旦南方各州脱离,大多数工人就团结在各自的旗帜周围,并承诺支持各自的战争努力。对战争物资日益增长的需求为整个联邦和南部邦联的妇女和男子、女孩和男孩提供了就业机会。然而,工人们并不总是对一份工作感到满意,他们毫无疑问地呼吁支持蓝灰色的男孩。他们经常抵制工作场所施加在他们身上的变化——新技术、军事纪律、不熟练的新人——以及总是落后于物价上涨的工资。抗议和罢工始于1861年,从1863年到战争结束,抗议和罢工的数量和强度都有所增加。自1857年经济大萧条以来,工会一直处于衰落状态,但在战争后期,工会又重新活跃起来。雇主有时会通过行业协会来应对员工日益增长的组织和反抗,这些协会试图破坏罢工,并将罢工者列入黑名单。当工人对“富人的战争和穷人的斗争”的不满和怨恨在地区分歧中普遍存在时,北方工人通过全市贸易大会、全国工会、旅行组织者和劳工报纸进行了更大的协调抵抗。南方工人倾向于孤立地从一家商店打到另一家商店,从一个城镇打到另一个城镇,因此他们很少能建立起一个更广泛的劳工运动,在战后的艰难岁月中幸存下来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
White Workers and the American Civil War
From the firing on Fort Sumter in April 1861 until the Confederacy surrendered in the spring of 1865, workers—North and South—labored long hours under often trying conditions at wages that rarely kept pace with wartime inflation. Though many workers initially voiced skepticism of plans for sundering the nation, once Southern states seceded most workers rallied round their rival flags and pledged to support their respective war efforts. The growing demand for war material opened employment opportunities for women and men, girls and boys, across the Union and Confederacy. Yet workers were not always satisfied with a job and appeals to back the boys in blue and gray without question. They often resisted changes pressed on them in the workplace—new technology, military discipline, unskilled newcomers—as well as wages that always lagged behind rising prices. Protests and strikes began in 1861 and increased in number and intensity from 1863 to the war’s conclusion. Labor unions, in decline since the depression of 1857, sprung back to life, especially in the war’s later years. Employers sometimes countered their employees’ increasing organization and resistance with industry associations that tried to break strikes and blacklist those who walked off their jobs. While worker discontent and resentment of “a rich man’s war and a poor man’s fight” were common across the sectional divide, Northern workers exercised greater coordination of their resistance through citywide trade assemblies, national trade unions, traveling organizers, and labor newspapers. Southern workers tended to fight their labor battles in isolation from shop to shop and town to town, so they rarely built a broader labor movement that could survive the hardships of the postwar era.
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