labor union periodicals

Transcription

labor union periodicals
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
RESEARCH COLLECTIONS IN LABOR STUDIES
General Editor: Melvyn Dubofsky
LABOR UNION
PERIODICALS
PARTI:
THE METAL TRADES
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
A Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
RESEARCH COLLECTIONS IN LABOR STUDIES
General Editor: Melvyn Dubofsky
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Consulting Editor
James P. Danky
Parti:
The Metal Trades
Guide compiled by
David H. Werning
A microfilm project of
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA
An Imprint of CIS
4520 East-West Highway • Bethesda, MD 20814-3389
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Scope and Content Note
¡x
Editorial Note
xi
Reel Index
A F. of L. Auto Worker
Amalgamated Journal
""."""'.•!.'.'""!
The Spark Plug and The Auto Worker
11111..1"111.'.'1.""'111.'"'1.1Z...
Auto Workers News and Labor Unity ana The Ford Worker
and Dodge Bros. Workers News and Fisher Body Worker
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers, and Helpers Journal
"'.!Z"""
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal
""1Z!"Z"""""!!!!!!!!Z"
Carriage and Wagon Workers Journal and Off/c/a/ Journa/ and M.E.S. A Educator ZZ'Z".
C./.Q A/eivs: Aluminum Workers Edition and Aluminum Workers News Digest
C./.O. A/ews: D/e Casters Edition
"
C./.Q A/eivs: A/f/ne, AM and Smelter Workers International Edition
ZZZ'""".'.
C./.O. A/eivs: L/n/ted Farm Equipment and Metal Workers Edition
ZZZZZ
F.E.News
International Metal Worker and United Weldors' News
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
International Molders'and Foundry Workers'Journal..
17
23
27
33
37
^
45
49
53
57
61
I.U.E.-C.I.O. News
69
'ZZZZZZZZZZZZ.
3
7
13
Vulcan Record anû Machinery Molders Journal
ZZZZZZZZ. 73
The Machinist
•^
77
Machinists and Blacksmiths'Monthly Journal and The Brass Worker
and Official Journal of the International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics
81
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater
35
Metal Workers Bulletin and Weldors'Journal
ZZ.ZZZ.ZZZ.ZZZZZZZZ. 91
Mine-Mill Union
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ.'.
95
Pattern Makers'Journal
99
Sheet Metal Workers'Journal
ZZZZZZZ.ZZZZZZ. 105
The Shipbuilder
ZZZZZZZZ.'.
111
Steel Labor
Stove Mounters'and Range Workers'Journal
U.E. News
United Automobile Worker
Z.ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ" 115
ZZZZZZZZ.'.'.'. 119
^25
ZZZZZZZZ.'.'" 129
Editor Index
131
Union Index
^3
INTRODUCTION
The periodical literature of the labor movement represents one of the most comprehensive records
in existence on the evolution of American working class organization. The evolution, administrative
structure, and objectives of the labor movement can best be traced in the records of its periodical
literature. Within limits, and with varying degrees of sophistication, the journals also illuminate the
cultural, political, and economic aspects of the American working class. Virtually every international
labor union published a journal, which usually (but not always) was begun shortly afterthe union was
founded. Many of the periodicals date from the last decades of the nineteenth century, and a few
began as early as the 1860s. Their primary purpose was to establish regular communication between
the national office of the union and the rank and file with monthly or bimonthly issues that typically were
sent free of charge to all dues-paying members. Union periodicals sought to inform the membership
about political issues, economic developments, and union business, as well as enabling local labor
organizations to report on the course of union activity around the country. The periodicals also kept
the members abreast of changing technologies in their respective crafts or occupations and often
provided a modicum of entertainment in the form of poetry, illustrations, and stories.
Journal Contents
The national officers typically used the editorial section of the journals to highlight the issues they
felt should be brought to the attention of the union membership. The editorials were extremely wideranging, including explanations of technical matters such as union bylaws and administration, as well
as interpretations of major events like strikes and negotiations, legislation, or economic circumstances affecting the union. The officers also touched on wider philosophical matters such as the
theory of trade unionism, the relationship of labor to capital, and the responsibility of the government
to its working citizens. The editorials, to be sure, tended to reflect the viewpoint of the national officers
or at least the controlling faction within the union.
The typical journal also featured one or more lead articles by prominent figures addressing a
current issue or problem. The authors of these articles included leaders of the labor federations such
as Samuel Gompers, William Green, and John L. Lewis, as well as writers from outside the union
movement, including political officials, prominent authors, and trade experts. Many of these lead
articles were reprinted from other sources; however, some of the editors took the initiative to
commission original articles as well. As with the editorials, lead articles varied widely in content. They
included discussions of technical changes in the workplace, political issues, and the philosophy of
trade unionism. In addition to editorials and lead articles, the periodicals ordinarily discussed matters
of internal union administration. These included reports on finances, organizing work, the operation
of social welfare programs, insurance and pension plans, and fraternal activities. The published
financial reports typically were audited and hence reliable. The results of investigations into complaints about union management also were reported in the pages of the periodical, although most of
the reporting tended to be uncritical.
The lines of communication were not (and could not be) only from the top down. Along with keeping
its visibility high among the local union members, the international headquarters was typically eager
to provide information to unionists at the local level regarding wage rates, employment conditions,
and union activities in different cities and regions across the continent. As a result, much of the
information that the journals purveyed, at least before World War I, was local news•news of fraternal
gatherings; of strikes, lockouts, and contract negotiations; of unemployment problems oremployment
opportunities in specific cities; of organizing work; and of local employer attitudes toward union
organization. News of boycotts, sometimes carried in regular "We Don't Patronize" columns, provided
evidence of the diverse forms of collective union actions practiced on the local level. News of
cooperative union venture enterprises might also be found. The extent of local coverage tended to
diminish after the First World War.
Adding to the local news in many of the journals were correspondence sections where, within the
policy limitations of the national editor, the pages gave voice to of membership. During the nineteenth
century letters from the rank and file appeared often. As was the case with the local reporting on union
activities, they tended to diminish steadily in the twentieth century- Correspondents varied widely.
They included leaders of local unions seeking to bring local conditions, accomplishments, or problems
to the attention of the readers. Some writers were rank-and-file unionists expressing their opinions
on political issues, new technologies in the workplace, or matters of union business. During the early
union years, letters encompassed a considerable amount of mundane, private communication,
perhaps addressed by itinerant workers to union comrades in other cities. While the content of the
correspondence sections was kept under tight control by most editors, careful readings might
nonetheless discern styles, concerns, and attitudes that can be significant in ascertaining the
mentality of the working classes. In some of the journals, editors encouraged competing viewpoints
that often conflicted with the values expressed in the editorials and revealed much about the internal
politics of the union.
Most trade union periodical literature shared a common format. A significant number of publications, however, employed a newspaper-style format. The most significant group of unions in this
category were Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) industrial unions. The CIO published a
national newspaper, the C.I.O. News, and encouraged its affiliated unions to lift from it most of the
national news articles it published and to combine these with articles of specific trade or industrial
interest. As a result, there was considerable repetition in the several trade editions of the C.I.O. News,
although each occupational edition featured articles unique to it. The newspaper format had much
less correspondence or other items of local origin and was more clearly controlled at the national (and
even the federation) level.
Research Opportunities
The research strengths and limitations of the periodical literature of the trade union movement was
well summarized in an essay by Lloyd Gardner Reynolds and Charles C. Killingsworth, Trade Union
Publications, The Official Journals, Convention Proceedings, and Constitutions of International
Unions and Federations, 1850-1941 (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1944). The labor union
periodicals are central to any institutional study of individual labor unions or craft groups. The
regularity and detail of their reporting on union activities and union objectives is a matchless source
on the evolution of the sponsoring union. Union finances and organizing work often were detailed on
a monthly basis. The voices of many of the union leaders, from the national level down to the local,
can be found here as nowhere else. (It should be remembered that most of the unions represented
by the hundreds of labor union periodicals left no archives and in the majority of cases only the most
fragmentary documentary records survive.)
Beyond the institutional histories of individual unions, the journals provide material for comparative
assessments of the American trade union movement. Researchers can discern the timing, for
example, of various union demands for such things as shorter workdays, government wage policies,
and social welfare legislation. Comparisons can be used between trade groups or between unions
within specific trade groups to monitor the evolution of union objectives, the style of union
administration, and the changes in official policy and political philosophies. In cases where unions
spent long periods contending with one another in jurisdictional battles, rival union periodicals provide
the researcher with critical perspectives on competing unions.
Studies of American working-class culture, including working-class political culture, have only just
begun to mine the vast array of labor union periodicals. At least forthe early union years, many of the
periodicals reported regularly on fraternal and social activities, on mutual aid networks, and on
cooperative endeavors. The discourse in both the published articles and the correspondence
columns can provide valuable clues to the political identities that both workers and their union leaders
created. Scattered letters, articles, and frequent obituaries depicted working-class heroes and
VI
revealed much about the culture of the authors, the subjects, and the audience. "Slice-of-life"
accounts offered insights into the typical lives of workers of the trade or craft group. The discussions
of common health and occupational hazards provided information on these aspects of working-class
life, while also offering valuable data on the workers' perceptions of public health and working
conditions. In countless ways, labor union periodicals elucidated worker attitudes toward gender,
race, and ethnicity. Pictures and illustrations, moreover, add valuable graphic representations of
workers and the workplace.
Politics, partisan and ideological, filled the columns of the union journals throughout their
publication runs. Again, political historians have scarcely drawn upon the wealth of material contained
in these sources. The leading political questions of the day were frequently the subjects of essays.
Many contributors were figures who exercised considerable political influence, ranging from the
leaders of the major labor federations (Gompers, Green, and Lewis) to the heads of the various
individual international unions, as well as leading intellectuals and political figures, including senators,
congressmen, governors, mayors, and heads of administrative agencies at the federal and state
levels. While much of the information flowed from the national offices of the union, there also was a
regular flow of articles on political developments at the local level.
Technological change and industrial sociology can also be monitored in considerable detail
through many of the periodicals. Most of the journals printed articles that discussed new developments in machinery and production techniques. An abundance of advertisements and illustrations for
new machines add to the potential uses of the periodicals in this context. Those interested in how the
labor process has changed over time should find these journals especially useful.
As Reynolds and Killingsworth pointed out in their pathbreaking essay, there are inherent biases
and limitations for the researcher in the official publications of American labor unions. Readers need
to remain aware of the "partisan" and "official" purposes of the sponsoring unions. Editors normally
attracted employers, competing unions, and dissident factions within their own union. (In some cases,
the journals obscure the existence of minority factions, but a few unions encouraged democratic
factionalism within limits.) Indeed, the coverage of even important events in the union's history can
grow frustratingly brief when events went poorly (as in losing a major strike) or if the leadership stood
to be tarnished by the news (as in the case of dissipation or malfeasance). Despite their limitations,
the journals, as Reynolds and Killingsworth point out, remain indispensable for certain types of
research (including histories of single unions; union objectives; beliefs and theories of the trade union
movement; and growth, structure, and administration of American labor unions). Equally important,
the journals disclosed such aspects of the workers' world of far less concern for labor economists as
Reynolds and Killingsworth. In the pages and columns of those union periodicals, historians and other
researchers may explore how workers and their leaders used language, graphics, and iconography
to represent their ideas and values concerning politics, society, culture, and such elemental
categories as manhood and womanhood. Those sensitive to shifts in the meaning of language and
styles of representation will find much to ponder and also to value in this collection.
Few Repositories
Although labor union periodicals were freely distributed to thousands of union members, few
libraries endeavored to collect these publications consistently until the 1940s when schools of
industrial relations became commonplace in major industrial states. Because the vast majority of the
periodicals were not copyrighted, even the Library of Congress failed to develop a comprehensive
collection. By the time major university libraries became active in acquiring labor periodicals of more
than local interest, nearly eighty years of continuous publication had elapsed, and save for the most
fortunate acquisitions programs, it was impossible for libraries to develop historically complete runs
of most labor union periodicals. Fortunately, there were at least three repositories that began
collecting on a national basis in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The U. S. Department
of Labor, founded in 1884 as the Bureau of Labor within the Department of the Interior, was a natural
magnet forthe literature of the American labor movement. The bureau's library was the first in America
devoted to the subject of the laboring classes. Labor periodicals began to accrue at the Bureau of
Labor during the 1880s, and never stopped.
VII
When the modem Department of Labor was created in 1917, the Bureau of Labor was merged
with the U. S. Children's Bureau. Laura Amelia Thompson, a sociologist trained at the University
of Chicago, had been the Children's Bureau librarian under its director and fellow Chicago alumna,
Julia Lathrop. Thompson, whose intelligent and ambitious acquisitions practices made the Children's
Bureau library the nation's premier repository of information on subjects like child labor and child
development, became the librarian for the new departmental library where she set out immediately
to make the holdings as complete as possible. From the point of her ascension to the library of the
Department of Labor in 1917 until her retirement in 1946, she established a policy of systematically
acquiring every trade union periodical published in America.
Before Laura Thompson's tenure, however, collection development at the Department of Labor
had been uneven. Virtually none of the earliest labor literature from the 1860s and 1870s made its
way to the Department of Labor's library. Obtaining rare early titles such as the Vulcan Record and
the Melders Journal, among others, was the work of Professors Jacob H. Hollander and George E.
Barnett at Johns Hopkins University. Beginning in 1902, Hollander and Bamett established a
graduate seminarlo study the history of the American labor movement. They made an effort to collect
complete serials of early trade union periodicals dating from the nineteenth centu ry. Their efforts were
rewarded with the acquisition of some of the earliest and rarest periodicals of the American labor
movement. For the nineteenth century, the Johns Hopkins Library holds the most impressive and
complete collection of periodicals of the American trade union movement.
Richard T. Ely, the father of American labor history and a professor of political economy at Johns
Hopkins from 1881 to 1892, seems to have contributed little to the establishment of that collection.
Upon moving to the University of Wisconsin in 1892, however, he established an ambitious
acquisitions program there. At Wisconsin, Ely founded the American Bureau of Industrial Research
(ABIR), with essentially the same mission as that of Hollander and Burnett at Johns Hopkins. The
ABIR almost matched Johns Hopkins' success in finding rare historical gems from the 1860s and
1870s. In the meanwhile, Ely recruited and trained a large group of labor scholars at the university
(including John R. Commons, Selig Perlman, David Saposs, and others) that became known
collectively as the "Wisconsin School" of labor studies. The cluster of prominent scholars further
energized the acquisitions work of the ABIR. It began collecting materials for a documentary history
of the American industrial society that appeared in ten volumes under Commons' general editorship
in 1910 and 1911. The ABIR's holdings were deposited at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin,
and the ABIR policy of collecting labor publications on a national scale has been continued to the
present day by the Historical Society. The Society's assumption of this legacy is important because
at both the Department of Labor and the Johns Hopkins University, the interest in maintaining
comprehensive collections of the American labor movement declined. In the case of Johns Hopkins,
the interest in maintaining the collection diminished sharply after the 1940s. The Department of Labor
continues to maintain an ambitious acquisitions program, but there were periods of less diligent
collecting between Laura Thompson's retirement and the present.
Among the three holdings noted in this essay•the U. S. Department of Labor, the Johns Hopkins
University, and the State Historical Society of Wisconsin•the vast majority of the periodical literature
of the American trade union movement has been saved for posterity. By drawing from the three
depositories to create the present microfilm edition, the publisher aims to provide the most
comprehensive edition of each title.
VIII
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTE
The labor union periodicals microfilm project undertaken by University Publications of America
plans to make available on microfilm every major trade union periodical published by an international
union in the United States before 1956. The program will be developed along a scheme of "trade
groups." In the initial phase, UPA plans to offer one trade group every other year beginning with the
Metal Trades, the Printing Trades, the Building Trades, and the Transport Unions (the latter in three
parts, Maritime, Railroad, and Overland and Air). As the larger trade groups are made available,
smaller trade groups may be released in multiples of two a year, including Clothing Trades, Food
Products, Wood and Forest Products, Government Employees, Mining, and others. The program will
not include titles that have been widely available on archival quality microfilm in complete runs through
1955. For example, virtually all radical (i.e., Communist and Industrial Workers of the World) union
periodicals have been previously microfilmed, and these will not be a part of the UPA series. Where
only substandard or substantially incomplete films are in existence, however, UPA will include the title
along with the previously unfilmed titles in the appropriate trade group.
The program has drawn upon the standard union list of Labor Periodicals, compiled by Bernard
Nass and Carmelita Sakr (Ithaca, New York, 1956) for the field of titles. Three major repositories have
been drawn upon to provide the vast bulk of the periodicals for microfilming: The State Historical
Society of Wisconsin, Johns Hopkins University, and the library of the U.S. Department of Labor. The
holdings of each of these collections is used to make the most complete possible editions of each title
included on the program. In the few cases where it has been necessary, UPA has made arrangements
with other archival sources to borrow those missing issues that are not available through any of the
three core institutions, for the purpose of making available as complete an edition of each title as
possible.
EDITORIAL NOTE
Labor Union Periodicals has been developed for micropublication in trade or occupational
groupings. The definition of each trade group and the identification of the titles for each trade group
have been made by Melvyn Dubofsky, professor of history, State University of New York at
Binghamton, and by James P. Danky, periodicals librarian of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
For each periodical, the user is provided with information concerning the various titles under which
the publication has been published, the union for which the journal was primarily published, the
periodicals' editors, the frequency of publication, and where the periodical was published. Inclusive
dates are provided for each item; the closing date indicates the last year included in this microfilm
publication.
Since this collection has been filmed from different sources, some reels have frame numbers. The
four-digit numberto the left of each entry indicates the frame number where a specific volume begins.
For the convenience of the researcher, a cumulative Editor Index and a Union Index are provided
following the last reel index of the collection.
XI
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
A. F. of L. Auto Worker,
1939-1956
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-225-4.
REEL INDEX
A. F. of L Auto Worker, 1939-1956
Titles
The Federation Auto Worker, 1939
The AFL Auto Worker, 1939-1956
Union Name
United Automobile Workers of America, 1939-1956
Editors
None listed, 1939-1942
Irvan Gary and Lester Washburn, 1943
Lester Washburn, 1944-1953
George Grisham and Earl Heaton, 1954
EarlHeaton, 1955-1956
Frequency of Publication
Biweekly, 1939-1940
Monthly, 1940-1956
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1939-1943
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1944-1953
Beverly Hills, California, 1954-1956
ReeM
1939; September 19-December 12; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-7.
1940; Vol. 1,Nos. 8, 10-22.
1941; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-9.
1942; January-June; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-6.
1943; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-11.
1944; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-10.
1945; Vol. 2, Nos. 11-12 through Vol. 3, Nos. 1-10.
1946; Vol. 3, Nos. 11-12 through Vol. 4, Nos. 1-10.
1947; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-12.
1948; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-12.
1949; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-12.
1950; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-12.
A. F. of L Auto Worker, 1939-1956
Reel 2
1951; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-12
1952; Vol. 10,1^08.1-12
1953; Vol. 11, Nos. 1-12
1954; Vol. 12, Nos. 1-12.
1955; Vol. 13, Nos. 1-12.
1956; January-February; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-2.
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Amalgamated Journal,
1899-1942
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-226-2.
REEL INDEX
Amalgamated Journal, 1899-1942
Title
Amalgamated Journal, 1899-1942
Union Name
Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel, and Tin Workers of America,
1899-1942
Editors
Ben I. Davis, 1899-1935
LouW. Davis, 1936-1942
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1899-1942
Location of Periodical
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1899-1942
ReeM
1899; October 6-December 28; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-13.
1900; Vol. 1, Nos. 14^12,44-52 through Vol. 2, Nos. 1-13.
Reel 2
1901 ; Vol. 2, Nos. 14-52 through Vol. 3, Nos. 1-13.
1902; Vol. 3, Nos. 14-52 through Vol. 4, Nos. 1-13.
1903; Vol. 4, Nos. 14-52 through Vol. 5, Nos. 1-14.
ReelS
1904; Vol. 5, Nos. 15-39,41-52 through Vol. 6, Nos. 1-14.
1905; Vol. 6, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 7, Nos. 1-14.
1906; Vol. 7, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 8, Nos. 1-14.
Reel 4
1907; Vol. 8, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-14.
1908; Vol. 9, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-15.
Amalgamated Journal, 1899-1942
Reels
1909; Vol. 10, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-14.
1910; Vol. 11, Nos. 15-40.
Reel 6
1910; Vol. 11, Nos. 41-52 through Vol. 12, Nos. 1-14.
1911 ; Vol. 12, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 13, Nos. 1-14.
1912; Vol. 13, Nos. 15-40.
Reel?
1912; Vol. 13, Nos. 41-52 through Vol. 14, Nos. 1-14.
1913; Vol. 14, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 15, Nos. 1-14.
ReelS
1914; Vol. 15, Nos. 15-52 through Vol. 16, Nos. 1-15.
Reel 9
1915; Vol. 16, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 17, No. 1-15.
Reel 10
1916; Vol. 17, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 18, No. 1-15.
Reel 11
1917; Vol. 18, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 19, Nos. 1-15.
Reel 12
1918; Vol. 19, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 20, Nos. 1-15.
Reel 13
1919; Vol. 20, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 21, Nos. 1-15.
Reel 14
1920; Vol. 21, Nos. 16-52 through Vol. 22, Nos. 1-16.
Reel 15
1921 ; Vol. 22, Nos. 17-52 through Vol. 23, Nos. 1-16.
Amalgamated Journal, 1899-1942
Reel 16
1922; Vol. 23, Nos. 17-52 through Vol. 24, Nos. 1-16.
Reel 17
1923; Vol. 24, Nos. 17-52 through Vol. 25, Nos. 1-16.
1924; Vol. 25, Nos. 17^12.
Reel 18
1924; Vol. 25, Nos. 43-52 through Vol. 26, Nos. 1-16.
1925; Vol. 26, Nos. 17-52 through Vol. 27, Nos. 1-17.
Reel 19
1926; Vol. 27, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 28, Nos. 1-17.
1927; Vol. 28, Nos. 18-43.
Reel 20
1927; Vol. 28, Nos. 44-52 through Vol. 29, Nos. 1-17.
1928; Vol. 29, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 30, Nos. 1-17.
Reel 21
1929; Vol. 30, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 31, Nos. 1-17.
1930; Vol. 31, Nos. 18-43.
Reel 22
1930; Vol. 31, Nos. 44-52 through Vol. 32, Nos. 1-17.
1931 ; Vol. 32, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 33, Nos. 1-18.
Reel 23
1932; Vol. 33, Nos. 19-52 through Vol. 34, Nos. 1-18.
1933; Vol. 34, Nos. 19-44.
Reel 24
1933; Vol. 34, Nos. 45-52 through Vol. 35, Nos. 1-18.
1934; Vol. 35, Nos. 19-52 through Vol. 36, Nos. 1-18.
Reel 25
1935; Vol. 36, Nos. 19-52 through Vol. 37, Nos. 1-17.
1936; Vol. 37, Nos. 18-42.
Amalgamated Journal, 1899-1942
Reel 26
1936; Vol. 37, Nos. 43-52 through Vol. 38, Nos. 1-17.
1937; Vol. 38, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 39, Nos. 1-17.
Reel 27
1938; Vol. 39, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 40, Nos. 1-17.
1939; Vol. 40, Nos. 18^13.
Reel 28
1939; Vol. 40, Nos. 44-52 through Vol. 41, Nos. 1-17.
1940; Vol. 41, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 42, Nos. 1-17.
Reel 29
1941 ; Vol. 42, Nos. 18-52 through Vol. 43, Nos. 1-17.
1942; Vol. 43, Nos. 18-52.
10
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
The Spark Plug, 1917
and
The Auto Worker, 1919-1924
H
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-227-0.
12
REEL INDEX
The Spark Plug, 1917
Title
The Spark Plug, 1917
Union Name
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers' International Union of America,
1917
Editor
William P. Mavell, 1917
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1917
Location of Periodical
Buffalo, New York, 1917
ReeM
1917; February 10-April 10; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-2.
The Auto Worker, 1919-1924
Title
The Auto Worker, 1919-1924
Union Name
United Automobile, Aircraft and Vehicle Workers of America, 1919-1924
Editor
John S. Martin, 1919-1921
W. A. Logan, 1922-1924
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1919-1924
Location of Periodical
Chicago, Illinois, 1919-1920
Detroit, Michigan, 1921-1924
1919; May-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-8.
1920; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-12.
1921; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-12;
1922; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-12;
1923; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-12.
1924; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-12.
13
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Auto Workers News,
1927-1934,
and
Labor Unity, 1932-1934,
and
The Ford Worker, 1926-1927,
and
Dodge Bros. Workers News,
1926-1927,
and
Fisher Body Worker, 1926-1927
15
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-228-9.
16
REEL INDEX
Auto Workers News, 1927-1934
Title
Auto Workers News, 1927-1934
Union Names
United Automobile, Aircraft and Vehicle Workers of America, 1927-1928
National Provisional Committee for the Organization of National Industrial Auto
Workers Union, 1929-1933
Auto Workers Union, 1934
Editors
Philip A. Raymond, 1927-1933
A. B. Magil, 1934
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1927-1933
Biweekly, 1934
Monthly, 1934
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1927-1934
ReeM
1927; May-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-8.
1928; Vol. 1, Nos. 9-12 through Vol. 2, Nos. 1-8.
1929; Vol. 2, Nos. 9-12 through Vol. 3, Nos. 1-8.
[Supplement: August 29,1929 (Vol. 3, No. 5); Special Convention Edition.]
1930; Vol. 3, Nos. 9-12.
1934^01.8,^8.1,4-17.
17
Labor Unity, 1932-1934
Title
Labor Unity, 1932-1934
Union Name
American Section, Red International Labor Unions, 1932-1934
Editor
Nathaniel Honig, 1932-1934
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1932-1934
Location of Periodical
New York, New York, 1932-1934
1932; Vol. 7, Nos. 4-12.
1933; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-9.
1934; Vol. 9, Nos. 1,3,5-7,9,10.
The Ford Worker, 1926-1927
Title
The Ford Worker, 1926-1927
Union Name
Ford Shop Nuclei of the Workers (Communist) Party of America, 1926-1927
Editor
None Listed
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1926
Semimonthly, 1927
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1927
1926; April-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-9.
1927; June-August; Vol. 2, Nos. 5-9; semimonthly.
18
Dodge Bros. Workers News, 1926-1927
Titles
Dodge Bros. Workers News, 1926
The Dodge Worker, 1926-1927
Union Names
Dodge Shop Nucleus of the Workers (Communist) Party, 1926
Workers (Communist) Party Shop Nucleus, 1926-1927
Editor
None listed
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1926-1927
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1926-1927
1926; August-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-5.
1927; April-August; Vol. 1, Nos. 9-12 through Vol. 2, No. 1.
Fisher Body Worker, 1926-1927
Titles
Fisher Body Worker, 1926
Workers' Bulletin, 1926-1927
Union Name
Workers (Communist) Party Shop Nucleus, Fisher Body Plant 10,1926-1927
Editor
None listed
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1926-1927
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1926-1927
1926; August-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-4.
1927; May-August; Vol. 1, Nos. 7-[10].
19
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers,
and Helpers Journal,
1901-1929
21
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin and The Johns Hopkins University Library.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-229-7.
22
REEL INDEX
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers, and Helpers Journal, 1901-1929
Title
The Blacksmiths Journal, 1901 -1920
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers and Helpers Journal, 1920
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers and Helpers
Monthly Journal, 1920-1923
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers and Helpers
Bimonthly Journal, 1924-1929
Union Names
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, 1901-1903
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and Helpers, 1903-1918
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers and Helpers,
1919-1927
Editors
Robert B. Kerr, 1901-1904
James W. Kline, 1905-1925
Roy Horn, 1926-1929
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1901-1923
Bimonthly, 1924-1929
Location of Periodical
Moline, Illinois, 1901-1903
Chicago, Illinois, 1904-1929
ReeM
1901 ; March-December; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-10.
1903; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-4.
Reel 2
1903^01.4,^8.5-12.
1904; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-12.
1905; Vol. 6,^8.1-12.
1906; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-12.
1907; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-12.
1908; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-10.
23
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers, and Helpers Journal, 1901-1929
ReelS
[Supplement: October 1907; Proceedings of the Eleventh Biennial Convention of
the International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and Helpers.]
1908;
1909;
1910;
1911;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
9, Nos. 11-12.
10,1^108.1-12.
11, Nos. 1-12.
12, Nos. 1-12.
[Supplement: November 1911 ; Proceedings of the Thirteenth Biennial Convention
of the International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and Helpers.]
1912; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
1913; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-9.
Reel 4
1913; Vol.
1914; Vol.
1915; Vol.
1916; Vol.
1917; Vol.
1918; Vol.
15, Nos. 10-12.
16,^8.1-12.
17, Nos. 1-12.
18, Nos. 1-12.
19, Nos. 1-12.
20, Nos. 1-6, 8,10-12.
Reels
1919;
1920;
1921;
1922;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
21,
22,
23,
24,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-3,5-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-9.
Reel 6
1922; Vol. 24, Nos. 10-12.
1923; Vol. 25, Nos. 1-12.
1924^01.26,^5.1-12.
1925; Vol. 27, Nos. 2-12.
1926; Vol. 28, Nos. 2-8.
1927; Vol. 29, Nos. 1-6.
1928; Vol. 30, Nos. 1-6.
1929; Vol. 31, Nos. 1-6.
24
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
BoilermakersBlacksmiths Journal,
1893-1955
25
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-230-0.
26
REEL INDEX
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal, 1893-1955
Title
Boiler Makerand Iron Ship Builder, 1893
The Journal, 1896
The Journal of the Brotherhood of Boiler Makers and Iron Ship Builders of
America, 1897-1905
The Journal of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship
Builders and Helpers of America, 1906-1912
The Boilermakers' Journal, 1913-1918
The Boilermakers' and Iron Ship Builders' Journal, 1919-1930
The Boilermakers Journal, 1931 -1950
The Boilermakers Journal and the Anvil Chorus, 1951 -1952
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths' Journal, 1953-1955
Union Names
International Brotherhood of Boiler Makers and Iron Ship Builders, 1893
Brotherhood of Boiler Makers and Iron Ship Builders of America, 1896-1905
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders and Helpers of
America, 1906-1930,1928-1950
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Welders and
Helpers of America, 1931-1937
International Brotherhoods of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths,
Forgers and Helpers, 1951-1952
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron Ship Builders, Blacksmiths,
Forgers and Helpers, 1953-1955
Editors
William J. Gilthorpe, 1893
Lee Johnson, 1896
John McNeil, 1897-1904
George F. Dunn and William J. Gilthorpe, 1905-1908
J.A.Franklin, 1908-1909
James B. Casey, 1910-1925
JohnJ. Barry, 1926-1934
L A. Freeman, 1935-1948
Earl B. Ashbrook, 1949-1955
27
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal, 1893-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1893
Semimonthly, 1896
Monthly, 1896-1955
Location of Periodical
New Orleans, Louisiana, 1893
Kansas City, Kansas, 1896-1919,1931-1955
Kansas City, Missouri, 1920-1930
ReeM
Frame #
0001
0027
0260
0479
0698
0916
1120
1893;
1896;
1897;
1898;
1899;
1900;
1901;
February, Vol. 1, No. 6; September-October, Vol. 2, Nos. 1-2.
January 1-December 1 ; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-17.
Vol. 9. Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 10,^8.1-12.
Vol. 11, Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 12, Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 13, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 2
0001
0268
0646
1091
1902;
1903;
1904;
1905;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
14, Nos. 1-12.
15^05.1-12.
16, Nos. 1-12.
17, Nos. 1-9.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
17,
18,
19,
20,
ReelS
0001
0123
0531
1144
1905;
1906;
1907;
1908;
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
10-12.
1-3, 5-12.
1-2, 4-12;
1-6.
Reel 4
0001
0247
0645
1908; Vol. 20, Nos. 7-12.
1909; Vol. 21, Nos. 1-12.
1910; Vol. 22, Nos. 1-12.
Reels
0001
0537
1080
1911; Vol. 23, Nos. 1-12.
1912; Vol. 24, Nos. 1-12.
1913; Vol. 25, Nos. 1-3.
28
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal, 1893-1955
Reel 6
Frame #
0001
0367
0862
1913; Vol. 25, Nos. 4-12.
1914; Vol. 26, Nos. 1-12.
1915; Vol. 27, Nos. 1-11.
Reel?
0001
0044
0540
1048
1915; Vol.
1916; Vol.
1917; Vol.
1918; Vol.
27,
28,
29,
30,
No. 12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-7.
30,
31,
32,
33,
34,
Nos. 8-12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-7, 9-12.
Nos. 1-12.
No. 1.
34,
35,
36,
37,
38,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
38,
39,
40,
41,
42,
Nos. 7-12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-12.
Nos. 1-9.
ReelS
0001
0190
0681
1078
1323
1918; Vol.
1919; Vol.
1920; Vol.
1921 ¡Vol.
1922; Vol.
Reel 9
0001
0281
0549
0817
1133
1922; Vol.
1923; Vol.
1924; Vol.
1925; Vol.
1926; Vol.
2-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-6.
Reel 10
0001
0143
0412
0687
0992
1926; Vol.
1927; Vol.
1928; Vol.
1929; Vol.
1930; Vol.
Reel 11
0001
0072
0288
0493
0665
0863
1930; Vol. 42, Nos.
1931 ; Vol. 43, Nos.
1932; Vol. 44, Nos.
1933; Vol. 45, Nos.
1934; Vol. 46, Nos.
1935; Vol. 47, Nos.
10-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-1.
29
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal, 1893-1955
Reel 12
Frame #
0001
0182
0382
0587
0805
1936^01.48,^8.1-12.
1937; Vol. 49, Nos. 1-12.
1938; Vol. 50, Nos. 1-12.
1939; Vol. 51, Nos. 1-12.
1940; Vol. 52, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 13
0001
0218
0434
0618
0790
0957
1126
1941; Vol.
1942; Vol.
1943; Vol.
1944; Vol.
1945; Vol.
1946; Vol.
1947; Vol.
53,
54,
55,
56,
57,
58,
59,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
60,
61,
62,
63,
64,
65,
66,
67,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
Reel 14
0001
0174
0352
0526
0701
0869
1039
1210
1948; Vol.
1949; Vol.
1950; Vol.
1951; Vol.
1952; Vol.
1953; Vol.
1954; Vol.
1955; Vol.
30
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Carriage and Wagon
Workers Journal, 1899-1908,
and
Official Journal of the Carriage,
Wagon and Automobile
Workers International Union
of North America, 1912-1915,
and
M. E. S. A. Educator,
1944-1951
31
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin and The Johns Hopkins University Library.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-231-9.
32
REEL INDEX
Carriage and Wagon Workers Journal, 1899-1908
Title
Carriage and Wagon Workers Journal, 1899-1908
Union Name
Carriage and Wagon Workers' International Union of North America,
1899-1908
Editor
None listed, 1899-1904
John H. Brinkman, 1907-1908
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1899-1908
Location of Periodical
Chicago, Illinois, 1899-1900
Cleveland, Ohio, 1902-1904
Washington, D.C., 1907-1908
ReeM
1899; July; Vol. I.No. 2.
1900; September; Vol. 2, No. 4.
1902; May; Vol. 3, No. 12.
1903; October; Vol. 5, No. 5.
1904; January; Vol. 5, No. 8.
1907; October-November; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-2.
1908; January, March-May; Vol. 8, Nos. 3-6.
33
Official Journal of the Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers
International Union of North America, 1912-1915
Title
Official Journal of the Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers International
Union of North America, 1912-1915
Union Names
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers International Union, 1912
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers International Union of North
America, 1912-1915
Editor
William P. Mavell, 1912-1915
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1912-1915
Location of Periodical
Buffalo, New York, 1912-1915
1912;
1913;
1914;
1915;
January-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 2, Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 3, Nos. 1-12.
Vol. 4, Nos. 1-9.
M.E.S.A. Educator, 1944-1951
Title
M.E.S.A. Educator, 1944-1951
Union Name
Mechanics Educational Society of America, 1944-1951
Editor
None listed
Frequency of Publication
Bimonthly, 1944
Monthly, 1945-1946
Irregularly, 1947-1951
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1944-1951
1944; May-October, December; Vol. 6, Nos. 12-21.
1945; January, March-May, July, October; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-6.
1946; February, April, June, August, October, December; Vol. 7, Nos. 8-12.
1947; February, June, September, December; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-2.
1948; April, September; Vol. 8, Nos. 3-4.
1949; March; Vol. 8, No. 5.
1951 ¡March; Vol. 10, No. 1.
34
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
C.I.O. News: Aluminum
Workers Edition, 1938-1943;
and
Aluminum Workers News
Digest, 1943-1944
35
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the library of the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-232-7.
36
REEL INDEX
C.I.O. News: Aluminum Workers Edition, 1938-1943
Title
The CIO News: Aluminum Workers Edition, 1938-1943
Union Name
Aluminum Workers of America, 1938-1943
Editors
Len De Caux, 1938-1939
Ray Pasnick, 1940-1941
N. A. Zonarich, 1942-1943
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1938-1942
Biweekly, 1943
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C., 1938-1939
New Kensington, Pennsylvania, 1940-1943
ReeM
Frame #
0001
0100
0310
1938; July 16-December 26; Vol. 1, Nos. 32-55.
1939^01.2^08.1-52.
1940; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-53.
Reel 2
0001
0226
0415
1941; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-52.
1942; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-51.
1943; January 4-June 21 ; Vol. 6, Nos. 1,3, 5, 7,9,11,13,15,17,19, 21, 23, 25.
37
Aluminum Workers News Digest, 1943-1944
Title
Aluminum Workers News Digest, 1943-1944
Union Name
Aluminum Workers of America, 1943-1944
Editor
R. W. Pasnick, 1943-1944
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1943-1944
Location of Periodical
New Kensington, Pennsylvania, 1943-1944
0470
0483
1943; July-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-6.
1944; January-May; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-5.
38
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
C./.O. News: Die Casters
Edition, 1938-1942
39
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-233-5.
40
REEL INDEX
C.I.O. News: Die Casters Edition, 1938-1942
Title
The C.I.O. News: Die Casters Edition, 1938
C.I.O. News: The Die Casting Worker, 1939-1940
C.I.O. News: Die Casters Edition, 1941-1942
Union Names
National Association of Die Casting Workers, 1938-1941
Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union, 1942
Editor
Len De Caux, 1938-1942
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1938-1939
Semimonthly, 1940-1942
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C, 1938-1942
[Note: Interspersed among the regular C.I.O. News: Die Casters Editions are editions published
specifically for Baltimore, Maryland, and Toledo, Ohio.]
ReeM
1938; February 5-December 5; Vol. 1, Nos. 9,13,17, 21, 26, 30, 34,39, 43,48, 52.
1939; January 2-December 25; Vol. 2, Nos. 1, 6,9,14,19, 23, 27,32,37,42,46,
50-52.
1940; January 15-December 23; Vol. 3, Nos. 3, 5, 7, 9,11,13,15,18, 20, 22, 24, 26,
28, 30, 33, 35, 37, 39, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52.
1941; January 13-December29; Vol. 4, Nos. 2, 4, 6, 8,10,12,15,17,19, 21, 23, 25,
28, 30, 32, 34, 37, 39, 41, 43, 45, 47, 50, 52.
1942; January 5-March 30; Vol. 5, Nos. 1, 3, 6,9,11,13.
41
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
C.I.O. News: Mine, Mill and
Smelter Workers International
Edition, 1938-1942
43
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-234-3.
44
REEL INDEX
C.I.O. News: Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers International
Edition, 1938-1942
Title
C.I.O. News: Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Edition, 1938-1942
Union Name
International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, 1938-1942
Editor
Len DeCaux, 1938-1942
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1938-1942
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C., 1938-1942
[Note: Interspersed among the regular CIO News: Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers Editions are
the Eastern, General and International editions.]
Reell
1938; December 12-26; Vol. 1, Nos. 53-55.
1939; January 2-December 25; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-19, 40-52.
1940; January 22-December30; Vol. 3, Nos. 4, 6-8,10-53.
1941 ¡Vol. 4, Nos. 1-52.
[Supplement: November 17,1941 ; The Murray Council Plan.]
1942; January 5-March 30; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-13.
45
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
C./.O. News: United Farm
Equipment and Metal
Workers Edition, 1938-1943
47
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-235-1.
48
REEL INDEX
C.I.O. News: United Farm Equipment and Metal Workers Edition,
1938-1943
Title
The CIO News: Farm Equipment Workers Edition, 1938-1943
Union Names
Farm Equipment Workers Organizing Committee, 1938-1941
United Farm Equipment and Metal Workers of America, 1942-1943
Editor
Len De Caux, 1938-1943
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1938-1943
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C., 1938-1943
Reell
1938; December 5-26; Vol. 1, Nos. 52-55.
1939; January 2-December 25; Vol. 2, Nos. 1,3-20, 46-52.
1940; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-53.
1941; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-52.
1942; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-52.
1943; January 4-March 1 ; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-9.
49
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
F.E. Atews, 1943-1949
51
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-236-X.
52
REEL INDEX
F. E. News, 1943-1949
Titles
F.E.,1943
Farm Equipment and Metal Workers News, 1943
F.E.News, 1944-1949
Union Name
United Farm Equipment and Metal Workers of America, 1943-1949
Editors
Mary Bradfield, 1943
Edwin J. Schonfeld, 1943-1944
Forrest Emerson, 1945-1949
Frequency of Publication
Semimonthly, 1943-1945
Weekly, 1946
Biweekly, 1946
Monthly, 1946-1949
Location of Periodical
Chicago, Illinois, 1943-1949
Reell
1943; March
1944; Vol. 1,
1945; Vol. 2,
1946; Vol. 3,
1947; Vol. 4,
1948; Vol. 5,
1949; Vol. 6,
15-December 20; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-19.
Nos. 20-24 through Vol. 2, Nos. 25-42.
Nos. 43-48 through Vol. 3, Nos. 49-67.
Nos. 68-75 through Vol. 4, Nos. 75-A-86.
Nos. 87-96.
Nos. 97-107.
Nos. 108-115.
53
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
International Metal Worker,
1902-1905
and
United Weldors' News,
1941-1945
55
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-237-8.
56
REEL INDEX
International Metal Worker, 1902-1905
Title
The International Metal Worker, 1902-1905
Union Name
United Metal Workers' International Union of America, 1902-1905
Editor
Charles O. Sherman, 1902-1905
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1902-1905
Location of Periodical
Chicago, Illinois, 1902-1905
Reell
1902;
1903;
1904;
1905;
December; Vol. 1, No. 1.
January-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 2-12 through Vol. 2, No. 1.
January-December; Vol. 2, Nos. 2-12 through Vol. 3, No. 1.
January-November; Vol. 3, Nos. 2-12.
57
United Weldors' News, 1941-1945
Title
United Weldors' News, 1941 -1945
Union Names
United Weldors, Cutters and Helpers of America, 1941
United Brotherhood of Weldors, Cutters and Helpers of America, 1942-1945
Editors
Richard A. Hardie, 1941-1942
J. W. Riordan, 1943
RuthE. Hardie, 1944-1945
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1941
Biweekly, 1942
Semimonthly, 1942,1943
Monthly, 1943,1944
Bimonthly, 1945
Location of Periodical
Los Angeles, California, 1941
St. Louis, Missouri, 1942,1943
Redondo Beach, California, 1942,1944-1945
1941 ; November 18-December 25; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-5.
1942; January 1 -December 20; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-23.
1943; January 5-December; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-21.
1944; January-December; Vol. 3, Nos. 22-23 through Vol. 4, Nos. 1-10.
1945; January-May; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-5.
58
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
international Molders'
and Foundry Workers'
Journal, 1864-1955
59
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-238-6.
60
REEL INDEX
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1864-1955
Titles
Iron Molders' International Journal, 1864-1865
The International Journal, 1866
Iron Molders' International Journal, 1867-1873
Iron Molders' Journal, 1874-1907
International Molders' Journal, 1908-1939
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1940-1955
Union Names
Iron Molders' International Union, 1864-1873
Iron Molders' Union of North America, 1874-1906
International Molders' Union of North America, 1907-1939
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Union of North America
1940-1955
Editors
E. S. Douglas, 1864-1865
William H. Sylvis, 1866-1868
William Saffin, 1870-1878
P. F. Fitzpatrick, 1879-1889
Martin Fox, 1890-1895
David Black, 1896-1902
John P. Frey, 1903-1926
Robert T. McCoy, 1927-1933
John F. Dunachie, 1934-1944
Taylor T. Buchanan, 1945-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1864-1955
Location of Periodical
Troy, New York, 1864-1865
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1866-1868
Cincinnati, Ohio 1870-1955
61
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1864-1955
ReeM
[Supplement: Annual convention proceedings of the Iron Molders' International Union:
1859,1860,1861,1863-1868,1870.]
1864; February 10-December 15; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-11.
1865; January 15; Vol. I.No. 12.
[Supplement: Quarterly reports: Oct. 1,1868; April 1,1869; July 1,1869; Oct. 1,1869;
Jan. 1,1870; April 1,1870; July 1,1870; and Financial report: July 1,1870.]
1866; April-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-9.
1867; January-December.
[Note: The volume and issue numbers are not listed after January, which is Vol. 1,
No. 10.]
1868; January-August.
[Supplement: Quarterly report, Oct. 1,1868.]
1870; August-December.
1871 ; January-December.
1872; January-December.
[Supplement: Convention proceedings: Jul. 10,1872; and Financial reports:
1870-1872.]
1873; January-October.
Reel 2
1873; November-December.
1874; January-December.
[Supplement: Convention proceedings, July 8,1874.]
1875; January-December.
1876; January-June, August-December.
[Supplement: Convention proceedings, July 1 and 5,1876.]
1877; January-December.
1878; January-August, October, December.
[Supplement: Convention proceedings, July 10,1878.]
1879; January, April-December.
[Supplement: Special session proceedings, Feb. 12,1879.]
1880; January-August.
Reel 3
Frame #
0002
0055
0200
0345
0489
0634
0777
1880 ; September-December.
1881 ; January-December.
1882; January-December.
1883; January-December.
1884; January-December.
1885; January-December.
1886; January-June, August-December.
62
Reel 4
Frame #
0002
0146
0282
0451
0611
0779
1887; January-December.
1888; January-June, August-December.
1889; January-December.
1890; January-June, August- December.
1891 ; January-December.
1892; January-December.
Reels
0002
0170
0338
0496
0780
1893; January-June; July-December; Vol. 29, Nos. 7-12.
[Note: No volume or issue numbers are given until July, which is Vol. 29, No. 7.]
1894; Vol. 30, Nos. 1-12.
1895; Vol. 31, Nos. 1-6, 8-12.
1896; Vol. 32, Nos. 1-12.
1897; Vol. 33, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 6
0002
0316
0673
1898; Vol. 34, Nos. 1-12.
1899; Vol. 35, Nos. 1-12.
1900; Vol. 36, Nos. 1-12.
Reel?
0002
0408
1901 ¡Vol. 37, Nos. 1-12.
1902; Vol. 38, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 8
0002
0598
1903; Vol. 39, Nos. 1-12.
1904; Vol. 40, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 9
0002
0501
1905; Vol. 41, Nos. 1-12.
1906; Vol. 42, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 10
0002
0529
1907; Vol. 43, Nos. 1-12.
1908; Vol. 44, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 11
0002
0466
1909; Vol. 45, Nos. 1-12.
1910; Vol. 46, Nos. 1-12.
63
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1864-1855
Reel 12
Frame #
0002
0545
1911; Vol. 47, Nos. 1-12.
1912; Vol. 48, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 13
0002
0584
1913; Vol. 49, Nos. 1-12.
1914; Vol. 50, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 14
0002
0539
1915; Vol. 51, Nos. 1-12.
1916; Vol. 52, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 15
0002
0515
1917; Vol. 53, Nos. 1-12.
1918; Vol. 54, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 16
0002
0533
1919; Vol. 55, Nos. 1-12.
1920; Vol. 56, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 17
0002
0362
0740
1921; Vol. 57, Nos. 1-12.
1922; Vol. 58, Nos. 1-12.
1923; Vol. 59, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 18
0002
0409
1924; Vol. 60, Nos. 1-12.
1925; Vol. 61, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 19
0002
0402
1926; Vol. 62, Nos. 1-12.
1927; Vol. 63, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 20
0002
0394
1928; Vol. 64, Nos. 1-12.
1929; Vol. 65, Nos. 1-12.
64
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1864-1955
Reel 21
Frame #
0002
0398
1930; Vol. 66, Nos. 1-12.
1931; Vol. 67, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 22
0002
0402
1932; Vol. 68, Nos. 1-12.
1933; Vol. 69, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 23
0002
0402
1934; Vol. 70, Nos. 1-12.
1935; Vol. 71, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 24
0002
0403
1936; Vol. 72, Nos. 1-12.
1937; Vol. 73, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 25
0002
0410
1938; Vol. 74, Nos. 1-12.
1939; Vol. 75, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 26
0002
0420
1940; Vol. 76, Nos. 1-12.
1941; Vol. 77, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 27
0002
0404
1942; Vol. 78, Nos. 1-12.
1943; Vol. 79, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 28
0002
0377
1944; Vol. 80, Nos. 1-12.
1945; Vol. 81, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 29
0002
0405
1946; Vol. 82, Nos. 1-12.
1947; Vol. 83, Nos. 1-12.
65
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Journal, 1864-1955
Reel 30
Frame #
0002
0348
0710
1948; Vol. 84, Nos. 1-12.
1949; Vol. 85, Nos. 1-12.
1950; Vol. 86, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 31
0002
0384
1951; Vol. 87, Nos. 1-12.
1952; Vol. 88, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 32
0002
0411
0845
1953; Vol. 89, Nos. 1-12.
1954; Vol. 90, Nos. 1-12.
1955; Vol. 91, Nos. 1-12.
66
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
I.U.E.-C.I.O. News,
1949-1955
67
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the Library of the New York State
School of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-239-4.
68
REEL INDEX
I.U.E.-C.I.O. News, 1949-1955
Titles
IUE-CIO News, 1949-1954
IUE AFL-CIO News^955
Union Name
International Union of Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers, 1949-1955
Editors
Arthur Riordan, 1949-1952
AI Hartnett, 1953-1955
Frequency of Publication
Biweekly, 1949-1955
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C., 1949-1955
ReeM
1949;
1950;
1951;
1952;
November 21-December5; Vol. I, Nos. 1-2.
Vol. 1^08.4-28.
Vol. 2, Nos. 1-26.
Vol. 3, Nos. 1-25.
Reel 2
1953^01.4,^8.1-24.
1954; Vol. 4, No. 25 through Vol. 5, Nos. 1-24.
1955; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-26.
69
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Vulcan Record, 1868-1875,
and
Machinery Molders Journal,
1888-1892
71
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of The Johns Hopkins University
Library.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-240-8.
72
REEL INDEX
Vulcan Record, 1868-1875
Title
Vulcan Record, 1868-1875
Union Names
Grand Forge of the United States, United Sons of Vulcan, 1868-1869
National Forge of the United States, United Sons of Vulcan, 1870-1875
Editors
B. A. McGinty, 1868
John O. Edwards, 1868-1870
Hugh McLaughlin, 1871-1872
David Harris, 1873-1874
Joseph Bishop, 1875
Frequency of Publication
Semiannually, 1868-1875
Location of Periodical
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1868
Cincinnati, Ohio, 1868
Covington, Kentucky, 1869-1870
Chicago, Illinois, 1871-1872
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1873-1875
Reell
Frame #
0001
0031
0060
0107
0165
0225
0300
0381
1868; Vol.
1869; Vol.
1870; Vol.
1871; Vol.
1872; Vol.
1873; Vol.
1874; Vol.
1875; Vol.
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
1,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-2.
3-4.
5-6.
7-«.
9-10.
11-12.
13-14.
15-16.
73
Machinery Molders Journal, 1888-1892
Machinery Molders Journal, 1888-1892
Titles
Journal of the International Brotherhood of Machinery Molders, 1888-1890
Machinery Molders Journal, 1891 -1892
Union Name
Brotherhood of Machinery Molders, 1888-1892
Editors
John A. Penton, 1888-1891
W. E. Wilkes, 1892
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1888-1892
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1888-1891
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1892
Frame #
0446
0460
0495
0519
0579
1888; April, August; Vol. 1, Nos. 4,8.
1889; September-November; Vol. 2, Nos. 9-11.
1890; September, June; Vol. 3, Nos. 9, 6.
1891 ; January, September, December; Vol. 4, Nos. 1,9,12.
1892; January, February, August, November, December; Vol. 5, Nos. 1, 2,8,11-12.
74
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
The Machinist,
1946-1955
75
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-241-6.
76
REEL INDEX
The Machinist, 1946-1955
Title
The Machinist, 1946-1955
Union Name
International Association of Machinists, 1946-1955
Editors
Lloyd White, 1946
Gordon H. Cole, 1946-1955
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1946-1955
Location of Periodical
Washington, D.C., 1946-1955
Reell
1946; April 4-December 26; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-39.
1947; Vol. 1, Nos. 40-52 through Vol. 2, Nos. 1-39.
1948^01.2^08.40-52.
Reel 2
1948; Vol.
1949; Vol.
1950; Vol.
1951 ; Vol.
1952; Vol.
3,
3,
4,
5,
6,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1^0.
41-52 through Vol.
41-52 through Vol.
41-52 through Vol.
42-52 through Vol.
4,
5,
6,
7,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1^0.
1-40.
1-41.
1-41.
ReelS
1953; Vol. 7, Nos. 42-52 through Vol. 8, Nos. 1-10,12^2.
1954; Vol. 8, Nos. 43-52 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-42.
1955; Vol. 9, Nos. 43-52 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-42.
77
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Machinists and Blacksmiths'
Monthly Journal, 1870-1875,
and
The Brass Worker, 1895-1896,
and
Official Journal of the
International Association of
Metal Mechanics,
1902-1904
79
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of The Johns Hopkins University
Library.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-242-4.
80
REEL INDEX
Machinists and Blacksmiths' Monthly Journal, 1870-1875
Titles
Machinists and Blacksmiths' International Journal, 1870-1872
Machinists and Blacksmiths' Monthly Journal, 1875
Union Name
International Machinists and Blacksmiths' Union of North America, 1870-1875
Editor
John Feherenbatch, 1870-1875
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1870-1875
Location of Periodical
Cleveland, Ohio, 1870-1875
Reell
Frame #
0001
0032
0229
0417
0418
1870; November-December; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-2.
1871 ; Vol. 8, Nos. 3-12 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-2.
1872; Vol. 9, Nos. 3-12.
[Supplement: Letter from John Feherenbatch to William H. Buckler regarding extra
copies of the journal. December 19,1904.]
1875; January-April, June-December; Vol. 12, Nos. 1-4, 6-12.
81
The Brass Worker, 1895-1896
The Brass Worker, 1895-1896
Title
The Brass Worker, 1895-1896
Union Name
United Brotherhood of Brass and Composition Metal Workers, Polishers and
Buffers, 1895-1896
Editor
William Anderson, 1895-1896
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1895-1896
Location of Periodical
St. Louis, Missouri, 1895-1896
Frame #
0515
0540
1895; October-December; Vol. 5, Nos. 10-12.
1896; January-May; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-5.
Official Journal of the International Association of Allied Metal
Mechanics, 1902-1904
Title
Official Journal of the International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics,
1902-1904
Union Name
International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics, 1902-1904
Editors
George B. Buchanan, 1902
John E. Devlin, 1904
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1902-1904
Location of Periodical
10^0,0^0,1902-1904
Frame #
0585
0613
1902; November-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 4-5.
1904; January-September; Vol. 2, Nos. 5-11.
82
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Metal Polisher, Buffer,
and Plater, 1897-1955
83
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-243-2.
84
REEL INDEX
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater, 1897-1955
Titles
The Journal, 1897-1906
Our Journal, 1907-1932
The Metal Polisher, Buffer and Plater, 1940-1955
Union Names
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, and Brass Workers' Union of North America
1897-1900
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders, and Brass Workers International Union of North America, 1901-1903
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders and Brass and Silver Workers'
International Union of North America, 1903-1910
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass and Silver Workers' Union of North
America, 1911-1917
Metal Polishers' International Union, 1918-1932
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers and Helpers International Union, 1940-1955
Editors
Samuel G. Carter, 1897
T. M. Daly and E. L Lynch, 1898
John J. Kinney, 1899
JohnJ. Cullen, 1900-1905
Charles R. Atherton, 1906-1926
W. W. Britton, 1927-1942
Ray Kelsay, 1943-1948
Ray Muehlhoffer, 1949-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1897-1925, 1928-1932
Bimonthly, 1926-1927, 1940-1955
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1897
New York, New York, 1898,1900-1905
Cleveland, Ohio, 1898-1899
Cincinnati, Ohio, 1906-1955
[Note: Publication suspended from April 1921 to December 1923 and February 1932 to December
1939.]
85
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater, 1897-1955
ReeM
Frame #
0002
1897; March, June-December; Vol. 4, Nos. 45,48 through Vol. 5, Nos. 49-53.
0148
1898; January-July, November-December; Vol. 6, Nos. 54-59 through Vol. 7,
Nos. 1,5-6.
0373
1899; Vol. 7, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 8, Nos. 1-6.
0808
1900; Vol. 8, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-6.
Reel 2
0002
0342
0777
1901 ; Vol. 9, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-5.
1902; Vol. 10, Nos. 6-12 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-6.
1903; Vol. 11, Nos. 7-12.
Reel 3
0002
0253
0693
1903; Vol. 12, Nos. 1-6.
1904; Vol. 12, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 13, Nos. 7-12.
1905; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 4
0002
0321
1906; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-12.
1907; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-12.
ReelS
0002
0350
1908; Vol. 17, Nos. 1-12.
1909; Vol. 18, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 6
0002
0348
1910; Vol. 19, Nos. 1-12.
1911; Vol. 20, Nos. 1-12.
Reel?
0002
0323
1912; Vol. 21, Nos. 1-12.
1913; Vol. 22, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 8
0002
0371
1914; Vol. 23, Nos. 1-12.
1915; Vol. 24, Nos. 1-12.
86
REEL INDEX
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater, 1897-1955
Titles
The Journal, 1897-1906
Our Journal, 1907-1932
The Metal Polisher, Buffer and Plater, 1940-1955
Union Names
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, and Brass Workers' Union of North America
1897-1900
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders, and Brass Workers International Union of North America, 1901-1903
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders and Brass and Silver Workers'
International Union of North America, 1903-1910
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass and Silver Workers' Union of North
America, 1911-1917
Metal Polishers' International Union, 1918-1932
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers and Helpers International Union, 1940-1955
Editors
Samuel G. Carter, 1897
T. M. Daly and E. L. Lynch, 1898
John J. Kinney, 1899
JohnJ. Cullen, 1900-1905
Charles R. Atherton, 1906-1926
W. W. Britton, 1927-1942
RayKelsay, 1943-1948
Ray Muehlhoffer, 1949-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1897-1925, 1928-1932
Bimonthly, 1926-1927, 1940-1955
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1897
New York, New York, 1898, 1900-1905
Cleveland, Ohio, 1898-1899
Cincinnati, Ohio, 1906-1955
[Note: Publication suspended from April 1921 to December 1923 and February 1932 to December
1939.]
85
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater, 1897-1955
Reell
Frame #
0002
1897; March, June-December; Vol. 4, Nos. 45,48 through Vol. 5, Nos. 49-53.
0148
1898; January-July, November-December; Vol. 6, Nos. 54-59 through Vol. 7,
Nos. 1,5-6.
0373
1899; Vol. 7, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 8, Nos. 1-6.
0808
1900; Vol. 8, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-6.
Reel 2
0002
0342
0777
1901 ; Vol. 9, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-5.
1902; Vol. 10, Nos. 6-12 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-6.
1903; Vol. 11, Nos. 7-12.
ReelS
0002
0253
0693
1903; Vol. 12, Nos. 1-6.
1904; Vol. 12, Nos. 7-12 through Vol. 13, Nos. 7-12.
1905; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 4
0002
0321
1906; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-12.
1907; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-12.
ReelS
0002
0350
1908; Vol. 17, Nos. 1-12.
1909; Vol. 18, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 6
0002
0348
1910; Vol. 19, Nos. 1-12.
1911; Vol. 20, Nos. 1-12.
Reel?
0002
0323
1912; Vol. 21, Nos. 1-12.
1913; Vol. 22, Nos. 1-12.
ReelS
0002
0371
1914; Vol. 23, Nos. 1-12.
1915; Vol. 24, Nos. 1-12.
86
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater, 1897-1955
Reel 9
Frame #
0002
1916; Vol. 25, Nos. 1-12.
0392
1917; Vol. 26, Nos. 1-12.
0799
1918; Vol. 27, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 10
0002
0359
0671
0710
1919; Vol.
1920; Vol.
1921; Vol.
1924; Vol.
28,
29,
30,
33,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-3.
1-12.
Reel 11
0002
0143
0227
0345
0573
1925; Vol. 34, Nos. 1-12.
1926^01.35,^8.1-12.
1927; Vol. 36, Nos. 1-6.
1928; Vol. 37, Nos. 1-12.
1929; Vol. 38, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 12
0002
0229
0415
0426
0499
0571
0652
0719
0802
1930; Vol. 39, Nos. 1-12.
1931 ¡Vol. 40, Nos. 1-12.
1932; January; Vol. 41, No. 1.
1940; Vol. 47, Nos. 1-6.
1941 ; Vol. 48, Nos. 1-4, 6.
1942; Vol. 49, Nos. 1-6.
1943; Vol. 50, Nos. 1-6.
1944; Vol. 51, Nos. 1-6.
1945; Vol. 52, Nos. 1-6.
Reel 13
[Note: The volume and issue numbers are given as they appear on Reel 13 and, although they
are not consecutive, there are no missing volumes or issues.]
0002
1946; Vol. 53, Nos. 1-6.
0100
1947; Vol. 54, Nos. 1-6.
0203
1948; Vol. 56, Nos. 1-6.
0286
1949; Vol. 62, Nos. 1-6.
0370
1950; Vol. 63, Nos. 1-5.
0451
1951; Vol. 64, Nos. 2-6.
0527
1952; Vol. 65, Nos. 1-5.
0595
1953; Vol. 66, Nos. 1-6.
0679
1954; Vol. 67, Nos. 1-6.
0764
1955; Vol. 68, Nos. 1-6.
87
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Metal Workers Bulletin,
1910-1914
and
Weldors' Journal,
1938-1941
89
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of The Johns Hopkins University
Library and the library of the U.S. Department of Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-244-0.
90
REEL INDEX
Metal Workers Bulletin, 1910-1914
Titles
Machinists Bulletin, 1910-1912
The Metal Worker, 1913
Metal Workers Bulletin, 1913-1914
Union Names
Brotherhood of Machinists, 1910
International Metal Workers Federation, 1911-1912
Brotherhood of Metal Workers, 1913-1914
Editors
Robert M. Lackey, 1910-1912
Charles Heyde, 1913-1914
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1910-1914
Location of Periodical
New York, New York, 1910-1914
ReeM
Frame #
0001
0005
0026
0074
0122
1910;
1911;
1912;
1913;
1914;
November-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-2.
Vol. 1, Nos. 1-10.
Vol. 2, Nos. 11-22.
Vol. 3, Nos. 23-34.
Vol. 4, Nos. 35-46.
91
Weldors' Journal, 193S-1941
Weldors'Journal, 1938-1941
Title
The Welder's [sic] Journal, 1938-1941
Union Names
Welders International Association, 1938-1940
United Weldors, Cutters and Helpers of America, 1941
Editors
Ron H. Davis, 1938
E.J.Aaberg, 1939-1941
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1938-1941
Location of Periodical
Bremerton, Washington, 1938-1941
Frame #
0171
0234
0348
0420
1938 ; April-December.
[Note: No volume or issue numbers given].
1939; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-12.
1940; January-November; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-8.
1941 ; March; Vol. 18, No. 1.
92
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Mine-Mill Union,
1942-1955
93
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-245-9.
94
REEL INDEX
Mine-Mill Union, 1942-1955
Titles
The Union, 1942-1953
The Mine-Mill Union, 1954-1955
Union Name
International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers, 1942-1955
Editors
Graham Dolan, 1942-1943
Morris Wright, 1944-1955
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1942,1946
Biweekly, 1943-1945,1947-1954
Monthly, 1955
Location of Periodical
Denver, Colorado, 1942-1944,1951-1955
Chicago, Illinois, 1945-1950
ReeM
1942;
1943;
1944;
1945;
April 6-December28; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-39.
Vol. 1, Nos. 40-50 through Vol. 2, Nos. 1-19.
Vol. 2, Nos. 20-25 through Vol. 3, Nos. 1-19.
Vol. 3, Nos. 20-25 through Vol. 4, Nos. 1-20.
Reel 2
1946;
1947;
1948;
1949;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
4,
5,
6,
7,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
21-26 through Vol.
28-35 through Vol.
21-27 through Vol.
20-26 through Vol.
5,
6,
7,
8,
95
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-27.
1-20.
1-19.
1-19.
Mine-Mill Union, 1942-1955
ReelS
1950; Vol.
1951 ; Vol.
1952; Vol.
1953; Vol.
1954; Vol.
1955; Vol.
8, Nos. 20-26 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-19.
9, Nos. 20-26 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-19.
10, Nos. 20-25 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-20.
11, Nos. 21-26 through Vol. 12, Nos. 1-19.
12, Nos. 20-26 through Vol. 13, Nos. 1-18.
13, Nos. 19-25 through Vol. 14, Nos. 1-14.
96
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Pattern Makers' Journal,
1893-1955
97
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of Labor
Library.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-246-7.
98
REEL INDEX
Pattern Makers' Journal, 1893-1955
Title
Pattern Makers'Journal, 1893-1955
Union Names
Pattern Makers' National League of North America, 1893-1897
Pattern Makers' League of North America, 1898-1955
Editors
L H. Kirberg and E. H. Diehl, 1893
L.R.Thomas, 1894-1895
J.F.McBride, 1896-1901
James Wilson and J. B. McNerney, 1902-1934
George Q. Lynch, 1935-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1893-1930
Bimonthly, 1931-1955
Location of Periodical
Flushing, New York, 1893-1894
Brooklyn, New York, 1895
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1896-1899
New York, New York, 1900-1905
Cincinnati, Ohio, 1906-1934
Washington, D.C., 1935-1955
ReeM
Frame #
0002
0050
0056
0079
0117
0141
0162
0278
0393
0562
1893; February, March, May, June, August, September; Vol. 2, Nos. 5-6,8-10.
1894; October; Vol. 3, No. 1.
1895; April, May, July, November; Vol. 3, Nos. 7-8,10, Vol. 4, No. 2.
1896; June-December; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-6, Vol. 6, No. 1.
1897; January-December; Vol. 6, Nos. 2-12, and Vol. 7, No. 1.
1898; Vol. 7, Nos. 2-6, 8-10,12-13.
1899; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-12.
1900; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-12.
1901; Vol. 10, Nos. 1-12.
1902; Vol. 11, Nos. 1-12.
99
Pattern Makers' Journal, 1893-1955
Reel 2
Frame #
0002
0153
0302
0515
0689
1903; Vol. 12, Nos. 1-12.
1904;Vol. IS.Nos. 1-12.
1905; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
1906; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-12.
1907; Vol. 18, Nos. 1-12.
[Note: The break in volume numbers does not represent missing volumes.]
Reel 3
0002
0227
0474
0693
1908; Vol.
1909; Vol.
1910; Vol.
1911 ¡Vol.
19,
20,
21,
22,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
Reel 4
0002
0221
0473
1912; Vol. 23, Nos. 1-12.
1913; Vol. 24, Nos. 1-12.
1914; Vol. 25, Nos. 1-12.
Reels
0002
0219
0436
0696
1915;
1916;
1917;
1918;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
26,
27,
28,
29,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
30,
31,
32,
33,
34,
35,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-11.
1-11.
1-12.
Reel 6
0002
0215
0371
0501
0568
0633
1919;
1920;
1921;
1922;
1923;
1924;
Reel 7
0002
0127
0311
0438
0563
0694
1925; Vol. 36, Nos. 1-12.
1926; Vol. 37, Nos. 1-12.
1927; Vol. 38, Nos. 1-12.
1928; Vol. 39, Nos. 1-12.
1929^01.40,^8.1-12.
1930; Vol. 41, Nos. 1-12.
100
Pattern Makers' Journal, 1893-1955
ReelS
Frame #
0001
0066
0125
0168
0224
0285
0366
0448
0620
0733
1931; Vol. 42, Nos. 1-6.
1932; Vol. 43, Nos. 1-6.
1933; Vol. 44, Nos. 1-6.
1934; Vol. 45, Nos. 1-2.
1935; Vol. 45, Nos. 3-8.
1936; Vol. 45, Nos. 9-14.
1937; Vol. 45, Nos. 15-20.
1938; Vol. 45, Nos. 21-26.
1939; Vol. 46, Nos. 1-6.
1940; Vol. 47, Nos. 1-6.
Reel 9
0001
0118
0294
0393
0498
0600
1941; Vol.
1942; Vol.
1943; Vol.
1944; Vol.
1945; Vol.
1946; Vol.
48,
49,
50,
51,
52,
53,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1947; Vol. 54, Nos.
1948; Vol. 55, Nos.
1949; Vol. 56, Nos.
1950; Vol. 57, Nos.
1951; Vol. 58, Nos.
1952; Vol. 59, Nos.
1953; Vol. 60, Nos.
1954; Vol. 61, Nos.
1955; Vol. 62, Nos.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
1-6.
Reel 10
0001
0094
0154
0213
0302
0360
0419
0477
0571
101
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Sheet Metal Workers'
Journal, 1896-1955
103
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-247-5.
104
REEL INDEX
Sheet Metal Workers' Journal, 1896-1955
Titles
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' Journal, 1896-1923
Sheet Metal Workers' Journal, 1924-1955
Union Names
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International Association, 1896-1902
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International Alliance, 1903-1923
Sheet Metal Workers' International Association, 1924-1955
Editors
James F. Hughes, 1896,1898-1900
H.A. Daniel, 1897
JohnE. Bray, 1901-1918
William L Sullivan, 1919-1927
W. M. O'Brien, 1928-1933
James W. Close and Louis M. Wicklein, 1948-1950
Edward F. Carlough, 1951-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1896-1927, 1948-1955
Quarterly, 1928-1933
Location of Periodical
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1896
Lexington, Kentucky, 1897-1900
Kansas City, Missouri, 1901-1917
Chicago, Illinois, 1918-1922
Washington, D.C., 1923-1955
[Note: Publication suspended from April 1933 to December 1947.]
Reell
1896; December; Vol. 1, No. 19.
1897; May-December; Vol. 2, Nos. 3-10.
1898; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-12.
1899; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-4, 6-10 through Vol. 5, Nos. 1-2.
1900; Vol. 5, Nos. 3-13 through Vol. 6, No. 1.
1901 ; January-April, June-November; Vol. 6, Nos. 2-6,8-12.
105
Sheet Metal Workers' Journal, 1896-1955
Reel 2
Frame #
0002
1901 ; December; Vol. 7, No. 1.
0008
1902; Vol. 7, Nos. 2-12 through Vol. 8, No. 1.
0105
1903; Vol. 8, Nos. 2-12.
[Note: May and June are both numbered as Vol. 8, No. 6.]
0248
1904; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-12.
0468
1905; Vol. 10, Nos. 1-12.
0737
1906; Vol. 11, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 3
0002
0278
0551
0837
1907; Vol.
1908; Vol.
1909; Vol.
1910; Vol.
12,
13,
14,
15,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
16,
17,
18,
19,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
20,
21,
22,
23,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
Reel 4
0002
0284
0544
0809
1911; Vol.
1912; Vol.
1913; Vol.
1914; Vol.
Reel5
0002
0270
0523
0786
1915;
1916;
1917;
1918;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Reel 6
0002
0286
0668
1919; Vol. 24, Nos. 1-11.
1920; Vol. 25, Nos. 1-12.
1921 ; Vol. 26, Nos. 1-12.
Reel?
0002
0311
0620
1922; Vol. 27, Nos. 1-12.
1923; Vol. 28, Nos. 1-12.
1924; Vol. 29, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 8
0002
0304
0602
1925; Vol. 30, Nos. 1-12.
1926; Vol. 31, Nos. 1-12.
1927; Vol. 32, Nos. 1-9.
106
Sheet Metal Workers'Journal, 1896-1955
Reel 9
Frame #
0002
0103
0203
0303
0400
0499
0527
0677
1928; Vol. 33, Nos. 1-4.
1929; Vol. 34, Nos. 1-4.
1930; Vol. 35, Nos. 1-4.
1931 ¡Vol. 36, Nos. 1-4.
1932; Vol. 37, Nos. 1-4.
1933; Vol. 38, No. 1.
1948; Vol. 39, Nos. 1-12.
1949; Vol. 40, Nos. 1-12.
Reel 10
0003
0162
0315
0471
0629
0811
1950; Vol.
1951; Vol.
1952; Vol.
1953; Vol.
1954; Vol.
1955; Vol.
41, Nos.
42, Nos.
43, Nos.
44, Nos.
45, Nos.
46, Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
107
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
The Shipbuilder,
1936-1955
109
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-248-3.
110
REEL INDEX
The Shipbuilder, 1936-1955
Titles
The Shipyard Worker, 1936-1947
Industrial Union Reporter, 1948-1950
The Shipbuilder, 1951-1955
Union Name
Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers of America, 1936-1955
Editors
Thomas Gallagher, 1936
Samuel J. Kramer, 1936-1946
Milton Murray, 1947-1948
John A. Ullman, 1949
A. G. Delman, 1950-1955
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1936,1940-1945
Biweekly, 1937-1939, 1946-1947
Monthly, 1948-1955
Location of Periodical
Camden, New Jersey, 1936-1955
[Note: Publication suspended from October 1949 to June 1950, November 1950 to January 1951.]
ReeM
1936; August 28-December 25; Vol. 1, Nos. 23,24,30,32,33-40.
1937; Vol. 1, Nos. 41-44, 46-52 through Vol. 2, Nos. 1-40.
1938; Vol. 2, Nos. 41-52 through Vol. 3, Nos. 1-14.
1939; Vol. 3, Nos. 15-26 through Vol. 4, Nos. 1-14.
1940; Vol. 4, Nos. 15-26 through Vol. 5, Nos. 1-26.
Reel 2
1941 ; Vol. 5, Nos. 27-52 through Vol. 6, Nos. 1-26.
1942; Vol. 6, Nos. 27-52 through Vol. 7, Nos. 1-26.
1943; Vol. 7, Nos. 27-52 through Vol. 8, Nos. 1-6.
m
The Shipbuilder, 1936-1955
Reel3
1943; Vol. 8, Nos. 9-27.
1944; Vol. 8, Nos. 28-52 through Vol. 9, Nos. 1-26.
1945; Vol. 9, Nos. 27-50.
Reel 4
1945; Vol.
1946; Vol.
1947; Vol.
1948; Vol.
1949; Vol.
1950; Vol.
9, Nos. 51-52 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-27.
10, Nos. 28-52 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-23.
11, Nos. 24-50.
11, Nos. 51-52 through Vol. 12, Nos. 1-19.
12, Nos. 20-28.
12, Nos. 29-32.
Reels
1951; Vol.
1952; Vol.
1953; Vol.
1954; Vol.
1955; Vol.
12, Nos. 33-^1.
12, Nos. 42-47, 50-52.
13, Nos. 1-7,11-12.
14,^5.1-4,10, 12.
15, Nos. 1-2, 4-6, 10-12.
112
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Steel Labor, 1936-1955
113
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-249-1.
114
REEL INDEX
Steel Labor, 1936-1955
Title
Steel Lafcor, 1936-1955
Union Names
Steel Workers Organizing Committee, 1936-1941
United Steel Workers of America, 1942-1955
Editors
J. B. S. Hardman, 1936
Vincent Sweeney, 1936-1955
Frequency of Publication
Bimonthly, 1936-1937
Monthly, 1938-1955
Location of Periodical
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1936
Indianapolis, Indiana, 1937-1955
ReeM
1936; August 1-December 19; Vol. 1, Nos. 1-9.
1937; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-12,14-22.
[Note: On May 24 an "Election Special" was issued.]
1938; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-12.
1939; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-12.
1940; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-12.
1941; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-12.
1942; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-12.
1943; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-12.
1944; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-12.
1945;Vol. lO.Nos. 1-12.
Reel 2
1946; Vol. 11, Nos. 1-12.
1947;Vol. 12,Nos. 1-12.
1948;Vol. 13,Nos. 1-12.
1949; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
1950; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-12.
1951; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-12.
1952^01.17,1^08.1-12.
1953; Vol. 18, Nos. 1-12.
115
Steel Labor, 1936-1955
Reel 3
1954;Vol. 19,Nos. 1-12.
1955:701.20,1^08.1-12.
116
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
Stove Mounters' and
Range Workers'Journal,
1898-1955
117
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin, The Johns Hopkins University Library, and the library of the U.S. Department of
Labor.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-250-5.
118
REEL INDEX
Stove Mounters' and Range Workers' Journal, 1898-1955
Titles
International Stove Mounters' Journal, 1898-1900
Stove Mounters' and Steel Range Workers' Journal, 1901
Stove, Range and Metal Pattern Workers' Journal, 1901
Stove Mounters Journal, 1902-1904
Stove Mounters' and Range Workers' Journal, 1905-1955
Union Names
International Stove Mounters' Union, 1898-1900
Stove Mounters' and Steel Range Workers' International Union of North
America, 1901,1905-1917
Stove Mounters' and Steel Range Workers, Pattern Fitters and Filers, International Union of North America, 1901
Stove Mounters' International Union of North America, 1902-1904,1918-1955
Editors
H. P. Oberling, 1898-1900
J.H.Kaefer, 1901-1912
Frank Grimshaw, 1913-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1898-1930
Quarterly, 1931-1955
Location of Periodical
Quincy, Illinois, 1898-1900
Detroit, Michigan, 1901-1955
ReeM
Frame #
0002
0013
0027
0129
0344
0547
0750
1898; September; Vol. 3, No. 9.
1900; May; Vol. 5, No. 5.
1901 ; May, August-December; Vol. 6, Nos. 5,8-12.
1902;Vol. 7, Nos. 1-12.
1903; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-12.
1904; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-12.
1905; Vol. 10,^8.1-12.
119
Stove Mounters' and Range Workers' Journal, 1898-1955
Reel 2
Frame #
0002
0216
0407
0626
0841
1906;
1907;
1908;
1909;
1910;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
11,
12,
13,
14,
15,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-9,11-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1916; Vol.
1917; Vol.
1918; Vol.
1919; Vol.
1920; Vol.
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
32,
33,
34,
35,
36,
37,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-12.
1-6.
1-4.
1-4.
1-4.
1-4.
1-4.
1-4.
1-4.
Reel 3
0002
0218
0430
0644
0859
1911;
1912;
1913;
1914;
1915;
Reel 4
0002
0218
0429
0643
0848
Reels
0002
0192
0348
0507
0665
0822
1921 ¡Vol.
1922; Vol.
1923; Vol.
1924; Vol.
1925; Vol.
1926; Vol.
Reel 6
0002
0158
0313
0421
0527
0582
0618
0654
0694
0739
0786
0837
1927; Vol.
1928; Vol.
1929; Vol.
1930; Vol.
1931 ¡Vol.
1932; Vol.
1933; Vol.
1934; Vol.
1935; Vol.
1936; Vol.
1937; Vol.
1938; Vol.
120
Stove Mounters' and Range Workers' Journal, 1898-1955
Reel?
Frame #
0002
1939 Vol. 44, Nos. 1-4.
0054
1940 Vol. 45, Nos. 1-4.
0107
1941 Vol. 46, Nos. 1-4.
1942 Vol. 47, NOS. 1-4.
0190
0240
1943 Vol. 48, Nos. 1-4.
1944 Vol. 49, Nos. 1-4.
0293
0349
1945 Vol. 50, Nos. 1-4.
0401
1946 Vol. 51, Nos. 1-4.
0457
1947 Vol. 52, Nos. 1-4.
1948 Vol. 53, Nos. 1-4.
1949 Vol. 54, Nos. 1-4.
1950 Vol. 55, Nos. 1-4.
1951 Vol. 56, Nos. 1-4.
1952 Vol. 57, Nos. 1-4.
1953 Vol. 58, Nos. 1-4.
1954 Vol. 59, Nos. 1-4.
1955 Vol. 60, Nos. 1-4.
[Note: The frame numbers on Reel 7 end at frame 0572.]
121
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
U.E. News, 1939-1955
123
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-251-3.
124
REEL INDEX
U.E. News, 1939-1955
Title
UENews, 1939-1955
Union Name
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, 1939-1955
Editor
Julius Emspak, 1939-1955
Frequency of Publication
Weekly, 1939-1948
Biweekly, 1949-1955
Location of Periodical
New York, New York, 1939-1955
ReeM
1939;
1940;
1941;
1942;
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
Vol.
1,
2,
3,
4,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-52.
1-52.
1-52.
1-52.
Reel 2
1943; Vol. 5, Nos. 1-52.
1944; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-53.
1945; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-52.
Reels
1946; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-52.
1947; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-29, 31-52.
Reel 4
1948; Vol.
1949; Vol.
1950; Vol.
1951; Vol.
10,
11,
12,
13,
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
Nos.
1-52.
1-35.
1-26.
1-25.
125
U. E. News, 1939-1955
Reels
1952; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-26.
1953^01.15,1^08.1-26.
1954; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-25.
[Note: UE Press Release, October 23,1953, included on film.]
1955; Vol. 17, Nos. 1-26.
126
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
Part 1 : The Metal Trades
United Automobile
Worker, 1936-1955
127
Source note: The collection was filmed from the holdings of the State Historical Society of
Wisconsin.
Compilation 1990 by University Publications of America.
All rights reserved.
ISBN 1-55655-252-1.
128
REEL INDEX
United Automobile Worker, 1936-1955
Title
United Automobile Worker, 1936-1955
Union Names
International Union, United Automobile Workers of America, 1936-1940
International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement
Workers of America, 1941-1955
Editors
Homer Martin, 1936-1940
Carl Haessler and Edward Levinson, 1941-1944
David P. Connery, 1945
Frank Winn, 1946-1955
Frequency of Publication
Monthly, 1936, 1945-1955
Weekly, 1937-1939
Semimonthly, 1940-1944
Location of Periodical
Detroit, Michigan, 1936-1955
ReeM
1936; May-December; Vol. 1, Nos. 2-7.
[Note: Issue for June is missing. Also included are the "Special Convention Number,"
the "Dodge Security Special," and the "Midland Special.'!
1937; January 19-December 25; Vol. 1, Nos. 9-48.
[Note: Monthly issues for January, March, and April are missing. Also included are
"G. M. Strike" bulletins, a "Special Convention Issue," "Ford" editions, and
several "West Side Conveyor" editions that were edited by Walter P. Reuther.]
1938; January 1-December 24; Vol. 2, Nos. 1-52.
[Note: Issues for August 13 and October 1 are missing. Also included are a "Ford"
edition and several "West Side Conveyor" editions that were edited by Walter P.
Reuther.]
129
United Automobile Worker, 1936-1955
Reel 2
1939; January 7-December 27; Vol. 3, Nos. 1-45.
[Note: Issues for April 1, July 5, November 22, and December 20 are missing.]
1940; January 1-December 15; Vol. 4, Nos. 1-34.
[Note: Issues for April 17, May 29, June 26, and July 22 are missing.]
1941 ; January 15-December 15; Vol. 5, Nos. 2-24.
1942; January 1-December 15; Vol. 6, Nos. 1-24.
1943; January 1-December 15; Vol. 7, Nos. 1-24.
Reel 3
1944; January 1-December 15; Vol. 8, Nos. 1-23.
1945; January 1-December; Vol. 9, Nos. 1-22.
1946; January-December; Vol. 9, Nos. 23-24 through Vol. 10, Nos. 1-10.
1947; January-December; Vol. 10, Nos. 11-12 through Vol. 11, Nos. 1-10.
1948; January-December; Vol. 11, Nos. 11-12 through Vol. 12, Nos. 1-10.
1949; January-December; Vol. 13, Nos. 1-12.
1950; January-December; Vol. 14, Nos. 1-12.
1951; January-February; Vol. 15, Nos. 1-2.
Reel 4
1951; March-December; Vol. 15, Nos. 3-12.
1952; January-December; Vol. 16, Nos. 1-12.
1953; January-December; Vol. 17, Nos. 1-12.
1954; January-December; Vol. 17 [sic], Nos. 1-12.
[Note: Also included: "Full Employment: Key to Abundance, Security, Peace" by Walter
P. Reuther, December 7,1953.]
1955; January-December; Vol. 18, Nos. 1-12.
130
EDITOR INDEX
The following ¡s a list of the editors of the publications included in Labor Union Periodicals, Part 1: The Metal
Trades. The number(s) following the name represents the page number of the guide on which the user will find
the listings for the publication edited.
Aaberg, E. J. 92
Anderson, William 82
Ashbrook, Earl B. 27
Atherton, Charles R. 85
Barry, John J. 27
Bishop, Joseph 73
Black, David 61
Bradfield, Mary 53
Bray, John E. 105
Brinkman, John H. 33
Britton, W.W. 85
Buchanan, George B. 82
Buchanan, Taylor T. 61
Carlough, Edward F. 105
Carter, Samuel G. 85
Gary, Irvan 3
Casey, James B. 27
Close, James W. 105
Cole, Gordon H. 77
Connery, David P. 129
Cullen, John J. 85
Daly, T. M. 85
Daniel, H. A. 105
Davis, Ben I. 7
Davis, Lou W. 7
Davis, Ron H. 92
DeCaux, Len 37,41,45,49
Delman, A. G. 111
Devlin, John E. 82
Diehl, E. H. 99
Dolan, Graham 95
Douglas, E. S. 61
Dunachie, John F. 61
Dunn, George F. 27
Edwards, John O. 73
Emerson, Forrest 53
Emspak, Julius 125
Feherenbatch, John 81
Fitzpatrick, P. F. 61
Fox, Martin 61
Franklin, J. A. 27
Freeman, L. A. 27
Frey, John P. 61
Gallagher, Thomas 111
Gilthorpe, William J. 27
Grimshaw, Frank 119
Grisham, George 3
Haessler, Carl 129
Hardie, Richard A. 58
Hardie, Ruth E. 58
Hardman, J. B. S. 115
Harris, David 73
Hartnett, AI 69
Heaton, Earl 3
Heyde, Charles 91
Honig, Nathaniel 18
Horn, Roy 23
Hughes, James F. 105
Johnson, Lee 27
Kaefer.J. H. 119
Kelsay, Ray 85
Kerr, Robert B. 23
Kinney, John J. 85
Kirberg, L. H. 99
Kline, James W. 23
Kramer, Samuel J. 111
Lackey, Robert M. 91
Levinson, Edward 129
Logan, W. A. 13
Lynch, E. L. 85
Lynch, George Q. 99
McBride, J. F. 99
McCoy, Robert T. 61
McGinty, B. A. 73
McLaughlin, Hugh 73
McNeil, John 27
McNerney, J. B. 99
Magil.A. B. 17
Martin, Homer 129
Martin, John S. 13
131
Mavell, William P. 13,34
Muehlhoffer, Ray 85
Murray, Milton 111
Oberling, H. P. 119
O'Brien, W. M. 105
Pasnick, Ray (R. W.) 37,38
Penton, John A. 74
Raymond, Philip A. 17
Reuther, Walter P. 129
Riordan, Arthur 69
Riordan, J. W. 58
Saffln, William 61
Schonfeld, Edwin J. 53
Sherman, Charles O. 57
Sullivan, William L 105
Sweeney, Vincent 115
Sylvis, William H. 61
Thomas, L. R. 99
Ullman, John A. 111
Washburn, Lester 3
White, Lloyd 77
Wicklein, Louis M. 105
Wilkes, W. E. 74
Wilson, James 99
Winn, Frank 129
Wright, Morris 95
Zonarich, N. A. 37
132
UNION INDEX
The following is an index to the unions represented in Labor Union Periodicals, Part 1: The Metal Trades. The
number(s) following the name of the union represents the page number on which the issue listings for that
union's periodical appear.
International Association of Machinists 77
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths 23
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and
Helpers 23
International Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Drop
Forgers and Helpers 23
International Brotherhood of Boiler Makers and Iron
Ship Builders 27
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron
Ship Builders and Helpers of America 27
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron
Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and
Helpers 27
International Brotherhoods of Boilermakers, Iron
Ship Builders, Blacksmiths, Forgers and
Helpers 27
International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, Iron
Ship Builders, Welders and Helpers of
America 27
International Machinists and Blacksmiths' Union of
North America 81
International Metal Workers Federation 91
International Molders' and Foundry Workers' Union
of North America 61
International Molders' Union of North America 61
International Stove Mounters' Union 119
International Union of Electrical, Radio and
Machine Workers 69
International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter
Workers 45, 95
International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft
and Agricultural Implement Workers of
America 129
International Union, United Automobile Workers of
America 129
Iron Molders' International Union 61
Iron Molders' Union of North America 61
Mechanics Educational Society of America 34
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers and Helpers
International Union 85
Aluminum Workers of America 37,38
Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin
Workers of America 7
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International
Alliance 105
Amalgamated Sheet Metal Workers' International
Association 105
American Federation of Labor 3
American Federation of Labor-Congress of
Industrial Organizations 69
American Section, Red International Labor
Unions 18
Auto Workers Union 17
Brotherhood of Boiler Makers and Iron Ship
Builders of America 27
Brotherhood of Machinery Molders 74
Brotherhood of Machinists 91
Brotherhood of Metal Workers 91
Carriage and Wagon Workers' International Union
of North America 33
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers
Internatbnal Union 34
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers'
International Union of America 13
Carriage, Wagon and Automobile Workers
International Union of North America 34
Congress of Industrial Organizations 37, 41, 45,
49,69
Dodge Shop Nucleus of the Workers (Communist)
Party 19
Farm Equipment Workers Organizing Committee
49
Ford Shop Nuclei of the Workers (Communist)
Party of America 18
Grand Forge of the United States, United Sons of
Vulcan 73
Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding
Workers of America 111
International Association of Allied Metal
Mechanics 82
133
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, and Brass
Workers' Union of North America 85
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass and Silver
Workers' Union of North America 85
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders
and Brass and Silver Workers' International
Union of North America 85
Metal Polishers, Buffers, Platers, Brass Molders,
and Brass Workers International Union of
North America 85
Metal Polishers' International Union 85
Mine, Mill, and Smelter Workers Union 41
National Association of Die Casting Workers 41
National Forge of the United States, United Sons
of Vulcan 73
National Provisional Committee for the
Organization of National Industrial Auto
Workers Union 17
Pattern Makers' League of North America 99
Pattern Makers' National League of North
America 99
Sheet Metal Workers' International Association 105
Steel Workers Organizing Committee 115
Stove Mounters' and Steel Range Workers'
International Union of North America 119
Stove Mounters' and Steel Range Workers,
Pattern Fitters and Filers, International Union
of North America 119
Stove Mounters' International Union of North
America 119
United Automobile, Aircraft and Vehicle Workers of
America 13,17
United Automobile Workers of America 3
United Brotherhood of Brass and Composition
Metal Workers, Polishers and Buffers 82
United Brotherhood of Weldors, Cutters and
Helpers of America 58
United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of
America 125
United Farm Equipment and Metal Workers of
America 49,53
United Metal Workers' International Union of
America 57
United Steel Workers of America 115
United Weldors, Cutters and Helpers of America
58,92
Welders International Association 92
Workers (Communist) Party Shop Nucleus 19
Workers (Communist) Party Shop Nucleus, Fisher
Body Plant 10 19
134
LABOR UNION PERIODICALS
PART 1 : THE METAL TRADES
A. F. of L. Auto Worker
Amalgamated Journal
The Auto Worker
Auto Workers News
Blacksmiths, Drop Forgers, and Helpers Journal
Boilermakers-Blacksmiths Journal
The Brass Worker
Carriage and Wagon Workers Journal
C.I.O. News: Aluminum Workers Edltlor
C.I.O. News: Aluminum Workers News Digest
CAO. News: Die Casters Edition
C.I.O. News: Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers International Edition
C.I.O. News: United Farm Equipment and Metal Workers Edition
Dodge Bros. Workers News
F. E. News
Fisher Body Worker
The Ford Worker
International Metal Worker
International Molders and Foundry Workers Journal
I.U.E.-C.I.O. News
Labor Unity
Machinery Molders Journal
The Machinist
Machinists and Blacksmiths' Monthly Journal
M.E.S.A. Educator
Metal Polisher, Buffer, and Plater
Metal Workers Bulletin
Mine-Mill Union
Official Journal
Official Journal of the International Association of Allied Metal Mechanics
Pattern Makers' Journal
Sheet Metal Workers' Journal
The Shipbuilder
The Spark Plug
Steel Labor
Stove Mounters' and Range Workers' Journal
U.E. News
United Automobile Worker
United Weldors' News
Vulcan Record
Weldors' Journal
UNIVERSITY PUBLICATIONS OF AMERICA

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