Today in Labor History April 1, 1946: Over 400,000 UMWA coal miners from 26 states went on strike for safer conditions, health benefits and increased wages. WWII had recently ended and President Truman saw the strike as counterproductive to economic recovery. In May, 1946, he seized the mines, making the miners temporarily federal employees. He ended the strike by offering them a deal that included healthcare and retirement security.

The coal strike was part of the strike wave of 1945-1946, the largest in U.S. history. During WWII, most of the major unions collaborated with the U.S. war effort by enforcing labor “discipline” and preventing strikes. In exchange, the U.S. government supported closed shop policies under which employers at unionized companies agreed to hire only union members. While the closed shop gave unions more power within a particular company, the no-strike policy made that power virtually meaningless.

When the war ended, inflation soared and veterans flooded the labor market. As a result, frustrated workers began a series of wildcat strikes. Many grew into national, union-supported strikes. In November 1945, 225,000 UAW members went on strike. In January 1946, 174,000 electric workers struck. That same month, 750,000 steel workers joined them. Then, in April, the coal strike began. 250,000 railroad workers struck in May. In total, 4.3 million workers went on strike. It was the closest the U.S. came to a national General Strike in the 20th century. And in December 1946, Oakland, California did have a General Strike, the last in U.S. history.

In response to the strike wave, Congress passed the Taft-Hartley Act in 1947, which severely restricted the powers and activities of unions. It also banned General Strikes, stripping away the most powerful tool workers had.

#workingclass #LaborHistory #union #strike #strikewave #generalstrike #wildcat #coal #mining #worldwartwo

You can buy the iconic club Jimi Hendrix, Tom Jones and Elton John rocked for just £475,000

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://metro.co.uk/2026/03/31/inside-time-capsule-music-history-market-475-000-27786218/

Edgar Faure, who died OTD in 1988, was in the French Resistance during #WorldWarTwo, he later served as Prime Minister of #France in 1952 https://cromwell-intl.com/travel/france/wwii-french-resistance/?s=mb #travel #history
World War II French Resistance Memorials — Travel in France

Finding the many small memorials to French Resistance fighters and civilians killed during the German occupation of France during World War II.

Bob's Pages of Travel, Linux, Cybersecurity, and More
Lise de Baissac, who died OTD in 2004, was a heroine of the Special Operations Executive during #WorldWarTwo, a special agent who risked her life running her own operations https://cromwell-intl.com/travel/france/wwii-french-resistance/?s=mb #travel #France #history
World War II French Resistance Memorials — Travel in France

Finding the many small memorials to French Resistance fighters and civilians killed during the German occupation of France during World War II.

Bob's Pages of Travel, Linux, Cybersecurity, and More

Today in Labor History March 19, 1933: Nazis arrested Jewish antifascist photographer Gerda Taro and interrogated her about a supposed communist plot to overthrow Hitler. She had previously been arrested for distributing anti-fascist literature. The Nazis eventually let her go and she fled to France, and then Yugoslavia. She died at the age of 26, photo-documenting the Spanish Republican war against Franco and the fascists. Some said that she was responsible, along with Robert Capa, for inventing the genre of war photography. Capa was actually the nom de guerre of Taro’s lover, Endre Friedmann, a Hungarian Jew who taught her the art of photography and who later went on to found Magnum Photos, along with French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson. “Capa” was Friedmann’s street name, back in Hungary. It meant “shark.”

#workingclass #LaborHistory #worldwartwo #hitler #nazis #holocaust #antisemitism #antifascism #antifa #fascism #photography #photojournalism #journalism #gerdataro #robertcapa

The Mörkö-Morane was a Finnish-engineered upgrade of the French Morane-Saulnier M.S.406 fighter during WWII. Faced with rising losses in 1942, Finnish commanders decided to re-engine their obsolete Moranes with captured Soviet Klimov M-105P V-12 engines (1,100 hp) and aerodynamic refinements.https://www.destinationsjourney.com/historical-military-photographs/finnish-morko-morane-fighter-aircraft/ #aeroplane #Aircraft #airplane #aviation #fighter #FinnishAirForce #MoraneSaulnierMS406 #SecondWorldWar #WorldWarTwo #WW2
Albert Einstein, born March 14, 1879

"Einstein & Hitler," illustration by Danny Hellman for EXIT Magazine, 4/12/94

#illustrator #illustration #comix #comics #worldwartwo #atomicbomb #hiroshima #nagasaki #holocaust #kabbalah
First flying on 28 December 1933, the Loire 70 was a long-range maritime reconnaissance flying boat designed for the French Navy. Seven production aircraft were ordered and along with the prototype served with Escadrille E7 at Karouba in Tunisia. An Italian air raid destroyed 3 of the 4 surviving aircraft. https://www.destinationsjourney.com/historical-military-photographs/loire-70-french-flying-boat/ #aeroplane #Aircraft #airplane #aviation #FlyingBoat #FrenchAirForce #Loire70 #SecondWorldWar #WorldWarTwo #WW2

New video on the firebombing of Dresden and Kurt Vonnegut's survival through it all. Check it out!

https://youtu.be/EsoptH1_zzo?si=QFTREVVi0oZFol9O

#KurtVonnegut #Dresden #WW2 #History #WorldWarTwo