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During the Great Depression, American workers, saddled with increasingly depressed wages and harsh working conditions, demanded adequate pay and safe workplaces. To bring companies and government agencies to the bargaining table, workers leaned on collective action as a means to secure victories. In both town and country, they formed unions and initiated strikes to gain concessions. These actions, however, were often met with contention and, in some cases, led to violence. In this lecture, we will examine the union campaigns that swept the nation during the Great Depression and how New Deal administrators responded. More specifically, we will highlight how Northwest Ohio came to embody the united dismay felt by both urban and rural workers in their fight for unionization.This is the fifth installment in the Great Depression Lecture Series, an America 250 program. This is a Wood County Park District lead event, in partnership with the Wood County Museum.
The Great Depression Lecture Series – "Strike! Workers, Unions, and the Labor Movement in Town and Country"
May 6 | 6:00PM
Speaker: Chase Fleece, Historic Agriculture Specialist (Wood County Park District)
Wood County Museum Meeting Room
FREE
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Event Venue
13660 County Home Rd, Bowling Green, OH, United States, Ohio 43402
Tickets
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