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This is my grandmother's memory of her first strike in her own words. Should have posted this yesterday, but labor day was every day back when.
"I worked for a sub-contractor in a room about two blocks long with two hundred other girls. A sub-contractor went into a place and rented a few machines, got the work and hired the girls to run the machines. My boss was young, about 25. I was about 17. He would tell me about socialism. I learned it from him--of course, I had a little background from home. Then the word went out about the strike. The first really big ILGWU strike. We were supposed to go out at 2pm on a certain day. As the day neared, I said, "Yussel, I'll walk out with you." He said, "Let's wait and see what happens." The day came closer. "So, we're walking out?" "Get back to your work." The day came. You couldn't see a head above a sewing machine. We usually sang as we worked. No sound. No woman could look at another, for shame.
"I'm going down at two," I said.
"If you do, you're fired."
But at two, I got up and walked down. Alone. No one came with me. No one was in the street.
The next morning, there were pickets out, and they thought I was trying to go to work.
"No," I said. "I walked down yesterday--I'm not going in."
They all came around me and took me down to the union office and stood me on a chair and said to everybody, "Look! This child" (I looked younger than I was)"walked down yesterday!" And they made a big thing of me, which I liked. I walked the picket line every day for two weeks, that's how long the strike lasted. At first, Yussel would come down and say to me, "Why don't you come back to work? You should see how happy the big boss has made it. He's put in a Victrola, we have music all day long. He serves coffee and cake."
One by one, all the women joined the line. At the end, Yussel came down, too. "I only stayed to talk everyone else into walking down," he said."
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