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Adolph Strasser

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Adolph Strasser (1843-1939), born in the Austro-Hungarian empire, was an American trade union organizer. Strasser is best remembered as a founder of the United Cigarmakers Union and the American Federation of Labor (AF of L). Strasser was additionally the president of the Cigar Makers' International Union for a period of 14 years, heading the union during the period in which it introduced its successful union label and gained substantial organizational strength.

Biography

Early years

Adolph Strasser was born in the Austro-Hungarian empire in part of today's Hungary in 1843. He was a native speaker of German.[1]

Strasser emigrated to the United States in about 1872.[2] After his arrival in America Strasser learned the craft of cigar making, working in New York City.[2] In the course of this activity, Strasser became involved in the trade union movement, helping to found the United Cigarmakers Union from those tenement-based workers excluded from membership in the Cigar Makers International Union.[2]

Trade union career

The CMIU established a monthly magazine in 1875, the Cigar Makers' Official Journal, of which Strasser was the editor.[3]

In 1877 Strasser was elected president of the Cigar Makers' International Union.[4]

During Strasser's term as head of the CMIU the organization began to win strikes which it had previously lost. Between 1871 and 1875 the union had waged 78 strikes, winning just 12, but in the years from 1876 to 1881 a total of 69 strikes had been fought, with 58 resolved in favor of the striking cigar workers.[3]

Gompers and Strasser were outspoken opponents of the tenement system of production, in which raw materials were provided to workers for manufacture at home.[3] Under their leadership the CMIU attempted to outlaw the practice of home work outright rather than making any effort to organize cigar workers engaged in that form of production.[3]

In 1881 the CMIU adopted use of a special "Blue Label" to denote union-made cigars.[4]

Later years

Strasser left the trade union movement in 1914, becoming a real estate agent in Buffalo, New York for the next five years.[2]

In 1919 Strasser retired and moved to the Southern coastal state of Florida, where he lived out the last two decades of his life.[2]


Death and legacy

Adolph Strasser died in 1939.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Patricia A. Cooper, Once a Cigar Maker: Men, Women, and Work Culture in American Cigar Factories, 1900-1919. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1987; pg. 20.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Adolph Strasser" in Stuart B. Kaufman (ed.), The Samuel Gompers Papers: Volume 1: The Making of a Union Leader, 1850-86. Urbana, IL: Illinois University Press, 1986; pg. 504.
  3. ^ a b c d Cooper, Once a Cigar Maker, pg. 22.
  4. ^ a b Cooper, Once a Cigar Maker, pg. 21.