On this day in Labor History the year was 1940.
That was the day that the federally mandated 40-hour work week went into effect for U.S. workers.
The 40-hour week had been passed as part of Fair Labor Standards Act in 1938.
Making five days of eight hour work the national standard had long been a top goal for labor.
For decades’ union members organized, demonstrated, when on strike, and even died for the right to work eight hours.
Labor argued that reducing the long, unregulated hours of toil was a matter of worker’s health and safety.
It was also a matter of dignity.
A more reasonable work week would give workers the time to spend with their families, to pursue other interests, and to have a full life outside of the grinding schedule demanded by many bosses.
Before the turn of the twentieth century, the eight-hour day movement declared “Eight hours for work, eight hours for rest, eight hours for what we will!” as their motto.
In 1886, nationwide rallies and strikes for eight hours took place on May 1st.
Today, May Day is celebrated as a worker’s holiday around the world in remembrance of that struggle.
In 1888, the American Federation of Labor took up the cause, and the Carpenters union became the standard bearer for eight hours.
Ten years later the United Mine Workers union members won the eight-hour day.
In 1916, the Adamson Act made eight hours the standard for interstate railroad workers.
A decade after that, Ford Motor Company, a leader in U.S. industry established the forty-hour work week.
Each of these victories were a step along the way to making the eight-hour day a reality and the law of the land.
October 22 - The Bosses Labor Board Decertifies PATCO
October 21 - Organizing in Paradise
October 20 - Merle Travis, Songs of the Working Man
October 19 - In the Streets and At the Shareholders Meetings
October 18 - Walking in Their Shoes
October 17 - The Making of a Monopoly
October 16 - Striking a Blow at Slave Labor
October 15 - Labor’s Magna Carta
October 14 - A Day of Protest in Canada
October 13 - An International Effort
October 12 - Bury Me with My Boys in Mt. Olive
October 11 -Remembering The Woman Behind the Lens
October 12 - Remembering the Woman Behind the Lens
October 10 - Mill Workers Strike and Win
October 9 - Mary Ann Shadd Cary is Born
October 8 - Locked Out and Ready to Fight
October 7 - Remembering Joseph Labadie
October 6 - Fannie Lou Hamer is Born
October 5 - Labor Candidates Step Up
October 4 - Truman Seizes the Nation’s Oil Refineries
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Mayo Clinic Talks
The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad
Positive Thinking Mind
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast