USA TODAY US Edition

UNIONS OWE DEBT TO BLACK WOMEN

- Steph Solis

In the depths of the Great Depression, thousands of minority women across the country joined the Internatio­nal Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union. Among the most active — and today largely forgotten — members were the women of Local 22 in New York City.

Black women such as Eldica Riley, Lillian Gaskin and Maida Springer-Kemp were on the front lines in the fight against management abuses in garment shops and racial discrimina­tion within the union. Historians say their efforts attracted tens of thousands of African Americans and Hispanics to unions and laid the groundwork for the peak of the civil rights movement.

“These stories of black women have been overshadow­ed,” says Janette Gayle, a history professor at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in New York.

Gayle knows because she has spent three summers looking for their stories, sifting through Cornell University’s ILGWU archives while researchin­g a book on the union’s black women pioneers.

Take Gaskin, a member of Local 22. She was sent to Chicago in 1935 to organize black women, who feared retaliatio­n from their employers.

In less than seven months, Gaskin had mobilized the most sympatheti­c workers, setting up meetings for them. Then she was pulled from the project.

The first — and only — account Gayle found of this was in a letter Gaskin wrote to Local 22 manager Charles Zimmerman, complainin­g that the union had sent her in to do the hard and potentiall­y dangerous work, then shut her out. “I feel that I am being used as a cat’s paw,” she wrote.

“That encapsulat­es what, on the whole, some black women leaders were feeling in the ILGWU,” Gayle says, “like they were being used.”

Other organizers’ names appear in footnotes or excerpts. A 1937 clipping from the Pittsburgh

Courier quotes Zimmerman praising the diversity in Local 22, a predominan­tly black chapter. By then, there were several women of color on the executive board, including Riley, Ethel Atwell and Bertha Edgecombe.

But for Zimmerman, that was a sign that the ILGWU was “above race,” and the union wasn’t always quick to respond to concerns about racial discrimina­tion. Riley and another black unionist, Edith Ransom, used their training at the ILGWU to help build Harlem’s Negro Labor Committee, which advocated for black workers.

They worked to outlaw forms of job discrimina­tion nationwide. Riley and Ransom joined A. Phillip Randolph in the 1940s March on Washington Movement, the precursor to the 1963 March on Washington. The earlier march, set for summer of 1941, was canceled once they convinced President Franklin Roosevelt to issue an executive order banning hiring discrimina­tion in federal training programs and contract positions.

Springer-Kemp, a Panamaborn garment worker who became a renowned internatio­nal labor organizer, wasn’t given her due until recent decades, says her biographer, historian Yevette Richards Jordan. Springer-Kemp, who joined the union in 1933, became the first black agent to oversee an ILGWU district. Among other leadership roles, she served as educationa­l director in another New York Local, 132.

Springer-Kemp used her role to push for integratio­n at union events. When asked to organize a drive for the war effort in 1942, she scheduled one in Chinatown for people of all background­s.

“We organized a blood bank with black and white workers laying table by table, giving blood because the Chinese didn’t ask what color blood it was,” SpringerKe­mp said, according to Daniel Katz’s book All Together Different.

“She was one of the early leaders, who was a strong advocate for unionism and civil rights,” says Jordan, who teaches at George Mason University. “She saw those two movements in tandem.”

 ?? KHEEL CENTER, CORNELL UNIVERSITY ?? Maida Springer-Kemp, left, of the Internatio­nal Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, tours a factory around 1949. She pushed for integratio­n at union events.
KHEEL CENTER, CORNELL UNIVERSITY Maida Springer-Kemp, left, of the Internatio­nal Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union, tours a factory around 1949. She pushed for integratio­n at union events.

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