Sherry Chandler » For your Labor Day holiday,

For your Labor Day holiday,

I wish you Bread and Roses:

Link courtesy of Ann Lederer, who also provides a link for lyrics and this information:

New Year’s Day, 1912, ushered in one of the most historic struggles in the history of the American working-class. On that cold January 1st, the textile workers of Lawrence, Massachusetts, began a nine-week strike which shook the very foundation of the Bay State and had national repercussions.

In its last session, the Massachusetts State Legislature, after tremendous pressure from the workers, had finally passed a law limiting the working hours of children under the age of 18 to 54 hours a week. Needless to say, the huge textile corporations had viciously opposed the law.

As an act of retaliation, the employers cut the working hours of all employees to 54 hours, with a commensurate cut in wages, of course. The workers in the Lawrence factories, some 35,000 of them, answered this with a complete walk-out.

The song… was inspired by one of the demonstrations which took place during the course of the strike. During a parade through Lawrence, a group of women workers carried banners proclaiming “Bread and Roses”. This poetic presentation of the demands of women workers for equal pay for equal work together with special consideration as women echoed throughout the country.

James Oppenheim, many of whose poems reflect a working-class content and sympathy, picked up the phrase and made it into a poem. Martha Coleman set the poem to music, and the song has become a part of the singing tradition of the American working-class.

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2 Comments

  • 1. Brooks Carver replies at 2nd September 2008, 9:09 am :

    Sherry,

    Deeply moving. Thank you.

  • 2. Deane replies at 2nd September 2008, 7:12 pm :

    Very nice….

    Sherry, I think Judy Collins does this version of the song here….

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