"SHSI Certificate of Recognition"
"Best on the Web"


Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
Marshall Cohen—researcher and producer, CNN

Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




RETAIL CLERKS UNION LOCAL 396 AFL-CIO

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Photo courtesy: Jim Lang

RETAIL CLERKS UNION LOCAL 396 AFL-CIO. The RCIU was chartered as the "Retail Clerks National Protective Union" in 1890 by the American Federation of Labor. It later adopted the name Retail Clerks International Association, and then became the Retail Clerks International Union. In 1979, the Retail Clerks merged with the Amalgamated Meat Cutters to form the United Food and Commercial Workers.

In 1934 the RCIU created a local chapter in Milwaukee, which quickly grew to over 600 members. Soon after the RCIU petitioned the Boston Store to raise employee wages for its men and women and to also officially recognize the union. The store's management refused with the justification that only a few of the department store employees were union members.[1] The union began striking on November 30, 1934 and the number of picketers soon swelled to over 1,500 picketers, which helped the strike gain national attention.

The protest began to unravel as some picketers began to act out by assaulting strikebreakers and stink bombing the store, which led to arrests. In response the Boston Store ran full-page ads in local newspapers giving their side of their story, a move that was met with a similar full-page ad by The Federated Trades Commission in the Milwaukee Leader. However as the store's management was unwilling to meet the union's demands, the union lost their ground when most of the union workers returned to their jobs. On January 11, 1935 the strike officially ended with none of the demands met. The store's only concession was merit-based bonuses for the strikers.

In late 1957 and most of 1958, there was a 13-month-long strike against three department stores in Toledo, Ohio, Lasalle & Koch, Lamson's, and Lion Store. The strike was settled by a "Statement of Understanding" under which the striking workers were reinstated to their jobs, but the union was not recognized.

The Boot and Shoe Workers' Union merged with the Retail Clerks International Union in 1977.


The 1968 Dubuque City Directory listed 527 FISCHER BUILDING.

---

Source:

"Retail Clerks International Union," Wikipedia Online: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retail_Clerks_International_Union