Watch: America’s Racist History of Labor

News flash: The history of labor in America is racist AF. Suggested Reading TODAY Co-Host Sheinelle Jones Gets Surprising News Months After Losing Husband to Cancer Vince Staples’ Comment About How Black Folks Would’ve Dressed For Jan. 6 Insurrection is Deeper Than You Think Rep. Jim Clyburn Stands With Michelle Obama on This Hard Truth…

News flash: The history of labor in America is racist AF.

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Labor Day became a federal holiday in 1894 after a railroad strike led by the American Railway Union known as the Pullman Strike.

This was a turning point in the labor movement, though it didn’t benefit all American workers. Black Pullman porters weren’t allowed to participate in the strike because they were not allowed in the white unions. But black people did unionize.

Some associate black unions with A. Philip Randolph and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, which was established in 1925. But some scholars date black unions to as early as 1838. And in 1869, there was the Colored National Labor Union, which was established by a ship caulker named Isaac Myers. Though the CNLU was short-lived, it paved the way for black unions to come.

Check out the video to learn more about the history of black labor in America.

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