LRB-2270/1
SRM:eev:jm
2013 - 2014 LEGISLATURE
May 14, 2013 - Introduced by Representatives Sinicki and Richards, cosponsored
by Senator C. Larson. Referred to Committee on Rules.
AJR36,1,1 1Relating to: commemorating the Bay View labor strike and massacre.
AJR36,1,52 Whereas, Wisconsin workers and reformers made important contributions to
3the history of labor in the United States, helping to enact legislation such as worker's
4compensation and unemployment insurance, models that, in turn, were adopted by
5other states; and
AJR36,1,76 Whereas, in the 1880s workers in Milwaukee began to advocate for the
7eight-hour workday, which we now take for granted; and
AJR36,1,98 Whereas, until that time workers generally labored at physically punishing
9jobs for many hours each day; and
AJR36,1,1210 Whereas, on May 1, 1886, a national campaign to require that all employers
11adopt a standard eight-hour day culminated when workers' unions urged all
12American workers to cease labor until their employers met the demand; and
AJR36,1,1513 Whereas, in Milwaukee, civil parades and demonstrations followed as striking
14workers shut down factories peaceably and without violence during the first five
15days of May 1886; and
AJR36,2,4
1Whereas, the morning of May 2nd revealed the turmoil among Milwaukee's
2laborers, as more than a dozen strikes had begun in the city, involving the carpenters,
3coal heavers, sewer diggers, iron moulders, teamsters, common laborers, and other
4workers striking for better pay; and
AJR36,2,75 Whereas, during this period, the good citizens of Milwaukee began to receive
6word of the bloody conflict in Chicago's Haymarket Square, where police had killed
7demonstrators; and
AJR36,2,108 Whereas, news of the bloodshed at Haymarket Square elevated tensions among
9the citizenry of Milwaukee and many of Milwaukee's workers and businessmen
10began to prepare for armed confrontation; and
AJR36,2,1211 Whereas, the last grand factory to remain open was the North Chicago Railroad
12Rolling Mills Steel Foundry, in Bay View; and
AJR36,2,1413 Whereas on May 5th, a crowd of demonstrators went to the rolling mill to enjoin
14the workers to participate in the general strike; and
AJR36,2,1715 Whereas, the assemblage of striking workers was fired upon by National Guard
16forces, under the order of Governor Jeremiah Rusk, killing seven people and
17wounding four; and
AJR36,2,2018 Whereas, the events of that day will remain in the historic and cultural legacy
19of Wisconsin forever, serving as a reminder of the sacrifices our forebears made so
20that we might lead happier, more prosperous lives; now, therefore, be it
AJR36,2,23 21Resolved by the assembly, the senate concurring, That the Wisconsin
22legislature commemorates this pivotal series of events and recognizes May 2nd as
23the anniversary of the Bay View labor strike and tragedy.
AJR36,2,2424 (End)
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