Veterans of World War I of the U.S.A. Walworth County Barracks No. 3241 (Delavan, Wisconsin) Records,

Container Title
Session II, August 10, 1976
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   0:00 to 0:15
Introduction
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   0:16 to 9:15
Organization of Local 890 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers--early members--working conditions were the primary grievances--big contractors unionized--local contractors as anti-union
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   9:16 to 12:55
Janesville contractors hostile to union, fired workers who voiced support for unions
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   12:56 to 17:05
H. P.'s first contact with the union, asked by Frank Kelly not to work during strike--Kelly later got job at Samson Tractor for H. P.--the boomers, travelling workers with nationwide contacts
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   17:06 to 22:00
Union structure, three divisions within the IBEW, none within Local 890--factionalism within the IBEW, little impact on Janesville
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   22:01 to 28:25
More on H. P. joining union at age 16--initiation--attitude toward unionism--could still work in open shops--no written contracts--more on Samson Tractor job
Reel/Side   14/1-A
Time   28:26 to 29:34
Absence of safety precautions
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   0:00 to 3:10
Improvements in safety--H. P. as a union members
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   3:11 to 7:35
Leaders of Local 890--terms of verbal agreements--death benefit for IBEW members
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   7:36 to 11:06
Reasons for joining the unions--chance for big jobs, overtime pay--big jobs for H. P.
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   11:07 to 11:47
GM annual changeover as big job here
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   11:48 to 19:08
The strike of 1919, Janesville Electric used strikebreakers--community reaction--H. P. won nothing from that strike--Emmons, a union man, began an electrical shop as a result of 1919 strike
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   19:08 to 26:43
H. P. went back to Albright after strike--other unions in Janesville in 1919, also used only verbal agreements--meetings and activities of the Building Trades Council
Reel/Side   14/1-B
Time   26:44 to 28:30
Early meetings of Local 890--pleas for assistance from other unions
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   0:00 to 0:10
Introduction
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   0:11 to 3:55
Vague recollections of the Council on Industrial Relations--Allied Pipe Trades
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   3:55 to 5:15
Repairing street car motors
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   5:16 to 9:46
Local membership during the 1920s--no decline in local membership parallel to national IBEW decline during the 1920s--impact of the Depression--H. P. had steady work then, serviced radios
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   9:47 to 18:27
H. P.'s reaction to the 1937 sitdown strike at GM--story about merchant demanding cash--recollection of picketing Ringling Circus--Carl Bunce--arrangements regarding electrical work at GM
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   18:28 to 21:50
Reaction to the CIO--problem with UAW members moonlighting on electrical work--UAW seemed down on the AFL to H. P.--strained relations
Reel/Side   14/2-A
Time   21:50 to 29:40
Bill Kuhlow's concern for local building codes, safety concerns, lobbied with the city government to improve them--relations with Henry Traxler--H. P. with few recollections of Janesville politics
Reel/Side   14/2-B
Time   0:00 to 3:42
Early business agents, not reimbursed for time--union couldn't afford a full-time agent
Reel/Side   14/2-B
Time   3:43 to 6:07
H. P. as a member of the apprentice examining board, role of board
Reel/Side   14/2-B
Time   6:08 to 10:53
Impact of Rural Electrification Administration on Local 890--REA used a different method of wiring--most REA work done by open shop workers in Janesville
Reel/Side   14/2-B
Time   10:54 to 14:32
H. P.'s overall attitude toward his union membership--importance of apprentice program and of getting the big jobs
Reel/Side   14/2-B
Time   14:33 to 16:43
Disagreements on contracts--the IBEW pension system