Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles by Grace Heilman Stimson recovers the largely neglected early history of organized labor in southern California, situating the city's unions within the broader trajectory of American labor and industrial relations. Drawing on extensive primary sources and previously untapped archives, Stimson reconstructs the origins and fragile development of trade unionism in Los Angeles from the late nineteenth century through the early twentieth century, a period when the region was more often identified with agricultural expansion, speculative booms, and the open-shop ideology than with industrial militancy. Her study highlights the city as both a frontier of labor organizing and a stronghold of uncompromising opposition, where unions struggled for survival against powerful employer associations, political elites, and, most prominently, the antiunion crusade of General Harrison Gray Otis and the *Los Angeles Times*.
Stimson's narrative introduces readers to forgotten but important local leaders such as Arthur Vinette, Jonathan Bailey, Frank Colver, and Isaac Kinley, while situating their efforts in relation to national figures like Samuel Gompers, Eugene V. Debs, and Daniel DeLeon. She traces debates between craft and industrial unionism, oscillations between political and economic strategies, and the interplay of conservatism, reformism, and radicalism within the city's labor movement. By focusing on the specific social and economic conditions of Los Angeles-its rapid population growth, recurrent business cycles, and strong open-shop ethos-Stimson illuminates how regional factors shaped both the defeats and the incremental advances of organized labor. A pioneering work of labor history, Rise of the Labor Movement in Los Angeles remains indispensable for scholars of industrial relations, California history, and the uneven geography of working-class struggle in the United States.
This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1955.