History

International Association of Machinists charter document

History and Development of
IAM District 54

The INTERNATIONAL ASSN. OF MACHINISTS AND AEROSPACE WORKERS began in 1888 in  Atlanta, GA. The Cleveland IAM was first chartered in Jan. 1890 as Lodge 83, which organized  machinists who worked in local shops. Following the lead of the national organization, which  affiliated with the American Federation of Labor in 1892, the local lodges affiliated with the  Central Labor Union (later the CLEVELAND FEDERATION OF LABOR) and joined with other  members in a general strike in 1901 for the 9-hour day. During World War I, the group won raises  for its members by systematically shifting them from one plant to another. However, following  wartime growth in the machinery field, the National Manufacturers Assn. attacked the expanding  labor movement by strengthening the blackball system and promoting the open shop. Cleveland  locals, organized into District 54 since 1913, fought back in 1919 by consolidating 5 existing IAM  lodges into Lodge 439 and chartering auto mechanics Lodge 1363. These 2 stronger bodies  supported the district in lean times. When the National Industrial Recovery Act guaranteed  workers the right to organize in 1933, District 54 was ready. Nearly a dozen new lodges were  chartered from 1933 to 1940. Some were composed entirely of workers at one plant (1108, Chase Brass & Copper; 1253, Warner & Swasey; 1228, Addressograph-Multigraph), while others cut across  company lines to unite men employed in a particular industry (metal stamping) or by job classification (tool-and-die makers). However, many new lodges collapsed in the face of employer opposition.

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