EIGHT-HOUR THEORY IN THE AMERICAN
FEDERATION OF LABOR
Henry Raymond Mussey
No student of American labor history can fail to be struck
with the extraordinary importance of the eight-hour issue in
union thinking during the formative years of the American Fed-
eration of Labor. At its first convention, in 1882, the Federation
of Organized Trades and Labor Unions of the United States and
Canada, predecessor of the American Federation, passed a strong
and Interesting resolution on the subject; the following year it
resolved that the question of shortening the hours of labor was
‘paramount to all other questions at present” ;* in 1884 it recom-
mended to its constituent organizations concerted action to
obtain the eight-hour day beginning May 1, 1886; and during
the next twenty years no convention passed without some declara-
tion concerning eight hours. In his report as president at the
convention of 1889, Mr. Gompers declared: “In the whole history
of the labor movement there has not been any question upon
which the thoughts of the civilized world have been so thor-
oughly centered as upon the Eight-Hour Movement inaugurated
by the American Federation of Labor at its last convention.” *
After referring to the discouraging conditions prevailing the year
before, he went on: “It was at this time that our proclamation
to the world was made, to call on the toilers of the country to
the movement to enforce the Eight-Hour workday, May 1, 1890.
From that moment a change took place. Hope was instilled into
the hearts and minds of the workers to supplant despair. The
rallying cry of eight hours was sounded. The working people
again stood erect and staunch in their manhood. The tide had
changed.”
' Proceedings, 1882, p. 15.
* Ibid., 1883, p. 16.
* Ibid., 1884, p. 14.
‘ Ibid., 1889, p. 14.
229