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Every Class Has Its Leaders: ASARCO, The Great Depression, and Popular Protest in Monterrey

Michael Snodgrass-2003-06-02-Cambridge University Press eBooks
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TL;DRAbstract

Early on the morning of May 24, 1932 – just as social unrest reached its peak in Depression-era Monterrey – 240 workers barricaded themselves inside the ASARCO smelter. As news of their sit-down strike spread, hundreds of strike supporters gathered outside the plant's gates. Present were the smeltermen's wives and children, unemployed workers, and residents of the surrounding neighborhood. ASARCO's workers struck as they did – in defiant violation of the labor law – to force management to sign a collective contract with their union. The action culminated a violent season of labor protests and hunger marches in the streets of Monterrey. As an alarmed public would have read in the press, Communists directed both the demonstrations and the ASARCO union. The sit-down strikers held firm as authorities beseeched them to exit the smelter. Late in the afternoon, the president ordered federal troops and mounted police to the scene. Faced with the threat of military intervention, the workers exi

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Early on the morning of May 24, 1932 – just as social unrest reached its peak in Depression-era Monterrey – 240 workers barricaded themselves inside the ASARCO smelter. As news of their sit-down strike spread, hundreds of strike supporters gathered outside the plant's gates. Present were the smeltermen's wives and children, unemployed workers, and residents of the surrounding neighborhood. ASARCO's workers struck as they did – in defiant violation of the labor law – to force management to sign a collective contract with their union. The action culminated a violent season of labor protests and hunger marches in the streets of Monterrey. As an alarmed public would have read in the press, Communists directed both the demonstrations and the ASARCO union. The sit-down strikers held firm as authorities beseeched them to exit the smelter. Late in the afternoon, the president ordered federal troops and mounted police to the scene. Faced with the threat of military intervention, the workers exi

Keywords

UnrestGreat DepressionPolitical scienceWorking classDepression (economics)DowntownLawCriminology

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