Rose Schneiderman, the labor organizer who taught ER everything
she "knew about trade unionism," was born in Russian Poland,
April 6, 1882.(1) Her
Orthodox Jewish family was close but exceedingly poor, despite
both her parents' employment as tailors. Her mother insisted
that Rachel (who would later change her name to Rose) attend
school and enrolled her in a traditional Hebrew school and,
when she turned six, in a Russian public school.
The family emigrated to the United States in 1890 and
made the Lower East Side of New York City their home. Two
years later, Samuel Schneiderman died of meningitis, leaving
his family in a dire economic condition. Deborah, his widow,
took in borders and sewed for neighbors; despite her efforts,
however, the family descended into poverty and was forced
to rely on charity to help pay the rent and grocery bill.
A thirteen-year-old Rose dropped out of school after the
ninth grade to help support the family by working as a department
store sales clerk. Three years later, despite her mother's
objections, Rose left sales for a better paying (but more
dangerous) job in the garment industry. By 1903, she organized
her first union shop, the Jewish Socialist United Cloth
Hat and Cap Makers' Union, where she quickly developed a
reputation as an effective leader after she organized a
successful strike opposing an open-shop policy.
By 1907, Schneiderman devoted most of her time to the
Women's Trade Union
League, which she later called "the most important
influence on my life." Within a year, she was elected
vice-president of the New York chapter, and thanks to
a stipend provided
by a member, she was able to work full-time organizing
for the WTUL. After the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire,
she
helped established the International
Ladies Garment Workers Union and led its 1913 strike.
Determined to outlaw sweatshop labor, she told New Yorkers,
"I would be a traitor to those poor burned bodies if I
came here to talk good fellowship. . . . Every year thousands
of us are maimed. The life of men and women is so cheap
and property is so sacred."(2)
Although she was a committed trade unionist, Schneiderman
grew increasingly frustrated trying to get male union members
to address women's labor issues. By the late nineteen teens,
the WTUL was her major focus. As president of both the New
York and national WTUL, she concentrated her efforts to
lobby for minimum wage and eight-hour-day legislation. In
1921, she helped organize the Bryn Mawr Summer School for
Women Workers. In 1922, Eleanor Roosevelt joined the WTUL
and the two women began a lifelong friendship. Schneiderman
tutored ER on the issues confronting women workers, the
challenges facing the trade union movement, and the problems
inherent in labor-management relations. ER responded to
Schneiderman's tutorial by chairing the WTUL finance committee,
donating the proceeds from her 1932-1933 radio broadcasts
to the WTUL, and promoting WTUL in her columns and speeches.
As Schneiderman recalled in her autobiography, ER overcame
the trappings of privilege to become "a born trade unionist."(3)
ER, and FDR, enjoyed
Schneiderman's company and often invited her to their homes
in New York City, Hyde Park, and, after FDR became governor,
Albany. In 1933, FDR named Schneiderman to the advisory
board of the National Recovery Administration, a position
she held until the Supreme Court declared the NRA unconstitutional
in 1935. For those two years, she represented labor's voice
on the board, working to see that wage and hour provisions
of the NRA codes treated workers fairly. In 1935, she returned
to both the New York and the national WTULs, whose presidencies
she held until the New York WTUL ceased operations in 1950
and the national WTUL disbanded in 1955. From 1937 to 1943,
Schneiderman, balancing her WTUL work with state politics,
served as secretary to the New York State Department of
Labor. Ninety-year old Schneiderman died in New York in
1972 at the Jewish Home and Hospital for the Aged.
Notes:
- Rose Schneiderman and Luch Goldthwaite,
All for One (New York: P.S. Eriksson, 1967),
251.
- Carol Hurd Green, ed. Notable
American Women: The Modern Period (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1980), 631.
- Rose Schneiderman and Luch Goldthwaite,
All for One, 257.
Sources:
Green, Carol Hurd, ed. Notable American Women:
The Modern Period. Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1980, 631-633.
Schneiderman, Rose and Luch Goldthwaite, All for One.
New York: P.S. Eriksson, 1967, 251-258.