Eleven-year-old Peter McGuire sold papers on the street in New
York City. He shined shoes and cleaned stores and later ran
errands. It was 1863 and his father, a poor Irish immigrant, had
just enlisted to fight in the Civil War. Peter had to help
support his mother and six brothers and sisters.
Many immigrants settled in New York City in the nineteenth
century. They found that living conditions were not as wonderful
as they had dreamed. Often there were six families crowded into a
house made for one family. Thousands of children had to go to
work. Working conditions were even worse. Immigrant men, women
and children worked in factories for ten to twelve hours a day,
stopping only for a short time to eat. They came to work even if
they were tired or sick because if they didn't, they might be
fired. Thousands of people were waiting to take their places.
When Peter was 17, he began an apprenticeship in a
piano shop. This job was better than his others, for he was
learning a trade, but he still worked long hours with low pay. At
night he went to meetings and classes in economics and social
issues of the day. One of the main issues of concern pertained to
labor conditions. Workers were tired of long hours, low pay and
uncertain jobs. They spoke of organizing themselves into a union
of laborers to improve their working conditions. In the spring of
1872, Peter McGuire and 100,000 workers went on strike and
marched through the streets, demanding a decrease in the long
working day.
This event convinced Peter that an organized labor movement
was important for the future of workers' rights. He spent the
next year speaking to crowds of workers and unemployed people,
lobbying the city government for jobs and relief money. It was
not an easy road for Peter McGuire. He became known as a
"disturber of the public peace." The city government
ignored his demands. Peter himself could not find a job in his
trade. He began to travel up and down the east coast to speak to
laborers about unionizing. In 1881, he moved to St. Louis,
Missouri, and began to organize carpenters there. He organized a
convention of carpenters in Chicago, and it was there that a
national union of carpenters was founded. He became General
Secretary of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of
America.
The idea of organizing workers according to their trades
spread around the country. Factory workers, dock workers and
toolmakers all began to demand and get their rights to an
eight-hour workday, a secure job and a future in their trades.
Peter McGuire and laborers in other cities planned a holiday for
workers on the first Monday in September, halfway between
Independence Day and Thanksgiving Day.
On September 5, 1882 the first Labor Day parade was held in
New York City. Twenty thousand workers marched in a parade up
Broadway. They carried banners that read "LABOR CREATES ALL
WEALTH," and "EIGHT HOURS FOR WORK, EIGHT HOURS FOR
REST, EIGHT HOURS FOR RECREATION!" After the parade there
were picnics all around the city. Workers and celebrants ate
Irish stew, homemade bread and apple pie. At night, fireworks
were set off. Within the next few years, the idea spread from
coast to coast, and all states celebrated Labor Day. In 1894,
Congress voted it a federal holiday.
Today we celebrate Labor Day with a little less fanfare on the
first Monday of September. Some cities have parades and community
picnics. Many politicians "kick off' their political
campaigns by holding rallies on the holiday. Most Americans
consider Labor Day the end of the summer, and the beaches and
other popular resort areas are packed with people enjoying one
last three-day weekend.