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ID 41478
JaLCDOI
Sort Key
5
Title Alternative
Labor Movement and Japanese Immigrants in Washington State, 1922-1924
FullText URL
Author
Kurokawa, Katsutoshi
Abstract
After the Seattle General Strike of 1919, the relationship between labor organizations and Japanese immigrants in Washington State became friendly. There were, however, many problems remained. When the big railroad shop strike occurred in the United States in 1922, one ofthe Japanese companies in Seattle sent strikebreakers to the railroad shops of Auburn. Almost all the Japanese in Auburn protested strongly against it because they wished to preserve a good relationship between white labor unions and the Japanese society there. Their appeal to the United Northwest Japanese Association in Seattle was, however, practically rejected by its executives. In 1924, U. S. Congress passed the Japanese Exclusion Act. Newspapers in Seattle, the Seattle Times, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and the Seattle Star welcomed the decision of the Congress. Only the Seattle Union Record, the organ of the Seattle Central Labor Council, was critical to the Exclusion Act and sympathetic to the Japanese in Seattle. The policy of the Union Record was, however, not supported unanimously by a large majority of the organized labor in those days. The influence of conservatives was becoming stronger in the Washington State labor movement. They had bad feeling on Japanese immigrants and were critical against the policy of Harry Ault, the editor ofthe Union Record.
Note
論説 (Article)
Publication Title
岡山大学経済学会雑誌
Published Date
2001-03-10
Volume
volume32
Issue
issue4
Publisher
岡山大学経済学会
Publisher Alternative
The Economic Association of Okayama University
Start Page
125
End Page
147
ISSN
0386-3069
NCID
AN00032897
Content Type
Journal Article
OAI-PMH Set
岡山大学
language
Japanese
File Version
publisher
NAID
Eprints Journal Name
oer