1902: Two dollars a day?
Verfasst: Do 15.02.18 09:55
I’ve been looking again at the Louisiana entry in the Depression-era WPA (Work Projects Administration) American Guide Series. From the chronology near the back of the book…
“1902 September 27-October 10. New Orleans streetcar men, with public support, strike unsuccessfully for 8-hour day and 25¢-per-hour minimum wage.”
New Orleans was growing like Topsy anyway, and oil had been discovered in Louisiana the year before. Silver dollars were falling like rain from the coin presses of the New Orleans Mint (60,180,000 from 1896 through 1902). So it seems certain that images like the one below must have figured prominently in the thoughts and conversations of the New Orleans streetcar men, who were striking for a minimum wage of $2 (8 x 25¢) a day.
Two dollars a day. A nice round number, and easy to picture…
“1902 September 27-October 10. New Orleans streetcar men, with public support, strike unsuccessfully for 8-hour day and 25¢-per-hour minimum wage.”
New Orleans was growing like Topsy anyway, and oil had been discovered in Louisiana the year before. Silver dollars were falling like rain from the coin presses of the New Orleans Mint (60,180,000 from 1896 through 1902). So it seems certain that images like the one below must have figured prominently in the thoughts and conversations of the New Orleans streetcar men, who were striking for a minimum wage of $2 (8 x 25¢) a day.
Two dollars a day. A nice round number, and easy to picture…