Beginnings
At the Second Convention
of the National Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (as the IBEW was then
known), first Grand President Henry Miller said, "No brands of
skilled labor ever presented a more unorganized or demoralized condition
than that of the Electrical Workers of American in the year of
1889."
But
Henry Miller and the other nine men who met in 1891 at the Brotherhood's
First Convention had a vision, a dream of workers joining together in
strength. From those demoralized and unorganized men has come one of the
largest trade unions in North America. Today the IBEW represents almost
a million people in all segments of the complex electrical industry. One
hundred years later, it can be confidently be said that the dream of the
10 men who met in St. Louis is alive and well.
In
1890, St. Louis was the scene of a national exposition featuring
electricity. Electrical workers from around the country traveled to wire
the booths, displays and decorations. There, at the end of the day, the
men would sit and talk about their working conditions. An hourly wage of
15 cents to 20 cents was considered good, and most made do with $8.00 a
week in pay. Apprenticeship training was unheard of, and safety
consisted of trial and error and hoping for the best. The men were ready
for a change.
A meeting was called at
Stolley's Dance Hall, where several members of what was to be called
Local 5221 of the American Federation of Labor met with AFL organizer
Charles Cassel. Henry Miller, a St. Louis lineman, was elected president
and J.T. Kelly, a wireman recently settled in St. Louis, vice president.
But these men realized a single isolated local union could accomplish
little permanent success without the weight of a national organization
of electrical workers behind it. So they set out across the country to
organize other locals, hoping to eventually bind them together.
Traveling in
railroad boxcars, Henry Miller visited Evansville, Louisville,
Indianapolis, Chicago, and Milwaukee, organizing as he worked.
Unions were organized in Toledo, New Orleans, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati,
Philadelphia and Duluth. Other small
organizations of linemen and wiremen in New York, Denver and on the West
Coast were contacted.
A
year later, in September of 1891, the call went out to all those newly
organized locals to meet in St. Louis to pull this loose collection of
locals into a national union. And on November 21, ten men -- T.J.
Finnell from Chicago; F.J. Heizleman from Toledo; E.C. Hartung from
Indianapolis; Harry Fisher from Evansville; Henry Miller, J.T. Kelly and
William Hedden from St. Louis; and J.C. Sutter, Joseph Berlovitz and
James Dorsey representing locals by proxy -- met at what became the
First Convention of the National Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. They
met for a week and worked out a constitution, adopted a logo -- the
now-famous clenched fist holding lighting bolts. Miller was elected
first Grand President and Kelly first Grand Secretary.
J.T. Kelly wrote of Henry
Miller, "Every movement, whether revolutionary or peaceful, every
organization established, no matter what the object, has associated with
it the name of some individual whose mind conceived and whose energy and
perseverance established it; and thus the name of Henry Miller will
forever be associated with the organization of the Electrical Workers of
America." Henry Miller was born on a ranch near Fredericksburg,
Texas, on January 5, 1858. At the age of 14, he worked as a water boy
for a government project to string a telegraph line from San Antonio,
Texas, to Fort Clark. He became a lineman and made his way around the
country working for railroads, Western Union and fledgling electric
utilities. By June of 1886, he was working for the St. Louis Municipal
Electric Light and Power Company. After small attempts at organizing, he
saw his chance to begin the process of establishing a citywide and
hopefully national, electrical workers' union when electrical workers
came to St. Louis for the 1890 exposition featuring electricity.
James
T. Kelly was born in Overton, Pennsylvania, in 1862, into a deeply
religious family. He started out as a teacher at a small college but
gave that up to enter the electrical construction trade as a wireman. He
settled in St. Louis around 1890. His only surviving child, John R.
Kelly, remembers his father fondly. Of his father John wrote, "I
remember my father decorating a horse and buggy and participating in
several Labor Day parades in St. Louis." He went on to write that
his father convinced the city of St. Louis to produce its own power from
the steam generated by the boilers in the then new city hospital, an
idea still popular today. A powerful speaker and writer, he is credited
with writing the preamble to the Brotherhood's first constitution and
was the first editor of The Electrical Worker, the predecessor of
today's IBEW Journal. J.T. Kelly's wife, Sarah, helped her
husband a great deal throughout his organizing efforts.
After the First
Convention adjourned, President Miller traveled to Birmingham, Alabama,
where the AFL was holding its annual convention. On December 4, 1891,
the Brotherhood received a charter from the AFL with jurisdiction over
all electrical work. In a letter written to J.T. Kelly dated December 5,
1891, Samuel Gompers, AFL president, said, "I am more pleased than
it is possible for me to give expression to you that your National
organization has been brought into existence."
Brother Miller continued
traveling and organized locals all up the East Coast. T.J. Finnell of
Chicago, elected Grand Organizer at the First Convention, concentrated
his organizing efforts on the Midwest. A year after its founding the
Brotherhood boasted 45 locals.
The second national
convention of the Brotherhood was held in Chicago in November of 1892
amid great optimism. With 26 delegates representing approximately 2,000
members from around the country, Henry Miller had reason to feel secure.
He said, "From present indications the continued growth of the
Brotherhood, both in local unions and in large membership, is
well-assured." Both Kelly and Miller were reelected; The Electrical
Worker was founded; the death-benefit payments, which went out to
members and their spouses, were doubled; and the future looked
promising.
The optimism of 1892,
however, soon gave way to the "Panic of 1893." The national
economy went into a tailspin; investment in electrical plants, which had
seen tremendous growth in the past five years, dried up; companies
folded -- even the recently founded giant, General Electric, barely
avoided bankruptcy. The Electrical Worker noted in August
1893 that the national electric trade was at a standstill and that it
was "going to be a very hard winter."
Between July and
November of 1893, the Brotherhood lost around 600 members; and the
attitude of those who remained was rapidly deteriorating. There was
feuding among locals over jurisdiction in the New York and Chicago
areas. There were also problems with unauthorized strikes.
By the Third Convention,
held in Cleveland in November 1893, the Brotherhood was in trouble. The
union was in debt, morale was low and tensions were high. Brother Q.
Jansen, a lineman from Local 2, Milwaukee, was elected Grand President;
and Henry Miller became Third Grand Vice President and Grand Organizer.
J.T. Kelly was reelected Grand Secretary. The delegates voted to raise
the per capita tax and assessment for The Electrical Worker and
to hold the Convention every two years in an effort to regain financial
stability.
Only eleven delegates
attended the Fourth Convention in 1895 in Washington, D.C. Times were
hard. Secretary Kelly went as far as to mortgage his house and personal
possessions to ensure the Brotherhood's operating funds. But things were
turning around. Belt tightening by the union and a general economic
upturn gave the Brotherhood a positive balance in the treasury by the
Fifth Convention held in Detroit in 1897. New locals were signed on, and
strikes were held to a minimum.
The Convention of 1897
paid special tribute to Brother Kelly, who stepped down as Grand
Secretary after bringing the union through one of its hardest times. The
delegates adopted a resolution thanking him for his "unsullied and
valuable services," and he returned to St. Louis where he remained
until his death a vocal and active member of Local 1. The Convention
delegates also formally praised their former Grand President, Henry
Miller. Like so many of the early linemen, Henry Miller died young -- on
July 10, 1896, in Washington, D.C., after sustaining a severe electric
shock and falling from a utility pole. He was 38 years old. In 1897 the
delegates voted to have his grave appropriately decorated.
J.T. Kelly wrote of Henry
Miller, "He was generous, unselfish and devoted himself to the task
of organizing the electrical workers with an energy that brooked no
failure...." That devotion to the task of organizing, that capacity
to turn plans into action, to change a dream of unity and bargaining
power into the reality of the Brotherhood, the delegates observed,
indebts all union members to the legacy of Henry Miller. And through
J.T. Kelly's extraordinary efforts, that legacy lives on today.
(From They Dared
to Dream, The 18-part History
of the IBEW, Thorn
Pozen, 1991 & The Electrical Workers' Story)