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  <eadheader countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" scriptencoding="iso15924" audience="internal" repositoryencoding="iso15511" findaidstatus="edited-full-draft" langencoding="iso639-2b"><eadid countrycode="us" identifier="ark:/13030/tf0d5n97pp" mainagencycode="CSfSt" publicid="PUBLIC &quot;-//San Francisco State University::Labor Archives and Research Center//TEXT (US::CSfSt::1991/048::International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records)//EN&quot; &quot;teamst85.sgm&quot;">teamst85.xml</eadid><filedesc>
      <titlestmt>
        <titleproper>Inventory of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records, <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1900-1948</date></titleproper><titleproper type="filing">International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records</titleproper>
        <author>Processed by Joshua Paddison; machine-readable finding aid created by
James Lake</author>
      </titlestmt>
      <publicationstmt>
        <publisher>Labor Archives and Research Center</publisher>
        <address>
          <addressline>San Francisco State University</addressline>
          <addressline>480 Winston Drive</addressline>
          <addressline>San Francisco, California 94132</addressline>
          <addressline>Phone: (415) 564-4010</addressline>
          <addressline>Fax: (415) 564-3606</addressline>
          <addressline>Email: larc@sfsu.edu</addressline>
          <addressline>URL: http://www.library.sfsu.edu/special/larc.html</addressline>
        </address>
        <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">&#xA9; 1999</date>
        <p>San Francisco State University. All rights reserved.</p>
      </publicationstmt>
    </filedesc><profiledesc>
      <creation>Machine-readable finding aid derived from WordPerfect.
Date of source: <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">Spring 1999.</date></creation>
      <langusage>Description is in <language>English.</language></langusage>
    </profiledesc><revisiondesc>
      <change>
        <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce" normal="20040323">March 23, 2004</date>
        <item>PUBLIC "-//San Francisco State University::Labor Archives and Research Center//TEXT (US::CSfSt::1991/048::International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records)//EN" "teamst85.sgm" converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.cdl.xsl (2004-09-16).</item>
      </change>
    </revisiondesc></eadheader>
  <frontmatter>
    <titlepage>
      <titleproper>Inventory of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records, <date calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1900-1948</date></titleproper>
      <num>Accession number: 1991/048</num>
      <publisher>Labor Archives &amp; Research Center
<lb/><extptr linktype="simple" show="embed" actuate="onload"/><lb/>San Francisco State University
<lb/>San Francisco, California</publisher>
      <list type="simple">
        <head>Contact Information:</head>
        <item>Labor Archives &amp; Research Center</item>
        <item>San Francisco State University</item>
        <item>480 Winston Drive</item>
        <item>San Francisco, California 94132</item>
        <item>Phone: (415) 564-4010</item>
        <item>Fax: (415) 564-3606</item>
        <item>Email: larc@sfsu.edu</item>
        <item>URL: http://www.library.sfsu.edu/special/larc.html</item>
      </list>
      <list type="deflist">
        <defitem>
          <label>Processed by: </label>
          <item>Joshua Paddison</item>
        </defitem>
        <defitem>
          <label>Date Completed: </label>
          <item>Spring 1999</item>
        </defitem>
        <defitem>
          <label>Encoded by: </label>
          <item>James Lake</item>
        </defitem>
      </list>
      <p>&#xA9; 1999 San Francisco State University. All rights reserved.</p>
    </titlepage>
  </frontmatter>
  <archdesc level="collection">
    <did id="did-1.7.1">
      <head>Descriptive Summary</head>
      <unittitle label="Title">International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records,
</unittitle><unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce" type="inclusive">1900-1948</unitdate>
      <unitid label="Accession number">1991/048</unitid>
      <origination label="Creator">
        <corpname>International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85</corpname>
      </origination>
      <physdesc label="Extent">.5 cubic feet</physdesc>
      <repository label="Repository">
        <corpname>San Francisco State University. Labor Archives &amp; Research Center</corpname>
        <address>
          <addressline>San Francisco, California 94132</addressline>
        </address>
      </repository>
      <physloc label="Shelf location">For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the Center's online catalog.</physloc>
      <langmaterial label="Language">
        <language langcode="eng">English.</language>
      </langmaterial>
    </did>
    <descgrp id="descgrp-1.7.2" type="admininfo">
      <head>Administrative Information</head>
      <accessrestrict>
        <head>Access</head>
        <p>Collection is open for research.</p>
      </accessrestrict>
      <userestrict>
        <head>Publication Rights</head>
        <p>Copyright has not been assigned to the Labor Archives &amp; Research Center. All requests for
permission to publish or quote from materials must be submitted in writing
to the Director of the Archives. Permission for publication is given on behalf
of the Labor Archives &amp; Research Center as the owner of the physical items and is not intended
to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be
obtained by the reader.</p>
      </userestrict>
      <prefercite>
        <head>Preferred Citation</head>
        <p>[Identification of item], International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 Records, 1991/048, Labor Archives &amp; Research Center,
San Francisco State University.</p>
      </prefercite>
    </descgrp>
    <odd id="odd-1.7.3">
      <head>Introduction</head>
      <p>These records from International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85, of San Francisco,
California, were donated in 1991. The collection was processed in spring 1999 by Joshua Paddison.</p>
    </odd>
    <bioghist id="bioghist-1.7.4">
      <head>History</head>
      <p>International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 85 of San Francisco was founded in August 1900,
with an initial membership of thirty-five men. The teamsters organized in response to the
appearance of the Draymen's Association, an alliance of San Francisco team-owners, which had
been founded in January of that year.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn1">1</ref></emph> Prior to the formation of the union, San Francisco teamsters
toiled under conditions the <title linktype="simple">Labor Clarion </title>described as "among the most slavish in the west." The
average work day was from 5 a.m. to after 8 p.m., and "there was no such thing as regulation of
hours, or working men in shifts. The problem of the employer was to get as much work as he
could out of the flesh and blood of his hired men; the problem of the teamsters was to keep alive."<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn2">2</ref></emph></p>
      <p>The union was put to an immediate test: On Labor Day, 1900, the large draying firm McNab &amp;
Smith fired three teamsters who belonged to the new union. About one hundred of the firm's other
drivers promptly went on strike, and the three men were reinstated the next day. This impressive
flexing of union muscle convinced more than 1,300 teamsters to apply for membership at the next
union meeting.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn3">3</ref></emph></p>
      <p>On October 1, 1900, Teamsters Local 85 entered into an agreement with the Draymen's
Association that established a higher, standard daily wage; a twelve-hour work day; and
guaranteed overtime pay for work on Sundays, holidays, or after 6 p.m. The contract also included
a stipulation that the Draymen's Association would employ only members of the union, and that
the union would work only for employers affiliated with the Draymen's Association. This
strengthened the power of both the union and the association.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn4">4</ref></emph></p>
      <p>Teamsters Local 85 was led by two powerful men who would loom large over San Francisco
organized labor for more than three decades: Michael "Bloody Mike" Casey (1857-1937) and John
P. McLaughlin (1873-1949). Born in Ireland, Casey--a charter member of Local 85 and its first
business agent--served as the union's president for more than thirty years. In 1904 he was elected
one of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters' (IBT) seven regional vice presidents and the
chief IBT representative and organizer for the entire United States west of Chicago. McLaughlin,
like Casey a charter member of Local 85, acted as its secretary for nearly fifty years. He also
served as State Labor Commissioner, administrator of the first Workmen's Compensation Act,
Collector of Internal Revenue, and member of the Public Utilities Commission.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn5">5</ref></emph></p>
      <p>In April 1901, the Draymen's Association joined forces with a variety of San Francisco wholesale
merchants, manufacturers, and retail merchants in a powerful new employer's union, the
Employers' and Manufacturers' Association. Casey later claimed that the Association was formed
due to a picnic--whenever the men of Teamsters 85 took a day off for a union picnic, business in
San Francisco ground to a halt. "This so shocked the Chamber of Commerce and the powers that
be in the economic world that they determined this was a dangerous thing and that the teamsters'
union ought to be destroyed," declared Casey.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn6">6</ref></emph></p>
      <p>In fact, the Employers' and Manufacturers' Association collected a $250,000 war chest to combat
unionism and managed to put down several small strikes in May and June, 1901. But in July, when
members of Teamsters 85 were ordered by the Draymen's Association to haul luggage for a
nonunion company, Casey led more than 2,500 teamsters on a strike. On July 30 between 10,000
and 16,000 sailors, firemen, and longshoremen who were affiliated with the City Front Federation
joined the teamsters in a sympathy strike throughout the Bay Area. "Not until 1934, at another
time of crisis for San Francisco labor, did teamsters, longshoremen, and seamen unite once more in
effective battle against employers," notes one historian.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn7">7</ref></emph></p>
      <p>The strike ended only after Governor Henry T. Gage stepped in on October 2 and announced that
he was declaring "the teamsters' strike and all collateral and sympathetic strikes or lockouts
originating from the teamsters' strike at an end." The exact terms of the settlement were never
revealed, but the strike demonstrated the power and solidarity of San Francisco labor, helped
launch the Union Labor Party, triggered the dissolution of the Employers' and Manufacturers'
Association, and vindicated the teamsters' right to organize and bargain collectively.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn8">8</ref></emph> (Unfortunately, no records pertaining to the 1901 strike appear in this collection.)</p>
      <p>Also in 1901, Teamsters Local 85 joined with Oakland's Local 70 and other Bay Area Teamsters
locals in organizing a central organization called the Team Drivers Joint Executive Council. After
the 1906 earthquake and fire, the Team Drivers Joint Executive Council was reorganized as San
Francisco Bay Area Joint Council 7, with Local 85 as its most influential member.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn9">9</ref></emph></p>
      <p>Of the four western Teamsters Joint Councils, San Francisco Bay Area Joint Council 7 was,
according to one historian, "by far the largest, most powerful, and unquestionably the most
conservative."<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn10">10</ref></emph> In fact, by the 1920s and 1930s San Francisco's Teamsters Local 85 was "so
large, wealthy, well-established, and secure in its position" that it resisted organizing California's
plentiful highway truckers, a move Teamsters locals in Seattle and Oakland eagerly embraced in
the mid-1930s. Casey finally bowed to IBT pressure in 1935 and helped launch the Bay Area
Highway Organizing Drive, later followed by the Highway Drivers Council of California.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn11">11</ref></emph></p>
      <p>During the San Francisco maritime and general strike of July 1934, strike leader Harry Bridges
appealed to the members of Teamsters 85 to join his longshoremen in a sympathy strike. Said Mike
Casey: "In all my thirty years of leading these men, I have never seen them so worked up, so
determined to walk out. I don't believe any power on earth can prevent them going on strike
unless the maritime strike is settled...."<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn12">12</ref></emph> In fact, on July 11, the Teamsters overwhelming voted in
favor of the sympathy strike, considerably strengthening the longshoremen's position.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn13">13</ref></emph></p>
      <p>Mike Casey died in 1937, and John P. McLaughlin took over as IBT vice president. That same
year, Local 85 joined approximately 150 other Teamster locals in eleven western states to form the
Western Conference of Teamsters, led by Seattle Teamster Dave Beck. The creation of this multi-jurisdictional regional body, unprecedented in Teamster history, significantly shifted the balance of
Teamster power westward; Beck himself rose to become president of the IBT in 1952.<emph render="super"><ref linktype="simple" target="fn14">14</ref></emph></p>
      <p id="fn1">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">1</emph>Robert Edward Lee Knight, <title linktype="simple">Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 </title>(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960), 58.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn2">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">2</emph><title linktype="simple">Labor Clarion </title>4 September 1908: 14.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn3">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">3</emph>Robert M. Robinson, "San Francisco Teamsters at the Turn of the Century," <title linktype="simple">California Historical Society Quarterly </title>35 (1956): 62.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn4">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">4</emph>Robinson, "San Francisco Teamsters," 63; Knight, 59-60.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn5">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">5</emph>50th Anniversary Celebration program, 25 November 1950, LARC, Peter Comacho Papers; Donald Garnel, <title linktype="simple">The Rise of Teamster Power in the West </title>(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972), 48, 51.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn6">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">6</emph>Donald F. Selvin, <title linktype="simple">A Terrible Anger: The 1934 Waterfront and General Strikes in San Francisco </title>(Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1996), 23.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn7">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">7</emph>Knight, 95.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn8">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">8</emph>See Ira B. Cross, <title linktype="simple">A History of the Labor Movement in California </title>(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1935), 237-247; David F. Selvin, <title linktype="simple">Sky Full of Storm: A Brief History of California Labor </title>(Berkeley: Center for Labor Research and Education, 1966), 21-26; Robinson, "San Francisco Teamsters," 145-152.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn9">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">9</emph>Robert M. Robinson, "A History of the Teamsters in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1850-1950" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of California at Berkeley, 1951), 181; Garnel, 49-51.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn10">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">10</emph>Garnel, 54.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn11">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">11</emph>Garnel, 101-116.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn12">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">12</emph>Selvin, <title linktype="simple">A Terrible Anger, </title>158.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn13">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">13</emph>Selvin, <title linktype="simple">A Terrible Anger, </title>165.</bibref>
      </p>
      <p id="fn14">
        <bibref linktype="simple"><emph render="super">14</emph>Robinson, "A History of the Teamsters," 298; Garnel, 200.</bibref>
      </p>
    </bioghist>
    <scopecontent id="scopecontent-1.7.5">
      <head>Scope and Content</head>
      <p>This small collection has only one series: Teamsters Local 85. Included within it are minutes, office
correspondence, and contracts and agreements.</p>
      <p>The oldest items in the collection are grievance committee minutes from 1900 to 1901, a
subscription log from 1901, and a "Tickets for Benefit Fight" log from ca. 1901 (all contained
within the same ledger).</p>
      <p>The most recent items in the collection are contract rules and regulations with the Draymen's
Association from the late 1930s and office correspondence from the late 1940s.</p>
      <p>Included in the collection is a record of unemployment relief administered by Local 85 during the
Great Depression (specifically, 1931 and 1932).</p>
    </scopecontent>
    <dsc id="dsc-1.7.6" type="in-depth">
      <head>Container List</head>
      <c01 id="c01-1.7.6.2">
        <did>
          <container type="Box-folder">1/1</container>
          <unittitle>Executive Board Minutes </unittitle>
          <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">Jan. 3, 1904-March 16, 1906 </unitdate>
        </did>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="c01-1.7.6.3">
        <did>
          <container type="Box-folder">1/2</container>
          <unittitle>General Meeting Minutes </unittitle>
          <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">May 4, 1905-April 12, 1906</unitdate>
        </did>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="c01-1.7.6.4">
        <did>
          <container type="Box-folder">1/3</container>
          <unittitle>Minutes and Financial Ledger </unittitle>
        </did>
        <c02 id="c02-1.7.6.4.2">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Grievance Committee Minutes (p. 1-26) </unittitle>
            <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">Sept. 16, 1900-Jan. 10, 1901</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="c02-1.7.6.4.3">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Unemployment Relief Records (p. 50-63) </unittitle>
            <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">Dec. 22, 1931-May 27, 1932</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="c02-1.7.6.4.4">
          <did>
            <unittitle>Subscription Log (p. 325) </unittitle>
            <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">May 28, 1901</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
        <c02 id="c02-1.7.6.4.5">
          <did>
            <unittitle>"Tickets For Benefit Fight" (p. 340-348) </unittitle>
            <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">ca. 1901</unitdate>
          </did>
        </c02>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="c01-1.7.6.5">
        <did>
          <container type="Box-folder">1/4</container>
          <unittitle>Office Correspondence </unittitle>
          <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1916-1948</unitdate>
        </did>
      </c01>
      <c01 id="c01-1.7.6.6">
        <did>
          <container type="Box-folder">1/5</container>
          <unittitle>Contracts and Agreements--Rules and Regulations (Draymen's Association) </unittitle>
          <unitdate calendar="gregorian" era="ce">1902-1937</unitdate>
        </did>
      </c01>
    </dsc>
    <descgrp id="descgrp-1.7.7" type="add">
      <head>Additional Information</head>
      <separatedmaterial>
        <head>Material Cataloged Separately</head>
        <p>The following material has been removed from the files and relocated elsewhere in the Labor
Archives, as indicated:</p>
        <list type="marked">
          <item><bibref linktype="simple"><title linktype="simple">Working Women in Large Cities: Fourth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor, </title></bibref>1888 (relocated to LARC book collection).</item>
          <item><bibref linktype="simple"><title linktype="simple">Strikes and Lockouts: Sixteenth Annual Report of the Commissioner of Labor, </title></bibref>1901 (relocated to LARC book collection).</item>
          <item>Agreement booklet, "Retail Furniture Council and Brotherhood of Teamsters Local No.85, July 1, 1964 - June 30, 1967" (relocated to LARC ephemera files, "Teamsters ... Local 85").</item>
        </list>
      </separatedmaterial>
      <relatedmaterial>
        <head>Related Collections</head>
        <archref show="embed" actuate="onrequest" linktype="simple"><unittitle>Peter Comacho papers, </unittitle><unitid>accession number 1989/085, </unitid>which also consists of early
Teamsters Local 85 records. </archref>
      </relatedmaterial>
    </descgrp>
  </archdesc>
</ead>
