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What are the origins of Labor Day

865 bytes added, 12:31, 8 February 2018
Origins of Labor Day
One major development in the the mid-19th century was the increasing demand for consumer products and infrastructure let to increasing demands on factories, leading to growth that was fueled by unregulated labor markets. The supply of labor was plentiful as populations expanded, but this also meant that child labor and very long hours (12 or more per day) were typical. Average workers, despite working often 7-day weeks for more than 10 hours per day, often barley made enough to feed their families and keep their homes. In the United States and elsewhere, the second half of the 19th century saw increasing labor strikes protesting wages and often conditions, where sweatshop-like conditions often existed.
 
May 1st was, from ancient origins, a festival day, often associated as a celebration for spring. In Chicago, in 1886, May 1 was celebrated as a day calling for the 8 hour workday. On May 4, 1886, in Haymarket Chicago, an organized demonstration that turned violent occurred. A bomb was thrown into the crowd and, combined with subsequent gunfire by police, several police and demonstrates were killed. Interestingly, it was in Europe that saw this event as being influential to the International Workers Conference in 1889 that called for annual demonstrations on May 1st to commemorate the events of the Haymarket event. In 1891, May Day (May 1) became recognized as the official day to recognize labor.nIn the United States, the events of Haymarket was highly negative to the authorities, while also it made them wary of the increasing power of organized labor.
==Developments in the Late 19th and early 20th Century==

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