Note: Most of this essay was originally published in 2023. It comes at a time when the Trump regime has aggressively, often illegally, laid off federal workers (likely down about 300,000 by year’s end) and is aggressively undermining critical growth industries such as renewable energy that employs nearly 3.5 million Americans in order to support the fossil fuel industry. These are among the latest examples of a long and often painful history for workers to get and keep jobs, count on basic protections, take care of their families, and be treated with decency and respect. This is a day to honor all who labor—and all who sacrificed to advance humane working conditions.
Growing up in the Midwest, Labor Day was always emotionally complicated. This was the unofficial end of the summer, the beginning of the end of those golden, radiant days of light and liberty. The day after meant going back to school.
My family would always have a barbecue. And while there were other times we had hot dogs and hamburgers, grilled chicken and chips, ice cream and pie, they always tasted better on Labor Day—almost as if this was a final meal before the boom came down. This was farewell to the lazy days of summer fun. This was a happy-sad day.
As a Chicago kid, it never fully dawned on me to reflect on how Labor Day was a holiday to commemorate the hard work of men and women. I honestly didn’t think about how many adults might need a Monday off or how exactly this holiday was meant to commemorate workers and labor history. That would come later when I studied labor history and covered labor as a budding reporter.
As a graduate student, I was particularly drawn to Chicago’s Haymarket Riot, also known as the Haymarket Massacre, on May 4, 1886. The event emerged out of a national strike, involving over 300,000 workers across the country, that started on May 1 to advocate for an eight-hour workday. It also followed a violent confrontation on May 3 when striking workers at the McCormack Reaper Works in Chicago attacked scabs and several hundred policemen responded brutally, leading to the deaths of two workers.
In protest, the International Working People’s Association, an anarchist group seeking to empower the working class, called for a protest on May 4 at Haymarket Square. Among the attendees was Carter Harrison, the sympathetic Chicago mayor, and Albert Parsons, the group’s leader (a former Confederate soldier who, intriguingly, became a radical Republican and married a former slave).
Not long after the mayor departed, calling the event peaceful, someone in the crowd threw a dynamite bomb after the large contingent of police sought to disperse the demonstrators. By the time police gunfire was over, eight officers were dead and dozens of police and civilians were injured.
In response, eight anarchists and foreign workers were rounded up, all of whom had alibis (only two were even there that day). While none were identified as the bomber, their inflammatory speeches led to their being charged as accessories to the murder.
After a hasty, partisan trial, in which all 12 jurors acknowledged they were prejudiced against the defendants, the jury reached a guilty verdict in three hours and seven of the men were sentenced to hang for their crimes. (Four were hanged the next year, one committed suicide in prison and two were eventually pardoned.)
The events of those first days of May—both the battle for workers’ rights and specifically the push for a shortened eight-hour workday—became an inspiration for the globally celebrated May Day, also known as International Workers’ Day.
In America, the first Labor Day celebration organized by labor activists was in New York City on Sept. 5, 1882; by 1894, 24 states had recognized the holiday. On June 28, 1894, President Grover Cleveland made it a national holiday on the first Monday every September.
But the launching of a federal holiday didn’t mean the eight-hour workday quickly followed suit. An 1890 government report tracking manufacturing employees found that they were still working on average 100 hours a week.
It would be decades before significant change was visible, requiring the hard work of labor unions and other supporters to turn the cry for change into policy and practice. In 1916, Congress passed a federal law establishing an eight-hour workday for interstate railroad workers, and the Supreme Court agreed that was constitutional the following year.
In 1926, Ford Motor Company instituted a five-day, 40-hour workweek. Founder Henry Ford insisted, “It is high time to rid ourselves of the notion that leisure for workmen is either lost time or a class privilege.” He saw the benefit for business: “People who have more leisure must have more clothes…eat a greater variety of food…require more transportation in vehicles.”
It wasn’t until 1938—more than a half century after the Haymarket Riot and the national strikes for eight-hour workdays—when Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act, which limited the workweek to 44 hours, and then amended the law two years later to 40 hours.
These days the 40-hour workweek is so ingrained in our thinking that it is remarkable to realize how long and fierce the struggle was to secure it. But let’s not doubt similar battles are still ongoing.
The Center for American Progress notes that, while the Trump administration claims that it’s “putting American workers first,” it is in fact actively gutting minimum wage protections for millions of workers. This includes hundreds of thousands of federal contract workers, disabled workers earning just $7.25 an hour, and providers of child care and home care.
While the current labor secretary is focused on plastering a giant Trump portrait on the facade of the Department of Labor building and praising her dear leader, let’s not forget how important it is to have compassionate leadership deciding labor policy. Indeed, American workers were lucky to have a pro-labor president like Joe Biden, who prioritized job growth and worker support.
So, too, let’s remember how labor activists helped us achieve something so fundamental as an eight-hour day. As one of their slogans put it back in 1886: “Eight hours for work, eight hours for rest and eight hours for what you will.”
May you enjoy this well-earned Labor Day holiday.
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"Freedom is not a state; it is an act. It is not some enchanted garden perched high on a distant plateau where we can finally sit down and rest. Freedom is the continuous action we all must take, and each generation must do its part to create an even more fair, more just society." - John Lewis
The 8 hour workday and 40 hour workweek aren’t possible for those earning minimum wage in this country. Single parents often work two or three jobs, just to meet minimum standards of life, housing , groceries, clothing, and transportation. It is getting worse as inflation rises, and medical care often goes by the wayside because employers are not providing health insurance to those who don’t work full time. It’s a disgrace that the wealthiest country in the world has so many living below the poverty line. The regime doesn’t have any interest in improving the lives of the poor; they are only providing tax cuts for the wealthy, who, obviously don’t need an increase in their income. We must elect those who will raise the minimum wage to a point where the standard of living can be applied to all who work a full time job.