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I don't think that the active labor movement ever represented half of the population, and I know the wealthy didn't. America was still very rural then; I don't think it was until the 1920s that half the population lived in urban areas, and the labor movement was more of an urban thing than rural. Note that the unions really didn't have national clout until the mid 1930s. In the instances I gave, at least one of the sides, and in the case of Vietnam and now, both sides are close to representing half of the people.
All that is not to say that there weren't serious class divisions at that time; there were. But most Americans either didn't know about the labor movement, or weren't involved and didn't care. Labor Day, first celebrated in the 1880s, was mostly a sop thrown to labor to stem the tide of socialism. Grover Cleveland had actually broken a strike (the Pullman Strike), and the government actively supported big business over labor unions, going so far as to provide police and the National Guard as strike-breakers. This practice went on, in varying degrees, until the 1930s.
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| Posts: 16645 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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| Posts: 16645 | Location: Lincoln Place, Granite City, IL, USA | Registered: 06-03-02 |    |
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