History of the IAM
1888: 19 machinists meeting in locomotive pit at
Atlanta, GA, vote to form a trade union. Machinists earn 20
to 25 cents an hour for 10-hour day.
1889: 34 locals represented at the first
Machinists convention, held in Georgia State Senate Chamber,
elect Tom Talbot as Grand Master Machinist. A monthly
journal is started.
1890: First Canadian local chartered at Stratford,
Ont. Union is named International Association of Machinists.
Headquarters set up in Richmond, VA. Membership at 4,000.
1891: IAM Local 145 asks $3 for a 10-hour day.
1892: First railroad agreement signed with
Atcheson, Topeka & Santa Fe.
1895: IAM joins American Federation of Labor
(AFL), moves headquarters to Chicago.
1898: IAM Local 52, Pittsburgh, conducts first
successful strike for 9-hour day.
1899: Time-and-a-half for overtime has become
prevalent. Headquarters moved to Washington, D.C.
1903: Specialists admitted to membership. Drive
begins for 8-hour day.
1905: Apprentices admitted to membership. There
are 769 locals. Railroad machinists earn 36 to 43 cents an
hour for 9-hour day.
1908: Metal Trades Department established within
AFL with IAM President James O''Connell as president.
1911: Women admitted to membership with equal
rights.
1912: Railway Employees Department established in
AFL with Machinist A. O. Wharton as President.
1914: Congress passes Clayton Act limiting use of
injunctions in labor disputes and making picketing legal.
1915: IAM wins 8-hour in many shops and factories.
IAM affiliates with International Metalworkers Federation.
1916: Auto mechanics admitted to membership.
1918: IAM membership reaches 331,000.
1920: Headquarters moved to first Machinists
Building, at 9th & Mt.Vernon Pl., N.W., Washington, D.C.
British Amalgamated Engineering Union cedes its North
American locals to IAM.
1920: Machinists earn 72 to 90 cents an hour for
44-hour week.
1922: 79,000 railroad machinists pin shopmen's
strike against second post-war wage cut. Membership declines
to 148,000.
1924: IAM convention endorses Robert M.
LaFollette, Sr., for President.
1926: Congress passes Railway Labor Act requiring
carriers to bargain and forbidding discrimination against
union members.
1927: IAM urges ratification of Child Labor
Amendments to U.S. Constitution; 2,500,000 children under 16
are working at substandard wages.
1928: 250 delegates at 18th IAM convention urge
5-day week to alleviate unemployment.
1929: Depression layoffs cut IAM membership to
70,000.
1932: Congress passes Norris LaGuardia Act banning
use of court injunctions in labor disputes.Wisconsin adopts
first unemployment insurance act. Nearly 30% of union
members are jobless.
1933: IAM backs National Recovery drive and
40-hour week. FOR picks IAM Vice President Robert Fechner to
head new Civilian Conservative Corps. Membership sinks to
56,000.
1934: IAM establishes Research Department.
1935: Congress adopts National Labor Relations Act
establishing right to organize and requiring employers to
bargain in good faith. IAM opens drive to organize aircraft
Industry.
1936: First industrial union agreement signed with
Boeing, Seattle. IAM convention endorses FDR for President.
Membership climbs to 130,000.
1937: Social Security and Railroad Retirement Acts
now in operation. IAM negotiates paid vacations in 26% of
its agreements.
1939: IAM signs first union agreement in air
transport industry with Eastern.
1940: Machinists rates average 80 cents an hour.
IAM pledges full support to National Defense program. IAM
membership climbs to 188,000.
1941: IAM pledges hail support to win the war
including no-strike pledge.
1944: 76,000 IAM members serve in armed forces.
Total membership now 776,000.
1945: First agreement with Remington Rand. IAM
convention votes to establish weekly newspaper, education
department. Widespread layoffs follow end of World War II.
1946: 88% of IAM agreements now provide for paid
vacations.
1947: Congress enacts anti-union Taft-Hartley Act.
Machinists Non-Partisan Political League founded. IAM Legal
Department established. Machinists average $1.56 an hour.
1948: IAM membership opened to all regardless of
race or color.IAM convention endorses Harry Truman for
President.
1949: Railroad machinists win 40 hour week.
Membership down to 501,000.
1950: IAM joins International Transport Workers
Federation. Machinists now average $1.82 an hour.
1951: IAM pledges full support of UN action in
Korea.
1952: Employees on 85% of airlines now protected
by IAM agreements. 92% of IAM contracts provide for paid
holidays.
1953: IAM has contracts fixing wages and working
conditions with 13,500 employers. IAM Atomic Energy
Conference organized.
1955: AFL and Congress of Industrial Organizations
(CIO) merge, Machinist Al Hayes elected Vice President and
chairman of Ethical Practices Committee. 70% of IAM
contracts now have health and welfare provisions. Machinists
average $2.33 an hour.
1956: 2,000th active local chartered. New ten
story Machinists Building dedicated at 1300 Connecticut
Ave., Washington, DC.
1958: IAM convention establishes a strike fund
which was approved by the membership in a referendum vote.
IAM membership now tops 903,000.
1959: Congress enacts anti-union Landrum-Griffin
Act.
1960: IAM convention endorses JFK for President
after personal visits from both Kennedy and Richard Nixon.
IAM convention establishes college scholarship program. IAM
establishes Labor Management Pension Fund.
1962: IAM Electronics Conference established. JFK
issues Executive Order giving Federal employees a limited
right to collective bargaining. Machinists now average $3.10
an hour.
1964: IAM convention endorses LBJ for President,
after a personal appearance. Delegates vote to change name
to International Association of Machinists and Aerospace
Workers. Membership at 800,000.
1966: IAM members strike five major airlines and
finally break through unfair 3.2% limit on wage increases.
First dental care plan negotiated with Aerojet General.
1967: Railroad machinists lead shopcrafts against
nation's railroads. Congress forces return to work and
arbitration.
1968: IAM membership tops 1,000,000. Machinists
average S3.44 an hour.
1969: IAM member, Edwin (Buzz) Aldrin, the first
space mechanic walks on the moon.
1970: Congress votes first Federal Occupational
Safety and Health law. IAM is one of 19 unions in first
successful coordinated bargaining effort against GE.
1971: IAM wins biggest back pay award in history,
more than $54,500,00 for 1,000 members locked out illegally
by National Airlines. IAM establishes Job Safety & Health
Department.
1972: IAM membership drops to 902,000 as a result
of recession and layoffs in defense industries. IAM
President Floyd Smith quits U.S. Pay Board to protest unfair
economic policies. IAM convention endorses Sen. George
McGovern for President.
1973: IAM and UAW hold first joint Legislative
Conference with 1,000 delegates in attendance. Machinists
average $4.71 an hour. Membership rises to 927,000.
1974: Watergate scandal cast its shadow over labor
unions along with the rest of the country. When President
Nixon resigned, IAM wired President Gerald Ford, "You can
count on our support and cooperation in your efforts to
bring America back to the principles upon which it was
founded."
1976: IAM convention endorses Jimmy Carter for
U.S. President., Delegates vote to set up Civil Rights and
Organizing departments and expand community services
program.
1977: William W. Winpisinger sworn in as the lAM's
11th president.
1979: Citizen/Labor Energy Coalition launches
first Stop Big Oil day to protest obscene profits by oil
conglomerates while American workers'' paychecks continue to
shrink.
1980: IAM media project begins. Thousands of IAM
members and their families monitor prime time TV to
determine media's portrayal of working people and unions.
1981: Older Workers and Retired Members Department
is established at Grand Lodge.
1982: Reaganomics grips nation. Individual and
corporate bankruptcies reach epidemic proportions. IAM
membership begins drop to 820,211.
1983: IAM introduces ''Rebuilding America'' act to
Congress as alternative to Reaganomics and to rebuild
nation’s industrial base.
1984: IAM convention in Seattle WA, endorses
Walter Mondale for U.S. President. Delegates vote funding
for Placid Harbor Education Center to improve the level of
understanding of workers in an ever changing world.
1987: IAM Executive Council establishes new
Organizing Department, the first ever to be headed by a Vice
President. First IAM Communications Conference convened in
Kansas City, MO.
1988: IAM celebrates 100th anniversary in Atlanta,
GA, on May 5.
1989: George J. Kourpias sworn in as the IAM's
12th president.
1992: IAM moves to new state-of-the-art
headquarters building in Upper Marlboro, MD, to keep pace
with technological changes and serve members'' needs well
into 21st Century; IAM convenes 33rd convention at Montreal,
Quebec, Canada.
1994: International Woodworkers of America ratify
merger agreement. More than 20,000 members join IAM family.
Some 8,000 USAir fleet service workers say "IAM yes."
Machinist newspaper bids fond farewell, reborn as IAM
Journal magazine.
1995: IAM, Auto and Steelworker unions debate
plans for unification by year 2000. Unity plan sparks
solidarity. Plan would create largest, most diverse union in
North America, with more than 2,000,000 active members, 1,
400, 000 retirees. Sixty-nine day strike brings major
victory in new contract at Boeing. Members air their views
during first round of Town Hall meetings.
1996: ‘Fighting Machinists'' spearhead political
battle for worker rights. Union efforts provide winning edge
in Clinton-Gore presidential victory. Meeting in Chicago,
IAM Convention delegates build bridge to 21st century.
Delegates establish IAM Women's Department.
1997: On July 1, Robert Thomas
Buffenbarger, 46, takes office as 13th International
president in 109-year IAM history, moves quickly to reshape
Union to reflect growing diversity, interests, concerns of
IAM members. Former IAM President Winpisinger dies Dec. 11.
1998: New Blue Ribbon Commission
empaneled to provide membership forum to voice opinions.
Placid Harbor facility renamed Winpisinger Education and
Technology Center to honor visionary union leader, who
brought the facility into being.
1999: General Vice President William
Scheri retires, Robert Roach, Jr. takes over the
Transportation Department. IAM Shares mutual fund created;
llows members to put money to work in a fund that invests in
IAM-represented companies. The National Federation of
Federal Employees affiliates with the IAM. Unification
effort with the Steelworkers and UAW ends because of major
philosophical differences; the three unions vow to work
together, however.
2000 : The IAM endorses Al Gore for
President. The AFL-CIO launches its New Alliance campaign,
Grand Lodge Convention delegates respond with mandate that
all IAM local and district lodges affiliate with their state
AFL-CIO labor councils.The IAM meets in San Francisco for
the 35th Grand Lodge Convention. The delegates
establish Communicator and Educator positions.
2001: IAM Communications revamped with
relaunch of website, online streaming of video, and
repositioning of the IAM Journal as an advocacy
magazine. IAM Executive Council reelected. William W.
Winpisinger Education & Technology Center increases capacity
by 50%. IAM Dedicates memorial to fallen members. IAM
members perish in September 11 attack. The IAM volunteers to
help in war against terrorism and to help America rebuild.
2002: The IAM establishes the Automotive
Department and sets in place dozens of organizing blitzes.
LL 2710's Gary Blanke wins the IAM's first photography
contest. Members speak out at the 2002 Blue Ribbon
Commission town hall meetings. Everyday Heroes, an
IAM documentary, which tells the story of the workers who
risked their lives in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks,
goes on sale. The proceeds go to treat rescue and recovery
workers at Ground Zero. The Transportation Department
ignites a nationwide Day of Action to urge passengers back
onto trains and airplanes. IAM members join with other U.S.
union members for the biggest midterm election turnout ever.
2003: The IAM creates the Department of
Employment Services to help members cope with the worst
recession in years; Tony Chapman named its director. IAM
leaders meet in Cincinnati, Ohio. IP Buffenbarger vows "No
more business as usual." Presidential candidates Howard Dean
and Richard Gephardt address the IAM leaders; Gephardt
endorsed for president. GVP George Hooper passes away.
Robert Martinez named Southern Territory GVP. ST Don Wharton
Retires, Eastern Territory GVP Warren Mart succeeds Wharton.
Lynn Tucker takes over as the Eastern GVP. James Brown takes
over the Midwest Territory with the retirement of Alex Bay.
2004: The IAM Executive Council marches
with thousands of trade unionists in Miami to protest Free
Trade Area of the Americas. President George W, Bush's "Wall
of Shame" tours Iowa during that state's presidential
caucuses to bring job losses onto the national radar screen.
CyberLodge, the innovative, open-source initiative to
organize information technology workers opens for business.
Former IAM President William W. Winpisinger is inducted into
the International Labor Hall of Fame. The 36th Grand Lodge
Convention convenes in Cincinnati and salutes North
America's Might. Vice presidential candidate Senator John
Edwards from North Carolina appears at a convention rally
after a unanimous endorsement of Senator John Kerry and
Senator Edwards by the delegates.