Exhibit: Women of Valor

Workers' Rights

“My father said that he knew my intentions were good, but he questioned what skills I had to do anything about them.”

In light of her factory experiences, Polier decided to enroll in Yale law school, "since it would be a good idea to get some legal background and know what my rights and the rights of other people were." "By the end of my second year [1926], the great textile strike had broken out in Passaic where I had worked, so I commuted between Yale Law School and Passaic, to the horror of some of the reputable people at Yale."


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The press termed Polier a "Joan of Arc" and reported on her fiery speeches against the "feudal tyranny" of the mill, its terrible conditions and its "octopus-like espionage system." Meanwhile Stephen and Louise Wise were, as always, "very understanding and very supportive even when I caused plenty of trouble," and sent letters and telegrams urging "love courage hope." Her father also joined her in addressing the strikers, helping to raise funds for their relief and gathering support in Washington.


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Police brutality against the strikers brought the struggle into the national spotlight, but mill owners still refused to negotiate for almost a year. Finally in December of 1927 the textile workers won their demands for the right to unionize.


Notes

Next—Just Like Her Father






How to Cite This Page
For a bibliography: Jewish Women's Archive. "JWA - Justine Wise - Workers' Rights." <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/wise/jp4.html>.

For a footnote: Jewish Women's Archive, "JWA - Justine Wise - Workers' Rights," <http://jwa.org/exhibits/wov/wise/jp4.html>.


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