Abstract: |
Local 1377 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers was the Cleveland (Ohio) local of electrical manufacturing
workers originally set up to represent employees of the Leece-Neville Company. By the mid-1950s, however, the local had absorbed
several units of Local 38, and included manufacturing units, maintenance units and radio and sound units, including appliance
repairmen and mobile/microwave technicians. Peter J. Zicarelli served as business manager, 1950-1970s. The local was involved
in jurisdictional disputes with Local 38 and representational disputes with the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers
of America and with independent workers' organizations such as the Electrical Workers Alliance at Leece-Neville and the Picker
X-Ray Employees Union. The collection consists of minutes, correspondence, reports, contracts and agreements, financial records,
membership rosters, grievance and arbitration proceedings, civil litigation records, organizing files, newspapers and periodicals.
The collection focuses on the day-to-day operations of an amalgamated local, with the various problems accompanying a mixed
membership, and includes material on the jurisdictional disputes with IBEW Local 38 and the representational disputes with
the United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, as well as labor-management conflicts and general conditions
in the Cleveland electric industries, especially General Electric, Leece-Neville, Westinghouse and Picker X-Ray. The collection
includes extensive material relating to the AFL-CIO Committee on Collective Bargaining, established in 1966 to negotiate an
industry-wide contract with GE and Westinghouse and the eight major unions it represented. Also includes files of Local 1377
officials Peter J. Zicarelli, Gordon M. Freeman, Joseph Keenan, and H.B. Blankenship and material regarding the role of women
in the local.
|