Atlanta+Washerwomen+Strike

Atlanta Washerwomen Strike, 1881 from AFL-CIO

 * 3000 Black washerwomen--and some whites--went on strike in the summer of 1881 for better wages, respect and a uniform pay rate.
 * Organized by 20 women who formed the Washing Society of Atlanta
 * Washerwomen also organized strikes in Jackson, Mississippi (1866) and Galveston, Texas (1877)
 * Washing clothes was backbreaking work
 * Using a washtub and washboard, women would heat water in a large pot, used homemade lye soap to clean the clothes, and then hang them on a clothesline to dry, a process that could take all day


 * African American Laundry Women Go on Strike in Atlanta from American Social History Projec**t


 * Black Women Advance Labor's Cause in an Unlikely Setting: 1881 Atlanta**


 * The Origins of the Civil Rights Movement in Atlanta, 1880-1910**, from American Historical Association

Book Review of **To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Women's Lives and Labors after the Civil War**, Tora. W. Hunter, 1997

The Negro Washerwoman, A Vanishing Figure. Carter G. Woodson, Journal of Negro History (July 1930)