Recognizing and celebrating Ben Fletcher - Philadelphia’s revolutionary labor leader - and honoring Local 8, the 1913 Longshoremen's Strike, and the city’s Black-led tradition of multiracial solidarity in the fight for dignity and respect at work and in our communities. WHEREAS, Local 8 was led by Ben Fletcher, a Philadelphia-born son of formerly enslaved parents, whose leadership, organizing brilliance, and commitment to racial justice made him one of the most prominent Black labor leaders in United States history; and WHEREAS, Fletcher’s legacy has been memorialized in Philadelphia through a mural by artist Jonathan Pinkett at 301 S. Columbus Boulevard, affirming his contributions to economic and racial justice; and WHEREAS, On May 14, 1913, more than four thousand longshoremen- workers in Philadelphia organized a powerful strike that shut down one of the busiest ports in the United States, demonstrating the collective strength of workers; and WHEREAS, During their two-week strike, these workers joined the Industrial Workers of the World, a revolutionary labor union committed to racial justice and worker solidarity across lines of race, ethnicity, and skill; and WHEREAS, The longshoremen became members of Local 8 of the IWW’s Marine Transport Workers Industrial Union, one of the most successful and durable examples of multiracial, multiethnic labor organizing in United States history, representing Black, Irish, Irish American, and European immigrant workers; and WHEREAS, At…
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