Union Labor Parade
El Día del Trabajo del Unión

Union Labor Parade

In the 1880s the first U.S. Labor Days took place in different cities. Back then, it was all about laborers wanting better treatment from their employers. In 1894 President Grover Cleveland signed into law a national Labor Day, and the law states this holiday is to be celebrated every first Monday in September. As years went on, and unions got stronger and larger, Labor Day was, indeed, a day to celebrate the worker. This picture shows the celebration of Labor Day in El Paso in the 1910s. A Parade took place in which these men with their cars joined.

Area: Central / Downtown

Collection: Aultman Collection

Source: El Paso Public Library

Uploaded by: El Paso Museum of History

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Report this entry

Choose the most important reason for this report

Your name

Your email address

Optional detail

Thank you for your report

More from the same community-collection

Photograph of Herlinda Chew Posing with Chinese Colony float - El Paso Sun Carnival Parade

Photograph of Herlinda Chew Posing with Chinese Colony float - ...

Photograph of The New China Grocery store sign

New China Grocery, at 200 S. Stanton St. Owned by Antonio and ...

Photograph of Herlinda Chew inside New China Grocery

Photograph of Josephine or Grace Chew (the elder daughters of ...

Women History Month sign at San Jacinto Park. Easter Sunday 2024.

Women History Month sign at San Jacinto Park. Easter Sunday ...

home.search_collection