Hillman, Sidney

Hillman, Sidney
orig. Simcha Hillman

born March 23, 1887, žagarė, Lith.
died July 10, 1946, Point Lookout, N.Y., U.S.

Lithuanian-born U.S. labour leader.

He immigrated to the U.S. in 1907, became a garment worker, and was elected president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America in 1914. Under his leadership the union greatly increased its membership, secured unemployment insurance, and organized two banks. He served in various New Deal labour organizations, including the National Recovery Administration. Hillman also helped found the Congress of Industrial Organizations and was active in it until his death. See also AFL-CIO; John L. Lewis.

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▪ American labour leader
original name  Simcha Hillman 
born March 23, 1887, Žagarė, Lithuania
died July 10, 1946, Point Lookout, N.Y., U.S.
 U.S. labour leader, from 1914 president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America, and in 1935–38 one of the founders of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO). He was noted for his aggressive organization of industrial workers and for his extension of union functions to include social services and political action.

      After receiving a rabbinical education, Hillman worked in a chemical laboratory in Kovno (now Kaunas), Lithuania, now Lithuanian S.S.R. On his release from imprisonment by the tsarist government for advocating labour reforms, he went to England and then, in 1907, to the United States. Employed in a men's clothing factory in Chicago from 1909, he led a garment workers' strike there the following year. Subsequently he moved to New York City, where he was elected president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers. Under his leadership the union greatly increased its membership; it secured unemployment insurance, provided a housing development for its members, and organized two banks, which, during the Great Depression, preserved several garment businesses by granting loans to the firms or by buying their stock.

      During the presidency of Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933–45), Hillman served in the National Recovery Administration, the Office of Production Management, and the War Production Board's labour division. In 1943 he became chairman of the Political Action Committee of the CIO, which was prominent in the election campaign of 1944. After World War II he was vice president of the World Federation of Trade Unions.

Additional Reading
Steven Fraser, Labor Will Rule: Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor (1991), is a biography.

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Universalium. 2010.

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