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Labor struggle

Striking coal in wartime

In late April 1943, as allied troops drove the last German forces to the tip of Tunisia, U.S. coal miners launched an unprecedented wartime strike wave that would last more than six months. Standing against their employers, the federal government and both the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations, several hundred thousand miners would threaten war production — and ultimately win concessions.

The Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph on April 28, 1943, as wildcat strikes spread throughout the region.