The Strike That Changed Maryland's Wilderness County

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Working people today face widespread anti-union campaigns led by politicians, corporations and techno-billionaires. The forces lined up against labor are formidable. But are they unbeatable?

That question was answered decisively in 1970 in deeply Republican and rural Garrett County, Md-Maryland’s wilderness county.

There, the county’s roads workers voted to join the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Their request was bitterly opposed by an anti-union county commission majority and local business leaders.

 But the workers and their wives would not be deterred. Reaching deep into their community and union for support, they waged an eight-month strike, the longest public worker strike in U.S. history. The strike ushered in a political revolution in the thinly settled county, leading to indelible changes in its economics, politics and culture.

         How did they survive financially and hold out so long? Find out in Len Shindel’s compelling history of the strike. And find in your own workplace the courage and confidence to build union power and dignity for working people.

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Working people today face widespread anti-union campaigns led by politicians, corporations and techno-billionaires. The forces lined up against labor are formidable. But are they unbeatable?

That question was answered decisively in 1970 in deeply Republican and rural Garrett County, Md-Maryland’s wilderness county.

There, the county’s roads workers voted to join the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Their request was bitterly opposed by an anti-union county commission majority and local business leaders.

 But the workers and their wives would not be deterred. Reaching deep into their community and union for support, they waged an eight-month strike, the longest public worker strike in U.S. history. The strike ushered in a political revolution in the thinly settled county, leading to indelible changes in its economics, politics and culture.

         How did they survive financially and hold out so long? Find out in Len Shindel’s compelling history of the strike. And find in your own workplace the courage and confidence to build union power and dignity for working people.

Working people today face widespread anti-union campaigns led by politicians, corporations and techno-billionaires. The forces lined up against labor are formidable. But are they unbeatable?

That question was answered decisively in 1970 in deeply Republican and rural Garrett County, Md-Maryland’s wilderness county.

There, the county’s roads workers voted to join the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees (AFSCME). Their request was bitterly opposed by an anti-union county commission majority and local business leaders.

 But the workers and their wives would not be deterred. Reaching deep into their community and union for support, they waged an eight-month strike, the longest public worker strike in U.S. history. The strike ushered in a political revolution in the thinly settled county, leading to indelible changes in its economics, politics and culture.

         How did they survive financially and hold out so long? Find out in Len Shindel’s compelling history of the strike. And find in your own workplace the courage and confidence to build union power and dignity for working people.