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Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Photographs and Prints Division

Griffith’s Studio

Skilled Workers

Historically, black workers had held monopolies on some skilled trades - brick making, carpentry, and shipbuilding, skills passed down from slavery. By the beginning of the twentieth century, this advantage was removed when jobs became mechanized and therefore less dirty. They were redefined as white jobs as was any traditional black job during a recession. But with high demand for workers during World War I, and the shortage of white workers, African Americans were heavily recruited by northern factories to fill some positions that had been reserved to whites.

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Image ID: DS_08scja
Title: A Bull-Gang of riveters.
Source: Jesse Alexander photograph collection.
Name: Griffith's Studio () - Photographer
Published: 1850-1980
Depicted: 1910s
Location: Photographs and Prints Division, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
Subjects: African American construction workers
Child labor
Rivets and riveting

Keywords: Men - Employment
Men - United States
Riveters
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