California Labor School

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(CLS), formerly the Tom Mooney Labor School (renamed in 1945),[1] was an educational house in San Francisco from 1942 to the 1950s. rector and Holland Roberts was the first education director for this "people's school." [1] The school was founded in August 1942, in premises above a car saleroom at 678 Turk Street, and named for labor leader Tom Mooney who had died on 6 March that year. It later moved to a 5-storey building at 216 Market Street, and in 1947 bought premises at 240 Golden Gate Avenue.[2]

The school was supported by 72 trade unions, members of the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations.[1] Its initial program "promised to analyze social, economic and political questions in light of the present world struggle against fascism".[2] It also taught the arts: the teenage Maya Angelou had a scholarship to study dance and drama.[3] The school taught students on many subjects such as labor organization, journalism, music, drama, history, women's studies, economics and industrial arts.[1] The union officials and professors from Stanford University and the University of California at Berkeley taught the courses at CLS.[1] The most popular course at the CLS called "Mental Hygiene Today" was taught by Erik Erikson.[4] The most important history course was called "History and Problems of the Negro in America.".[4] The school offered different kinds of services such as preparing union pamphlets and newspapers, conducting dance concerts and theatrical shows at local meetings.[4]

From 1945 to 1947 the school was accredited for veterans' education under the G.I. Bill of Rights, and by 1947 there were 220 full-time students, among the 1800 students attending 135 classes. In 1948 the school was placed on the Subversive List and attendances declined. The school closed in the 1950s.[2]

Archives of the school's material are held in the Labor Archives & Research Center of California State University[5] and the University of Michigan.[1]

References

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