The 1920s Jazz Age is remembered for flappers and speakeasies, not
for the success of a declining labor movement. A more complex story
was unfolding among the young women and men in the hosiery mills of
Kensington, the working-class heart of Philadelphia. Their product
was silk stockings, the iconic fashion item of the flapper culture
then sweeping America and the world. Although the young people who
flooded into this booming industry were avid participants in Jazz
Age culture, they also embraced a surprising, rights-based labor
movement, headed by the socialist-led American Federation of
Full-Fashioned Hosiery Workers (AFFFHW).
In this first history of this remarkable union, Sharon
McConnell-Sidorick reveals how activists ingeniously fused youth
culture and radical politics to build a subculture that included
dances and parties as well as picket lines and sit-down strikes,
while forging a vision for social change. In documenting AFFFHW
members and the Kensington community, McConnell-Sidorick shows how
labor federations like the Congress of Industrial Organizations and
government programs like the New Deal did not spring from the heads
of union leaders or policy experts but were instead nurtured by
grassroots social movements across America.