United Federation of Teachers Oral History Collection
Call Number
Date
Creator
Extent
Extent
Language of Materials
Abstract
The United Federation of Teachers is an American Federation of Teachers-affiliated union representing workers in New York City. The union was founded in 1960 following the merger of the Teachers Guild and the High School Teachers Association. In 1985, George Altomare, a founder and Vice-President of the UFT and history teacher, initiated an extensive oral history project to document the history of teacher collective bargaining in New York City. The union hired free-lance oral historian Renee Epstein to conduct the interviews with UFT members, organizers, staff, and officers. The interviews document the activities of the UFT and its predecessor unions, including the Teachers Union and the Teachers Guild. Also discussed are committees and organizing activities within the UFT and its predecessors, such as the Unemployed Teachers Organization, the Anti-War Committee, and the Communist Party's activity within the Teachers Union. Interviewees also reflect upon union leadership and the major strikes of the 1960s and 1970s, including the bitter 1968 Ocean Hill-Brownsville strike over community control.
Historical Note
In 1985, George Altomare, a founder and Vice-President of the United Federation of Teachers and history teacher, initiated an extensive oral history project to document the history of teacher collective bargaining in New York City. The union hired free-lance oral historian Renee Epstein to conduct the interviews.
New York City teachers first organized in 1912 with the publication of The American Teacher. The editor, Henry Linville, founded the Teachers' Union, which in September 1916 affiliated with the recently-founded American Federation of Teachers. The TU undertook the struggle to gain recognition and decent working conditions for teachers. It campaigned for fair appointment procedures, an annual salary paid monthly, minimum wages with gradual increases above the cost of living, and a sabbatical leave. In 1935, the Teachers' Union splintered over accusations of Communist Party domination. Rival factions disrupted meetings over political disputes and undermined the TU's unionist activities. That year, Linville and a majority of the Executive Board resigned and organized the Teachers' Guild. As one of its first acts the Guild created an unemployment committee to evaluate the Depression's impact on teachers. The committee found that only one in nine teachers was employed. Reduced class size would also remain a prominent issue for which the Guild advocated.
Additionally, the Guild worked to achieve recognition as negotiators for teachers who had grievances against the Board of Education. Frustrated by the confusion of having at least 12 different teacher associations during negotiations with the Board of Education, the Guild, along with the militant Committee for Action through Unity (including members of the Guild and the High School Teachers Association) and 1500 unaffiliated teachers, agreed to the terms of a merger. The new organization, the United Federation of Teachers, became Local 2 of the AFT. In 1961, the UFT won an election to become the sole collective bargaining representative for teachers, winning the endorsement of 77% of the city's teachers who were eligible to vote. In the winter of 1961, the UFT began negotiations on a wage and benefit package that had been submitted to the NYC Board of Education. Continued procrastination by the Board of Education precipitated a one-day teacher's strike on April 11, 1962, which resulted in a contract which became a model and spur to teachers throughout the country. After the Union's first contract, the ranks of the UFT grew to over 100,000 to become the largest union local in the U.S.
Arrangement
Access compact disks and transcripts are arranged alphabetically. Master cassettes have a numbering scheme that was applied to alphabetized tapes, with materials later added to the collection being given numbers at the end of the sequence.
Scope and Contents
The collection consists of interviews with members, organizers, staff, and officers of the United Federation of Teachers regarding the activities of the UFT and its predecessor unions, including the Teachers Union and the Teachers Guild. Also discussed are committees and organizing activities within the UFT and its predecessors, such as the Unemployed Teachers Organization, the Anti-War Committee, and the Communist Party's activity within the Teachers Union. Interviewees also reflect upon union leadership and the major strikes of the 1960s and 1970s, including the bitter 1968 Ocean Hill-Brownsville strike over community control. Many of the interviews have been indexed or transcribed.
Subjects
Organizations
Conditions Governing Access
Materials are open without restrictions with the exception of cassette 10 in box 5. Access to cassette 10 in box 5 is restricted.
Conditions Governing Use
Unless otherwise noted, any rights (including copyright and related rights to publicity and privacy) held by the United Federation of Teachers are maintained by New York University. Permission to publish or reproduce materials in this collection must be secured from repository. Please contact tamiment.wagner@nyu.edu.
Preferred Citation
Identification of item, date; United Federation of Teachers Oral History Collection; OH 009; box number; folder number; Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
In 1985, the UFT commissioned Renee Epstein to conduct the interviews. They were deposited in the Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives between 1985 and 1989. Audio materials that were not part of the 1985 project were later added to the collection. The accession number associated with this collection is 1986.022.
Custodial History
In May 2021, the Carrie Cunningham interview was removed from the collection as it is part of the New York City Immigrant Labor History Project Oral History Collection (OH 014).
Audiovisual Access Policies
Access to audiovisual materials in this collection is available through digitized access copies. Researchers may view an item's original container, but the media themselves are not available for playback because of preservation concerns. Materials that have already been digitized are noted in the collection's finding aid and can be requested in our reading room.
About this Guide
Processing Information
Between accessioning and the early 2000s, tapes were inventoried, numbered, and many were transcribed or indexed. Tapes were arranged alphabetically and given numbers, with subsequently-acquired tapes being added at the end of the numbering run. Digitization of master cassettes began in the 2014. At the same time, a finding aid was created by encoding and updating preexisting archival description to comply with archival descriptive standards. In May 2021, the Carrie Cunningham interview was removed from the collection as it is part of the New York City Immigrant Labor History Project Oral History Collection (OH 014).
In 2024, individual listings for original recording, transcript, interview summary and/or access copy were added to some interview subjects in the inventory.