Out Of This Furnace: Unskilled Immigrants

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In the late nineteenth century, many European’s immigrated to the United States in search of a better lifestyle as well as an equal opportunity to earn good fortune. These immigrants who wanted to work were categorized as unskilled workers, who are generally characterized by low education levels and small wages. Thomas Bell’s Out of This Furnace, depicts the experiences that these European immigrants, Slovaks in particular, experienced in all aspects of life including life surrounding the workplace of America. The unskilled businesses of the United States employ these immigrants for long hours and low wages. Working conditions were terrible; working in the steel mills means you must work 12 hour shifts, 7 days a week with little reward. …show more content…

The mills, which were part of the steel industry that produced the steel to build the foundation of the Brooklyn Bridge, were filled with unskilled immigrant worker’s with no say in politics. In Out of This Furnace, Bell shows a particularly gruesome element of working in the mills when he explains that the management of the mills pressured the steelworker to act a certain way in politics. Very few laborers had political rights, and those that did knew the consequences of going against the companies say. “Mike had registered as a Republican—anything else would have been suicidal – but had determined to vote for Eugene Debs, the Socialist. He knew the risk. Should he be found out – and that the company had ways of learning how a man had voted nobody in Braddock doubted – he would be fired (Bell, 189-190). This concept reinforces the idea that big businesses were a large part in politics and they often manipulated immigrant’s political rights and freedoms to get what they want. Another way companies stripped men of political freedom is they gave union workers less hours, thus earning a lower wage. Dobie, who was one of Bell’s characters who recognized that he needed to organize and gain recognition for steel workers, was put on two or three day weeks for doing so. This caused a major cut in Dobie’s pay, which would have been problematic and inconvenient. In other cases of strikes and labor organizing there had been men left dead, thrown in jail, and fired from their jobs. “The Homestead union leaders were arrested, charged with murder, riot and conspiracy. A notice was put up giving the men ten days to return to work, on company’s terms. Very few accepted the offer. The company sent eviction notices to all “striking” tenants of company houses (Bell, 43)” This combination of poor working conditions and lack of political freedom

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