THIS DAY IN HISTORY – FDR seizes control of Montgomery Ward – 1944

Via History.com

On this day in 1944, as World War II dragged on, President Franklin D. Roosevelt orders his secretary of war to seize properties belonging to the Montgomery Ward company because the company refused to comply with a labor agreement.

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In an effort to avert strikes in critical war-support industries, Roosevelt created the National War Labor Board in 1942. The board negotiated settlements between management and workers to avoid shut-downs in production that might cripple the war effort. During the war, the well-known retailer and manufacturer Montgomery Ward had supplied the Allies with everything from tractors to auto parts to workmen’s clothing–items deemed as important to the war effort as bullets and ships. However, Montgomery Ward Chairman Sewell Avery refused to comply with the terms of three different collective bargaining agreements with the United Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union hammered out between 1943 and 1944. In April 1944, after Sewell refused a second board order, Roosevelt called out the Army National Guard to seize the company’s main plant in Chicago. Sewell himself had to be carried out of his office by National Guard troops. By December of that year, Roosevelt was fed up with Sewell’s obstinacy and disrespect for the government’s authority. (The uber-capitalist Sewell’s favorite insult was to call someone a “New Dealer”–a direct reference to Roosevelt’s Depression-era policies.) On December 27, Roosevelt ordered the secretary of war to seize Montgomery Ward’s plants and facilities in New York, Michigan, California, Illinois, Colorado and Oregon.

In his announcement that day, Roosevelt emphasized that the government would “not tolerate any interference with war production in this critical hour.” He issued a stern warning to labor unions and industry management alike: “strikes in wartime cannot be condoned, whether they are strikes by workers against their employers or strikes by employers against their Government.” Sewell took the fight to federal court, but lost.

For much of the 20th century, Montgomery Ward, founded in 1872, reigned as one of the country’s largest department store and mail-order retail chains. Heavy competition from Wal-Mart, Target and similar discount stores forced the company to close all of its stores in 2000, though it retains a catalog and internet presence.

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8 Comments
LGR
LGR
December 27, 2017 7:39 am

I bought my 1st .33 LP at Montgomery Wards with money earned from a paper route.
Can’t remember how much it cost. I’m guessing this was circa 1969-70?
The buy: The Rolling Stones Big Hits (High Tide and Green Grass).
Almost every track is good, but this was one of my faves.

Dutchman
Dutchman
December 27, 2017 8:08 am

I hate that fucking song, Satisfaction. The Philly radio stations played that over and over again, day and night. Can’t stand it

Stucky
Stucky
December 27, 2017 8:11 am

“Roosevelt was fed up with Sewell’s obstinacy and disrespect for the government’s authority.”

Above describes how government works in just 13 words.

Then again, that was then, and this is now. We have more rights than ever now. Even if they want to, the government will never confiscate with the stroke of the pen your gold, bitcoins, or property. We have a kinder and gentler government now.

22winmag - ZH refugee who just couldn't take the avalanche of damn-near-hourly Bitcoin and doom porn stories
22winmag - ZH refugee who just couldn't take the avalanche of damn-near-hourly Bitcoin and doom porn stories
December 27, 2017 8:22 am

Monkey Ward’s probably sold more guns and ammo in it’s day than Sears and WalMart combined.

For that I salute you.

LGR
LGR
December 27, 2017 8:36 am

Dutch I tried posting the link to It’s All Over Now, but it got jacked up somehow. I need more coffee.

Centurion44
Centurion44
December 27, 2017 10:02 am

FDR just loved Joe Stalin, he couldn’t bend over farther. Winston was fed up with both of them. Stalin was more avaricious than Adolf. Plus Putin attended the Stalin Institute of Fascism & Despotic Rule in Moscow. Commonly know as KGB.

lmorris
lmorris
December 27, 2017 10:45 am

Well FDR and STALIN were one and the same shit.

MrLiberty
MrLiberty
December 27, 2017 1:55 pm

How sad and delusional that all those guys who happily signed up to “defeat fascism” over in Europe NEVER realized that economic fascism had already taken root in the US, go so much worse during the war and after, and not a damn thing was done about it. Not by those who stayed behind, nor those who went and fought. And yet we are supposed to consider them the “Greatest Generation.” Most still don’t realize that crony-capitalism and government parasitic control of privately-owned businesses IS economic fascism.

“Fascism should more appropriately be called Corporatism because it is a merger of state and corporate power”
― Benito Mussolini

“Fascism is a religion. The twentieth century will be known in history as the century of Fascism.”
– Benito Mussolini