Cigar Makers' International Union

The first local Cigar Makers' Union was founded in Baltimore, Maryland in 1851 by craftsmen who were opposed to the importation of low-cost laborers from Germany.This group quickly expanded in size to include about 160 of the city's 800 or so cigar workers before collapsing in an unsuccessful strike to avert a general cut in wages.[1] The defeat proved temporary, as in 1859 another New York union was established in response to complaints about the business behavior of one manufacturer named Tom Little.[4] During the Civil War, the revenue-starved federal government instituted an internal revenue tax on cigars and established a system of permits for employers and employees.[1] This gathering decided to move forward with the establishment of a national union and called a foundation convention for the group for June 21, 1864, in New York City.The years 1871 and 1872 saw the arrival of a substantial wave of immigrants from Bohemia, a region which now comprises the western two-thirds of the Czech Republic.[7] The CMIU concentrated its efforts on publicizing the abuses inherent in the so-called "tenement house system," ultimately forcing the New York Board of Health to take notice of the situation.[1] The two sibling unions were in a position of competing with one another and they engaged in a bitter and destructive four year war, undercutting one another's contracts in order to gain recognition, until they once again reunited in 1886.While the CMIU pressed for higher wages, shorter hours, better working conditions, and the right of collective bargaining, it restricted its organizing efforts to the skilled cigar roller or craftsman, requiring factory owners to reject any production of cigars by machine or to use non-union semi-skilled or unskilled labor, i.e. a closed shop.A "Sept. 1880" date was added top center to the label design in 1888 and appears on all CMIU cigar (not stogie) issues until 1974.
Samuel Gompers, perennial President of the American Federation of Labor for more than three decades, was an important leader of the Cigar Makers' International Union.
CMIU labels were affixed to boxes of union-made cigars as a means of informing consumers of their origin.
labor unionAmerican Federation of LaborBaltimore, MarylandGermanyNew YorkEnglandstrikeconcentrationAmerican Civil WarSamuel Gomperstobaccoself-employedPhiladelphiaNewarkClevelandNew HavenBostonDetroitBohemiaCzech Republiceconomies of scaletenementssubletlockoutemployers' associationFederation of Organized Trades and Labor UnionsCigarmakers' Progressive Union of AmericaSocialist Labor Party of AmericaDemocraticRepublicandual unionismCleveland, Ohiocollective bargainingstogieJames Albert BonsackWorld War ICentral AmericaSouth AmericaRetail, Wholesale and Department Store UnionAdolph StrasserJ. Mahlon BarnesJohn J. BallamJohn KirchnerUniversity of Maryland Libraries