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Alex Rose (labor leader)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alex Rose
President of theUnited Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union
In office
May 1, 1950 – December 28, 1976
Preceded byMax Zaritsky
Succeeded byNicholas Gyory
New York State Secretary of the
American Labor Party
In office
July 16, 1936 – May 20, 1944
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byHyman Blumberg
Personal details
Born(1898-10-15)October 15, 1898
Warsaw,Congress Poland, Russian Empire
DiedDecember 28, 1976(1976-12-28) (aged 78)
Political partyAmerican Labor(1936–1944)
Liberal(after 1944)

Alex Rose (15 October 1898 – 28 December 1976) was a labor leader in theUnited Hatters of North America (UHNA) and theUnited Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union (UHCMW), a co-founder of theAmerican Labor Party, and vice-chairman of theLiberal Party of New York.[1]

Background

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Alex Rose, the son of a wealthy leather tanner, was born inWarsaw,Poland. After secondary school, Rose immigrated to theUnited States, having been denied a Polish university education because he wasJewish.

Career

[edit]
Executive Committee of theUnited Hebrew Trades, 1928.
Seated from left to right: Samuel Epstein, M. Tigel,Max Pine,Morris Feinstone, M. Wolpert, A. Josephson, H. Wander.
Standing from left to right: A. Baron, J. Etenson, M. Brown, A. Solovyov, A. Greenwald, W. Zuckerman, Alex Rose.

With the outbreak of theFirst World War, Rose was forced to abandon professional aspirations and take a job as amillinery worker; in 1914 he joined the Cloth Hat, Cap, and Millinery Workers' International Union (CHCMW) and became interested inorganized labor. In 1918, Rose joined theBritish Army, and upon returning to America in 1920 resumed union organizing activities. In 1934, the CHCMW merged with the United Hatters of North America to form theUnited Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union (UHCMW). He worked his way through union leadership and was elected president of the United Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union in 1950, where Rose sought to root outCommunist andgangster influence from unions.

In 1936, Rose co-founded theAmerican Labor Party. Because the communists acquired influence in the ALP, in 1944 Rose, along withDavid Dubinsky, Ben Davidson, and others founded the Liberal Party of New York. Rose became its vice-chairperson. Under Rose's leadership, the Liberal Party was quite influential in New York politics and somewhat influential in national politics, exercising power by endorsingDemocratic and occasionally, liberalRepublican candidates. In 1966 Rose successfully lobbied SenatorRobert F. Kennedy to campaign on behalf of judgeSamuel Silverman to clean up corruption from the surrogate court.

Rose was one of the most brilliant political strategists of the 20th century. Perhaps his greatest triumph was in theNew York Citymayoral election of1969.John V. Lindsay was elected mayor as a fusion candidate (Republican-Liberal) in1965, but was denied the Republican nomination in 1969. Alex Rose directed Lindsay's reelection campaign in 1969 as the Liberal candidate against both Democratic and Republican opponents so successfully that he not only was reelected, but he brought on his coat-tails enough Liberal councilmen to displace the Republicans as minority party in the City Council.

Legacy

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One block of W. 186th Street in Manhattan (between Chittenden Avenue & Cabrini Boulevard) is named "Alex Rose Place."

After Rose's death in 1976, leadership of the Liberal Party passed to Raymond B. Harding, who also exerted a considerable amount of influence in New York State politics until the party lost its ballot line in 2002.[2]

References

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  1. ^Chris McNickle (1993).To be Mayor of New York: Ethnic Politics in the City. Columbia UP. pp. 45–57.ISBN 9780231076364.
  2. ^[1]

External sources

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Wikimedia Commons has media related toAlex Rose.
Trade union offices
Preceded by President of theUnited Hatters, Cap and Millinery Workers International Union
1950–1977
Succeeded by
Nicholas Gyory
Preceded byAmerican Federation of Labor delegate to theTrades Union Congress
1950
With: J. P. McGurdy
Succeeded by
International
National
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