[PRCo] Re: Demise of Steel industry in Pittsburgh
John Swindler
j_swindler at hotmail.com
Tue Sep 11 19:35:09 EDT 2007
I worked the summer of 1966 as a grinder in Homestead Works. First night,
two of us started grinding out imperfections in steel plates. After about
45 min. and about five plates, an old timer came over and told us: "you
boys need to take a break for the rest of the night. You'll be back in
school in the fall, and we don't need them changing the incentive for this
job."
In retrospect, I'd now presume that both US Steel and the USW thought they
had a monopoly. Guess what: they didn't.
What also happened is that a lot of steel production moved south, frequently
to small specialty steel companies. And there has been tremendous
productivity increases. There is no longer a need for a sea of workers to
produce a ton of steel.
John
>From: robert simpson <bobs at pacbell.net>
>Reply-To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
>To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
>Subject: [PRCo] Re: Demise of Steel industry in Pittsburgh
>Date: Tue, 11 Sep 2007 15:18:25 -0700 (PDT)
>
>John;
>
> I remember working in Munhall in 1960, and frequently crossed the
>Homestead Bridge. I couldn't help but notice a new building being erected
>directly across the street from the U. S. Steel Homstead plant and each
>steel girder was prominently marked "Made in Japan". How, I wondered,
>could they manufacture steel in Japan, ship it to America, and transport it
>cross-country for less than simply buying it from across the street? I
>sensed a feeling of doom for our once thriving steel industry. The steel
>industry has gone the same route as our beloved streetcars and exist only
>in our memories.
>
> Robert Simpson
> from Krazy California
>
> On Tue, 11 Sep 2007, John Swindler wrote:
>"> Wasn't there a downturn in the steel industry in 1958/59????? Did it
>have
> > anything to do with auto production???
>
>116 day steel strike in 1959. July, i think, it started
>
>This matters to me as I am researching something which is going to involve
>going over newspapers from when Oliver Iron & Steel closed.
>
>
>
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