El Monte berry strike of 1933

The El Monte berry strike began on June 1, 1933 in El Monte, California. It was part of the largest California agricultural strike of 1933, organized by the Cannery and Agricultural Workers’ International Union. The berry strike affected local Japanese farm owners and growers.

Background

The strike took place in the heart of the Great Depression and eventually involved over 7,000 workers. Conditions for field workers were difficult and with twice as many workers as there were jobs in the San Gabriel Valley, the bad conditions and low wages caused the initial walkout.[1]

Connection to local alien land laws

The El Monte Berry Strike brought to light the unique relationship between Mexican agricultural workers, Japanese growers, white land owners and local El Monte officials. The town of El Monte's land ownership arrangements in 1933 were heavily influenced by alien land laws that dictated who could own land and placed heavy restrictions on immigrants being allowed to own land outright.[2]

The state of California experienced a heavy influx of Japanese immigrants from 1890 to 1920 which resulted in some immigrants becoming farm owners seeking ownership of land. However, California's alien land laws restricted Japanese growers' ownership rights, which led to growers leasing land from local white landowners. In 1933 the agreements between Japanese growers and white land lessors were actually in violation of California state law, so the strike could have potentially exposed both Japanese lessees and white landowner lessors' land arrangements. The situation was profitable for both sides with “roughly 80% of the 600-700 acres of land in El Monte” being leased by Japanese growers.[2]

If local officials could prove there was the possibility of a conspiracy between the white landowners and the Japanese growers then both the Japanese lessee and white landowner stood to lose ownership of the land if local officials enforced the law. Tensions between Mexican berry pickers, Japanese growers, white landowners and local officials were poised to bring unwanted attention to the profitable illegal agricultural arrangements that were in place in El Monte.[2]

White landowners were also worried that if Mexican agricultural workers were successful in striking against their Japanese employers that they would strike against white landowners next. Thus white landowners, the El Monte and Los Angeles Chambers of Commerce, the Los Angeles Police Department, and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department supported the Japanese farmers in the strike.[1]

Course of the strike

Strikers initially demanded a raise to 25 cents per hour which was promptly rejected by Japanese American farmers. The Japanese countered with an offer of 20 cents per hour but this was also rejected by the strikers.[1]

With no workers to pick fruit during a critical harvest season, Japanese farmers looked for support from organizations within the Japanese community to help pick berries. Children were excused from school to help while friends and relatives came from around Southern California to aid in the harvest.[3]

The El Monte Chamber of Commerce had a vested interest in keeping Mexican workers non-unionized and used tactics such as red-baiting to turn public opinion against the strikers.[3]

The month-long strike ended on July 6, 1933 with field workers declaring victory even though they didn't end up better off than they were before the strike with a slight wage raise. Berry season had come to an end when the strike was lifted and so berry farmers saw no need to make concessions.[1]

Historical significance

Japanese American farmers in El Monte essentially "won" the strike, but only because their interests overlapped with those of white landowners. Furthermore, the defeat of the strikers was part of a larger anti-union campaign.[3]

The dismal outcome from the strike for agricultural workers resulted in the CAWIU essentially being extinguished by 1934. Japanese farmers would go on to play a similar middleman role in the Venice Celery Strike in 1936 and in the rise of the Nisei Farmers League in the 1970s.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Modell, John (1977). The Economics and Politics of Racial Accommodation: The Japanese of Los Angeles 1900-1942. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 9780252006227.
  2. 1 2 3 O'Brien, David J.; Fugita, Stephen S. (1991). The Japanese American Experience. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253206565.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Niiya, Brian (1993). Japanese American history: an A-to-Z reference from 1868 to the present. Los Angeles, California: Japanese American National Museum. pp. 131–132. ISBN 9780816026807.

Further reading

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