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Working the Midwest: Professional Writing and Working-Class RhetoricMain MenuWorking the Midwest and Digital Humanities at Pittsburg State UniversityOverview of ProjectNavigating the ProjectsA Description of the Individual ProjectsJamie McDaniel7d1c50d66443d970871743d62f90c2a04a2f2c84
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12016-05-21T20:05:45-07:00Jamie McDaniel7d1c50d66443d970871743d62f90c2a04a2f2c8498451plain2016-05-21T20:05:45-07:00Jamie McDaniel7d1c50d66443d970871743d62f90c2a04a2f2c84When American workers failed to follow his lead and abandon Roosevelt, Lewis resigned as president of the CIO. In 1942, he broke with the industrial union movement he had helped create and took the UMWA out of the CIO. Thereafter, Lewis largely devoted himself to the UMWA, remaining a bold and visionary labor leader. Bitter mine strikes in 1943 and 1946 earned him the enmity of many, but Lewis persisted. He continued his militancy; his miners went on strikes or "work stoppages" annually. In 1945 to 1950, he led strikes that President Harry S. Truman denounced as threats to national security. In response, industry, railroads and homeowners rapidly switched from coal to oil.