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Box 4

 Container

Contains 6 Results:

Motion Time Analysis Instruction Course, Vol.2 -- A.B. Segur & Co., Industrial Engineers (R.C. 16)

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 1
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: 1911-1979; Majority of material found within 1950 - 1957

Time study standards -- garment manufacturing

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 2
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: 1911-1979; Majority of material found within 1950 - 1957

Phillip-Lester Manufacturing Co. -- government contract-piecework prices on herringbone twill trousers, Jan. 3, 1951

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 3
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: Jan. 3, 1951

Piecework rates

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 4
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: 1911-1979; Majority of material found within 1950 - 1957

Piecework rates, (1950s?)

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 5
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: (1950s?)

Piecework rates, various companies and contracts (1 or 2), (1951-?)

 File — Box: 4, Folder: 6
Identifier: I
Scope and Content of the Series From the Series: This series contains some files relating to industry research and information from the first half of the twentieth century. This information includes files on the garment industry in different parts of the country, the activities of various companies that employed UGWA workers (i.e., J. C. Penny), constitutions, correspondence, union label issues, and the Hawes Cooper Bill (a law stating that convict labor of one state could not compete with convict labor in another state). The rest of this...
Dates: (1951-?)