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2025 - 2026 LEGISLATURE
LRB-0696/1
CMH:amn
May 8, 2025 - Introduced by Representatives Sinicki, Clancy, Moore Omokunde, Madison, Kirsch, Neubauer, Roe, Phelps, Emerson, Arney, DeSmidt, Stroud, Tenorio, Hysell, Hong, Johnson, Cruz, Stubbs, Rivera-Wagner, Andraca, DeSanto, Miresse, Subeck, J. Jacobson, Udell, Joers, Bare, Billings, Palmeri and Ortiz-Velez, cosponsored by Senators Larson, Carpenter, Roys, Wirch, Spreitzer, Drake, Hesselbein and Ratcliff. Referred to Committee on Rules.
AJR53,1,1
1Relating to: commemorating the Bay View labor strike and tragedy.
AJR53,1,62Whereas, Wisconsin workers and reformers have long made important
3contributions in the history of labor in the United States, having helped enact new
4state laws early in the 20th century, such as Workers Compensation and
5Unemployment Insurance, that, in turn, were adopted by other states and the
6federal government; and
AJR53,1,97Whereas, decades earlier, in the late 1800s, workers were still struggling to
8attain basic rights in the workplace and still generally labored at physically
9punishing jobs for 10 to 12 hours per day, six days per week; and
AJR53,1,1210Whereas, in the 1880s, workers in Milwaukee, like others in Chicago and
11across the country, began to advocate for the eight-hour workday, an early
12cornerstone of the basic bill of rights of all people in the workplace; and
AJR53,2,213Whereas, employers made no efforts toward reform, and eventually workers

1organizations across the nation called upon all workers to cease their labor if
2employers had not adopted a standard eight-hour workday by May 1, 1886; and
AJR53,2,53Whereas, in Milwaukee, civil parades and demonstrations developed over the
4first five days of May 1886, as workers peaceably and without violence joined the
5national work stoppage to protest and abolish inhumane work hours; and
AJR53,2,96Whereas, on May 2, 1886, many German and Polish workers and their
7families walked to the picnic grounds in a huge Eight-Hour Day Parade, and on
8May 3, thousands of workers from the breweries and the building trades went on
9strikes and marched from factory to factory; and
AJR53,2,1310Whereas, by May 5, 1886, unrest among Milwaukees laborers over the
11struggle for better work hours had led to more than a dozen strikes in the city,
12involving carpenters, coal heavers, sewer diggers, iron moulders, teamsters,
13common laborers, and other workers asking for humane work hours; and
AJR53,2,1614Whereas, the last grand factory in Milwaukee still in operation that day was
15the North Chicago Rolling Mill in Bay View, which manufactured rails for the
16nations railroads; and
AJR53,2,1917Whereas, on May 5, 1886, despite the threat of violence from the state militia,
18a crowd of striking workers started to walk, peaceably and unarmed, to the Rolling
19Mill to enjoin workers there to participate in the general strike; and
AJR53,2,2320Whereas, despite the law-abiding nature of their procession, this group of
21walking laborers was fired upon by the state militia, on direct orders from Governor
22Jeremiah Rusk, resulting in seven people killed and four, including innocent
23bystanders, wounded; and
AJR53,3,4
1Whereas, some 50 of the workers who marched that day and were fired upon
2were indicted on charges of rioting and conspiracy for merely exercising their right
3of freedom to assemble, and three of them eventually served six to nine months in
4prison; and
AJR53,3,95Whereas, the infamous events of May 5, 1886, will remain a part of
6Wisconsins cultural and economic legacy forever and should remind us in the
7present to honor the sacrifices of our forebears, including laying down their lives, so
8that all those who labor might lead safer and more productive work lives; now,
9therefore, be it
AJR53,3,1410Resolved by the assembly, the senate concurring, That the Wisconsin
11Legislature recognizes the historic significance of this pivotal series of events in
12Wisconsins and the nations history, and directs that, from this day forward, the
13fifth day of May each year will be observed in our state as the anniversary of the
14Bay View labor strike and tragedy.
AJR53,3,1515(end)
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