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May 13th, two thousand strikers from
Everett and Tacoma arrived to shore up the Seattle picket lines. This, combined with Mayor Dore's refusal to ask Governor Martin to call in the National Guard, effectively ended this strikebreaking effort. By May 15th, off-shore unions also joined the strike, and the Teamsters ceased crossing the picket lines.
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The strike began on May 9, 1934, late in Mayor Dore's first term. Longshoremen in all ports of the West Coast walked out, and in
Seattle, the Masters, Mates, and Pilots Union refused to handle cargoes as the shipping companies began recruiting University of Washington students as strikebreakers. On
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Returning to office after Mayor
Charles L. Smith's only term, Dore became a stronger proponent of organised labour. In contrast to Mayor Smith, he kept police away from picket lines, particularly those of the American Newspaper Guild when they struck first the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, then the
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Dore ran for his first term on a platform of relief for the unemployed and balancing the city budget through budget cuts. While his first term began with strong support from labour, he fell out of favour after his attempts to work with other Puget Sound mayors to demand help from the state and
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Mayor Beck's other notable effort was defeating a proposition to refinance and rebuild
Seattle's streetcar system in line with the wishes of the Transit Worker's Union. Opposing a "trackless trolley" (overhead-wire electric) network, Dore favoured gasoline-powered busses as a replacement.
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Governor Roland
Hartley with relief efforts failed. He also angered labour by opposing the Unemployed Citizens' League's march on the state capital of Olympia through Seattle.
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During inter-labour conflict between the
American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations, Dore sided with Dave Beck and the AFL over the rival CIO.
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Berner, Richard C. (1992). "Financial Crisis: Taking The Treet
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194:(December 11, 1881 โ April 18, 1938) was an American politician who served as the
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250:"Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois on April 19, 1938 ยท 22"
324:. Seattle, Washington: Charles Press. p. 338-339.
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20th-century mayors of places in
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349:. Seattle, Washington: Charles Press. p. 429.
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198:from 1932 to 1934 and from 1936 to 1938.
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56:June 1, 1936 โ April 13, 1938
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347:Seattle 1921-1940: From Boom to Bust
322:Seattle 1921-1940: From Boom to Bust
225:Seattle Times and the Seattle Star.
91:June 4, 1932 โ June 4, 1934
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296:"Dore, John Francis (1881-1938)"
294:Wilma, David (October 7, 2000).
271:"Dore, John Francis (1881-1938)"
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398:Mayors of Seattle, Washington
273:. HistoryLink.org. 2000-10-07
750:Washington (state) Democrats
252:. Newspapers.com. 1938-04-19
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161:(1938-04-18)
109:Succeeded by
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74:Succeeded by
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23:John F. Dore
735:1938 deaths
730:1881 births
305:January 13,
220:Second Term
97:Preceded by
62:Preceded by
724:Categories
574:Fitzgerald
277:2019-03-07
256:2019-03-07
236:References
202:First Term
180:Democratic
170:Washington
139:1881-12-11
654:F. Miller
559:Cotterill
544:J. Miller
534:Ballinger
87:In office
52:In office
629:Millikin
609:C. Smith
584:E. Brown
579:Caldwell
464:L. Smith
454:B. Brown
429:Maddocks
709:Harrell
699:Burgess
694:Harrell
679:Nickels
644:Clinton
639:Pomeroy
624:Carroll
619:Langlie
594:Edwards
554:Dilling
444:Gatzert
434:Collins
166:Seattle
704:Durkan
689:Murray
684:McGinn
674:Schell
659:Uhlman
649:Braman
599:Harlin
589:Landes
569:Hanson
514:Phelps
509:Ronald
484:Shoudy
479:Yesler
469:Struve
459:Jacobs
439:Yesler
424:Jordan
414:Jordan
409:Atkins
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146:Boston
664:Royer
634:Devin
539:Moore
529:Humes
519:Black
499:White
494:Moran
489:Minor
474:Leary
419:Stone
42:37th
669:Rice
614:Dore
604:Dore
564:Gill
549:Gill
524:Wood
504:Hall
449:Weed
351:ISBN
326:ISBN
307:2024
156:Died
129:Born
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286:^
168:,
148:,
390:e
383:t
376:v
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137:(
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.