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appointed his own candidate. However, Taft did sign an executive action to secure Parson's reappointment as a letter carrier, bypassing civil service rules. Parsons was re-appointed as postmaster in
Yonkers in 1914, and then from 1919 served as superintendent of the motor vehicle service of the New
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By 1900, Parsons and Hayes were unable to work together. Hayes alleged that
Parsons was not completing work, and had not called meetings of the executive board. Parsons obtained an injunction barring Hayes from handling money or mail for the union, but Hayes obtained a counter-injunction which gave
37:(NALC), becoming president of his local in 1894, and in 1896 winning election as president of the national union. In 1898, he was additionally elected as General Master Workman, the national leader of the Knights of Labor. He defeated incumbent
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him control of the union's apparatus. Parsons set up a rival KoL organization, but it was much smaller than Hayes' version, and
Parsons soon passed its leadership on to
26:, Parsons worked as a machinist, then a rock driller, before in 1889 becoming a letter carrier. He joined the New York Letter Carriers' Association, an affiliate of the
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72:. He backed a rival slate of candidates for various civic posts that year, but all were defeated in the primaries.
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Reports of the
Industrial Commission on Labor Organizations, Labor Disputes, and Arbitration, and on Railway Labor
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as a special inspector of post offices, then worked for the customs service of the
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General Master
Workman of the Knights of Labor (minority faction)
41:, who had the support of the federation's secretary-treasurer,
19:(1856 – 1930) was an American labor union leader.
75:Parsons lost his postmaster position in 1910, when
143:. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. 1901.
68:. In 1905, he was appointed as the postmaster of
33:In 1890, Parsons was a founder member of the
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80:York City post office. He died in 1930.
30:, and became its master workman in 1893.
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236:National Association of Letter Carriers
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35:National Association of Letter Carriers
104:. University of Illinois Press. 1986.
340:Trade unionists from New York (state)
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199:"Criticise Taft on civil service".
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260:General Master Workman of the
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125:"Knights of Labor election".
335:Activists from New York City
60:, Parsons was appointed by
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184:"Roosevelt's man beaten".
169:"Yonkers postmaster out".
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102:The Samuel Gompers Papers
66:United States Post Office
325:American trade unionists
330:Knights of Labor people
154:"The World of Labor".
188:. September 26, 1905.
272:Isaac D. Chamberlain
222:Trade union offices
213:Executive Order 1157
173:. September 8, 1905.
129:. November 20, 1898.
158:. October 12, 1902.
77:William Howard Taft
56:A supporter of the
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294:Succeeded by
269:Succeeded by
243:Succeeded by
234:President of the
70:Yonkers, New York
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291:1900–1902
282:Federation split
279:Preceded by
266:1898–1900
262:Knights of Labor
251:Preceded by
240:1896–1901
227:Preceded by
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320:1930 deaths
315:1856 births
297:Simon Burns
229:R. F. Quinn
51:Simon Burns
309:Categories
84:References
43:John Hayes
22:Born in
108:
106:ISBN
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91:^
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114:.
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