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Hugo Ernst

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hugo Ernst (December 11, 1876 – July 22, 1954) was a Croatian-born American labor union leader.

Born in Varaždin in Croatia, Ernst's father was the city's rabbi. Hugo studied journalism, and when he was 26, emigrated to New York City to become a reporter on a Croatian-language newspaper. When he asked for a pay rise, he was instead sacked, and became a bus boy. In 1904, he traveled to St Louis, to work as a waiter at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition. After the event, he moved to San Francisco, around which time, he joined local 30 of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees' International Alliance.[1]

Ernst later became secretary of the local, which organized low-paid workers, and he became the leader of opposition to Jere L. Sullivan's craft unionism.[2] In 1939, Ernst was elected as secretary-treasurer of the union, moving to Cincinnati to take up the post. He then took the top post, of president, in 1945, also become president of the American Federation of Labor's Employees Board. He also served as a vice-president of Americans for Democratic Action, and of the Labor League for Political Education. He died in 1945, still in office.[1]

A street was named after Ernst in Holon, in Israel.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Hugo Ernst dies; led hotel union". New York Times. July 23, 1954.
  2. ^ Josephson, Matthew (1956). Union House, Union Bar. Random House.
Trade union offices
Preceded by President of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees' International Alliance
1945–1954
Succeeded by
Ed Miller
Preceded by
Isidore Nagler
Harold D. Ulrich
American Federation of Labor delegate to the Trades Union Congress
1944
With: Holt Ross
Succeeded by