Philip Murray: Union Man
A Life Story
by
Book Details
About the Book
The picture on the front cover of this book depicts the US Steel plant in Clairton, PA, a suburb of Pittsburgh.
This plant is one of the few major steel mills left standing and still in production in America. Fittingly, this mill, a virtual loner sitting in the heart of the rust belt, reflects in its enduring, majestic solidity the spirit of Philip Murray a union warrior who during the years of struggle was in the vanguard of the battle to establish the organized labor movement in America.
Capping a 60-year span during which he worked his way up through the union ranks to president of the CIO in 1940 (holding that position until he died in 1952), it was Philip Murray who brought trade unionism to the threshold of institutional greatness in America.
About the Author
Pat Angelo was born in Johnstown, PA a midsize steel city whose industrial centerpiece was Bethlehem Steel. He grew up in a steelworkers’ family and for a short period worked in the mill himself before going into the service. Taking advantage of the GI Bill, Angelo attended college then embarked on a teaching career from which, after 31 years, he retired from Edinboro University of Pennsylvania as a Professor Emeritus of English. Angelo resides in Edinboro with his wife, Joan, who is also a writer of books about the rise of unions and the spare-living working class cultures from which they were spawned.