Preamble to the Constitution of the Knights of Labor, 1881 From Terence V. Powderly. Constitution of the General Assembly, District Assemblies, and Local Assemblies of the order of the Knights of Labor in America. Marblehead, Mass.: Statesman Publishing Co., 1883 PREAMBLE
I. To bring within the folds of organization every department of productive industry, making knowledge a stand-point for action, and industrial, moral worth, not wealth, the true standard of individual and national greatness. II. To secure to the toilers a proper share of the wealth that they create; more of the leisure that rightfully belongs to them; more society advantages; more of the benefits, privileges, and emoluments of the world: in a word, all those rights and privileges necessary to make them capable of enjoying, appreciating, defending and perpetuating the blessings of good government. III. To arrive at the true condition of the producing masses, in their educational, moral, and financial condition, by demanding from the various governments the establishment of bureaus of Labor Statistics. IV. The establishment of co-operative institutions, productive and distributive. V. The reserving of the public lands--the heritage of the people--for the actual settler:--not another acre for railroads or speculators. VI. The abrogation of all laws that do not bear equally upon capital and labor; the removal of unjust technicalities, delays, and discrimination in the administration of justice; and the adopting of measure providing for the health and safety of those engaged in mining, manufacturing, or building pursuits. VII. The enactment of laws to compel chartered corporations to pay their employees weekly, in full, for labor performed during the preceding week, in the lawful money of the country. VIII. The enactment of laws giving mechanics and laborers a first lien on their work for their full wages. IX. The abolishment of the contract system on national, state, and municipal work. XI. The prohibition of the employment of children in workshops, mines, and factories before attaining their fourteenth year. XII. To secure for both sexes equal pay for equal work. XIV. The reduction of the hours of labor to eight per day, so that the laborers may have more time for social enjoyment and intellectual improvement, and be enabled to reap the advantages conferred by the labor-saving machinery which their brains have created. XV. To prevail upon governments to establish a purely national circulating medium, issued directly to the people, without the intervention of any system of banking corporations, which money shall be a legal tender in payment of all debts, public or private. |
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