Jacob Samual Potofsky was born on November 26, 1894, in the Teteriv River town of Radomisl, Russian Empire (now Radomyshl, Ukraine).[1][2] At age eleven, Potofsky immigrated with his family to Chicago, USA.[2]
Career
Potofsky started working when he was 14 years old[1] as a pocket maker.[3] In 1910, by then a "floor boy" in a clothing factory for Hart, Schaffner & Marx, as a member of Pantsmakers Local 144 he partook in a strike called by Sidney Hillman against the clothing manufacturer.[1][2] Soon after, Potofsky joined what became the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America.[1][3] In 1913, he became secretary-treasurer of the union's joint board in Chicago. In 1916, Hillman moved him to New York, where he became assistant general secretary of the union. In 1934, Potofsky became assistant president. In 1940, he became general secretary-treasurer when Joseph Schlossberg retired. In 1941, he strongly opposed the isolationist policy of John L. Lewis, president of the CIO and also the United Mine Workers (UMW).[2]
In 1946, after 36 years of association, Potofsky succeeded Hillman as president of the Amalgamated Clothing Workers, when the union had 350,000 members and 96% of the men's clothing industry under union contract.[2] He was active in the American Labor Party of New York State.[2]
Potofsky was noted for his ability to reconcile differences within a union or between union and employer. He was, however, staunchly pro-labor, warning workers that "What you earn at the bargaining tables can be taken away in the legislative halls."[1] His work landed him on the master list of Nixon political opponents.[citation needed]
Personal life and death
Potofsky married twice, first to Callie Taylor (who died in 1946) and then to widow Blance Lydia Zetland; they had two daughters.[1] (Daughter Delia married noted photographer and newspaper columnist William P. Gottlieb.[1])
Jacob Samuel Potofsky died age 84 on August 5, 1979, in New York City of cancer.[1]
Legacy
Following his death, President Jimmy Carter issued a statement recognizing Potofsky as "one of the giants of the labor movement".[4] The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America hailed Potofsky, saying in a release that "The life and times of Mr. Potofsky are inextricably interwoven with the growth and stability of the American labor movement."[1] ACW president Murray Finley and secretary-treasurer Jack Sheinkman stated, "Jack Potosfky's genius was motivating workers to face their own destinies. In his case, it was organizing workers to form unions, to bargain collectively, and to make group decisions for the common good."[1]
Works
Autobiographical essay in American Spiritual Autobiographies: Fifteen Self-Portraits (1948)[5]
^Potofsky, Jacob S. (May 1963). "The Pioneering of Workers' Banks". The Federationist: Official Monthly Magazine of the AFL-CIO. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)