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Title United States Department of Labor
Date 29 Dec 1942- 27 Nov 1945
Document Type Report
Reference MSIPL 67, Box 11, Folder 132, Series 1
Library / Archive Special Collections & University Archives, University Library, University of Illinois at Chicago
Collection Name Immigrants' Protective League Records, 1919-1967
Description Information on salaries, particularly in relation to the National War Labor Board. Includes increase of salaries for three employees of the Immigrants' Protective League. The regulation of wages and working hours following the 'Fair Labor Standards Act, 1938' is also noted here.
Series Description The Immigrants' Protective League was founded in 1908 as a resource for all new immigrants arriving in Chicago. The Women's Trade Union League had overseen an immigration committee for the protection of women immigrants, but the desire to expand the committee's scope led to the founding of a separate organization, the IPL. The IPL's mission was to assist immigrants in adjusting to American life, not unlike the work being undertaken at Hull House. Indeed, it was Hull House's Grace Abbott who served as the IPL's first director, a position she held until 1921. The State of Illinois briefly took over the work of the IPL beginning in 1919, but when the government retreated, the IPL carried on its activities independently once again. The Immigrants' Protective League's undertook many activities. Initially the group defended immigrants against opportunistic exploitation by porters, ticket agents, and cabbies when they first arrived, and against bad employment practices and threats of deportation once they were working. The group also advocated for improved health care, urged fewer federal immigration restrictions, and acted as an agent for re-uniting new arrivals with their families. After the passage of restrictive immigration legislation in the early 1920s the IPL spent much more time providing legal and technical services than it did on its earlier activities. During the depression, the IPL assisted immigrants in returning to their home countries, and in obtaining naturalization papers in order to benefit from New Deal programs. Then, during World War II, the IPL aided families trying to find relatives displaced by the war. In 1958, the group's name was changed to the Immigrants' Service League. It then merged in 1967 with the Travelers Aid Society of Metropolitan Chicago. The two renamed the joint group Travelers and Immigrants Aid (TIA) in 1980, then in 1995 changed the name once again to Heartland Alliance for Human Needs and Human Rights. The Immigrants' Protective League records contain agendas, reports, memoranda, case histories, affidavits, legislative bills, dissertations, press releases, resolutions, photographs, maps, addresses, statements, clippings, articles, reports, published materials, divided into five series. The material spans the years 1919 through 1967.
Theme(s) Politics, Legislation and Governance
Places Chicago, Illinois, United States
People Rich, Kenneth; O'Malley, Thomas; Aguirre, Mary; Wilson, Elizabeth; Jerry, Helen B; Brown, Lester
Keywords regulations, working conditions, societies, government, Second World War, wages, administration, employment, legislation, Protector of Immigrants, skilled migration, immigration, immigrant, apprenticeship, education, medicine, law, occupation, economics, social life, welfare, women, Red Cross, charity, university, defence, national identity, war work, veteran, teacher, domestic service, labour
Language English
Copyright Special Collections & University Archives, University Library, University of Illinois at Chicago