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National White Shirt Day

Celebrating when folks in factories banded together, rolled up their sleeves, and said, "We're in this together," shaping a new era for labor.

Historical InterestJobs & Professions28
Marketing angleinferred

Honor labor history and worker solidarity by connecting your brand to fair labor practices and employee appreciation during National White Shirt Day.

Relevance 28low intent
  • Share the untold story of 1930s union organizing and how it shaped modern workplace rights
  • Feature employee spotlights celebrating workers in your industry who embody the spirit of solidarity
  • Host an internal awareness campaign about labor history and your company's commitment to fair working conditions
  • Partner with labor organizations or historical societies for educational content and community engagement

History

National White Shirt Day may sound like another collar-worker holiday, but it actually marks a significant time in history.

During the 1930s, during the times of the Great Depression, union groups began to pop up as a way to protect workers from unfair treatment. They fought to develop insurance, payroll, and health and safety regulations.

The United Automobile Workers (UAW) had only existed since 1935 during that time and helped bring automobile workers together.

However, organizing in such fashion was a dangerous time, as General Motors, a significantly successful company during that time, had almost complete control over the politics of the Flint, Michigan region, maintaining spies to keep their workers in line.

Many of the conditions of the time were horrible for those workers, often resulting in deaths.

The UAW, kept in secret, organized a rally at the Cleveland’s Fisher Body plant, where workers would remain inside the plants but would not work, keeping people outside from the plant, and refusing the leave the premises.

The Flint sit-down strike was conducted a way to revolt against the harsh conditions, and the union itself helped form civil systems to maintain order within the plant.

National White Shirt Day first took place in 1948 and was inspired by the idea that those revolting had — that their shirts should be kept as clean as their bosses’. This day remembers this significant moment in history, as it helped inspire the protections of automobile workers and helped form powerful unions today.


How to celebrate

Wear a White Shirt

As the day says, don a white shirt and try and keep it as clean as possible. Support those you know working in the automobile industry and give them thanks for the hard work they do.

Learn More About White Shirt Day

Take some time to research how the strike inspired many other unions to form, how the responses of that time period helped create better working conditions for many people in the workforce today. Share this information with your friends and colleagues and tell them about the significance of this event.


FAQ
How did the Flint sit-down strike actually work, and why was “sitting down” so powerful?
In a sit-down strike, workers remain inside the factory but refuse to work, preventing the employer from bringing in replacement labor or moving machinery. During the 1936–1937 Flint sit-down strike, General Motors workers occupied key plants around the clock, organized their own internal security, food distribution, and dispute-resolution committees, and barred management and police from taking over the facilities. This tactic made it extremely costly and risky for GM to forcibly remove them, giving the union significant bargaining leverage and helping win recognition and better conditions.
What kinds of working conditions did auto workers face in the 1930s, and how did unions try to change them?
Auto workers in the 1930s often dealt with low pay, speed-ups on the assembly line, long hours, little job security, and dangerous conditions such as unguarded machinery, toxic fumes, and inadequate safety equipment. Companies like General Motors also used “company spies” and threats of firing to discourage organizing. Unions such as the United Auto Workers (UAW) pushed for written contracts that included higher wages, limits on arbitrary discipline, health and safety measures, seniority rules, and grievance procedures so workers had a formal way to challenge unfair treatment.
How did the Flint sit-down strike affect labor rights beyond the auto industry?
The victory at Flint demonstrated that industrial workers could win recognition from one of the largest corporations in the world, encouraging organizing drives in steel, rubber, electrical equipment, and other mass-production industries. After General Motors recognized the UAW in 1937, union membership in the United States surged, and other big firms signed contracts with industrial unions. Historians note that this wave of organization helped solidify collective bargaining as a central feature of U.S. labor relations under New Deal legislation such as the National Labor Relations Act.
What role does the United Auto Workers (UAW) play in protecting auto workers today?
Today the UAW negotiates collective bargaining agreements with automakers and parts suppliers that cover wages, health insurance, pensions or retirement plans, job security provisions, and safety rules. The union also trains workplace health and safety representatives, files grievances when contracts are violated, lobbies for pro-worker laws, and represents members in disputes over discipline or layoffs. In recent years it has bargained over issues such as temporary work, plant closures, and safety in high-tech and electric-vehicle facilities.
What are common health and safety hazards in modern auto manufacturing, and how are they addressed?
Modern auto plants still face hazards such as repetitive-motion injuries, heavy lifting, welding fumes, noise, chemical exposure from paints and solvents, and risks from robots and automated machinery. These risks are addressed through ergonomic design of workstations, mechanical lifting aids, guarding and interlocks on machines, local exhaust ventilation, hearing protection, and training on safe procedures. In countries such as the United States, government standards—like those enforced by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)—and union–management safety committees are key mechanisms for identifying and controlling these hazards.
How did the Flint sit-down strike change the relationship between blue-collar workers and management?
Before the strike, many auto workers had little voice in how work was organized and could be disciplined or laid off with few protections, while managers and white-collar staff were seen as clearly higher in status. The successful strike forced General Motors to recognize the UAW as the bargaining representative, giving production workers a collective say over wages, hours, and conditions. The symbolic emphasis on workers deserving the same dignity as their white-collar bosses helped challenge rigid class distinctions on the shop floor and made respect a core theme of later labor negotiations.
How did the Great Depression contribute to the rise of auto worker unionization?
During the Great Depression, plunging car sales led auto companies to cut wages, speed up production for those still employed, and carry out mass layoffs. Economic insecurity and harsh conditions made workers more receptive to union organizing, while federal policies under the New Deal—especially the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, which protected the right to organize and bargain collectively—gave unions a legal foundation. In this environment, the UAW was able to organize large numbers of auto workers, and high-profile actions like the Flint sit-down strike accelerated that growth.