The People Make History
On this week's Labor History Today: As the nation reflects on Independence Day, we turn from the "Great Men" of history to the voices of the people. We begin with Frederick Douglass's searing 1852 speech, What to the Sla...
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Word In Your Ear
Mark Ellen, David Hepworth and Alex Gold
Word In Your Ear
Mark Ellen, David Hepworth and Alex Gold
Word In Your Ear
Mark Ellen, David Hepworth and Alex Gold
Filmmaking Conversations Podcast with Damien Swaby
Damien Swaby
Far Out With Faust (FOWF)
Far Out With Faust
Cinema Chat With David Heath
David
Nota Bene
Benjamin Brillaud
Playlist Culture G : les podcasts pour apprendre chaque jour
Acast France
Rock a Domicilio
Alberto Marchena
Dazed and confused: Led Zeppelin Bio.
Mario A Ortiz Ramos
Seforimchatter
Nachi Weinstein
A History of the United States
Jamie Redfern
Native Land Pod
iHeartPodcasts and Reasoned Choice
Gretel le Maître Ponders Beauty, with Bede & other guests
Gretel le Maître
Bloomin' Legends with Johnny Vaughan & Gavin Woods
Global
Next Level Soul Español con Alex Ferrari
Alex Ferrari
英文小酒馆 LHH
英文小酒馆 LHH
This Day in History
onthisdayinhistory
White Horse Inn
Michael Horton, Justin Holcomb, Bob Hiller, Walter R. Strickland II
Labor History Today
laborhistorytoday
海獅說---生活裡的小世界史
神奇海獅先生
אפרכסת
אמיר אורן
Iron Trap Garage Podcast
Iron Trap
American Campus Podcast
Lauren Lassabe Shepherd
Classic Radio Theater
Hudson River Radio .com
Western Context - News from Alberta, BC, and Canada
Western Context
The Frommer's Travel Show
Pauline Frommer
Psychedelic Chill Music Podcast
Psychedelic Chill Music
Modern Classical Music Podcast
Tandy Venice
Les grands dossiers de l'Histoire par Franck Ferrand
Radio Classique
Nym & Nylene's Nightmare Cottage
Nightmare Nym
BioGraphics - True Biographies & History's Most Fascinating People
biog
My Lunch Break
MY LUNCH BREAK
Media Matters Podcast Network
Michael Wilson
The Listening Tube
Bob Woodley
Into The Austenverse
David & Lisa Campbell
Historia
laborhistorytoday
On this week's Labor History Today: As the nation reflects on Independence Day, we turn from the "Great Men" of history to the voices of the people. We begin with Frederick Douglass's searing 1852 speech, What to the Sla...
This week on Labor History Today: Silk stockings were all the rage in the 1920s, but the workers who made them paid the price. When the H.C. Aberle Hosiery Company in Philadelphia imposed wage cuts and harsher working co...
This week on Labor History Today (originally broadcast 1/11/2026), Simon Sapper talks with historian Martin Wright, co-author of Made by Labour: A Material and Visual History of British Labor, 1780–1924. The book traces ...
On this week’s Labor History Today (Originally released October 12, 2025): A visit to the Donora Smog Museum, where a six-day inversion in 1948 trapped toxic fumes over a Pennsylvania mill town and changed how the U.S. t...
As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, Labor History Today visits Old Slater Mill in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, widely considered the birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution. In this excerpt from T...
On Labor History Today: What happens if the labor laws that have governed workplace organizing since the 1930s simply disappear? Historian Leigh Campbell-Hale joins Labor Exchange host Robert Lindgren to discuss the 1927...
This week on Labor History Today: Hazel Dickens remembered. The Mine Wars Forum talks with Hazel’s nephew Buddy Dickens about the legendary labor singer’s deep roots in the West Virginia coalfields, her fierce commitment...
On this week’s edition of Labor History Today: the People’s 250 campaign asks whose stories belong in America’s history, from the 1968 Memphis sanitation strike to today’s fights for worker dignity and democracy. Then hi...
On Labor History Today: What do Chicago’s three Haymarket monuments reveal about labor history, public memory, and who gets to shape the story of the past? Labor historian Peter Cole explains. Plus: Australia’s early fig...
On this week’s Labor History Today: a powerful look at past and present struggles for worker rights and justice. We revisit the Haymarket Affair and the origins of May Day, then hear from historian Marla Ramírez on the f...
On this week’s Labor History Today: Can resistance to Trumpism help rebuild worker power? Jeremy Brecher, author of Strike!, joins labor historian Joe McCartin and organizer Stephen Lerner to discuss their argument that ...
This week’s Labor History Today features Labor Express Radio in Chicago, previewing May Day 2026. From the 1886 fight for the eight-hour day to today’s call for an “economic blackout,” organizers are mobilizing for what ...
On this week’s Labor History Today, producer producer Harold Phillips talks with Victoria McCallum and Lantz Simpson, co-writers of The Last Words of Joe Hill, a short play imagining Joe Hill in a modern coffee shop, spa...
On this week’s Labor History Today: In April 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. stood with striking sanitation workers in Memphis—members of AFSCME Local 1733—delivering his powerful “Mountaintop” speech just one day before hi...
On this week’s Labor History Today: As Women’s History Month draws to a close, we mark the founding of the Coalition of Labor Union Women in 1974, when more than 3,000 women from 58 unions came together in Chicago to dem...
This week on Labor History Today, we explore moments when workers didn’t just demand change—they forced it. Detroit, 1937: sit-down strikers face a violent police raid—and resist, floor by floor, in a pivotal moment in t...
This week on Labor History Today: From the fiery tragedy that shocked the nation—the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire—to the powerful solidarity of the 1912 Bread and Roses strike in Lawrence, Massachusetts. We’ll a...
On this week’s Labor History Today, we continue our look at the legacy of A. Philip Randolph and the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, the first major Black-led union in the United States. Recorded at Georgetown Unive...
On this week’s Labor History Today, historian Eric Arnesen marks the centennial of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, tracing how A. Philip Randolph and Black railway workers built the first major Black-led union i...
On this week’s Labor History Today, host Chris Garlock explores how workers’ struggles leave lasting marks—not just on history, but on the physical landscape itself. In Hamilton, Ontario, the 1946 Stelco strike helped se...
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