Kellogg's six-hour day

"On December 1, 1930, at the start of the Great Depression, W.K. Kellogg replaced the traditional three daily eight-hour shifts in his cereal plant with four six-hour shifts. By adding on a new shift he and his managers created jobs for employees that the company had laid off and for other unem...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kline Hunnicutt, Benjamin
Institution:ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
Format: TEXT
Language:English
Published: Philadelphia 1996
Temple University Press
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-782012450029-Kellogg-s-six-hour-day.htm
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author Kline Hunnicutt, Benjamin
author_facet Kline Hunnicutt, Benjamin
collection Library items
description "On December 1, 1930, at the start of the Great Depression, W.K. Kellogg replaced the traditional three daily eight-hour shifts in his cereal plant with four six-hour shifts. By adding on a new shift he and his managers created jobs for employees that the company had laid off and for other unemployed persons in Battle Creek, Michigan. Kellogg's six-hour day was the pinnacle of a hundred-year process that cut working time virtually in half. Kellogg Management, propelled by a vision of Liberation Capitalism, insisted that six hours would revolutionize society by shifting the balance of time from work to leisure--from economic concerns to the challenge of freedom. Kellogg's employees, like centuries of workers, believed that work was a means to an end. An overwhelming number of employees were willing to "share their work" and found the extra time an opportunity to invest in the family, community, church, and individual freedom. When World War II ended, Kellogg's managers abandoned the six-hour shift and began with the rest of the nation to define progress as more work for more people. Losing sight of the original dream of more time to live outside necessity, management argued that work should remain the center of life, providing identity, meaning, and purpose to an otherwise meaningless existence. Hunnicutt documents the struggle of those workers, mostly women, who resisted management and the new beliefs about work's centrality. They fought to keep their six-hour shifts until 1985, and in the process preserved the century-old vision of "progressive shortening of the hours of labor." Their story is a monument to workers' struggle for control over their lives and for substantial freedom beyond necessity. It serves as a reminder of a remarkable vision of progress, offering hope and guidance to the last decade of this century when layoffs, downsizing, mandatory overtime, and a "jobless future" plague the nation."
format TEXT
geographic USA
id 782012450029_5147fd6c77ab4d0a81f31d0cee215ed9
institution ETUI-European Trade Union Institute
is_hierarchy_id 782012450029_5147fd6c77ab4d0a81f31d0cee215ed9
is_hierarchy_title Kellogg's six-hour day
language English
physical 261 p.
Paper
publishDate 1996
publisher Philadelphia
Temple University Press
spellingShingle Kline Hunnicutt, Benjamin
case study
history
shift work
unemployment
work sharing
working time
Kellogg's six-hour day
thumbnail https://www.labourline.org/Image_prev.jpg?Archive=124227994240
title Kellogg's six-hour day
topic case study
history
shift work
unemployment
work sharing
working time
url https://www.labourline.org/KENTIKA-782012450029-Kellogg-s-six-hour-day.htm