LARC

The Stubborn 1,000: The Watsonville Canneries Strike | ongoing exhibit until April 16

A Labor Archives Exhibition

Special Collections Gallery, J. Paul Leonard Library, fourth floor

Tuesday – Thursday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. | Closing April 16, 2026

 

The Watsonville Canneries Strike, 1985 – 1987

Watsonville, in the heart of the agricultural Pajaro Valley, was once known as the "frozen food capital of the world" with a large number of canneries processing the majority of frozen food products sold in the United States. In September 1985, nearly half of the town's 4,000 cannery workers went out on a strike to protest reductions in wages and benefits at the Watsonville Canning and Shaw Frozen Food Companies.

The strike was led predominantly by Mexican and Mexican-American women. They went up against the cannery owners, the powerful agribusiness machine, local police, and their own union, which had become entrenched and unresponsive. After battling for 18 months, strikers rejected an initial poor settlement negotiated by the union, pushing back against larger pay cuts and winning medical benefits for all workers, seniority rights and striker amnesty. But most of all, they gained organizing and leadership skills and a voice in the future of their community.

As striker Margarita Páramo explained: "We knew we had won, and we began to feel that we had won more than the strike, ganamos dignidad y un futuro bueno para nuestros hijos" (we won dignity and a good future for our children).

This exhibition was generously funded by the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library.

Saturday in the Gallery

Last chance to view ‘The Stubborn 1,000: The Watsonville Canneries Strike’ exhibit

Join us for a rare weekend opportunity to visit the gallery on Saturday, April 11, 9 a.m. – 2 p.m., during the Library’s open house for Explore SFSU.

The current exhibit on the Watsonville Canneries Strike will close Thursday, April 16. Regular gallery hours are Tuesday through Thursday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

 

The Watsonville Canneries Strike, 1985 – 1987

Watsonville, in the heart of the agricultural Pajaro Valley, was once known as the “frozen food capital of the world” with a large number of canneries processing the majority of frozen food products sold in the United States. In September 1985, nearly half of the town's 4,000 cannery workers went out on a strike to protest reductions in wages and benefits at the Watsonville Canning and Shaw Frozen Food Companies.

The strike was led predominantly by Mexican and Mexican-American women. They went up against the cannery owners, the powerful agribusiness machine, local police, and their own union, which had become entrenched and unresponsive. After battling for 18 months, strikers rejected an initial poor settlement negotiated by the union, pushing back against larger pay cuts and winning medical benefits for all workers, seniority rights and striker amnesty. But most of all, they gained organizing and leadership skills and a voice in the future of their community.

As striker Margarita Páramo explained: “We knew we had won, and we began to feel that we had won more than the strike, ganamos dignidad y un futuro bueno para nuestros hijos” (we won dignity and a good future for our children).

This exhibition was generously funded by the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library.

Designers in the Reading Room: Engaging with Tangible Artifacts in the Digital Age

SF Bay Area designers and artists, join the Special Collections & Archives unit at SFSU for this special open house event. Learn about the value of public-facing archives to designers and their research through tactile engagement with design artifacts. 

If you can’t make this event, view our digitized materials or schedule an in-person appointment at Special Collections & Archives

Please note: Food and drink are not allowed in LIB 460.

Song of the Stubborn One Thousand | author Peter Shapiro on the Watsonville Canneries Strike

Part of the program series for the Labor Archives’ ongoing exhibition The Stubborn 1,000: The Watsonville Canneries Strike

Peter Shapiro, a labor journalist and author of Song of the Stubborn One Thousand, will speak about the story of the 18-month strike.

In September 1985, nearly half of the Watsonville's 4,000 cannery workers went out on a strike to protest reductions in wages and benefits. They went up against the cannery owners, the powerful agribusiness machine, local police, and even their own union. The victorious strike was led predominantly by Mexican and Mexican-American women, who gained organizing and leadership skills and a voice in the future of their community.  

We knew we had won, and we began to feel that we had won more than the strike, ganamos dignidad y un futuro bueno para nuestros hijos (we won dignity and a good future for our children).”
— striker Margarita Páramo

Book Talk — Get on the Job and Organize with Jaz Brisack

Join us for a thought-provoking conversation with author Jaz Brisack. Get on the Job and Organize tells the inspiring story of the fight to unionize workers at Starbucks and Tesla in an era of political and social unrest. As one of the exciting new faces of the American Labor Movement, Brisack argues that while workers often organize when their place of work is toxic, it’s equally important to organize when you love your job. They frame the struggle within the context of America’s long tradition of labor organizing and provide the nuts and bolts of a campaign — from how to educate yourself and your colleagues, to what backlash can be expected and how to fight it, to what victory looks like even if the union doesn’t necessarily “win.”

Jaz Brisack is a union organizer and co-founder of the Inside Organizer School, which trains workers to unionize. After spending a year at Oxford as a Rhodes Scholar, they got a job as a barista at the Elmwood Starbucks in Buffalo, New York, becoming a founding member of Starbucks Workers United and helping organize the first unionized Starbucks in the United States. As the organizing director for Workers United Upstate New York & Vermont, they also worked with organizing committees at companies ranging from Ben & Jerry’s to Tesla.

A Labor Studies event. Co-sponsored by the Labor Archives and Research Center.

The Stubborn 1,000: The Watsonville Canneries Strike Opening Event

A Labor Archives and Research Center Exhibition

Special Collections Gallery, J. Paul Leonard Library, fourth floor

Spring – Fall 2025 | open Tuesday – Thursday, 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

Opening Event: Thursday, Feb. 27, 4 – 6:30 p.m. | Exhibition tour at 4:30 p.m. with curator Tanya Hollis

The Watsonville Canneries Strike, 1985 – 1987

Watsonville, in the heart of the agricultural Pajaro Valley, was once known as the "frozen food capital of the world" with a large number of canneries processing the majority of frozen food products sold in the United States. In September 1985, nearly half of the town's 4,000 cannery workers went out on a strike to protest reductions in wages and benefits at the Watsonville Canning and Shaw Frozen Food Companies.

The strike was led predominantly by Mexican and Mexican-American women. They went up against the cannery owners, the powerful agribusiness machine, local police, and their own union, which had become entrenched and unresponsive. After battling for 18 months, strikers rejected an initial poor settlement negotiated by the union, pushing back against larger pay cuts and winning medical benefits for all workers, seniority rights and striker amnesty. But most of all, they gained organizing and leadership skills and a voice in the future of their community.

As striker Margarita Páramo explained: "We knew we had won, and we began to feel that we had won more than the strike, ganamos dignidad y un futuro bueno para nuestros hijos" (we won dignity and a good future for our children).

This exhibition was generously funded by the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library

Exhibition caps massive project to digitize agricultural labor research material

‘Fields of Struggle: Agricultural Laborers in California, 1939 – 1966’ is based on more than 1,400 items collected by researcher and activist Henry P. Anderson

When San Francisco State University’s Labor Archives and Research Center (LARC) holds its annual program Thursday, Feb. 29, it won’t just celebrate the 38th anniversary of the event series’ launch. It will also mark the culmination of a two-year, labor-intensive effort to digitize the life’s work of one of California’s most notable labor researchers.

The free, open-to-the-public event — to be held 5 – 7 p.m. in room 460 of the J. Paul Leonard Library — will also serve as the official opening of a new exhibition, “Fields of Struggle: Agricultural Laborers in California, 1939 – 1966.” The exhibition showcases material from the Henry P. Anderson Papers, a collection of audio interviews, film footage, photographs, periodicals and more documenting the experiences of California agricultural workers. Anderson was studying for a master’s in Public Health at the University of California, Berkeley, in the mid-1950s when he began collecting the material as part of a thesis project on Mexican agricultural workers. Anderson became convinced that the program that allowed the workers to come temporarily to the U.S., known as the Bracero Program, was riddled with abuses, and he used his research to advocate for change. He remained active for years afterward as a labor activist and historian.

Consisting of 1,460 items, the Henry P. Anderson Papers was catalogued and digitized under the direction of San Francisco State Digital Archivist Leah Sylva. Now it’s not just the backbone of the “Fields of Struggle” exhibition. It will be available online to researchers anywhere, anytime.

“Now researchers worldwide can access the correspondence, photographs and interviews remotely without needing to travel to campus,” Sylva said. “Also the selection process curates a sampling of material, presenting objects with high research value without the considerable labor usually required to hunt through archival cartons for relevant items.”

Anderson (pictured, right) passed away in 2016. He had supported LARC with charitable donations and had conversations with staff members about leaving the center his papers. Two years ago, the Anderson Family Trust brought that to fruition with a generous grant covering the cost of organizing and digitizing the papers. The papers were donated by the family and processed in 2019 – 2020 by Archival Processing Team Lead Eva Martinez.

A number of Anderson’s children and grandchildren will be on hand for the “Fields of Struggle” opening event Feb. 29.

“It is tremendously gratifying, rewarding and moving, for myself and my family, to know that my father’s work now is memorialized in digital form and lives on as a resource for labor researchers and historians,” said Dori Anderson Rodriguez, Anderson’s daughter. “My father’s labor research materials, which included recorded interviews, photographs and writings, was to him his most valuable and important legacy. It brings us great pride and gratification to know that his research is now preserved and can be used now and in the future.”

“Fields of Struggle: Agricultural Laborers in California, 1939 – 1966” will be open for class visits throughout 2024. Anyone interested in scheduling a visit should email Sylva

The Feb. 29 LARC event will feature keynote speaker Mireya Loza, author of “Defiant Braceros: How Migrant Workers Fought for Racial, Sexual and Political Freedom.” 

An Eye Towards Justice: Exhibition Closing Event

Join photojournalist and SF State faculty member Scot Tucker for a discussion of Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel’s compelling body of work documenting the critical social transformations of the 20th century United States.

When:  Thursday November 30, 2023 | 2:00 - 3:00pm

Where: Labor Archives and Research Center, Library Room 460

Co-sponsored by the Journalism Department

 

A Labor Archives and Research Center Exhibition  

Special Collections Gallery, J. Paul Leonard Library, San Francisco State University 

October 2022 - December 2023 | open Monday-Thursday 1:00pm to 5:00pm

With curators Catherine Powell & Wendy Welker

Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel created a compelling body of work documenting the critical social transformations of the 20th century in the United States from a working-class perspective. They emigrated to the United States around 1930 just as the Great Depression began and became itinerant farm laborers. Working in the fields profoundly shaped their worldview and they came to feel the purpose of their photographic work was “to contribute to an understanding of the inequities of the world.” The exhibition highlights their images of the economic hardships of the depression, the transformations to the Bay Area brought by World War II, communities and individuals standing up for justice, and longshore workers facing the impact of mechanization. The work of Mieth and Hagel is relatively unknown today and our aim with the current exhibition is to celebrate and bring wider attention to their significant contributions to the canon of documentary photography. 

This exhibition was generously funded by the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library.

Harry Bridges and the ILWU

Please join us for the Labor Archives and Research Center's 37th Anniversary Annual Program, featuring Robert W. Cherny, Professor emeritus of History at San Francisco State University, discussing his new biography, Harry Bridges Labor Radical, Labor Legend (University of Illinois Press, 2023), with a musical performance by Marie Shell.

WHEN: February 24, 2023 

TIME: Doors at 6:00 pm; Program 7:00-8:00 pm (PST) 

WHERE: ILWU Local 34, 4 Berry St., San Francisco, CA 

https://goo.gl/maps/gsDDSFQJfiEeTPgT6

We ask that all attendees wear masks, and for the comfort and safety of our audience, we will not be serving food or drinks this year. Proof of vaccination or negative COVID test required. 

Robert Cherny helped found the Labor Archives and Research Center and has served on the Advisory Board from its inception. He received his PhD in history from Columbia University, joined the history faculty at San Francisco State University in 1971, and became emeritus in 2012. He served at various times as chair of the history department, director of the labor studies program, chair of the academic senate, chair of the CSU academic senate, acting dean for behavioral and social sciences, and interim dean of undergraduate studies. He is the author or co-author of forty-some published essays and seven monographs, co-editor of two anthologies, and co-author of college textbooks on US and California history. He began working on a biography of Harry Bridges in 1985 at the invitation of Harry and Nikki Bridges and spent the next fifteen years doing archival research at more than 25 archives, but university and other responsibilities delayed him from completing the book until after he retired. We are pleased to have Professor Cherny present his research at the ILWU Hall for this annual program. 

Musical performance will be by Marie Shell, the granddaughter of Harry Bridges, who will perform “The Ballad of Harry Bridges.” 

For more information, contact larc@sfsu.edu or 415.405.5571

An Eye Towards Justice: The Photographs of Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel

A Labor Archives and Research Center Exhibition  

 

Fall 2022-Spring 2023 | open Monday-Thursday 1:00pm to 5:00pm. 

Hansel Mieth and Otto Hagel created a compelling body of work documenting the critical social transformations of the 20th century in the United States from a working-class perspective. They emigrated to the United States around 1930 just as the Great Depression began and became itinerant farm laborers. Working in the fields profoundly shaped their worldview and they came to feel the purpose of their photographic work was “to contribute to an understanding of the inequities of the world.” The exhibition highlights their images of the economic hardships of the depression, the transformations to the Bay Area brought by World War II, communities and individuals standing up for justice, and longshore workers facing the impact of mechanization. The work of Mieth and Hagel is relatively unknown today and our aim with the current exhibition is to celebrate and bring wider attention to their significant contributions to the canon of documentary photography. 

 

This exhibition was generously funded by the Friends of the J. Paul Leonard Library.