Descriptive Summary
Administrative Information
Introduction
History
Scope and Content
Material Cataloged Separately
Descriptive Summary
Title: International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 70 Records,
Date (inclusive): 1916-1980s
Date (bulk): (bulk 1937-1958)
Accession number: 1987/070, 1990/079, 1991/004, 1991/009, 1991/113
Creator:
International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 70
Extent: 4.0 cubic feet
Repository:
San Francisco State University. Labor Archives & Research Center
San Francisco, California 94132
Shelf location: For current information on the location of these
materials, please consult the Center's online catalog.
Language:
English.
Administrative Information
Access
Collection is open for research.
Publication Rights
Copyright has not been assigned to the Labor Archives & Research Center. All requests for
permission to publish or quote from materials must be submitted in writing
to the Director of the Archives. Permission for publication is given on behalf
of the Labor Archives & Research Center as the owner of the physical items and is not intended
to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be
obtained by the reader.
Preferred Citation
[Identification of item], International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 70 Records, 1987/070, 1990/079, 1991/004, 1991/009,
1991/113, Labor Archives & Research Center,
San Francisco State University.
Introduction
These records were donated in three batches by International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 70,
of Alameda County, California, in 1987, 1990, and 1991. The collection was processed in spring
1999 by Joshua Paddison.
History
International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 70, of Oakland, California, was chartered in 1901.
In the first decade of the twentieth century, the East Bay lagged behind San Francisco in
population (Oakland, Berkeley, and Alameda combined had less than 100,000 residents in 1900
while San Francisco boasted three-and-a-half times that) and organized labor activity. Many East
Bay laborers commuted to San Francisco each morning or were scattered in small, hard-to-organize
industries. Moreover, Oakland lacked San Francisco's tradition of union militancy and its
cadre of experienced labor leaders. East Bay unions were typically smaller, less organized, and
less likely to strike than their San Francisco counterparts.
1
This was true for Oakland-based
Teamsters Local 70 when contrasted with its San Francisco counterpart, Local 85, which was
charted in August 1900.
In 1901, Local 70 joined with Local 85 and other Bay Area Teamster locals in organizing a
central organization called the Team Drivers Joint Executive Council.
2
After the 1906 earthquake
and fire, Local 70--like most East Bay unions, especially in the building trades--saw a rise in
membership as San Francisco companies transferred operations to the East Bay.
3
More work
meant higher wages and more interest in unions. Also as a result of the fire, the Team Drivers
Joint Executive Council was reorganized as San Francisco Bay Area Joint Council 7, with Local
70 as a member.
4
From 1920 to 1949, Local 70 was led by its dynamic and controversial secretary-treasurer,
Charles W. Real (1888-1966). Born in San Francisco, Real was active in East Bay unionism and
politics for virtually all of his adult life; he was a longtime member of the Oakland Civil Service
Commission and chairman of the Alameda County Labor Committee for Earl Warren's
gubernatorial campaign of 1942 and Thomas Dewey's presidential campaign of 1948.
5
Hot-tempered
and ambitious, Real made as many enemies as allies; he was once indicted for a murder
that occurred while he was attempting to organize local taxicab drivers, but was acquitted.
6
Real was a tireless promoter of Local 70's interests. Frustrated at Local 70's second-class status
behind powerful Local 85 within Joint Council 7, in 1935 Real gave his support to a plan,
opposed by Local 85, to organize Bay Area highway delivery drivers. As a result, Local 70 gained
several hundred new members.
7
"There was always a battle goin' on between Local 70 and Local
85," remembered Teamster president Dave Beck, "because Charlie Real was tryin' to dominate
the whole picture and he was always tryin' to beat Local 85 to the punch on contracts and
everything else that happened."
8
Real remained a powerful figure in Bay Area Teamster activities
until he was expelled from Local 70 for unknown reasons in 1949; executive board minutes
indicate only that he was removed "for conduct unbecoming an officer of the Union."
9
In July 1934, Local 70 joined dozens of other unions up and down the Pacific coast in a sympathy
strike after the events of "Bloody Thursday" in San Francisco. During the strike, Local 70
continued to help city and county officials supply food desperately needed to the East Bay.
10
In 1937, Local 70 joined approximately 150 other Teamster locals in eleven western states to
form the Western Conference of Teamsters, led by Seattle Teamster Dave Beck. The creation of
this multi-jurisdictional regional body, unprecedented in Teamster history, significantly shifted the
balance of Teamster power westward; Beck himself rose to become president of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters in 1952.
11
In April 1937, Beck placed Local 70 in trusteeship for one year after Oakland Teamsters refused
to cross the picket lines of longshoremen led by Harry Bridges. The trusteeship suspended Local
70's right of self-rule, ousted several officers, canceled all regular union meetings, and placed an
outside agent (appointed by Beck) in temporary control. Beck then ordered Local 70 to break
Bridges's strike. However, more than 500 of Local 70's 2200 members met secretly to vow
allegiance to the ousted officers and to promise to honor the longshoremen's picket lines. On May
2, Beck himself spoke at a mass meeting for Oakland Teamsters where he garnered their
compliance in return for $1 per day wage increases. Local 70 thereafter ignored the Bridges's
picket lines, sparking a long-standing rivalry between Bay Area Teamsters and longshoremen
(soon part of a larger "holy war" between the A.F.L and the C.I.O.)
12
Local 70 initiated three lengthy strikes in the early 1960s. Seeking higher wages and better fringe
benefits, Local 70 went on strike in July 1961 against members of the Lumber and Mill
Employers' Association and four ready-mixed concrete companies. The dispute was resolved in
late September.
13
Also in September 1961, Local 70 joined Teamsters Locals 896 (bottlers) and 278 (drivers) in a
strike against several soft drink bottlers in San Francisco, Alameda, and San Mateo counties. In
response, four soft drink companies purchased newspaper, radio, and newspaper advertisements
to recruit strikebreakers in what the
East Bay Labor Journal called the "most serious
strikebreaking drive by employers in 25 years."
14
The strike ended in October when Oakland
mayor John C. Houlihan stepped in and helped settle the dispute.
15
In November 1962, Local 70 initiated a wildcat strike against Consolidated Freightways after the
company fired two Teamsters for refusing to unload a non-union trailer. The dispute, which lasted
for almost a month, was particularly bitter; Consolidated Freightways fired all 126 of the striking
union members and obtained a restraining order to stop their picketing. The dispute went before
arbitrator Arthur M. Ross in December. "The ringleaders are dismissed while the followers are
reinstated," he decided, reinstating (with unimpaired seniority but without back pay) the jobs of all
but five of the striking Teamsters.
16
The Local 70 strike bulletin called the decision "full of
discrepancies, inconsistencies, and sloppy thinking.... Nowhere in the annals of modern arbitration
can such an unfair decision be found."
17
In May 1964, Teamster Local 291, representing construction, excavation, ready-mix, and lumber
drivers, split from Local 70.
1Robert Edward Lee Knight,
Industrial Relations in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1900-1918 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1960), 127-130.
2Donald Garnel,
The Rise of Teamster Power in the West (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1972), 49-50.
3Knight, 176-177.
4Robert M. Robinson, "A History of the Teamsters in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1850-1950" (Ph.D. dissertation, University
of California at Berkeley, 1951), 181.
5Obituary,
San Francisco Chronicle, November 3, 1966: 48.
6Garnel, 141.
7Garnel, 105-109.
8Garnel, 105.
9Executive board minutes, February 14, 1950: 2.
10
East Bay Labor Journal Official Labor Year Book, 1934: 23.
11Robinson, 298; Garnel, 200.
12Robinson, 315-320; Garnel, 142, 164, 166.
13
East Bay Labor Journal, August 18, 1961; October 6, 1961.
14
East Bay Labor Journal, September 29, 1961.
15
East Bay Labor Journal, October 13, 1961.
16Arthur M. Ross, arbitration decision,
Consolidated Freightways v. Teamsters Local 70, 12.
17Teamsters Local 70 strike bulletin, December 17, 1962.
Scope and Content
The files of Teamsters Local 70 are divided into four series: Teamsters Local 70, Teamsters Local
515 (Oakland chauffeurs' union), International Brotherhood of Teamsters material, and non-Teamsters
material.
The series "Local 70" comprises eleven subseries: minutes, monthly financial reports, office
correspondence, membership information, election material, dispatchers' logs, contracts and
agreements, print material, and
Teamsters Local 70 v. Consolidated Freightways arbitration material.
The collection's contracts and agreements are divided by industry and arranged alphabetically.
When an industry has required more than one folder, each folder title indicates the alphabetical
span of companies contained within. For example:
Local 70 Contracts and Agreements--Oil Companies (Associated Oil - Johnson Oil) 1938-1949
This folder contains all of Local 70's contracts and agreements with oil companies that fall
alphabetically between Associated Oil and Johnson Oil.
The folder's inclusive dates (1938-1949, in this case) indicate the beginning and ending dates of
the contracts within. If, for example, a contract with Johnson Oil was agreed upon in 1938 and
was in effect until 1949, 1938-1949 is the date listed (rather than simply 1938).
The majority of the material in the collection dates from 1937 to 1958. Many of the minutes,
financial reports, and office correspondence in the collection came from the files of William J.
"Big Bill" Conboy (1889-1964), Local 70's International Representative during the 1950s.
The earliest items in the collection are dispatcher's logs from 1916 to 1920. Other early material
includes an "East Bay Drayage Tariff and Shopper's Guide" from 1924 and Teamsters Local 515
membership ledgers from 1925 to 1927.
The most recent items in the collection are election materials and contract and agreement booklets
from the late 1980s.
Included in the collection are issues from 1963 to 1968 of Local 70's newsletter,
Local 70 Te'mo,
and issues from 1955 to 1969 of
Northern California Teamster, along with several Teamsters
conference proceedings from the 1940s. Also included is a transcript of the 1962
Local 70 v.
Consolidated Freightways arbitration proceedings, arbitrator Arthur M. Ross's decision,
supervisors' statements, and Local 70's strike bulletin.
Material Cataloged Separately
- Photographs (twelve), relocated to LARC Photo Collection, "Subjects A-Z," under "Teamsters"
and "Teamsters 1912-1915."
- Buttons (approximately 100 from 1935 to 1980s), relocated to LARC button collection (one
small box and one large envelope).
- Election bumper stickers, relocated to LARC bumper sticker collection.
- Print material relating to Jimmy Hoffa, relocated to LARC ephemera and poster files.