Uploaded by folkstreamer on Jun 14, 2011
Produced by Jim Leary's public folklore class at the University of Wisconsin, in cooperation with Ironworkers Local 383, this film focuses on the culture and identity of contemporary ironworkers in southwestern Wisconsin.
The Cultural Traditions of Ironworkers
The International Association of Bridge, Structural, Ornamental and Reinforcing Ironworkers formed in 1896. Rooted in the ancient trades of carpentry and masonry once essential to bridge and building construction, as well as to the medieval guilds of wrought-iron craftsmen, the IABSO&RIW emerged amidst the rise of metal bridge and building construction, as well as in an era marked by fierce struggles of workers for the right to organize. Popularly known and self-described as "ironworkers," even though their work is done chiefly with steel, members of the ironworkers union in the 21st century erect the frames of large buildings and bridges, position rebar for reinforced concrete, manipulate and install stair railings, fashion ornamental metalwork, move heavy equipment, and a good deal more. Following upon an extended and rigorous apprenticeship program, journeyman ironworkers must be competent at positioning and connecting steel beams, "rodbusting" or tying rebar, and welding. Thanks to relative accord with contractors nowadays, strikes are rare, good pay and pensions are the norm, and safety is paramount on job sites. At the same time, work is seldom steady since new construction rises and falls with the prevailing economy; technology changes constantly; and workforce demographics alter as African Americans, new immigrants, and some women enter the trade alongside the traditional male American Indian and European American ironworkers.
Possessing individual and collective occupational and organizational histories, ironworkers also recall and practice an array of distinctive cultural traditions. Retired ironworkers and many still active have vivid memories of debates over whether money for pensions or beer was more important, of walking picket lines, of "booming out" to pay their "dobies" (fees) to another local that had work, of eating midday meals packed in uninsulated metal lunch pails, of "riding the load" of I-beams or the "headache ball" on a crane's cable to a skeletal building's upper reaches, of walking "on high steel" while not "tied off," of working bare-handed and bare-headed in the pre-glove and hard hat era, of hand-splicing frayed wire rope, and good deal more. Such rich laborlore also includes distinctive tools, clothing, gestures, speech, stories, pranks, informal competitions, customs like the "topping out" ceremony for completion of a building's frame, and a widespread self-image as--in the words of Norm Brown, a veteran ironworker--"the fightin'est group of the trades" or, as an envious cement finisher put it, "the Marines of the building trades." Adept at the art of working, more than a few ironworkers are also accomplished artists who make or alter occupational gear and tools, while using welding skills, scrap rebar, and tie-wire off-the-job to fashion a range of practical and playful objects.
The culture of ironworkers historically has attracted attention from writers and scholars including folklorists. In 1892, philosopher William James was dazzled when: "The sight of a workman doing something on the dizzy edge of a sky-scaling iron construction brought me to my senses very suddenly . . . Heroism . . . was before me in the daily lives of the laboring classes." In 1949, journalist Joseph Mitchell's "Mohawks in High Steel" chronicled American Indian ironworkers in New York City and farther afield (New Yorker, September 17). Mike Cherry's powerful memoir, On High Steel: The Education of an Ironworker, appeared in 1974. In the 1970s ironworkers were prominent participants in the Smithsonian Institution's Festival of American Folklife, culminating in two weeks devoted to "Workers Who Build" amidst the summer-long bicentennial FAF. And there are frequent references to ironworkers throughout the writings of Archie Green, including this passage from Working Americans: Contemporary Approaches to Occupational Folklife (1978) that emphasizes the literally and figuratively foundational nature of the trade: "The ironworker's skill establishes the physical site where white collar lore emerges."
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cool vid guys
433 LA
ryaniw433 4 hours ago
right on brothers!
433LV
Last1onearth666 4 months ago
@kittensandlipstick
Credits for both songs are at the end of the film. The song at the beginning is Bud Parker's "Iron Worker's Lament." It came out in the mid-1960s as 45 rpm recording on the VANCO label out of Vancouver, WA, just across the Columbia River from Portland. I've been in touch with the Portland Ironworkers Local, but they don't know who the performer was. I'm still running down leads. You can get it on a CD in the Twisted Tales from the Vinyl Wasteland series.-Jim Leary
RLhs1968 6 months ago
@IRONSEAN7
Hey thanks, Iron Sean! One of the guys in this little film, Dave Nelson, boomed out to work with Local 7 in the early 1960s; he was part of the raising gang for the Prudential Insurance building. He especially enjoyed working with some Caughnawaga Mohawks on a crew, and also after hours at the Chantilly Bar. Anyway the guys here in Wisconsin's Local 383 are glad you like the film. And I like what you have on-line!
Jim Leary
RLhs1968 6 months ago
@CharmedQuarkZ99
Thanks for your memory re: my class's little film. I've been doing more documentation with ironworkers this summer, some of whom have worked on bridges across the Mississippi River joining IA and WI. Drinking hard but getting the job done right is still common enough, although on-the-job drinking is pretty much gone.--Jim Leary
RLhs1968 6 months ago
Great video! May I ask what the song is that plays at the beginning of the video?
kittensandlipstick 6 months ago
Cool video man! we love what we do! well,, when theres work, lately a lotta guys got the Ironworker blues on their couch! much respect Local 7 IW,, boston ma
IRONSEAN7 6 months ago