
OCAW 1-591 History Series; Segment 1
as researched by Douglas W. Erlandson

"Shell Strike of 1956"
On March 17, 1956, 320 members of OCAW 1-591 took a strike vote to enter into
a labor dispute against Shell Oil of Anacortes. The Union was seeking its first
ever collectively bargained agreement. The major points of contention were,
a seniority clause, wages and a grievance procedure.
The strike vote passed by a 93% margin. Voting in favor were 269 with 18 voting
no.

OCAW
District 1 Director Charles Armin was on site to help the newly organized Local
with their negotiations. International Representative Courtland Myers was
assigned
to lead the negotiations. As President, Robert Thurmond chaired the unions
negotiating committee. (In 1956, OCAW 1-591 was not amalgamated, as Shell
was the locals only employer.) The remaining committee members were,
Vice-President Gene Stender, Secretary Ed Snyder, Harold Yeoman, Tom McCormick
and Berlin Carr.
 Unlike todays strikes, Shell Oil shutdown the newly built $75,000,000
refinery. An undisclosed number of salaried workers and executives remained
inside, being quartered in Pullman cars. OCAW picketers Bob May and Virgil Avey
were Local 1-591's first picketers. They were on site and picketing within 10
minutes after hearing the news that the 'pin had been pulled'. OCAW maintained
pickets 24 hours a day outside the refinery. Both sides prepared for a long
dispute. Shell Oil was offering a 6% general wage increase with a minimum of 15 cents
hourly. The present scale was $1.96 to $2.54. The union was seeking the "Gulf
Coast" rate, ranging from $2.25 to $2.90.
OCAW
received immediate support from other local unions. The Anacortes Central Labor
Council agreed not to allow any of their members to cross the OCAW picket line
and the strike was unanimously endorsed by the Skagit Valley Building Trades
Council.
To help OCAW members affected by the strike, the union set a 'Strike Benefit
Committee' that was chaired by Berlin Carr. A food voucher program was set up
with Mutt Jackson the manager of 'Tradewell', who's grocery store was conveniently
located across the street from the union hall. The Benefit Committee also helped
members by paying their electric power bills. Executive Board member Harold
Yeoman visited many of the local banks to inform them before hand, that some
of the striking members would probably be falling behind on their loans but
everything would be made right when the strike ended.

On March 29th, Federal Mediator William Hosie contacted Shell Oil and OCAW
to schedule a preliminary meeting to discuss the differing issues between the
two parties. Both agreed to the mediation offer.
By now the entire community was passionately wrapped up in the dispute and was
hoping an early, amicable settlement would be reached. Shell Oil began mailing
job offers to the striking OCAW members, offering work to anyone willing to
cross the picket line. They also began taking out newspaper ads advertising
job vacancies to the community at large as well as out of county solicitations.
Twice Shell tried to bring in new employees without telling them that they would
have to cross a picket line. Almost all of them immediately quit when they found
out there was a labor dispute in progress.

Eventually
some OCAW members did scab the picket line. The most vocal was Guy Vaughn Lewis
Jr. He had informed the union through the local newspaper of his intention
to
cross the picket line. Several Letters to the Editor were printed
on the subject from both parties. By all accounts, the union had the communitys
support. Shell continued their position by taking out huge newspaper ads, presenting
the facts as they saw them. The union then set up a Public Relations Committee
and answered them by Letters to the Editor and newspaper ads of
their own.

As
might be expected, Mr. Lewis then became a target of the union members. On one
occasion, while driving through the line, Lewis claimed Arthur Beacham struck
his car with a metal object, scratching it. He then filed a complaint with authorities
which later lead to Mr. Beacham being arrested. The case later went to court,
where a crowded court room heard testimony from four witnesses for the defense,
and two for the prosecutor. Beacham was found guilty and fined $35. Up
until now, OCAW had allowed contractors to pass through the picket line, but
on April 9th, all but two passes were revoked by the union. President Thurmond
stated that, Shell was trying to demoralize the membership by having
contractors cross the line as well as trying to provoke picket line violence.
In early June, the committee took Shell's latest, revised offer to the membership
for a vote. Upwards to 225 members were on hand. After a long meeting wherein
each page was read, point by point, the members voting by secret ballot, rejected
the offer nearly unanimously. The disagreement remained over wages, seniority,
scheduling, hospital insurance, vacations, union security, and the grievance
procedure. A quick settlement was not in sight.
Support money started to come in from other Labor organizations. OCAW District
1 donated a whopping $1000! International Rep. Myers stated that in all his years
in the labor movement he had never seen such strong public support. Every trade
union in the area had sanctioned the strike and was giving their full support.

By
now the wives of the strikers were very active. They helped show a unified
OCAW by serving food and coffee to the picketers around the clock. And
they started
collecting coffee can rims to get a free 30 cup coffee pot from MJB
for the union hall. 75 lids were needed and when it became obvious the womens
support group wasnt going to be able to collect enough, MJB was
contacted and they were very gracious and gave them one.
In
a desperate move to get the plant up and running, Shell went to Oak Harbor to
recruit help from a group of soon to be discharged Navy crewmen. Shell was able
to hire about 30 sailors offering them a terrific future with the company. But
the refinery needed about 300 employees to operate it properly. They then tried
to recruit summer help from among some college students. Shell graciously pointed
out to them that this would be a great way to raise the tuition money they would
need for college. Several tried but soon quit. The passage through the picket
line proved to be too
traumatic.
On
May 28th, Al Noyes, a scab Shell employee returning to his home in Burlington
was critically injured at 2am when a large rock crashed through his windshield
striking him in the head. Noyes was discovered unconscious in his automobile
on the Avon cutoff to Burlington. According to the Sheriffs department,
the stone was five inches in diameter. Noyes was taken to a Skagit county hospital
and then to Swedish Hospital in Seattle, later he lost the sight in his left
eye. Sheriff Harold Hinshaw described the incident a case of definite
foul play. Shell Oil offered a huge $5000 reward for the arrest and conviction
of the person or persons responsible for the attack. Authorities were never
able to connect anyone with the incident.
 At
a well attended membership meeting, the committee reported that some progress
was being made. The company had offered a contract in California that had
recently
been accepted there. Although it had numerous items that came up short, it
was an improvement over the companys first proposal in Anacortes. Shell continued
to mail out back to work offers to the strikers as well as offer
jobs to the community. The number of takers was less than ten.
Most of them quit within 2 or 3 days.
Financial support for the striking local continued! OCAW locals 1-6, 1-356,
1-589, 1-120, 1-519, 1-128, 2-477 and
4-367 all sent regular monthly contributions.
Money was received from the Washington State CIO Council, Spokane Labor Council,
United Steel Workers of America and the Pulp & Sulfite Workers Union. Many
of the locals raised their dues to back the Anacortes Shell group.
In the spirit of solidarity, Canadas OCAW District Council generously
donated $1000 to the strikers as well. Even the Sheep Shearers Union made a
financial contribution, even though almost no one knew they even existed.


To help resolve the dispute, a 'Citizens Conciliatory Committee' was put together.
This unique committee was made up of 8 local business men who had the respect
of both management and labor. The committee members were Jerry Mansfield, Fred
Cartwright, Scott Richards, Bill McCracken, Lloyd Foster, Rufus Fox, Dick Wilson,
and Ivar Antonius. Above all else, they remained impartial as they explored
ways that might help resolve the strike. The committee met with Shell, with
the union and with Mediator Hosie. Never jointly, always separately. The committee's
efforts were a vital factor in the two parties reaching a tentative agreement.
On July 22nd the strike settlement agreement was signed by International Representative
Courtland Myers, Chairman R.E. Thurmond and Shell Oil.
The 122 day strike was
officially brought to a close.
 The
gains won by the union were: a good seniority clause, grievance procedure, improved
contract reopening language, improved vacation plan, a shop steward system,
safety language, even rain gear, all of which are still enjoyed by OCAW members
today. The wage issue however, remained unchanged from the original company
offer.
On the morning of July 24th the ex-strikers returned to work in unison. They
were met by R.C. Barton, Refinery Manager and A.D. Northcutt, Personnel Manager.
There were many smiles and much handshaking. Coffee was served by the company.
At the large gathering President Thurmond thanked the members of local 1-591
and their wives, OCAW International, fellow oil workers from other OCAW locals,
trade unions and labor organizations, as well as the community for their faithful
support. Everyones support helped bring the strike to an end.
Upon returning to work, the ex-strikers all received a retroactive pay check
that was part of the settlement agreement the union was able to get Shell to
agree to.

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