Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Women participants in "New York's Greatest Labor Day Parade" September 6, 1910. Signs read "Goff's Decision Promotes Derision" and "We Appeal From the Goff Court to the Court of the People."
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Newspaper clipping title reads "Striking Cloakmakers Filled the Streets Coming out of the Manhattan Lyceum After the Meeting." Article headline reads "50,000 Cloakmakers Involved in Strike." July 8, 1916.
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Group of men in the street holding signs in English and Yiddish. English sign reads "Shushansky's Workers 117 Essex St. Win 50 Hours $50 Treat." Yiddish sign reads "All workers at Shushansky's shop 117 Hester Street are going back to work. 50 hours, $50
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Marchers with banners supporting the 1910 Chicago Cloakmakers strike share the street with trolleys, autombiles, musicians and others.
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Illustration, by Lola, of a man and a woman representing the cloak boss and the union threatening each other. Original title and caption read, Peace Talk at the Point of a Dagger: He: "Do you love me kitten...?" She "Certainly, just as much as you love me
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Male employees of Jouvenile (sic) Cloak Co. ride in a horse-drawn carriage during the Cloakmakers Strike in 1910.
Kheel Center, Cornell University Library: Women posing for a group photo during the Cloakmakers strike of 1910.