American Council on Productivity"Left to Right: Will Lawther, President Executive Council, Trade Union Congress, Walter Reuther, Williamson, President General and Municipal Workers; Arthur Deaken, President Transport and General Workers Union; Tewson, Sec. Gen., British Trades Union Congress."
American Federation of Labor, Congress of Industrial Organizations
George Meany and Walter Reuther hold aloft a gavel at the AFL and CIO merger convention in New York Citym December 1955.
At home of Mayor Daniel Hoan, Socialist Mayor of Milwaukee, during 1937 Convention.-Left to Right: Roy Reuther, Walter Reuther, Daniel Hoan, Victor Reuther. August 1937
Three newsmen question Walter Reuther on contract issues, the Teamsters Jimmy Hoffa, and the new President John Kennedy. Contract issues involve the desire for a salary instead of an hourly wage with a sliding 30 hour work week and retraining for automation. Some notable quotes by Reuther regarding the AFL-CIO merger, Jimmy Hoffa, and COPE are included among others." 16mm
Brenda Miller receives 1st Scholarship. Given by GM Director Leonard Woodcock. Surrounded by family: Father Harry Miller, shown at right, a tool maker and long time member of Fisher 21 of Local 157 in Detroit. Also pictured are Brenda's Brothers, Howard and Bernard, and her mother, Mrs. Frances Miller
At a meeting of the CIO executive board at the Amalgamated Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago, July 18, union head Philip Murray indicated that the CIO would endorse the Democratic Presidential candidate -L-R-James B. Carey-Secretary-Murray- Tresurer-Walter Reuther- President of UAW-Alan S. Haywood - CIO Vice President circa 7/19/52
Washington: President Johnson hands several pens to Attorney General Robert Kennedy during a ceremony at the White House for the signing of the Civil Rights Bill into Law."Roy Reuther between Kennedy and LBJ." July 2, 1964
16mm, Walter Reuther and Bill Oliver, UAW fair employment commissioner, testifying in front of Judge John Hannah at the 1960 Civil Rights Hearings in Detroit, MI.
Civil rights leaders in Washington at the time of the 1963 March to Freedom. Stading at right is Walter Reuther and Roy Wilkins. Seated at far left is Whitney Young, unidentified, A. Philip Randolph and Martin Luther King, Jr.