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Administrative Services Division > DWD Timeline History for
1883-1899
Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development
Timeline History: 1883-1899
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The
Wisconsin Bureau of Labor Statistics was
established in 1883 and headquartered at the
Capitol. Wisconsin became the 9th state to
create a state agency to collect
non-agricultural statistics. (The US Bureau of
Labor Statistics was established in 1884.) The
bureau was given authority to enforce laws
regulating the employment of children and women,
passed as early as 1867. The total budget for
the Bureau was $2,000.
In
1884, the Bureau published its first labor
statistics report. Safety related questions
asked on the 1884 survey: "What height are
your buildings; are they wood, brick or stone?
Have you fire escapes? What kind? Have you
apparatus for extinguishing fires?

|
1883
|
Governor
Jeremiah McLain Rusk
(1882-1889)

Labor
Commissioner Frank A. Flower (1883 ? 1887)

Early loggers
|
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The
Wisconsin State Militia was called to guard the
Allis Reliance Iron Works in May 1886. The
1800's normally favored business interests over
workers' collective actions. Labor Commissioner
Flower stated in the 1883-84 Biennial Report
"Strikes have been likened to war, but they
also may be likened to boils which show the
condition of the system. That it is deranged and
the blood impure and a constitutional remedy is
needed to drive the humors out".
|
1886 |

1886
Labor Strike
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Wisconsin's
first safety law was an 1887 machine statute,
which required fences or guards around gears,
shafts, bull-wheels and pulleys.
|
1887 |

"Accident
in the Machine Shop"
|
|
New
Factory inspectors began to enforce employment
laws.
Legislation
raised the minimum age of employment from age 12
to 13 for Wisconsin residents.
Commercial
establishments were regulated by new state law.
|
1889
|
Governors:
William Dempster Hoard (1889-1891)
George Wilbur Peck (1891-1895)
|
|
Legislation
passed to prohibit race discrimination in
restaurants, inns and other public
accommodations in Wisconsin.
|
1895
|
Governors:
William Henry Upham (1895-1897)
Edward Scofield (1897-1901)
|
|
Minimum
age for employment was raised from age 13 to 14
for Wisconsin residents.
|
1897 |
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Beginning
in 1867, labor groups secured laws to protect
young workers. Such legislation fixed age
limits, set educational requirements, restricted
work hours and prohibited young children from
working in industrial plants. The first work
permit program was instituted in 1899.
|
1899
|
The
first public employment office in the state was
established by the city of Superior.
|
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Updated
July 12, 2007
DWD Communications Office
Content Contact:
Chris Marschman