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9

?31-4

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UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

& >1 ^

FRANCES PERKINS, Secretary

3

WOMEN’S BUREAU

s

MARY ANDERSON, Director

CRINNELL COLLEGE LIBRARY ,

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A

>

Hours and Earnings in Certain
Men’s-Wear Industries
RAINCOATS
SPORT JACKETS

Bulletin

of the

Women’s Bureau, No. 163-5

UNITED STATES

331.4

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE

LLti 3
Bo. U.3-5-

WASHINGTON: 1940

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C.




Price 10 cents

REPORTS ON MEN’S-WEAR INDUSTRIES IN THIS SERIES
Bulletin

Work Clothing; Work Shirts; Dress Shirts 163-1
Knit Underwear; Woven Cotton Underwear 163-2
Seamless Hosiery 163-3
Welt Shoes 163-4
Raincoats; Sport Jackets 163-5
Caps and Cloth Hats; Neckwear; Work and Knit Gloves;
Handkerchiefs 163-6
n




CONTENTS
Page

Letter oftransmittal
Raincoats_____________
Introduction
Earnings and hours
Week’s earnings________________
Hours worked2
Average hourly earnings
Sport jackets_____________________________________________________ _____
Introduction_____________________________ _________________________
Government specifications
Industrial classification of jackets_=_____________________________
Leather-jacket manufacture
Wool-jacket manufacture
The industry:
Basis of Women’s Bureau classification_________________________
Scope of survey
Leather and sheep-lined jackets
12
Method of wage payment
12
Established scales of wages
12
Policies concerning learners
12
Earnings and hours of experienced workers_____________________
Week’s earnings
13
Hours worked
16
Average hourly earnings
17
Wool jackets____
Method of wage payment
21
Established scales of wages_________________________
Policies concerning learners __________________________________
Earnings and hours of experienced workers_____________________
Week’s earnings
21
Hours worked
24
Average hourlyearnings
25
Earnings in firms making competing jacket lines____________________

v
1
1
2
2
4
6
6
6
7
7
7
8
9
9

13

21
21
21
21

29

TABLES
RAINCOATS

Page

1. Average and distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State_______
2. Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded, by sex and State_______
3. Average and distribution of hourly earnings, by sex and State_______

3
4
4

SPORT JACKETS

Pag»

1. Number of establishments visited and number of men and women for
whom earnings were reported, by State-Outdoor cold-weather
jackets
2. Average week’s earnings and average hourly earnings, by sex and
State—Leather and sheep-lined jackets
3. Distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State—Leather and sheeplined jackets
4. Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded by sex and State—Leather
and sheep-lined jackets
5. Distribution of hourly earnings in 1-cent intervals—Leather and
sheep-lined jackets
17
6. Distribution of hourly earnings in 5-cent intervals, by sex and State—
Leather and sheep-lined jackets
18




m

11
13
14
16

IV

CONTENTS
Page

7. Average hourly earnings, by occupation and State—Leather and
sheep-lined jackets----------------------------------------------------------------------8. Average week’s earnings and average hourly earnings, by sex and
State—Wool jackets_____________________________________________
9. Distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State—Wool jackets------10. Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded, by sex and State—Wool
jackets_______________________________________________ __________
11. Distribution of hourly earnings in 1-cent intervals—Wool jackets----12. Distribution of hourly earnings in 5-cent intervals, by sex and State—■
Wool jackets ___________________________________________________
13. Average hourly earnings, by occupation and State—Wool jackets-----




20
22
23
25
25
26
28

LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL
United States Department of Labor,
Women’s Bureau,

Washington, December 4, 1939.
I have the honor to transmit the fifth pamphlet in the
series of six on earnings and hours in men’s-wear industries surveyed
by the Women’s Bureau to secure wage data for the Division of Public
Contracts. This bulletin, which has to do with raincoats and the
garments termed variously windbreakers, mackinaws, sport jackets,
and so forth, is the last to go to press; they have been issued separately
as a measure of economy in distribution.
The reports were written by Arthur T. Sutherland, of the editorial
division.
Respectfully submitted.
Mart Anderson, Director.
Hon. Frances Perkins,
Secretary of Labor.
Madam:




HOURS AND EARNINGS IN CERTAIN
MEN’S-WEAR INDUSTRIES
RAINCOATS
INTRODUCTION
The raincoat industry is one of a number of men’s-wear industries
surveyed by the Women’s Bureau in order to supply wage and hour
data for the use of the Division of Public Contracts in establishing
prevailing wage rates.1 The survey covered establishments whose
chief products were men’s, women’s, and children’s oiled-cloth,
vulcanized, rubberized, and cravenette raincoats. Minor products
in several of the firms consisted of various types of sport clothes, but
in each case the major part of the total output was raincoats. As
this is a relatively small industry in the United States and is not
reported separately by the Bureau of the Census, the size of the
industry is not ascertainable. The industry is, however, situated
chiefly in Massachusetts and New York, with scattered production
important also in Ohio, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Indiana, New Jersey,
and Tennessee.
In the Women’s Bureau study, field investigators visited firms in
each of the States mentioned above except Illinois. The number of
establishments totaled 35, and these employed 2,581 workers. As
shown in the summary following, women comprised nearly two-thirds
(65 percent) of the work force. In New York they were only 43 per­
cent of the workers, but in Pennsylvania and Massachusetts they were
respectively 55 and 68 percent, and in the residual group of States,
which includes Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio, and Tennessee and is con­
sidered as one group because too few establishments were scheduled
for separate tabulation, women formed 78 percent of the workers.
State

Number of Number of Number of
establish­ employees
men
ments

Women
Number

Percent of
total

36

2,681

897

1,684

65.2

15
12
3
5

1,086
554
83
858

353
317
37
190

733
237
46
668

67.5
42.8
65.4
77.9

1 Includes 2 establishments in Indiana and 1 each In New Jersey, Ohio, and Tennessee.

Wage and hour data were obtained for each employee engaged in
the manufacture or handling of the product or equipment. The
data are for a pay period considered by the management as repre­
sentative of normal operation.
i A minimum-wage determination of the Secretary of Labor, which took effect Aug. 2, 1937, states that
40 cents an hour, or $16 for a 40-hour week, shall be the minimum wage for employees on Government con­
tracts in the men's-raincoat industry.




1

2

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

EARNINGS AND HOURS
Week’s earnings.
The range in the amount of the week’s earnings, regardless of the
time worked, was extremely wide, but the most common earnings were
below $20 and the average for the entire group was $19.60. On the
basis of 5-dollar intervals the largest group of workers, 27 percent,
earned $10 and under $15, and the next largest group, 25 percent,
earned $15 and under $20. Approximately equal proportions were
at the extremes of the wage scales; 13 percent had earnings below $10,
and 14 percent earned $30 and more.
There was great variation in the wages paid in the different States.
In New York, where the workers averaged $27.20 and as many as 24
percent of them earned $40 or more, wages were much more favorable
than in the other States covered. Massachusetts had the lowest
average, $17.55, but Pennsylvania also was relatively low, with
$18.10. Fifty-four percent of the workers in Massachusetts and of
the small group in Pennsylvania earned $10 and under $20; in New
York, where 54 percent earned $20 and more, there were 37 percent
with earnings of $10 and under $20. The proportions with earnings
below $10 varied from 9 percent in New York to 16 percent ^Massa­
chusetts.
In table 1 are apparent the very great differences in the earnings
of women and men. The average week’s earnings of all women were
$15.30, and they varied by State only from $15.10 in Massachusetts
to $16 in New York. Large proportions of the women in each case
earned $10 and under $20. New York is outstanding in the propor­
tion with earnings of $25 and over, but it also has the largest propor­
tion with earnings below $10.
The average week's earnings of all men were $27.65, and they
varied by State from $22.60 in Massachusetts to $35.45 in New York.
The most common earnings of men in Massachusetts were $15 and
under $25; 23 percent earned $20 and under $25, and 21 percent
earned $15 and under $20. Only 31 percent in Massachusetts earned
as much as $25. In contrast to this, in New York as many as 41
percent earned $40 and over and 22 percent earned $30 and under $40.
Hours worked.
The number of hours worked was reported for 1,851 workers em­
ployed in 25 of the 35 establishments. These data were not available
in the 4 establishments in Pennsylvania and Tennessee, so these
States are not included in the tabulations of hours worked and hourly
earnings.
Considering the workers in all States as a group, the largest propor­
tion, 43 percent, worked over 40 hours. The remainder were divided
almost equally between 40 hours and under 40 hours. In Massa­
chusetts 37 percent worked 40 hours and 32 percent worked less than
40 hours. In New York 44 percent worked over 40 hours and 36
percent worked 40 hours. More than half (54 percent) in the other
States worked over 40 hours, but nearly three-tenths (29 percent)
worked less than 40 hours.




Table 1.—Average and distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State
202065'

Total
Number of employees.................... ......... .
Average earnings 1 _................ .............. .

2,573
$19.60

Massa­
chusetts
1,074
$17. 55

New
York
556
$27.20

Men

Women

All employees
Week’s earnings

Pennsyl­
vania

Other
States 1

83
$18.10

860
$17.35

Total

Massa­
chusetts

New
York

Other
States 1

Total

Massa­
chusetts

New
York

Other
States 1

729
$15.10

236
$16.00

671
$15.15

a 891
$27. 65

345
$22.60

320
$35.45

189
$25.15

3.5
12.7
35.8
29.6
13.5
3.0
1.2
.4
.2

4.5
12.9
38.0
25.9
12.5
4.3
1.5
.4

12
114
31.4
28.0
12.7
4.2
2.1
1.7
1.3

2.4
11.9
319
34.9
115
1.0
.4

1.2
6.6
11.7
15.9
16.7
10.9
9.1
8.6
6 19.2

2.9
11.3
11.3
20.9
22.6
9.3
7.0
6.7
8.1

1.9
12.2
8.1
5.3
10.0
7.5
14.4
7 40. 6

0.5
5.8
9.5
17.5
25.4
118
15.9
4.2
6.3

* 1, 682
$15.30

Percent of employees
4.0
12.4
29.4
24.3
15.7
5.9
3.3
2.4
2.7

1.8
7.2
20.3
16.5
8.5
7.6
5.2
9.0
»210

10.8
30.1
211
18.1
8.4
6.0
2.4

2.0
10.6
29.3
3L0
16.9
11
3.8
.9
L4

Cumulative percents

Under $12........ ..........................-................
Under $14----------------- ----------------------Under $16___________ ____ ___________

7.2
13.2
22.7
319
45.3

8.8
16.4
25.2
39.3
50.9

17
9.0
16.9
25.0
32.0

3.6
10.8
22.8
37.2
47.0

7.4
12.5
23.7
36.0
46.5

9.3
16.2
29.1
45.0
57.7

10.0
17.4
28.8
47.1
61.6

10.6
18.6
32.2
46.2
55.5

8.6
113
28.2
42.0
514

3.4
7.9
11.1
16.4
21.9

6.1
14.2
17.7
23.2
28.7

.3
1.9
5.6
9.4
117

3.2
6.3
7.9
14.8
18.5

$16 and over....... ........... .........................—
$18 and over_________ ________ ____
$20 and over___..................... ......................

517
43.6
313

49.1
37.9
30.0

68.0
62.5
512

53.0
39.7
319

53.5
39.7
27.2

42.3
29.4
18.4

38.4
26.6
18.7

415
36.0
22.0

45.6
29.5
15.9

78.1
70.9
615

71.3
61.2
53.6

85.3
81.9
77.8

81.5
75.1
66.7

Under $8___________ _______________

RAINCOATS

2.7
10.6
27.4
24.9
14.6
5.7
4.0
3.3
6.8

i Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio, and Tennessee.
* Includes 46 women in Pennsylvania, not shown separately,
s Includes 37 men in Pennsylvania, not shown separately.
4 The mean—the simple arithmetic average.
J 10.5 percent earned $50 or more,
e 8.3 percent earned $50 or more.
717.8 percent earned $50 or more




CO

4

HOURS AKD EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR
Table 2.—Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded, hy sex and State

State

Total.........

Other States >__

Percent who
Num­
worked—
ber
with
hours
worked Under 40 Over
40
40
re­
ported hours hours hours
1,851
817
293
741

28.6

28.9

37.0
35.5
16.6

31.8
20. 5
29.0

Men

Women

All employees

Percent who
Percent who
Num­
Num­
ber
worked—
ber
worked—
with
with
hours
hours
worked Under 40 Over worked Under 40 Over
40 hours 40
40
40
re­
re­
hours
ported hours hours hours ported hours

42.5

1,227

31.7

24.2

44.1

624

23.4

37.2

39.4

81. 2
44.0
54.4

530
111
586

34.5
18.0
31.7

36.0
16.2
15.0

29.4
65.8
53.2

287
182
155

26.8
22.0
18.7

38.7
47.3
22.6

34.5
30.8
58.7

iIndiana, New Jersey, and Ohio.

In Massachusetts and the group “other States” a larger proportion
of the women than of the men worked less than 40 hours, but in
New York the opposite was true. The proportion of women who
worked 40 hours or more varied from 65 percent in Massachusetts to
82 percent in New York. The proportion of men varied from 73
percent in Massachusetts to 81 percent in the group “other States.”
Average hourly earnings.
Hourly earnings were computed for the 1,851 workers with hours
worked reported by dividing the week’s earnings of each employee by
the number of hours he or she worked in the pay period. The average
earnings of the entire group were 47.8 cents an hour. They varied
from 43.2 cents in the residual group of States to 70.1 cents in New
York.

20.1
6.6

7.4
5.9

5.1
7.2

3.7
3.3
12.7 * 48.2

44.1
70.1
43.2

3.9
2.7
1.6

Total men..........................

1, 227
624

38.7
65.9

3.2
2.1

5.2
2.4

cents

cents

cents

cents

j

20,
i

cents

U nder

817
293
741

over

cents and
60

27.1
6.7

Other States 8---------------

cents

under

15.6
5.9

under

9.2
2.2

50,

18.7

7.6
14.6
2.7 2 49.8
6.7
10.9

under

6.5

4.9
5.1
7.2

45,

6.8

8.7
4.1
6.1

under

6.9

12.6
6.1
22.5

40,

15.6

17.6
6.5
28.5

cents

55,

60

55

50

45

under 40
35,

20.2

16.5
7.8
9.6

under

12.4

under
cents
6.9
7.6
9.9
4.9

6.0
5.1
2.0

Massachusetts...................

35

25

4.3

cents

30,

47.8

under

2.8

20

25,

Total-................... - 1,851

30

,

Percent of employees whose earnings were -

1

earnings (cents !)

ployees

A verage h o u rly

State

N u m b er of em ­

Table 3.—Average and distribution of hourly earnings, by sex and State

1 The mean—the simple arithmetic average.
,
, .
a
2 11.9 percent earned 60 and under 80 cents; 10.2 percent, 80 cents and under $1; and 27.6 percent, $1 or more.
8 Indiana, New Jersey, and Ohio.
. __
*
^ nn
* 16.3 percent earned 60 and under 70 cents; 8 percent, 70 and under 80 cents; 3.5 percent, 80 and under 90
cents; 5.3 percent, 90 cents and under $1; and 15.1 percent, $1 or more.

There was little concentration of hourly earnings in New York; 10
percent was the largest single group, in contrast to 18 percent in
Massachusetts and 29 percent in other States. Nearly one-fifth (18
percent) of the New York workers earned less than 30 cents, but
one-half had earnings of 60 cents or more, over one-fourth (28 percent)



5

RAINCOATS

of $1 or more. In Massachusetts there was some concentration In
the two groups that together made BO and under 40 cents (34 percent),
but 18 percent earned less than 30 cents and 15 percent earned 60
cents or more.
The great differences between the earnings levels of women and
those of men are indicated clearly in table 3 and the summary that
shows the averages in the various States. For all women the average
earnings were 38.7 cents an hour. Nearly half of them (47 percent)
had earnings of 35 and under 45 cents, but as many as 18 percent
earned less than 30 cents, and only 12 percent earned 50 cents or more.
By State, women’s average hourly earnings varied only from 37.4
cents in New York to 39.6 cents in the group “other States.”
W omen
State

Total___________________
Massachusetts__________________________
Other States 2..............................................

Men

Number

Average
hourly
earnings 1
(cents)

Number

1,227

38.7

624

65.9

530
111
586

37.9
37.4
39.6

287
182
155

65.4
90.0
57.0

Average
hourly
earnings 1
(cents)

1 The mean—the simple arithmetic average.
2 Indiana, New Jersey, and Ohio.

The average hourly earnings of men were 65.9 cents. More than
two-thirds of the men (68 percent) had earnings of 50 cents or more,
15 percent averaging $1 or more. Only 7 percent had earnings below
30 cents.
The average of 90 cents earned by the men in the New York firms
was greatly in excess of the averages in the other localities, which
were 55.4 cents for Massachusetts and 57 cents for the other States.




SPORT JACKETS
INTRODUCTION
This report concerning earnings and hours of employees engaged in
the production of men’s outdoor cold-weather jackets forms a part
of the Women’s Bureau study of men’s-wear industries made for the
Division of Public Contracts at the request of the Secretary of Labor.
Agents of the Bureau visited factories that specialized in the manu­
facture of leather, sheep-lined, or wool jackets or coats purchased by
the United States Government. The survey was conducted in the late
months of 1937.
There is such a wide variety of types and styles of outdoor jackets
and of materials from which they are manufactured that no simple
term or characteristic describes the entire group. However, some
indication of the many types of jackets and coats manufactured is given
by the specifications in the orders for jackets purchased by the Gov­
ernment and by the classifications used in the trade to designate such
products.
Government specifications.
The United States Government issues specifications for outdoor
cold-weather jackets, made of specified materials and in specified
lengths, under the following titles:
Garment title

Material

Windbreakers (lumberjackets) __ Black sheepskin, wool lined
Red and black plaid, 95 percent
wool, unlined.
Overcoating, 32-ounce, with knit­
ted collar and cuffs, unlined.
Leather, horsehide
Jackets, winter flying
Shearling, sheep, electrified
Mackinaw (for Regular Army). Shelter-tent duck, 30-ounce felt or
32-ounce melton (body lining),
style double-breasted.
Coats, mackinaw, commercials - Melton 95 percent wool, style
single-breasted, double back and
chest.
Coats, nurses’, moleskin, sheep- Moleskin cloth (cotton), lining of
sheepskin.
lined.
Jacket, pea (Alaskan clothing)__ 8-ounce duck, 20-ounce melton,
and 13-ounce felt, quilted lining.
Parka, fur trimmed----------------- 8-ounce duck trimmed with wolf,
wolverene, or lynx fur in hood
and sleeves.
Parka, fur (Alaskan clothing).. Reindeer summer skin
Squirrel skin, tanned

Length,
(size 42)

28 inches.
28 inches.
28 incnes.

34 inches.
30

or 32
inches.

42% inches.
35 inches.

While no other specifications were obtained from the Government by
the Public Contracts Division, firms scheduled had orders for the fol­
lowing additional types of jackets: Coats—marine, moleskin, sheepskin6



SPORT JACKETS—INTRODUCTION

7

lined; jackets navy pea, melton, heavy twill; wool coats—jumper
style for Indian Service.
In its own specifications, therefore, the United States Government
does not use one title to designate a coat of any given material or style.
A mackinaw may be of duck, wool-lined, or of wool, and a pea jacket
may be of the same materials and general construction. Jackets 32
inches and longer are called jackets, mackinaws, or coats. The 28-inch
jacket is consistently called a windbreaker or a lumberjacket, though
it may be made of various materials.
Industrial classification of jackets.
While Government specifications for jackets are issued under a few
titles, the trade employs many to designate differences in style of
outdoor, cold-weather, work, or sport jackets. Jackets ranging in
length from 30 to 40 inches and double-breasted are called mackinaws,
reefers, collegiates, navy peas, and by other names. Jackets often of
the same length but single-breasted and double-backed are called
mackinaws, work jackets, stags, cruisers, hunting coats, and by names
of other sports. The jacket that is 24 to 28 inches in length may be
made like the single-breasted type of coat except that it is banded at
the waist, or it may be a garment requiring no special skill; it is called
a blazer, a windbreaker, a lumberjacket, a cossack, and by other
names. Firms that specialize in high-grade jackets frequently give
each of their products a special name for advertising purposes.
Leather-jacket manufacture.
Leather jackets made in 1937 were cut, in the main, from horsehide,
capeskin, and suede, though some firms reported jackets of goatskin,
sheepskin, and pigskin. They were lined with wool, kasha, rayon, or
sateen, or were unlined. The jackets were made up in hip and waist
lengths, straight and bloused, buttoned and zippered, and in numerous
styles.
Regardless of the style, lining, or length, the production of leather
jackets requires greater skill than is required for cotton work or sport
jackets. Skins are relatively costly, so good workmanship is essential
to avoid spoilage. Skins must be cut singly by hand, the process being
known as short-knife or draw-knife cutting. They are stitched on a
specially constructed sewing machine having a compound feed that
pushes the stiff material along as it is stitched. Employer and em­
ployee alike recognize the leather cutters and sewing-machine opera­
tors as more skilled workmen than cutters and operators on similar
jackets of wool or cotton mixtures.
While some of these firms make sheepskin coats with the skin as the
outer material, more frequently the sheepskin is the lining for a coat
made of moleskin (a cotton material), or of leatherette or corduroy
While the skin must be liand-cut like any jacket leather, the fact that
it is a lining with wool exposed permits of the stitching being less
carefully done. In 1937 very few firms specialized in the sheepimed coat; rather it was made by firms producing other leather jackets.
Wool-jacket manufacture.
Wool cloth for jackets is cut with an electric cutter. The heavier
wools are best stitched on a sewing machine constructed like the
leather-stitching machine. The lighter wools can be stitched on
cotton-garment sewing machines after changes in attachments are



8

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

made, though a few special machines may be needed. While best
practice requires such a division of wool-jacket manufacturing,
actually some plants equipped only with the cotton-garment machines
produce not only the lighter wool jackets but some of the heavier
ones. The belief, substantiated by practice, seems to be that any firm
equipped to manufacture cotton work clothes or woolen garments can
produce a line of wool jackets, but that leather jackets present difficult
problems.
The industry.
The United States Census of Manufactures does not list the outdoor
cold-weather jacket as an industry. In 1937 it was included in “men’s
cotton, leather, and allied garments.” The Census figures show that
there were 78 establishments making leather and sheep-lined clothing,
consisting of leather coats and jackets (including sheep-lined), other
leather garments, and sheep-lined coats excluding leather. These
employed an average of 4,075 workers in 1937. The value of these
products was reported to be $19,288,528. The firms making other
types of outdoor jackets were combined with men’s work-clothing
factories and only data pertaining to value and quantity of specific
products were shown separately. The total value of these outdoor
jackets (including men’s, youths’, and boys’ windbreakers and lumberjackets; mackinaws, mackinaw coats, reefers, and other short coats;
melton jackets; blanket-lined and similar coats; leatherette coats and
jackets; hunting coats and vests; riding and camp clothing; ski suits
and snow suits; and other sport clothing) amounted to $38,145,706.
The market for work or sport jackets has not been large enough to
employ many persons the year round on leather and sheep-lined jackets
or on wool jackets. Of a total of 89 firms visited, only 22 made
jackets solely of one or the other material without filling in with other
garments. Ten of these firms were in New York, four in New Jersey,
and four in Massachusetts.
Firms visited, that produced predominantly the leather and
sheep-lined jackets, often produced wool hip and waistline jackets of
different types, snow suits or ski suits, and a few corduroy jackets,
wool-lined. A very few of these firms devoted part of the year to the
production of raincoats, summer slacks, or fur coats, while some
conducted the jacket line as a department of factories producing
dress fur coats, leather work gloves, and sporting goods.
Where the production stress was on wool jackets, snow or ski
suits of wool frequently were made, and many firms made specific
types of leather jackets. The larger number of wool-jacket firms
supplemented jacket production with another product in the slack
season. Such products included men’s overcoats, wool trousers,
women’s coats and suits, women’s spring sport coats, cotton blouses,
and jackets, raincoats, barrack bags. In a few instances the wool
jacket was a department in a factory with other departments producing
flannel shirts, caps and hats, fur and wool overcoats.
Two groups in addition to the factories whose major production is
of leather, sheep-lined, or wool jackets compete in this field: One is
the small factory that makes a cheaper jacket of mixed wool and
cotton, or of leatherette; the other is the cotton-work-garment firm
that makes a quantity production item, usually of mixed wool and
cotton, to keep workers employed the year round. While firms



SPORT JACKETS—INTRODUCTION

9

specializing in leather and sheep-lined jackets did not feel the competi­
tion from these cotton-garment firms, a few large producers were
repeatedly mentioned by wool-jacket manufacturers as offering severe
competition in all cheaper lines of both hip and waistline jackets.
Some of the largo cotton-garment firms produced the wool-mixed
jacket in separate factories as a regular item, but others placed orders
wherever plants were running slack, sending out a machine man
with parts to make necessary machine adjustments.
Basis of Women’s Bureau classification.
From the foregoing description of the overlapping of products,
the difficulties in segregating outdoor cold-weather jacket manufac­
turing as an industry are clear. Rather, the segregation can be based
only on the products made in greatest volume during the year. The
Women’s Bureau considered first the length of the period in 1937
during which the factory or factory department was engaged on
leather, sheep-lined, or wool jackets, and the length of time on woolmixed or leatherette jackets or other types of garment. The factory
whose production was on wool-mixed or leatherette jackets or other
types of garment has been eliminated from tables, and the pay-roll
data for these establishments are used only to show the earnings in
plants competing with the firms in the classes selected for study.
Factories that operated the larger part of the year on leather, sheeplined, or wool jackets were classified further according to the produc­
tion during the period for which a pay roll was transcribed. Where
two-thirds of the production was on leather and sheep-lined jackets,
the factory was tabulated under this classification. In only three
cases were there added to the leather group factories whose leatherjacket production during the pay-roll week was listed as 50 percent
of the total; these factories were added because an additional part of
the production was on sheep-lined ski suits or on fur coats—the produc­
tion being more largely on skins than on wools. All other factories
were tabulated under wool jackets.
In the few factories where volume production was found both on
leather and on wool jackets, machine operators as well as cutters
worked continuously on one product; but in the larger number of
factories surveyed, some of the workers were transferred from leather
to wool, or from wool to leather as the demands required. For this
reason it is not feasible to separate the workers by the specific product
on which they were employed in the pay-roll week.
Scope of survey.
Every effort was made to visit all firms whose major products
were leather, sheep-lined, or all-wool men’s jackets in States in which
more than three firms were located. The 13 States visited were as
follows: Connecticut, Illinois, Iowa, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minne­
sota, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Maine was not visited because the
number of firms known to specialize in these products did not exceed
three, but the records of one Maine plant were secured from the
firm’s Boston office. Visits to four Ohio firms yielded no reports, as
production had shifted to other fields or no hour records were kept.
In this report data from some States are combined because too few
establishments were scheduled for separate tabulation. (See table 1
for States and groups of States.)



10

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

As far as can be ascertained, all men’s-leather-jacket firms in
States covered that employed 50 or more persons, and many smaller
ones, were scheduled. Attention is called to the fact that firms
specializing in women’s leather jackets were not included because
such firms insisted that the style element dominates the industry,
which is concentrated in New “York City. In New Jersey several
large sheep-lined-jacket firms would not furnish pay-roll data until
after January 2, as accountants were closing the books for the year.
It is believed that all firms in the States included whose major
product was wool jackets and whose staff comprised 50 or more persons
were covered. In all, week’s earnings records were obtained for 5,140
experienced persons employed in 73 leather, sheep-lined, or wool jacket
firms in the fall months of 1937. Records of hours worked were re­
ported for 4,253 persons in 58 of these firms. _
_
Cotton-garment firms that produced wool-mixture jackets, or some
wool jackets, and other small factories specializing in wool-mixture or
leatherette or corduroy coats were not included in the survey proper.
However, 12 of the former and 6 of the latter, mentioned frequently as
offering sharp competition to the wool-jacket industry proper, were
visited, and in 16 of them the pay-roll records of employees working on
wool or wool-mixture jackets only were taken. One cotton-garment
firm visited claimed that its wool-mixture jackets had been distributed
to so many plants that it was not feasible to separate the pay-roll
record of wool-jacket operators from those of shirt or overall operators.
The second cotton-garment firm that produced wool or wool-mixed
jackets in one plant had furnished a pay roll for the jacket plant for
another survey earlier in 1937.
. ,
.
As has been stated (p. 8), only 22 of the 73 firms majoring m
leather, sheep-lined, or wool jackets produced solely jackets of these
three materials without other garments in the slack seasons. How­
ever, the pay-roll records of cutters and sewing-machine operators
were transcribed only for those employed solely on leather, sheep-lined,
or wool jackets in the week studied. The scope of the survey, with
number of establishments and of employees covered, the latter ex-»
elusive of learners, is shown in table 1.
From table 1 it is apparent that the great majority of the workers
were women, though the proportion varied for the different products.
Women comprised 60 percent of the work force in firms producing
leather and sheep-lined jackets, 77 percent in the wool-jacket firms, and
83 percent in the firms making mixed wool and cotton or leatherette
jackets. Women are relatively fewer in the firms making leather and
sheep-lined jackets, as the work requires greater skill, and the cutting
operations, usually done by men, are more important in the production
of these jackets than is the case for wool or cotton jackets. By State,
the proportion of women in leather and sheep-lined jacket firms
varied from 41 percent in New York and Connecticut to 73 percent in
Minnesota; in firms making wool jackets the proportion varied from
73 percent in Minnesota and 74 percent in New Jersey and Pennsyl­
vania to 91 percent in Iowa and Michigan; and in the firms making
mixed wool and cotton or leatherette jackets it varied from 76 percent
in Wisconsin to 93 percent in Iowa and Missouri.
Usually, cold-weather-jacket production is heavy until the first of
December. In all sections of the country the season in 1937 ended
about November 1. Consequently, it was necessary to take pay-roll '



SPORT JACKETS----INTRODUCTION

11

records in an earlier fall month to secure a week of steady operation,
though agents visited the plants in November and December.
All employers agreed that 1937 had been a very light year for orders
of outdoor cold-weather jackets. This condition affects the records
presented in two particulars: First, not so many persons were em­
ployed, and second, even in pay-roll periods regarded as representative
of full employment, the volume frequently was insufficient to yield
highest earnings to piece workers.
Table 1.

Number of establishments visited and number of men and women for
whom earnings were reported, by State—Outdoor cold-weather jackets
Establishments whose major products were as specified

Illinois...............................
Iowa, Michigan, and
Missouri
Massachusetts, Maine,
and New Hampshire___
Minnesota________ ____
New Jersey and Pennsyl­
vania_____ __________
New York and Connec­
ticut.-.............................
Wisconsin________ ____

615
83.3

123
16.7

|

I
£

Men

Employees

Total

438
22.8

Number of es­
tablishments -

25 1,923 1,485
100.0 77.2

Total

Men

Total
Percent distribution.

Employees

Women

Number of es­
tablishments

Men

Women

Total

Employees

Mixed wool and cotton or
leatherette jackets i

Wool jackets

j

State

Number of es­
tablishments

Leather and/or sheeplined jackets

48 3, 217 1,934 1, 283
100.0 60.1 39.9

16

738
100.0

5

256

148

108

2

330

253

24

223

120

103

32

244

223

21

24

61

57

4

* 10
0

842
380

511
277

331
103

'3
9

115
503

94
369

21
134

65
1

173
104

140
91

33
13

9

734

444

290

5

494

365

129

5

375

308

67

11
3

269
513

111
323

158
190

4

237

181

56

1

25

19

6

77

\ Pnly plants named frequently as competitors in the wool-jacket market were, included. See p. 29
2 Iowa and Missouri.
3 Iowa and Michigan.
4 Massachusetts only.
* Massachusetts and New Hampshire.
6 Massachusetts and Maine.

202065°—40----3




LEATHER AND SHEEP-LINED JACKETS
Method of wage payment.
In leather-jacket cutting (see p. 7), the cutters are paid by the
piece to a very large extent; only about one in every six were found to
be paid, for some special reason, at a time rate. Regular sewingmachine operation is paid at piece rates entirely. Onty sample or
repair machine operators are on a time basis.
The other manufacturing operations are paid on a time basis in
approximately three-fourths of the cases. The operations include
such tasks as: Tacking skins on cutting tables, marking for buttons
and buttonholes, trimming edges, inspecting, folding, ticketing, and
boxing. Nonmanufacturing occupations are practically always paid
on a time basis.
Established scales of wages.1
In the matter of organization, the leather and sheep-lined jacket
industry comes under the Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America.
According to the director of research of this union: “Piece rates for
operators * * * are established * * * at a level which will
provide a minimum of 45 cents per hour to experienced operators.
The piece rates for operators actually yield an a.verage of above 60
cents per hour to all operators. The rates for cutters are established
so that experienced cutters will earn an average of a dollar an hour.”
Under the cotton-garment code of N. R. A. the rates were fixed as
follows: 45 cents for sewing-machine operators; 75 cents for shortknife cutters; 40 cents for unskilled ($14 for 36 hours). “The number
of learners * * * shall not exceed 10 percent of the total number
of manufacturing employees in said plant. A learner shall be classi­
fied as a person who has worked in this industry for a period of not
more than 12 weeks in whatsoever capacity. Learners shall be paid
not less than 50 percent of the minimum wage for first 4 weeks; twothirds for second 2 weeks; and 80 percent of the minimum wage for
third 4 weeks.”
Policies concerning learners.
Of the 48 firms producing principally leather jackets, one-half stated
that they employed beginners as needed. The other half said that
when they could not secure trained leatherworkers they hired workers
experienced on wool coats, suits, or dresses, or kindred garments.
The Massachusetts firms that reported learners said they considered
that the State minimum wage for learners in the men’s-furnishings
industry applied to them; that is, a guarantee of $8.50 a week for the
first 3 months and $10 for the second 3 months. Firms in other States
usually put machine operators on piece rates immediately, while be­
ginner cleaners and trimmers and other workers were paid a time rate.
Only 18 firms actually were employing beginners at the time the pay
rolls were copied. Beginners numbered 71 persons, and hourly earn­
ings were computed for 58 of these. The largest single group, 31
percent, earned 30 cents, but 28 percent earned 25 and under 30 cents,
and 26 percent had earnings below 25 cents. The arithmetic average
was 27.9 cents an hour.
i A minimum-wage determination of the Secretary of Labor, which took effect May 13, 1938, states that
42^ cents an hour, or $17 for a 40-hour week, shall be the minimum wage for employees on Government
contracts in the leather and sheep-lined jacket industry.

12




13

LEATHER AND SHEEP-LINED JACKETS

EARNINGS AND HOURS OF EXPERIENCED WORKERS

Week’s earnings.
The 48 firms making principally leather or sheep-lined jackets em­
ployed 3,217 workers in the fall of 1937. These workers had average
earnings of $22.45 for the pay-roll week taken, a period said to repre­
sent full employment,. Thirty percent earned $20 and under $30,
and 25 percent $15 and under $20. Less than 1 percent earned exactly
$15 and 75 percent earned more than $15. Equal proportions of the
workers, 7 percent in each case, had earnings at the extremes of the
wage scale, under $10 and $40 or more.
Average weekly earnings approximated the average for all States in
Massachusetts ($21.80), in Minnesota ($22.30), in Iowa and Missouri
($22.35), and in Wisconsin ($23.35). They reached $25.25 in New
York and Connecticut and $28.75 in Illinois. They fell to $19.45 in
New Jersey and Pennsylvania. The details in regard to week’s
earnings of all employees are given in tables 2 and 3.
Table 2.—Average week’s earnings and average hourly earnings, by sex and State—

Leather and sheep-lined jackets

State

Number Number
of estab­ of em­
week’s
lish­
ployees earnings1
ments

Number with hours worked
reported
Estab­
lish­
ments

Average
Employ­ hourly
earnings1
ees
(cents)

All employees
Total............ .................. .
Illinois__________________
Iowa and Missouri_______
Massachusetts...............
Minnesota__
New Jersey and Pennsylvania___
New York and Connecticut__
Wisconsin________

48

3,217

$22. 45

35

2,420

5
4
10
6
9
11
3

256
223
842
380
734
269
513

28. 75
22. 35
21. 80
22.30
19. 45
25. 25
23.35

2
3
8
5
7
7
3

123
746
335
508
163
512

63.4

51.8

60.8

Women
Total... ... ______

48

1,934

$18. 76

35

1,495

Illinois............. ......... __
Iowa and Missouri.......... ........ _
Massachusetts___________
Minnesota- ________
New Jersey and Pennsylvania
New York and Connecticut_______
Wisconsin____________

5
4
10
6
9
11
3

148
120
511
277
444
111
323

25.95

2

87

17.50
20. 30
16.70
16.95
19.65

8
5
7
7
3

463
245
297
63
323

48. 8

56.4

Men
Total-............... ............ .........

48

1,283

$28.00

35

925

75.2

Illinois_____ ____ _ ______ _
Iowa and Missouri______ __________
Massachusetts____________________
Minnesota. __
_ ______ .
New Jersey and Pennsylvania___ _____
New York and Connecticut__ .
Wisconsin.-.___ ___________ _______

5
4
10
6
9
11
3

108
103
331
103
290
158
190

32. 50
26 85
28. 50
27. 55
23. 60
31.10
29. 70

2

36

95.1

8
5
7
7
3

283
90
211
100
189

79. 3
86. 3

i The mean—the simple arithmetic average; not computed w’here base less than.25.




77.4
75.2

Table 3.—Distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State—Leather and sheep-lined jackets
Percent of employees whose earnings were—
Number
of em­
ployees

State

Under
$10

510, under 515, under 520, under 525, under 530, under 535. under 540. under $50 and
$40
$50
$35
over
$30
$25
$20
$15

Under
$15

Over $15

$15

Total. __

------- --------------

Illinois___
__
-- -----------------Iowa and Missouri___ .. .. - — --­
Massachusetts - - --­
Minnesota___
___ ___
. New Jersey and Pennsylvania------------New York and Connecticut _ _ --------Wisconsin_________ _____ --- -

3,217
256
223
842
380
734
269
513

7.1
.4
4.0
9.7
6.6
10.8
8.9
1.9

16.7
5.1
18.4
17.9
11.3
23.8
14.9
14.4

25.2

18.7

11.4

8.5

5.2

5.5

1.7

23.8

0.9

75.3

19.1
26.0
24.0
29.5
27.4
19.0
26.9

17.2
20.6
19.4
21.1
18.4
14.9
18.5

17.6
8.1
9.4
16.3
8.2
11. 5
13.8

16.0
10.3
7.2
5.8
4.1
8.6
14.0

8.6
6.3
5.3
2.6
3.3
7.4
6.0

12.1
6.3
5.0
5.8
3.0
9.3
3.9

3.9

1.5

2.0
1.1
1.1
5.6
.4

5.5
22.4
27.7
17.9
34.6
23.8
16.4

2.6
.4
.2

93.0
77.6
71.9
82.1
62.8
75.8
83.4

0.1

29.7

1.0

69.3

.5

Women
Total____________

------- --

Illinois .
_
_______________ - Iowa and Missouri—-----­
Massachusetts____ . -----Minnesota ---- - New Jersey and Pennsylvania------ —
New York and Connecticut---------------Wisconsin

1,934

9.3

20.4

32.2

22.0

9.2

4.3

1.6

1.0

148
120
511
277
444
111
323

.7
7.5
13.9
6.1
12.2
16.2
2.8

7.4
23.3
21.5
12.3
27.3
22.5
20.4

24.3
33.3
30.7
35.7
33.8
28.8
33.4

18.2
23.3
22.3
24.5
18.7
21.6
25.4

15.5
4.2
6.8
14.8
6.3
8.1
11.5

18.2
3.3
3.7
3.2
1.4
1.8
5.3

8.8
4.2
.8
.4
.5
.9
1.2

6.8
.8
.2
2.5

.4

8.1
30.8
35.4
18.4
39.4
38.7
23.2

14.7

14.7

10.6

12.2

4.3

15.0

0.7

84.3

13.0
18.4
12.7

8.3
8. 7
12.4

9.3

7.6
14.2

10.5

1.9
12.6
15.7
16.5
27.2
13.3
4.7

3.7

8.3

19.4
12.6
12.4
14.6
7.6

94.4
87.4
83.4
83.5
72.4
86.7
94.7

.2
4.1
.9

91.9
69.2
64.4
81.6
56.5
60.4
76.8

Men
Total-------------

Wisconsin. _ __ _

--------------- ---

___________ ___




1,283
108
103
331
103
290
158
190

4.0

3.3
7.8
8.6
3.8
.5

11.1
1.9
12.6
12.4
8.7
18.6
9.5
4.2

14.7
12.0
17.5
13.6
12.6
17.6
12.0
15.8

13.8
15.7
17.5
14.8
11.7
17.9
10.1
6.8

20.4
12.6
13.3
20.4
11.0
17.9

28.9

5.1
2.9
2.8
9.5
1.1

.3
.5

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN'S WEAR

All employees

LEATHER AND SHEEP-LINED JACKETS

15

There was a very wide range in the week’s earnings paid to the
employees in each State group, though in every case but Illinois and
Minnesota the most common week’s earnings were from $10 to $25,
the proportion of workers who received such earnings varying from 49
percent in New York and Connecticut to 70 percent in New Jersey
and Pennsylvania. In Illinois and Minnesota the concentration of
week’s earnings was somewhat higher; 54 and 67 percent, respectively,
of the workers had earnings of $15 to $30. In Wisconsin the concen­
tration at $15 to $30 (59 percent) was practically the same as that at
$10 to $25 (60 percent).
Low earnings were paid more generally in Massachusetts and in
New Jersey and Pennsylvania, where respectively 28 and 35 percent
of the workers had earnings of less than $15. In contrast to these are
the large number of workers in New York and Connecticut, 31 per­
cent, and in Illinois, 41 percent, who were paid $30 or more. In
New York and Connecticut, however, a substantial proportion of the
employees (24 percent) had earnings below $15.
The average week’s earnings of the men employed in the leather
and sheep-lined jacket factories varied from $23.60 in New Jersey and
Pennsylvania to $32.50 in Illinois. The men in New York and Con­
necticut also had high average earnings, $31.10, while those in the
remaining States averaged between $26 and $30.
There was little concentration of men’s earnings at any point in the
wage scale, and the distribution of earnings shows that roughly 14
percent of the men had earnings in each of the four $5 intervals from
$15 to $35; 27 percent were paid $35 or more. In only three States
were there as many as one-fifth of the men with earnings in any $5
interval; in Illinois and in Minnesota one-fifth earned $25 and under
$30, and in Wisconsin nearly three-tenths earned $30 and under $35.
The proportion of men who were paid $30 or more varied from only
26 percent in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and 39 percent in Min­
nesota to 55 percent in Wisconsin; it was 50 percent or more also in
Illinois and in New York and Connecticut. In New Jersey and
Pennsylvania as many as 27 percent were paid less than $15. Com­
pared to this large proportion were only 2 percent in Illinois, 5 percent
in Wisconsin, and from 13 to 17 percent in the other States who had
such low earnings.
The week’s earnings of women were considerably lower than those
of men, and their average earnings ranged from $16.70 in New Jersey
and Pennsylvania to $25.95 in Illinois. In only one other State—
Minnesota—did women average as much as $20. States where women
had relatively low average earnings were (besides New Jersey and
Pennsylvania) New York and Connecticut with $16.95 and Massa­
chusetts with $17.50. The difference between men’s and women’s
average earnings varied from $6.55 in Illinois to $14.15 in New York
and Connecticut.
In general, the most common earnings of women were from $10 to
$25; 51 percent in New York and Connecticut and 61 percent in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania had earnings of $10 and under $20, and from
53 to 60 percent in Massachusetts, Wisconsin, and Minnesota earned
$15 and under $25. In Iowa and Missouri identical proportions (57
percent) earned $10 and under $20 and $15 and under $25. Women
in Illinois had somewhat higher earnings, as 58 percent earned $15
and under $30 and as many as 34 percent earned $30 and over. In



16

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

no other State did one-tenth of the women earn $30 or more, and no
woman in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, New York and Connecticut,
or Wisconsin earned as much as $40. The proportion with earnings
below $10 varied from 1 percent in Illinois and 3 percent in Wisconsin
to 14 percent in Massachusetts and 16 percent in New York and
Connecticut.
Hours worked.
The number of hours worked in the pay-roll week was reported for
2,420 employees, or three-fourths of the total for whom week’s earn­
ings were reported. From table 4, which gives a summary of the
hours worked, it is seen that one-half of the employees had less than
40 hours of work, more than one-fifth (22 percent) worked 40 hours,
and almost three-tenths (29 percent) exceeded 40 hours.
There was a pronounced diversity in working hours among the dif­
ferent States. In only one locality—New York and Connecticut—did
the majority of the workers (56 percent) work longer than 40 hours.
New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and Iowa and Missouri, were the only
others in which the majority worked 40 hours or more; in the first
two one-fourth of the employees worked 40 hours and more than twofifths (43 percent) worked over 40, and in Iowa and Missouri twothirds had a 40-hour week. In the remaining States—Massachusetts,
Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois—from 51 to 69 percent of the
employees had less than 40 hours of work. It is interesting to note
that even though a larger proportion of the employees in Illinois and
Wisconsin than in the other States worked less than 40 hours, Illinois
ranked first and Wisconsin ranked third in average week’s earnings
of the workers.
Table 4.—Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded, by sex and State—Leather and

sheep-lined jackets
Women

U nder

40 hours

49.9

21.6

28.5 1,495

53.4

20.1

26.5

925

44.3

23.9

123
33
746
335

69.1
30.3
51.2
59.7

30.1
66.7
15.2
23.3

.8
3.0
33.6
17.0

87
U7
463
245

64.4

34.5

1.1

80.6

19.4

47.7
61.2

17.9
21.6

34.3
17.1

36
116
283
90

56.9
55.6

10.6
27.8

32.5
16.7

508

32.1

24. 6

43.3

297

29.3

28.3

42.4

211

36.0

19.4

44.5

163
512

27.0
63.3

17.2
23.2

55.8
13.5

63
323

23.8
81.4

4.8
11.5

71.4
7.1

100
189

29.0
32.3

25.0
43.4

46.0
24.3

M assachusetts .............. .
Minnesota_________
New Jersey and Pennsylvania____ New York and Connccticut..................... .............
Wisconsin____ ____ ____

40

Percent who
worked—

hours

hours

hours
40

hours

40

40

Percent who
worked—

U nder

worked reported

hours

O ver

40 hours

40

40

hours

U nder

worked reported

Percent who
worked—

Number with hours

Total........................ 2,420

State

Number with hours

Number with hours
worked reported

Men

O ver

All employees

o

>
O
31.8

1 Distribution not computed; base less than 25.

In all States combined a larger proportion of men than of women
worked 40 hours or more, but this did not hold true in each State
when considered separately. In New York and Connecticut 71 per­
cent of the women but only 46 percent of the men worked more than
40 hours. In New Jersey and Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Illi­
nois the proportions of women who worked 40 hours or more were



LEATHER AND SHEEP-LINED JACKETS

17

respectively 71, 52, and 36 percent, in contrast to respectively 64, 43,
and 19 percent of the men. In Wisconsin and in Minnesota, however,
as in all States combined, larger proportions of the women than of the
men worked less than 40 hours, the proportions in these two areas
being 81 and 61 percent of the women compared to 32 and 56 percent
of the men.
Average hourly earnings.
In spite of the fact that employers selected a pay-roll week of full
operation, individual records showed many workers who did not put
in a full week. Hourly earnings, therefore, furnish the only valid basis
for a wage comparison. Records of hours worked were not available
for all workers, but hourly earnings were computed for the 2,420
employees in 35 firms for whom such records were obtained. The
figures were arrived at, for each employee separately, by dividing the
week’s earnings by the number of hours worked.
A distribution in 1-cent intervals of hourly earnings of workers on
leather and sheep-lined jackets shows that no single amount was
earned by so many as 4 percent of the workers. The largest single
group (3.8 percent) earned 36 and under 37 cents an hour; the second
largest groups (2.6 percent in each case) earned respectively 45 and
under 46 cents and 42 and under 43 cents. Table 5 shows in detail
the very wide distribution of hourly earnings, which ranged, for 91
percent of the workers, from 35 cents to a dollar or more.
With earnings in 5-ccnt intervals (table 6), the largest single group
was 11.4 percent for the employees who earned 35 and under 40 cents
an hour, followed by 10.5 percent who earned 45 and under 50 cents,
and 10.3 percent who earned 40 and under 45 cents, the three groups
comprising almost a third (32.2 percent) of the total. Just over half
the employees had hourly earnings of as much as 40 cents but of less
than 70 cents. The arithmetic average of the earnings of all 2,420
employees was 60.8 cents.
Table 5.—Distribution of hourly earnings in 1-cent intervals—Leather and sheep-

lined jackets
Employees
Hourly earnings
(cents)
Num­
Per­
ber
cent
Total___

2, 420

100.0

Under 20
20, under 21___
21, under 22__
22, under 23..-.
23, under 24___
24, under 25__
25, under 26___
26, under 27___
27, under 28__
28, under 29_____
29, under 30_____
30, under 31_____
31, under 32_____
32, under 33_____
33, under 34_____
34, under 35_____
35, under 36_____
36, under 37_____
37, under 38_____
38, under 39_____
39, under 40___

11
6
3
5
4
2
27
5
16
6
12
41
20
30
20
19
38
91
60
41
40

0.5
.2
.1
.2
.2
. 1
i.i
.2
.7
.2
.5
1.7

.82

1.

.8
.8
1.6
3.8
2.5
1.7
1.9




Employees
(cents)

40, under 41___
41, under 42___
42, under 43___
43, under 44__
44, under 45__
45, under 46__
46, under 47___
47, under 48_____
48, under 49_____
49, under 50__
50, under 51_____
51, under 52_____
52, under 53_____
53, under 54_____
54, under 55_____
55, under 56_____
56, under 57_____
57, under 58_____
58, under 59_____
59, under 60_____
60, under 61_____
61, under 62. __
62, under 63___

Num­
ber
49
49
63
37
51
63
49
47
49
47
43
32
52
34
37
48
32
35
45
48
37
40
36

Per­
cent
2.0
2.0
2.6
1.5
2.1
2.6
2.0
1.9
2.0
1.9
1.8
1.3
2.2
1.4
1.5
2.0
1.3
1.4
1.9
2.0
1.5
1.7
1.5

Employees
Hourly earnings
(cents)
Num­
Per­
ber
cent
63, under 64___
64, under 65___
65, under 66___
66, under 67__
67, under 68___
68, under 69___
69, under 70___
70, under 71_____
71, under 72^ ..
72, under 73___
73. under 74....
74, under 75_____
75, under 76_____
76, under 77_____
77, under 78___
78, under 79 ...
79, under 80--------

15
37
32
31
29
31
26
19
30
26
17
19
28
24
15
26
18

0.6
1.5
1.3
1.3
1.2
1.3
1.1

80, under 90_____
90, under 100.-100 and over____

156
110
205

6.4
4.5
8.5

.8
1.2
1.1
.7
.8
1. 2
1.0
.6

1.1

.7

Table 6.—Distribution

of hourly earnings in 5-cent intervals, by sex and State—Leather and sheep-lined jackets

Percent of employees whose earnings were—
Num­
ber of
75,
80,
85,
90,
95
65,
70,
60,
45,
50,
55,
40,
35,
30,
Un­
em­
under under under under under under under under under under under under cents,
ploy­ der 30 under
95
under
85
90
70
75
80
60
65
40
45
50
55
35
cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents cents
$1
ees

State

$1
and
over

Under 37^
37H
cents cents

Over
37H
cents

All employees

New Jersey and PennsylNew York and Connecti-

123
33
746
335
508
163
512

1.5

83.1

6.1
18.9
6.3

.5

100.0
93.9
80.6
93.7

3.7

27.6

6.1

66.3

14.7
4.1

21.5
6. 6

.4

78.5
93.0

17.9

1.7

80.3

23.3
7.3

.4

100.0
76.2
92.7

.3

31.6

7.7

60.6

1.5

.6

36.5
7.4

.3

63.5
92.3

11.4

1.2

87.5

.7

100.0
87.6
96.7

5.4

11.4

10.3

10.5

8.2

8.6

6.8

6.2

4.6

4.6

3.6

2.9

2.6

1.9

8.5

5.7
24.2
10.1
12.5

5.7
9.1
9.2
8.1

7.3
3.0
8.7
9.3

4.1
3.0
6.0
8.1

12.2
15.2
6.4
8.1

4.9
6.1
4.0
4.8

6.5
3.0
3.8
5.1

9.8
9.1
2.3
5.1

9.8

4.1

6.1
4.0
3.6

.8
9.1
9.9
11.6

6.5

2.4
1.8

.8
3.0
17.6
5.4

3.2
2.7

1.6
1.2

.7
2.1

22.0
9.1
10.1
10.7

9.8

11.4

16.9

13.2

10.6

6.5

7.7

4.3

3.3

3.0

2.8

1.0

1.8

1.8

2.2

2.5
2.9

3.1
4.1

3.7
2. 5

4.0

11.0
1.0

6.1
3.5

7.4
5.2

11.0
9.2

3.7
10.4

7.4
10.0

14.0

10.8

10.9
8.0
10.4
11.0

9.8
10.4

2.5
6.4

5.5
6.4

3.1
7.4

1.8
5.9

7.7

5.5

3.5

3.0

1.9

0.9

1.1

0.3

1.4

5.7
6.5
9.8

14.9
3.9
9.4

4.6
3.0
4.9

6.9
2.6
2.9

9.2
.4
4.5

6.9
.4
.8

10.3
.2
4

2.3

14.9
.4
2.4

1.3

1.0

6.7
10.5
Women

Total

_________ 1,495

New Jersey and Pennsyl-

87
463
245

New York and Connecti323

4.3

5.4

15.3

13.8

15.4

•

3.0
2.4

3.0
3.7

1.1
24.8
6.1

1.1
15.1
15.9

6.9
14.0
16.7

6.9
12.1
8.6

9 8

13. 5

22.8

17. 2

11.4

7.4

8.8

4.7

1.7

17.5
1.5

11.1
3.1

14.2
5.9

17.5
10.2

17.5
14.2

6.3
15.2

11.1
14.9

3.2
12.1

1.6
6.8

5.3

5.3

2.5

.9

___

Men
Total 1.__................-

New Jersey and PennsylNew York and Connecti-

925

3.5

36
283
90

1.4

211
100
1S9

5.3

5.2

4.5

4.9

4.0

4.8

5.4

7.2

6.4

7.1

6.3

6.1

5.0

4.5

19.9

1.4

2.8
3.5
1.1

2.8
4.6
6.7

5.6
6.0
4.4

5.3
3.3

5.6
10.6
4.4

5.6
5.6
4.4

5.6
5.6
11.1

11.1
5.3
6.7

5.6
7.8
7.8

8.3
3.9
3.3

8.3
1.8
6.7

38.9
25.8
33. 3

11.7
3.3

5.7
3.3

5.7
3.3

10.0

8.5

8.5

7.6

9.5

5.2

6.2

3.8

5.7

5.2

5.2

2.4

4.3

3.8

6.2

9.0

21.8

3.8

74.4

7.0

3.0
4.2

3.0
4.2

7.0
7.4

5.0
3.7

2.0
2.1

5.0
1.6

9.0
7.9

3.0
5.8

9.0
8.5

5.0
11.1

3.0
11.6

4.0
6.3

5.0
8. 5

6.0
5.8

24.0
11.1

12.0
5.3

_________

88.0
912

1 Total includes Iowa and Missouri, not shown separately; number too small for computation of percentages.



—

.5

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN ’S WEAR

2,420

Total

LEATHER AND SHEEP-LINED JACKETS

19

By State.-—A comparison by State of the average hourly earnings of
workers on leather and sheep-lined jackets reveals little difference in
earnings in New England, New York, and most of the Middle Western
States, the averages in all these ranging from 60.5 to 64.1 cents an
hour. The extremes of average earnings were Illinois with 81.7 cents,
or 21 cents more than the general average for all States, and New
Jersey and Pennsylvania with 50.6 cents, or 10 cents less than the
general average.
In the distribution in 5-cent intervals of earnings in the various
States, wide differences appear. In Illinois nearly two-thirds (64 per­
cent) of the workers averaged 70 cents or more an hour and no worker
was paid so little as 37K cents. In Minnesota and Wisconsin roughly
one-half earned 40 and under 65 cents and one-third earned 70 cents
or more.
Hourly earnings were at a much lower level for employees in the
eastern States. Just over one-half in Massachusetts earned 30 and
under 55 cents, though as many as one-fourth had earnings of 70 cents
or more. In New Jersey and Pennsylvania the most common earn­
ings were below 50 cents; 52 percent earned 30 and under 50 cents
and 10 percent had earnings below 30 cents; less than one-sixth of the
workers in these States earned as much as 70 cents. . In New York
and Connecticut there was a substantial proportion of the workers at
each extreme of the earnings scale; 45 percent averaged less than 50
cents and 34 percent had earnings of 70 cents and over.
The records of New Jersey and Pennsylvania were examined care­
fully to determine the cause of the lower earnings in this area. New
Jersey made a larger volume of sheep-lined jackets than any other
State; further, the price level was in a somewhat lower range than
that of most of the jackets made in the Middle West and New Eng­
land. These factors may have some bearing on the earnings of the
workers.
By sex.—Hourly earnings were computed for 925 men and 1,495
women. (See table 2.) The average earnings of the men were 75.2
cents, or 23.4 cents more than the women’s average of 51.8 cents.
Among the States the men’s average varied from 60.7 cents in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania, to 86.3 cents in Minnesota and 95.1 cents in
Illinois. The extremes of the women’s average earnings were 41.4
cents in New York and Connecticut and 77.2 cents in Illinois. Only
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania was the men’s average less than 75
cents, but in all States but Illinois the women’s average was less than
57 cents.
Except in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the most pronounced con­
centration of men’s earnings was in the intervals above 70 cents; the
proportions with such earnings varied from 56 percent in Massachu­
setts to 83 percent in Illinois. In New Jersey and Pennsylvania 56
percent of the men had earnings of less than 60 cents. The number
of men who earned less than 40 cents was small; no man in Illinois
earned so little as 45 cents and in the other States the proportion with
earnings below 40 cents varied from 7 percent in Minnesota to 27
percent in New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
The hourly earnings of women workers, on the other hand, were
largely concentrated in the intervals below 60 cents in each State but
Illinois. In Massachusetts, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and New
York and Connecticut from 60 to 78 percent of the women earned



20

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

less than 50 cents, and in Minnesota and in Wisconsin approximately
65 percent earned less than 60 cents. Only 24 percent of the women
in Illinois had earnings of less than 60 cents, and as many as 44 per­
cent had earnings of 80 cents or more. Ten percent of the women in
New Jersey and Pennsylvania and 18 percent of those in New York
and Connecticut earned less than 30 cents an hour.
Variation by firm.—The average hourly earnings were computed for
all firms with 50 or more employees, and in some States there was
considerable difference in the firm averages. The highest firm average
exceeded the lowest by less than 1 cent in Illinois and by only 4.5 cents
in Wisconsin, but in Minnesota the difference was 12.9 cents and in
Massachusetts it was 22.2 cents.
Earnings by occupation.—The largest group of workers on leather
and sheep-lined jackets, the sewing-machine operators (63 percent of
the total), averaged 56.6 cents an hour. At no point was there any
concentration, fairly equal numbers earning amounts ranging from
35 and under 36 cents to 59 and under 60 cents. More than 85 percent
of the operators earned over 37% cents, the minimum set for cotton
and allied garment workers on public contracts. In all States but
Illinois (77.8 cents) and the combined area of New Jersey and Pennsyl­
vania (46.9 cents), average earnings were similar to the general
average, the amounts ranging only from 57.3 cents to 59.1 cents.
Hand cutters (21 percent of the total) represent the second largest
group of workers on leather and sheep-lined coats, and the average
hourly earnings of these workers were 87.9 cents. Even in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania, the area paying less to machine operators
than was paid elsewhere, the cutters earned 84 cents, or slightly more
than cutters earned in Wisconsin. In Massachusetts, Minnesota,
New York and Connecticut, and Illinois, they averaged from 88.3
cents to $1.02.
_
Employees in other manufacturing operations are about one-seventh
of the manufacturing staff, and the average hourly earnings for these
workers were 41.6 cents. In Wisconsin and in Minnesota the average
for this group was about 50 cents. The average for all States com­
bined was affected by the low figure for Massachusetts (37.1 cents)
and that for New Jersey and Pennsylvania (34.6 cents).
Table 7.—Average hourly earnings, by occupation and State—Leather and sheep-

lined jackets
All occupations

Cutters

Machine
operators

Other
manufacturing
occupations

Nonmanu­
facturing
occupations

Em­
ployees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings i
(cents)

Total----------

2,420

60.8

506

87.9

1,522

56.6

338

41.6

54

44.6

30

101.8

Massachusetts------

746
335

60.5
64.1

144
70

88.3
91.6

84
28
494
200

77.8
57. 3
57.3
59.1

90
65

37.1
49.7

18

508

50.6

83

84.0

308

46.9

98

34.6

19

20
107
58.5
33
96.1
63. 4
163
56
50.6
83.3
301
67.3
63.4
141
Wisconsin___ ____
512
1 The mean—the simple arithmetic average; not computed where base less than 25.

3
14

State

New Jersey and
Pennsylvania---New York and




9

WOOL JACKETS
Method of wage payment.
The difference in the cutting and sewing of wool and leather has
been described. The number of cutters on wool jackets is relatively
smaller than the number needed for leather jackets.
. About equal numbers of the cutters in wool jackets were paid on a
time basis and on a piece basis. Sewing-machine operators were paid
by the piece. Other manufacturing’ processes were paid on both a
time and a piece basis. Nonmanufacturing workers were time workers.
Established scales of wages.2
The Amalgamated Clothing Workers of America groups mackinaws
with leather and sheep-lined jackets in setting rates; that is, a cutter
of mackinaws would average SI an hour, an operator 60 cents, with
the minimum for operators 45 cents. The difficulties in limiting any
wage determination to one style of jacket have been discussed.
Policies concerning learners.
Many wool-jacket firms regarded their product as one not suited to
the training of beginners; rather, they looked to other garment indus­
tries for trained people, though a few had boys beginning as handlers
Whom they expected to train to become cutters. Of the 25 firms
scheduled in the fall of 1937, 13 were employing some learners,
a?gregating 41, in the pay-roll week recorded. In a number of cases
these were paid piece rates, if sewing-machine operators, or they were
guaranteed such amounts as 16 cents, 25 cents, and 30 cents an hour,
for 4, 6, or 8 weeks.
Hourly earnings were computed for 39 beginners for whom hours
worked were reported, and the average for the group was 25.4
cents. The largest number, 17, had earnings of 25 and under 30 cents,
10 of these at 25 and under 26 cents; 9 earned 30 and under 40 cents,
6 earned 20 and under 25 cents, and 7 were paid less than 20 cents.
EARNINGS AND HOURS OF EXPERIENCED WORKERS

Week’s earnings.
The 25 firms making principally wool coats employed 1,923 experi­
enced workers. A somewhat larger proportion than in the leatherjacket field were women—77 percent compared to 60 percent.
These workers averaged earnings of $17.10 in the pay-roll week
taken, when the factory was operating full time. At least $20 a
week was earned by 29 percent; 28 percent earned $15 and under
$20; and just over 25 percent earned $10 and under $15. Less than
1 percent earned exactly $15, the minimum set by the Secretary of
2 A minimum-wage determination of the Secretary of Labor, which took effect August 2, 1937, and an
amendment extending coverage, effective May 13, 1938, state that 37^ cents an hour, or $15 for a 40-hour
week, shall be the minimum wage for employees on Government contracts in the wool-jacket industry.




21

22

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

Labor for public contracts on cotton and allied garments; 56 percent
earned more than $15.
_
Average week's earnings of employees were about the same in
Wisconsin and in Minnesota, respectively $19.65 and $19.90. They
reached $19 in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, but fell to $12.40
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania. A careful examination was made
of the production of the five firms in the area last mentioned. Mack­
inaws, meltons, and navy pea jackets ranged from 60 percent to 94
percent in individual firms, with some making 25 percent or more
leather jackets, in the pay-roll period taken. But each made other
products when the wool- and leather-jacket season was over.
Table 8.—Average

week’s earnings and average hourly earnings, by sex and State—
Wool jackets

State

Number with hours worked
reported
Number Number Average
of es­
week’s
of
em­
tablish­ ployees earnings 1
Average
Establish­ Employ­ hourly
ments
earnings1
ments
ees
(cents)
All employees

Total................................. .................

25

1,923

$17.10

23

1,833

47.6

Iowa and Michigan--------------------------- Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Minnesota
New Jersey and Pennsylvania................
Wisconsin.............................. -........... -........

2
2
3
9
5
4

330
244
115
603
494
237

18.35
15.55
19.00
19. 90
12.40
19.65

2
2
3
9
3
4

330
244
115
491
416
237

48.3
37.8
47.3
58.7
40.9
46.0

25

1,485

$15.30

23

1,417

43.0

2
2
3
9
5
4

253
223
94
369
365
181

15. 75
15.30
18. 20
17.90
10. 30
18. 25

2
2
3
9
3
4

253
223
94
358
308
181

43.2
36.6
46.4
52.3
36.3
42.2

Women

Men
Total................... ........... ....................

25

438

$23. 00

23

416

63.0

Illinois.................................................. ......

2
2
3
9
5
4

77
21
21
134
129
66

26. 90

2
2
3
9
3
4

77
21
21
133
108
56

65.3

Minnesota.......... .........
....... ..................
New Jersey and Pennsylvania................. Wisconsin................... .........-....................-

25. 40
18. 45
24.25

76.4
52.4
58.2

* The mean—-the simple arithmetic average; not computed where base less than 25.

A comparison of the earnings figures in table 8 with those of workers
in leather and sheep-lined jackets indicates for each State group where
a comparison is possible that earnings in leather and sheep-lined jackets
exceeded those in wool jackets. The difference in Minnesota was only
$2.40, but in New Jersey and Pennsylvania the workers making wool
jackets averaged $7.05 less, and in Illinois $10.40 less, than those mak­
ing leather and sheep-lined jackets.



Table 9.—Distribution of week’s earnings, by sex and State—Wool jackets
Percent of employees whose earnings were—
State

Number
of em­
ployees

Under
$10

$10,
under
$15

$15,
under
$20

$20,
under
$25

$25,
under
$30

$30,
under
$35

$35,
under
$40

$40,
under
$50

$50
and
over

Under
$15

Over
$15

$15

All employees
Total..................................................
Illinois____ __

___________ _____

Minnesota.__ ... _. _____ _____
New Jersey and Pennsylvania. _v
Wisconsin

1,923

17.5

25.6

28.2

14.9

6.3

3.9

2.5

0.7

0.3

43.1

0.5

56.4

330
244
115
503
494
237

7.6
13.1
2.6
6.2
47.6
4.6

28.5
32.4
21.7
19.7
27.5
24.9

33.6
37.3
33.9
34.2
12.6
28.3

17.0
11. 5
32.2
17.9
5.1
21.5

2.4
4. 5
5.2
11.1
3.0
10.5

4.5
1.2
2.6
6.8
1.4
5.5

4.8

1.2

.3

.6

.9
3.2
1.6
3.4

.9
.6
.6
1.3

.4
.8

36.1
45.5
24.3
25.8
75.1
29.5

.6
.4
.8

63.3
54.5
75.7
73.6
24.5
69.6

0.2

51.9

Women
Total..................... ...................

1,485

19.4

28.6

30.5

15.9

4.4

1.1

0.1

47.9

Illinois________________________
Iowa and Michigan_____ ________
Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Minnesota_____________________
New Jersey and Pennsylvania____
Wisconsin______________________

253
223
94
369
365
181

9.5
12.6
2.1
7.0
55.3
3.3

34.4
34. 5
22.3
21.7
29.6
28.2

38.3
37. 7
37.2
39.8
9.6
30.4

15.0
11. 7
34.0
21.4
3.6
26.5

1.6
2. 7
3.2
8.4
1. 1
9.4

.8
.9
1.1
1.6
.5
2.2

.4

43.9
47.1
24.5
28.7
84.9
31.5

.3

.5
.3

56.1
52.9
75.5
70.7
14.8
68.5

Men
Total
Illinois__
Minnesota. __ _ __ . _______ _____
New Jersey and Pennsylvania
Wisconsin______ ___________________

438

11.2

15.5

20.3

11.6

12.8

13.2

10.7

3.2

1.4

26.7

1.4

71.9

77
i 21
i 21
134
129
56

1.3

9.1

18.2

23.4

5.2

16.9

19.5

5.2

1.3

10.3

2.6

87.0

3.7
25.6
8.9

14.2
21.7
14.3

18.7
20.9
21.4

8.2
9.3
5.4

18.7
8.5
14.3

20.9
3.9
16.1

11.9
5.4
14.3

2.2
2.3
5.4

1.5
2.3

17.9
47.3
23.2

.7
.8
3.6

81.3
51.9
73.2

1 Distribution not computed; base less than 25.




24

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

The distribution of the week’s earnings in wool-jacket firms is shown
in table 9. With the exception of Massachusetts and New Hampshire,
and of New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the most usual earnings were
$10 and under $20, the proportion with such earnings varying from 53
percent in Wisconsin to 70 percent in Iowa and Michigan. In Massa­
chusetts and New Hampshire 34 percent of the workers earned $15
and under $20, and the second largest group, 32 percent, earned $20
and under $25. Not far from half of the large group in New Jersey
and Pennsylvania had earnings of less than $10 and over one-fourth
earned $10 and under $15. The proportion of workers who averaged
as much as $25 varied from about 6 percent in Iowa and Michigan to
21 and 22 percent in Wisconsin and hi Minnesota.
The number of men reported in Iowa and Michigan and in Massa­
chusetts and New Hampshire was too small for the computation of
average earnings, hut in the other States their average earnings
varied from $18.45 in New Jersey and Pennsylvania to $26.90 in
Illinois. More than two-thirds (68 percent) of the men in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania had earnings of less than $20; one-fourth
earned even less than $10. There was no marked concentration of
earnings in the other States, but in each case there was a substantial
number with earnings of $30 or more, the proportion being about 36
percent in Minnesota and in Wisconsin and 43 percent in Illinois.
Only 14 percent in New Jersey and Pennsylvania had such earnings.
The women’s average earnings ranged from $10.30 in New Jersey
and Pennsylvania to $18.20 in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
and $18.25 in Wisconsin. In the States for which a comparison of
men’s and women’s earnings is possible the women averaged from SO
to $11.15 less than the men averaged. No woman was reported with
earnings as high as $40, and only from 2 percent in New Jersey and
Pennsylvania to 12 percent in Wisconsin earned as much as $25.
Consequently, there was a pronounced concentration at the lower
levels. Over seven-tenths in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
earned $15 and under $25 and in New Jersey and Pennsylvania more
than half (55 percent) had earnings of less than $10. In the other
States from 59 to 73 percent of the women earned $10 and under $20
Hours worked.
The number of hours worked during the pay period covered was
reported for 1,833 employees in 23 firms. Fifty-one percent of the
employees worked less than 40 hours, 21 percent worked 40 hours,
and only 28 percent exceeded 40. There was considerable variety in
the length of the workweek in the different States, and the proportion
of employees who worked 40 hours or more ranged from only 22 per­
cent in New Jersey and Pennsylvania to 82 percent in Wisconsin.
A shorter week for women than for men was the rule. The pro­
portion of men who worked 40 hours or more varied from 38 percent
in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and in Minnesota to 92 percent in
Illinois and 91 percent in Wisconsin. The range in the proportion of
women who worked at least 40 hours was from 16 percent in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania to 80 percent in Wisconsin. More than
three-fifths of the women in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
and almost three-fourths in Iowa and Michigan also worked 40 or
more hours.



25

WOOL JACKETS

Table 10.—Hours worked in the pay-roll week recorded, by sex and State—

Wool jackets

Percent who
worked—

40 hours

54.0

21.7

24.3

416

40.6

20.4

38.9

12.1
65.6

253
223

51.3
27.8

45.1
4.5

3.6
67.7

77
i 21

7.8

51. 9

40. 3

115
491

33.0
66.0

30.4
25.3

36.5
8.8

94
358

38.3
67.6

33.0
29.1

28.7
3.4

i 21
133

61.7

15.0

23. 3

416
237

78.1
17.7

2.9
22.4

19.0
59.9

308
181

83.8
20.4

3.2
21.5

13.0
58.0

108
56

62.0
8.9

1.9
25.0

36.1
66.1

40 hours

Over 40 hours

Under 40 hours

27.6 1,417

Under 40 hours

21.4
46.7
6.1

Over 40 hours

51.0
41.2
28.3

Under 40 hours

Number with hours
worked reported

Percent who
worked—

Over 40 hours

Percent who
worked—

330
244

Total.......................- 1,833
Illinois__________ _____
Iowa and Michigan .__ _
Massachusetts and New
Hampshire
Minnesota____ .
New Jersey and Pennsylvania
Wisconsin..........................

Men

40 hours

worked reported

State

Women

Number with hours
worked reported

Number with hours

All employees

1 Distribution not computed; base less than 25.

Average hourly earnings.
Hours worked were reported in all but two of the wool-jacket firms
scheduled, making hourly earnings available for 1,833 employees.
They were arrived at by dividing, for each employee separately, the
week’s earnings by the hours worked.
The average hourly earnings of all employees during the fall pay­
roll period taken were 47.6 cents. This corresponds closely to the
earnings in Wisconsin, in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, and
Illinois. The Minnesota average was outstanding, at 58.7 cents an
hour. In New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and in Iowa and Michigan,
earnings were only 40.9 cents and 37.8 cents, respectively. (See
table 8.)
Table 11.—Distribution

of hourly earnings in 1-cent intervals—Wool jackets

Employees
Hourly earn­
ings (cents)

Num­
ber

Per­
cent

Total___

1,833

100.0

20, under 21___
21, under 22
22, under 23___
23, under 24___
24, under 25___
25, under 26___
26, under 27___
27, under 28___
28, under 29__
29, under 30___
30, under 31__
31, under 32___
32, under 33___
33, under 34___
34, under 35___
35, under 36___
36, under 37___
37, under 38___
38, under 39___
39, under 40___

31
17
5
27
9
10
39
20
48
26
25
58
37
64
53
39
45
55
39
51
47

1.7
.9
.3
1.5
.5
.5
2. 1
1.1
2.6
1.4
1.4
3.2
2.0
3.5
2.9
2.1
2.5
3.0
2.1
2.8
2.6




Employees
Hourly earn­
ings (cents)

40, under 41.......
41, under 42
43, under 44___
44, under 45
45, under 46
46, under 47
47, under 48
48, under 49
49, under 50___
50, under 51
5J, under 52___
52, under 53___
53, under 54___
54, under 55
55, under 56 .
56, UDder 57
57, under 58___
58. under 59.
59, under 60___
60, under 61
61, under 62
62, under 63

Num­
ber

Per­
cent

49
51
48
38
56
53
34
49
41
39
47
26
39
24
15
33
22
23
20
23
18
26
22

2.7
2.8
2 6
2.1
3.1
2.9
1.9
2.7
2.2
2. 1
2.6
1.4
2.1
1.3
.8
1.8
1.2
1.3
1.1
1.3
1.0
1.4
1.2

Employees
Hourly earn­
ings (cents)

Num­
ber

Per­
cent

63, under 64
64, under 65

9
13

0.5
.7

66, under 67
67, under 68.......
68, under 69___
69, under 70___
70. under 71
71, under 72
72, under 73
73, under 7-4
74, under 75
75, under 76.......
76, under 77.......
77, under 78
78, under 76

13
9
7
10
14
9
9
8
6
14
13
5
4
5

.7
.5
.4
.5
.8
.5
.5
.4
.3
.8

80, under 90___
90, under 100...__

52
36
46

2.8
2.0
2.5

.3
.2
.3

to
o

Table 12.—Distribution of hourly earnings in 5-cent intervals, by sex and State—Wool jackets
Percent of employees whose earnings were—
State

Num­
ber of
Under
em­
ployees
zb

25,

35,
under
40
cents

40,
under
45
cents

45,
under
50
cents

50,
under
55
cents

55,
under
60
cents

60,
under
65
cents

65,
under
70
cents

70,
under
80
cents

80
cents,
under
$1.00

6.6

4.8

2.7

4.7

4.8

$1.00
over

Over

Under
37|4
cents

cents

33.8

0.7

65.6
70.3
44. 3

37^
cents

All employees
Total________________
Illinois..........................................
Iowa and Michigan.....................
Massachusetts and New Hamp­
shire_____ _______________
Minnesota............................... .
New Jersey and Pennsylvania. _
Wisconsin___ __________ ____

1,833

5.4

8.6

13.7

12.9

13.2

11.8

8.2

2.5

330
244

3.3
8.2

7.9
12.7

12.4
23.0

11.5
20.1

14.5
11.5

15.2
12.7

10.3
4.9

5.5
4.9

5.5
.4

2.4
.8

3.0
.4

7.3
.4

1.2

28.5
54.9

1.2
.8

491
416
237

1.0
14.9
.4

2.2
15.6
6.8

6.5
15.1
20.3

7.5
16.6
13.5

11.4
11.5
18.1

14.8
14. 5
5.5
10.1

16.5
7.5
6.2
9.7

12.2
9.8
2.6
7.6

6.1
8.8
2.9
3.0

.9
5.9
1.0
2.1

3.5
10.0
2.6
5.1

1.7
9.0
2.6
2.5

5.9
2.6
.8

20.9
12.6
55. 5
31.2

.2
.7
.8

79.1
87.2
43.8
67.9

9.5

6.5

4.0

2.4

3.3

1.1

0.1

36.9

0.2

62.9

.4

.4

34.0
57.8

2.8
1.6

Women
Total...................................

1,417

9.2

15.1

14.2

14.9

13.4

253

4.3
8.5

9.9
13.0

14.6
24.2

11.9
22.0

17.0
11.7

16.6
11.7

11.5
4.9

5.1
2.7

4.3
.4

2.0
.4

2.0
.4

358
308
181

1.1
17.2
.6

6 4
2.2
15.3
8. 8

9.6
6.4
16.2
22.7

11.7
8.4
19.2
12.2

19.1
14.2
11.7
20.4

14.9
19.0
5.8
12.2

19.1
9.5
6.8
12.2

10.6
12.0
2.3
7.2

3.2
9.2
1.9
1.7

1.1
5.9
1.0
1.7

4.3
9.2
1.0
.6

Massachusetts and New HampNew Jersey and Pennsylvania..

6.2

66.0

12.0
60.1

.3

87.7
39. 9

Men
Total i...............................
Illinois_____ _______________
Minnesota___________ ____
New Jersey and Pennsylvania. _
Wisconsin..... ........_........... . __

416
77
133
108
56

2.6
.8
8.3

6.5
1.3
2.3
16.7

8.9
5.2
6.8
12.0
12.5

8.7
10.4
5.3
9.3
17.9

7.5

6.2

3.8

7.0

7.5

3.6

9.6

17.3

10.8

23.1

2.2

74.8

6.5
3.8
11.1
10.7

10.4
2.3
4.6
3.6

6.5
2.3
4.6
1.8

6.5
3.8
3.7
8.9

9.1
7.5
5.6
7.1

3.9
6.0
.9
3.6

6.5
12.0
7.4
19.6

29.9
25.6
5.6
10.7

3.9
21.8
10.2
3.6

10.4
14.3
42.6
21.4

5.2

84.4
85.7
54.6
75.0

1 Total includes Iowa and Michigan, and Massachusetts and New Hampshire, not shown separately; number too small for computation of percentages.




2.8
3.6

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN ’S WEAR

30
cents

30,
under
35
cents

WOOL JACKETS

27

In each State where it is possible to make the comparison, hourly
earnings on wool jackets were lower than those on leather and sheeplined jackets. The difference in favor of the latter was only 5.4
cents in Minnesota, but it was 17.4 cents in Wisconsin and as much
as 33.4 cents in Illinois.
A distribution of hourly earnings in 1-cent intervals revealed no
group of more than 3.5 percent earning any one amount, and in only
four cases was the proportion as high as 3 percent.
The tabulation of earnings in 5-cent intervals, table 12, shows that
the larger groups occurred in the four intervals that together comprise
30 and under 50 cents, each of which had from 12 to 14 percent of
the workers. Almost two-thirds earned over 37% cents, the maximum
rate for cotton and allied garments set for public contracts.
The lower wages in New Jersey and Pennsylvania and in Iowa and
Michigan are indicated by the large groups” of workers with hourly
earnings at the low levels. In New Jersey and Pennsylvania, from
15 to 17 percent of the workers were in each of the intervals below 40
cents; that is, a total of 62 percent of the workers had such earnings.
More than two-fifths (43 percent) of the workers in Iowa and Michi­
gan earned 30 and under 40 cents, and one-fifth earned less than
30 cents.
In Illinois and in Wisconsin, the largest groups of workers had
earnings of 30 and under 50 cents, and in Massachusetts and New
Hampshire, and in Minnesota, the most common earnings were 40
and under 60 cents. The proportion of employees with earnings
of 60 cents or over ranged from only 2 percent in Iowa and Michigan
to 40 percent in Minnesota.
The average hourly earnings of the men (table 8) were 63 cents, or
15.4 cents above the general average for all workers and 20 cents above
that of the women. Among the States, Minnesota had the highest
average for men, 76.4 cents, followed by Illinois with 65.3 cents. The
average was considerably lower in Wisconsin, 58.2 cents, and in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania, 52.4 cents.
Considering the men as a group, there was very little concentration
of earnings at any point. Approximately equal proportions, some­
thing over one-fourth, had earnings at the two extremes, under 40
cents and 80 cents and over. The majority of the men in Minnesota
(73 percent) and in Illinois (53 percent) had earnings of 60 cents or
more, but only 45 percent in Wisconsin and only 30 percent in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania were paid so much. A large group in
New Jersey and Pennsylvania (46 percent) earned less than 40 cents.
The two extremes of women’s average hourly earnings were 52.3
cents in Minnesota and 36.3 and 36.6 cents, respectively, in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania and in Iowa and Michigan. In the other
States the averages varied from 42.2 cents to 46.4 cents. Only 1 per­
cent of the women in Iowa and Michigan earned as much as 60 cents
an hour, but in Minnesota the proportion with such earnings was 27
percent; in the other States it was from 4 to 9 percent. On the basis
of 5-cent intervals the most usual earnings of women were as follows:
55 percent in Minnesota earned 40 and under 60 cents, 53 percent in
Massachusetts and New Hampshire earned 40 and under 55 cents,
60 percent in Illinois earned 30 and under 50 cents, 55 percent in
Wisconsin earned 30 and under 45 cents, and 59 percent and 51 per­



28

HOURS AND EARNINGS IN MEN’S WEAR

cent, respectively, in Iowa and Michigan and in New Jersey and Penn­
sylvania earned 25 and under 40 cents.
Variation by firm.-—Variation in average hourly earnings was more
general in wool-jacket firms than in the leather-specialty field. To
some extent, lower earnings were due to location in small cities out­
side an industrial area, but more generally the products made when
not manufacturing cold-weather jackets seem to have been the
determining factor. Employees of jacket firms that produced over­
coats and sport suits for men or women until winter-jacket manu­
facturing was started, or that ran departments for such production
simultaneously, had earnings in the higher brackets when working
on jackets. Employment in the off season in jacket firms that picked
up a,ny garment on which they could get orders—such as pants, cotton
sport jackets, shirts, raincoats—usually yielded lower earnings.
Ranges such as these were found in the average hourly earnings in
different firms in the same State or area: 39.1 to 49.8 cents; 43.7 to
70.5 cents; 42.7 to 56.1 cents. The State location of the firm was not
a factor in determining earnings.
Earnings by occupation.—Table 13 reports the earnings of four
occupational groups of workers employed by firms specializing in
wTool-jacket production. Cutters averaged 81.7 cents an hour, sewing
machine operators 44.7 cents, and employees in other manufacturing
jobs 41.6 cents. Nonmanufacturing employees also averaged 41.6
cents. In Minnesota cutters averaged 90.8 cents, but in Illinois they
averaged only 77 cents. The average of sewing-machine operators
varied from 38 cents in Iowa and Michigan to 53.3 cents in Minnesota;
it ranged in the other States from 41.1 cents to 47.3 cents.
Table 13.—Average hourly earnings, by occupation and State—Wool jackets

All occupations

State

Cutters

manufacSewing-machine Other
facturing occu­
operators
pations

Nonmanufac­
turing
occupations

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ployees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cenfes)

Em­
ployees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(cents)

Em­
ploy­
ees

Aver­
age
hourly
earn­
ings 1
(centwS)

1,833

47.6

177

81.7

1,301

44.7

288

41.6

67

41.6

330
244

48.3
37.8

46
4

77.0

245
193

43.1
38.0

14
47

35.1

25

46.5

115
491

47.3
58.7

4
84

90.8

88
316

47.3
53.3

18
79

50.0

5
12

416
237

40.9
46.0

19
20

298
161

41.1
43.3

85
45

34.2
45.4

14
11

Iowa and Michigan.
Massachusetts and
New Hampshire.
New Jersey and
Pennsylvania___

1 The mean—the simple arithmetic average; not computed where base less than 25.

A comparison with the occupational earnings in firms specializing in
leather jackets is interesting. Hourly earnings of hand leather-cutters
were only about 6 cents higher than those of machine wmol-cutters;
but sewing-machine operators averaged 12 cents more on leather than
on wool jackets. Average hourly earnings on the other manufacturing
processes were alike for the two materials.



r

EARNINGS IN FIRMS MAKING COMPETING JACKET LINES
As has been stated, the firms mentioned frequently as competitors
of wool-jacket establishments were visited and pay rolls were taken
for such of the employees as were engaged in jacket production.
These firms either specialized in different styles of jackets of wool
mixture, corduroy, or leatherette, or competed by producing jackets
as a side line with a general line of work clothing. Few of the com­
peting firms mentioned were small, and among the work-clothing
establishments listed as competitors were some of the largest in the
United States.
Because these data were gathered only to determine the differences
in earnings of jacket workers in a few competing firms, the number
covered is too small to lend significance to any average. In fact, the
range of products manufactured, and the policies with regard to the
transfer of workers from one product to another, differed so widely
from firm to firm that earnings also differed widely in the few firms
included. For example: Two firms in different States produced a
full Hue of wrool-mixture jackets, one making some leather jackets and
the other raincoats. In these firms average earnings of employees
approximated 60 cents an hour; that is, the earnings level was the
same as in the leather-jacket specialty group. But firms making the
same kind of wool-and-cotton-mixture and some all-wool jackets that
produced also pants, playsuits, and other such products, paid rates
that yielded but 35.8 cents in hourly earnings during a full pay-roll
week in 1937.
Differences in earnings were found also among the work-clothing
plants that operate branches principally on jackets or that work a
part of the force on jackets for a few months in the year. The range
of hourly earnings in jacket factories of the few work-clothing firms
covered was from 34.2 cents to 48.3 cents; and even in the same
State, firms operating a part of their shirt or overall force on jackets
showed hourly earnings of such workers ranging from 28.8 cents to
48.5 cents.




29

o