the triumph and decline of the "squares": grumman aerospace
Transcription
the triumph and decline of the "squares": grumman aerospace
© COPYRIGHT By David Hugh Onkst 2011 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED For Heidi, who was, and is, always there for me THE TRIUMPH AND DECLINE OF THE “SQUARES”: GRUMMAN AEROSPACE ENGINEERS AND PRODUCTION WORKERS IN THE APOLLO ERA, 1957-1973 By David Hugh Onkst ABSTRACT This dissertation is a social, cultural, and economic history of the men and women of the Grumman Aerospace Company of Bethpage, New York from 1957 through 1973. These “Grummanites” were the engineers and production workers who designed and built the Apollo Lunar Modules that allowed humans to land on the Moon. This study provides unique insights into the impact that the Apollo Program—a large state-initiated and -supported program—had on those “squares,” people whom many contemporaries saw as a vital part of mainstream 1960s American society. By the beginning of the Space Age in 1957, Grumman, Long Island’s single largest employer, had firmly established a workplace culture of paternalism that Grummanites largely embraced. Company officials believed strongly in worker retention and had established a policy of providing every sort of benefit their employees seemingly desired, including a highly personal and participatory form of management. Many Grummanites had joined the firm during the early years of the Apollo Program because they believed in the promise of permanent employment on exciting projects that would explore the endless frontier of space. But, as many of these mainly self-reliant, ii individualistic “squares” would bitterly discover, their dedication to Grumman did little to secure their livelihoods during the aerospace industry’s early 1970s downsizing; their individual successes were too largely tied to federal spending and declined when Americans grew disenchanted with space exploration. This dissertation demonstrates how the cultural bond of paternalism between aerospace workers and their company unraveled in the 1960s, and then ended in the early 1970s, because of forces within the company, the economy, and the American state. The word "triumph" in this study’s title not only applies to Grummanites’ triumphs with the Lunar Modules, but also their individual socioeconomic victories. The term “decline” refers to the early 1970s downsizing of more than a third of the Apollo workforce that had made that program a reality. By relying on a wide-range of archival research (including corporate records) and extensive surveys and interviews with Grummanites, this dissertation provides an overview of how Apollo era aerospace workers interacted with the Cold War American state. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Finishing a dissertation is a humbling experience. It allows one to reflect back and realize how many people have touched one’s life and contributed to one’s development as a scholar and as a human being. Many people and organizations have sustained me as I completed this milestone, and I’d like to thank them publically. Unfortunately, I will undoubtedly forget to acknowledge some who deserve mention, but I trust, despite my oversight, that they will realize how much I appreciated all that they did for me. First, I would like to thank my dissertation committee, which was carefully chaired by Peter Kuznick, and included Allan Lichtman and Roger Launius. Each of them contributed significantly to the development of this work and offered substantial and thoughtful comments. Although I didn’t always heed all of their advice and counsel, they helped me mold this monograph into a much better work than it would have been without their keen eyes and sharp critiques. Early in the process, Michael Kazin played an important role. Through many thought-provoking conversations and discussions he inspired me to take a kernel of an idea and turn it into a strong project proposal. And the late Bob Griffith also provided constant feedback along the way. I only wish that Bob had lived long enough to see me complete this work, but I know that he guided me along in other ways as I brought it home. iv Many people have welcomed me into the space history community and assisted me with my career and the development of this dissertation. Shortly after arriving in Washington, DC in the early 1990s, John Logsdon offered me a research position at the George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute, which further stimulated my interest in the field. I also met Dwayne Day there, who has remained a good friend and a constant source of motivation. John and Dwayne introduced me to a number of people in the field, including those at NASA and the National Air and Space Museum. Several individuals in the NASA History Office took an interest in this work from its very beginning, including Stephen Garber, Jane Odom, Colin Fries, John Hargenrader, Liz Suchow, Glen Asner, Mark Kahn, and Nadine Andreassen. All of them were extremely helpful during my tenure as the 1999-2000 AHA Fellow in Aerospace History and have continued to assist me with research to this day. A little bit further down the street from NASA, at the National Air and Space Museum, Michael Neufeld, Allan Needell, David DeVorkin, Martin Collins, Paul Ceruzzi, Valerie Neal, Tom Crouch, and Margaret Weitekamp gave me an inspiring environment in which to work as a Smithsonian Predoctoral Fellow. They regularly peppered me with penetrating questions and pushed me to think differently as I approached my research. They also provided many enjoyable lunch hours as I grappled with various challenges. Their thoughtful guidance along the way was greatly appreciated. Additionally, I’d like to recognize the museum’s library and archive staff for helping me access a wide variety of sources in a timely manner. Other archivists and librarians who also offered a great deal of assistance include historian Josh Stoff at the Cradle of Aviation Museum, the staff at the Long Island v Studies Institute at Hofstra University, and William Lefevre at the Walter P. Reuther Library at Wayne State University. I also wish to thank the National Science Foundation for providing me with an award at a key moment in the research process. Exploring the history of Grummanites has been an extremely exciting and satisfying endeavor. It would not have been possible, however, without the assistance of several key Grummanites. Dick Dunn was the first one to put me in touch with the good folks at the Northrop Grumman History Center in 1997. There, Larry Feliu, Lynn McDonald, George Hendry, and the late Roger Seybel, all offered extensive support as I poured through records of the history of the organization and its people. Ross Fleisig shared copies of his personal papers with me, and Joe Dudek and Don Imgram introduced me to the Grumman Retiree Clubs in Bethpage, Long Island, and in the Washington, DC area. Meeting such a large number of former Grummanites was a meaningful experience, and their involvement ensured that my project would become a reality. Many of them filled out surveys and questionnaires and took the time to answer my many questions in person. I only hope this dissertation facilitates a better understand of their personal stories and careers. Throughout this process, there have been many friends and family members who have stood by my side. Deep gratitude goes to my mother, my father, and my wife’s family, for their unwavering support. And a special shout out to Uncle Harold, one of my favorite history conversationalists. I also received generous encouragement from several friends at the University of Maryland’s Clarice Smith Performing Arts Center during the home stretch of completing my Ph.D.—many thanks to Fallon and Matt Bachman, Ed vi Lewis and Scott Palmer, Scott Eichinger and Jason Lott, and Debby and Victor Vargas. People I know from the Round House Theatre also provided years of moral support while I grinded through the dissertation process, including Alice Baer (who painstakingly entered all of the information from the Grummanite Survey/Questionnaires into an Excel spreadsheet!), Ira Hillman and Jeremy Barber, Susan McGee, Janet Tuthill, Gary and Stacy Cardillo, Adrian Ballard, Katha Kissman, Jerry Whiddon, Mal and Dottie Knapp, and Melissa-Leigh and Carlos Bustamante. In an effort to escape the rigors of study, I often went orienteering with great friends who not only offered a good distraction from my work, but who were there for me during good and bad times, including Ted and Darcy Good, Peggy Dickison and Nadim Ahmed, Greg and Kathleen Lennon, Jan and Dasa Merka, Tim Good, Valerie Meyer, Tom and Trish Strat, Tom Nolan, Eddie Bergeron, Brad Whitmore, and all of my other orienteering buddies, especially those from the Quantico Orienteering Club. Finally, there are several long-time friends and colleagues who I want to recognize. These include Greg and Christina Viscomi, Dave Brandt and Heather Lair, Jodie Allison-Bunnell, Lisa Forrest and Herb Golden, Andy Butrica, Karyn Strickler, Ken Durr, Rich Taylor, Dave Hamdy, Tim and Mickey Hammett, the late Uday Mohan (my great jazz buddy), and, of course, Bernie Unti (a.k.a. Howard)—a wonderful comrade-in-arms at AU, and the best neighbor in the world. All of these people contributed to my sanity and health along the way (more than they will ever know), and I am tremendously grateful for their friendship. Last, but most importantly, this dissertation came to fruition because of the unflagging dedication and support of four incredible souls. First, my sister Chérie has always vii supported me. She has helped me with everything ranging from computer problems to the big questions about life. She also dealt with many of the formatting and styling issues as well as proof-reading the work. Second, Art Dwight, my personal coach, stepped into my life three years ago and motivated me to reenergize my drive and passion for this project. He was there at this project’s most crucial juncture and was absolutely essential to bringing me to this moment of completion. Third, not enough can be said about my close friend and colleague Liz Stewart. Liz began the Ph.D. program at American University with me many years ago, and, although she completed her monograph long before I did, she tirelessly stayed in “dissertation mode” with me and offered numerous comments and suggestions on ways I could improve mine. She has read every single word of this work many times over and provided numerous edits. I cannot thank her enough for her profound generosity and everything she has done for me as a friend and colleague. And finally, there is my wife Heidi. She is everything to me. She has been the best friend and partner I could ever imagine. She has always been there to support me in absolutely every way. Without her, this dissertation—and my wonderful life so far— would not have been possible. This work is humbly dedicated to her. Rockville, MD, July 2011 viii INTRODUCTION Walter Burt came from the coal fields of Pennsylvania. At the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Company, his life took on a new pride and passion. Burt was one of the lead production workers on the Apollo Lunar Module's cable system during the 1960s. Every day, he arrived at Grumman an hour early in order to discuss ideas with colleagues about ways they could improve their work and make it more efficient; he also spent countless hours beyond his regular duties to make sure everything was "just right" with the Lunar Module (LM). Burt took great pride in the fact that his hands touched something daily that men were going to use to land on the Moon.1 Joe Gavin took just as much pride in his work as the Director of Grumman's LM Program. Gavin had followed a different path than Burt on his way to Grumman. After obtaining a degree in aeronautical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Gavin began slowly working his way up through Grumman's engineering corps. Throughout his career, he spent many nights on a cot in his office and only caught a few hours of sleep. By the summer of 1972, Gavin would become the President of the Grumman Aerospace Company.2 1 Jimmy Breslin, "No Reason Now to Go in Early," Newsday, 30 July 1972, “LM Production,” Vertical Files, Cradle of Aviation Museum, East Garden City, NY. Hereinafter cited as CAM. 2 "Fly Me to the Moon: An Interview with Joseph G. Gavin, Jr.,” Technology Review (July 1994): 62. 1 2 That same summer, Walter Burt heard some discouraging news on the radio while driving home from work. Grumman, which had been considered one of the front-runners for the Space Shuttle contract, had lost the $2.6 billion job to North American Rockwell. That meant layoffs were imminent. While it is difficult to uncover whether Burt was one of those who lost their jobs, one thing is clear: many of Burt's friends and colleagues, from engineers to production workers, were among those dropped from the company's payroll as the Apollo Program came to an end. 3 Burt's and Gavin's stories exemplify the range of emotions that many aerospace workers felt during the Apollo era. At times, there were moments of intense pride and joy in knowing that their work had made a difference to their company and country; there were also moments of despair, however, when they found out that their job, or a colleague's job, would soon be gone. This study explores those bittersweet times for Grumman workers and management during the Apollo era and tries to make sense of them within the context of the 1960s and early 1970s. This history of Grumman aerospace engineers and production workers during the Apollo era provides unique insights into the impact that the U.S. civil space program has had on American society. During the 1960s, the burgeoning business of space exploration put a vast number of Americans to work. At that time, the aerospace industry 3 Jimmy Breslin, "No Reason Now to Go in Early," Newsday, 30 July 1972, “LM Production,” Vertical Files, CAM. 3 was the largest manufacturing employer in the nation.4 At the height of the Apollo Program, approximately one out of every fifty Americans was working on some aspect of the project.5 Grumman, one of the largest and most important aerospace companies in the Northeast, was one of the key players in the new field of space exploration, thanks to the Apollo Lunar Module and Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO) contracts that the company had won in the early 1960s. During the Apollo era, the Bethpage, New York, manufacturer would become Long Island's single largest employer, with over 37,000 workers and a billion-dollar corporation.6 One of the overarching historical questions this study helps address is how large state-initiated and -supported programs, and the companies that helped facilitate those programs, affected the people who worked on such enterprises. Conversely, this project also explores how those workers interacted with the government, or in this case, how they interacted with a major aerospace company and the Cold War American state of the 1960s. This study analyzes these questions by exploring the socioeconomic, cultural, and professional lives of the engineers and production workers of the Grumman Corporation's 4 Aerospace Industries Association Industrial Relations Committee, "National Goals and the Aerospace Industry," April 1971, 2, "Aerospace Industry," Section A-12, Northrop Grumman History Center, Bethpage, NY. Hereinafter cited as NGHC. 5 For the statistics about the number of people who worked on the Apollo program, see Roger Launius, NASA: A History of the U.S. Civil Space Program (Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing Company, 1994), 70. 6 For information about employment numbers, see "Employee-Population, As of 1st of Month," "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. Grumman became a billion-dollar corporation in sales for the first time in 1966. See H. E. Bockrath to Len Victor, Long Island Press, 29 November 1966, "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. 4 Aerospace Division from the birth of the Space Age in 1957, through their triumphs with the Apollo Lunar Modules and Orbiting Astronomical Observatories during the 1960s and early 1970s, to the end of the Apollo era and the subsequent aerospace industry recession (or depression, for some) of 1972-1973. As a whole, this dissertation seeks to provide a much-needed overview of what aerospace engineers' and workers' lives were like during the "Golden Age" of the American space program and its immediate aftermath. “Grummanites”—as Grumman employees like to refer to themselves—were deeply affected by several of the social and cultural movements that helped define the 1960s and 1970s. Most Grummanites experienced certain aspects of the organized labor movement and the African-American freedom struggle, as well as the beginning of the reconfiguration of traditional gender norms. Many of these actions took place within and around Grumman. Grummanites did not merely experience these social and cultural movements passively; they saw them up-close and personal. Some perceived these sociocultural shifts as distractions to themselves and fellow aerospace workers who had dedicated themselves to putting American astronauts on the Moon before the end of the 1960s. Only a few historical works have offered insights into the lives of aerospace industry workers during the 1960s and 1970s, and they have been NASA-sponsored histories. One outstanding book on the subject is Sylvia Doughty Fries‟s NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo (1992), which focuses on the lives of fifty-one NASA engineers who worked at the Space Agency during the Apollo Program. However, because Fries‟s work is only centered on NASA employees, not contractors, this 5 dissertation provides a very different perspective by focusing on Grumman employees.7 Similarly, while Howard McCurdy‟s Inside NASA: High Technology and Organizational Change in the U.S. Space Program (1993) provides important insight into NASA employees and their organizational culture from the 1950s through the 1980s, it is still centered solely on the government space agency. 8 There are also several histories about the agency‟s various centers across the country that provide occasional glimpses into the lives of workers, as do some of the autobiographies and memoirs of various NASA officials and administrators, but again these works are focused mainly on space agency personnel. 9 It is also worth noting that there are a few histories of various aerospace 7 Sylvia Doughty Fries, NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo (Washington, DC: NASA SP4104, 1992). 8 Howard McCurdy‟s Inside NASA: High Technology and Organizational Change in the U.S. Space Program (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993). 9 A few examples of the NASA sponsored histories of the agency‟s various centers include: Andrew J. Dunar and Stephen P. Waring, Power to Explore: A History of Marshall Space Flight Center, 1960-1990 (Washington: NASA SP-4313, 1999); Henry C. Dethloff, “Suddenly Tomorrow Came…”: A History of the Johnson Space Center, 1957-1990 (Washington: NASA SP-4307, 1993); James R. Hansen, Spaceflight Revolution: NASA Langley Research Center from Sputnik to Apollo (Washington: NASA SP4308, 1995); Lane E. Wallace, Dreams, Hopes, Realities. NASA‟s Goddard Space Flight Center: The First Forty Years (Washington: NASA SP-4312, 1999); Charles D. Benson and William Barnaby Faherty, Moonport: A History of Apollo Launch Facilities and Operations (Washington: NASA SP-4204, 1978); Alfred Rosenthal, Venture into Space: Early Years of Goddard Space Flight Center (Washington: NASA SP-4301, 1985); Seth B. Anderson, Memoirs of an Aeronautical Engineer: Flight Tests at Ames Research Center: 1940-1970 Monograph in Aerospace History, No. 26, 2002, (Washington: NASA SP-2002-4526); and Curtis Peebles, ed., The Spoken Word: Recollections of Dryden History, The Early Years Monograph in Aerospace History, No. 30, 2003 (Washington: NASA SP-2003-4530). William Barnaby Faherty, Florida‟s Space Coast: The Impact of NASA on the Sunshine State (Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida, 2002) also provides some insights into space program workers‟ lives. Some examples of NASA-oriented biographies include: Henry W. Lambright, Powering Apollo: James E. Webb of NASA (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995); Robert C. Seamans Aiming at Targets: The Autobiography of Robert C. Seamans (Washington: NASA SP-4106, 1996); Keith T. Glennan, The Birth of NASA: The Diary of T. Keith Glennan, edited by J.D. Hunley (Washington: NASA SP-4105, 1993); Gene Kranz Failure is not an Option: Mission Control From Mercury to Apollo 13 and Beyond (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2009); Christopher Kraft, Flight: My Life in Mission Control, 6 companies that contain occasional passages about their employees. However, they are company histories, not works specifically dedicated to the subject of aerospace workers.10 A few books do offer glimpses into the lives of Grummanites during the Apollo period. Tom Kelly‟s excellent memoir Moon Lander: How We Developed the Apollo Lunar Module (2001), which mainly focuses on Kelly‟s experiences as Grumman‟s LM Program Engineer, provides insight into Grummanites‟ lives during the 1960s and 1970s from an insider‟s perspective.11 Similarly, George Skurla and William Gregory‟s Inside the Iron Works: How Grumman‟s Glory Days Faded (2004) also reveals some information about Grumman‟s rank-and-file workers. In this memoir, Skurla, who had been the company‟s F-14 Program Manager, as well as the man in charge of the LMs down at Cape Canaveral, shares some interesting stories about Grummanites during the Apollo era.12 But perhaps the best work about rank-and-file Grummanites up to this point has been Charles Pellegrino and Joshua Stoff‟s Chariots for Apollo: The Making of the (New York: Plume, 2002); and Glen W. Swanson, editor, “Before This Decade is Out…”: Personal Reflections on the Apollo Program (Gainesville: The University Press of Florida, 2002). 10 Although not an actual corporate history, Joan Lisa Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999) offers good insights into the agency and its interactions with the aerospace industry. Some corporate-oriented histories worth noting include: Mike Gray, Angle of Attack: Harrison Storms and the Race to the Moon (New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1992); William b. Harwood, Raise Heaven and Earth: The Story of Martin Marietta People and Their Pioneering Achievements, (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993); Walter J. Boyne, Beyond the Horizon: The Story of Lockheed (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 1998); and Robert J. Serling, Legend & Legacy: The Story of Boeing and Its People (New York: St. Martins Press, 1991). 11 Thomas J. Kelly, Moon Lander: How We Developed the Apollo Lunar Module (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001.) 12 George M. Skurla and William H. Gregory Inside the Iron Works: How Grumman‟s Glory Days Faded (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2004). 7 Lunar Module (1985), republished in 1999 with the slightly altered title Chariots for Apollo: The Untold Story Behind the Race to the Moon.13 Pellegrino and Stoff conducted extensive interviews in the early 1980s with many of the Grummanites who helped design and build the LMs. While the book is an exciting and popular account of that process and the problems Grummanites encountered, it is solely focused on that story, unlike this dissertation, which looks more broadly at how Grummanites experienced many of the social and cultural issues of the 1960s and 1970s. 14 A recent, more analytic Grumman-oriented work is Stephen Raymond Patnode‟s dissertation “Labor‟s Love Lost: The Influence of Gender, Race, and Class on the Workplace in Postwar America” (2008). Patnode spends approximately a third of his work looking at certain aspects of Grummanites‟ lives from the 1940s to the 1970s and “assesses the role that gender, class, and race played in the decision of some workers to reject unions.”15 Although Patnode makes some important and interesting observations about the culture of “masculinity” among Grummanites during the postwar era, his emphasis on the foundational years of what he argues is Grumman‟s gendered culture— the 1940s and 1950s—represents an entirely different focus from this work. This dissertation looks at Grummanites during the Apollo era and places workers in the 13 Charles R. Pellegrino and Joshua Stoff Chariots for Apollo: The Making of the Lunar Module, (New York: Atheneum, 1985); and Charles Pellegrino and Joshua Stoff, Chariots for Apollo: The Untold Story Behind the Race to the Moon (New York: Avon Books, 1999). 14 Although Pellegrino and Stoff‟s republished version of their book has an extensive “Afterword” describing where the historical participants were in 1999 that is the only change from the original version. 15 Stephen Raymond Patnode, “Labor‟s Love Lost: The Influence of Gender, Race, and Class on the Workplace in Postwar America” (Ph.D. diss., Stony Brook University, 2008), iii. 8 context of the political economy of the national mobilization to reach a new frontier, a much different story. Finally, two other Grumman-specific works from the 1970s deserve mention. Political scientist Randolph Paul Kucera‟s 1973 dissertation Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation and its "Familial” Relationship with the United States Navy does an excellent job exploring the strong bond the company had with the seafaring service, while Richard Thruelsen‟s The Grumman Story (1976) remains the standard general company history. 16 In closing this discussion about the historiographic significance of this dissertation, it is important to note that this work is not a history of the Lunar Modules. There have already been some outstanding books on that subject, some of which have been mentioned previously. In addition to the works of Kelly, Pellegrino, and Stoff, readers can obtain an excellent overview of the LMs, as well as the Apollo Command/Service Module, by looking at Courtney Brooks, James Grimwood, and Loyd Swenson‟s Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft (1979).17 It remains one of the key works on the subject. The multi-volume, NASA-sponsored, The Apollo Spacecraft chronologies (1969-1974), also provide a wealth of information about the LMs. 18 David Mindell‟s recent book Digital Apollo: Human and Machine in 16 Randolph Paul Kucera, “Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation and its "Familial” Relationship with the United States Navy” (Ph.D. dissertation, Syracuse University, 1973); and Richard Thruelsen, The Grumman Story (New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, 1976). 17 Courtney G. Brooks, James M. Grimwood, and Loyd S. Swenson, Jr., Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft (Washington: NASA SP-4205, 1979). 18 Ivan D. Ertel and Mary Louise Morse, The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology, Volume I, Through November 7, 1962 (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4009, 1969); Mary Louise Morse and Jean 9 Spaceflight (2008) is a fascinating look at the conflict between the astronauts‟ desire to pilot the LM and allowing flight by automated systems. Mindell reveals the inspired design compromise that was reached.19 Finally, Joshua Stoff‟s Building Moonships: The Grumman Lunar Module (2004), although essentially a pictorial reference guide, still provides a great deal of information about Grumman‟s role in the history of the Lunar Modules.20 This dissertation is based on extensive archival research at the Northrop Grumman History Center, the NASA Historical Reference Collection, the Smithsonian Institution‟s National Air and Space Museum Archives and Library, the Library of Congress, the National Archives, the Cradle of Aviation Museum, the Long Island Studies Institute, and the United Auto Workers Archives. It also relies on several oral histories of Grummanites and personal interviews and correspondence with them. Finally, Kernahan Bays, The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology, Volume II, November 8, 1962-September 30, 1964 (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4009, 1973); Courtney G. Brookes and Ivan D. Ertel, The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology, Volume III, October 1, 1964-January 20, 1966 (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4009, 1973); Ivan D. Ertel and Roland W. Newkird with Courtney G. Brooks The Apollo Spacecraft: A Chronology, Volume IV, January 21, 1966-July 13, 1974 (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4009, 1974). 19 David A. Mindell, Digital Apollo: Human and Machine in Spaceflight (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2008). 20 Joshua Stoff, Building Moonships: The Grumman Lunar Module (Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2004). For those readers wishing to see the strict technical aspects of the LMs, there are also a few excellent photographic and pictorial works on the Lunar Module‟s architecture. Two good examples are Scott P. Sullivan, Virtual LM: A Pictorial Essay of the Engineering and Construction of the Apollo Lunar Module, the historic spacecraft that landed man on the Moon (Burlington, Ontario, Canada: Apogee Books, 2004); and Christopher Riley, NASA Apollo 11: An Insight into the Hardware from the First Manned Mission to Land on the Moon (United Kingdom: Haynes Publishing, 2010). For an excellent bibliography of LM related material from 1994, see “Chapter 4: Apollo Technology” in Roger D. Launius and J.D. Hunley, An Annotated Bibliography of the Apollo Program NASA Monographs in Aerospace History, Number 2, (Washington, DC: NASA History Office, July 1994), 23-28. 10 it is important to note briefly a very key source used to complete this dissertation—an extensive historical survey/questionnaire completed by thirty-one former Grummanites. They were members of Grumman retiree clubs on Long Island and in the Washington, DC, area in the fall of 1999 (when the questionnaire was administered). The survey consists of eighty-nine questions about their socioeconomic backgrounds and their experiences during the Apollo era. Originally, roughly 280 questionnaires were handed out at the retiree club meetings. Thirty-one were completed, representing a return rate of approximately 11%. Although these Grummanites were a self-selected group, given the fact that they were members of a retiree club, they still represent a vital link to the history of Grummanites and their lives during the 1960s and early 1970s. The title of this dissertation—“The Triumph and Decline of the „Squares‟”—is a reference to NASA Administrator Thomas Paine's comment about the success of the Apollo 8 Mission in December 1968. The day after Apollo 8 astronauts Frank Borman, James Lovell, and William Anders became the first men ever to orbit the Moon, Paine praised the efforts of the engineers and others who had made the mission a success. At the time, he declared the feat "The Triumph of the Squares"; since then, the phrase has been used repeatedly to describe the overall effort of the engineers and scientists who worked on Apollo. 21 In that spirit, this dissertation associates the phrase with the Grummanites who designed and built the LMs. Paine‟s observation encapsulated a 21 For more details on Paine's phrase, see Houston Chronicle, 27 December 1968; and "Memorandum For Mr. Sherrod," 17 January 1969. Both found in "Thomas O. Paine Administrative Files," NASA Historical Reference Collection, NASA Headquarters, Washington, DC (hereinafter cited as NHRC). 11 cultural tension reaching its peak in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The term "square" began to take on a new and unflattering meaning for the American counterculture in the 1950s, connoting a person who was unimaginative, shortsighted, excessively moralistic, and “unhip.” Indeed, many aerospace engineers physically exemplified the counterculture‟s image of a square, because they always seemed to be wearing dress shirts and ties, complete with pocket protectors. Yet as NASA Administrator Paine noted in a 1970 commencement address at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (provocatively titled “Squareland, Potland, and Space,”) many Americans continued to think of a square as a person who was fair, just, straightforward, morally upright, and clearly centered in the "mainstream" of American society. In the culture wars of the 1960s, Grummanites perceived Apollo as a triumph for squares—a triumph for those who dedicated themselves wholeheartedly to an American, as well as a company, goal. Unlike many other historical studies about the 1960s that focus primarily on the left-leaning social movements of the era, this study explores a particular aspect of what many contemporaries believed was the backbone of middle America.22 To be sure, this dissertation does reveal how many of the key social movements of the 1960s affected Grummanites, but it does so from their perspective. The word "triumph" in this dissertation‟s title not only applies to the Grumman engineers' technological and emotional triumphs with the LM and OAOs, but also their individual socioeconomic 22 For an example of the more flattering interpretation of the term "square," see "Squareland, Potland and Space," Commencement Address by Dr. Thomas Paine, NASA Administrator, at Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 7 June 1970, NHRC. 12 victories. The space program afforded hundreds of thousands of Americans the opportunity to advance themselves socially, economically, and professionally, albeit sometimes briefly, and Grummanites were no exception. Many of them would take advantage of the professional and economic opportunities that the U.S. civil space program offered to realize their middle-class aspirations. Believing their efforts would be repaid with lifelong employment, many resisted increasing evidence that traditional values such as unconditional company loyalty and dedication to craft were “square.” But for those who lost their jobs in the post-Space Race “decline” of the 1970s, those middleclass hopes and aspirations were short-lived. This dissertation consists of six chapters and a conclusion. Chapter One briefly explores the history of Grumman and the development of its unique organizational and work culture. It also reveals the relationship that the company‟s employees had with one another. It then explores how the company‟s culture and personal relationships changed when Grumman began working with NASA in the 1960s. Grummanites logged a great deal of overtime designing and building the LMs. President John F. Kennedy‟s deadline of landing a man on the Moon before the end of the 1960s put enormous pressure on them to produce the Lunar Modules on time. As a result, many Grummanites‟ lives changed because of their work on the program, and Chapter One explores those changes within the context of the Space Race and NASA‟s goals. It concludes by delving into what Grummanites‟ expectations were when they began working on the space program and juxtaposes those expectations with some broader cultural ideas about space exploration, particularly those developed by Wernher von Braun and his colleagues. 13 Chapters Two and Three investigate how Grummanites experienced some of the key social movements of the era. The second chapter focuses on the company‟s labor relations. It explores the question of why Grumman remained one of only two major aerospace companies that never unionized. By the early 1960s, 93% of the aerospace industry had been organized; only Grumman, and, ironically, Northrop (which would take over Grumman in 1994), remained non-union. Chapter Two investigates Grummanites‟ steadfast anti-unionism within the context of the company‟s unique paternalistic culture. It also provides some important insights into the different approaches that the United Auto Workers and the International Association of Machinists used in trying to entice the workers to join them. Chapter Three explores the issue of the company‟s race relations. It is the story of what happened when a small group of AfricanAmerican Grummanites, who were dissatisfied with their progress at the firm, challenged the company and demanded that it help them improve their occupational positions and status. Thanks to the growth of equal employment laws in the 1960s, this group of workers took legal action and pushed their case all the way to federal court. They also tried to organize a mass strike against the company. In short, Chapter Three is the story of what happened when the Civil Rights Movement came to Grumman. Chapter Four focuses on the history of Grumman‟s downsizing in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The company‟s first significant layoffs of that period began in the winter of 1967, almost two years before Apollo 8 orbited the Moon. By early 1971, Grumman had lost roughly one-quarter of its 1960s workforce. As the region‟s largest employer, Grumman‟s downsizing had a significant trickle-down effect on Long Island, both 14 psychologically and economically. This section of the dissertation explores this story and then places the Reduction-in-Force (RIF) within a regional and national context. It also looks at the breakdown of traditional gender roles and the loss of masculine identity in the home when many of the engineers who received pink slips were unable to find new jobs. Chapter Four also reveals how Grumman‟s paternalistic culture began to unravel as a result of all of the downsizing. Although some Grummanites took solace in the fact that the company had won the Navy‟s new F-14 fighter jet contract in 1969, that program did not reverse the decline in employment at Grumman quickly enough. As 1972 approached, Grumman management decided to put all of the company‟s energy into trying to win NASA‟s upcoming Space Shuttle contract. If the company could secure that job, it would reenergize the firm and assure its future. Chapter Five investigates the complicated and intertwining stories of Grumman‟s F-14 “Tomcat” Program and the company‟s bid to win the Space Shuttle contract. In an effort to secure the Tomcat in 1969, Grumman had pursued a “fixed-price” agreement with the Navy; company president Lew Evans was convinced that the firm had to win the job or else it would be out of the fighter jet business forever. Unfortunately for Grumman, although the “fixed-price” idea attracted the Navy, and was calculated to adjust to a normal rate of inflation, it actually ended-up seriously jeopardizing the company‟s future. When the recession hit in the early 1970s and inflation skyrocketed, Grumman lost a considerable amount of money on every F-14 it built. Congressional hearings ensued and were taking place even as Grumman prepared to submit its final bid for the Space Shuttle. Chapter Five explores this complex story and reveals how the F-14 15 contract impacted the company‟s attempt to secure the Shuttle. It also looks at how NASA and Grumman‟s previous work relationship on the LM Program affected the firm‟s bid. Having put all of their hopes into winning the Shuttle, Grummanites were devastated when North American Rockwell got the job. In the aftermath of the loss, Grumman officials and state and local politicians scrambled to try to secure Shuttle subcontracting work to try to keep as many Grummanites on the job as they could. However, the subcontracting positions would not come until well into 1973, and by that time it would be too late to save many Grummanites‟ jobs. As Chapter Five closes, it focuses on how Grumman‟s paternalistic culture was coming apart during the postApollo layoffs in the recession of the early 1970s. The last chapter of this dissertation looks at the state of the aerospace industry in the early 1970s. It explores how industry experts‟ views about the future of aerospace quickly changed within the course of only a couple of years. In 1969 the sector‟s leading authorities were recommending job and skill reconversion as the best way for the industry to handle Apollo‟s downsizing. Former aerospace engineers could help alleviate many of the nation‟s problems—including its urban, social, environmental, and transportation challenges—if they applied their skills to other economic sectors. Theoretically, the plan made sense, but when the recession of the early 1970s hit, and funding dried up, even reconversion was no longer a viable option to solve massive unemployment among aerospace engineers. This chapter reveals that no one had a good answer for the aerospace unemployment crisis. Chapter Six also looks at three key unemployment studies about aerospace workers in the mid-1960s by the U.S. Arms 16 Control and Disarmament Agency. These investigations, which assess the unemployment experiences of thousands of workers in very different regions of the country, include studies of Boeing in Seattle, Martin in Denver, and Republic Aviation in Farmingdale, Long Island (Grumman‟s neighboring firm). Taken together, these case studies reveal the host of problems unemployed aerospace workers faced when they tried to find jobs, even during a period when the perception was that Apollo employment was still on the rise. Overall, Chapter Six looks at the ways in which aerospace workers confronted the decline of their hope of lifetime employment. The 1960s was a time of great excitement and pride for Grummanites. It was a period of incredible technological advances and unprecedented individual growth. The space program had afforded many of them opportunities to advance socially, economically, and professionally, and they had made the most of the opportunity. The Apollo era was also a time when Grummanites learned to work in an entirely different manner; NASA's new testing procedures and organizational methods essentially forced them to create a new work environment that was more responsive to the major changes brought on by the challenges of human space flight. They also faced pressures from the labor and civil rights movements that tried to alter their organizational and work culture. In some cases, these challenges threated their very jobs, or at least that‟s the way it seemed to them. Perhaps most significantly for Grummanites, all these forces—NASA‟s technocratic culture, the radical democracy of the era‟s social movements, and the waning of a national commitment to the frontier of space—had helped to slowly unravel the company‟s paternalistic culture throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. For their part, 17 Grummanites had to come to terms with whether the squares would indeed triumph or would ultimately decline. CHAPTER ONE GRUMMAN, NASA, THE SPACE RACE, AND THE PROMISE OF THE ENDLESS FRONTIER When Grumman first started constructing airplanes during the early years of the Great Depression, the company began developing a unique culture. That culture remained intact well into the 1960s when the firm built the Apollo Lunar Modules, the spacecraft that allowed the U.S. to realize President John F. Kennedy‘s goal of landing a man on the Moon before the end of that decade. This chapter explores the development of Grumman‘s culture and then assesses some of the changes it went through during the Space Age as the company began working with NASA. It also discusses the effects that the Space Race had on Grummanites and questions what drove them to sacrifice countless hours working on the Lunar Modules. The final section seeks to understand what Grumman engineers‘ occupational expectations were going into the 1960s. A history of Grummanites during the Apollo era allows us to better understand the hopes and dreams of many of the Americans who helped the U.S. civil space program reach the Moon. Grumman and Its ―Cradle to Grave Culture‖ Grumman started designing and building aircraft in a small garage about twenty miles east of Manhattan in January 1930. Four men were essentially responsible for the growth and development of the firm: Leroy ―Roy‖ Grumman, a former Navy pilot and 18 19 engineer; Leon ―Jake‖ Swirbul, one of Grumman‘s close friends and an ex-Marine; William Schwendler, a former aeronautical engineer with the Chance Vought Company; and Clinton Towl, an accountant with a couple of years of engineering studies under his belt.1 The Long Island manufacturer started with only twenty-one employees. During the Depression, however, the company expanded considerably, thanks to several contracts with the Navy. Roy Grumman‘s connections with the seafaring service worked to the firm‘s advantage, and the company developed a ―familial‖ relationship with that branch of the military service.2 By World War II, Grumman had grown so much that it needed to move further out onto Long Island and establish new facilities. 3 During World War II, Grumman established itself as one of the leading aircraft manufacturers, employing approximately 25,500 workers.4 A long and well-known line of Navy fighters emerged from the company's new plants in Bethpage during the war, including the carrier-based F6F, the famous "Hellcat." As many naval pilots would attest, 1 Three other men were key investors in Grumman in the very beginning, but did very little to contribute to its development and growth, they included A. P. Loening, Grover Loening, and E. W. Poor. The Loenings had opened a small aircraft company for a short while in the 1920s, but it failed. Roy Grumman, Swirbul, Schwendler, and Towl had all worked at Loening. For an extensive discussion about Grumman‘s beginning, see Richard Thruelsen, The Grumman Story (New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, 1976), 17-69. For more about the personalities of Grumman, Swirbul, Schwendler and Towl, see George M. Skurla and William H. Gregory, Inside the Iron Works: How Grumman‘s Glory Days Faded (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2004), 11. 2 By 1933, approximately 75% of Grumman‘s sales came from Navy contracts. See Randolph Paul Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation and its ‗Familial‘ Relationship with the United States Navy‖ (Ph.D. diss., Syracuse University, 1973), 113. 3 For an in-depth discussion about Grumman‘s move out onto Long Island, see Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 57-93. 4 Grumman reached the height of its World War II employment in September 1943 when approximately 25,500 employees worked there. See, "Employee-Population, As of 1st of Month," "Personnel," Section A-8, Northrop Grumman History Center, Bethpage, NY, (hereinafter cited as NGHC). 20 the Hellcat and its cousins performed amazingly well over the Pacific. Grumman fighters could withstand extensive combat damage and still bring their pilots safely back to their ships. As a result, the company gained an outstanding reputation for its designs and products.5 Some people began calling Grumman the "Iron Works" because of the solid fighters it had built; others claimed that the name Grumman stamped on a product carried the same value as the word "sterling" stamped on silver.6 Grumman's relationship with the Navy continued to grow during the postwar era. 7 During the 1950s, the Bethpage company fared much better than some of its competitors because of the large proportion of Navy aircraft contracts it won. Despite a few years of fairly severe downsizing, the company began to rebuild its employee base; nevertheless, by October 1957, during the dawn of the Space Age, Grumman had still only reclaimed a little more than half of its total World War II workforce. 8 If the company wanted to continue to grow, it needed to diversify and, thanks to the Soviet Union, there was a new urgency to find ways to break on through to the ether of space. Grumman did not enter the Space Age as quickly or as excitedly as many of its competitors; the Bethpage firm was slow to participate in the new field of space 5 An extensive history of Grumman‘s World War II naval aircraft can be found in Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 159-215. 6 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 6. Admiral John S. McCain, the grandfather of Senator John S. McCain, III, said: ―Grumman is to the Navy what sterling is to silver.‖ 7 From 1945-1959, Navy contracts accounted for over 90% of Grumman's total annual sales. Grumman‘s F9F fighter jet, the ―Panther‖ (and its cousins the ―Cougar‖ and the ―Tiger‖) became mainstays of the seafaring service during the period. At that time, Grumman fighters represented 61% of the Navy‘s air fleet. See Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 127-129. 8 "Employee-Population, As of 1st of Month," "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. 21 exploration. Beginning in the late 1940s and continuing into the early 1950s—several years before Sputnik—many of the country's major aircraft companies were eagerly remaking their firms into aerospace corporations. Historian Joan Lisa Bromberg has described how contractors "struggled for hegemony over the new field" and "fought hard to claim space as their turf."9 North American Aviation, for example, had created four very distinct divisions that focused on every major space-oriented technology from rocket engineering to nuclear power by 1955. The Glenn L. Martin company had done much the same thing by the mid-1950s concentrating on launch vehicles and securing the contracts for the Viking rocket for Project Vanguard (the U.S.‘s intended first artificial satellite), and the Air Force's Titan ICBM (the era‘s main nuclear warhead rocket).10 Grumman, on the other hand, came to the space field very late and somewhat reluctantly because of a conservative management philosophy.11 Unlike many contractors, Grumman was essentially an aircraft company that did space, not a full-fledged aerospace firm. The difference stemmed from the fact that many of Grumman's competitors had several experienced and well-funded space-oriented divisions already in place by the time President Kennedy called for the establishment of the Apollo Program, unlike Grumman, which only created a Space Steering Group from a small handful of engineers in 1958, 9 Joan Lisa Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999), 14 and 30. The first quote is from page 14, the second is from page 30. 10 11 Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry, 23. As Stephen Kerekes, a Grumman Public Relations Assistant, noted about the firm‘s slow entry into the field of space exploration: ―Getting Jesus Christ replaced in the Catholic Church would have been easier than getting the Board [of Directors] to let the firm do anything besides building Navy airplanes. The selling job that had to be done inside the company was probably harder than getting the contracts from NASA.‖ For the quote, see Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 259. 22 almost nine months to the day after the launch of the first Sputnik. 12 Grumman's upper management, which had been with the company since its early years, would have been quite content to continue to focus the company's energies on supplying the Navy with aircraft. Compared to the new and young pro-space managers who were starting to take control at North American Aviation and some of the other major aerospace firms, Grumman's company elders were very conservative when it came to bidding on space projects.13 Nevertheless, since most of the industry was trying to get into space design and production, the company‘s managers decided to allow a small group of engineers to begin exploring the possibilities of entering the field. Grumman formed its Space Steering Group (SSG) on July 3, 1958.14 The SSG, led by Al Munier, a former civil engineer who had helped design the 1939 World's Fair's Trylon and Perisphere, began working immediately on proposals for aircraft that would venture beyond the earth's atmosphere. One of the first bids the small cadre put together was for the Project Mercury space capsule. Although the group's proposal was a definite front-runner in the competition, the Navy stepped in at the last minute and asked NASA to award the contract to another company; the seafaring service was concerned that the delivery of its planes might be delayed if Grumman took on another major contract.15 12 Sputnik 1 launched on October 4, 1957. Grumman‘s space efforts began on July 3, 1958. 13 For more on this issue, see ―Chapter 2: Losing Our Nerve‖ in Thomas J. Kelly, Moon Lander: How We Developed the Apollo Lunar Module (Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 17-22; and Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry, 22-25. 14 "Development of Grumman Space Effort Prior to 1960," "LM Design," Vertical Files, Cradle of Aviation Museum, East Garden City, NY, (hereinafter cited as CAM). 15 Kelly, Moon Lander, 11; and Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 80-81. 23 Discouraged, but still determined, the SSG pressed on, and in October 1960 Grumman won the right to build the Orbiting Astronomical Observatories—a series of historic Earthorbiting space telescopes. Then, in November 1962, it captured one of the most coveted space contracts of the era, the Apollo Lunar Module (LM).16 Suddenly faced with the daunting engineering tasks associated with developing spacecraft, Grumman went through a massive build-up within a relatively short period of time. In less than three years, the firm‘s employment rolls exceeded its World War II peak, and by April 1968, the company reached its all-time employment record of approximately 37,000 workers.17 Of those employees, roughly a third would work on the company's space projects.18 Certain sectors of the workforce would concentrate on space more than others; by mid-1966, for example, almost half of Grumman's engineers and scientists were working on the LMs and OAOs.19 In all, the company‘s Apollo-era workforce was approximately 95% white and 5% minority.20 Women represented about 16 "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 8, in the author‘s possession; and Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 326. 17 "Employee-Population, As of 1st of Month," "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. 18 For the total number of Grumman, Bethpage employees, who worked on the LMs and OAOs, see and compare, Brian M. Tuohy to Glen Bayless, 29 August 1966, "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC; "Grumman, Program Management Memo, 8/24/66," "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC; Stephen Kerekes to Glenn Nixon, 27 May 1966, "LM-Personnel," Section A-71, NGHC; and 24 January 1968, Newsday, "LM-Letters of Commendation," Section A-71, NGHC. 19 20 Brian M. Tuohy to Glen Bayless, 29 August 1966, "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, "The Grumman Corporation and Its Subsidiaries: Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Personnel Characteristics," May 1970, 1415, Section A-10, NGHC. 24 10% of the total employee population.21 From a strictly corporate standpoint, Grumman would become NASA's second largest contractor in 1966, as the Apollo Program reached its height of production.22 Over half of the company‘s business came from space contracts at this time.23 Generally speaking, Grumman engineers and production workers were very different from one another. Most of the space engineers had grown up in white-collar families (with well-established roots in the U.S.) and had obtained at least two years of a college-level education at a university or technical institute. They also tended to be fairly young, especially compared to their counterparts on the aircraft side of the company. During the early 1960s, the space engineers were generally very restless and aggressive mavericks who liked the challenge of trying to figure out how to make a craft maneuver in the vacuum of space; many of them had given up the chance for quick career advancement by asking for an assignment in the space division instead of remaining in the tried-and-true, and much better-established, aeronautical division.24 Grumman production workers, on the other hand, tended to be older aeronautical craftsmen who had worked in the aircraft industry for many years. Several of them were first- or second-generation Americans of 21 "Tabulation of Employees, December 1966," "Women," Section A-8, NGHC. 22 Jane Van Nimmen and Leonard C. Bruno with Robert L. Rosholt, NASA Historical Data Book, Volume I: NASA Resources 1958-1968, (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4012, 1988), 218. 23 Brian M. Tuohy to Glen Bayless, 29 August 1966, "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC; and H. E. Bockrath to Len Victor, 29 November 1966, "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. 24 "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 7-8; Tom Kelly to David Onkst, 27 August 1998, hard copy of e-mail message; and George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000. All in the author‘s possession. 25 European descent, whose families had come from Germany, Italy, or Eastern Europe. And unlike the engineers, most had grown up in blue-collar families.25 As a whole, four out of five Grummanites were married and almost 60% of the male employees had served in the military.26 Most Grummanites lived in close proximity to Bethpage. Approximately 80% of the company‘s employees resided on Long Island during the Apollo era. The remainder either commuted from one of New York City's five boroughs, New Jersey, or upstate New York.27 The most concentrated clusters of Grummanites lived in the Long Island townships of Oyster Bay and Hempstead in Nassau County, west of Grumman.28 Levittown, the nation‘s first truly mass-produced suburb, was a particularly popular residential choice for many of the workers; it was located only a few miles to the southwest of the company‘s main facilities. Still, most Grummanites lived someplace east 25 "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 4; and Tom Kelly to David Onkst, 27 August 1998, hard copy of e-mail message. Both in the author's possession. Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 21; and Ann Markusen, Peter Hall, Scott Campbell, and Sabina Deitrick, The Rise of the Gunbelt: The Military Remapping of Industrial America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991), 123. All the Grummanites who participated in the survey/questionnaire for this study included extensive information about their family histories in their surveys. For more details, see and compare all of the Grummanite survey/questionnaires in the author‘s possession. For more about Grummanites of Italian descent, see Stephen Raymond Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost: The Influence of Gender, Race, and Class on the Workplace in Postwar America‖ (Ph.D. diss., Stony Brook University, 2008), 18-19 and 321-324. 26 Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, "Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Characteristics of Corporate Manpower, 1968 Revision," April 1969, Table 1, p. 10, Section A-10, NGHC. 27 See and compare ibid., 11 and Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, ―The Grumman Corporation and Its Subsidiaries: Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Personnel Characteristics," May 1970, Section A-10, NGHC. 28 Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, ―Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Characteristics of Corporate Manpower, 1968 Revision," April 1969, p. 7, Table 2, p. 11, Section A-10, NGHC. 26 of the Bethpage plants, especially in Suffolk County.29 Many of the engineers resided in the Suffolk County townships of Huntington and Islip and along the North Shore on Oyster Bay.30 Production workers tended to live more on the South Shore and in Hempstead Township.31 By the late 1960s, most Grummanites had benefitted from the era's unprecedented economic growth and had become members of the middle class. The median salary at the company was between $10,000 and $15,000, compared to the 1969 New York state median family range of $10,500 a year.32 During the Apollo era, many Grummanites purchased homes, new cars, and a wide variety of household goods and appliances, things that had been out of reach for many workers of previous generations. The new jobs generated by the Space Race coincided quite nicely with the explosion of mass consumer goods in the 1960s. 29 See and compare, Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, "Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Characteristics of Corporate Manpower, 1968 Revision," April 1969, p. 7, Table 2, p. 11, Section A-10, NGHC; and Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, "The Grumman Corporation and Its Subsidiaries: Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Personnel Characteristics," May 1970, Section A-10, NGHC. 30 See and compare, Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, "Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Characteristics of Corporate Manpower, 1968 Revision," April 1969, p. 7, Table 2, p. 11, Section A-10, NGHC; and "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 4. 31 "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 4. 32 See and compare Department of Public Affairs, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, "The Grumman Corporation and Its Subsidiaries: Economic Contributions to Long Island and Selected Personnel Characteristics," May 1970, Table 7, p. 32,Section A-10, NGHC; and William Lerner, Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, Part 1 (Washington, DC, 1975, Series G 205-256), 297. 27 Grumman must have seemed very enticing to the job-shopping aerospace engineers who browsed the company‘s advertisements in the professional and trade journals during the early years of the Space Age. The Bethpage firm promised incoming engineers a very friendly, flexible, and relaxed work environment, and the opportunity to design some of the most "technically challenging" space projects of the day.33 Engineers could expect to work together in a team-oriented atmosphere, in which management interacted with them in a very professional, but collegial manner.34 They might even solve some engineering problems together while carpooling to work or eating dinner at a local restaurant.35 New hires would also be working in some of the most advanced space engineering and testing facilities in the world.36 One of the company‘s most notable ads—simply titled ‗The People of Grumman‖—perfectly exemplified the distinct image the firm wanted to convey; it was also a portrait of the way the company believed it acted. As the ad noted, The success or failure of a company lies precisely in its people and their level of performance. There are no hard departmental lines at Grumman. The approach to work is 33 "Lunar Landing and Rendezvous Program Offers Engineers and Scientists the Greatest Technical Challenge of Our Times," Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering (March 1963): 83; and Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering (September 1963). For an example of the more on the relaxed work environment, see "Careers at Grumman," 1967, 48, untitled file, Section A-40, NGHC. 34 ―Total Involvement at Grumman: The Insiders,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 24 August 1964, 107; and ―Total Involvement at Grumman: Team Concept,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 31 August 1964, 84. 35 ―…The Car Pool,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 12 June 1961, 122; and ―…Inspiration Break,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 19 June 1961, 122. 36 ―Grumman Panorama: Aerospace Test,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering (July 1963): 117; ―The Scene at Grumman: Lunar Landing Simulation,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 23 March 1964, 89; ―One of these LMs will Blast Off,‖ copy of trade journal advertisement, undated, ―LM Design,‖ Vertical Files, CAM; and ―Grumman ‘63,‖ Product Advertising Book, 1963, ―Product Booklets,‖ untitled box, Sect A-40, NGHC. 28 flexible, the environment informal. Here the engineer, whose area of responsibility is broad, is free to move in the direction his talents take him. . . . If, in describing the engineering climate at Grumman, one were restricted to single descriptive words . . .‖Stability‖ . . .‖Growth‖ would come naturally to mind. . . . Grumman has a record of job stability that is unique; the annual turnover rate is less than one-quarter that of the rest of the industry. 37 Though intellectually adventurous, these engineers were looked for employment security, and they were attracted to this extremely stable company with an excellent future. 38 The LMs and OAOs were only going to be the first steps towards exploring the heavens. Several of Grumman's ads suggested that the firm‘s engineers would be designing a space station and a spacecraft for a mission to Mars, among other space projects. 39 On the more personal side, newly hired Grummanites could expect to enjoy a diverse and extremely pleasurable middle-class lifestyle on Long Island. One of Grumman's recruitment brochures promised: "Working and living on the Island, you can choose your way of life—urban, suburban, or country gentleman, depending on where you locate. The densely populated urban areas are concentrated close to New York City, but 37 ―The People of Grumman,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Astronautics & Aeronautics Engineering (October 1963): 59. 38 Even as late as 1967, a time when most companies were getting ready to downsize their Apollo workforce, Grumman was suggesting that it would continue to "retain its engineers and other professional personnel." See, "Careers at Grumman," 1967, 10, untitled file, Section A-40, NGHC. A similar example can be found in a special college edition of Engineering Opportunities in 1966. Grumman published an exciting article in the journal about some of the challenges that the LM engineers were facing. The article's message was clear, ―join us and you‘ll also be doing these kinds of exciting things.‖ See Grumman, "Engineering Opportunities, Special College Ed., 1966," "Grumman Aerospace," Section, A10, NGHC. For a couple of clear examples of Grumman‘s stability, see ―The People of Grumman,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Astronautics & Aeronautics Engineering, (October 1963): 59; and ―Stability at Grumman,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 15 March 1965, 297, ―LM Production,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 39 Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering (September 1963); and Aviation Week & Space Technology, 15 March 1965, 297. 29 give way to attractive suburban communities as you move eastward."40 The brochure also contained pictures of New York City‘s skyline, the Island's wonderful beaches, a number of the area's recreational and sporting opportunities, great homes and schools, and even noted that the company's water skiing club was coached by Bruce Parker, the world water ski champion.41 The production workers and engineers who joined Grumman entered a company with a unique and well-established culture. From the firm‘s very beginning, Grumman managers fostered a sense of caring and concern for their workers. They deeply believed that the company had a "magnitude of responsibility" to its employees, and to Long Island, because of the firm‘s sheer size and the impact of its operations.42 As one manager put it, Grumman's leadership ―developed a close personal attachment and sense of responsibility toward every single person that worked for Grumman."43 Managers often agonized about the possible ramifications of laying off workers during slowdowns; in fact, they often went out of their way to try to keep employees on-the-job, even if that meant transferring them to an entirely different, unrelated part of the company. In essence, the company bragged that it "specialize[d] in creating a sort of environment which… could be described as the 40 "Grumman: Engineering for Production," circa 1956-57, "Employee Handbooks," Section A-10, 41 Ibid. NGHC. 42 See attached handwritten note, "Grumman and the Long Island Economy," by F.J. Edwards, Jr., March 16, 1964, "Long Island," Section A-10, NGHC. 43 H. E. Bockrath to Bernie Bookbinder, Newsday, 7 March 1966, 4-5, "Articles, Written Here, and Sent out for Publication," Section A-12, NGHC. 30 advanced stages of paternalism."44 Leon ―Jake‖ Swirbul, Grumman‘s President and one of the company‘s founders, was the person most responsible for developing the firm‘s nurturing culture. Swirbul, a former World War I-era Marine, was one of the company‘s original investors; he had put up $8,125 to help start the firm.45 From Grumman‘s very early days, Swirbul had done his best to inculcate a sense of teamwork, camaraderie, and equality among his workers and engineers. People viewed Swirbul as a ―considerate man,‖ recognized that he ―had a genius for making friends,‖ and believed he ―would have made the greatest politician in the world.‖46 Described as a man who possessed an ―Ernest Borgnine‖ personality, Swirbul would roam the shop floor, with his suit coat off and shirt sleeves rolled up, encouraging and motivating people.47 He had a real hands-on approach and would literally pat workers on the back and tell them what a good job they were doing. During the 1950s, he insisted that all of his newly hired engineers work a total of two months on 44 Ibid. 45 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 32; and Research and Engineering Department of the UAWCIO, ―Grumman Aircraft,‖ 16 August 1948, 4, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, Archive of Labor and Union Affairs, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, (hereinafter cited as ALUA). 46 For the quote ―considerate man‖ see George DeWan, ―The Wings of War,‖ Newsday.com, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.Newsday.com/community/guide/lihistory/ny-historyhs736a,0,3972922,printstory?coll=ny-lihistory-navigation. For all other quotes see Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 47 Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession; and Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 31 the shop floor.48 As one engineer recalled, he and his white-collar colleagues could ―gettheir-hands-dirty.‖49 This introduction to the manufacturing process made it very easy for employees of all levels to interact amicably and develop a sense of respect for one another. Many friendships developed because of these types of interactions, as well as a sense that everyone stood on equal ground. For most, Grumman was a relaxed and "classless work environment."50 It was also a ―friendly, uninhibited atmosphere where rigid protocol ha[d] no place.‖ 51 Overall, Swirbul was a much-beloved figure and a "genius at labor relations."52 Some of Swirbul‘s greatest employee care innovations at Grumman came during World War II. Aiming to cutting down on worker absenteeism, he developed several services and courtesies to help employees with their errands, as well as their personal problems.53 His ―Green Truck‖ would snake through the employees‘ parking lot and take care of flat tires and other automobile repairs. Sometimes the Green Truck‘s drivers would also run errands for employees, making sure a worker had turned off the gas at home, for 48 Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. Stephen Patnode also notes that engineers sometimes worked on the shop floor. See Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 260. 49 William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November 1999-April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 50 Michael Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. 51 "Careers at Grumman," 1967, 48, untitled file, Section A-40, NGHC. Historian Stephen Patnode also notes Grumman‘s ―largely informal‖ management approach. See Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 37. For an additional instance related to this issue, also see page 301. 52 53 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr. Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 24; and George DeWan, ―The Wings of War,‖ Newsday.com, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.Newsday.com/community/guide/lihistory/ny-historyhs736a,0,3972922,printstory?coll=ny-lihistory-navigation. 32 example, or closing all the windows in case of a rainstorm. They might even fix a leaky faucet for someone.54 Swirbul also set up a company nursery school and created a host of clubs and sports teams.55 During the war, lunchtime dances sprang up, and company managers (including top management) played alongside the rank-and-file on employee softball teams.56 Swirbul received a lot of criticism from managers at other aircraft companies because of the way he treated his workers. They insisted that ―such mollycoddling didn‘t pay off.‖57 He believed it did, however, and his company‘s workforce retention rate proved it. During World War II, Grumman experienced only half of the turnover of other aircraft manufacturers. 58 Swirbul‘s workers obtained a number of other compensations and perks from Grumman over the years. First and foremost, every Grummanite received free medical care. If an employee faced a more serious illness than was covered by the company's major medical policy, he or she could go to famous Strang Cancer Prevention Center in New York City or the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota and receive free care, paid for 54 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 24; George DeWan, ―The Wings of War,‖ Newsday.com, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.Newsday.com/community/guide/lihistory/ny-historyhs736a,0,3972922,printstory?coll=ny-lihistory-navigation; and Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 55 George DeWan, ―The Wings of War,‖ Newsday.com, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.Newsday.com/community/guide/lihistory/ny-history-hs736a,0,3972922,printstory?coll=nylihistory-navigation; and Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 56 Ibid. 57 Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 58 Ibid. 33 by Grumman. Employees could also take advantage of the company‘s in-house job training programs by simply requesting enrollment. For those seeking more advanced studies, the firm offered an evening college scholarship program that paid an employee's tuition as long as he or she kept making good academic progress. Grummanites also liked the fact that the company took employee suggestions seriously. Several suggestion programs flourished inside the Bethpage plants during the 1960s. The most popular was called Project Sterling. Employees submitted more than 15,000 suggestions a year to the project. The best suggestion of the year received a $1,000 prize, while other finalists received trips to New York and Cape Canaveral. Employees could also look forward to annual vacation tours of Europe and Bermuda, a yearly holiday turkey (most often handed out directly by the company president), and an extravagant annual summer picnic. And perhaps, most notably, Swirbul had always matched neighboring unionized companies‘ pay increases and thereby kept Grummanites‘ salaries equal with other Long Island aerospace workers‘ wages, a move that some believe keep Grummanites quite happy and anti-union.59 In sum, Swirbul and the company‘s other founding fathers seemed to strive to offer employees virtually every benefit, perk, incentive, and activity a worker could want and expect; Grumman‘s culture of corporate caring was built on a solid foundation as far as the employees were concerned.60 59 For more on this issue, see and compare Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Daniel J. Carroll, Survey/Questionnaire, 17 November 1999; and James Panos, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 April 2000, all in the author‘s possession; and Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 226 and 243-244. 60 An excellent overview of such Grumman employee offerings is in H. E. Bockrath to Bernie Bookbinder, Newsday, 7 March 1966, 5-8, "Articles, Written Here, and Sent out for Publication," Section 34 Two very unique Swirbul innovations that helped him strengthen his caring image among workers included his ―Open Door‖ initiative and his bonus system. Swirbul‘s ―Open Door‖ policy—which the rest of the company‘s management also supposedly practiced—helped endear him to the workers. He knew that employees found it extremely difficult to build up the courage to knock on the boss‘s door. To remedy the situation, he always left his door wide open with his desk facing outward so that if he saw an employee pacing around, he could ask them if they wanted to see him; no secretary acted as an intermediary or guard.61 Swirbul‘s bonus system also became popular among employees. The program based worker bonuses on the total production output of a plant, not on an employee‘s individual performance.62 According to one Newsday reporter, employees received about half of any savings when output increased, which, on average, worked out to about 30% of an employee‘s annual salary.63 By the end of World War II, the program had supposedly paid out approximately $38 million. 64 One aircraft worker‘s medical emergency reveals a great deal about Swirbul‘s character, as well as about the difference between the culture of Grumman and that of A-12, NGHC. For a thorough review of Swirbul‘s culture of paternalism, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 11-20. 61 Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 62 George DeWan, ―The Wings of War,‖ Newsday.com, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.Newsday.com/community/guide/lihistory/ny-history-hs736a,0,3972922,printstory?coll=nylihistory-navigation. 63 Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 64 Ibid. 35 other companies. During this period, Justin Ostro, Republic Aviation‘s President of the International Association of Machinists, Lodge 1987 approached management about the possibility of using the company‘s ambulance/aircraft to fly an employee‘s sick child to a distant hospital for a procedure to repair ―a hole in its heart.‖ Republic was Grumman‘s nearest competitor, and a unionized company, while Grumman was not. Without much consideration, Republic‘s front office denied the request, because it did not want to set a precedent. Trying to find some way to help the child, Ostro turned to Swirbul. The two men had gotten to know one another because of their work together with several local charities, as well as their shared interest in attending local boxing matches. 65 When Ostro asked Swirbul whether he could help the employee‘s child, the Grumman president got back to him within a few hours and simply said: ―OK, just tell us where and when you want the aircraft.‖66 Overall, Grummanites viewed the company‘s culture of paternalism very positively. Scholars from a variety of disciplines have sometimes used the term disparagingly, equating it with an unequal power structure in which workers or other ―children‖ suffer from some type of ―false consciousness.‖ But those Grummanites living under Swirbul‘s regime felt differently. They did not see subterfuge on the part of management; they deeply believed that the company‘s managers were honestly concerned with their welfare. The reciprocal nature of Grumman‘s corporate culture suggests that there was indeed something unique about the relationship between workers and 65 ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin Ostro,‖ 28 November 2006, in the author‘s possession. 66 Ibid. 36 management. As historian Stephen Patnode—another scholar who recently investigated certain aspects of Grumman—has noted, ―the employees at Grumman were not displeased with this paternalism—indeed, they clearly viewed it as a positive thing…. [they] did not use the word ―paternalistic‖ in a pejorative sense.‖67 To this day, Grummanites speak fondly of the culture of concern that Swirbul and the company‘s founding fathers cultivated from the early days of the company. It was a win-win situation as far as Grummanites were concerned, and a very unique bond developed with no seeming downside. As George Skurla, the company‘s man in charge of the LM Program at Cape Canaveral (and the F-14 fighter later on), remembered, ―Grumman was a cradle to grave culture.‖68 The LMs and the OAOs—Grumman‘s Major Space Projects of the 1960s Grumman‘s most prestigious and significant space projects were the Apollo Lunar Modules (LM) and the Orbiting Astronomical Observatories (OAO). The Bethpage company landed the OAO contract in October 1960, and then the Lunar Module agreement just a little over two years later in November 1962. 69 The LMs and OAOs were 67 Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 37-38. As Patnode states, in post-war America, ―this new benevolent paternalism was consensual—it involved an accepting decision from employees to be part of a harmonious community within the workplace.‖ For this quote, see page 34. For additional instances of Grummanites viewing paternalism positively, also see pages 16 and 257. Overall, Patnode believes that Grummanites embraced paternalism and thereby rejected organized labor because they thought that unions would emasculate them and undermine their autonomy. For more on this issue, see pages 12, 16 and 336. 68 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 19. 69 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 326 and 333; and ―NASA/Grumman OAO Program History,‖ no date, ―OAO,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. Grumman won the LM contract on November 7, 1962, see Kelly, Moon Lander, 35. 37 key spacecraft that allowed humans to land on the Moon, thus enabling scientists to begin to chart and understand previously unknown aspects of the universe. These were vehicles that respectively represented the two extremes of space exploration during the 1960s: the push to win the politically driven Cold War race to the Moon, and the scientific endeavor to map and fathom the physical universe. For Grummanites, the development, construction, and deployment of the LMs and OAOs were far-reaching achievements, true triumphs that they continue to remember proudly to this day. Overall, the LM and OAO missions remain key moments in the history of space exploration. Grumman‘s spacecraft were highly specialized, handcrafted vehicles. They were quite different from the mass-produced naval aircraft that Grumman had cranked out during World War II. Each OAO and LM was slightly different due to individual mission specifications, and as such, each had to be modified and assembled under careful scrutiny. For Grummanites, the production of spacecraft required entirely new testing procedures and standards that were extremely rigorous. And Grummanites had to learn to work in new types of facilities, like the ―Clean Room," where they had to don white lab coats, hats, and booties, and literally check off the tools and materials they took in with them in an effort to avoid leaving behind even the slightest debris which might cause havoc once the spaceship was in zero gravity. In short, designing and building spacecraft differed vastly from any other type of work they had done up to that point. 70 The Orbiting Astronomic Observatories were the most advanced satellites of the 70 Charles R. Pellegrino and Joshua Stoff, Chapter 18 ―QC‖ in Chariots for Apollo: The Making of the Lunar Module (New York: Atheneum, 1985), 65-71. 38 1960s.71 They were the forerunners of the Hubble Space Telescope that would rightfully garner so much public attention in the 1990s and the first decade of the twenty-first century. Grumman would construct four OAOs over the course of twelve years, from the time it won the contract in 1960 until the launch of the fourth OAO (also known as Copernicus) in August 1972. While some would go on to highly successful missions, others were outright failures. Physically, the OAOs looked like fairly small cylinders, roughly three by two meters in size, containing various telescopes and scientific experiments. Solar panels would deploy on the sides of the vehicles in order to power each OAO‘s battery system once it had established orbit. The first OAO launched in April 1966, but failed when its battery died after only twenty-two orbits and the mission was scrubbed.72 OAO-2 fared much better when it went up in December 1968. It contained several ultraviolet (UV) telescopes that would function for years and even detect a supernova in the early 1970s.73 But then third observatory, OAO-B, failed to even reach orbit and plummeted into the Atlantic Ocean when it launched on the last day of November 1970.74 Fortunately, Copernicus, the final OAO, was a highly successful instrument. Its UV telescope and x-ray experimental packages would make some important discoveries 71 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 326 and 333; and ―NASA/Grumman OAO Program History,‖ no date, ―OAO,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 72 ―Orbiting Astronomical Observatory Programs,‖ no date, ―OAO,‖ Vertical Files, CAM; and ―Orbital Telescopes,‖ Hartmut Frommert, accessed 14 June 2011, http://spider.seds.org/oaos/oaos.html. 73 Public Affairs Office, Goddard Space Flight Center, Orbiting Astronomical Observatory-II (OAO) Selected Press Clippings, December 1968-January 1969, no folder (loose in box), ―Box 30 OAO, Brochures, News, etc.,‖ Sect A-95, NGHC; and Joseph G. Gavin, Jr., ―The Orbiting Astronomical Observatory,‖ TRW Space Log, no date, ―Articles,‖ ―Box 30 OAO, Brochures, News, etc.,‖ Sect A-95, NGHC. 74 ―Orbiting Astronomical Observatory Programs,‖ no date, ―OAO,‖ Vertical Files, CAM; and ―Orbital Telescopes,‖ Hartmut Frommert, accessed 14 June 2011, http://spider.seds.org/oaos/oaos.html. 39 about pulsars and the first suspected black hole.75 Dr. James Kupperian, NASA‘s main scientist who worked on the OAOs, would state in 1981 that he believed ―the achievements of [the] OAO will probably prove more lasting than those of Apollo in the areas of science and technology.‖76 Overall, the OAOs ranged between highly successful vehicles that made vital contributions to science, and utter failures.77 The Lunar Module (LM), or Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) as it was known during it early years of development, was humankind's first true spacecraft; it was the first vehicle to operate totally outside of the Earth‘s atmosphere. The LM was a two-stage spacecraft designed to shuttle a pair of astronauts from the Apollo Command/Service Module (CSM), which would orbit the Moon, to the lunar surface, and then back into orbit again to rejoin the CSM. Many contemporaries called the LM the "bug" because of its four insect-like landing legs. Its ―legs‖ attached to the gold Mylar-covered, cubeshaped, descent stage that held the cone-shaped engine that allowed the astronauts to descend to the lunar surface. On top of the descent unit rested the ascent stage, which contained the ship's control room and the engine that allowed the astronauts to blast off 75 ―NASA‘s HEASARC: Observatories—The Copernicus Satellite (OAO-3),‖ NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, accessed 14 June 2011, http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/copernicus/copernicus.html; ―Astronomical Observatory Ends Scientific Investigations,‖ NASA Press Release 81-10, 15 January 1981, ―News Releases Press Kit Folder,‖ ―Box 30 OAO, Brochures, News, etc.,‖ Sect A-95, NGHC; and Public Affairs, Space, Grumman Aerospace Corporation, ―Press Coverage of the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory,‖ 31 July 1972 - 15 September 1972, no folder (loose in box), ―Box 30 OAO, Brochures, News, etc.,‖ Sect A-95, NGHC. 76 ―OAO Retires After Star-Studded Career,‖ Grumman Plane News, 27 February 1981, 4-5, ―OAO,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 77 For general information about all of the OAOs see Hartmut Frommert‘s excellent website about ―Orbital Telescopes‖ that he developed and maintains for the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS), accessed 14 June 2011, http://spider.seds.org/oaos/oaos.html. 40 once a Moon mission was completed. By 1966 approximately 7,500 Grummanites were working on the LM. From the beginning of the program until the fall of 1968, the LM was constantly behind schedule and over budget. Every subsystem of the vehicle seemed to have major developmental problems.78 Not until the successful flight of Apollo 9 in March 1969 did Grumman match the proper cost and schedule projections. 79 Two of Grumman‘s Lunar Modules stand out more than others due to their historical significance. LM-5, the Eagle, is perhaps the most famous because of the role it played in the Apollo 11 mission. On July 20, 1969, the Eagle carried astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin to the lunar surface—the first men to walk on the Moon. Nine months later, LM-7, the Aquarius, also gained fame by saving the lives of Apollo 13‘s three crew members after an explosion in their service module. With the help of Grumman engineers, the crew converted Aquarius, a vehicle only designed to sustain two men for forty-eight hours, into a ―lifeboat‘ that helped all three men safely return to the Earth. Grummanites took great pride in their spacecraft, particularly the LMs. For many, designing and building the Lunar Modules were the highlights of their careers—true triumphs. During the Apollo 11 mission, they were ―elated‖ and extremely ―proud to be…Grummanite[s].‖80 George Daelemans remembered that he felt ―ten feet tall‖ at the 78 Every LM subsystem seemed to have major developmental problems, but they are too numerous to mention here. By 1966, the most pressing problems on the LM were with the ascent engine and the vehicle‘s weight. For more details see and compare, Kelly, Moon Lander, 126-144; and ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 9-10, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 79 80 Kelly, Moon Lander, 153-154. Many Grummanites used the word ―elated‖ and ―proud‖ when discussing their feelings about Apollo 11. For more details, sample the Survey/Questionnaires in the author‘s possession. The ―proud to 41 time, while John Caruso said he ―swelled up‖ with pride ―like a 500 foot diameter balloon!‖ 81 William Kiesel added that Apollo 11 was ―a long-time dream realized.‖82 And Bertram Dawkins recalled that they ―all felt that this was the greatest achievement of our lives.‖83 During Apollo 13, pride swelled among Grummanites once again. Although some Americans feared the worst for the astronauts, many Grumman engineers and workers felt confident that their LM would bring them back home safely.84 In short, employee Laurence Van Wallendael recalled that during the incident, he just thought about ―how hard everybody [had] worked on [the] LM and knew it would turn out right—The Grumman Way.‖85 Fortunately for the astronauts and the nation, the company‘s spacecraft, a vehicle that many had made great sacrifices to bring to fruition, went beyond be…Grummanite[s]‖ quote comes specifically from William (Bill) Ptucha, Survey/Questionnaire, 19 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 81 George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession; and John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000, in the author‘s possession. 82 William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 83 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr. Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. 84 For some of the Grummanites who felt confident that the LM would bring the astronauts home safely, see Benjamin F. Beekman, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 March 2000; Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000; Harry Prodromides, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000; and Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999. All in the author‘s possession. 85 Laurence Van Wallendael, Survey/Questionnaire, 7 February 2000, in the author‘s possession. Notably, many Grummanites were upset by the 1995 film Apollo 13‘s portrayal of Grummanites. They believe that the movie unfairly shows the Grumman representative as being ―an ass-covering clown,‖ instead of someone who really worked to help convert the LM into a lifeboat. For the quote, see George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. For other Grummanites who were upset by the movie‘s interpretation, see Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000; James Panos, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 April 2000; and Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999. All in the author‘s possession. 42 people‘s expectations. The LM had proved that Grumman products made a difference when a difference counted. For Grummanites, these were truly triumphant moments. Grumman and NASA‘s Relationship When one talks with former Grummanites about their relationship with NASA during the 1960s, one hears generally positive reviews about teamwork and the great deal of respect that the two organizations had for one another. While this collaborative relationship evolved gradually over the course of the LM and OAO programs, it is important to realize that in several cases such cooperation only came about after a period of conflict between the two organizations. Troubles between NASA and its contractors were inevitable in a program the size and magnitude of Apollo. Complications between Grummanites and the space agency occurred because of the differences between the two organizational cultures. Grumman was very proud of its relaxed organizational structure wherein "rigid protocol had no place." 86 NASA, on the other hand, was a much larger and more structured institution, which, to Grummanites, seemed to require too much testing and paperwork.87 For Grumman employees used to dealing with the Navy, NASA seemed "too bureaucratic and documented" and "too involved in day to day activities." 88 The Navy, after all, had generally left Grumman alone to perfect an aircraft until it was ready 86 "Careers at Grumman," 1967, p. 48, untitled file, Section A-40, NGHC. 87 For discussions about NASA requiring volumes of paperwork, see and compare "Early NASA Culture and Its Interactions with the Grumman OAO Development Team—The Perceptions of Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 2; Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 191; Robert F. White, Survey/Questionnaire, 25 January 2000; and Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999. Both in the author‘s possession. 88 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession 43 to be delivered. But NASA, with its emphasis on schedules and deadlines—which were necessary if the U.S. was going to land a man on the Moon before the end of the 1960s— forced Grummanites to learn to work in a whole new manner; thus the 1960s were the beginning of a new era for Grumman, especially in its relations with the government. 89 Grumman had developed a very close, even ―familial,‖ relationship with the Navy in the 1930s, and that association set the tone for Grummanites‘ perception of the way in which the customer/contractor system should work from that point forward; such perceptions would have a profound impact on the way Grummanites viewed their interaction with NASA. From the end of World War II until the dawn of the Space Age, about 90% of Grumman‘s total annual sales had flowed from Navy contracts.90 During that same period, approximately 60-70% of all of the seafaring service‘s planes had been made by Grumman.91 It was quite clear that the Navy liked Grumman aircraft, and that the Bethpage firm loved designing and building planes for it; the procurement process and contract oversight gave Grumman a virtual lock on naval aviation.92 George Klaus, a manager at Grumman‘s Electronic Systems Center, remembered: ―In the old days the Navy would call us up and ask us to build something for them and we would build it.‖93 In fact, most of the Navy‘s Requests for Proposals (RFPs) appeared to be drafted specifically 89 Many Grummanites remember the Navy as less demanding than NASA. For an example of just two such discussions, see and compare Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999; and John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000. Both in the author‘s possession. 90 Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 127. 91 Ibid., 128 and 202. 92 Ibid., 202. 93 Ibid., 126. 44 with Grumman‘s capabilities in mind.94 Donald Riehl, another Grummanite, remembered that ―the Navy was very loosey-goosey and they were willing to give the contractor a lot of latitude. They would do a lot of things at Grumman on word of mouth kind of thing.‖95 Political scientist Randolph Kucera, an expert on Grumman/Navy relations, has noted that one of the main reasons the two organizations got along so well was that several former naval personnel, particularly aviators, went to work for the Bethpage firm. That allowed Grumman to understand and anticipate what the Navy wanted and a strong bond developed between the two organizations‘ engineers.96 In essence, Grumman and the Navy had created a high level of trust and respect for each other from initial aircraft designs through the final delivery of a plane. This was the type of contractor relationship that Grumman had grown up with and come to expect. Grummanites discovered that designing and building spacecraft was a vastly different process than producing airplanes for the Navy, however. Previously the firm almost always knew what type of plane the Navy would want before it even asked for it. 94 Ibid., 157-158; and John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000, in the author‘s possession. 95 The quote is from an interview that historian Stephen Patnode conducted with Donald Riehl in July 2003. According to Patnode, Riehl had ―worked for both Republic and Grumman (Republic from 1951-1964 with two years out for military service, and Grumman from 1964-1994). He started working for Republic shortly after he graduated high school. Riehl‘s first job was a blueprint control clerk, which means he was in charge of tracking blueprints as they made their way through the company. By the time he retired from Grumman, Riehl was financial manager for computing systems.‖ For the quote about the relationship between Grumman and the Navy, see Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 301. For Riehl‘s background, see pages 300-301. Grummanite George Skurla also makes a similar observation about the symbiotic relationship the firm and the Navy had during this period. For more details, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 38. 96 Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 166-168 and 183-188. 45 Many of the engineering challenges of a naval plane could be anticipated. With spacecraft, however, there were a number of unknowns.97 Grumman would have to make multiple innovations in the design and construction of the LMs and OAOs. NASA also required more paperwork and oversight than other customers. Redundancy was essential, because unlike airplanes, most spacecraft could not be retrieved for reevaluation if things went wrong.98 Furthermore, because NASA and Grumman had not already established a relationship prior to the Space Age, there were going to be some cultural challenges between the two organizations, challenges that would ultimately alter Grumman‘s way of doing things. Almost from the moment Grumman won the LM contract in November 1962, the program was behind schedule and over-budget. By 1963, NASA was starting to realize that the program was going to be much bigger and more expensive than originally projected. The space agency and its contractors were going to need more facilities, personnel, and funding if the U.S. was going to land a man on the Moon before the end of the decade. With these issues in mind, Joseph Shea, NASA‘s Manager of the Apollo Spacecraft Program Office, turned his attention to the contractors. Shea noticed about Grumman‘s start-up of the LM Program, ―a real problem getting Grumman to commit itself to expansion, either in terms of facilities or personnel…. [R]ather than expand to do 97 Ibid., 178-179; and Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession 98 Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 166-168 and 189-190. 46 the job that had to get done, they used very heavy overtime and job shoppers.‖99 The firm did not hire more people as company employees because of its paternalistic management philosophy; once Grumman hired someone, it felt a responsibility to that person. In the past, many of the firm‘s managers had agonized about the possible ramifications of laying off workers and often went out of their way to try to keep employees on the job, even if it meant transferring them to an entirely different department than was suited to their skills.100 NASA officials realized that it was not unusual for most companies to have a slow start to programs, especially given the new larger scope of Apollo, but in their eyes, the development of the LM needed to be sped along. 101 George Mueller, NASA‘s Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight, felt that Grumman‘s ―performance was lagging.‖102 From his perspective, ―basic improvements were required in the timeliness of technical solutions, program staffing, cost control, subcontract management and schedule position‖ at Grumman.103 By 1965, NASA officials were so concerned that they decided 99 In NASA‘s vernacular, job shoppers were people who did not officially work for Grumman, but were merely ―hired on contract to pad out some of the activities.‖ For more see Joseph F. Shea, ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ 52, ―Folder 1—Grumman/LM, Shea Program Review, November, 1965,‖ ―Additional Background on Grumman/LM,‖ Folder # 012971, Robert Sherrod Apollo Collection: Gemini Fact Sheets-MSC thru Grumman, NASA Headquarters, NASA Historical Reference Collection, Washington, DC. 100 George Titterton Interview, NGHC Audio Tape 21, NGHC. For additional information about the company putting employees in different jobs during slow times so that they could keep them on staff, see Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 245-247 and 260. 101 ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 1, ―Hjornevik Report 620 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 102 Ibid. 103 Ibid. 47 to send a small group to Bethpage to see if they could get Grumman to make a number of changes in the way it was handling the LM. In March, Joseph Shea took a small task force to Bethpage to begin officially renegotiating Grumman‘s LM contract. Up to that point, the LM agreement had been a standard cost-plus-fixed-fee contract, which in essence meant the firm would recoup its overhead on the project, plus a predetermined profit. Shea wanted to convert the program into a cost-plus-incentive-fee agreement, which would not only pay Grumman its costs, but also various incentive payments if the firm met key target dates for the delivery of the LMs. With that type of contract, the better Grumman adhered to the program‘s schedule and meeting other milestones, the higher its payment. Shea believed that incentives would help spur Grumman to perform better and follow through on NASA‘s suggestions for improving the program. But what Shea‘s visit to Bethpage actually did was to cause one of the first major clashes between the two organizations. The task force‘s mission brought to a head the tensions that had been growing between Grumman and NASA.104 Shea‘s main goal was to get Grumman to agree to ―25 to 40 percent cuts in cost and manpower,‖ according to Grumman‘s chief LM engineer Tom Kelly.105 Although NASA had actually complained that Grumman had not hired enough people in the past, it believed that manpower costs could be cut significantly if the company stopped its practice of using job-shoppers and relying heavily on overtime; if the company would just hire 104 Kelly, Moon Lander, 146-147; and ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 2, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 105 Kelly, Moon Lander, 146. 48 more regular employees, those problems, which cost too much money, might be overcome. Grumman managers were floored by NASA‘s request. Joe Gavin, Grumman‘s LM Program Director (and a company vice president), and Bob Mullaney, the firm‘s LM Program Manager, successfully combated NASA‘s suggested cuts line-by-line, with a few minor exceptions. They did not see how they could run the program any other way. The negotiations, or rather arguments, went on for several days. Tom Kelly remembered the confrontation: ―the total estimated cost was going up, even beyond our initial position, because of oversight and underestimates that became apparent during the detailed negotiations. Joe Shea became increasingly testy; he was gruff with us in our management interface meetings, and there were reports that he had been dressing down his own troops for failing to reduce LM costs.‖106 Finally, after roughly a month of discussions, Shea ended the exercise and left Bethpage. A handful of NASA employees remained behind, to continue to see if they could find agreement on new terms between the space agency and the Bethpage firm. 107 In November 1965, Shea filed a report entitled ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ in which he gave NASA officials an honest assessment of the Apollo contractors. The account made several key points about Grumman and its approach toward managing the LM program, as well as suggesting why there was so much tension 106 Ibid., 146-147. 107 Ibid., 147. 49 between the firm and the government agency. First of all, Shea found that Grumman‘s ―staffing was always slower than they had promised, than they had estimated, or than the program needed.‖ 108 One of the main reasons these problems arose was a complete difference in approach between NASA . . . and Grumman. This, I think, has probably been the largest single area of technical irritation between us. We tried to bring in a fair part of the Mercury-Gemini experience and the ballistic missile experience, while they were going back and wanting to do things in effect the way airplanes have been done. There is a significant difference in those two approaches. 109 Elaborating on the conflict, Shea stressed that ―Grumman has been primarily a Navy contractor and has done things a particular way with the Navy. The Air Force approach…is probably somewhat more similar to ours, and that approach…is a detailed review all through the development cycle of how a contractor performs….The Navy approach has been, I think, to leave Grumman alone and judge only by end results.‖ 110 Shea believed these differences could be worked out if Grumman would fully accept the use of a new integrated scheduling system called ―Program Evaluation Review Technique,‖ or PERT, which NASA was using across the board on the Apollo Program. Shea and NASA believed in PERT. They thought it did an excellent job integrating everything about a project into one master system, but Grumman had been slow to adopt it, and many employees eschewed it. PERT was an invaluable tool for a task as massive 108 Joseph F. Shea, ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ 53, ―Folder 1—Grumman/LM, Shea Program Review, November, 1965,‖ ―Additional Background on Grumman/LM,‖ Folder # 012971, Robert Sherrod Apollo Collection: Gemini Fact Sheets-MSC thru Grumman, NASA Headquarters, NASA Historical Reference Collection, Washington, DC. 109 Ibid. 110 Ibid., 57. 50 and complex as Apollo, with so many companies involved. The Navy had originally created PERT for use in the development of its Polaris Missile system in the late 1950s. It had proven itself as an indispensible tool in organizing and reviewing the design, production, and delivery of the missiles.111 Although Grumman had taught its employees special classes in the use of PERT, many employees resisted the imposition of the system into their normal routine.112 Shea noted that Grummanites ―needed evidence that PERT systems or the managements systems truly work[].‖113 For example, Grummanite Bertram Dawkins, a designer on the LM, had very little regard for PERT. Dawkins believed that the space agency had become a bureaucracy and as such had come to rely on bureaucratic systems. He opined, ―when the old NACA [National Advisory Committee on Aeronautics] was converted into NASA [in 1958], it became a big project agency. As such it imposed itself on its suppliers, such as Grumman, forcing the use of project structure and methods…to reflect their own, good or bad. The scheduling system they imposed (PERT) was extremely wasteful. They were difficult customers.‖114 Yet there was evidence that NASA was correct in its insistence on systems. One example of how PERT and NASA‘s other organizational techniques seemed to work 111 Kelly, Moon Lander, 101-103. NASA also borrowed some organizational techniques and systems from the Air Force‘s configuration management system used on the Redstone Missile project. See pages 101-102 for more on this subject. 112 Kelly, Moon Lander, 102-104. 113 Joseph F. Shea, ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ 61, ―Folder 1—Grumman/LM, Shea Program Review, November, 1965,‖ ―Additional Background on Grumman/LM,‖ Folder # 012971, Robert Sherrod Apollo Collection: Gemini Fact Sheets-MSC thru Grumman, NASA Headquarters, NASA Historical Reference Collection, Washington, DC. 114 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. 51 better than Grumman‘s occurred at the company‘s White Sands, New Mexico test facility, the place where the firm assessed the LM‘s descent and ascent engines (as well as its reaction controls). Shea described how PERT had detected that there was going to be at least a three-month delay (if not more) in one of the component‘s first test-firings, but not everyone was convinced. 115 Lynn Radcliffe, the Grumman engineer in charge of White Sands, seemed to understand the situation better than other co-workers and he quickly embraced NASA‘s new systems and organizational techniques. He had a difficult time getting other Grummanites to play along, however. He characterized the interactions between the two organizations: We didn't know what we were doing…we were trying to adjust to something like a fish out of water…Organization? I learned about organizational charts really for the first time after I went on the Lunar Program…It was like pulling teeth to get people not to work the way they'd always worked. My biggest problem were the oldest types in Grumman…and the only smart thing I ever did was to understand early, we're playing in NASA's ballpark and we‘re gonna play by NASA's rules…but these other experienced Grumman types, nobody was gonna tell them how to make a spacecraft…and they would get off track…and wouldn't operate by the book, and NASA would nail ‗em.116 It took NASA a while to convince Grummanites that PERT was the best system to use, but eventually most accepted its use, especially when they saw how it could integrate 115 Joseph F. Shea, ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ 61, ―Folder 1—Grumman/LM, Shea Program Review, November, 1965,‖ ―Additional Background on Grumman/LM,‖ Folder # 012971, Robert Sherrod Apollo Collection: Gemini Fact Sheets-MSC thru Grumman, NASA Headquarters, NASA Historical Reference Collection, Washington, DC. 116 Lynn Radcliffe Interview, audio tape, no date, tape mislabeled ―Schoney and Art Baldwin,‖ NGHC. Portions of this quote are contained in Pellegrino and Stoff, Chariots for Apollo, 44. 52 every part of the program and help prevent schedule delays.117 Shea had found other major problems at Grumman during his investigation and he enumerated these in his November 1965 report. First of all, he did not think that the company‘s LM Program Office, under the direction of Joe Gavin, was functioning properly, mainly because of the way the firm had organized the decision-making process and accountability chain. In Shea‘s opinion, ―Gavin was not getting enough leverage to get his fair share of the rest of the corporate resources.‖ 118 The problem was that only the LM managers reported directly to the Program Office, whereas most of the rank-and-file engineers and personnel assigned to LM were controlled by Grumman‘s general departments like manufacturing, engineering, and flight testing, among others.119 Shea also found that Grumman did not oversee its subcontractors very well. As he saw it, the company had ―a ‗hands off‘ subcontractor management philosophy,‖ one in which Grumman felt that its only job was to define the technical specifications of a product and then sit back and wait for the subcontractor to deliver the product. 120 Shea believed that all of these problems stemmed from faults in Grumman‘s organizational and corporate culture, which stressed a reliance on personal relationships. 117 Kelly, Moon Lander, 104. 118 Joseph F. Shea, ―Apollo Spacecraft and Related Facilities,‖ 58, ―Folder 1—Grumman/LM, Shea Program Review, November, 1965,‖ ―Additional Background on Grumman/LM,‖ Folder # 012971, Robert Sherrod Apollo Collection: Gemini Fact Sheets-MSC thru Grumman, NASA Headquarters, NASA Historical Reference Collection, Washington, DC. 119 Ibid. 120 Ibid., 56. 53 He admitted that ―Grumman is still the best contractor we have working for us on the Apollo spacecraft program,‖ and he acknowledged that many of the company‘s problems were normal given the fact that it was taking on a totally new and daunting task like Apollo. Nevertheless, he argued that Grumman put ―a bit too much faith in the people delegated to run the program.‖121 He also believed that the company‘s emphasis on total personal interaction at all levels of the firm and its loose communication style, ironically caused ―a slightly constricted overall organization.‖122 In an effort to remedy these problems, Shea met with Grumman‘s top senior officials and convinced them the firm would be in a ―crisis situation‖ with the LM if it did not start changing things very quickly.123 As a result, the firm directed Senior Vice President George Titterton to spend more time overseeing the LM program. Titterton, who was already in charge of watching over all of the company‘s other programs, business, and contracts, was suddenly spending about half of his time as the de facto manager of the LM. As Shea noted, as soon as Titterton stepped in, it ―made a world of difference because all of a sudden things get done when the LEM needs something.‖ 124 Shea concluded that Grumman was on the way to making the necessary changes so that the LM Program would work properly, but he also knew that NASA had to constantly keep the firm‘s unique corporate and organizational culture in mind when 121 Ibid., 57. 122 Ibid. 123 Ibid., 57 and 60. 124 Ibid., 60. 54 considering how the company would react to suggested changes to its routines. As Shea told NASA officials, ―the Grumman hardware, and the Grumman performance[,] will be better than perhaps any spacecraft we have had. There is a fundamental integrity in the company once you get them aroused, [sic] that is going to make them produce. But at the same time their intense pride and their way of having done things before has made it very hard for them to recognize that they had a problem. So the strength is also the weakness.‖ 125 Fleshing out his overall assessment of Grumman, Shea concluded: They have a strong faith in their personnel, although we have indicated that we think that they might do a little better. It is the situation of a fraternalistic organization. They would almost rather have somebody like Titterton come in and straighten the thing out than to make some organizational changes at the right effective level in the organization. This is not to say they don‘t have a very good young organization. I think it would be very difficult for Grumman because of just the way they have grown up to bring people in from the outside and have those people be effective. They are a build-up-from-the-bottom kind of organization.126 Shea recognized Grumman‘s assets and experience and was ready to work with whatever shortcomings he saw in the company‘s organizational culture. By the end of 1965, after several difficult months of discussions and renegotiations, NASA and Grumman had hammered out a new contract for the LM. 127 The cost-plus-incentive-fee agreement, valued at approximately $1.42 billion, planned the 125 Ibid., 57. 126 Ibid., 61. 127 ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 2, ―Hjornevik Report 620 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 55 entire program out through the end of the decade. 128 The agreement seemed to calm both organizations and restore a certain degree of confidence; things seemed to be on the right track with the LM. However, in early 1966, Grumman‘s new president Lew Evans reviewed the program and grew very concerned about the company‘s continued escalation of its costs and its difficulty supervising subcontractors. He therefore asked NASA for help; he wanted the space agency‘s advice on what Grumman could do to remedy the situation.129 NASA obliged the new president and sent a team of experts to Bethpage. In the end, their report helped push Grumman toward a more hierarchical organizational model, a very different type of firm than Jake Swirbul had helped nurture decades earlier. In mid-June 1966, at Evans‘ behest, Wesley L. Hjornevik, NASA‘s Associate Director for Manned Space Flight, took an investigative team to Grumman. The NASA group began a twelve-day intensive review of the company‘s subcontractor system, as well as its schedule forecasts and performance. 130 NASA found that most of the firm‘s cost 128 Kelly, Moon Lander, 146-147. 129 ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 2, ―Hjornevik Report 620 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; and Courtney G. Brooks, James M. Grimwood and Loyd S. Swenson, Jr. Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4205, 1979), 197. Lew Evans took over as Grumman‘s President in 1966 when Leroy ―Roy‖ Grumman retired due to a serious eye ailment. Clint Towl‘s the company‘s former President had vacated the presidency in order to take over Roy Grumman‘s former position as Chairman of the Board. For more details about the transition, see Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 323. 130 W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 3, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 149. Kelly 56 increases and delays were due to its subcontractors. At the time, the oversight of subcontractors was split between the engineering and business offices. The investigative team recommended that Grumman create one management position over LM subcontractors to correct that problem.131 NASA also believed that the Ground Support Equipment (GSE) team was running too far behind schedule and needed a coordinated plan for all facets of its operation.132 The space agency wanted Grumman to buy some of its GSE items from other contractors, like General Electric, North American, and McDonnell, who were already doing a good job in this area. 133 Finally, and most significantly, NASA strongly hinted that a major change needed to be made to the LM‘s management. As the report starkly noted, ―strong program management is absent.‖ 134 claims that the review was ten days long, but on the cover of the report it lists a twelve day investigation going from June 20 through July 1. 131 W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, 20, 22-23, 54, 61, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 149. 132 W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, 47-48, 50-51, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 149. 133 Kelly, Moon Lander, 149; and W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, 33, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC. 134 W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, 21, 64-65, 69, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC. The quote is from page 21. 57 Although George Titterton‘s new oversight of the program over the last year had improved things substantially, it still was not strong enough.135 In a follow-up letter to Evans, Hjornevik offered a few ―personal observations and impressions‖ about what he felt were the main reasons Grumman was having problems. 136 His comments cited many of the same glitches that Shea had identified as key difficulties for the company a year earlier. Hjornevik observed, ―I was struck by the anomaly of a group of people who, in our judgment, were more competent and capable at every level than any other contractor in our experience; yet, the net performance was substantially below that capability.‖137 He believed that there were two reasons for this problem. First, the company had never worked on a project as large as the LM before, and it consequently did not know how to organize and manage the program effectively; people in Grumman‘s various departments tended to leave loose ends to be handled by the company‘s LM Program Office, and that left the program office with too much to do. In short, the company was not supporting the LM Program office as well as it could. Second, Hjornevik felt that the company was performing ―significantly…below-capacity‖ because of ―the Grumman tradition of informality and the resulting tendency to lack detailed planning.‖138 As Hjornevik concluded, ―firefighting becomes a way of life. Evidence of this 135 W. L. Hjornevik, ―Findings and Recommendations of the NASA Management Review of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) Program,‖ at Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., June 20 – July 1, 1966, NASA-MSC-Houston, pp. 21, 64-65, 69, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 150. 136 Wesley L. Hjornevik to Llewellyn J. Evans, 27 July 1966, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC. 137 Ibid. 138 Ibid. 58 problem is replete in our notes. In a program of the scale and complexity of the LEM, this traditional Grumman mode has become a crippling disease.‖ 139 On August 9, approximately six weeks after the Hjornevik review, the team‘s leaders returned to Grumman to see how well the company was doing at implementing its suggestions.140 The firm seemed to have taken the report‘s recommendations seriously and it had made some major changes, given its usual adherence to a relaxed and friendly corporate culture. First, Grumman had significantly altered it organizational structure so that there was a distinct difference between all of the LM‘s operational matters and the company‘s other departments; all LM matters seemed to finally be controlled by the LM Program Office.141 Individual subcontract managers were also given much more authority in the new system, and the firm had even created an overall LM Subcontractor Manager, a key point for the Hjornevik team.142 Other changes included Grumman‘s acceptance of significant schedule changes, its agreement to purchase most of its Ground Support Equipment from its competitors, and its integration of all GSE matters into a master 139 Ibid. 140 ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 4, ―Hjornevik Report 620 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 141 ―Grumman Response to NASA Management Review Team—Findings and Recommendations,‖ 9 August 1966, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC. 142 Bill Evans was appointed as the LM Subcontractor Manager. See Grumman Response to NASA Management Review Team—Findings and Recommendations,‖ 9 August 1966, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 5-6, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 150-151. 59 calendar.143 Finally, and most significantly, Grumman replaced Bob Mullaney as LM Program Manager and increased George Titterton‘s duties so that he was overseeing all of Grumman‘s space programs.144 Titterton moved out of his old office and into a new work space located right next to LM Program Director Joe Gavin‘s office in Plant 25, the Lunar Module‘s main engineering building. Titterton was spending about 80% of his time supervising the project. These adjustments ensured that the LM Program received the highest support across the corporation. Surprisingly, Mullaney had become Titterton‘s staff assistant.145 As Grummanite Tom Kelly, the LM‘s Chief Engineer, noted about this personnel change, ―to me it seemed that, as program manager, Mullaney had been made the scapegoat for Grumman‘s poor cost and schedule performance on LM.‖ 146 On August 15, only a few days after the Hjornevik team‘s follow-up review, Joe Gavin sent a key memo to the company‘s senior managers underscoring the importance of making NASA‘s recommendations work. Gavin stressed, ―I cannot overemphasize the 143 ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 4-6, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. For more on Grumman‘s purchase of GSE from other companies, see William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 144 C. William ―Bill‖ Rathke became the new LM Program Manager. See ―Grumman Response to NASA Management Review Team—Findings and Recommendations,‖ 9 August 1966, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC. 145 ―Grumman Response to NASA Management Review Team—Findings and Recommendations,‖ 9 August 1966, ―LM-NASA Review June/July 1966,‖ Sec. A-71, NGHC; ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 7, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 149-150. 146 Interestingly, as Kelly also stated, ―Joe Shea and Mullaney did not get along well…. Shea was still smarting from the standoff with Grumman [during the contract renegotiations in March 1965]…where Mullaney outmaneuvered him to a draw.‖ See Kelly, Moon Lander, 150. 60 urgent need for all of us to: (1) Demonstrate to NASA that we will carry out the actions we plan, and (2) Make a significant improvement in actual performance on the LEM program.‖147 He wanted to redeem the company in the space agency‘s eyes. Almost a year later, in May 1967, NASA checked up on Grumman‘s progress once again. Overall, the agency saw significant improvements and was particularly pleased by the job LM Subcontractor Manager Brian Evans was doing. The company still needed to improve its staffing, costs, and scheduling, but NASA believed Grumman would eventually achieve those goals, especially since it was meeting with a NASA review team on a monthly basis.148 As a result of the changes precipitated by the Hjornevik report, Tom Kelly believed that NASA finally ―felt that at last Grumman was going beyond its traditional dedication to the U.S. Navy and was considering NASA and its Apollo program a very high priority customer,‖ something that the space agency had been pushing for ever since the two organizations began working together.149 From NASA‘s perspective, it looked as if Grumman was finally listening to its customer with an open mind and giving it a healthy level of respect. But was it? Unfortunately for Grumman, the circumstances surrounding 147 J. G. Gavin, Jr. to J. Buxton, et al, ―Subject: Grumman Response to NASA Management Review Team Findings and Recommendations,‖ Memo, 15 August 1966, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC. 148 J. J. Carroll and the Business Development Department to L. J. Evans, et al, ―Subject: RASPO Review of the Hjornevik Report,‖ Memo, 12 May 1967, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; ―Statement by Dr. George E. Mueller, Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight before the Senate Committee on Aeronautical and Space Sciences,‖ 12 June 1967, 10, ―Hjornevik Report 6-20 to 7-1 1966—Findings & Recommendations of,‖ ―Hjornevik Report,‖ Sect. A-67, NGHC; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 151. 149 Kelly, Moon Lander, 151. 61 the delivery of its first operational Lunar Module (LM-1) to NASA in June 1967 once again made the space agency question Grumman‘s judgment as a contractor. On the first day of summer, NASA took numerous high-ranking officials and engineers to Bethpage to begin the Customer Acceptance Readiness Review (CARR) of the LM-1. The CARR was an intensive and formal review of the vehicle, a mandated process that called for NASA to physically inspect every aspect of the LM-1 before accepting its final delivery. CARR represented NASA‘s way of making sure the vehicle complied with all of the expected specifications. In all, approximately four hundred people were involved in the CARR, two hundred NASA employees and two hundred of their Grumman counterparts. Grumman had a difficult time finding enough space for that many people to meet and work together comfortably. As Tom Kelly remembered the event, George Titterton had ―decided to pattern the CARR on the annual Grumman stockholders‘ meeting.‖150 He cleared out one of the company‘s largest hangars and put up several hundred folding chairs facing a large raised stage to accommodate the review‘s largest and most important session. What followed was ―a tragic comic circus,‖ Kelly noted.151 The massive hangar reverberated deafeningly with that many people in it. Review board members had to repeat things two or three times in order to be heard, even with loudspeakers. And temperatures inside the facility rose considerably, especially after they shut the hangar‘s doors to cut down on outside noise. Space agency representatives, although patient, were clearly aggravated by the situation. Kelly remembered watching 150 Ibid., 3. 151 Ibid., 182. 62 ―NASA officials desultorily thumbing through some of the briefing handout material and looking at their watches every minute or two. Surely in another few minutes they would leave.‖152 The CARR meeting lasted until just a little bit before 8:00 P.M. that evening. For NASA representatives, it had been a very long day, and one that reminded them how differently Grumman treated them compared to some of the other Apollo contractors, particularly North American Aviation (NAA).153 As Tom Kelly revealed in his autobiographical account about designing and building the LM, NASA always felt much more comfortable dealing with North American than with Grumman, even after the Apollo 1 fire of January 1967, which had been caused by NAA‘s equipment. From NASA‘s perspective, NAA treated it with respect and seemed to focus all of its attention on Apollo. Grumman, on the other hand, had avoided implementing several of NASA‘s suggestions; the Bethpage company appeared a bit arrogant.154 Part of NASA‘s perception about the two organizations stemmed from the different approaches they took toward accommodating the space agency‘s representatives from the very beginning of their relationships. Shortly after Grumman had won the LM contract in November 1962, it sent a handful of engineers to southern California to tour North American‘s facilities. NAA was the Apollo Program‘s leading contractor, having won the right to design and build the Apollo Command/Service Module, the second stage of the Saturn V launch vehicle, as 152 Ibid. 5. 153 For Kelly‘s full recollections about the LM-1 CARR, see ibid., 3-6. 154 Kelly, Moon Lander, 261. For an insightful discussion about the difference between ―responsive‖ and ―arrogant‖ aerospace contractors, see Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry, 43-44. 63 well as the Saturn V‘s F-1 and J-2 engines (NAA‘s subsidiary, Rocketdyne, was in charge of the engines). To accommodate NASA officials, NAA had constructed a stylish and sophisticated air-conditioned meeting room, complete with the best audio-visual equipment of the day. John Paup, NAA‘s Apollo Program Director at the time, advised the visiting Grummanites to build the same type of facilities back in Bethpage. However, Grumman‘s senior officials saw no reason to do so. ―The company fathers and their navy customers had grown up and worked in Spartan, austere surroundings. They cherished the ‗hair-shirt‘ image of frugality and conservatism, which had always suited the navy,‖ Kelly recalled.155 ―How, they asked (not unreasonably), could we expect the navy to be content with second-class facilities at Grumman if they saw a luxurious NASA center right in Bethpage?‖ 156 Grumman‘s failure to construct such a facility had caused serious problems for the company, especially during the LM-1 CARR. Kelly believed that it was ―obvious that the austere image that played so well with the navy was alienating the NASA management of Apollo.‖157 Although Grumman would go on to build a sophisticated onsite NASA facility along NAA lines, the new building would come too late. By that time, NASA representatives had already been reminded of their second-rate status at Grumman, at least compared to the way NAA and other contractors treated them.158 155 Kelly, Moon Lander, 47. 156 Ibid. 157 Ibid. 158 For Kelly‘s full recollections about the differences between NAA‘s and Grumman‘s NASA facilities, see ibid., 46-47. 64 A few months after the historic Apollo 11 mission, Eugene Drucker, a researcher from Syracuse University, wrote an important report about the relationship between NASA and some of its key contractors. The October 1969 study detailed some of the common challenges contractors faced in their interaction with the space agency. Drucker had interviewed roughly fifty employees, anonymously, from McDonnell-Douglas, North American (including Rocketdyne, one of its subsidiaries), and Grumman. 159 A common observation the workers made was that NASA had pushed their companies to create strong, ―semi-autonomous,‖ Apollo Program offices.160 Some characterized these new types of offices as being ―a company within a company.‖ 161 Although some contractors readily accepted such organizational changes, others had resisted NASA‘s influence for as long as they could—as Grumman had—but then still ultimately gave in to the space agency. 162 Another common complaint was that there was ―excessive monitoring on the part of NASA, and undue penetration into the internal affairs of [each] company.‖ 163 Although most recognized that these changes were supposedly positive attempts by NASA to help their companies operate more effectively and efficiently, Drucker found that NASA interference ―create[d] in the contractors‘ organizations a ‗goldfish bowl 159 Eugene E. Drucker, ―The Apollo Project Manager-Contractor Interface,‖ Working Paper No. 4, Syracuse/NASA Program, Syracuse University, NGL 33-022-090, October 1969, 1, NASA Headquarters, Library, Washington, DC. 160 Ibid., 8. 161 Ibid. 162 Ibid. 163 Ibid., 11. 65 complex.‘‖ 164 Many had also been bothered by what they perceived as ―excessive requests by NASA for information, briefings, [and] proposals, etc.‖165 And some workers had been frustrated by misunderstandings about who the decision-makers were at different levels of NASA (unlike at the companies, which seemed clearly delineated to the employees), as well as the realization that NASA/contractor relationships were sometimes greatly affected by managers‘ personalities, as the clash between Joe Shea and Bob Mullaney had proven (Shea and Mullaney had not get along well during the early days of the LM Program). 166 Although the workers understood that NASA had to impose a great many changes on their organizations in order to make sure a program as complex as Apollo reached its ultimate goal of a manned lunar landing before 1970, many still found the process of change extremely unsettling.167 In the end, many Grummanites remember NASA‘s supervision and interaction with them as bureaucratic and meddlesome. The Navy had been liberal in the oversight of its aircraft contracts, but NASA was an entirely different type of customer. Grummanites found the agency very formal in its management style, and very intrusive. Engineer John Caruso, for example, observed that with NASA ―everything had to be done ‘by the 164 Ibid. 165 Ibid. 166 Ibid., 11, 14, and 4. For additional information about the unclear chain of command for decision making, see Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 191. 167 Eugene E. Drucker, ―The Apollo Project Manager-Contractor Interface,‖ Working Paper No. 4, Syracuse/NASA Program, Syracuse University, NGL 33-022-090, October 1969, 11, 14 and 4, NASA Headquarters, Library, Washington, DC. 66 book.‘"168 S. Murray Krameisen, a company draftsman, remembered that in his department NASA‘s questions and changes had to be passed down through the chain of command, instead of the NASA people coming directly to him and talking with him face-to-face—a very different system than Grumman‘s ―classless‖ management style where all levels of employees interacted on a regular basis.169 Similarly, Raymond Sala, a test engineer and lab manager, believed that there were just ―too many management systems‖ once the Apollo Program started.170 He really ―didn‘t care for the NASA bureaucracy.‖ 171 John Morrison, the foreman of the LM Ascent Stage Structure Assembly and a supervisor at Cape Canaveral, complained that the space agency had ―too much involvement in day-today activities.‖ 172 He found ―it was quite different working with NASA. We were not used to outside surveillance of everything we did.‖173 William Kiesel, a fluids power engineer, joked, ―we used to say that we would reach the moon simply by just stacking-up all the paperwork!‖174 And Don Imgram, one of the OAO‘s lead engineers, believed that 168 John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000, in the author‘s possession. 169 S. Murray Krameisen, Survey/Questionnaire, 22 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. For more on NASA‘s formal management approach, also see Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 191. Stephen Patnode also notes that some decisions had to start going through a hierarchical chain of command, although he does not relate it directly to NASA‘s influence. See Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 261-262. 170 Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 171 Ibid. 172 John M. Morrison, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 173 174 Ibid. William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 67 NASA's constant monitoring of his program was "enormously intrusive and thoroughly unnecessary."175 According to his calculations, over a third of the cost of the OAO program was wasted on having to respond to all of NASA‘s inquires during an "era of justification."176 Finally, summing up most Grummanites‘ feelings about the space agency, company President John Bierwirth, who would take over the firm in November 1972, simply concluded that NASA just ―got too bureaucratic.‖177 Despite this challenging relationship during the Apollo Program, a few Grummanites remarked on NASA‘s professionalism and fondly remember some individual interactions. Eugene Toscano, a Grumman model designer, for example, felt that agency representatives were ―great to work with,‖ and remembered them as being ―friendly and professional.‖ 178 He even became ―good friends‖ with some of them. 179 Walter Muench, an assistant project engineer on one of the OAOs, also found the space agency‘s people to 175 "Early NASA Culture and Its Interactions with the Grumman OAO Development Team—The Perceptions of Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 2. 176 "Early NASA Culture and Its Interactions with the Grumman OAO Development Team—The Perceptions of Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 2. For more on NASA causing unnecessary paperwork, see Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 191; Robert F. White, Survey/Questionnaire, 25 January 2000; and Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999. Both in the author‘s possession. 177 John C. Bierwirth, Survey/Questionnaire, 31 May 2000, in the author‘s possession. George Daelemans, one the key OAO engineers, remembered NASA workers in a more ambivalent way than some Grummanties. As he observed, those ―who had always worked as government employees tended to consider contractors as potential cheaters, while those who had come from private industry cut us more slack." See George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. Historian Stephen Patnode has also noted that Grummanites felt that the company had become more ―bureaucratic and hierarchical‖ in the 1960s and 1970s, although he does not specifically tie it to the intrusion of NASA. For more, see Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 286 and 297. 178 Eugene J. Toscano, Survey/Questionnaire, 29 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 179 Ibid. 68 be ―very professional‖ and ―very friendly,‖ and he discovered that they ―knew their engineering and management side very well.‖180 Test engineer Raymond Sala offered that NASA was a ―good customer insofar as working out problems & requirements were concerned,‖ but he did not elaborate much more.181 And Mike Hlinko, a senior design engineer, ―had a high respect for NASA people.‖182 Still, to be sure, even though some Grummanites remember certain NASA workers fondly and with respect, others still cannot help but think about the space agency‘s management and oversight of its programs and the stress that it caused for them. In sum, NASA and Grumman‘s interaction during the Apollo era revealed a clash between two organizational cultures. Grumman tried to adhere to the older, more traditional way of doing business, which was based on trust and the belief that people would get everything done correctly and on time, while NASA‘s more calculated approach relied on systems and schedules that accounted for every detail. To many Grummanites, NASA‘s system seemed impersonal and based solely on numbers and calendars, whereas their system relied on people and trusting relationships. That is not to say that Grumman did not have its own sophisticated project systems before NASA entered the picture, but merely to note that it favored a people-oriented approach, rather than the cold scientific methods of the new era. NASA‘s organizational systems were 180 Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000, in the author‘s possession. For some other Grummanites who also spoke about NASA representatives‘ friendly and pleasant demeanor, see N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000; and Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000. Both in the author‘s possession. 181 Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 182 Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. 69 necessary to accomplish a task as large and complex as Apollo in a timely manner. But for Grummanites, the transition to NASA‘s new systems and organizational techniques was very unsettling. Bertram Dawkins, a LM Designer, aptly summed up the entire experience for many Grummanites: ―We had a comfortable working arrangement with the US Navy. When NASA arrived, they wished to impose their way of doing things. They also brought a great deal of bureaucracy and the need for a great deal of documentation.‖ 183 Grummanites, the Space Race, and Apollo‘s Deadline Ever since President John F. Kennedy‘s May 25, 1961 announcement that the U.S. would pursue the goal of landing a man on the Moon before the end of that decade, scholars and the media have overwhelmingly highlighted the role that the Cold War played in driving the Apollo Program. For most Americans, Apollo represented a race between the United States and the Soviet Union—a contest to prove one nation‘s supposed technological and scientific superiority over the other. 184 On this issue, historian Joan Lisa Bromberg has argued that NASA and the aerospace industry of the 1960s "served as a means for waging the cold war…. NASA and [space] industry engineers…often shared a 183 184 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. There are a multitude of books that stress the Cold War was the driving force behind the Apollo Program. One of the classic works is Walter A. McDougall‘s Pulitzer Prize-winning book …The Heavens and the Earth: A Political History of the Space Age (New York: Basic Books, 1985). Notably, space historian John Logsdon has recently revealed that President Kennedy was trying to develop a jointU.S./U.S.S.R. lunar landing program shortly before he died that would have halted the Apollo Program and ended the Space Race. For more, see John M. Logsdon, John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). For an extensive list of books and articles that stress the Space Race aspects of Apollo, see ―Chapter 2: The Space Race‖ in Roger D. Launius and J.D. Hunley, An Annotated Bibliography of the Apollo Program, NASA Monographs in Aerospace History, Number 2, (Washington, DC: NASA History Office, July 1994), 13-18. 70 common version of patriotism—a commitment to winning the space race in the name of the United States and the capitalist system."185 Even though many people have stressed the desire to beat the Russians to the Moon as the main motivation behind the Apollo Program, one facet of this study has been to investigate to what extent that factor actually drove Grummanites. Were the thoughts of winning a Cold War battle for the United States foremost in their minds? Although it is clear that Kennedy's lunar landing schedule mobilized the aerospace industry to win the Space Race for the U.S., it is important to realize that the Cold War actually played only a small role in motivating Grummanites to build and perfect the LMs and deliver them on time. Pride—individual, departmental, and company pride—coupled with the pure thrill of engineering problem-solving, are what spurred on Grummanites to construct the LMs, not the Cold War race to the Moon. For most of the Grummanites who designed and built the LMs, working on the program fostered a combination of incredible pride, passion, and pressure. All of them were aware that the entire world was literally watching their efforts, because unlike the Soviet Union's program, the U.S. civil space program's missions were televised. They also knew that America's technological honor was a stake if they did not beat the Russians to the Moon. And making the situation even more stressful, President Kennedy‘s deadline loomed over their heads. Tom Kelly, Grumman's Chief Engineer on the Lunar Module and the so-called "father of the LM," was particularly cognizant of these factors. But Kelly's awareness of the gravity of the program went a step further than most. He realized that it 185 Bromberg, NASA and the Space Industry, 6 and 9. 71 was also Grumman's reputation and future that was at stake. If the company succeeded, the LM would enhance Grumman's already "sterling" reputation, but if it failed, both the nation and the company would be humiliated. Although it is reasonable to assume Grummanites‘ attitudes and motivations were closely attuned to the Cold War implications of their work, the goal of racing to the Moon played a very minor role, if any at all, in their thinking. While the Space Race definitely helped determine the LM‘s delivery schedule and thereby defined the overall parameters of the program, Grummanites treated NASA's timetable like any other contractor's delivery schedule, not like an international showdown with the Soviet Union. As Grumman LM propulsion engineer Lynn Radcliffe observed, "You know, sometimes you run a race against competition and sometimes you only run it against the clock. I thought we were only running against the clock—the decade of the 60s."186 John Morrison, one of the company‘s supervisors at Cape Kennedy, stated that his main ―desire was to do the best job possible, to build a space craft, to safely bring our astronauts to the moon and back, not to beat the Russians, but to do a perfect job."187 Robert White, a Grumman model designer, ―saw no need at all to race or be first.‖ 188 For him, ―it was [just] important to go to the moon, for technical knowhow.‖ 189 He added that the LMs ―were no different than 186 NGHC Audio Tape # 24, ―LM—Lynn Radcliffe‖ 6/12/83, NGHC. 187 John M. Morrison, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. 188 Robert F. White, Survey/Questionnaire, 25 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 189 Ibid. 72 the rest of the contracts,‖ except that they received all of the ―limelight.‖ 190 Henry Pallmeyer, who had worked on the LM throughout the Apollo 11 mission, did not think that beating the Russians factored into his or his colleagues‘ work motivations ―at all, we just did our job.‖ 191 Similarly, LM test engineer Raymond Sala ―never thought about the Space Race except when it caused us to work OT [overtime]. We just did our work as best we could…. We loved our work and wanted Grumman to do well.‖192 And George Meltzer, a LM tool fabricator, wanted ―to do the best I could to keep Grumman's reputation untarnished.‖193 Even when the Cold War seemed to motivate some Grummanites‘ more strongly than others, it still intertwined with their identities as company employees. For example, Ray Russo, a structural mechanic and supervisor on the LM, admitted that, although the space race ―influenced and motivated [him] greatly,‖ it mainly did so by making him ―more conscious of the schedule and [the need] to produce a quality product.‖194 In a similar vein, Laurence Van Wallendael merely saw the building of the LM as ―a race to see who did better and Grumman came out on top.‖195 190 Ibid. 191 Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000, in the author‘s possession. 192 Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 193 George Melzer, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 194 Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 195 Laurence Van Wallendael, Survey/Questionnaire, 7 February 2000, in the author‘s possession. For more about the idea of merely being motivated to do a good job as a ―contractor,‖ see Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000; and Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999. Both in the author‘s possession. More instances of company pride being a major motivator can be found in Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Robert F. White, Survey/Questionnaire, 25 January 2000; and Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999. All in the author‘s possession. 73 One of the most common images that the history of the Apollo Program conjures up is a picture of aerospace workers laboring countless hours and enduring enormous amounts of pressure. That image, in most cases, is quite correct. It was not uncommon for many Grummanites to work twelve to fourteen hour days, seven days a week, for several months in a row. While some worked during the day, others came in at night. Many of Grumman‘s facilities, such as Plant 5 (one of the LM‘s key assembly buildings), operated twenty-four hours a day during the peak of production. 196 Although Grumman technically had several different work shifts, it was often difficult to tell who was working which one because of the constant hours of overtime everyone was putting in around the clock. Interestingly, while there was definitely a great deal of pressure generated by the LM‘s tight schedule, many Grummanites believed that most of the stress they felt was actually self-generated. Ozzie Williams, the man in charge of the LM's reaction control, noted that most Grummanites knew and accepted the fact they would have to put in long hours, because no one was really sure how the LM was actually going to come to fruition. In his eight years on the program, there were only about a half dozen weekends he did not work. Space flight, after all, was a new phenomenon, and there did not seem to be enough hours in the day to consider all of the aerodynamic challenges that they would run And for a few instances in which Grummanites specifically mention the desire to beat the Russians to the moon, see Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000; James Panos, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 April 2000; and to a lesser extent N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000. All in the author‘s possession. 196 "Tabulation of Employees, December 1966," "Women," Section A-8, NGHC. See all of the Grummanite survey/questionnaires in the author‘s possession for more about all of the work hours they averaged. 74 up against in the endless frontier.197 Consequently, employees constantly pressed themselves to make sure they had all their bases covered. As Williams observed, everyone realized that they were essentially "climbing this [type of] Everest" and they were not quite sure how they were going to get to the top.198 They felt confident that they would make it, but they were not always sure which route they would need to take.199 But LM engineers and workers were not the only Grummanites who worked long hours and felt the pressures of deadlines. Many of the OAO program workers also logged in a great deal of overtime, often to the detriment of their families. As one of the OAO's chief engineers noted, the average OAO engineer worked approximately sixty to seventy hours a week. That same engineer twice cancelled a celebration of his twenty-fifth wedding anniversary because it conflicted with important business at the company. He also had to disappoint his family by calling them from work and cancelling their trip to California after they were already packed and waiting in the car. 200 Grummanites made incredible sacrifices to make sure that the LMs and OAOs were successful. Sometimes the trade-offs were well worth it because of the immense pride and excitement they felt. Many Grummanites, for example, believed that their ultimate payoff came when they watched the Apollo 11 Lunar Module (LM-5) during its 197 For more on the unknowns in spacecraft design, see Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession 198 "Ozzie Williams Interview," LM #31, 6/1/83, audio tape, NGHC. 199 Ibid. 200 "Grumman and Its Early Space Program Successes: A Historical Perspective as Seen by Donald A. Imgram," sent via e-mail to David H. Onkst, 5 May 1999, 8-9. 75 historic mission, while others felt greater satisfaction from their work on the Apollo 13 module (LM-7) because it had saved the lives of three astronauts. Still, for all of the positive aspects they saw from working long hours, they also saw some distinctly negative ramifications, mainly the neglect of their families. Many Grumman spouses had to raise children on their own. As Karl Jurgensen remembered, overtime ―definitely put more load on wives at home with children.‖201 Eugene Coll, for example, only saw his three sons on the weekends.202 For Bertram Dawkins, ―the long hours kept me out of the house during the period when the 1st and 2nd children were growing up.‖203 Henry Pallymeyer regretted that ―the result of these overtime hours was that my wife brought up my children.‖204 And Ray Russo confessed, ―I missed watching my children grow and being part of their lives as a father.‖205 Although the long hours definitely harmed family relationships, the overtime pay helped many Grummanites‘ families to afford a middle-class lifestyle. Although some might not have been home to provide parental guidance, they at least brought home the economic support to help their families. Bill Ptucha, for instance, remembered that ―the extra money came in handy for extra items, savings for education for children and yearly family vacations.‖206 While Robert Innoesu admitted ―all the overtime allowed for many 201 Karl Jurgensen, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 April 2000, in the author‘s possession. 202 Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 203 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. 204 Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000, in the author‘s possession. 205 Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 206 William (Bill) Ptucha, Survey/Questionnaire, 19 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 76 things we normally could not afford.‖207 Notably, all thirty-one of the Grummanites who participated in the survey for this study owned homes in the Apollo era. 208 And still, yet another irony of the overtime issue was that although Grummanites were able to fulfill many of their middle-class material aspirations, the long hours they worked ultimately keep them from fully enjoying those goods, and therefore certain aspects of their social status. As the famous sociologist C. Wright Mills noted in his study of the 1950s American middle-class, one of the fundamental values of the middle-class was the growth of more leisure time. In fact, Mills discovered that most Americans actually disliked their jobs and only went to work in order to have enough money to obtain leisure goods and more recreational time. Conversely, many Grummanites honestly found their jobs quite exciting and fun. In a sense, for many Grummanites, work was their leisure activity. Nevertheless, they still realized that even though they had improved certain aspects of their socioeconomic lives, they still fell short in other areas and were unable to partake of all of the benefits of their labor. 209 Work and the Promise of the Endless Frontier Shortly after the birth of the aviation industry in the late 1910s, those who chose to 207 Robert Ionescu, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. For more about some of the Grummanites who were happy to work overtime, see and compare William (Bill) Ptucha, Survey/Questionnaire, 19 November 1999; Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000; S. Murray Krameisen, Survey/Questionnaire, 22 November 1999; George Melzer, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 November 1999; and N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000. All in the author‘s possession. 208 209 See all Grummanite survey/questionnaires in the author‘s possession for more on this point. For more on these issues, see C. Wright Mills, White Collar: The American Middle Classes (New York: Oxford University Press, 1953), 235-37. 77 join the business quickly realized that employment in aeronautics could be quite unstable. Workers came to understand that a company‘s survival depended on its ability to keep securing new aircraft contracts; that was the reality that many of the first generation of aeronautical engineers and production workers—those who would eventually manage the aircraft companies of the postwar era—experienced during their formative years in the industry. But in the 1950s, a new generation of aeronautical engineers was preparing to enter the workforce. Many in this second generation of professionals would hold a different view about their work and their future prospects, especially after the dissemination of the vision of several key space exploration advocates. In the 1950s, Wernher von Braun, a former German rocket engineer who would become known as ―the father‖ of the Saturn V (the Apollo Program‘s launch vehicle), space exploration writer Willy Ley, and several other space travel advocates, would help foster a seemingly realistic image about the possibilities of what engineers might achieve if humankind pushed out into space. Bringing those visions to fruition took on a new sense of urgency for space exploration boosters after the Soviet Union launched Sputnik 1 in October 1957. Suddenly the U.S. needed a civilian army of aerospace engineers who could help the nation demonstrate its supposed scientific and technological superiority over the Russians. The new industry responded by enlarging its engineering cadre significantly to achieve a lunar landing, among other undertakings. Although von Braun and others had envisioned a different order of space missions and programs before going to the Moon, it still seemed to many engineers and other advocates that Apollo was just the first step into the heavens. 78 And that idea would be reinforced by the aerospace industry throughout most of the 1960s. For many engineers who joined the aerospace business during this era, it was as if there was a tacit promise of a career‘s worth of work on vehicles that would explore the endless frontier of space.210 As space historians such as Dwayne Day, Roger Launius, Michael Neufeld, Howard McCurdy, and Sylvia Doughty Fries have revealed, many NASA engineers and managers were so acculturated in von Braun‘s original vision of space exploration that it significantly influenced the shaping of much of the space agency‘s future. Many at NASA embraced his version of manned space flight, which included a space shuttle, a space station, a lunar landing, and a mission to Mars; as Dwayne Day first argued, this ―Von Braun Paradigm‖ was a guiding philosophy for many at the space agency.211 Von Braun‘s 210 Although many people refer to space as ―the final frontier,‖ others call it ―the endless frontier.‖ For one key example see Ken Hechler, Toward the Endless Frontier: History of the Committee on Science and Technology, 1959-1979 (Washington, DC: U.S. House of Representatives, 1980). 211 For Day‘s exploration of the ―Von Braun Paradigm,‖ see Dwayne A. Day, ―The Von Braun Paradigm,‖ Space Times (November-December 1994): 12-15; and Dwayne A. Day, ―Paradigm Lost,‖ Space Policy 11 (August 1995): 153-159. Space historian Michel Neufeld recently noted that even though Day‘s idea of the ―Von Braun Paradigm was ―controversial from the start,‖ because some felt that he had overlooked or downplayed other space exploration plans that were present in the period, it still ―was undeniably influential over the long run, especially on spaceflight true believers inside the movement and in the general public.‖ As Neufeld concludes about the subject: ―I would agree that Dwayne Day‘s thesis of a von Braun paradigm consisting of four main elements [shuttle, station, moon, Mars, respectively] remains a plausible interpretative device for analyzing a half century of U.S. human spaceflight planning, especially up to 1989.‖ These quotes are from pages 326 and 346 of Michael J. Neufeld, ―The ‗Von Braun Paradigm‘ and NASA‘s Long-Term Planning for Human Spaceflight,‖ in Steven Dick, ed., NASA‘s First 50 Years—Historical Perspectives (Washington, DC: NASA SP-2010-4704, 2010), 325-347. Neufeld‘s recent biography of von Braun also contains numerous illustrations about how von Braun‘s vision inspired NASA officials and other space boosters. For more details, see, Michael J. Neufeld, Von Braun: Dreamer of Space, Engineer of War (New York, NY: Vintage Books, 2007). Howard McCurdy also explores this issue rather extensively in Howard E. McCurdy, Space and the American Imagination (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997). In Sylvia Doughty Fries, NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4104, 1992), there are also several instances of von Braun and his cohorts‘ vision shaping aerospace workers ideas about space flight and exploration. Some other key works that have explored and dissected Day‘s idea include Roger D. Launius, Space Stations: Base Camps to the 79 concepts first started to gain traction in the public‘s imagination through a series of articles in the popular magazine Collier‘s that began on March 22, 1952. Von Braun penned the first article ―Man Will Conquer Space Soon: Top Scientists Tell How in 15 Startling Pages.‖212 Other contributors to the eight-part series included several of the day‘s other well-known authors and scientists, such as spaceflight popularizer Willy Ley, Harvard astronomer Fred Whipple, and author/journalist Cornelius Ryan, among others. Chesley Bonestall, ―the most influential space artist of the time,‖ provided exquisite illustrations for the series.213 In von Braun‘s opener, he detailed his plans for a massive Earth-orbiting space station from which the U.S. could launch lunar missions; collectively, the articles put forth a vision that included not only the creation of a space station, but also landing men on the Moon, the establishment of a lunar base, and a manned mission to Mars. At the same time that the articles were running, von Braun was appearing on several television shows to promote his and his colleagues‘ ideas. Walt Disney would even produce a series of programs with the help of von Braun, Ley, and others, in order to advertise the Tomorrowland section of his new theme park Disneyland. The Disney shows, which ran from 1955 through 1957 and featured von Braun, revealed to millions of Americans the possibilities of spaceflight as conceived by von Braun and his colleagues. By the time the first Sputnik launched in the fall of 1957, Americans had an expansive idea Stars (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2002), 26-27; Roger D. Launius and Howard E. McCurdy, Robots in Space: Technology, Evolution, and Interplanetary Travel (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008), 64-65. 212 213 McCurdy, Space and the American Imagination, 38-39; and Neufeld, Von Braun, 259. The quote is from McCurdy, Space and the American Imagination, 39. For more on Bonestall, see Neufeld, Von Braun, 257-259. 80 of the possibilities of space exploration, thanks to von Braun and his cohort.214 This optimistic view seemed to promise years of employment for those entering the aerospace industry. One of the best examples of this can be found in David Beers‘s autobiographical account of what it was like to grow up the son of a Lockheed aerospace engineer in the 1960s. Beers imagined his family and their fellow aerospace engineering neighbors as belonging to a special kind of ―blue sky tribe,‖ led by the father figure of von Braun. The tribe worshiped the growth and success of the military industrial complex (and its ventures into the heavens), and was richly rewarded for its devotion. 215 Beers‘s ―communal memoir‖ demonstrates what a profound effect Sputnik, von Braun, and the Space Race had on this community.216 Beers‘s father, a naval aviator who had flown Grumman F9F Cougars in the service, had obtained an aeronautical engineering degree at Purdue University; notably, Neil Armstrong, another Purdue aerospace engineering graduate, and the man who would become the first person to walk on the Moon, was one of his classmates.217 Beers‘s parents had watched the first Sputnik orbit overhead from 214 Both Howard McCurdy and Michael Neufeld cover the Collier‘s articles and their effects on NASA planers and space boosters thoroughly. For an extensive discussion on this subject, see and compare McCurdy, Space and the American Imagination, 37-71; and Neufeld, Von Braun, 255-278 and 285-290. 215 Beers got the idea of describing his family and their cohorts as a ―tribe‖ from anthropologist Hugh Gusterson‘s book Nuclear Rites: A Weapons Laboratory at the End of the Cold War (1998) about the workers and their community at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, California. See David Beers, Blue Sky Dream: A Memoir of America's Fall From Grace (New York: Doubleday, 1996), vii and 21-22. 216 For the ―communal memoir‖ quote, see Beers, Blue Sky Dream, vii. 217 Ibid., 3-7 and 131. 81 their backyard in Springdale, Ohio.218 Beers described the impact that flight had on his family and his ―tribe‖: "Sputnik came to be a lucky star to millions…. Sputnik…sped the transformation of the aircraft industry into something called 'aerospace.' Sputnik did this by rewriting the rules of the Cold War…and when it did, the new rules favored my people, our future."219 Shortly after the launch of Sputnik I, Beers‘s father took a job with Lockheed in Southern California.220 The elder Beers had been particularly inspired by von Braun and his colleagues‘ space travel visions of the 1940s and 1950s. He first read Willy Ley‘s popular book The Conquest of Space in 1949, at the age of sixteen, and it had made him ―ache for that future.‖221 Beers also relates how the Collier‘s series and von Braun‘s television shows had helped guide many in the blue sky tribe toward careers in aerospace engineering. 222 For Beers and his father, von Braun was ―a man who not only embraced our star, our story, but wrote the story for us over and over again…in whatever way made our version of the future seem inevitable.‖223 As Beers saw it, von Braun was a ―re-imaginer of 218 Ibid., 17. 219 Ibid., 18. 220 Ibid., 17. Interestingly, Beers notes about his father: ―You should know...that my father's life as an organization man perfectly traced the arc of the Cold War aerospace industry. And that (much like America itself) he became more and more dubious about the deal he had made….‖ For more on this idea, see page 14. 221 Beers, Blue Sky Dream, 26. 222 Ibid., 25. 223 Ibid., 22. 82 America‘s middle class.‖224 Von Braun had reconceived ―aerospace [as] the work of a worthy new middle class, not an elite so much as a host of scientific-technologicalmilitary-industrial-complex families living lives of modern purpose. He saw my family joined to some bigger design." 225 For Beers, Taken together, all of the teachings of Wernher von Braun…offered his blue sky tribe, people like my family, an approach to life. Taking his example, we have found it possible to hold many profoundly contradictory notions in our minds as long as a sensation of forward momentum could be felt in our lives. A space rocket to preserve us, a space rocket to change everything...Wernher von Braun gave his tribe any number of ways to explain to ourselves why we naturally deserved the fruits of an economy commanded from above, our new lives of aerospace suburban gentility.226 Summing up the profound effect that von Braun and his contemporaries had on stirring people to enter the aerospace industry and build spacecraft, Beers opines My tribe, certainly, assumed Apollo's success would secure our dominance. Having been placed in charge of the future, we had delivered as promised a man on the moon on television. As scripted by our tribe's father, Wernher von Braun, the moon shot was to be but a way station on the path to Mars, a warm-up for the building and launching of a 'flotilla' of manned spaceships to the red planet. 227 David Beers‘s experience demonstrates how powerfully many aerospace industry engineers had embraced von Braun‘s vision of space exploration, convinced they could 224 Ibid., 32. 225 Ibid., 27. 226 Ibid., 34. 227 Ibid., 132. 83 look forward to a career‘s worth of work on space‘s endless frontier. Indeed, many NASA engineers also described themselves as coming of age learning about the possibilities of space flight from von Braun, Willy Ley, and other space boosters. George Sieger, for example, who would become a NASA operational engineer at Cape Canaveral during the early 1960s, had first applied to the space agency because of an advertisement for the Mercury Program that he saw in Aviation Week entitled ―the First American ‗Man in Space.‘‖ 228 But Sieger‘s real motivation for joining NASA came from having read the works of von Braun and Ley and becoming enamored of them while growing up. During his senior year in high school, he used ideas from their stories to write a term paper titled ―On Going to the Moon.‖229 Similarly, Hank Martin, who would go on to work on satellites for NASA at the Goddard Space Flight Center, remembered that seeing the 1950 movie Destination Moon, a film that featured a rocket like von Braun‘s V-2 landing on the lunar surface, was a seminal moment in his desire to pursue a career in aerospace. As he remembered, after watching the film for the first time, he remained in his seat and sat through it again, and from that moment, he was hooked; he had to go into space flight.230 The federal government capitalized on the imaginative power of von Braun‘s vision after the Sputnik challenge. Space historian Sylvia Doughty Fries, interviewed both Sieger and Martin, as well as about fifty other NASA engineers from the Apollo era. On 228 Fries, NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo, 36. 229 Ibid., 34. 230 Ibid., 47-49. 84 the effect of the Sputnik Revolution on this generation of professionals, Fries has observed, ―No engine designed or built to launch men to the Moon was as powerful as the engine of the U.S. government itself.‖231 The federal government and its programs helped foster the education and development of aerospace engineers and ―generated in this country one of the great social and occupational changes in the twentieth century.‖ 232 In short, those occupational changes were accompanied by a sense that the U.S. would be exploring the endless frontier of space for decades to come, if not longer. The aerospace industry itself also helped further the von Braun vision of space exploration well into the 1960s, and Grumman was in the forefront of the proselytizers; their advertisements helped bolster the idea of endless work on the limitless frontier. The September 1963 issue of Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering, for example, featured a Grumman advertisement with two drawings of a space station and one schematic of it. The ad asked: ―What form will the nation‘s first earth orbiting space station take?‖ The ad promised that ―experienced Grumman design and development engineers continue to investigate all types of space station concepts.‖ It closed by noting that ―whatever the final design may be, the mechanical and human problems involved are enormous, demanding unique capabilities for integrating the most complex components.‖233 Essentially, for engineers who wanted to work on von Braun‘s space station, Grumman was the place. At the bottom of this ad was a notice that referred readers to a second Grumman 231 Ibid., 54. 232 Ibid. 233 ―What Form will the Nation‘s First Earth Orbiting Space Station Take?, Grumman Advertisement, Astronautics & Aerospace Engineering (September 1963). 85 announcement later in the journal. The second listing, entitled ―The People of Grumman,‖ stressed that the company was growing and was extremely stable. The ad noted that over 63% of its employees had worked for the company for more than five years, and 45% had worked there at least ten years or more. 234 It also boasted that the firm‘s annual turnover rate was ―less than one-quarter that of the rest of the industry.‖235 In closing, it suggested, ―if a growth spot and Grumman‘s record of stability appeals to your instincts, you are cordially urged to consider the following positions.‖236 Eighteen months later, another Grumman trade journal advertisement married the idea of stability and the von Braun vision of long-term space industry work. The March 15, 1965 ad in Aviation Week & Space Technology featured a one-quarter page drawing of the Lunar Excursion Module (LEM) and was entitled simply ―Stability at Grumman.‖237 It emphasized that ―Stability at Grumman is not an abstract. It‘s a way of life.‖238 In 1965, the ad related, Grumman‘s employee retention rate broke records; 55% had been with the company for more than five years, 37% for more than ten years, and 19% over fifteen years. 239 The notice went on to tout some of Grumman‘s major 234 ―The People of Grumman,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Astronautics & Aeronautics Engineering, (October 1963): 59. 235 Ibid. 236 Ibid. 237 ―Stability at Grumman,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Aviation Week & Space Technology, 15 March 1965, 297, ―LM Production,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 238 Ibid. 239 Ibid. 86 accomplishments and then asked, ―Where will it end? Maybe on Mars somewhere. Professional verve with ‗built-in‘ stability. That‘s the word at Grumman. Investigate challenging opportunities in the following areas....‖240 In the summer of 1965, Grumman ran yet another advertisement that continued to press von Braun‘s long-term vision of space flight forward. The two-page ad in the July issue of Air Force Magazine depicted an astronaut floating in space from multiple angles and insisted ―Grumman‘s plans for outer space are down to earth.‖241 The notice stressed that the company felt ―at home in space…. So much so, that we‘ve spent $20 million on space facilities.‖242 The ad went on to reveal that the company had big plans for aerospace, but, it noted, ―they‘re also realistic. Even now, Grumman is adapting the LEM vehicle to the following missions: Earth orbiting space station for a variety of experiments; Lunar orbiting space station for gathering scientific data; Lunar taxi to support extended stays on the moon; Lunar shelter for astronauts; Cargo vehicle for a variety of payloads. And we‘re not done yet. These programs are tied in with our nation‘s post-Apollo objectives.‖ 243 A November 1965 Grumman advertisement seemed to have all of the company‘s space missions mapped out for the next decade, if not longer. The two-page ad entitled ―Grumman‘s Across-the-Board Space Capabilities: 1965-1975,‖ featured a large photo of 240 Ibid. 241 ―Grumman‘s Plans for Outer Space are Down to Earth,‖ Grumman Advertisement, Air Force Magazine, July 1965. 242 Ibid. 243 Ibid. 87 a LM and an orbital path diagram.244 The copy stressed the company‘s ―present LEM work‖ and stated that ―many logical extensions of the LEM programs‖ would be used in future missions to help facilitate trips to lunar bases and to act as ―planet launch platforms,‖ among other missions which might include ―Mars Missions‖ and ―Orbital Space Stations.‖245 The possibility of using space stations for ―interplanetary staging bases has long captured the imagination of space scientists and engineers,‖ the ad noted. ―The ultimate mechanics of such strategic bases are undergoing prolonged and careful scrutiny at Grumman.‖246 And one year later, a November 1966 Grumman trade journal ad entitled ―One of These LMs will Blast Off,‖ showed engineers hard at work on one of the LMs in the company‘s ―Clean Room‖; this ad insisted, ―Grumman holds the aces needed for Post-Apollo programs.‖247 In essence, many of Grumman‘s space ads of the 1960s combined Wernher von Braun and his colleagues‘ vision of space exploration with the idea of long-term, stable employment. For the new generation of aerospace engineers who joined Grumman during that period, it must have seemed that they had many solid years of employment ahead of them as the U.S. planned to push deeper into the frontier of space. Grumman engineers were not the only professionals joining the industry in the mid-to-late 1960s with the thought that they had many years of employment ahead of 244 ―Grumman‘s Across-the-Board Space Capabilities: 1965-1975,‖ Grumman Advertisement, November 1965, ―LM Design,‖ Vertical Files,‖ CAM. 245 Ibid. 246 Ibid. 247 ―One of These LMs will Blast Off,‖ Grumman Advertisement, November 1966, ―LM Design,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 88 them; NASA engineer Ronald Siemens is one example. Born in 1949, Siemans began working for NASA in 1967 at the Johnson Space Center in Houston as part of a workstudy program. He was helping with ―trade studies‖ about the possibilities of a manned space station.248 At that time, ―there were still teams looking at Moon bases and Mars missions and space station[s],‖ as he recalled.249 Because of his work record at the space agency, Siemans planned a lifelong career in aerospace. Remembering the 1970s, he caustically noted, however, ―if you don‘t get it in writing, you‘d better not believe the government because they really put it to us.‖250 Siemens recalled that in 1971 ―the RIFs [reductions in force] were occurring, and the promise of a guaranteed job didn‘t hold up that year.‖251 Fortunately for him, he was able to go back to work at Johnson the following year, after obtaining a Master‘s Degree in chemical engineering at Rice University. 252 Siemens‘s experience demonstrates that even as late as 1967, after the peak of Apollo employment had already passed, engineers were still entering the aerospace workforce believing they were going to have ―guaranteed job[s],‖ because of the promise of Moon bases, Mars missions, and an orbiting space station. Although NASA had continued to plan well into the 1960s for a space station, a space shuttle, and even a mission to Mars, by the early 1970s, the von Braun vision, which 248 Fries, NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo, 52-53. 249 Ibid., 52-53 and 111. Frank Toscelli, a NASA engineer at Goddard, was also working on design parameters for the Space Shuttle and the Space Station in the mid-1960s. See page 95 of Fries‘s work for more details. 250 Fries, NASA Engineers and the Age of Apollo, 53. 251 Ibid. 252 Ibid. 89 had shaped so many aerospace engineers‘ ideas about what it would be like to work in the industry, had been suddenly eviscerated. Richard Williams, a NASA employee who would train flight crews, perhaps best summed up the irony of joining the Apollo Program only to realize that it would mark the end of many aerospace workers‘ careers. Even though Apollo 11 should have been the high point for NASA employees, Williams remembers it as ―one of the lowest points in my career…. We had all been so hyped on this thing of going to the Moon. And then, to all of a sudden wake up one day with the realization of ‗there‘s no more‘….Why didn‘t we plan for something further on? ... I was just devastated.‖ 253 By the end of the Apollo era in 1972, the Space Shuttle was the only viable part of that vision that survived in the economic downturn of that period. 254 All of von Braun‘s other major ideas for manned spaceflight were put on hold, some indefinitely. And while the vision of a space station would begin to take shape in 1998, that program began development too late to save the jobs of many who had joined the industry in the 1960s. Still, the important point remains that Wernher von Braun and his colleagues had created a distinct vision in the 1950s about the future of space travel and exploration, an image that many aerospace engineers absorbed. That vision prompted many of them to join the aerospace industry in the wake of the first Sputnik launch. And when they started with the industry, they believed they would have decades of work ahead of them. In a 253 254 Ibid., 116. For more on the indefinite dismantling of the von Braun‘s vision, see ―Chapter Eighteen: For Him, a World Was Falling Apart,‖ in Neufeld, Von Braun, 434-457. 90 sense, it appeared as if there was endless work to be done on the endless frontier of space. Conclusion Beginning in the 1930s, Grumman developed a very unique culture that forged a distinct bond among Grummanites. The company felt like a family. Jake Swirbul, one of the firm‘s founders, had been the main architect of this paternalistic culture. He had been the vital component that had helped connect Grummanites throughout the company. Swirbul had rejected a strict, hierarchical, management system, and instead fostered a very friendly and loose organizational culture. Despite such an unorthodox approach, Grumman still developed into a highly effective and professional company that turned out arguably the best military aircraft of World War II. The firm‘s corporate culture thrived when Grumman worked with the Navy throughout the war and well into the 1950s; the two organizations had forged a relationship that created a stronger Grumman in the postwar period. By the time the Russians launched Sputnik 1 in October 1957, however, company officials knew that Grumman needed to venture into space-related work if it was going to continue to prosper. Grumman entered the Space Age as an aircraft company that was ill-prepared for the new era, compared to the more forward-thinking aerospace companies that had already anticipated the transition to a new American political economy. The company‘s traditional leadership made Grumman late to the game. But it made-up ground quickly by securing the contract for the OAOs, as well as one of the most coveted jobs of the time, the design and construction of the Apollo Lunar Modules. When Grumman began working with NASA on these programs, the space agency pressed the company to change its 91 organizational structure and approach to assure that these programs met NASA‘s cost projections and schedules. Grumman‘s interaction with NASA, unlike its relationship with the Navy, caused a serious culture clash. NASA‘s insistence that Grumman change its organizational structure and approach to accommodate the space agency disrupted the company‘s operations and unsettled employees. Many of these changes were indeed necessary if the U.S. was going to make it to the Moon before 1970. The Space Race had enlarged the aerospace industry, but it did little to motivate or inspire Grummanites, despite the fact that they were working on the Apollo Lunar Module, the vehicle that would ultimately determine if the nation met JFK‘s lunar landing goal. Grummanites worked countless hours on the LMs because they were dedicated to their company, above all else. For them, the importance of the job was based on ―Grumman Pride,‖ not racing the Russians to the Moon. For the generation of aerospace engineers who grew up in postwar America, Grumman must have seemed like an ideal place to work, especially for those interested in space exploration. The company appeared to be on the cutting-edge of space technology for those engineers acculturated in visions of space travel propounded by Wernher von Braun and his colleagues. The firm was not only building the LMs and OAOs, but it also had distinct plans for the post-Apollo era, as its advertisements clearly promised. If an engineer wanted to help build the supposed upcoming space station, or help plan future Mars missions, Grumman seemed like a great place to work. And to make matters even more enticing, Grumman was a highly stable company compared to other aerospace firms. Many employees had multiple years of service under their belts. It seemed obvious that once you started working for Grumman, you could expect to be working for a long time. 92 In short, for those who joined Grumman at the dawn of the Space Age, it appeared that they would be working for many years on space‘s boundless frontier. The Apollo Program was merely the first step into the heavens. There would surely be many more to come in the years ahead. CHAPTER TWO ―DON‘T TELL US WE‘RE SUFFERING AND UNDERPAID AND ILL-FED:‖ LABOR AND PATERNALISM AT GRUMMAN From its beginnings in the early 1930s, until its acquisition in the 1990s, Grumman remained one of only two major US aerospace companies that never unionized. Ironically, Northrop, of El Segundo, California—the only other major non-union American aerospace firm—would eventually take over Grumman in 1994.1 Although we must wait for a serious historical study of Northrop and its labor relations to truly understand the way that company dealt with its workers, preliminary investigations of the southern California firm suggest that it successfully held unions off by giving workers strategic wage increases at just the right moment, namely as labor began to close in on the company.2 Grumman, on 1 For evidence that reveals that Grumman and Northrop remained the only two non-union companies, see and compare, ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin Ostro, Former Business Manager of Republic IAM Lodge 1987,‖ 28 November 2006; Report Prepared for the Major Collective Bargaining Negotiations in the Aircraft Industry in 1960 (Edition Prepared for Grumman Workers) by the United Auto Workers Research Department, circa 1960, pp. 2-3. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI (hereinafter cited as ALUA); and John Barnard, American Vanguard: The United Auto Workers During the Reuther Years, 1935-1970 (Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2004), 309-310. 2 Only one author, Richard Sanders Allen, has written anything of significance on Northrop, and that monograph does not address the company‘s labor relations. John Barnard, however, who has studied the history of the United Auto Workers, has delved a bit into how the firm dealt with unions. Barnard argues that Northrop had a habit of offering its employees wage increases within days of union votes. During an National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) election at the company in the 1950s, which included more than 1,000 employees, (note—Barnard does not give the specific date, but merely implies it took place during that period), the workers turned the union away by just 62 votes right after the company had announced a significant wage hike on the same day as the election. For more on this issue, see Barnard, American Vanguard, 309-310. For Allen‘s book see Richard Sanders Allen, The Northrop Story, 19291939 (New York: Orion Books, 1990). 93 94 the other hand, overcame unions by relying more on its own particular culture of paternalism.3 While one could easily look at this factor cynically and view it as the behavioral modification tool of management, or an insincere corporate gesture at best, an examination of the history of labor‘s attempts to unionize Grumman reveals a much different picture. Most Bethpage managers appeared largely sincere in their efforts to make their employees happy and their company one of the best places to work. These managers‘ efforts created an intense sense of loyalty among Grummanites that seemed unmatched in the aerospace field, notably, in an industry where unions thrived. At the dawn of the Space Age in the late 1950s, with over 90% of all aircraft firms organized (the aircraft industry was the nation‘s largest employer at the time), Grummanites‘ resistance to unions stood out, particularly in a country where approximately one out of every four working-class Americans carried a union membership card.4 3 As noted in Chapter One, although Jake Swirbul matched neighboring unionized companies‘ pay raises, that was not the only reason Grummanites were anti-union. The firm‘s culture of paternalism, as demonstrated in this chapter, played a major role in keeping employees from organizing. 4 The International Association of Machinists claimed that the aircraft industry had become the nation‘s largest employer by the 1950s. For more on this subject, see Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12. On the percentage of aircraft unions organized, see inserted letter by Charles Kerrigan, UAW Director of Region 9A, in Report Prepared for the Major Collective Bargaining Negotiations in the Aircraft Industry in 1960 (Edition Prepared for Grumman Workers) by the UAW Research Department, circa 1960, p. 3, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31. On November 22, 1949, the UAW noted that the US Department of Labor stated that one out of every four working Americans belonged to a union, or approximately 15,600,000 people, spread over some 197 unions. Notably, at least six of those organizations claimed more than 500,000 members each, while a few others stood closer to the million-member mark. The UAW cites the Department of Labor‘s Directory of Labor Unions, (BLS Bulletin No. 937). For more on this issue, see ―One in Four Holds Union Card, Says BLS,‖ UAW-CIO Organizer, Republic Aircraft Workers edition, Vol. 1, No. 2, 22 November 1949, p. 3, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24. All found in ALUA. 95 This chapter investigates the history of Grumman‘s anti-unionism from the company‘s birth in the 1930s through the post-Apollo era of the 1970s. It explores the subject on several different levels. From a macro perspective, it sets Grummanites‘ antiunion sentiments within the context of the entire aerospace industry‘s labor movement. On a more local basis, it examines how Grummanites, who lived and worked in a regional hotbed of unionism, successfully kept organized labor away from their company, despite the unionization of three of their closest neighbors—Brewster Aeronautical, CurtissWright, and Republic Aviation. The experiences that most of these companies‘ employees had with unions would significantly influence the way Grummanites responded to organized labor. Often, their stories served as cautionary tales against unionizing. While exploring all of these issues, this chapter also develops these themes within the context of the union battle for supremacy in the aerospace industry that raged between the United Auto Workers (UAW) and the International Association of Machinists (IAM). Finally, and most importantly, this section of the dissertation uncovers and helps dissects part of the very unique culture of paternalism that Grumman developed. As this chapter will reveal, Grummanites felt a deep sense of fealty to the company because of the relationship they had established with their employer, and that loyalty, when combined with the anti-labor feelings stimulated while watching the union experiences of workers at other firms, engendered a virulent sense of anti-unionism at the Bethpage manufacturer. 96 Unions and the Aircraft Industry From Its Origins to World War II The first serious organizational drives in the aircraft industry—and by extension the aerospace field—began in earnest the mid-1930s.5 Many labor organizers had chosen to bypass such workers in the past because they believed that these employees lacked class consciousness.6 During the initial growth of the aircraft industry, many aircraft workers had risen in individualistic jobs that had required very special skills, and that specialization commanded some solid financial rewards; in other words, individualism seemed to hold more sway than worker solidarity.7 Nevertheless, by the mid-1930s, when the aircraft industry shifted toward more mass production, several unions chose to try to break into the sector. The UAW and the IAM became the main rivals vying for employees in the 5 Barnard, American Vanguard, 308; and John S. Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight: Work and Labor in the Aircraft Industry, 1908-1945‖ (Ph.D. diss., State University of New York at Binghamton, 2000), iv. 6 Labor leaders viewed aircraft employees in the 1920s and early 1930s, at best, as apathetic toward organizing. During the early days of aviation, workers and bosses toiled together side-by-side to make the industry take off and they developed a sense of kinship. They also subverted their individualistic needs for the ―good‖ of the business. Hence, there was no real feel for class consciousness. For more on this issue, see Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight‖, 3-4. On this subject, Olszowka cites Mark Perlman, The Machinists: A New Study in American Trade Unionism (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961), 109-111; Nelson Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home: The CIO in World War II (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 56, 73, 122, 139; Jacob Vander Meulen, The Politics of Aircraft and Building an American Military Industry (Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1991), 154. 7 John Olszowka, an aviation labor historian who writes about Curtiss-Wright, notes that the firm‘s employees had brushed aside unions during the 1920s and 30s because of their devotion to an ―aircraftsman ideology.‖ A rather conservative and individualistic philosophy, ―aircraftsmanship‖ had developed during the early days of flight when manufacturing a plane required skilled craftsman to hand tool the airplanes and management and labor‘s advancement seemed interdependent. As Olszowka explains, the ideology ―placed an emphasis on promoting the advancement of aviation‖ and ―remained rooted firmly in the concept of mutual cooperation‖ particularly during the early decades of flight. Workers gained personal satisfaction knowing that they contributed to the growth of the industry in a type of pioneering manner and they received solid compensation for their efforts. As workers saw it, the whole system gave them economic and occupational stability. See Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight‖, iv, 10-11, 394-407. 97 industry. The Auto Workers believed that they were the most logical organizing unit for aircraft workers to join because they had historically dealt with employees who built internal combustion engines, the driving force in airplanes. The Machinists, on the other hand, felt that they should represent aircraft workers because of the skilled machining of parts needed in the construction of airframes. 8 In June 1936, the IAM scored the first major victory when it organized Boeing in Seattle.9 The following year, the Machinists added Lockheed, located in Burbank, CA, to their ranks, and then they rounded out their numbers by also capturing Consolidated Aircraft of San Diego, just prior to America‘s entry into World War II.10 Notably, IAM Local 751 at Boeing would eventually become the nation‘s largest aircraft union of the era, when its membership reached approximately 40,000 members at the height of the war.11 8 Barnard, American Vanguard, 308. 9 John McCann, a historian of IAM Boeing Lodge 751, dates the agreement between the IAM and Boeing as June 26, 1936. See John McCann, Blood in the Water: A History of District Lodge 751 of the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (Seattle, District Lodge 751, IAM&AW, 1989), 207. 10 Barnard, American Vanguard, 172-173. As IAM historian Robert Rodden notes, Lockheed joined the IAM in March 1937, see Robert G. Rodden, The Fighting Machinists: A Century of Struggle (Washington, DC: Kelly Press, Inc., 1984), 102. One of the best ways to gain an overview of the different aircraft companies in existence at the time is to view the sophisticated ―Chronology of the Aircraft Industry‖ in Donald M. Pattillo, Pushing the Envelope: The American Aircraft Industry, (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1998), 373-382. 11 McCann, Blood in the Water, 84. Between 1939 and mid 1943, union membership at Lockheed went from only 400 to more than 37,000, Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 102. While the Machinists were busy grabbing companies on the West Coast, the UAW signed workers at several of the major aircraft firms in the East, including Bell Aircraft in Buffalo, Lycoming Manufacturing in Williamsport, PA, and Brewster Aeronautical in Long Island City (Queens, NY). The Auto Workers had also started some campaigns in southern California, securing Vultee Aircraft in Downey and North American Aviation in Inglewood. Before the end of the war, they would also organize Ryan Aeronautical in San Diego, Douglas Aircraft in Santa Monica, the Glen L. Martin Company in 98 To most aircraft workers, the UAW seemed the more powerful of the two unions, at least up through the early years of World War II. IAM historian Robert Rodden has suggested that when the Auto Workers began organizing on the West Coast in the 1930s ―it appeared that the UAW would become the predominant union in the new aircraft industry. Their organizers came bursting out of Detroit and into the aircraft factories of southern California like gangbusters. UAW campaigns were powered with enthusiasm and emotion and featured songs, bands, marches, and sitdowns.‖12 In all, the Auto Workers would bring their total number of union aircraft workers to more than 400,000 members by the mid-1940s.13 During World War II, organized labor in all industries faced tremendous social and political pressures on the home front to make limited demands; the war represented a global emergency that called for cooperation in order to build up the arsenal of Baltimore, and Chance-Vought in Central Connecticut. For more details, see and compare Barnard, American Vanguard, 172-173. The UAW also won a NLRB election at Vultee in August 1940—at least according to Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 57; and Pattillo, Pushing the Envelope, 373-382 12 13 Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 101. Barnard, American Vanguard, 309. For the purposes of comparison, Robert Rodden, an historian of the IAM, states that union membership in the US, from the time of the Wagner Act in 1935, to December 1941, rose from 3.7 million to 10.4 million. See Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 98. One important and unique union-related aspect about the aircraft industry bears discussion. For the two international unions, the aircraft industry differed from any other type of industries that the unions had tried to organize—essentially most airplane manufacturers built only one main product, military airplanes, and had only one customer, the U.S. Government. The federal government refused to tolerate work stoppages that would delay their products for very long. The use of the strike as an bargaining weapon was extremely limited. Consequently, while organizing the aircraft industry, the unions could not rely on the use of strikes to achieve their demands in the same way it had in other industries. For more on this issue, see Barnard, American Vanguard, 309-310. Historian Nelson Lichtenstein also notes that by the late 1940s, approximately 80% of workers in basic industry had organized. See Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 233. 99 democracy.14 This call for stability ran counter to the labor turmoil of the 1930s, when workers had secured a high degree of shop-floor autonomy by exerting their power through strikes.15 During World War II, however, the CIO (the UAW‘s umbrella organization), the most liberal faction of the labor movement, agreed to a temporary truce so that the country could build the weapons needed to defeat fascism abroad. 16 The CIO and the Roosevelt Administration, allies during the Great Depression, remained friends during the war, and the CIO supported FDR‘s call for calm labor relations. Union officials agreed to hold wages in check by letting the government‘s National War Labor Board (NWLB) and National Defense Mediation Board (NDMB) mediate and set gradual salary increases. They also agreed to suspend the right to strike for the entire war. 17 One of the most telling examples of how the CIO and federal government reached a wartime accord emerged from the North American Aviation (NAA) strike of 1941. Earlier that year, the IAM and UAW had finished a heated competition to organize the southern California company with the Auto Workers taking the victory in April by a slim margin. On April 16, the UAW began negotiating with NAA, but by June 5, when their 14 For an excellent discussion of the political pressures on labor to cooperate during the war and support the Roosevelt coalition against Fascism, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 5-6 and 26-43. 15 Ibid., 5-6. 16 Ibid., 6. 17 Ibid.,6; Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 130-131; and Joong-Jae Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control: The Labor-Management-State Contests Over Defense Production at Brewster, 1940-1944,‖ International Labor and Working Class History 66 (2004): 136-137. On the creation of the War Labor Board, and its favorable view toward more of the boss‘s side of things, see Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 130-131. 100 demands went unmet, the Auto Workers went out on strike. 18 Henry and Dorothy Kraus, two of the UAW‘s main Communist organizers on the West Coast, led the employees in the walk-out, much to the discontent of the union‘s national leadership in Detroit.19 The federal government—wanting to get the major defense contractor back in production as soon as possible—sent the Army in to break up the strike. The plant quickly began producing aircraft again shortly thereafter.20 UAW leaders in Detroit blamed the organization‘s Communist faction for the setback and quickly ordered union-wide support of FDR‘s call for labor peace. Although NAA workers received a wage increase as result of the strike (thanks to the National Defense Mediation Board), labor had essentially lost its bargaining power by agreeing not to strike during the conflict and by letting the federal government set its wages.21 Labor historian Nelson Lichtenstein has described the strike‘s broader implications: ―Deprived of the right to strike, and with several of the normal functions of the union leadership now assumed by government agencies, many unionists feared for the stability and integrity of their organizations.‖22 18 Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 58-59. 19 Ibid., 59-60. 20 Ibid., 60-66. 21 Ibid. For a discussion of the strike, which deemphasizes the role of Communism, Lichtenstein suggests looking at James R. Prickett, ―Communist Conspiracy or Wage Dispute?: The 1941 Strike at North American Aviation,‖ Pacific Historical Review, 50 (1981), 215-33. 22 Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 66. For more on the NAA strike, see and compare: Irving Bernstein, Turbulent Years: A History of the American Worker, 1933-1941 (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1969), 765; Prickett, "Communist Conspiracy or Wage Dispute?‖, 215-233; Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 58-66; John Barnard, Walter Reuther and the Rise of the Auto Workers (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1983); and Steven Fraser, Labor Will Rule: Sidney Hillman and the Rise of American Labor (New York: Free Press, 1991 ), 465-70. 101 Regardless of the unions‘ no-strike pledge, the rank and file in many industries during World War II did not see eye-to-eye with their unions‘ national leadership, and tensions increased within the labor movement. In 1942 workers in some of the heavy industries started making demands and walked off their jobs. The following year a series of wildcat strikes (unofficial union walkouts initiated spontaneously by the rank and file) broke out in the rubber, shipbuilding, automotive, and coal mining industries. 23 Curiously, of all of the heavy industries, aviation seemed more immune to walk-outs than some of the other manufacturing sectors, despite having much lower wages on average. 24 But not all aircraft workers obeyed the no-strike pledge.25 Workers in at a least one aircraft company, in close proximity to Grumman, felt compelled to strike to try to save their jobs and their company. Brewster Aeronautical and the Hotbed of Unionism Brewster Aeronautical, of Long Island City, NY (Queens), shared some important distinctions with Grumman. Both companies became key Navy contractors, and the firms resided within thirty miles of one another, right outside New York City.26 Despite these 23 Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 6-7. 24 On the issue of wages being lower for aircraft workers in comparison to some of the other heavy industries, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 115. 25 In 1943, IAM members at Boeing in Seattle, and Consolidated in San Diego, went out on wildcat strikes when the National War Labor Board turned down across the board wage increases for aircraft workers on the West Coast. The Boeing employees‘ demonstration, which occurred in January and included more than 15,000 IAM members marching on city hall, became the largest worker demonstration in Seattle history. For more details, see and compare, Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 138-139; Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 132-133; and McCann, Blood in the Water, 67-75. 26 Joshua Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island (Interlaken, NY: Heart of the Lakes Publications, 1989), 47. Interestingly, at one point, Brewster had also done some subcontracting work for 102 commonalities, however, the two companies‘ employees held markedly different views about organized labor. While Grumman workers rejected unions, Brewster employees had joined the ranks of the UAW as early as the 1930s; in fact, the company had been one of the Auto Workers‘ first converts among aircraft workers. Nelson Lichtenstein has noted that the employees of Brewster, UAW Local 365, had ―a reputation as the most oppositional and politically sophisticated in the entire UAW, posing a constant irritation to the international‘s top leadership.‖27 The story of Brewster‘s workers consequently reveals the type of intense unionism that grew up among aircraft workers in the New York area and that seemed to surround Grumman and its employees; in short, it demonstrates that New York and the Northeast represented a hotbed of unionism.28 Brewster began manufacturing in 1932, and by 1938 had won a Navy ―Fly Off‖ contest with its F2A Buffalo Fighter against one of Grumman‘s early versions of the F4F Wildcat. The resulting contract between Brewster and the Navy made the Buffalo the primary fighter of the seafaring service at the time. 29 By the end of World War II, however, the company had only built approximately 550 fighters, and not without Grumman. See Joong-Jae Lee, ―We Went to Washington to Raise a Little Hell: Wartime Alternative Unionism of Local 365 of the UAW-CIO and the State, 1939-1945‖ (Ph.D. diss., New York University, 2000), 55. 27 Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 129-130. 28 Notably, as at least one aviation historian has noted, Brewster was also racially progressive because it became ―the first U.S. aircraft manufacturer to hire large numbers of black employees for production, a move which was unpopular in 1940.‖ See Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 47. 29 Ibid., 95. 103 encountering some serious problems that had major repercussions for the firm, its employees, the federal government, and the wartime effort.30 Shortly after signing the Buffalo contract, Brewster began facing serious production problems. Almost as soon as the Buffalo went into production, the Navy started redesigning the aircraft with wartime improvements causing major setbacks in their delivery. The Navy, in desperate need of its aircraft in the time of war, tried to force the company to improve its rate of production. In April 1942 it essentially seized control of Brewster‘s manufacturing.31 Then in November 1943, with Buffalos still coming off the line too slowly, the Navy started to look for ways to have Brewster construct other contractors‘ planes—particularly Chance-Vought‘s F3A ―Battler,‖ a version of the highly praised ―Corsair.‖ At the Navy‘s behest, Brewster suddenly became a full-time subcontractor of the F3A.32 Adding to the firm‘s challenges, the Navy pushed Brewster to overhaul its top management on more than six occasions in less than two years. By 1944, Brewster‘s future looked extremely grim. Many Americans viewed it as the worst producing war plant in the nation, thanks to seemingly constant newspaper reports. Many in the federal government, as well as and the company‘s top management, placed the blame for production setbacks on UAW Local 365. UAW Local 365 had negotiated a favorable contract for its members, one which forbade the company from ―firing, shifting or disciplining workers without union 30 Ibid., 47. 31 Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control,‖ 143. 32 Ibid., 146. 104 permission.‖33 At a time when Brewster was trying to improve production and return the firm to profitability, the contract impeded management‘s ability to make quick changes in the workforce to increase efficiency and reduce payroll. Some company officials referred to the agreement as nothing short of ―hellish.‖34 Union leader Tom DeLorenzo, a man who refused to accept the wartime ―no-strike‖ pledge, held very strong beliefs about the power of labor, which made it even harder for Brewster‘s management to improve its relationship with its workers. In an interview with the Washington Post, DeLorenzo declared that ―the policy of our local union is to win the war without sacrificing too many of the rights which we have at the present time.‖35 He went on to state ―if I had brothers at the front who needed the 10 or 12 planes [that] were sacrificed [during a strike], I‘d let them die, if necessary, to preserve our way of life or rights.‖ 36 Even though Brewster managers felt straitjacketed by their relationship with their workers, they also faced equal pressure from the Navy; in effect, they found themselves trapped between the two sides and unable to find a way out of the situation. The Navy‘s constant redesign of the Buffalo caused problems with retooling. Sometimes the company did not even have complete plans and drawings for the aircraft.37 As Joong-Jae Lee, a historian of Brewster notes, these problems affected the pace at which employees could 33 ―Haunted House,‖ Time, 18 October 1943. 34 ―A Prayer for Henry,‖ Time, 1 November 1943. 35 Historian Joong-Jae Lee quotes the Washington Post interview in his dissertation. See Lee, ―We Went to Washington to Raise a Little Hell,‖ 8. 36 Ibid. 37 ―A Prayer for Henry,‖ Time, 1 November 1943. 105 work. Some had to wait while new production systems emerged, while others faced temporary layoffs and wage cuts.38 At certain points, the firm‘s foremen even tried to solve these challenges by retooling particular pieces required in the redesign of the planes. 39 Nevertheless, despite the employees‘ attempts to offer logical solutions to the company‘s problems, military and civilian bureaucrats rejected their efforts. The workers responded with what Lee calls an attempt to seize ―Patriotic Control‖ of Brewster. Although the company had returned to profitability in 1944, after more than two years of serious losses, the workers continued to face major layoffs, sometimes numbering in the thousands.40 In an effort to counter the situation, employees began a letter-writing campaign to Congress; they wanted an investigation of the military and company‘s poor planning and mismanagement of the Buffalo‘s production.41 Lee argues that they hoped that their missives would improve the situation for everyone involved— the company, the military, the government, the employees, and the war effort—but more importantly, they believed their job security depended on a Congressional investigation.42 Ultimately an inquiry did take place, and some of the workers went to Washington to 38 Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control,‖ 138. 39 Ibid., 140. 40 More than 10,000 workers received layoffs in May, ―End for Brewster,‖ Time, 29 May 1944. At one point in early June, more than 8,500 employees reported to work to only discover that 4,000 of them still had jobs at the end of the day, ―The First Cutback Crisis,‖ Time, 12 June 1944. 41 Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control,‖ 138-139. 42 Ibid., 138 106 testify and ―Raise a Little Hell,‖ but it did little to help.43 By late spring of 1944, with more layoffs occurring, thousands of employees decided to violate the ―no-strike‖ pledge and stage a sit-in to draw more attention to their plight. Although the strike received national press coverage, the workers‘ actions made little difference by that point.44 For the Navy and the federal government, regardless of who had caused the debacle at Brewster, the time had come to cut their ties to the firm; the Pentagon announced plans to end all contracts with Brewster by July 1. The firm would fold shortly after the end of the war. Despite the complicated factors leading to the company‘s downfall, the actions of Local 365 undoubtedly influenced some Grummanites‘ views of the role of organized labor. At a time when Grumman was setting some of the most significant production records of any wartime manufacturer, Brewster faced crippling setbacks.45 While scholars will continue to debate who caused the problems at the firm, the point remains that for some Grummanites, the lesson appeared to be that Brewster‘s employees, who had built one of the strongest unions in the industry, could not save their jobs despite their bold actions and UAW backing. Brewster‘s story also points to the highly charged environment 43 Tom DeLorenzo, the leader of Brewster‘s union, stated that they ―went to Washington to raise a little hell. Historian Joong-Jae Lee quotes him in Lee, ―We Went to Washington to Raise a Little Hell,‖ 3 and 144. 44 Joong-Jae Lee has found that Brewster‘s employees, unlike most wildcat strikers, wanted to honor their no-strike pledge, particularly during their letter writing campaign to Congress, but when their voices went unheard, they decided to stage a sit-in. For more on this point and the strike in general, see Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control,‖ 143-150. For a slightly different view, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 204-205. Also see Lee, ―We Went to Washington to Raise a Little Hell,‖ 9. 45 By the end of the war, Grumman had produced 17,013 aircraft. As aviation historian Josh Stoff notes: ―At one point in 1945, Grumman was turning out more than one plane an hour, 664 in one month, an aircraft production record which has never been equaled.‖ For more details, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 56. 107 of unionism that seemed to surround Grumman, as well as abound in New York state and the northeast region. Curtiss-Wright—The IAM Gains an Edge in the Aircraft Industry At approximately the same time that Brewster‘s workers fought to try to save their jobs, employees at Curtiss-Wright, another New York aircraft manufacturer, wrestled with the question of whether they would join the UAW or the IAM. Located in Buffalo, NY, Curtiss-Wright, one of the oldest and largest aeronautical companies in the business, had been around since the dawn of flight.46 For some labor organizers, the firm represented the ―Ford‖ of the aviation industry, a very prestigious and coveted prize.47 Although CurtissWright workers had eschewed unions during the company‘s early days, by the late 1930s they began to see an advantage to organizing, particularly as the firm completed its conversion to the mass production of metal aircraft. The unionization of Curtiss-Wright represented a sea change in the battle between the UAW and the IAM for the hearts and minds of aircraft workers. 48 While the Machinists had fallen far behind the Auto Workers in total membership by the end of the 1930s, their successful campaign at Curtiss-Wright in 1942 quickly reversed that trend by starting to entice more aeronautical workers over to their side. Curtiss-Wright‘s workers‘ acceptance of a union would leave only two major aircraft firms—Grumman and 46 Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight,‖ 11-12. 47 For the Ford quote, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 102. 48 Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight,‖ 392-393. 108 Republic—unorganized in New York and the Northeast by the start of the Cold War. Many Grumman and Republic employees formed their preliminary impressions about organized labor while watching the struggle that occurred between the Auto Workers and the Machinists over Curtiss-Wright. The American Federation of Labor‘s (an affiliate of the Machinists) initial organizing attempts at Curtiss-Wright in the 1920s and early 1930s had failed to inspire many workers because the Federation had remained steadfast to its traditional guiding principle of ―pure and simple‖ craft unionism. In other words, instead of viewing aircraft workers as a whole bargaining unit, the Federation wanted to split the workers up into smaller craft-oriented units and organize these on an individual basis.49 During the company‘s early years, when employees internalized what aviation historian John Olszowka calls an ―aircraftsman ideology‖—a type of philosophy that ―placed an emphasis on promoting the advancement of aviation‖ and that ―remained rooted firmly in the concept of mutual cooperation‖—the AFL‘s approach did not appeal to them.50 The Depression, however, started to erode the feeling of mutuality that workers had with their employers. Aviation workers, particularly those at Curtiss-Wright, quickly discovered that economic and occupational security had its limits, especially during periods of financial upheaval and major technological change. In the late 1930s, when aeronautical companies completed the shift to the mass production of metal aircraft, the need for the highly skilled craftsman of the early years of aviation—the men who had built 49 Ibid., 9 and 392. 50 Ibid., 10. 109 planes with their hands—fell by the wayside. Olszowka reveals that many Curtiss-Wright workers began ―to realize the necessity of relying on outside agencies and collective action to ensure that employers met the obligations of the ideology [of aircraftsmanship].‖51 At the beginning of World War II, Curtiss-Wright‘s employees seemed poised to adopt a union, but which one? By the 1940s, the UAW and the IAM had developed very distinct agendas and methods to try to attract workers. The Auto Workers, the more progressive of the two organizations, tended to stress the collective and cooperative nature of unionization, as well as the need for patriotic sacrifice during the war. The UAW supported President Roosevelt‘s no-strike pledge and seemed satisfied to let the federal government determine wage increases via the National War Labor Board (NWLB) and National Defense Mediation Board (NDMB). The Machinists, on the other hand, while also showing patriotic support of the war and the no-strike pledge, refused to simply let the NWLB and NDMB have free rein when it came to establishing pay increases. During the organizational drives at Curtiss-Wright, the Auto Workers made the fatal mistake of suggesting that workers should accept minimal pay raises in support of the war. The union‘s agenda for defining wage structures seemed vague and out of touch to the workers.52 As Olszowka notes, even though the UAW might have ―equated sacrifice of premium pay with patriotism,‖ the employees viewed it ―as a needless, if not, arrogant 51 Ibid., 394-395 52 On the issue of the abstract nature of the UAW‘s wage goals, see ibid., 397-399 and 403. 110 concession‖ on the part of union leaders.53 The Machinists, conversely, stood firm on the issue and put forth very clear and concise monetary goals for workers‘ pay.54 The IAM insisted it ―would not willingly relinquish premium pay or sacrifice the economic status of its members.‖55 The IAM ultimately won the union election because, as Olszowka concludes, it understood that ―economic individualism… remained at the core of the wartime work experience. Patriotism and wartime cooperation, to be certain, drew many people into the aircraft factories. Still, workers looked at the opportunities the war presented primarily as a means for achieving economic self-improvement.‖56 In sum, with the unionization of Curtiss-Wright, the IAM gained significant momentum over the UAW in the wartime battle to organize aircraft workers. 57 Although the UAW had been the largest union in the industry up through the 1930s, after the campaign in Buffalo the Auto Workers would have to struggle to try to keep up with the IAM‘s appeal to plane-makers. In succeeding years the Auto Workers would find themselves locked in fierce battles with the Machinists to try to capture any remaining unorganized aircraft companies, particularly the two remaining majors in the Northeast— Grumman and Republic. But sadly for the Auto Workers, as the history of these 53 Ibid., 399. 54 Ibid., 397 and 403. 55 Ibid., 403. 56 Ibid., 409. Notably, Nelson Lichtenstein has a brief, but interesting, discussion of the CurtissWright campaigns in Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 103. 57 Olszowka, ―From Shop Floor to Flight,‖ 392-393. 111 campaigns would reveal, the UAW would never quite regain its edge because it failed to learn from some of its mistakes in the Curtiss-Wright election. Unions and the Aircraft Industry During the Immediate Postwar Period Immediately after the war, the aircraft industry went through a massive downsizing because of the significant decrease in warplane production. Within a few years, however, thanks to the continued need for military aircraft during the emerging Cold War and the massive growth of the commercial aviation market, the aircraft industry began a significant postwar expansion that created numerous jobs. Both the UAW and IAM attempted to capitalize on this opportunity and continued to compete with one another for membership. The Auto Workers grabbed Fairchild, Sikorsky, and AVCO, while the Machinists captured several Douglas plants in southern California.58 The constant competition between the two rivals had its consequences, however. They expended a great deal of time and energy throughout the late 1940s in trying to raid each other‘s membership, with little gain. Consequently, on September 9, 1949, the two unions decided to sign a ―noraid‖ agreement.59 Although the term ―no-raid‖ might seem self-explanatory, the pact had some subtle aspects. At its core, the accord essential prohibited the two organizations from interfering with, or stealing, workers with whom the other union had already established a contractual 58 59 Barnard, American Vanguard, 309. Agreement Between UAW-CIO and International Association of Machinists,‖ signed by A.J. Hayes, et al, IAM, and Walter Reuther, et al, UAW, September 9, 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 25, ALUA. Also see Barnard, American Vanguard, 309. 112 agreement. It did not, however, prohibit a healthy competition vying for the allegiance of workers at still unorganized plants; the accord only required that the rivals not denigrate each other in the process of trying to sign up employees. After all, the two unions wanted to maintain the image of a healthy and cooperative labor movement in general; in other words, they wanted to conduct themselves in a manner that would help build up trade union loyalty.60 Still, despite this general pact, the no-raid agreement did not keep the UAW and IAM from competing intensely for the affections of the workers at the remaining non-union firms in the aeronautical industry. Although perceived violations threatened the agreement several times in the 1950s, the accord, in one form or another, remained in effect into the 1970s, particularly within the aircraft industry.61 The Taft-Hartley Act, also passed in the immediate postwar period, had a major impact on the way companies dealt with organized labor. After the war, the no-strike pledge ended. In 1946, numerous strikes broke out nationwide, and big business pushed for federal legislation that would help check labor‘s momentum, if not roll back some of 60 ―Agreement Between UAW-CIO and International Association of Machinists,‖ signed by A.J. Hayes, et al, IAM, and Walter Reuther, et al, UAW, September 9, 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 25, ALUA. Also see Barnard, American Vanguard, 309. 61 On the issues of troubles with the agreement in the 1950s, and revisions of the agreement, see and compare, Letter, A. J. Hayes, IAM to Walter Reuter UAW-CIO, 15 May 1952, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 25; Letter, Walter P. Reuther, UAW, to All International Officers, Executive Board Members, Department Heads and Staff Members, ―Subject: No-Raiding Agreement between the UAW-CIO and the International Association of Machinists,‖ 18 June 1952, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 25; ―UAW, Machinists Widen Agreement,‖ New York Times, 12 June 1953, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 25; ―Labor Unity,‖ Wall Street Journal, 14 September 1953, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 28; and Agreement—International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO and International Union of Automobile, Aerospace, and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, signed by Leonard Woodcock, et al, UAW and Floyd E. Smith, et al, IAM, 12 March 1971, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 51, Folder 27. All found in ALUA. 113 its gains. Within a year, a new Republican majority in Congress pushed through the TaftHartley Act, which placed a number of restrictions on unions. One aspect of the law required unions to ―authorize‖ and advertise strikes well in advance, or else face major legal penalties. It also imposed severe restrictions on unions that walked out on industries vital to national defense, particularly during national emergencies; federal arbitration became the norm in such situations. Sympathetic boycotts in support of affiliated unions also became illegal. Taft-Hartley also gave employers the right to actively speak out against unions, which essentially meant that they could exercise their free speech to skewer worker organizations, something unheard of during labor‘s high tide during the New Deal.62 With the Taft-Hartley Act in place, employers suddenly had a new arsenal of weapons to use in their conflict with unions. Republic Aviation‘s management would take advantage of the situation on more than one occasion. The Unionization of Republic and Its Effects on Grummanites One of the most important factors influencing the way Grummanites‘ viewed organized labor centered around the UAW‘s and IAM‘s attempts to unionize Republic Aviation—Long Island‘s other major aircraft manufacturer. Based in Farmingdale, Republic Aviation and its main plants stood only nine miles from Grumman‘s primary Bethpage facilities.63 With both companies residing in such close proximity, employees 62 The Taft-Hartley Act became law in June 1947. For more on the subject, see and compare Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 7 and 238-242; and Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 148-151. 63 Although Republic‘s main office was located in Wilmington, Delaware, its main plant was located in Farmingdale, New York, in the Babylon Township of Suffolk County on Long Island, ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and 114 from both firms made their homes in the same neighborhoods and knew each other. Some had even worked for both companies at different points in their careers. Over the years, these two groups of employees talked with one another and knew what went on in each other‘s plants; they found their views of organized labor inextricably informed by each other.64 Their employers—Republic and Grumman—would remain the only two major aircraft manufacturers in the Northeast that had not unionized by the end of World War II.65 In fact, the two companies, in addition to Northrop of El Segundo, California, would continue into the late 1940s as the only major U.S. aircraft companies that had not organized. An exploration of Republic‘s history, as well as organized labor‘s attempts to unionize the company, proves vital to understanding the difficulties of unionizing aircraft workers, particularly on Long Island. Republic‘s example also provides a distinct look at the different ways the UAW and the IAM tried to organize employees in different national industries, especially the northeastern aircraft manufacturers, as well as providing keen insight into how many Grummanites may have viewed the prospect of unionization. Republic grew out of the small Seversky Aircraft Company, which had begun in 1931. When new investors took over the firm later that same year, they renamed it Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, 1191. On the proximity of the two plants to one another, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 65. 64 For information about the relationship between Grumman and Republic workers, see two former Grummanites‘ Survey/Questionnaire, Michael Hlinko Questionnaire, 21 December 1999; and Eugene Coll Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000. Both in author‘s possession. 65 On Republic being ―one of the last major holdouts against unionization in the air frame industry,‖ see Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 173. 115 Republic Aviation.66 As Seversky, the company had sold only 140 aircraft; two years later, with 5,500 employees on its payroll, Republic began a significant transformation; World War II had a remarkable impact on the company thanks to Republic‘s production of the P47 ―Thunderbolt,‖ one of the Army Air Force‘s major fighter-planes.67 According to the U.S. military, the Thunderbolt had the most ―consistently reliable performance‖ of all of the aircraft in the country‘s World War II arsenal.68 By 1944, at the height of the P-47‘s production, more than 32,000 employees worked at Republic and turned out more than 10,000 planes that year.69 At one point, twenty-eight planes a day came off the assembly line, or put another way, Republic produced more than one Thunderbolt an hour (the plants were operating around the clock at the time).70 In all, the company built more than 15,000 P-47s during the conflict, and the firm‘s profits rose considerably.71 As one of the 66 The Republic Aviation moniker officially came into being on October 18, 1939, see Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 4, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. For more on the general history of Seversky, and its merger with Republic, see Joshua Stoff, The Thunder Factory: An Illustrated History of Republic Aviation Corporation, (Osceola, WI: Motorbooks International, 1990), 7 and 13-14. 67 Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 53. 68 Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. The P47 dominated European skies with a 5:1 ―Kill‖ ratio, which meant for every five enemy planes lost, only one Thunderbolt went down. Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 53. For an extended discussion of the P-47 from its initial planning through its production during the war, see Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 39-68. 69 On the number of employees at Republic, see Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 7. For information about the number of P-47s produced, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 53. 70 71 Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 53. On the number of Thunderbolts built, see and compare Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA; and Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 7. The UAW-CIO report places the number precisely at 15,329. For one view of the company‘s profits, see Report, ―Republic 116 largest and most lucrative non-union aircraft companies, Republic looked enticing to labor organizers, particularly the UAW.72 The UAW officially began trying to organize Republic in 1942. Like many initial union drives, the campaign went through a period of fits and starts and really did not get rolling until early January 1943.73 That winter, the UAW began distributing literature outside the company gates and soliciting membership applications on a regular basis. 74 It also started holding regular union meetings. At one such gathering, the membership elected four men as shop stewards. Shortly thereafter, these men—Sam Stone, Robert Katz, Raymond Kahler, and Robert Bobrow—while proudly displaying their union steward buttons, began pamphleteering and soliciting for the UAW, ostensibly, on their own time, both inside and outside the plant.75 Company officials and supervisors asked Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ by the Research and Engineering Department of the UAWCIO, Detroit, MI, July 1948, 2, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 72 For information about how enticing Republic looked to the UAW, see, generally, Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 73 Myron Dmyterko to J.W. Livingston, 13 December 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA; ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, 1191. 74 ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, 1191. 75 Sam Stone began working for Republic on July 29, 1942, in the fuselage department. He joined the union on November 10, 1942. Robert Katz, a longer-term employee, started at the company on January 13, 1941. Eventually reaching a position in the assembly shop, Katz became a UAW member on January 30, 1942. Robert Bobrow joined the union almost immediately after starting at Republic in April 117 them to stop, and even warned them to stop, but the stewards continued. When Katz‘s supervisor questioned him about what he hoped to accomplish with a union, particularly during wartime, Katz responded that employees wanted to ―obtain adjustments of grievances, improve their working conditions and morale, and produce more goods for the war effort,‖ among other things.76 Republic managers, looking to keep the union from getting a toehold in the company, promptly fired the four stewards within one week for violating a supposedly strict company rule against soliciting for any cause on company property.77 On March 24, the UAW filed charges of unfair labor practices against Republic with the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and requested a thorough investigation 1942. He became a UAW member on the 27th of that month and acted as the Chairman of the union‘s organizing committee and the main steward for the whole plant. And interestingly, Raymond Kahler actually became a UAW member on January 13, 1942, more than a week before Republic hired him on the 21st. Like Bobrow, Kahler was a member of the organizing committee. ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, contains a brief occupational biography of each of these men on pages 1192, 1196, 1198, and 1191, respectively. For information about the election as stewards, and their pamphleteering and organizing efforts, see the aforementioned volume page 1192. 76 ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, 1196. 77 Technically, the company discharged Stone on January 20 for soliciting membership inside the plant on his own time (he claimed he did it during his lunch time). Whereas Katz received his walking papers because he continued to wear his union steward button in the plant. Bobrow and Kahler also received their discharges because they refused to take off their steward buttons in the plant, despite warnings to do so. For more details on these issues, see ―In the Matter of Republic Aviation Corporation and International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, UAW-CIO,‖ Case No. C-2621—Decided August 11, 1943, in ―Decisions and Orders of the National Labor Relations Board,‖ Volume 51—July 1, 1943—August 19, 1943, published by the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC, 1944, 1190. 118 of the matter.78 During the inquiry, the company justified its firing of the men for two reasons. First, Republic argued that when the men wore their union steward buttons, that action led some employees to believe that the union had already received authorization to bargain on their behalf, which impinged on the company‘s policy of strict neutrality in dealing with labor matters.79 Second, the company also had a strict rule about soliciting for any cause on its property, which it had established and published in its employees‘ handbook in March 1941, well before any union activity had taken place.80 Despite these arguments, on May 21, 1943 a NLRB trial examiner sided with the dismissed workers and found that the company had engaged in certain unfair labor practices. To remedy the situation, the NLRB ordered the company to rehire the workers without prejudice, as well as issue them all of their back pay, and conspicuously place details about the settlement in the plant for all employees to see.81 Republic might have lost the initial argument, but it was not willing to go down without a fight. Shortly after the NLRB handed down its decision, the aircraft 78 See ibid. 79 Ibid., 1187. 80 The main purpose of the company‘s rule against solicitation seems to have been to check all unauthorized lotteries, benevolent fund collections, and any other unauthorized activities from occurring. Nevertheless, during the war there appears to have been several exceptions to this rule made by management, such as Red Cross drives, war bond drives, collections for the American Legion, and other like-minded causes. Technically, these solicitations were not personal appeals, per se, but rather ad hoc, company approved, large scale funding drives. Still, there appears to have been many person to person solicitations that occurred with the knowledge, participation, and tacit approval of supervisors, and this happened both on company time and during the solicitor‘s own time. For a more in-depth discussion of these issues, see ibid., 1192-1193. 81 See ibid., 1201-1203. 119 manufacturer appealed the case, which passed from the NLRB to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.82 When the Circuit Court sided with the NLRB in March 1944, the company pushed the case even higher, all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. On April 23, 1945, the nation‘s highest court upheld the NLRB and Circuit Court‘s findings and ruled that Republic had infringed on its employees‘ rights by prohibiting them from soliciting for a union while at work, on their own time. To date, lawyers still cite the decision as major case law; the courts continue to recognize the case as a fundamental finding that upholds the right of workers to organize. 83 Although the UAW had ultimately won the battle, union leaders would think long and hard about what had happened before they would try to reengage Republic‘s workers in an organizational drive; the company would obviously continue to resist attempts at unionization, and workers might have second thoughts about getting involved given the ordeal that pro-union employees had gone through. In the end, it would take several years, a major shift in the economy, and the incursion of its rival—the IAM—before the UAW would make another run at Republic. 82 The exact details of the appeals process are as follows: In May 1943, Republic appealed the NLRB trial examiner‘s findings. That July, the NLRB heard oral arguments about the case at its national headquarters in Washington, DC. Unfortunately for Republic, an NLRB appeals board upheld the original trial examiner‘s findings on August 11. For more on this issue, see ibid., 1186-1190. Unsatisfied by that decision, the aircraft manufacture then appealed the case to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, which handed down its decision on March 22, 1944, upholding the NLRB‘s previous two findings. For the full details of this decision, see Republic Aviation Corporation v. National Labor Relations Board, No. 287, Circuit Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, March 22, 1944, in ―Federal Reporter, Second Series, Volume 142 F. 2d,‖ St. Paul, MN, West Publishing Company, 1944, 193-197. 83 Decision, in Republic Aviation Corp v. NLRB, 324 U.S. 793 (1945) Decided April 23, 1945, before the U.S. Supreme Court. 120 During the first three years after World War II, Republic had its share of financial difficulties, like most aircraft manufacturers. The company downsized significantly and reported losses of approximately two to four million dollars annually.84 Within a few years, however, thanks to the increased need for military aircraft Republic began rehiring large numbers of employees, and by the end of the first quarter of 1948, it was projecting a $3.9 million profit for that year.85 The F-84 ―Thunderjet,‖ the first jet fighter that could handle air-to-air refueling as well as carry atomic weapons, helped turn Republic around.86 The Air Force, enamored with the aircraft, ordered over 400 F-84s from Republic in early 1948.87 By the end of the Korean War, the Thunderjet would establish itself as one of the key weapons of the conflict with a 7:1 kill ratio over the Soviet MiG, a performance that would keep Republic profitable.88 84 These figures come from a report by the UAW-CIO‘s Research Department. Perhaps the single largest contributing factor to the company‘s loses was its attempt to try to build the Seabee, a private, personal, commercial aircraft, which had little demand. For more information on these issues, see Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 2, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 85 The figure comes from a 1948 UAW‘s Research Department report that projected that Republic would make a 76.3 % return on its investment that year. By comparison, General Motor figured a return of only 26% on its investment in 1948. The government owned the majority of Republic‘s land buildings, and machinery, which it leased to the company. For more details, see Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 4, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 86 Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 8. 87 The UAW puts the exact number of 1948 F-84 Air Force orders at 409. For more on this issue, see and compare Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 62-63; Stoff, The Thunder Factory; and Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Republic Aircraft Co., Farmingdale, L.I., New York,‖ July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 88 A full discussion of the history of the F-84 is in Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 82-109. For a history of the kill-ratio of Republic‘s P-47 Thunderbolt, one of the company‘s more successful aircraft, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 53. 121 One cannot determine with certainty which union, the UAW or IAM, began the postwar unionization drive at Republic. The archives of both unions remain silent on the exact details, as do other traditional historical sources. Documents do reveal that by early 1948 the IAM had made significant headway at Republic, so much so that the UAW feared it might lose the company.89 In May 1948, Republic had more than 6,000 workers on its payroll, and by the end of June the IAM had convinced more than 2,000 of them to sign union authorization cards allowing the organization to negotiate on their behalf.90 Like many aircraft workers in the postwar era, Republic employees faced the threat of constant layoffs and rehires at lower pay, despite the company‘s profitability. Manufacturers kept wages down with this practice. 91 According to the UAW, Republic seemed particularly calculating in these matters because it gave its foremen a low ―Cost Quota,‖ which essentially rewarded them with a percentage of the wages they saved by reclassifying jobs to lower pay grades, issuing layoffs, and helping to rehire former employees at less money.92 By late June 1948, several Republic employees had received 89 Historian Stephen Patnode notes that IAM recruiter Martin Buckley was initiating a drive on Long Island in 1948. For more details, see Stephen Raymond Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost: The Influence of Gender, Race, and Class on the Workplace in Postwar America‖ (Ph.D. dissertation, Stony Brook University, 2008), 139-140. 90 On the number of employees at Republic, see John W. Livingston to Charles H. Kerrigan, 15 May 1948, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. Regarding the number of workers who had signed union authorization cards, see IAM, Long Island NY Office, ―Watch the I.A.M. News for True Republic Confessions,‖ 21 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 91 This layoff system is related in IAM, Amityville, NY Office, ―Is My Job Safe?,‖ 3 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 92 UAW-CIO Office, Farmingdale, NY, ―Why Wage Cuts at Republic?,‖ 4 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 122 pink slips for no apparent reason, and with no avenue open to appeal the matter, the time for unionization seemed right.93 On June 24, an NLRB examiner certified that the Machinists had ―well over the required number of cards‖ to hold an NLRB-sanctioned election. It informed Republic of that fact, but the company appealed, which meant it could suspend the election for ninety days, a desperate stalling tactic.94 Others besides Republic felt thankful for a stay of the election. The UAW launched a massive flier campaign hoping to sway workers to its side. One pamphlet simply pleaded: ―There are several unions who would like to represent you. Be wise in your choice. Look them over carefully....SO THINK THINGS OVER—JOIN THE UAW-CIO TODAY [emphasis in the original document].‖95 In mid-July, the Auto Workers also published a series of special appeals in their Plane Facts, Republic Edition, newspaper that combined several elements: the historic achievements of the union with a not so subtle indictment of the IAM, as well as a quick personal note from one of the UAW‘s leaders. From the broader perspective, the Auto Workers noted that they represented more than a million workers in the automotive, aircraft, and farm implement fields. They also stressed that their organization had gotten raises for their employees at General Motors and 93 A series of terminations occurred after employees requested wage increases or transfers to other departments with jobs with higher pay grades. See ―Here‘s What Republic Calls Job ‗Security‘: One Case Illustrates Republic‘s Practice of Unjust Firings,‖ Machinists‘ News, Vol. 1, No. 29., 28 June 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 94 Normally, after an NLRB certification took place, workers would vote within two weeks to determine which union, if any, they choose. See ―Republic‘s ‗Promises‘ Are As Worthless As They Ever Were: Stalls Election Again; NLRB Accepts Card Count,‖ Machinists‘ News, Vol. 1, No. 30, 5 July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 95 The underlining and capitalization is specifically from UAW-CIO, ―Republic Workers: Cheer Up Here Comes the UAW-CIO,‖ circa early summer 1948, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 123 Chrysler, as well as their workers at the aircraft firms of Consolidated-Vultee in Wayne, Michigan, Wright Aeronautical in Paterson, New Jersey, and Bell Aircraft in Buffalo, New York.96 On a more personal note, the newspaper also recounted, very briefly, that Charles Kerrigan—the UAW‘s Director of Region 9A and the man who had penned the general appeal article—had once worked for Republic as a cable splicer for sixty-five cents an hour.97 But just in case that plea did not strike a chord, the UAW indirectly indicted the Machinists for their inability to stop Republic‘s layoffs during the immediate postwar period. ―Another union (one that is around today) tried to organize the plant,‖ the article reminded Republic workers. ―Some hundreds of workers were laid off at that time without regard for seniority. What did that union do about the layoffs? NOTHING AT ALL! [emphasis in the original document]‖98 And it crowed that some Republic old-timers, who had supposedly been around during the UAW‘s first organizing campaign during the war, believed that this action ―might never have happened if a good union like the UAW had 96 See Charles Kerrigan, ―Open Letter to Republic Workers: Regional Director Charles Kerrigan Describes Benefits to be Had by Joining the UAW Aircraft Family,‖ Plane Facts (Republic Edition), New York, NY, 13 July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. Notably, a July 21 article for Plane Facts (Republic Edition), also mentioned that the union had negotiated raises and better working conditions for aircraft employees at Stinson, Fairchild, Chance-Vought-Sikorsky, Curtiss Wright, and North American. See ―Where You Belong…,‖ Plane Facts (Republic Edition), 21 July 1948, 1-2, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 97 Information about Kerrigan‘s Republic background can be found in ―An Appeal to Reason,‖ Plane Facts (Republic Edition), 22 July 1948, 2, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 98 See ―An Appeal to Reason,‖ Plane Facts (Republic Edition), 22 July 1948, 1, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 124 been around at the time trying to organize the plant openly, and keeping management too worried to try to pull any fast ones.‖99 Although the Auto Workers and Machinists continued to vie for Republic workers throughout the summer, at the end of September, as the election approached, the UAW seemed to back away. The organization decided to halt its pamphleteering and await the outcome of the election for the ―welfare of the workers‖; the UAW claimed that it wanted the workers to decide if they really wished the IAM to represent them, without any interference from other unions.100 The Auto Workers were hedging. If the Machinists did not win the election, it did not want them blaming the UAW for the results, as it explained in a letter to the workers: ―THE UAW-CIO WILL NOT ALLOW ITS ACTIVITIES TO BE the grounds for AN ALIBI BY THE I.A.M., IF THE I.A.M. SHOULD LOSE THE ELECTION [emphasis in the original document]. Nor does the UAW desire to be drawn into a conflict with another union where the only losers will be the workers in the plant.‖101 The letter ended by cautioning the workers: ―YOU ARE TAKING A BIG STEP WHEN YOU CHOOSE A UNION TO REPRESENT YOU, SO DO IT CAREFULLY [emphasis in the original document]‖102 99 See ibid. 100 Apparently, the UAW must also have been contesting the legitimacy of the NLRB‘s certification of some of the IAM‘s union authorization cards from Republic workers. As a UAW flier to Republic workers noted: ―…because we are concerned with the future welfare of Republic workers, THE UAW-CIO IS WITHDRAWING FROM THE PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS BOARD [emphasis in the original document].‖ See Kerrigan, ―Letter to Republic Workers,‖ circa Late Summer 1948, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 101 See ibid. 102 Ibid. 125 The election took place on September 23, 1948.103 The IAM lost by 95 votes.104 Precisely why the Machinists lost is unclear, but what is noticeable is that the workers, within a matter of three months, suddenly received a substantial wage increases and other benefits. On October 11, Republic employees obtained a base pay increase of ten cents. The company claimed it had wanted to give the raise earlier, but did not want to influence the election.105 A little over a month later, on November 24, workers received their Christmas Bonus (one week‘s regular pay) early because of their ―outstanding accomplishment‖ during the year.106 Finally, on December 30, employees who had been with the company for at least a year received a vacation increase from one week to two weeks.107 Whether some employees knew about these increases and benefits before the election is not apparent. Whatever the case, Republic suddenly seemed determined to use what one UAW historian has called the ―time-honored tactic‖ of the aircraft industry to try to stave off further NLRB elections by giving employees pay hikes and other benefits at just the right moment.108 Fortunately for the company, neither the IAM nor UAW could 103 Information on the 1948 vote is contained in Mundy I. Peale to ―Each Republic Employee,‖ 5 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 104 A history of the lost election from the previous year is in by the IAM, Long Island Office, ―Republic Sends A ‗Confession‘ to Your Homes,‖ Machinists‘ News, , Vol. 3, No. 10, 24 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 105 The increase supposedly represented the fourth general raise at Republic since the end of the war. Information on the October 1948 increase is contained in Mundy I. Peale to ―Each Republic Employee,‖ 5 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 106 The November 1948 ―Christmas Bonus‖ is recounted in ibid. 107 The December 1948 vacation time increase is covered in ibid. 108 Barnard, American Vanguard, 309. 126 force another election, or even start campaigning for another one, for a least another year; NLRB rules called for a one-year cooling-off period before another election could take place.109 The battle for Republic workers‘ allegiance revived in the fall of 1949 and reached a fevered pitch. All three sides—the IAM, the UAW, and the company itself—thrust and parried against each other. The firm had begun its campaign earlier in the summer when it created a small in-house ―Company Appointed Grievance Committee,‖ in response to the Machinists‘ and workers‘ charges that no system existed to handle wage reductions, ―unjust‖ layoffs and dismissals, as well as other employee complaints. The committee acted like little more than a titular organization, because Republic still had the final say over which workers it could lay off or fire, as long as it did so ―justly.‖110 The company sent an ebullient letter to its employees stressing that it had planned to institute all of the bonuses and worker improvements of the fall of 1948 even before the IAM had started pressuring the Farmingdale manufacturer. Republic, the letter proclaimed, was a great company that treated its employees well, and they would be smart to avoid unions, which spoil relations between labor and management.111 For its part, the UAW kicked off its drive in late September by opening an office at the local VFW Hall in Farmingdale.112 It 109 See Mundy I. Peale to ―Each Republic Employee,‖ 5 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 110 See IAM, Amityville, NY Office, ―Surprises at Republic,‖ 21 September 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 111 Mundy I. Peale to ―Each Republic Employee,‖ 5 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 112 See UAW-CIO Farmingdale, NY Office, ―The UAW-CIO Opens Republic Drive,‖ 20 September 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 127 also promised to use several former Chance-Vought employees (one of the UAW‘s unionized companies) in the Republic campaign; they would sing the praises of the organization to company employees.113 The IAM also began pushing hard at this point.114 Shortly after Republic had sent out the rosy letter to its employees, the Machinists published a point-by-point rebuttal stressing that the IAM had forced major changes at the company.115 While the Auto Workers and Machinists busied themselves trying to sway Republic‘s workers to their respective sides, some very unique differences emerged between the two organizations‘ approaches, particularly regarding the language and tactics they used. Some contemporaries believed the Machinists had a more ―conservative‖ perspective than the Auto Workers.116 This difference became especially 113 Myron Dmyterko to J.W. Livingston, 6 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. An October 12 UAW flier also noted that the organization had pushed Ford to fund its workers‘ retirement through a pension plan. It also stated that the UAW had won a company-financed health insurance fund for the Ford workers and their families. For more information on this subject, see UAW-CIO Office, Farmingdale, New York, ―UAW-CIO Wins Company-Paid Pensions and Health Insurance,‖ 12 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 114 Myron Dmyterko to J.W. Livingston, 6 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. On October 3, the IAM noted in a flier to Republic workers that it put Shop Chairmen in place in its unionized companies who could remain in direct contact with upper management, and that when layoffs occur, those dismissed became the first rehired, without a loss of pay. The organization also stressed that it watched out for workers insurance rights. See IAM, Amityville, NY Office, ―Is My Job Safe?,‖ 3 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 115 IAM, Long Island Office, ―Republic Sends A ‗Confession‘ to Your Homes,‖ Machinists‘ News, Vol. 3, No. 10, 24 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 116 The ―conservative‖ label comes from Justin Ostro, the former President and Business Manager of Republic IAM Lodge 1987. Notably, Ostro also stated that the Machinists had come from the AFL tradition, whereas the UAW had come out of the CIO. See ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin 128 noticeable beginning in the fall of 1949 when the IAM started to rely heavily on breadand-butter, ―common man‖-style arguments. The UAW, on the other hand, took a more Marxian, labor vs. capital, stance—a curious choice given their troubled past with the Communist Party (as witnessed by the North American Aviation Strike of 1941, when the union‘s national leadership blamed a handful of Communist leaders for the walkout‘s failure).117 In essence, the Machinists concentrated on Republic workers‘ individual benefits and needs, and how the IAM could help them secure them. The UAW, conversely, stressed the importance of unions in general and the significance of the UAW nationwide; it never told the workers how joining the UAW would specifically change their individual lives. In other words, the IAM talked in specifics, whereas the UAW tended to speak in generalities. Beginning in mid-October 1949, the IAM began handing out fliers that addressed common concerns of workers. On the 21st, one Machinist handbill assured Republic workers that they would remain safe if they signed union pledge cards or wore pro-union buttons because the law protected workers who tried to form unions (no doubt partially in thanks to the Supreme Court case won by the Auto Workers several years earlier).118 The Ostro,‖ 28 November 2006, in the author‘s possession. Richard Rodden, a former machinist himself, states that the IAM was ―more traditional and less flamboyant‖ than the UAW. See Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 101. 117 For more on the NAA strike of 1941, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 58-66. As IAM historian Robert Rodden notes, the Machinists viewed Communists as destructive to the labor movement. The IAM had barred Communists from becoming members of their union in 1924. For more on this issue, see Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 76, 117, and 165. Historian Stephen Patnode also notes the IAM‘s emphasis on ―bread-and-butter economic issues.‖ See Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 138. 118 Court Case. Curiously, the UAW literature form this time period is devoid of any mention of the Supreme 129 flier assured Republic workers that many had already turned in their cards without retaliation from the company, and some pro-IAM employees had even received promotions to lead men on the assembly line. The handbill‘s main message provided Republic workers with real-life examples that they would avoid punishment if they stood up for their rights; its whole demeanor assuaged one of their deepest fears—the fear of repercussions.119 Another flier stressed the IAM‘s patriotism and their ability to get results during negotiations with employers. The handout stated that the Machinists had resolved 97% of all of their discussions negotiations with companies without resorting to a strike, a very real and common concern of workers. It also noted that the organization had negotiated some pension plans that had lasted for more than fifteen years—another breadand-butter argument. And finally, the flier stressed the IAM‘s democratic nature by noting the union ―operate[s] as YOU want it to, because it is run by YOU.‖120 Overall, the IAM wanted to comfort workers and sway them over to its side with real life issues—not a perspective the UAW stressed in its literature. By contrast, the Auto Workers‘ handbills, pamphlets, and newspapers from this period only focused generally on the plight of aircraft workers by couching their problems in the very broad language of labor vs. capital, ―us vs. them.‖ Although their articles did a solid job explaining the situation from an overall perspective, they did not offer Republic workers any real or practical indications that the union would improve their individual 119 IAM, Long Island NY Office, ―Watch the I.A.M. News for True Republic Confessions,‖ 21 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 120 IAM, Amityville, NY Office, ―World‘s Highest Standards,‖ 8 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 130 lives. The UAW‘s October 25, 1949, newspaper, for example, prepared especially for Republic Workers, equated the leaders of the aircraft industry with overpaid fat cats whose whole way of life rested on governmental subsidies.121 Another flier, entitled ―Mr. Peale Goes to Town,‖ targeted Mundy Peale, the President of Republic, for a redressing. The handbill stressed how much pay Peale took home each week and pronounced: ―We know that Republic workers are fed up with a Government-subsidized management which takes bows for giving the workers what is theirs in justice, while remaining discreetly silent about how much of it they have taken back again.‖122 While the flier did mention Republic‘s practice of job reclassification at lower rates and its lack of a strong seniority system, the union‘s only solution was to ask workers to vote for the organization to represent them.123 Another special Republic Edition of the UAW newspaper, which came out on November 22, concentrated on wage and merit increases, as well as job classifications, in the U.S. aircraft industry as a whole, and not specifically at Republic. Although the paper did a fine job pointing out the system‘s flaws, it did not tell Republic 121 UAW-CIO Office, Farmingdale, NY, ―Gold-Plated Panhandlers: Is the Aircraft Industry— Built by the Public—Operated in the Public Interest?‖, UAW-CIO Organizer, Republic Aircraft Workers Edition, Vol 1., No. 1, 25 October 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 122 ―Mr. Peale Goes to Town!‖, UAW-CIO Organizer, Republic Aircraft Workers Edition, 9 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. According to at least one contemporary Republic worker (Justin Ostro, who would become the President of Republic IAM Lodge 1987) Mundy Peale was an incredibly arrogant man. When Peale traveled to Washington, DC, to meet with Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara about Republic‘s F-105 contract, and the Secretary told Peale he did not have time to meet with him, Peale apparently told McNamara, in no uncertain terms, that they were going to meet. McNamara then acceded to Peale‘s demand and proceeded to explain in less than five minutes that the DoD had rejected the F-105 contract and had decided to build the TFX jointtask fighter instead. See ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin Ostro‖ 28 November 2006, in the author‘s possession. 123 ―Mr. Peale Goes to Town!‖, UAW-CIO Organizer, Republic Aircraft Workers Edition, 9 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 131 workers what it could do for them. It did, however, gloriously recount all of the UAW‘s various victories around the country.124 Yet another UAW flier accurately argued that Republic had kept workers‘ pay and promotions in check with its supposedly ―scientific‖ job evaluation system and merit increases; nonetheless it still played up the general class struggle angle further by asking Republic employees to consider how hard President Peale worked writing letters compared to the jobs they worked.125 Overall, by the fall of 1949, the IAM had provided Republic workers with more useful information than the UAW, and in greater quantities. While the UAW had produced professionally published ―Republic Edition‖ newspapers and pamphlets, the IAM had created a mixture of folksy handwritten and hand-illustrated fliers and handbills, as well as professionally printed newspapers specifically for Republic workers. By mid-November, the Machinists had already published three volumes of their newspaper with more than ten issues each, contrasted with the UAW‘s two issues of its newspaper. When it came to providing the workers with information tailored to their specific concerns, the IAM‗s efforts far outstripped those of the UAW.126 124 ―Why Merit Increases in Aircraft?‖, UAW-CIO Organizer, Republic Aircraft Workers edition, Vol. 1, No. 2, 22 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 125 UAW-CIO Office, Farmingdale, Long Island, ―Job Evaluation: What Does It Mean? How Does It Work?‖, 10 January 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 126 One can determine the quality and quantities of the UAW‘s and IAM‘s publications by comparing and contrasting the two organization‘s documents cited in this chapter. A prime example of one of the IAM‘s handwritten fliers is IAM Office, Amityville, NY, ―DIAGNOSIS: Same Old Knife,‖ March 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. This document features hand-illustrated World War II GIs and a poem that relates that Republic‘s men (war veterans) had been tough overseas in the war. Now, the flier said, they were getting screwed over by their boss and they needed to stand up and fight for themselves and the rights had they had before by siding with the IAM. For historian Stephen Patnode‘s take on the same flier, see Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost,‖ 147-148. 132 Fear became another problem that plagued the UAW‘s campaign and stilted its progress during the fall of 1949, fear that people would link a UAW Republic organizing effort with Communist organizers—not a pleasant association in the era. Workers also worried, at least according to the UAW, that Republic might retaliate against them if they sided with the Auto Workers. Workers remembered that, the UAW Auto Workers had unexpectedly abandoned their campaign at the aircraft manufacturer when Republic dragged the shop stewards to the Supreme Court, and they feared a repeat of that failure. All these worries became particularly pronounced starting in the last week of October 1949 after some Communists handed out copies of The Daily Worker at Republic‘s main gates. Concerned about its past connections to Communist organizers, the UAW tried to distance itself from the group. That week the UAW halted pamphleteering at Republic until the Communists moved on to a different location.127 Despite the Auto Workers‘ attempts to distance separate themselves from radicalism, the Machinists hoped to capitalize on events, and they quickly turned out a flier that questioned the UAW‘s loyalty while stressing the Machinists‘ patriotism. The November 8 flier blatantly recounted that the IAM had gotten rid of the ―COMMIES‖ and ―anyone else who believed in the overthrow of our government by force‖ at its annual convention as early as August 1925.128 The Machinists had seen ―the need of clipping the wings of the 127 Myron Dmyterko to J. Livingston, 1 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 128 IAM, Amityville, NY Office, ―World‘s Highest Standards,‖ 8 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 133 left-wing birds better than 20 years ago,‖ the flier claimed.129 Overall, the handbill—while trying to paint the UAW as a Communist organization—also tried to hold the IAM up as a patriotic, middle-of-the-road union.130 At approximately the same time that the IAM tried to inflame fears about the UAW‘s Communist connection, the Auto Workers learned about Republic workers‘ fears that the UAW might abandon them. On November 1, Myron Dmyterko, the Auto Workers‘ lead organizer at Republic, wrote to UAW headquarters in Detroit and noted about the situation: The people (workers) at Republic are beginning to take more notice of the UAW now than at first. There is however fear in the workers‘ minds—fear that the UAW might withdraw from the drive as had happened in the past and fear of reprisal by the Company. These reports come from our organizers from within the shop. We have assured the workers by voice and literature that this fear is unfounded.131 Dmyterko then confessed to one of his other supervisors in a separate letter on the same date: ―Our drive is gaining a bit of momentum. The workers at Republic are at this point beginning to look for us at the gates with our leaflets. However, the signed cards are not coming in as fast as I had expected. We have received some twenty five cards at this point.‖132 Six weeks later, things had not gotten much better for the UAW. By that point, 129 Ibid. 130 Ibid. 131 Myron Dmyterko to J. Livingston, 1 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 132 Myron Dmyterko to Paul Russo, 1 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 134 Dmyterko had only received a total of sixty signed authorization cards, and he reported to Detroit: ―The contacts we have made are skeptical about signing cards due to the fact that they question us about the stability of the UAW. This is asked of us because the UAW started to organize the plant in 1942 and have withdrawn so many times since that date.‖133 Nevertheless, Dmyterko concluded by noting that he and his compatriots believed that the IAM might be preparing to pull out of the Republic campaign because it supposedly felt frustrated by the slow signup for IAM representation. The UAW representative claimed that they stood ready to jump into any void created if the IAM quit.134 But where Dmyterko got the notion that the IAM was leaving is a mystery. The Machinists had no intention of abandoning Republic. The Machinists faced a few of their own challenges collecting union authorization cards. By mid-November, the IAM had obtained only about 35% of Republic workers‘ pledge cards (roughly 1715), and the organization had promised that it would not even try to hold another election until they had at least 51% pledged to the organization. 135 In an article titled ―We Confess to Republic,‖ IAM organizers complained that employees seemed content to stand by and wait for the ―other guy‖ to sign up first. The article 133 Myron Dmyterko to J.W. Livingston, 13 December 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA.. 134 135 Ibid. Because the exact number of Republic employees is difficult to determine for certain time periods, the 1,715 figure is based on the approximate 4,900 known Republic workers eligible to vote in an NLRB election in May 1950. For the 4,900 figure, see IAM, Amityville, NY, ―Another Jekyll and Hyde Act,‖ 4 May 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 135 suggested that if workers did not start registering soon, an election might not even occur.136 The Machinists also ran a special appeal from a twenty-four year Republic veteran who expressed his views about working conditions and how the IAM had forced small changes at the company. It seemed especially pitched at new workers and those who had not signed their IAM cards yet. He wrote: We at Republic Aircraft are all in the same boat. We haven‘t had it too bad in the past several years because of one fact—we have profited through the campaign management has waged to prevent unionization of this plant. Management arbitrarily improved wages. Management arbitrarily improved working conditions. And management may have arbitrarily fooled some of us, but not all of us into thinking we are secure at Republic without a Union. ….We face a fork in the road. One road leads to job security through unionization. The other road, and it‘s a rough one, leads right back to where we were years ago. So either, [sic] we sign I.A.M. Authorization cards, win an election and become a union plant, or we stay dis-organized [sic] subject to every whim of every boss at Republic…. 137 This Republic veteran concluded by admonishing his fellow workers that ―in the 24 years I‘ve had to work for a living[,] I‘ve found out that whenever management fights like the devil to keep out a union… that‘s when the employees really need one.‖ 138 By late winter/early spring 1950, the IAM had gained significant momentum, while the UAW‘s campaign continued to flag. Despite Republic‘s gift of a Christmas bonus (one 136 ―We Confess to Republic,‖ Machinists‘ News, Long Island, NY Edition, Vol. III., No. 11, 14 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 137 ―Come On!—Let‘s Face the Facts,‖ Machinists‘ News, Long Island, NY Edition, Vol. III., No. 11, 14 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 138 Ibid. 136 week‘s pay) to all its employees at the end of 1949 (as well as the opportunity to purchase gifts in the company‘s plants at a 35% discount), the workers seemed ready to rebel against management and form a union.139 By mid-winter, the UAW still only had approximately 275 union authorization cards, whereas the IAM had collected almost enough to meet its goal.140 By the end of March/early April, the IAM filed for an NLRBsanctioned election.141 As soon as the NLRB and company could agree on a date for the event, more than 4,900 Republic shop floor workers and production and maintenance engineers would head to the polls and decide the company‘s fate. 142 139 Republic‘s Christmas bonuses are recounted in Myron Dmyterko to J. Livingston, 1 November 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. Notably, another factor that might have played into the general ill-humor of Republic workers toward their company might have been the fact that Grumman had granted an 8 cent per hour increase to its workers on December 26th. That amount, when coupled with Grumman‘s holiday pay and Christmas Bonuses had Republic workers upset, at least according to UAW organizers. For more on this subject, see Myron Dmyterko to J.W. Livingston, 13 December 1949, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 140 On January 10th, the UAW had 110 signed cards in hand and claimed that it was getting much more active in the plant. At that time, it said it had 20 volunteers working for the organization and was looking to get close to 100 very soon. One month later, on February 17th, however, the organization had still only obtained 275 cards. UAW organizers said that workers had a good feeling in the plant about the organization, but sign-up had been slow because people feared reprisal by the company. In a meeting for Republic workers during this time at the local UAW‘s organizing office, for example, only nine workers showed up. It was suggested that the meetings be moved to Mineola and be held later in the evening. For more on these issues, see and compare Myron Dmyterko to J. Livingston, 10 January 1950; and Myron Dmyterko to Brother Livingston, 17 February 1950. Both found in UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 141 For information about the IAM filing for an NLRB-sanctioned election in later March/early April 1950, see IAM, Amityville, NY, ―The International Association of Machinists Will File a Petition,‖ March-April 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 142 The figure of approximate 4900 eligible Republic voters come from IAM, Amityville, NY, ―Another Jekyll and Hyde Act,‖ 4 May 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 137 Although the IAM wanted to hold the election during the week of April 10, the company did not give in that easily.143 It stalled the event by appealing the election application.144 Republic‘s workers finally went to the ballot boxes, and on Thursday, November 2, 1950, in a vote of 1778 to 1717, employees gave the election to the IAM by 61 votes.145 After several long years of labor organizing, Republic had finally fallen to unionization. By the end of 1950, Grumman remained the only major, non-union aircraft company in the eastern U.S.146 In spite of management‘s dire fears, for several years the IAM and Republic lived in relative harmony as the company‘s F-105 Thunderchief, an Air Force supersonic fighter-bomber, became a highly profitable aircraft and helped expand employment considerably.147 But in 1956, the two sides reached an impasse during contract 143 On the IAM‘s desire to hold the election during the week of April 10, see IAM, Amityville, NY, ―The International Association of Machinists Will File a Petition,‖ March-April 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 144 Ironically, as the IAM noted in one of its fliers, despite Republic President Mundy Peale‘s past pronouncement that he was ―not opposed to collective bargaining,‖ the election was going to have to ―be forced upon Republic by an agency of Uncle Sam.‖ For more, see IAM, Amityville, NY, ―Another Jekyll and Hyde Act,‖ 4 May 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 145 Notably, a telegram from Charles Kerrigan, the UAW‘s Regional Director of Long Island, to UAW headquarters, stated that the IAM had won by 67 votes, not 61. Obviously the telegram writer probably interpreted a handwritten 61, where the 1 looked like a 7 and thus wrote 67. He apparently had a problem reading the handwriting since he typed the message was from a ―Charles H Kerrnwunp,‖ instead of ―Charles H. Kerrigan‖ the UAW‘s Region 9A Director. For the final vote tally, and evidence of this issue, see Telegram, Charles H. Kerrnwunp [sic] (in New York, NY) to John W. Livingston, 1252 PM, 2 November 1950, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 24, ALUA. 146 Northrop of El Segundo, California remained the only other unorganized major aircraft company at that time. One brief, but solid, discussion about the IAM‘s campaign at Republic can be found in Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 173. 147 The F-105 replaced the F-84F in the Air Force‘s arsenal. By 1959, Republic had built more than 600 Thunderchiefs and they would later become the main aircraft used in the Vietnam War. During 138 negotiations, and a bitter and violent strike ensued which left an indelible impression both locally and nationally. Talks had broken down over the issues of wage increases, the number of paid holidays, and improved health benefits. 148 Neither side wanted to give in, particularly the workers who felt that the company had taken everything away from them during prior negotiations, so much so that union officials noted: ―we had to fight them lock, stock, and barrel to get back piecemeal what we had before we started.‖149 For many Grummanites, the 1956 Republic strike would become a vivid part of their personal views of the realities of a unionized company, and one that stood only a few miles away. The strike began the week of February 19 when approximately 11,500 workers walked away from their work stations.150 Both sides had dug in and prepared for a long that conflict, they would fly 75 % of all of the air strikes during the first 4 years of the war. For detailed information on the Thunderchief, see Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 122-143. 148 For the key issues of the negotiations, see Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAMUAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 6, 31 January 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA. 149 Union leaders mentioned this about the 1955 negotiations in particular. For more, see Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA. 150 Documents do not relate the precise date of when the strike began. Originally set to commence at midnight on February 18th, it appears the IAM held off for at least a day to give Republic a little more time to try to reach an agreement. When that failed, the strike began. Union records claim that the strike was in ―full swing‖ by Monday, February 20th. For more on this issue, see and compare Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA; Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 18, 16 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA; and Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 20, 20 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA. On the issue of the number of workers who walked out, union records place the figure at somewhere between 11,000 and 12,000 employees, whereas Time settled on 12,000. Another union report placed the number precisely at 11,625. As a happy medium, I choose the approximate figure 11,500. For details about these figures, see and compare Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW 139 fight. The company had erected guard towers, complete with movie cameras (in the hope of documenting ―the struggle to stop incoming cars‖) at all of the entrances to its main plant in Farmingdale.151 Barbed wire also ringed the facility‘s entire perimeter. Inside the factory, executives set up cots and stocked the cafeteria with enough frozen food for several weeks.152 Union officials, on the other hand, conducted picket line drills and had placed a trailer outside the company gates with a big sign on it declaring it the ―Republic Lodge 1987, International Association of Machinists, Field Office.‖ IAM workers also prepared coffee wagons and sound trucks to send in if a stalemate occurred.153 Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 20, 20 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA; Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 26, 28 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 13, ALUA; Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 38, 16 March 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA; and ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94. 151 ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94. On other preparations by Republic, see Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA. 152 See and compare ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94; and Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA. Interestingly, later on in the spring of 1958, when it looked like another strike would occur, Justin Ostro, the President and Business Manager of the IAM‘s Republic Lodge 1987, noted that Republic‘s preparations for the strike drew a remarkable resemblance to the company‘s 1956 actions. Preparations included: ―1) Erection of towers at every gate of the Republic plant—two towers at each of the main gates. The towers were fireproof and contained unbreakable glass windows, equipped with large newsreel cameras. 2) Steel posts set into concrete were strung around the entire perimeter of the Republic plant with barbed wire cyclone fencing. 3) Cots and other sleeping equipment along with equipment for feeding were brought into the plant so that personnel could sleep in. 4) Eleven large railroad tankers filled with oil were brought into the Republic plant.‖ Fortunately, the strike did not occur because the two sides reached an agreement on April 8. See Justin Ostro to Ernest Demcheck, 14 April 1958, UAW Papers, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 153 Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 17, 15 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA; and Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating 140 On Monday, February 20, the situation started to get very tense when the strike hit full stride. Workers had forced Republic to shut down all of its plants (its main Farmingdale facility and three other smaller Long Island plants) and kept approximately 5,000 engineers (non-union members) from entering the company‘s gates. 154 Although the IAM said it would allow non-production line workers through if they agreed to not produce any planes, the company refused the offer. 155 Adding more problems to the already difficult situation, the Suffolk County Sheriff‘s Department had men on site watching the picketers. Violence erupted, and sources disagree on which side instigated the melee. According to the IAM, Sheriff William McCollom stood by ―goading deputies into committing acts of brutality against strikers.‖156 The Machinists claimed: ―When McCullom‘s [sic] legal goons are not beating and jailing our picketing members on trumped up charges, they are loafing around the plant gates getting coffee handouts from Republic management and fawning on Republic supervision.‖157 But such tactics Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 19, 17 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA. 154 Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 20, February 20, 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA; and ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94. 155 ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94. 156 Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 21, 21 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 12, ALUA. 157 Ibid. 141 apparently backfired, at least according to IAM officials, because the workers seemed to grow more militant and morale remained high. 158 Time magazine described the incident differently. It reported that the Sheriff‘s Department, or ―police,‖ had very few officers present and that they had received orders ―not to carry nightsticks.‖159 The journal reported that authorities found themselves ―repeatedly overwhelmed,‖ and when ―a mob of pickets rushed to an entrance to head off workers, a cop stood aside. ‗What the hell was I going to do?‘ he muttered. I was outnumbered 200 to 1.‖160 Time also claimed that the picketers had turned engineers and other strikebreakers back by throwing themselves onto cars that attempted to drive through the picket lines.161 No matter who bore the responsibility for the violence, the magazine somberly concluded, ―In the first six days of rioting at the gates, 139 were arrested and more than 30 injured.‖162 Hoping to force the picketers back to work as soon as possible, Republic, at the end of the strike‘s first week, went to the New York State Supreme Court and showed fifteen minutes of filmed ―mob violence by the strikers.‖ The result was a ―temporary 158 Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 20, 20 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA. Apparently, the Machinists appealed to New York Governor Averell Harriman to intervene and keep the sheriff from breaking the strike, but nothing seemed to ever come of that request. For more on this issue, see Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 19, 17 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 14, Folder 27, ALUA. 159 ―State of Business: First Big Strike,‖ Time, 5 March 1956, 94. 160 Ibid. 161 Ibid. 162 Ibid. 142 injunction against mass picketing.‖163 On February 26, the IAM rallied more than 7,500 Republic workers at the local armory in Jamaica, New York, and convinced them to pledge to stay out on strike until the company offered a fair settlement. 164 The next morning, with the injunction in full force, only 132 production workers returned to their jobs, and only half the technical and clerical staff joined them. 165 Although the violence subsided, the strike continued to grind on through the rest of the spring. On April 2, Republic canceled all of the employees‘ group health insurance and threatened retiring employees with pension cuts, but that forced very few of them back to work.166 By the end of the strike‘s eighth week, only 10% of the strikers had returned to their jobs.167 Ironically, one of the key morale boosters for the strikers came from the Auto Workers. In early April, the UAW sent the local Republic IAM lodge a $10,000 strike fund check in a show of solidarity.168 The money, combined with the funding already coming from the IAM, made a significant difference to the workers. 163 Ibid.; and Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 25, 27 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 13, ALUA. 164 Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 26, 28 February 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 13, ALUA. 165 Ibid. 166 Justin Ostro to Leonard Woodcock, 14 April 1956, UAW papers, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 167 168 Ibid. Fred H. Coonley to Leonard Woodcock, 9 April 1956, UAW Papers, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA; and Justin Ostro to Leonard Woodcock, 14 April 1956, UAW papers, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 143 By mid-May, even the federal government had grown concerned about the intractability of the strike. After a thirteen-week standstill, the Preparedness Investigating Sub Committee of the U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services started getting ready to research the Republic Strike; they also considered whether to hold hearings about it.169 Aircraft workers throughout the country also focused their attention on the situation. 170 Fortunately, for everyone concerned, the strike ended after sixteen long weeks. On June 9, the IAM ratified an agreement with Republic that contained a seven cent per hour raise, significant upgrades in medical and accident insurance, an increase in vacation days, as well as greater seniority rights.171 Throughout the rest of the decade, Republic and its workers continued to have difficulties during their annual contract negotiations, but still managed to reach agreements. In 1958, although both sides prepared for a strike that rivaled the 1956 conflict, the two sides ironed out an accord at the last minute before a walk-out occurred.172 The same situation occurred in 1960.173 169 Justin Ostro to Leonard Woodcock, 18 May 1956, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 16, Folder 3, ALUA. 170 Ibid. 171 IAM Republic Lodge 1987 and Republic Aviation Corporation, ―Strike Settlement Agreement,‖ circa 7 June 1956; and Justin Ostro to Irving Bluestone, 9 July 1956. Both found in UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 19, Folder 1, ALUA. 172 For information about the 1958 negotiations, see and compare Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 19, 17 February 1958; and Daily Coordination Summary of the Joint IAM-UAW Coordinating Committee, by the IAM Regional Office, Los Angeles, CA, No. 28, 4 March 1957 [obvious typo, it should be 1958, as it is hand stamped with a March 6, 1958 date]. Both found in UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder 11, ALUA. 173 In 1960, 8400 Republic workers stood ready to walkout, but after a last-minute, 46-hour, round-the-clock negotiating session, the two sides reached an agreement. For more on this subject, see Justin Ostro to Gordon Cole, 5 April 1960, UAW Papers, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 17, Folder 4, ALUA. 144 When the U.S. entered the Space Age in 1957, employees of both Republic and Grumman anticipated a time of great excitement as the country prepared to go head-tohead with the Russians to establish space-firsts. Republic quickly became a major aerospace research facility. In 1958, the company finished building the Paul Moore Research and Development Center, which ―became one of the best-equipped private space research facilities in the country.‖174 It housed eight laboratories specifically dedicated to space research.175 In the early 1960s Republic and Grumman would vie for many of the same space contracts. Both companies prepared design studies for the Apollo Lunar Lander (preliminary LM concepts). Republic created a single engine design that the astronauts supposedly could have used to both land on, and take off from, the Moon. Grumman‘s concept, which would win the NASA contract and become the driving force of the Apollo Lunar Module, had two separate engines, one to land on the lunar surface, the other to blast off from it. 176 The two companies also did preliminary designs for the Apollo Command Module, which NASA eventually awarded to North American Aviation.177 And in 1962, while Grumman busied itself building the Lunar Module, 174 Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 156. 175 Ibid. Republic received its first space contract in 1960. The agreement called for the design of the first experimental Lunar Exploration Spacesuit. See Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 80. 176 177 Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 161. Rockwell eventually carried out a design similar to Republic‘s initial proposal for the command module. It would become one of the final studies considered by NASA for the Apollo Command Module. See Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 80. 145 Republic completed research on Project Fire, a stability study of the Apollo Command Module‘s heat shield.178 But for many Grummanites, the history of the era also meant something a little more, particularly when they remembered what had happened to their neighbors and friends who worked at Republic. Although Republic employees had made some solid gains after they formed a union in 1956, for many Grummanites, those gains had come at too high a cost. When some former Republic workers—or ―union refugees,‖ as one Grummanite called them—came to work for Grumman, these new workers stressed that their former company ―was ruined by unions.‖179 For loyal workers, Grumman represented a different type of company than Republic. Because Grumman took care of its employees, Grummanites felt that they did not need a union, particularly if it would create the type of ill will that the unionization process had caused between management and labor in 178 Project Fire obtained ―research data during atmospheric re-entry at hyperbolic velocities.‖ According to Long Island aviation historian Josh Stoff, the project demonstrated ―the stability of the Apollo CM shape and to test the proposed heat-shield at lunar return speeds,‖ Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 157 and 159. For more on the project, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 80-81. Some of Republic‘s other notable space contracts included: the 1964 design for the interior of the Air Force‘s Manned Orbiting Laboratory; the 1964 contract for developing an Advanced Orbiting Solar Observatory to study sunspots, solar flares and other high energy radiation; a 1973 plan for the Space Shuttle Orbiter‘s vertical tail; and the infamous design of Skylab‘s toilet, which cost $17 million and received the moniker ―astrojohn.‖ For details on all of these projects, see and compare Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 159, 162, and 164; and Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 80-81. 179 The first quote is from former Grummanite Eugene Coll, whereas the second is from former Grummanite Michael Hlinko. See Eugene Coll Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; and Michael Hlinko Survey/Questionnaire, 22 December 1999. Both in the author‘s possession. For more Grummanites who agree that Grumman employees viewed unions negatively because of what happened at Republic, see Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000; Elsie M. Barone, Survey/Questionnaire, 17 November 1999; George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000; Laurence Van Wallendael, Survey/Questionnaire, 7 February 2000; and N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000, all in the author‘s possession. 146 Farmingdale. The organization of Republic served as a warning for Grummanites about the downside of unionization. First Attempts to Organize Grumman After they lost the battle to organize Republic, the Auto Workers remained determined to secure a major aircraft company on Long Island. The UAW set its sights on Republic‘s neighbor, Grumman; the union had eyed the Bethpage manufacturer since the late 1940s. In August 1948, the organization published its first internal research report about the firm, based on an article in Fortune magazine, as well as information from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and Moody‘s Industrial Statistics.180 Although an internal UAW research file, the report still contained much of the same unsuccessful language that had not worked for the Auto Workers during their Republic campaign—a capital vs. labor argument, with a radical inflection. In essence, the report represented the Auto Workers‘ rather cut-and-dried view of Grumman, its wealth, and its labor relations, and it underlined the UAW‘s obvious desire to organize the company.181 The report opened with the following passage: ―The deafening roar of the airplane and the satisfied purr of the fat profit cat are two common place [sic] sounds out in Long Island where the Grumman plant is located. This company‘s planes are beautiful but its 180 Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Grumman Aircraft, 16 August 1948, 1, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 181 One major flaw in the UAW‘s study revolved around the fact that it kept comparing aircraft workers‘ pay with that of Grumman executives, even though it only used general statistics about aircraft workers around the country, not Grumman employees specifically. It also only used general family budget estimates for workers in New York. In other words, it did not specifically note what Grumman workers were actually paid at this time. See, Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Grumman Aircraft, 16 August 1948, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 147 profit picture is breathtaking. Between 1939 and 1947 Grumman increased its net worth by $23 million, or 1,175%. At the end of 1947, Grumman was worth more than $25 million. In 1939, its net worth was only $2 million.‖182 The commentary went on to note that the firm‘s stockholders had only held approximately 5% of the investments that made up Grumman‘s total net worth. It claimed that subsidies from the U.S. government, and by extension the American taxpayers, constituted the remaining balance of the company‘s investments. In other words, the UAW believed that Grumman stockholders had grown rich on government contracts at the taxpayers‘ expense. After all, the federal government had subsidized the building of the company‘s plants and furnished them with equipment. But what had Grumman given back to its workers?, the report asked.183 Another section of the UAW‘s commentary took special care to detail how much profit the company‘s founders had garnered during the war effort. Even though the corporation had started on a shoestring budget of $64,000, it had become a multi-million dollar company by World War II.184 Leroy Grumman, the company‘s Chairman of the Board, who had initially invested $16,950 in 1928, acquired more than 50,000 shares in the company when the firm‘s dividends skyrocketed, and by 1948, those shares‘ worth rested at approximately $2 million.185 182 Research and Engineering Department of the UAW-CIO, ―Grumman Aircraft,‖ 16 August 1948, 1, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 183 Ibid., 1-2. 184 Ibid., 4. 185 Ibid. The report also stated the following 1928 initial investments: the Loening Brothers at $30,000; Leon A. Swirbul, had made a $8,125 investment; and William T. Schwendler, Edmund W. Poor, and E. Clinton Towl, had pooled their funds for a combined total of $9,250. 148 In the area of labor relations, the report took the issue of paternalism head on, outlining instances in which the company could appear to have abused its authority. ―Grumman‘s labor policy may at best be described as paternalism,‖ the report began.186 It also stated: Fortune, in an article on the Grumman Aircraft Co., relates an incident which apparently reflects the company‘s labor relations philosophy. A foreman one day complained to higher supervision that some of the workers were lingering too long in the washroom. Whereupon, the company hired a man whose only job was to mop up the washroom all day long. A top management spokesman commented ‗the men respect you when you outsmart them like that.‘!!!187 The report also vaguely described a Grumman wartime incentive plan, and dismissed its value, insisting that ―the UAW‘s experience with incentive plans would lead us to be extremely suspicious of them, and particularly of one imposed on the workers unilaterally by management.‖188 More than ten years after the UAW‘s initial research report on Grumman, and several years after it had lost Republic to the IAM, the Auto Workers began gearing up to start an organizing campaign at Bethpage. In preparation for the drive, union leaders in Detroit asked the UAW‘s Research Department for a final financial accounting of 186 Ibid., 5 187 Ibid. The UAW‘s report also noted: ―Everyone knows a father can be arbitrary. At war‘s end, Grumman fired every one of its employees, and then ‗hired back those it wanted‘ (Fortune). Because Grumman workers have no union they also have no seniority rights. There is nothing to prevent a recurrence of this ‗fatherly‘ action.‖ On this issue, Drew Fetherston, of Newsday, said: ―They asked supervisor and foreman to draw up lists of essential workers. When peace arrived, they fired the entire work force then rehired 5,000 within 10 days.‖ The article is reprinted on the Grumman Park Memorial website, see Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Memorial Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 188 Ibid., 6. 149 Grumman.189 The December 22, 1958 report noted that although the aircraft manufacturer‘s sales had fluctuated wildly since World War II, it had remained a very profitable company. During the 1950s, for example, Grumman‘s average annual sales stayed close to $7 million, which equated to about an 18% return on the company‘s investment—a very high rate of return.190 The report stressed that many of Grumman‘s profits had come not only from its major military contracts, but also its diversification into the commercial market; the company‘s Gulfstream (a top-selling corporate jet), and the new Ag-Cat (a small agricultural crop dusting plane), had helped boost Grumman‘s commercial sales.191 UAW researchers also noted that Grumman not only had a main plant in Bethpage, but also some small facilities in Calverton, NY, and Stuart, FL, as well as some smaller subsidiaries in Marathon, NY (Grumman Boats, Inc.) and Athens, NY (Aerobilt Bodies, Inc), which produced aluminum truck bodies and trailers. 192 Organized labor's attempts to unionize Grumman began in early 1959, approximately twenty-one months before the aerospace company even received its first major space contract (for the OAOs). On January 15, 1959, the UAW had some of its members from a local company called Micro Metallic start distributing fliers and union 189 Irving Bluestone and Emily Rosdolsky, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ 22 December 1958, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 190 Ibid., 2-3. The company‘s all-time sales peak, up to this point, was in 1954. It went through a significant decline through 1956 during the downsizing after the Korean War. However, the company still managed to make a sizable profit each year. 191 Ibid., 1. 192 Ibid., 1-2. 150 authorization cards outside the main gate at the Bethpage plant.193 The leaflets, simply entitled ―Greetings,‖ and labeled Volume 1, Number 1, claimed that many Grummanites had asked the UAW about the possibility of conducting an organizational drive in Bethpage.194 The fliers—specifically published for Grumman employees—went on to note that the UAW had begun such a campaign. Workers could help the drive succeed, the leaflets stressed, by signing their union authorization cards and giving them to the UAW Long Island Organizing Committee located in Mineola. That action would allow the Auto Workers to go to the NLRB and force an election. 195 Many Grummanites—in spite of their reputation for harboring strong anti-union sentiments—courteously accepted the leaflets, while others tore them up and threw them into the air.196 Fortunately for the Auto 193 For information about the beginning of the organizing campaign, see and compare ―They Said It Couldn‘t Be Done,!‖ Vol. 1, No. 2, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, AFL-CIO), Bethpage, NY, February 1959; ―Greetings,‖ Vol. 1, No. 1, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the UAW Organizing Committee, Mineola, NY, January 1959; Daniel House to Charles H. Kerrigan, March 5, 1959; and ―Grumman Employes,‖ [sic], Long Island Press, circa 15 January 1959. All found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 194 The UAW published 10,000 fliers at the outset. ―Greetings,‖ Vol. 1, No. 1, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the UAW Organizing Committee, Mineola, NY, January 1959, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 195 A Long Island Press article stated that UAW officials wanted to get at least 50 % of the employees to sign cards before asking for an NLRB election, otherwise: ―If the union asked the NLRB for a vote—and lost it—it could delay Grumman unionization for many years.‖ See ―Grumman Employes,‖ [sic], Long Island Press, circa 15 January 1959, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 196 On Grummanites‘ positive reception of the UAW‘s handouts see and compare ―They Said It Couldn‘t Be Done,!‖ Vol. 1, No. 2, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, AFL-CIO), Bethpage, NY, February 1959, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. The negative reception of such information by Grummanites is recalled in a 1989 letter to the Grumman History Center from former Grummanite Elmer Evans, who noted the following about the situation: ―Employees would often take these, tear them up and throw the pieces in the air, then drive in, park and smugly proclaim that they didn‘t need a union.‖ For more on this issue, see Elmer Evans to Louis Lovisolo, 19 April 1989, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 151 Workers, some Grummanites returned their authorization cards to the UAW office. For union officials, that action suggested that some Grummanites knew the advantages of organizing.197 Initially, UAW officials must have been heartened when the authorization cards started arriving at their office. But the cards were unsigned and Grummanites had also attached extraordinary notes to them. Many Grummanites asked the same pointed question: "Why do Grumman Workers need a Union?"198 For UAW officials, who wanted to force an NLRB-supervised election, the workers‘ questions demonstrated Grummanites‘ well-known resistance to organizing; their inquiries also revealed just how far UAW officials would have to go to sway the aerospace workers. It appeared that the Auto Workers had to prepare for a long siege. The UAW attempted to address Grummanites‘ questions about the need for a union directly in a February 1959 newspaper published especially for them. Reaching back into history and tenuously tapping the ideal of patriotism, union officials simply noted that Another Grummanite, Eugene Coll, a draftsman and design specialist who worked on the LM, remembered telling union pamphleteers ―to get a real job.‖ See Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. And Bill Ptucha, a designer of automated systems for the F-14, remembered that such ―leaflets were tossed away immediately.‖ See William (Bill) Ptucha, Survey/Questionnaire, 19 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 197 See and compare ―Greetings,‖ Vol. 1, No. 1, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the UAW Organizing Committee, Mineola, NY, January 1959; ―They Said It Couldn‘t Be Done!,‖ Vol. 1, No. 2, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, AFL-CIO), Bethpage, NY, February 1959; and Daniel House to Charles H. Kerrigan, 5 March 1959. All found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 198 ―They Said It Couldn‘t Be Done!,‖ Vol. 1, No. 2, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, AFL-CIO), Bethpage, NY, February 1959, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 152 America‘s founding fathers' recognized that ―in Union there is strength.‖ 199 The UAW also interpreted the establishment of the United States as the effort to form ―a more perfect union‖ and finished with the rather vague conclusion that ―it is our belief that what is good for America is good for labor; and conversely, that labor has much to contribute to the future, continuing improvement of the general welfare of all Americans.‖200 Another UAW publication enumerated vast statistics about Grumman and the aerospace industry in general. The Auto Workers intended that the study would give Grummanites an idea where their wages and benefits stood in comparison with the industry nationwide.201 Charles Kerrigan, the UAW Director of Region 9A (Grumman‘s region) had written a special letter inserted into the report, which anticipated the workers‘ belief in the company‘s generosity. He wanted Grummanites to understand that: ―while both you and we recognize that Grumman has generally followed, (sometimes belatedly), the broad section of the Aircraft Industry, which is organized (over 93%), this detailed analysis helps to point out certain very real differences which exist between your conditions of employment and those provided for under union contract.‖ 202 Kerrigan referred to the fact that Grumman often ―followed,‖ or matched, the raises at neighboring 199 Ibid. 200 Ibid. 201 Report Prepared for the Major Collective Bargaining Negotiations in the Aircraft Industry in 1960 (Edition Prepared for Grumman Workers) by the UAW Research Department, circa 1960, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 202 Ibid. See the inserted letter by Charles Kerrigan. 153 companies like Republic by offering Grummanites the same increases.203 He went on to argue that even though government contracts basically underwrote the aircraft industry, the only way for workers to guarantee their jobs, wages, and benefits, was by voting to bring in the union.204 The report tried to defuse Grummanites‘ concerns about unions ―ruining‖ business by concluding that while Grumman had gone through some sales fluctuations, it had always remained very profitable, and its outlook seemed quite good. The UAW wanted to get workers to believe that a union could help them share in those profits.205 Overall, the UAW‘s publication and handouts for Grummanites during this time period were a mixed bag; some contained the same ―high-minded‖ language about the value of unions and the UAW in general (language which had failed during the Auto Workers‘ Republic campaign), whereas others contained a much more practical approach 203 Elmer Evans, a former Grummanite noted in a 1989 letter to the Northrop Grumman History Center that the company always watched the raises other local aerospace companies gave their workers, and when those increases were announced, Grumman would match them, but only afterward. Justin Ostro noted the same thing. In an interview in November 2006, he claimed that every time the IAM renegotiated a contract with Republic, Grumman would match Republic‘s concessions, benefits and wage increases, to keep workers happy. For more on these issues, see and compare Elmer Evans to Louis Lovisolo, 19 April 1989, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Section A-19, NGHC; and ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin Ostro,‖ 28 November 2006, in the author‘s possession. Furthermore, several of the Grummanites who participated in the survey/questionnaire for this study also stressed the fact that Grumman matched other companies‘ raises. See Daniel J. Carroll, Survey/Questionnaire, 17 November 1999; Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; James Panos, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 April 2000; Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; and William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), all in the author‘s possession. 204 See the inserted letter by Charles Kerrigan in Report Prepared for the Major Collective Bargaining Negotiations in the Aircraft Industry in 1960 (Edition Prepared for Grumman Workers) by the UAW Research Department, circa 1960, 3, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 205 UAW Research Department, ―Report Prepared for the Major Collective Bargaining Negotiations in the Aircraft Industry in 1960 (Edition Prepared for Grumman Workers),‖ circa 1960, 2, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 154 that focused on bread-and-butter issues, matters that the workers could identify with on an individual basis. In other words, the fliers and publications demonstrate that the UAW was still searching for the best tactical appeal to reach Grummanites; some emphasized ―this will put money in your pockets‖ arguments, while others stressed ―this is the UAW, it‘s great and you should join us and we‘ll take care of you‖ stories. One key 1960 flier from the UAW Organizing Committee tried to straddle both sides of these issues, even though it fell short on specifics. It addressed the issues of ―Merit Review‖ vs. ―Automatic Progression.‖206 The flier claimed: ―It is common knowledge that the overwhelming majority of UAW members have guaranteed rates of pay…because they have automatic progression.‖207 The UAW deemed Grumman‘s system of ―Merit Review‖ a ruse because it allowed the bosses to determine, arbitrarily, if a worker deserved a pay raise. But with the UAW‘s automatic progression system, the Auto Workers argued, a worker received guaranteed pay raises at predetermined times and levels. The flier concluded that it usually took only ninety days to six months for UAW union workers to advance to the top rate of pay in their jobs. 208 Overall, the Auto Workers‘ language had begun to lean toward the utilitarian rather than the theoretical, a shift away from the arguments they had used during the Republic campaign. Such language suggests that the UAW had learned its lesson and had begun to try to appeal to Grummanites with practical arguments instead of higher-minded communitarian positions. 206 UAW Organizing Committee, Hicksville, New York ―Merit Review at Grumman…‖ circa 1960, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 207 Ibid. 208 Ibid. 155 Then again, a June 1961 letter from UAW Headquarters in Detroit revealed the Auto Workers‘ limited thinking about what Grummanites really needed during this period. The correspondence, directed to the UAW‘s head organizer in the Bethpage area, noted that headquarters had sent six topical pieces for the ―Volunteer Organizers‘ Handbook,‖ which included: (1) ―Who is the UAW?‖; (2) ―Who Runs the UAW?‖; (2A) ―Facts about the International Union‖; (3) ―What about Dues?‖; (4) ―How Contracts are Negotiated‖; (5) ―The Right to Strike‖; and (6) ―When Can We Strike?‖209 Other topics included: (A) ―Principles contained in Pension Plans‖; (B) ―UAW Insurance Provisions‖; (C) ―Your Right, under Law, to Organize‖; and (D) ―Supplemental Employment Benefit Plans and What They Mean.‖210 These general pieces apparently comprised the heart of the UAW‘s field manual in Bethpage. While UAW managers in Detroit offered to develop specific topics for Grummanites, they needed to know which types of arguments had succeeded in the field before they could proceed; they needed feedback on the situation. However, the UAW archives remain silent about the issue of whether they ever received any information from the field. Consequently, as the Auto Workers moved toward a full-fledged campaign in Bethpage, it appears that they had only very general information about the best ways to appeal to Grummanites.211 209 Joseph Tuma to Forest Innis, 12 June 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, 210 Ibid. 211 Ibid. ALUA. 156 One other UAW flier from this period reveals the Auto Workers‘ attempts to stress the importance of the need for a union to Grummanites through a logical, and yet subtle, argument.212 The leaflet suggested that if the workers organized, they could share in the company‘s wealth. One section stressed that ―Nobody‘s Mad at Anybody!‖, alluding to the idea that Grummanites wondered why the UAW thought they had grown upset with management and stood ready to join a union.213 Management, the flier argued, was not evil per se, but had simply gotten too caught up in the daily challenges of running the business to have time to deal with the workers; obviously, a union like the UAW could force management to take time to listen to employees‘ concerns.214 The flier stressed the UAW‘s democratic nature by noting its members decided who ran the union and who became Shop Stewards.215 It mentioned that employees should not consider themselves disloyal if they joined a union; most professionals had their own types of unions, after all, such as the American Medical Association and the American Bar Association. The leaflet also noted that government studies had revealed that not belonging to a union cost the average worker $32 a month, and that money went directly into the bosses‘ pockets.216 212 Although this two page flier does not give a specific publication date, it is a circa 1960-1963 document based on some of the photos and issues contained in certain sections. See UAW Organizing Headquarters Flier, by the UAW Organizing Headquarters of Hicksville, NY, circa 1960-1963, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 213 UAW Organizing Headquarters Flier, by the UAW Organizing Headquarters of Hicksville, NY, circa 1960-1963, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 214 Ibid. 215 Ibid. 216 Ibid. The Auto Workers floated this idea to answer workers who questioned whether they would save any money by joining the UAW after paying union dues. 157 Finally, just for good measure, the UAW‘s flier also mentioned that Presidents Kennedy and Eisenhower had both supported unions.217 One key theme that emerged in the UAW‘s Grumman publications revolved around the company‘s culture of paternalism; that culture became the main obstacle standing in their way of organizing the firm. As one of the UAW‘s early newspapers had noted, many churches throughout American history, and even the nation‘s Founding Fathers, had pointed out the dangers of paternalism. With that in mind, the UAW asked Grummanites to consider: "Just Ask Yourself what will happen when Jake Retires?"218 Jake Swirbul, Grumman‘s President, had been one of the company‘s founding fathers and the key developer of Grumman‘s paternalism (as described fully in Chapter One). That culture—which had fostered the strong belief among employees that the firm treated them fairly and equally—was the main reason the company‘s rank and file had resisted the idea of unionizing throughout the years. At approximately the same time that the UAW began its organizing drive at Grumman, Swirbul and his fellow managers began educating themselves about the UAW‘s success at unionizing aircraft companies in the East. Although Swirbul felt confident that they could hold off a union, he still showed concern and caution. An unnamed Grumman manager researched the Auto Workers‘ unionization of the Glenn L. Martin Company. Citing American Aviation Daily, one of the industry‘s leading publications, the author 217 218 Ibid. ―They Said It Couldn‘t Be Done!,‖ Vol. 1, No. 2, UAW, AFL-CIO Flier, Published for the Employees of Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp., by the International Union United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW, AFL-CIO), Bethpage, NY, February 1959, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 158 noted that the contract between the UAW and Martin Corporation had given the ―union a big wedge in future contract negotiations with other aircraft companies.‖ 219 Some of the more troubling aspects about this situation, for Grumman‘s leadership, included the fact that the contract forced the scheduling of several significant automatic pay raises, as well as an increase in the labor grades of several jobs previously ineligible for such increases. 220 Upper management also researched the history of some of the UAW‘s other unionization drives at other aircraft companies to prepare for what it perceived as an upcoming battle.221 Throughout the spring of 1960, Grumman managers and the UAW waited, prepared, and watched each other for any major movements. Even as the Auto Workers continued to hand out union authorization signature cards, the company suffered a huge loss: on June 28, Jake Swirbul died of a heart attack.222 Grumman‘s ―genius at labor relations‖ was suddenly gone. Although Swirbul had lived to see the dawn of the Space Age, he would not be there to help Grummanites realize their contributions to the history 219 ―Excerpt From American Aviation Daily: New Martin-UAW-CIO Pact Sets Up Union Shop,‖ 2 January 1952, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 220 Ibid. 221 For example, see ―Excerpt From American Aviation Daily: Panel Findings Unacceptable to Douglas UAW Workers,‖ 2 January 1952; and ―Excerpt From American Aviation Daily of January 4, 1952: New Fairchild-UAW Pact to Provide Modified Union Shop,‖ both in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 222 Richard Thruelsen, The Grumman Story (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1976), 290; and Austin H. Perlow, ―Two Big Unions Aim to Organize Grumman Plant,‖ Long Island Press, 18 September 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. Some reported that Swirbul had developed colon cancer earlier that year. Nevertheless, his sudden death was unexpected. For more on this point see Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Memorial Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. 159 of space exploration. On the day of Swirbul‘s funeral, Grumman closed all of its plants so that any employee who wanted to attend the service could do so. Thousands paid their last respects at the Brookville Reformed Church in Glen Head, only a few miles from Grumman‘s main plant.223 While Grummanites grieved, the UAW saw a chance to step up the pressure on the Bethpage company. For union officials, Swirbul‘s death created a hoped-for cultural break at Grumman; they saw it as an opportunity to drive a wedge between labor and management. UAW President Walter Reuther and the union‘s national leadership sent Forest Innis, an organizer in his 50s, to Bethpage to begin a full unionization campaign. 224 The soft-spoken Innis, one of the UAW‘s top field men, had helped unionize General Motors and International Harvester, among several other companies in the U.S., Mexico, and Canada. He had also assisted in UAW negotiations with Ford, Chrysler, Curtis Wright, North American Aviation, Douglas, Goodyear, Bendix, and the Glenn L. Martin 223 Drew Fetherston, ―Pioneers on the Runway: Raising Grumman,‖ a reprint from Newsday, Grumman Memorial Park, accessed 4 July 2006, http://grummanpark.org/runway1.htm. Labor relations at Boeing had been amicable until 1947, when a new group of managers took over after company president Phil Johnson, a founding member of the firm, died. The new managers wanted to break the union. A major cultural shift occurred, similar to the one that occurred at Grumman following the death of Swirbul. A key member of the founding generation of the company had passed. As IAM historian Robert Rodden noted about Johnson: ―For years Johnson personally negotiated with the union. When the company was small he dealt with employees in the ship in an easy man-to-man way. But with his passing a new generation took over, with lawyers replacing engineers and bureaucrats displacing builders.‖ See Rodden, The Fighting Machinists, 153. 224 Although several newspaper articles from January of 1962 claim that Innis was 57 at the time, an examination of his UAW Oral History Interview reveals his date of birth as June 6, 1905, which would make him 55 at the time he started working the Grumman campaign. For more on this issue, see and compare, ―UAW Comes Out in the Open in Organization of Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 7 January 1962; Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Take Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962; and Oral History Interview of Forest L. Innis, Interviewed by Jack W. Skeels, University of Michigan, Wayne State University, Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, 30 March 1963, 1. 160 Company.225 Within weeks, Innis had a UAW office set up above a beauty shop in the heart of Hicksville, NY, just minutes from Grumman‘s main plant.226 Innis had originally joined the UAW when he worked for the Bendix Corporation in South Bend, Indiana. As a Chief Steward for UAW Local 9, he took part in the famous sitdown strikes at Bendix in 1936.227 Shortly thereafter, he began organizing for the Auto Workers throughout Indiana and Southern Michigan, and eventually became the Assistant Regional Director of Region 2A in the Midwest. 228 Innis then joined the UAW‘s National Aircraft Department, where he took charge of contract negotiations.229 By the time he had arrived in Bethpage, Innis had accumulated more than twenty-five years of organizing experience.230 The UAW felt that it had the right man in the right spot at the right time. 225 The background story of Innis and his organization drive can be found in Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962; and Biographical Sketch: Forest L. Innis, 22 December 1964, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 178, Folder 34, ALUA. 226 A 1962 UAW pamphlet listed the UAW‘s Hicksville Office‘s location at 174 Broadway, Hicksville, New York. See UAW Grumman Organizing Committee, ―Your Right to Organize,‖ circa 1962, in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. Innis had faced a great deal of adversity in his life. Born and raised in Indiana, he had only attended school through the eighth grade. Around 1920, he began working for Studebaker, after already having worked as a welder for a railroad company. When the Great Depression hit, Innis found employment with several public works projects, but those jobs did not last long. The economic upheaval tore him and his family apart. He had to take his daughter and go live with his parents, while his wife went back to stay with her family. In the process, they lost their house and all of their furniture. For more details, see and compare Biographical Sketch: Forest L. Innis, 22 December 1964, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 178, Folder 34, ALUA; and Oral History Interview of Forest L. Innis, Interviewed by Jack W. Skeels, University of Michigan, Wayne State University, Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, 30 March 1963, 1. 227 Biographical Sketch: Forest L. Innis, 22 December 1964, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 178, Folder 34, ALUA. 228 Ibid. 229 Ibid. 230 Ibid. 161 From his new base of operations above the beauty shop, Innis, or ―Spike‖ as his UAW friends called him, began a full press on Long Island‘s aerospace giant in June 1960.231 UAW organizers started driving a truck displaying union posters around Grumman‘s main Bethpage plant on a daily basis. Innis and his colleagues also began meeting whatever discontented Grummanites they could find in small prearranged groups outside the plant. They mainly met in people‘s homes, and all the meetings remained closed so as not to arouse the attention of anti-union Grummanites; company moles became a real concern.232 Despite Innis‘s best intentions, the UAW campaign experienced a series of major setbacks in the middle of the summer of 1960. After only a few short weeks on the job, Innis was hospitalized with a gall bladder attack and went through a long recovery process. The Auto Workers‘ union drive stalled. The campaign did not return to full strength until the end of September, after Innis had fully recovered and returned to work.233 For a few more months, the drive seemed on track, but then sometime in the 231 As one example of Innis‘s nickname, see Forrest Innis to Irving (Stone), 5 February 1961, UAW President‘s Office Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 221, Folder 13, ALUA. 232 The background story of Innis and his organization drive can be found in Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962. For a letter referring to the fear that some Grummanites had about company moles reporting their actions during this period, see Open Letter from F. L. Innis, UAW, 12 July 1962, in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 233 Innis returned to work on September 17th. For the full information on Innis‘s sick leave period, see and compare, Forest Lowell Innis, ―Notice and Proof of Claim for Disability Benefits,‖15 September 1960; Charles H. Kerrigan to Walter P. Reuther, 19 September 1960; and Charles H. Kerrigan to Walter P. Reuther, 22 August 1960. All found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 178, Folder 34, ALUA. 162 winter of 1961, Innis suffered a heart attack, setting the Auto Workers even further behind.234 While Innis recovered, the IAM, the UAW‘s main rival, decided it wanted to test the waters at Grumman. Matthew DeMore, the Machinists‘s newly elected Vice President of the New York region, declared that the IAM would start soliciting Grumman fully in the fall of 1961.235 As DeMore told a local newspaper reporter, with just a bit of unintended hyperbole, ―Our people on Long Island…don‘t feel it will be an easy matter. But I can tell you this and you can publish it as a fact—eventually we will take Grumman.‖236 DeMore‘s confidence stemmed from the IAM‘s successful campaign at Republic, and with this in mind, he declared: ―We‘ve been on Long Island so long and have so many members…we have a feeling we belong to Long Island and Long Island 234 One can deduce the circumstance surrounding Innis‘s heart attack by reviewing a letter from Irving Stone. See Forrest Innis to Irving (Stone), 5 February 1961, UAW President‘s Office Collection— Walter P. Reuther, Box 221, Folder 13, ALUA. 235 Austin H. Perlow, ―Two Big Unions Aim to Organize Grumman Plant,‖ Long Island Press, 18 September 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. Although the UAW and IAM still had a ―no-raid‖ agreement in effect at this time, and they had been cooperating with each other generally in setting up certain overarching goals for workers in the aerospace industries, those measures did not prevent them from vying for the right to organize Grumman. Beginning in 1959, the UAW and IAM began meeting annually to draw up general guidelines and goals that should be followed by both unions when bargaining on the behalf of aerospace workers. Issues included wage stability, job security, comprehensive insurance parity, as well as apprenticeship training programs, among other subjects. For more on the two unions meeting on these issues, see and compare, ―Proceedings of the First Joint Aircraft, Missile and Related Electronics Conference, International Association of Machinists and International Union, United Automobile, Aircraft, Agricultural Implement Workers of America,‖ Kansas City, Missouri, August 6-7, 1959, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 27, Folder 11, ALUA; ―Unity for Family Security, Job Security, Union Security for all Aircraft and Missile Workers,‖ by the IAM and UAW, 1958, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 13, Folder10, ALUA; and ―Two Unions Ask Pay Stability for Aircraft, Missile Workers,‖ Silvergate Union News, Vol 8, No. 4, by the IAM, 16 February 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 236 DeMore is quoted in Austin H. Perlow, ―Two Big Unions Aim to Organize Grumman Plant,‖ Long Island Press, 18 September 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 163 belongs to us.‖237 Charles H. Kerrigan, the UAW‘s Regional Director of the New York area, strongly disagreed, insisting, ―If anyone organizes Grumman it will be the UAW.‖238 For his part, Forrest Innis welcomed the competition, because ―it gets people talking union.‖239 As the article noted, the only thing union leaders agreed on was that Swirbul‘s death would turn a page in management and labor relations. 240 In reality, the IAM‘s entry into the field became nothing more than a side investigation to assess its chances of capturing Grumman if the UAW failed. Grumman managers realized that Innis and the UAW presented the real threat to the company at the time.241 Grumman‘s management came up with several ideas about how to keep the Auto Workers from achieving their goal including restricting them from handing out fliers and leaflets on company property. The restriction made campaigning difficult enough for the Auto Workers that Innis wrote Grumman‘s front office asking for permission to hand out pamphlets in the parking lot. The distribution of such materials had become the only solid 237 Ibid. 238 Austin H. Perlow, ―Two Big Unions Aim to Organize Grumman Plant,‖ Long Island Press, 18 September1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 239 Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962. 240 Austin H. Perlow, ―Two Big Unions Aim to Organize Grumman Plant,‖ Long Island Press, 18 September1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 241 On the IAM‘s brief interlude into the situation, see Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962; and ―NLRB Sets Vote at Grumman; May Be Start of Union Drive,‖ unidentified newspaper, January 1962, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 164 way to reach the production and maintenance workers, so Innis asked for a quick response, but it appears that he did not get one. 242 Nevertheless, by the fall of 1961 Innis and his colleagues had started to gain significant ground, despite his repeated absences and the pamphleteering restrictions. It was Grumman‘s maintenance workers that gave the UAW their first glimmer of hope. While most Grummanites still remained vehemently opposed to unions, the maintenance workers (or operating engineers, as they were called) had become dissatisfied enough with their jobs to begin to consider organizing.243 Some were disgruntled about the limited pay they received for working Sundays. In a letter to Grumman President Clinton Towl, John R. Tucker, a maintenance worker at Bethpage and a resident of Babylon, Long Island, described the situation as he heard it from the operating engineers, since he ―work[ed] close to the men.‖ The operating engineers ran the powerhouse, the boiler room, and the 242 F. L. Innis to J. B. Rettaleata [sic Rettaliata], 16 May 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. The UAW had its lawyers working on the problem. One group of strategies they came up with emerged from their interpretation of the Supreme Court case Babcox v. Wilcox, which ―indicated that it would be an unfair labor practice for an employer to prevent non-employee union organizers from distributing literature on its parking lots, if it is the only means of reaching the employees of the plant.‖ The strategy, as the lawyers noted, would be to force the NLRB to intervene with an unfair labor practice issue and force them to issue an order. To do that, the UAW would have to show that: the parking lots were the only accessible way to reach the employees; there were no sidewalks adjacent to the company parking lots where the literature could be distributed; the union did not have the addresses and phone numbers of the employees; the union did not have any members inside the plant; and the employees were spread out over a far enough area so that the union could not contact them via mail, phone, or by personal contact. Some of the lawyers believed they could create an NLRB test case by either asking for the company‘s permission to distribute fliers and being turned down, or actually just distributing the fliers in the parking lot and getting turned away. Of course, the lawyers noted, it would be best if the UAW could just get employees to hand out fliers on their own free time, as the rules affecting employees, were entirely different than those affect non-employees. For more on these issues, see ―Opinion—In Re: Babcox v. Wilcox‖ by Benjamin Rubenstein, circa 1961, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 243 ―NLRB Sets Vote at Grumman; May Be Start of Union Drive,‖ unidentified newspaper, January 1962, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 165 refrigeration/air-conditioning departments at Grumman‘s Bethpage and Peconic plants. Tucker explained that they worked six straight days a week, either Monday through Saturday or Tuesday through Sunday, on a rotating basis. If an employee worked a Sunday, he would normally receive time-and-a-half pay. If a maintenance worker missed a day of work during one of the five days preceding his Sunday rotation, however, he only received a regular day‘s pay. Surprisingly, this issue became the main reason some maintenance workers began to consider forming a union, according to Tucker.244 Slowly, throughout the fall of 1961, more of the approximately 170 operating engineers began signing a petition authorizing the UAW to collectively bargain on their behalf. As Innis and Grumman‘s management both realized, if at least 30% of them added their signatures to the cause, that action would force a NLRB-supervised election—the first in the company‘s history.245 Faced with the threat of having to endure the company‘s first union election, Grumman managers produced a very pointed letter to give to the operating engineers and all of the company‘s employees and stockholders. The document, dated October 5, 1961, addressed Innis‘s pro-union arguments directly, while also stressing the paternalistic 244 John R. Tucker, Jr, to E. Clinton Towl, 1 November 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 245 The actual number of employees who worked these maintenance jobs varies among newspaper reports. Based on a survey of all of these materials, the actual number seemed to rest somewhere around 160 to 170, although some newspapers reported the number as low as 150. On this subject, see and compare, Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962; ―NLRB Sets Vote at Grumman; May Be Start of Union Drive,‖ unidentified newspaper, January 1962, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC; and ―UAW Comes Out in the Open in Organization of Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 7 January 1962. For information on the type of workers who signed the petition, see ―NLRB Sets Vote at Grumman; May Be Start of Union Drive,‖ unidentified newspaper, January 1962, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 166 nature of the company. The letter began: ―In order to help you to an informed opinion as to the way you should vote, I am giving you in this letter some information of which you probably have only an imperfect knowledge.‖ It enumerated several key points from the company‘s view. One section noted all the ―fringe benefits‖ employees received, which included contributions to a pension plan, a Christmas Bonus, a Christmas Turkey, paid vacations, paid holidays, a contribution toward an employees‘ group health insurance plan, as well as funding employee medical appointments at some specialty hospitals such as the Mayo Clinic. In all, these benefits represented the equivalent of about eighty-three cents per hour, per employee, and acted as a supplement to every worker‘s paycheck.246 The letter also played upon workers‘ identification of the interests of the company. If wages increased to the point that unions wanted, management argued, costs would rise significantly, which in turn would make Grumman less attractive when competing for government contracts, and if Grumman got fewer contracts, that would mean fewer jobs and more layoffs. In closing, the document argued that Grumman management and labor had always gotten along; unions only tried to cause antagonism between the two parties. Nevertheless, Grumman managers wanted its employees to know, the company would not retaliate against any employees that voted for a union. 247 The letter had the desired effect, eliciting some strong responses from Grummanites, overwhelmingly in the anti-union column. A few days after the missive first circulated, Grumman President Clinton Towl, the letter‘s signatory, began receiving 246 Letter (Draft), and notes ―The Points to Stress in Spreading the Company Position,‖ unidentified author, 5 October 1961, in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 247 Ibid. 167 several extraordinary letters from former and current employees declaring their allegiance to the company, their strong anti-union sentiment, and much more. Several also took the opportunity to let Towl know that the company needed to improve significantly in certain areas, however. Despite Grumman‘s supposedly well-known ―Open Door‖ policy (under which any Grummanite could bring a problem to anyone in the company, either personal or professional), these letters reveal that some workers obviously did not feel that their grievances had been heard. They stand out as excellent examples of the mindset of Grummanites at the time. Eugene Notturno, an employee from West Babylon, Long Island, denounced the idea of a union, but he also complained vehemently that employees had no real opportunity to redress their grievances. ―From your letter I get the impression that you beleive [sic] all is peaches and cream between supervision and labor in our organization?‖ he wrote. ―Well I think different.‖ He argued that the creation of a company grievance committee would actually help in keeping unions away from the Bethpage plant. Notturno asserted: I heartily agree that a union can not [sic] improve our lot, as it is, we have most of the advantages of a union, and none of it‘s [sic] disadvantages, no doubt that they could give us a few fringe benefits, but certainly not enough to make up for the losses. NO, WE DEFINITELY DO NOT WANT A UNION...BUT ........ In the last paragraph, you [sic] mention of the ―successful practice of solving internal problems.‖ successful [sic] for whom? Supervision does the talking and the workers do the listening, [the] worker has no redress, no one to tell his side of the story to. I don‘t NEED or WANT representation, but it would be comforting to know that 168 there is a GRIEVANCE committee to turn to if I had a legitimate gripe.248 Notturno indicated his dissatisfaction with the merit pay system, a key union argument about the arbitrariness of Grumman‘s paternalism. ―Foremen are of very little help, they are the ones that made a mockery of the word ‗MERIT,‘‖ he insisted. ―A man can be a very good worker, which can mean nothing if your foreman does not like you, all he need say of you is ‗WORK UNSATISFACTORY,‘ and that‘s it, that brings him the results he wants, his word is always taken above the worker‘s.‖ He reiterated his opposition to unionization, and closed by noting ―I realize I‘m sticking my neck out with this letter, [but] loyalty prompted me.‖249 An October 27 letter from William F. Partridge, a Grumman middle manager from Seaford, Long Island, and a twenty-one year company veteran, agreed almost completely with Notturno‘s missive. Partridge‘s forceful prose detailed how some workers felt unappreciated by upper-level managers, suggesting that management‘s inattention might actually open the door for unions to come through. ―It is fine for top executives to sit in the lofty branches of the Grumman tree, supported by the sturdy branches of managers, supervisors, foreman, etc. and speak of present business, prospective new business, broad employment benefits, etc.,‖ Partridge wrote. ―But there seems to be little evidence that Grumman top management is cognizant of, or understand [sic] the many small problems of 248 Eugene Notturno to E. Clinton Towl, 29 October 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 249 Ibid. 169 the individual workers that are gnawing at the roots of that tree.‖ Partridge let Towl know that his letter to the workers had ―Missed-the-boat as far as carrying a personal message to each and every employee in Grumman.‖ He intended his correspondence to be a wake-up call to forestall unions. He also argued for the creation of a ―Shop Steward‖ so that workers could really air out their problems, and Grumman could stop unions. ―This, I believe is the basic problem that Grumman Management has to face, and solve, if they intend to ward off the Union infiltration,‖ he concluded. 250 Even when it appeared workers had every right to be furious with Grumman, they were not, as witnessed by John H. Byrne‘s October 30 letter. Byrne, a former employee, suggested that while Grumman might have had some serious problems with worker seniority at the time (as Forrest Innis had claimed), even workers who had lost their seniority still retained a particularly strong sense of loyalty to the company. Byrne‘s letter, which reveals the paternalistic hold the company had on many workers, described his own particular circumstances. On October 16, 1959, I was laid off with one hours [sic] notice, for reasons, beyond me, is a mystery [sic]. I was assigned to Dept 40 (Plant 2) for ten and one-half years under Foreman John Kost. To my best knowledge my work was always above pass, very little or no absenteeism, or lateness. At that time I was 67 years old with but a short time to go before retirement. Being laid off at such a time, caused the loss of a bonus at Xmas [sic] and the thought of trying to secure employment at that age (67). Age to me means nothing as I honestly and true fully [sic] believe that I 250 William F. Partridge to Clinton E. [sic] Towl, 27 October 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 170 can uphold my end with men, many, many years my junior.251 Amazingly, Byrne acknowledged that he knew that a union would have protected his seniority, yet he pronounced himself still opposed to unionization. His letter‘s main aim was to improve Grumman, ―a fine place to work.‖252 ―I mention this to you[,] Mr Towl[,] to show that job security doe[s] not hold in Grumman‘s present plan,‖ he wrote. 253 John R. Tucker, a maintenance worker in Bethpage Plant 2 and a resident of Babylon, Long Island, believed that the UAW had prodded Grummanites to view their work situations more harshly, in order to gain support for unionization. Tucker had originally started working for Grumman in the 1940s, but left to try his hand at farming. When he discovered that tilling the soil did not agree with him, however, Grumman took him back, for which he was very grateful. Like many Grummanites, he took full advantage of the company‘s liberal health care policy. Grumman paid for him to visit the Strang Clinic for a medical checkup. As he suggested in a November 1 letter to President Towl, the company‘s health care was yet another reason Grummanites wanted to keep unions away. After relating his experience at the Strang Clinic (notably, he had been there on the day that Jake Swirbul died), Tucker asked rhetorically, ―Can you imagine a union 251 John H Byrne to E. Clinton Towl, 30 October 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 252 Ibid. 253 Ibid. 171 company sending its employees to New York or Rochester, Minn.?‖254 Tucker‘s letter, like all of the correspondence sent to Towl on this subject, reveals a strong sense of loyalty to the company. As a stockholder—be it so small—and a loyal Grummanite. I whole heartedly agree with you anent [sic][about] unions. In all big organizations such as ours we are bound to have a few dissatisfied. Unfortunately men are sometimes unable to think for themselves and rely on outside forces to do so for them. My status in Gurmman [sic] is low, but my moral[e] is the highest. . . . I do not believe, and hope, the union will be unable to get enough sign ups to warrant a vote. 255 His letter concluded, ―If there is ever any way I can be of service to you or to the company, please call on me. I am in the maintenance.‖256 Finally, a November 9 letter from former Grummanite Joseph W. Van Dusen, a retiree living in Florida, simply summarized what many workers feared would happen if the company unionized—the loss of ―friendship‖ between management and its employees. Van Dusen believed that the men are really being Stupid to want a union as they don‘t know what they can lose by it—the many things that GAEC [Grumman Aircraft Engineering Company] does for them without any cost to themselves…. I for one[,] if I was still working for GAEC[,] would be against it very much as it could spoil the friendship between company and help. 257 254 John R. Tucker, Jr, to E. Clinton Towl, 1 November 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 255 Ibid. 256 Ibid. 257 Jos W Van Dusen to E. C. Towl, 9 November 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 172 Van Dusen had attached a $50 check to his letter as a donation to the newly formed Jake Swirbul Memorial Fund, as well as a copy of an article by Senator Barry Goldwater, entitled ―Unions Destroy Work Incentive,‖ from the Orlando Sentinel dated November 4, 1961. Goldwater‘s article essentially echoed the anti-union argument, suggesting that unions drive up labor costs in the U.S. and make it much easier for foreign countries to compete against America.258 As these letters from Grummanites reveal, many employees held strong anti-union beliefs. Although some workers felt that the company had significant progress to make regarding employee grievances and seniority, they still remained loyal to Grumman. Regardless of such strong company loyalty, by December 1961, UAW organizer Forrest Innis had succeeded in persuading at least 30% of the Grumman maintenance workers to sign his petition and force an NLRB-supervised election. As Christmas neared, NLRB official Louis Schneider examined the petition and scheduled the election for January 18, 1962. Innis and Grumman managers would have one month to make their final cases for or against the union. Officially, the ballot would ask Grumman‘s maintenance workers if they wanted to join Local 30 of the International Union of Operating Engineers. 258 The article Van Dusen attached from Goldwater also argued that one of the main reasons unions cost the country so much was because they created territorial working situations on jobs that could have easily been handled by just one group of workers. Citing an example to support his theory, Goldwater explains that he watched three different sets of workers in a California port, from seemingly three different unions, unload a ship on which he was traveling. He went on to describe how two sets of workers just sat around doing nothing while waiting for the third group to finish their part of the job. For instance, one group would operate the fork lift to carry the merchandise from the warehouse to the dock, while another would place chains under the freight pallets so they could be lifted, while still another group, from a different union, would be in charge of hoisting the freight onto the ship. Goldwater argued that this type of compartmentalized and segmented work system was the main reason unions cost the country too much. 173 The announcement that a union vote would take place in January provoked one last spate of employee letters in support of the company. One of the communications, a letter from Werner Lederman, an employee from Great Neck, Long Island, revealed how some workers tried to find creative ways to keep the union away. Lederman noted: From conversations with fellow employes [sic] in our department I gather that by far the largest (if not all) percentage of men are not in favor of unionizing and I feel strongly, [sic] that this sentiment is company-wide. Why should a few maintenance engineers be able to cast a vote that could eventually lead to organizing the whole company? Is it not possible to have an election, or some other means of popular expression, on a much broader scale, so as to give a larger and more diversified part of employes [sic] a chance to voice their opinion? I am sure that would keep things on a status quo basis.259 Lederman placed himself solidly in the anti-union camp, insisting that ―it just seems unfair to me to see this company, with it‘s [sic] highly regarded name, to stand by waiting, possibly, for a few to bring about major changes unwanted by most.‖260 Another Grumman employee, Sonny Pangallo, penned an open letter to rebut Forrest Innis and the UAW just prior to the January election; notably, someone must have reproduced it to hand out to other Grummanites, particularly given its typewritten format. Pangallo‘s letter dramatically details how passionate many Grummanites became when considering the possibility of a unionized company. Pangallo‘s two-page tract enumerated the various benefits that the company‘s employees enjoyed. It argued: 259 Werner Lederman to E. Clinton Towl, 20 December 1961, ―Union Correspondence from Employees to E.C.T. (not acknowledged),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 260 Ibid. 174 We, who are employees of Grumman are now faced with a proposed plan to unionize. Why? Is it because Grumman is a sweat shop? Is it because Grumman employees do not make a living wage? Is it because we, as workers are slaves? NO! None of these things exist or have ever existed in the history of Grumman Aircraft. . . . Do we not have as many benefits as fine as any Union could ever provide? In fact, do we not have more benefits than any union could ever provide? . . . Show me one unionized company that provides all year-round employment. Don‘t most companies with unions hire and fire in accordance with work-loads or seasonal requirements? Grumman managements‘ [sic] one aim in business is to provide stable employment so that their personnel can be content being able to meet their daily financial responsibilities in living a normal life…. We regard, furthermore, the proposal of unionization as an intrusion of the mutual respect and trust that has existed between employee and employer since the very beginning of Grumman. . . . Mr. Innis, . . . you admit yourself that if Grumman needed a Union, it would have been unionized long ago. You infer, furthermore, that since Mr. Towl succeeded Mr. Jake Swirbul, our need for union ―protection‖ has increased. . . . Certainly Mr. Swirbul was a great man whose loss was practically irreplaceable and whose shoes were near impossible to fill. But no man has ever filled a pair of shoes so magnificently as our Mr. Towl. He has continued in the same understanding and intelligent tradition. He has always kept the welfare, security and satisfaction of the workers in mind and, we the workers, feel priviledged [sic] and proud to refer to him as our employer. . . . Let those who are suffering and under-paid and illfed unionize—that is their right, but leave us who did not want the union in peace. Don‘t tell us we‘re suffering and underpaid and ill-fed, for all we have to do is look in the mirror.261 As Pangallo‘s letter suggests, Grumman managers should have had little to fear as the 261 NGHC. Typewritten Letter, Sonny Pangallo, January 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, 175 January election approached; it appeared that the bulk of company employees remained extremely loyal to the corporation. Grumman‘s strong sense of paternalism had created a powerful bond between employees and management. Still, management remained concerned as the company‘s first union vote drew near. In an effort to make one last appeal to the maintenance workers to reject a union, Towl addressed the upcoming election in his annual year-end address to the employees on December 29. He opened his speech by recounting some of the company‘s new employee benefits, including catastrophic health insurance, but then turned his attention to the approaching union vote: As most of you probably know, there will be an election on January 18th to decide whether or not 169 people—in part of one of our departments—will be represented by a union. I hope that everyone in the group will vote and will vote with great sincerity based on considerable thought on the subject. A vote should be made with considered judgment—the judgment of the voter—not of a super-imposed persuasion sponsored by a group promoting their own interests rather than that of the fellow voting. After all, 169 people is a small group. Only slightly more than 1% of all Grummanites [sic]. It would be a damned shame if such a small percentage provided a foot in the door that would be completely unwelcome—I am sure—to a great majority of us. Let me repeat that our employment stability has been the highest in our industry so far. I do not think it possible for any foreign go-between to improve this stability. Our relations between people working together has resulted in substantial benefits to all of us. Again, projecting an outside influence into these relations cannot improve them.262 262 NGHC. ―Speech: E. Clinton Towl,‖ 29 December 1961, ―Speeches—E.C. Towl,‖ 10-11, Sect A-8, 176 Towl reminded the workers that, from his perspective, employment stability and cooperative worker-management relations had resulted in ―Job Security…a unique Grumman condition that no foreign go-between can improve.‖263 A few weeks after Towl‘s address, and only days before the election, Forrest Innis and a Grumman spokesperson verbally battled in Long Island‘s leading newspaper Newsday. The Grumman official characterized the company‘ workforce: ―Grumman people like it here. They stay. Our separations for all reasons—including layoffs—is and has been…one quarter of the industry average. This sense of job security began to become apparent many years ago and is just as strong today. A union won‘t succeed at Grumman because the Grumman people don‘t want it.‖264 Innis, however, had a different take on the situation; he believed that Grummanites felt concerned about their job security and seniority rights, especially after Swirbul‘s death. Despite the odds against him, Innis seemed determined to succeed and remained optimistic. Still, he opined, ―if Grumman wasn‘t hard to organize, it would have been organized long ago.‖ 265 It snowed on January 18, 1962—Election Day. Grummanites from every level of the company stood around, even after their shifts had ended, to await the outcome of the vote; some even built a bonfire outside the polling place.266 When the NLRB 263 Ibid. 264 The quote is contained in Harvey Aronson, ―UAW Takes Tiny Steps in Big Bid at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 15 January 1962. 265 266 See ibid. Copies of photos from the Northrop Grumman History Center, in the author‘s possession, show the workers waiting around for the elections results, some even outside in the snow. 177 representative announced the final tally, maintenance workers had voted 152 to 15 against affiliating with Local 30 of the International Union of Operating Engineers.267 One week after the election, a letter signed by eighteen of the Air-Conditioning and Boiler Room Men summed up why they had voted against organizing. The letter simply addressed ―To all Grummanites,‖ argued: Point one, was a grievance committee. Due to managements [sic] open door policy such a committee is wholly unnecessary. As for job security, it is seriously doubted if an individual in any industry has greater security than here a Grumman. This is due to the on-the-job training program and an individual‘s opportunity to transfer to another department should the demand for their craft lessen or they become handicapped and unable to perform their present job. Our average wage and fringe benefits fall well above what the union offered and unlike the union there is not maximum rate. Contrary to other statements made, we are reimbursed for jury duty, vacations are based on a six day week, we are not penalized financially or otherwise for taking sick leave, have a pension plan to which the employee does not contribute, double time for holidays work. We all have various other fringe benefits such as free Chest X-ray, eye and dental examinations to mention a few. Promotions are based on a man‘s ability to perform his job, not seniority alone. This encourages a man to perform his best, maintain his individuality and not be a number on a seniority list. We could go on but we feel it is sufficient to point out that at one time or another the majority of us were members of various unions, came into Grumman with our eyes wide open and are still here with no intention of leaving. In short, Local 30 or any other union can only afford us the opportunity to forfeit these benefits and take on 267 For the final tally of the vote, see Virginia Rozycki, ―Via the Grapevine,‖ Suffolk County News, 1 February 1962; and ―Letter from Air-Conditioning and Boiler Men to All Grummanites,‖ 24 January 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 178 greater financial burdens such as: dues, assessments and loss of bonuses. It is not a matter of what the unions can do for us, but what we can do for them. Namely, make them more powerful by increasing their membership and treasuries and giving them the opportunity to say they ‗took Grumman.‘268 Two weeks after the election, former Grummanite-turned-newspaper columnist Virginia Rozycki succinctly summarized what the outcome meant for the UAW and other unions, and why the operating engineers had so summarily dismissed unionization. As Rozycki noted: ―the vote was a blow, not only to the defeated local, but to other unions hoping to organize production workers in the 14,400-man company. . . . Take it from an ex-Rosie-the-Riveter at Grumman, union dues aren‘t tempting when a worker already benefits from a fair management for free.‖269 On the other side of the issue, Forrest Innis claimed that he was not discouraged by the vote. He planned to continue his push to ―organiz[e] Grumman employees…because they asked the UAW for help in setting up a local union to establish collective bargaining. We‘ve never turned a deaf ear to the problems of workers and we certainly would not at Grumman simply because the job seemed big or difficult.‖ 270 Within weeks after the vote, it became clear that Innis and the UAW had no plans to surrender. Innis continued to tell reporters that he believed that Grummanites had no job security, no 268 ―Letter from Air-Conditioning and Boiler Men to All Grummanites,‖ 24 January 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 269 270 Virginia Rozycki, ―Via the Grapevine,‖ Suffolk County News, 1 February 1962. Austin H. Perlow, ―Business and Labor: Federation to Map Organizing Drive,‖ Long Island Press, 29 January 1962. 179 real wage security or equality, and no seniority rights. 271 He also asked UAW headquarters for supplies, and they sent them in the form of multiple copies of the organization‘s main newspaper, Solidarity, as well as in-plant organizers‘ manuals.272 Charles Kerrigan, the UAW Region 9A Director, even wanted to record special audiotapes with a message from UAW President Walter Reuther specifically pitched at addressing Grummanites‘ issues.273 And based on the lease that Forrest Innis signed to maintain the UAW Hicksville office until at least June 30, 1964, it looked as if the UAW planned to keep campaigning at Bethpage.274 But Innis and the UAW picked a difficult year to try to reinvigorate the campaign, especially given the great discontent between aerospace workers and management across the nation in 1962. Several companies faced strikes, or at the least the threat of a strike. Much to the organized labor‘s disappointment, however, President John F. Kennedy 271 For Innis‘s quote, see Austin H. Perlow, ―Business and Labor: Federation to Map Organizing Drive,‖ Long Island Press, 29 January 1962. Innis and the UAW continued to press the issues of wage security and equality, seniority, and job security, into the summer. For more on these subjects, see and compare ―Your Right to Organize,‖ pamphlet by the UAW Grumman Organizing Committee, circa 1962, in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC; ―This is the UAW,‖ pamphlet by the UAW Grumman Organizing Committee, Sect. A-19, NGHC; and Open Letter from F. L. Innis, 12 July 1962, in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. During this same period, Metalworking News, a union publication, would claim, whether it was correct or not, that the UAW had successfully signed up close to 1000 Grummanites—including employees from a variety of jobs under the supervisory level—spilt between the company‘s two plants at Bethpage and Calverton, New York. See ―UAW Recruits 1,000 at Grumman,‖ Metalworking News, 22 January 1962. 272 Charles H. Kerrigan to Tom Clampitt, 26 March 1962; and Joseph Tuma to Spike Innis, 6 March 1962. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 273 Leonard Woodcock to Guy Nunn, 2 March 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 274 Benjamin Rubenstein to Forests L. Innis, 1 May 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 175, Folder 10, ALUA. 180 intervened in many of these situations, averting strikes or forcing employees back to work through Executive Orders and injunctions.275 Employees at North American Aviation, Ryan Aeronautical, General Dynamics, Aerojet, Lockheed, Boeing, and even Republic, all faced strike threats by workers.276 Kennedy‘s new and specially appointed Presidential Aerospace Board became his main instrument for investigating the industry.277 The Board would help ―settle‖ disputes in the aerospace sector.278 The UAW later noted, about 1962, ―in less than a year, one of the nation‘s largest, fastest growing, and most critical industries experienced serious strikes, open hostility short of class warfare, involvement of outside extremist groups, and unprecedented government intervention where the office of the President of the United States was involved in seven of the ten major contracts that 275 For more on these issues see and compare, IAM and UAW, ―Report on the Aerospace Dispute 1962,‖ 1962, UAW President‘s Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 9, ALUA; and ―Draft— Aerospace Collective Bargaining,‖ by the UAW, circa April-May 1963, UAW President‘s Collection— Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 10, ALUA. 276 ―Draft—Aerospace Collective Bargaining,‖ by the UAW, circa April-May 1963, 5, UAW President‘s Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 10, ALUA.; and ―IAM-UAW Set Sights for Collective Bargaining-‗62,‖ News Views, published by the Republic Lodge No. 1987 and IAM, Farmingdale, Long Island, NY, Vol. 11, no. 1, 12 March 1962, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 277 IAM and UAW, ―Report on the Aerospace Dispute 1962,‖1962, UAW President‘s Office Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 9, ALUA. The new board had direct similarities with the President‘s Missile Sites Labor Commission that Kennedy had established with Executive Order 10964 a year earlier. It would focus on labor discontent at missile bases and Cape Canaveral. For more on the President‘s Missile Sites Labor Commission, and Executive Order 10964, see and compare ―NASA Labor Problems,‖ Report, by NASA, 13 July 1961 and 12 February 1962; and Julius E. Kuczma to Frederick Beebe, 5 June 1963, Suitland Documents. Both found in NASA-69-A-2522, Box 3 ―Congressional—1964.‖ 278 IAM and UAW, ―Report on the Aerospace Dispute 1962,‖ 1962, UAW President‘s Office Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 9, ALUA. 181 were renewed in the industry.‖279 In the battle against unionization, the Grumman Corporation had a strong ally in the Kennedy administration. Once again, Grummanites were affected by the labor situation at Republic. If Innis wanted to sway more workers to his side, the situation in Farmingdale made it difficult. Problems started to arise at Republic at the end of January when union officials first learned that workers would face serious cutbacks and layoffs due to the cancelation of the F-105 D Thunderchief contract.280 Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara‘s decision to create the TFX multi-service jet fighter (produced by General Dynamics) made the Thunderchief redundant. McNamara saw no need for the different military services to have separate planes, and the TFX program would create a joint-task fighter that every branch of the military could use.281 With Republic only producing one plane at the time, the F105, and with the TFX set to go into operation in 1965, layoffs seemed imminent.282 The Republic workforce would be decimated; projections placed 13,000 (out of 15,000) Republic employees out of work by the end of the new contract date, a mass layoff that would result in a loss of 60,000 jobs on Long Island. In an attempt to save their jobs, 279 UAW, ―Draft—Aerospace Collective Bargaining,‖ circa April-May 1963, 5-6, UAW President‘s Office Collection—Walter P. Reuther, Box 34, Folder 9, ALUA. 280 Ever since World War II, when it became one of Long Island‘s top employers, Republic had relied on only producing one type of aircraft. Grumman, on the other hand, had nine planes in production at this time. For a full history of the F-105 Thunderchief, see Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 122-143. 281 For a comprehensive history of the TFX decision, see Robert J. Art, The TFX Decision: McNamara and the Military (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1968). Also see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 64. 282 Technically, Republic would have two more years before its Thunderchief contract concluded, but with no new planes on the horizon, management had to start laying-off employees due to the limited amount of work. 182 Republic workers and Long Islanders started a letter-writing campaign to President Kennedy. By February 22, the White House reported receiving over 50,000 letters on the subject, which many believed had been the largest single letter-writing campaign devoted to a local issue up to that point. Nevertheless, a few hours prior to a White House‘s announcement in support of McNamara, ninety-four Republic workers had already received layoff notices from the company. Local, state, and national politicians with links to New York grew very concerned about the situation; some even expressed outrage and vowed to fight for their constituents. At that time, aerospace employees represented about one-quarter of Long Island‘s workforce.283 Still, President Kennedy promised to stand by McNamara and support whatever decisions he made about defense purchases.284 By early spring 1962, Republic workers decided to take action. Republic and the IAM had been trying to reach an agreement since the beginning of March. 285 One of the workers‘ main issues centered on unemployment benefits, particularly given the 283 This statistic is from the Franklin National Bank of Long Island‘s publication The Franklin Letter. The publication went on to argue that things could be a lot worse for Long Island. At one time during World War II, the aircraft industry employed almost half of the area‘s workforce. See ―Republic Layoffs Pose No Serious Threat to Long Island‘s Well-Diversified Economy,‖ The Franklin Letter (Special Issue), published by The Franklin National Bank of Long Island, Franklin Square, NY, Vol. 3, no 2., 26 February 1962, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 284 All of this information comes from a series of articles in News Views, published by the Republic Lodge No. 1987 and IAM, Farmingdale, Long Island, NY, Vol. 11, no. 1, 12 March 1962, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. For the entire story, see and compare the following articles in News Views: ―Defense Dept. Cuts Back Production of F-105-D, 7; ―Cutback Climaxes Feud,‖ by Bob Greene, (reprinted from Newsday 8 February 1962), 2; and ―Officials Voice Concern, Demand Action on Layoffs,‖ page 7. As mentioned earlier, Republic‘s President Mundy Peale was furious about the cancelation of the F-105 program and demanded a conference with Secretary McNamara. For more details on this issue, see footnote #121 in this chapter; and ―Notes from Phone Interview with Justin Ostro,‖ 28 November 2006, in the author‘s possession. 285 Roy R. Silver, ―Walkout Called at Republic on L.I.,‖ New York Times, 2 April 1962, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 183 cancellation of the F-105 contract. At the end of March, NASA had given a new $5 million contract to the Farmingdale manufacturer for two experimental spacecraft, but the new projects only rescued engineering jobs, not those of rank-and-file employees.286 On April 1 Republic workers went out on strike. 287 Approximately 5,500 of them crammed into the local Levittown Arena to approve the walkout by a 16-1 margin.288 Unlike the 1956 walkout, the 1962 strike remained peaceful and orderly, with no more than ten picketers at any one of the company‘s three gates.289 Despite a lack of violence, the strike still caused a great deal of resentment; the two sides became locked in a bitter and contentious fight. Union officials accused the company of stalling and not offering any real concessions, while management blamed IAM 286 Ibid. 287 Several unions were involved with, or supported, the walkout, either as strikers, or sympathetic union workers who showed solidarity. Besides Republic IAM Lodge 1987, some of the other unions mentioned as being involved with, or supporting the strike, included: Local 775 of the United Association of Journeymen and Apprentices of Plumping and Pipe Fitting Industry of the United States and Canada (AFL-CIO); Local 25 of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (AFL-CIO) Local 1318 of the United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America (AFL-CIO); the International Union of Operating Engineers, Local Unions 30 and 30-A (AFL-CIO); Local 164 of the Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders International Union (AFL-CIO); several employees of the John G. Sharp Cafeteria and Concessionaire at Republic. For more on this issue, see Executive Order 11029, President John F. Kennedy, 13 June 1962, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/jfkeo/eo/11029.htm. 288 Workers voted 4,792 to 617 to reject the company‘s pre-strike offer. They voted 5,273 to 340 to strike. For more on these issues, see and compare ―Report on Strike at Republic,‖ probably by Justin Ostro, circa 4 April 1962; and ―Walkout Called at Republic on L.I.,‖ Roy R. Silver, New York Times, 2 April 1962, UAW Papers, 15-23, My Republic Files. Both found in UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA 289 Justin Ostro (probable author), ―Report on Strike at Republic,‖ circa 4 April 1962, UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 15, Folder 23, ALUA. 184 leaders for keeping the workers from accepting a ―perfectly fine‖ contract.290 Talks dragged on for weeks until the beginning of June, when President Kennedy again involved himself in the situation. On Thursday, June 7 he issued Executive Order # 11025, which created a ―Board of Inquiry to Report on Labor Disputes Affecting the Tactical Fighter Production Industry.‖291 The next day Republic‘s management took advantage of the President‘s intervention and sent a letter to its workers chiding them for striking for more than ten weeks. The missive also noted that Kennedy‘s new board would issue a report the following week, and it would only take a few days until the President would seek an end to the strike via an injunction under the Taft-Hartley Act. The letter closed by asking the strikers to return to work before an inevitable injunction went into effect; after all, even the President wanted them to get back to work.292 On Wednesday, June 13, President Kennedy issued a second Executive Order, #11029, which ended the Republic strike for the good of the nation‘s defense.293 Employees had to report back to work within days. 294 290 These types of bilious rhetorical battles are discussed in John J. Ryan to RAC Employees, 13 April 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 291 The important information about Executive Order # 11025 is contained in Executive Order 11029, which also deals with Republic (it actually amends Executive Order 11025). See Executive Order 11029, President John F. Kennedy, 13 June 1962, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/jfkeo/eo/11029.htm. 292 The letter actually gave a projected timeline of upcoming events. On Monday, June 11, the Board of Inquiry would begin its work. It would report back to JFK on Thursday the 14th, and on Friday the 15th, Kennedy would go to the Attorney General and seek and injunction. See John J. Ryan to RAC Employees, 8 June 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 293 Executive Order 11029, President John F. Kennedy, 13 June 1962, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/jfkeo/eo/11029.htm. 294 Mundy I. Peale, to All Bargaining Unit Employees, 15 June 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 185 As with the 1956 Republic strike, the 1962 walkout had a profound effect on Grummanites, from rank-and-file employees all the way up to management. For many shop floor workers, the strike reinforced the idea that unions accomplish little besides causing turmoil for all involved. Managers, while undoubtedly agreeing with that assessment, had also gained a few more insights into unions during the walkout. Throughout the strike, as a courtesy, one of Republic‘s Vice Presidents had forwarded to Grumman‘s front office copies of all of the letters it had sent to its employees. This allowed Grumman‘s top managers to keep track of what went on at the neighboring company; they filed the letters away for future reference.295 Grumman managers also kept themselves apprised of some of the discussions taking place in the U.S. House and Senate during July 1962, as Congress considered putting together a bill to prohibit strikes at strategic defense facilities. Grumman managers had copied several pages of congressional testimony and placed them in their files, along with related information about the issue from the Aerospace Industries Association.296 Overall, the 1962 Republic strike reminded Grummanites, on all levels, about the issues and problems involved when a company became unionized. Despite the profound impact that Republic‘s circumstances had on Grumman‘s decision-making, after the 1962 strike, Republic‘s effects on Long Island waned 295 Robert B. Kinkead, Assistant to the Vice President of Republic, sent copies of the letters to Grumman. For evidence of this argument, see and compare all of the letters from Republic from April to June 1962 in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 296 Letter, and attachments (Congressional Testimony copies—i.e. copies from the Congressional Record), Aerospace Industries Association to Industrial Relations Advisory Committee—ER and WR, 24 July 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 186 considerably as its status as a major contractor and innovator in the aerospace industry declined. With the cancelation of the F-105 contract, Republic did not have any other aircraft in production or on the drawing board; by 1965 the Fairchild Corporation had acquired the Farmingdale firm and remade it as the Republic Aviation Division of Fairchild Hiller.297 A new president took over the company and Republic‘s Paul Moore Center, a leader in aerospace research, closed. Many of the former engineers who had worked at the center found employment at Grumman.298 After the merger, the Republic Aviation Division of Fairchild Hiller would have little impact on Grumman, particularly in the realm of labor relations, due mainly to its limited size and number of employees.299 Ignoring the unsuccessful 1962 Republic strike, back in Bethpage, Innis and his UAW colleagues continued to press throughout the period, even given the difficult atmosphere for organized labor. In December 1963, for example, the UAW‘s Grumman campaign seemed revitalized; Innis ordered another 10,000 UAW authorization cards and published a four-page leaflet for Grumman workers.300 The flier, complete with UAW 297 Historian Judy Rumerman notes that Fairchild acquired Republic in July 1965 and then renamed it in September. See Judy Rumerman, ―Republic Aviation,‖ Centennial of Flight, accessed 2 July 2006, http://www.centennialofflight.gov/essay/Aerospace/Republic/Aero43.htm. 298 Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 64; and Stoff, The Thunder Factory, 166. 299 In 1969, Fairchild/Republic would become one of three finalists vying to build the Air Force‘s F-15, but at the last minute the contract went to McDonnell-Douglas, probably because Grumman had just won the F-14 contract from the Navy a few weeks earlier and politicians and the Pentagon wanted to spread the money around to different sections of the country. For more on this subject, see Stoff, The Aerospace Heritage of Long Island, 65. Fairchild would eventually close its Republic Long Island plant in 1987. At that point, the plant only had approximately 3,500 employees. 300 On the number of UAW authorization cards ordered, see Letter and attachments, Francis X. O‘ Malaria to Jean (last name not given), 19 December 1963. The four page leaflet is UAW, Grumman Organizing Committee, Hicksville, NY, ―Let‘s Talk Union,‖ December 1963. Both found in UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 187 convention pictures, stressed the need for shorter work hours, more vacation time, adequate medical care, and better paying pensions.301 It argued that workers ought to share in the nation‘s extraordinary postwar prosperity: At one time, ‗leisure‘ was the exclusive possession of a very small and aristocratic class. Leisure was the hallmark of the rich and wellborn. Today, however, leisure is the possession of all the working people. Not just the plant owner but the plant worker as well, has time for education, sports, culture, reading, travel and family life. This one gain by the UAW—the increase in the leisure time of a plant worker—has been a tremendous contribution to the American People—a contribution without parallel in human history.302 The UAW asserted that the aerospace industry had gotten rich at the expense of its workers and asked them to ―REMEMBER: The Aerospace industry with its high profits guaranteed by the government can well afford to meet the just economic needs of employees in Aerospace Industry.‖303 The flier concluded ―It‘s Time to Act Now!!‖304 That very prosperity may have worked against the union, however; in spite of Innis‘s strong appeals, the flier probably had little impact on Grummanites, as evidenced by the subsequent lack of movement in the UAW‘s Grumman campaign. At mid-decade, Grummanites seemed totally uninterested in a union. Nevertheless, a group of employees at one of Grumman‘s small subsidiaries in upstate New York felt differently. 301 UAW, Grumman Organizing Committee, Hicksville, NY, ―Let‘s Talk Union,‖ December 1963, UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 302 Ibid. 303 Ibid. 304 Ibid. 188 The UAW‘s Victory at Olson Bodies, A Grumman Subsidiary Aerobilt Bodies, a small division of Grumman, was located in Athens, NY about thirty miles south of Albany on Route 9-W.305 Grumman began making aluminum truck bodies at the Athens plant in 1949.306 Six years later, the company expanded operations with an additional plant in West Athens, about three miles from the first factory. 307 By 1963, Grumman had decided to consolidate all of its non-aerospace related subsidiaries— which included not only Aerobilt, but also an aluminum boat and canoe plant in Marathon, NY, a fiberglass boat factory in Bristol, RI (The Pearson Company), and two more truck body plants in Sturgis, MI and Sherman, TX—under one umbrella company called Grumman Allied Industries based in Garden City, Long Island.308 JBE Olson Corporation, a smaller corporate body of Grumman Allied, distributed the company‘s truck bodies, which sold under the trade names of ―Kurb Side,‖ ―Kurb Van,‖ ―Kargo King,‖ and 305 ―Organizational—Report,‖ attached to Letter, Francis S. O‘Mealia, UAW to Charles Kerrigan, 15 June 1963, UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 306 ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, 4, AFL-CIO, UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 307 308 Ibid. Technically, the merger took place on December 31, 1962. ―New Grumman Corporation,‖ Sunday Review, 24 February 1963, UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. Also see, for a full discussion of the merger with Aerobilt Bodies, ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 5, UAW Region 9A collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA.. 189 ―Olsonette.‖309 Many of the same people acted as corporate officers for both Olson and Grumman Allied.310 Although sales at Grumman Allied would decline slowly throughout the 1960s, the division still managed to make a profit. At the beginning of 1967, the division‘s net worth amounted to approximately $3.9 million. 311 The Aerobilt plants, or ―Olson Body Division,‖ as many contemporaries called them, represented a very small part of the Grumman Corporation. In June 1963, only about 270 employees worked in Athens, compared to the more than 18,200 in Bethpage and its sister plants downstate.312 Aerobilt stood totally removed from the heart and soul of Grumman on Long Island; nevertheless, one cannot ignore the history of labor‘s attempts to organize Olson. Although Grummanites in Bethpage appeared virulently antiunion, their counterparts in Athens seemed fairly amenable to the idea of unionization. Consequently, when the UAW called in the late spring of 1963, it became obvious that the 309 See ibid. 310 On May 15, 1967, Wallace B. Spielman, the President of J.B.E. Olson, also became President of Grumman Allied. Less than two months later, on July 1, 1967, based on Spielman‘s recommendation, all of the truck body manufacturing of Grumman Allied became a subsidiary of Olson Bodies, Inc. According to the UAW Research Department, Olson simply became ―a trade name used for sales purposes by the truck body operations of Grumman Allied Industries.‖ For more details on these issues, see and compare Larry L. Heyen to Tony Merino, p. 1, 25 April 1968, UAW Research Department, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. And see and compare with ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 5, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 311 Larry L. Heyen to Tony Merino, p. 2, 25 April 1968, UAW Research Department, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 312 According to UAW researchers, the Aerobilt plants employed approximately 270 workers in June 1963. See Report, ―Organizational—Report,‖ attached to Francis S. O‘Mealia to Charles Kerrigan, June 15, 1963, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. For the population who worked on Long Island, see ―Employee—Population: As of the 1st of Month,‖ circa 1973, Grumman Files, ―Personnel,‖ Sect A-8, 1st Drawer of C-7, NGHC. 190 Auto Workers would try an end run around management by trying to organize a smaller part of Grumman and thereby perhaps build momentum for a larger campaign in Bethpage. After all, if the UAW succeeded in unionizing Olson, it could technically claim it had organized Grumman. But even though Olson represented a very small part of Grumman, and generally comprised an entirely different organization than its parent firm on Long Island, Olson management would still try to resist the Auto Workers‘ attempts at unionization with all its might by appealing the case to the nation‘s highest courts, a pattern that the main Bethpage company had followed when dealing with issues of race relations and accusations of discrimination (see Chapter Three). Unions first began trying to organize Olson in the early 1950s. From 1951 to 1962, several groups—including the Auto Workers, the Sheet Metal Workers, the Iron Workers, the Steel Workers, the Electrical Workers (IUE), and the Boilermakers—all tried to collect enough signatures to secure an NLRB-sanctioned election, but each organization failed, until the Electrical Workers finally forced a vote on August 24, 1962.313 Although 313 For the complicated history on this subject, see and compare ―Organizational—Report,‖ attached to Francis S. O‘Mealia to Charles Kerrigan, 15 June 1963; and ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 5. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. Many of the unions appealed to the NLRB to hold an election, but failed to secure one. In 1951, the Auto Workers petition with NLRB Case 2-RC-3613. The Boilermakers tried next in 1957 with NLRB Case 2-RC-8693 and 1958 with NLRB Case 2-RC-9437. In 1960, the Sheet Metal Workers tried twice with NLRB Case 3-RC-2486 and Case 3-RC-2872. See ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 5, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 191 balloting ran close, the Electrical Workers lost 110 to 123 votes.314 Immediately following the posting of polling results, the IUE filed a complaint with the NLRB claiming that ―the employer prevented a free choice of bargaining representatives by it‘s [sic] interference.‖ Although the NLRB‘s regional office in Buffalo found the protest had no merit, the IUE appealed the case to the Board‘s national office, which ordered a new election. 315 During the follow-up election in April 1963, the vote went overwhelmingly against the union by a count of 158 to 53. Again however, the IUE objected and filed a complaint with the NLRB, claiming that the company ―interfered with ‗employee‘s [sic] self-organizational rights‘‖ by granting several concessions just prior to the new election, including paid hospitalization insurance and wage increases. The protest essentially went nowhere. Although IUE representatives felt discouraged, they said they still planned on continuing their organizational efforts at Olson. 316 Ultimately, however, the Electrical Workers failed to make much headway at the Athens plants, and it eventually abandoned its drive. It would take several more years before another NLRB-supervised election would occur in Athens. During the mid-1960s, the UAW led the way among unions vying to take Olson. The Auto Workers believed that Olson employees would respond favorably to the UAW as the main labor organization that dealt with the automotive and truck industry—and they 314 Report, ―Organizational—Report,‖ attached to Letter, Francis S. O‘Mealia to Charles Kerrigan, 5 June 1963, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 315 Ibid. 316 Ibid. 192 were correct.317 In early September 1966, George Hildenbrand, Sr., an Olson employee and member of the Auto Workers‘ In-Plant Organizing Committee, proudly donned his UAW button and began passing out union authorization cards at both Athens plants. 318 By September 26, the UAW had received signatures from well over the usual 50% of workers necessary to call for an NLRB-sanctioned election. Of the 225 maintenance and production workers at Olson, 121 had given the UAW the right to bargain on their behalf. The next day the Auto Workers filed the cards with the NLRB and requested an election.319 While George Hildenbrand and his colleagues busied themselves collecting the authorization cards, Olson‘s managers began questioning the workers about why they wanted a union. When David Simmons, one of the plant‘s managers, discovered that the employees‘ main concerns centered on low wages and a lack of fringe benefits, the company‘s Senior Vice President quickly instituted several raises. Hildenbrand got a seventeen cent per hour increase, while about half of the other employees received raises from five to twenty cents per hour.320 Over the next several months, well into December 317 Francis X. O‘Mealia, a UAW Field Representative, expressed this opinion as early as June 1963. See ibid. 318 Hildenbrand began handing out cards on September 8. ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 6 and 8, and 25-26, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 319 320 See ibid. The raises went into effect, without the employees knowing it at first, on September 19. Mr. Loar, the company‘s Sr. Vice President at the time, instituted the increases. See ibid., 8-9, and 16. 193 1966, Simmons called each of the employees who had gotten increases into his office, one at a time, even after the raises had already shown up in their paychecks, to discuss their increases and ask them if they felt satisfied with the additional money. He also asked if they believed that the company had treated them fairly, and, whether they had signed a union authorization card. If they had endorsed one, he wanted to know why. He also asked if they wanted to get their card back. Simmons would conclude the conversation by letting the worker know that he had ways of finding out who had signed cards, and, he added, those people had made a mistake because the company planned to fight every attempt at organization. Finally, Simmons would state that Olson would never negotiate a contract with any union.321 Other Olson managers besides Simmons tried to intimidate the workers; some of the plant‘s foremen also browbeat the employees. One of them told the workers they were ―crazy‖ if they thought the UAW could win an election, and he threatened that even if the UAW succeeded, the company would shut its doors rather than operate with a union shop. He also mentioned to other employees that they might not have a job if the firm unionized.322 Similarly, another foreman claimed that if the workers voted for a union, then ―the Company would put locks on the doors.‖323 While the NLRB busied itself verifying the UAW signature cards, Olson‘s top managers devised a different strategy to undermine any election that took place. They argued that if the NLRB scheduled an 321 See ibid., 11 and 16. 322 Ibid., 14-16. 323 Ibid., 15-16. 194 election, then it should include all of Olson‘s truck body-building interests, not just the Athens plants. They demanded that the maintenance and production employees at the plants in Sturgis, MI and Sherman, TX—notoriously anti-union plants—participate in any vote.324 To evaluate the case, the NRLB held hearings on four separate occasions during October and November 1966.325 After evaluating the issue for several months, the NLRB ruled on January 27, 1967 (which incidentally was the same day as the Apollo 1 fire), that the election would include only the Athens workers. The election would take place a few weeks later, on February 17.326 Two hundred and twenty employees cast ballots on the 17th, and remarkably, despite management pressure, the vote split evenly among the workers. One hundred and ten employees voted for the UAW, while an equal number sided with the company.327 The Auto Workers quickly challenged one of Olson‘s ballots, however, because it claimed that William Davenport, one of the employees who had cast a vote, worked for Olson as a 324 According to a May 1963 letter from Kenneth W. Robinson, the UAW‘s Regional Director for Region 1-D, the Auto Workers had petitioned the NLRB in the past for a sanctioned election at the Sturgis, Michigan, Plant G. See Kenneth W. Robinson to Woodrow L. Ginsburg, 14 May 1963, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 325 The hearings took place on October 28, and November 4, 16, and 17. ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 6, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 326 See ibid.; and Francis X. O‘Mealia to Joseph Mooney, 24 January 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 327 Of 225 eligible voters, 220 cast ballots―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 5. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 195 secretary, not a production employee, although he had worked on the shop floor formerly. The NLRB found the UAW‘s argument persuasive and deemed Davenport ineligible to participate in the election.328 With Davenport‘s ballot invalidated, the Auto Workers won the election by one vote—110 to 109.329 On February 24, Olson contested the election and filed a formal protest with the NLRB.330 The protest contained a number of complaints. The first objection centered on the decision to throw away Davenport‘s ballot, a decision which the NRLB quickly upheld. Another point of contention stemmed from the fact that the company had requested that shut-in employees be allowed to cast absentee ballots in their homes prior to the election under the watchful eye of representatives from all three parties, the NLRB, 328 While Olson claimed Davenport eligible to vote, the UAW tried to overturn the claim. Olson said he had been a plant clerical employee and therefore eligible to vote, whereas the UAW claimed he was ―a liason [sic] man between the engineering and drafting departments and is not part of the production and maintenance unit, and is not eligible to vote.‖ The UAW cited the fact that the election was only for production and maintenance workers, not clerical or professional people, and that both parties had agreed to the exclude engineers and draftsmen. NLRB Case, Supplemental Decision and Certification of Representation, Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., [Employer] and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) [Petitioner], before the National Labor Relations Board, Third Region, Case No. 3-RC-4023, 14 April 1967, Signed by Merle D. Vincent, Jr. Regional Director of the Third Region of the NLRB, Buffalo, NY, 1-8, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 329 Ibid.; and ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 6, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 330 ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 6, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. Olson‘s protest—NLRB Case Number RC-3-4023—went to the NLRB‘s regional office in Buffalo for review. The case number is contained in Letter, Francis X. O‘Mealia to Joseph Mooney, 17 April 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 196 Olson, and the UAW. But the NLRB had denied the request and continued to uphold that decision.331 Olson also claimed that some pro-union workers had coerced or bribed at least three employees into supporting the UAW, but once again, the NLRB dismissed all three complaints.332 331 The NLRB claimed that it had always been the agency‘s policy to only count the votes of employees who actually went to the polls. See, NLRB Case, Supplemental Decision and Certification of Representation, Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., [Employer] and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) [Petitioner], before the National Labor Relations Board, Third Region, Case No. 3-RC-4023, April 14, 1967, Signed by Merle D. Vincent, Jr. Regional Director of the Third Region of the NLRB, Buffalo, NY, 8. Olson had requested home voting or mail-in voting for fifteen shut-in employees. Even though the NLRB rejected the request, eleven of the employees still made it to the actual polling place to cast their ballots. On this issue, see ―Memorandum for the U.A.W.—Intervenor,‖ on A Petition before the Supreme Court of the United States, October Term 1970, No. 238, Olson Bodies, Inc., formerly Grumman Allied Industries, Inc. (petitioner) vs. National Labor Relations Board and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) (Respondents), on a Petition for a Writ of Certitorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, 3-4. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 332 The first complainant claimed that pro-union employees had harassed and threatened him prior to the election and it had given him a nervous breakdown. One of them had told him ―he could be subpeoned [sic] and brought to the courthouse for changing his mind against the union.‖ The complainant also claimed that he noticed several pro-union workers talking about him and making threatening looks and tones. Even though the employee identified the ―threatening‖ workers by name, they all denied the incident and the situation quickly turned into a ―he said, he said‖ argument. The NLRB consequently dismissed the protest. The second aggrieved worker complained that one of the UAW‘s In-Plant Organizing Committee Members had told her that he had heard that the company foreman had said she would lose her job after the election. Although the UAW member did not mentioned the union by name, and even admitted to having had a conversation with the female employee, he said that he had only repeated what he had heard. Again, it turned into another ―he said, she said‖ situation and the NLRB dismissed the objection. The third and final complainant--who had planned to leave Olson for Michigan shortly after the election anyway--noted that one of the UAW‘s representatives, along with two of the UAW‘s In-Plant Committee Members, met with him at a diner three days before the election and offered to write him a letter of recommendation that he could take with him to find a new job. The employee stated that ―nobody asked him how he was going to vote, or asked him to vote for the union, but he ‗felt‘ the letter of recommendation was made to get him to vote for the union.‖ Interestingly, he received the letter, which had been prepared by a UAW International Representative, on the morning of the election. Despite such testimony, the NLRB dismissed the idea of a bribe because the letter did not force him to vote a certain way; the agency viewed the letter as ―merely a friendly gesture.‖ For the full story see NLRB Case, Supplemental Decision and Certification of Representation, Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., [Employer] and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) [Petitioner], before the National Labor Relations Board, Third Region, Case No. 3-RC-4023, 14 April 1967, Signed by Merle D. Vincent, Jr. Regional Director of the Third Region of the NLRB, Buffalo, NY, UAW Papers, 8-11 and 14, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 197 Olson‘s various attempts to overturn the election had failed. The NLRB officially certified the original results in April 1967.333 News of the election results spread quickly. On April 2, the Long Island Press underlined the UAW‘s surprising victory against Grumman, announcing: ―They said it couldn‘t be done. But Region 9A of the United Auto Workers, AFL-CIO, has not only organized a Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp. shop, but has actually won a representation election. It was not at Grumman‘s main plants in Bethpage, but at a Grumman subsidiary upstate—Grumman Allied Industries of Athens.‖334 The article characterized the mood of Charles Kerrigan, the UAW‘s Regional Director, as ―jubilant.‖ Regarding Grumman‘s main plants in Bethpage, the newspaper noted that Ennio ―Chip‖ Morselli, a UAW International Representative, said ―We‘ll keep on trying to crack it.‖335 The article closed by reminding its readers that Grumman had 333 The election results became official on April 14, even though the UAW and others knew well before that point that the NLRB would certify the original results. See NLRB Case, Supplemental Decision and Certification of Representation, Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., [Employer] and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) [Petitioner], before the National Labor Relations Board, Third Region, Case No. 3-RC-4023, 14 April 1967, Signed by Merle D. Vincent, Jr. Regional Director of the Third Region of the NLRB, Buffalo, NY. Also see, ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 6. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 334 ―UAW Wins in Grumman Shop,‖ Long Island Press, 2 April 1967, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 335 Ibid. Based on a March 30, 1967, internal UAW letter, the Auto Workers, buoyed by their victory at Olson, seriously considered intensifying their campaign at the Bethpage plant. See Anthony Merino [writing from Catskill, NY] to Ben Rubenstein, esq., 30 March 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31. 198 been the unsuccessful target of the UAW, the IAM, and other unions for many years; the Olson campaign represented an unusual union victory. 336 Olson refused to communicate with the UAW, or even recognize it as the official bargaining unit for Olson‘s employees.337 The company appealed the final certification of the results to the NLRB.338 On June 5, Olson‘s President Wallace B Spielman visited the company and gave a speech to the workers. He began with some very typical statements like ―business looks good,‖ but then quickly got to the main point of his address. Spielman stressed that ―we could do good running this business without any outside interference,‖ and he promised the employees if they ―would stick along with him . . . [they] would reap benefits they never even dreamed of.‖339 He closed his speech by noting that, as of that date, all hourly employees would receive a ten cent per hour increase, and that the company would pay for the employees‘ group hospitalization insurance, as well as increasing their number of paid sick days to five a year. 340 That same day, Spielman informed the UAW that the company would take all necessary steps to invalidate the final 336 ―UAW Wins in Grumman Shop,‖ Long Island Press, 2 April 1967, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Section A-19, NGHC. 337 Joseph L. Newton to Martin Gerber, 8 May 1967; and ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 3 and 7. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 338 The company appealed the final results on April 27, 1967. See ibid., 6. 339 The quotes are paraphrased statements by witnesses who are quoted in ibid., 19. 340 See ibid. 199 election results.341 On June 13, the UAW filed a reverse complaint against Olson with the NLRB for engaging in unfair labor practices.342 Throughout the summer, Olson would continue to appeal the UAW‘s right to bargain on behalf of its employees, and the UAW would counter with its own suits.343 In August, the situation got downright nasty. On the 4th, Olson fired George Hildenbrand, the lead union organizer at the company, an action that represented the culmination of a months-long disagreement over appropriate work assignments. 344 Hildenbrand, a diabetic with a bad back and poor knees, had originally worked in Olson‘s final assembly inspection area for several years, but because the job required him to stand on ladders, and he experienced frequent dizzy spells, he requested a transfer to a different department.345 The company shifted him to the ―back department,‖ which required workers to finish off the backs of the trucks by sometimes lifting close to eighty pounds. Hildenbrand, approaching retirement and in ill health, requested another transfer, but the company asked him to stay put and see if he really wanted to move again. Frustrated, 341 Ibid., 20. 342 Ibid., 7. 343 Ibid. 344 Ibid., 3 345 Notably, the company never offered Hildenbrand a job that would have allowed him to work just at ground level and stay off of ladders. Furthermore, according to the NLRB, another reason Hildenbrand received a transfer from the final assembly inspection area to the back department centered on the fact that the back department stood right next to the company washroom, and because Hildenbrand could talk with employees about the union as they entered and exited the bathroom, the company thought it best to move Hildenbrand. See ibid., 34. 200 Hildenbrand left the shop floor in a huff; the company claimed he had quit, despite management‘s request that he think about the assignment for a week. 346 Several weeks later, on September 22, 1967, the company fired another sixty-nine employees without notice and without consulting the UAW.347 The employees received curt letters stating: ―Dear Mr. __________, Due to a variety of factors relating to business and production conditions at the Athens, New York plant, we are compelled to have a permanent general reduction in our work force. We regret that your employment with the company is terminated at the end of this business day.‖348 According to at least one Olson manager, company President Spielman had informed Olson‘s managers, shortly after he took charge of the firm, that he believed that the Athens plants had too many workers on its payroll, especially compared with the Sturgis and Sherman plants. 349 Consequently, the terminations would have represented a logical outgrowth of Spielman‘s assessment. Fiftysix of the terminated workers, or 81%, were union members, however, and at 33 of the 69 had at least ten years of seniority. Of the thirty-three, 82% were union members.350 According to the NLRB, the mathematical probability that 56 of the 69 laid-off employees would be union members, based on pure chance and no other factor (like anti-unionism), 346 For the full story about Hildenbrand‘s employment and the issues surrounding his dismissal, see ibid., 24-45. 347 When the election occurred in mid-February, Olson employed approximately 225 workers at its Athens plants. By September, however, that number had fallen to about 200 employees because of general attrition. For more details on this issue, see ibid., 49. 348 See ibid., 46. 349 Ibid., 52. 350 Ibid., 3-4 and 46-47. 201 rested at about one in a billion.351 As early as 1962, Olson had threatened layoffs to dissuade workers from voting for a union; now, the company made good on that threat. 352 NLRB investigators believed that Olson had fired the employees with the hope that if the company won its appeal to hold another vote, fewer pro-union employees would be around to cast ballots.353 Within days of the September firings, the Auto Workers filed a formal complaint with the NLRB regarding Olson‘s conduct; they demanded a full investigation.354 Several weeks later, they added more charges.355 By early December 1967, an NLRB Trial Examiner found in the UAW‘s favor, ruling that Olson had in fact engaged in unfair labor practices by refusing to bargain with the union. 356 In February 1968, the NLRB‘s General Counsel charged Olson with violating the National Labor Relations Act.357 Notwithstanding the unfavorable decision for Olson, the company‘s goal of stalling the case by tying it up in the courts had worked. The investigation dragged on for several 351 Ibid., 64. 352 Ibid., 49. 353 Ibid. 354 The UAW filed the charges on September 26, 1967. See ibid., generally. 355 See ibid. 356 Ibid., 7. 357 Technically, the February 5 document found that Olson had violated the National Labor Relations Act ―by coercively interrogating employees concerning their union activities, threatening employees with plant and other reprisals, and promising and granting wage increases and other benefits, all to discourage its employees from adhering to the union; by discharging 70 employees [Hildenbrand and the other 69] and refusing to reemploy them because of their union membership and activities; and by failing and refusing to bargain with the Union, the certified collective-bargaining representative of its employees in an appropriate unit.‖ See ibid., 2. 202 more months. At the end of February, the appeal process kicked the case up to the NLRB regional office in Albany, New York.358 Over the course of the twenty-seven hearing dates, evidence emerged that Olson had fired most of the seventy employees as retaliation. Despite Olson‘s claims that the termination had occurred because of a need to cull the excessive workforce at the Athens plants, NLRB investigators learned that more than half of the employees that Olson had retained had worked approximately six to eight hours per week of overtime. If the Athens plants had too many workers, why did more than half of the employees have to work overtime on a weekly basis, and why had the company regularly hired high school and college students during their summer breaks?359 Even though the NLRB‘s investigation found in favor of the UAW once again, in December 1968—as Apollo 8 circled the Moon—Olson still refused to abide by the NLRB‘s rulings.360 As a result, the NLRB appealed the case to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit.361 Olson‘s stalling tactics continued to work to its advantage. The Second Circuit did not issue a ruling until thirteen months later in January 1970, and then it only upheld the 358 Ibid. The hearings began on February 26, 1968 and concluded on June 3. 359 Olson also hired some other ―interesting‖ employees during this time period. In February, Olson‘s guards started working on the shop floor. To handle company security, Olson hired some ―Pinkerton People.‖ Of the five former Olson guards, three received jobs in the production and maintenance department, while the other two received retirement packages. For more on these issues, see ibid., 47-48. 360 361 Ibid., 7. The NLRB petitioned the court on December 11, 1968, to hear its case. See ibid. Technically, the UAW received the right to intervene in the Olson Case from the U.S. Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, in February 1969. For more details on this issue, see Benjamin Rubenstein to Stephen Schlossberg, Esq., 19 February 1969, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 203 set of remedies and conclusions that the NLRB Division of Trial Examiners had already put forth the previous year.362 That NLRB decision had ordered Olson to rehire the seventy employees it had fired in September 1967 to positions substantially equivalent to those they had lost, and to compensate them for any back pay it owed them. The ruling also called for Olson to recognize, publicly, that it had engaged in unfair labor practices by spying on, and interrogating, employees. It also required the company to acknowledge its misdeeds publicly and outline its remedy, as well as recognize the UAW as the employees‘ union of choice and finally negotiate with it.363 Unwilling to give up until it had exhausted every avenue of appeal, Olson tried to take the case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. Fortunately for the UAW, in October 1970, the nation‘s highest court, refused to hear the case.364 362 ―Opinion,‖ United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, National Labor Relations Board and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) (Intervenor) vs. Olson Bodies, Inc, formerly Grumman Allied Industries, Inc. (Respondent) No. 51—September Term 1969, Argued 3 October 1969, Decided 6 January 1970, Docket no. 33048; and letter, Benjamin Rubenstein to Stephen Schlossberg, 8 January 1970. Both found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA, 363 For a full discussion of the findings, remedies and orders, see ―Brief and Findings,‖ United States of America, Before the National Labor Relations Board, Division of Trial Examiners, Washington, DC, TXD-326-69, Case 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America, AFL-CIO, 72-77. Olson had immediately appealed the NLRB Trial Examiners‘ June 1969 findings and asked for an oral argument on the issue, but the NLRB‘s main board in Washington, DC denied the request in April 1970 because it found ―no prejudicial error was committed‖ by the Division of Trial Examiners in June 1969. For more details on this subject, see ―National Labor relations Board Decision and Order,‖ 181 NLRB No. 166, Cases 3-CA-3326 and 3-CA-3326-2, Olson Bodies, Inc., a subsidiary of Grumman Allied Industries, Inc., and International Union, United Automobile, Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW), rubber stamp dated April 13, 1970; and also see letter, Benjamin Rubenstein to Stephen Schlossberg, 17 April 1970. All found in UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 364 ―Memorandum for the U.A.W.—Intervenor,‖ on A Petition before the Supreme Court of the United States, October Term 1970, No. 238, Olson Bodies, Inc., formerly Grumman Allied Industries, Inc. (petitioner) vs. National Labor Relations Board and International Union, United Automobile, 204 More than three-and-a-half years after Olson‘s workers had elected the UAW to represent them (albeit by only one vote), the employees and the Auto Workers had finally won their case. As one UAW attorney noted, the victory represented ―the first crack in the armor of Grumman Aircraft Corp.‖365 In spite of the fact that Olson remained only a very small part of the Grumman Corporation, and a subsidiary at that, clearly the UAW believed it had made its first inroad into Grumman. The UAW hoped that the Bethpage plants would soon fall. Nevertheless, back on Long Island, at the real heart and soul of Grumman, UAW field workers had failed to secure the company, and would continue to fall short. Grumman and Long Island After Olson At approximately the same time that the UAW had started to gain a toehold at Olson, it became apparent that the legacy of Grumman‘s anti-unionism would continue to have a widespread effect on Long Islanders and their economy, at least according to some of the employees and union officials at the local Sperry plant. In May 1966, after a series of layoffs at Sperry, Tom Cowell, the President of Local 450 of the International Union of Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers (the union at Sperry), claimed that the company had only let people go for two reasons. The first: Sperry had shifted the workload to several new plants in anti-labor, right-to-work states. The other reason stemmed from Aerospace and Agricultural Implement Workers of America (UAW) (Respondents), on a Petition for a Writ of Certiorari to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 365 The attorney initially mentioned the UAW‘s victory at Olson as the ―first crack…‖ immediately after the Second Circuit‘s ruling in 1969. See Benjamin Rubenstein to Stephen Schlossberg, 8 January 1970, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 205 alleged problems with the DoD‘s procurement policies. Cowell told Long Island Congressmen and aides to Senators Jacob Javits and Robert Kennedy that he found it ―more than a coincidence‖ that ―Grumman, the only large non-union defense plant on Long Island, is awarded contract after contract, while Sperry and the other Union shops decline steadily. In face of this practice, we can only assume that the Defense Department is pursuing an anti-union policy in awarding its contracts.‖366 Regardless of the correctness of Cowell‘s assessment, the perception that Grumman had to become a union company, or else stunt the future of Long Island workers and the region, remained foremost on labor organizers‘ minds. Buoyed by their victory at Olson, the Auto Workers wanted to take another run at Bethpage. Beginning in the spring of 1967, a few internal letters circulated among some of the UAW‘s leadership expressing confidence that they could take Grumman. 367 The company represented an even greater prize than it had during the UAW‘s first campaign. From 1962 to 1967, Grumman‘s sales had more than tripled. Its net worth in 1967 rested at about $21.5 million and it had a very high return on its investment at 19% (the average U.S. manufacturer earned only 12% during this period).368 Overall, the Bethpage company had made some significant financial gains, and the UAW wanted to sign the 366 Cowell is quoted in Local 450 of the International Union of Electrical, Radio, and Machine Workers, ―Report on Washington Meeting,‖ 9 May 1966, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 367 Anthony Merino, [writing from Catskill, NY], to Ben Rubenstein, esq., 30 March 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 368 In 1966, Grumman had a net return of approximately 30%. That year, most manufacturers had a 14% return, and 1966 was one of the most prosperous years in US history up to that point. For more details, see ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation,‖ prepared by the UAW Research Department, 25 April 1968, 1-3, UAW Research Department Collection, Box 113, Folder 21, ALUA. 206 asset-rich firm‘s workers to its ranks.369 On June 22, Allan DeLorenzo, one of the UAW‘s new field representatives on Long Island ordered more than 5,000 union authorization cards from Detroit for a new Grumman campaign drive. 370 Less than a month later, the Auto Workers began distributing literature at the Grumman plant in Calverton, Long Island.371 The publication asked: ―Is Joining a Union an Act of Disloyalty to the Company?‖ The flier stressed that professionals like doctors and lawyers had their own organizations to protect them and provide security—as should the workers at Grumman.372 Despite Bethpage‘s historical penchant for anti-unionism, Grumman did not want to be too cavalier about the threat of unionization in 1967. Some managers started to review strategies to keep organized labor from gaining ground at the firm. Managers circulated a 1967 article reprinted from Nation‘s Business entitled ―What to do When the Union Knocks,‖ which detailed some of the contemporary tactics that businesses used to hold unions at bay. The essay featured a family-run business—the corporate culture that Grumman strived to emulate—and it described the problems this unnamed company encountered when a union tried to organize it. Topics included: ―Things to do to avoid 369 Ibid. 370 Allan DeLorenz to Joe Mooney, 22 June 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 371 The UAW began distributing the flier on July 21, 1967. See no. 146, National Organizing Department of the UAW Organizing Committee, ―Is Joining a Union an Act of Disloyalty to the Company?‖, February 1964, distributed at the Calverton Plant on 21 July 1967, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 173, Folder 31, ALUA. 372 See ibid. 207 unions,‖ ―Things unions promise employees,‖ and ―Things unions hate the most.‖373 The article stressed the importance of keeping workers informed about any union activities affecting the firm, as well as reminding them of company benefits—both techniques Grumman had used. The piece also noted that most unions try to organize a company by splitting it up into smaller groups of employees (or departments) and dividing and conquering them—a strategy the UAW had attempted with Grumman‘s maintenance workers in 1962. The essay concluded that although many companies found themselves surrounded by unions, certain key tactics and strategies (which the article had discussed) could help keep organized labor out.374 By the fall of 1967, the UAW‘s latest drive seemed stalled. Long Island Press reporter Austin H. Perlow wrote that the Long Island Federation of Labor (AFL-CIO), under the leadership of President Toby Coletti, had decided to try to organize Grumman using its own strategy. Perlow reported that Coletti had hinted at the Federation‘s October convention that the federation would attempt to unionize Grumman using a new technique. In the past, only individual unions had tried to sway Grummanites, mainly because of jurisdictional battles, but Coletti planned to use the manpower and money of two or more unions (with up to about 100 organizers) to mount an extensive organizational drive, with the Long Island Federation of Labor serving as the coordinating 373 What to Do When the Union Knocks,‖ Reprinted from Nation‘s Business, 1967, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 374 Ibid. 208 organization.375 For Coletti and other local labor leaders, the fact that Grumman had remained a non-union company had become a ―source of extreme discomfort‖ and ―embarrassment.‖376 Coletti realized that the mission might take up to two years or more, but he proclaimed ―we are going to take Grumman no matter what it costs!‖ 377 At least one Grummanite, Fred Hawkins, concerned by the report about Coletti, decided to investigate the situation. In an inter-office memo, Hawkins recounted that he had met with several labor officials who had attended the convention and they seemed convinced that Perlow had blown Coletti‘s comments way out of proportion, and that he had ―invented or fabricated most of his by-lined story.‖378 According to Hawkins, the Federation had ―no present plans for an all-out organizational drive at Grumman.‖379 Coletti‘s main goal was to try to organize Nassau and Suffolk county employees. He had only mentioned Grumman because it had become routine to talk about organizing the aerospace giant whenever people considered new organizational drives on Long Island. Besides, as Coletti recognized, even in a best-case scenario, organizing Grumman 375 For the full story, see and compare Austin H. Perlow, ―Union Plans New Grumman Drive,‖ Long Island Press, 23 October 1967; ―Unions May Try Drive at Grumman,‖ Suffolk Sun, 24 October 1967; and ―See Grumman Organizing Drive,‖ Long Island Daily Review, 25 October 1967. All found in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 376 For the ―source of extreme discomfort‖ quote see Austin H. Perlow, ―Union Plans New Grumman Drive,‖ Long Island Press, 23 October 1967. The ―embarrassment‖ quote is contained in ―Unions May Try Drive at Grumman,‖ Suffolk Sun, 24 October 1967. Both found in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC 377 Austin H. Perlow, ―Union Plans New Grumman Drive,‖ Long Island Press, 23 October 1967, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 378 Inter-Office Memorandum from Fred Hawkins to J.B. Rettaliata, ―Perlow L.I. Press Story, ‗Union Plans Grumman Drive,‖ 31 October 1967, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 379 Ibid. 209 ―require[d] a long-range outlook.‖380 Hawkins closed his memo by suggesting that if there was any coherent strategy for attacking Grumman, it would be to have the Federation ―put pressure on our Long Island Congressman [sic] to prevent them from supporting and bringing business into a non-union plant.‖381 Despite the apparent hyperbole of Perlow‘s story, which other local newspapers had picked up, some Grummanites and local residents did not waste any time writing editorials which demonstrated their continued dislike of unions. Williston Park, a Grummanite, sent the following comments to the Long Island Press shortly after Perlow‘s story appeared: What an honor to be a Grumman employee, and to have this union so willing to spend so much to ‗take us.‘ Is the union willing to ‗take‘ our money in union dues? How nice! Will they ‗take‘ our time in union meetings and fine us if we can‘t attend? With so much more money in their hands will they be able to ‗take‘ bigger and better ‗Vacation-Conventions‘ at our expense? Will they ‗take their salaries every week while the workers are out of work at the inevitable strike time‘? After all, aren‘t strikes how leaders assert themselves? ‗Take‘ is exactly what the union is so willing to do for us. Ask some of the Republic or Sperry ex-patriots at Grumman.382 Obviously suspicious of union motives, Park insisted the UAW had nothing to offer Grumman workers. ―In return for their ‗take‘ will they offer raises? Advancement? Bonus 380 Ibid. 381 Ibid. 382 ―Williston Park, Taking Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 8 November 1967, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 210 checks? Paid medical coverage? Investment plans? Job security?‖ he asked. ―These and many other benefits we already have at Grumman. Perhaps we take too much for granted.‖383 Apparently, Bethpage‘s continued anti-unionism must have affected the UAW‘s campaign. By the end of 1967, it seems that the Auto Workers gave up trying to organize Grumman; historical sources grow silent on the matter after that time period. Perhaps the UAW had to expend all of its regional resources and energies fighting Olson. Whatever the case, after trying to unionize Grumman for more than seven years, the UAW abandoned the goal of trying to capture Long Island‘s aerospace giant. Another five years would pass before another union, the UAW‘s rival, the IAM, would attempt a campaign at Bethpage. Beginning in 1972, IAM members from New York City‘s District 15 started pamphleteering at the company. Organizers from the Office and Professional Employees International (OPEIU), Local 153, a white-collar union for office workers, joined them. 384 As in past years, the IAM stressed salary increases, job security, and pensions. 385 The Machinists exhorted Grumman‘s workers to ―Never Let it Rest! Until Your ‗Good‘ is 383 Ibid. 384 For more information on this subject, see and compare IAM and Aerospace Workers, AFLCIO, ―To All Grumman Employees,‖ Circa 1972-1973; District # 15 of the I.A.M. & A. W., AFL-CIO, ―‘Join Us at the Fair,‘‖ Circa 1972 (based on dates in the document); ―Second Union Woos Labor At Grumman,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa May 1973 (based on date clues in the document) (Although this article identifies the OPEIU as Local # 153 at one point and then calls it # 163 at another, some of Grumman‘s internal documents identify the union as Local # 153.) All found in ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 385 See ibid. 211 ‗Better‘ and Your Better ‗Best‘,‖ in regard to their wages.386 They also stressed that Grumman could fire a worker at any time if they did not belong to a union.387 The IAM wanted employees to know: ―We are with you, and we are going to stay with you until you have a real union.‖388 And stay they did. In the spring of 1973, twenty Machinists, led by John Kennedy, the President and Business Manager of IAM Republic Lodge 1987, began passing out leaflets at the Bethpage plants. Their pamphlet recounted how the IAM had helped Republic‘s employees meet their goals. A week later, the IAM handed out the same flier at Grumman‘s plant in Calverton, Long Island. Kennedy noted that while some Grummanites refused the pamphlets, the IAM ―did get a good reception from most of them.‖389 He also 386 District # 15 of the I.A.M. & A. W., AFL-CIO, ―‘Join Us at the Fair,‘‖ Circa 1972 (based on dates in the document), ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 387 IAM and Aerospace Workers, AFL-CIO, ―To All Grumman Employees,‖ Circa 1972-1973, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 388 Ibid. If some Grummanites needed another reason to shun unions in 1972, one came in the form of a dispute between President Nixon‘s Pay Board and the Machinist and Auto Workers over the rate of wage increases negotiated with companies. In early January, newspapers reported that the two unions and their locals had negotiated as much as a 31% increase with their contracted companies over the next three years, with approximately 12-15% of that increase coming in the first year. The Pay Board, however, whose job required it to keep inflation in check, set out to enforce its own recommended 5.5% increase, with some aerospace industry members of the board believing they could stretch it to as much as 8.5%. The main point for non-unionized aerospace workers remained that even with a union‘s protection and negotiating apparatuses, the federal government could still, at its whim, move in and overturn all of a union‘s hard won benefits. So many workers questioned the advantages of being a union member. For a full discussion of this story, see and compare ―The Pay Board‘s Big Test, Business Week, 1 January 1972; ―Wage Board Fails to Break Impasse on Aerospace Pay,‖ Philip Shabecoff, New York Times, 5 January 1972; ―Pay Board Said Near Compromise to Pare Aerospace Wage Rise to 8% by Stretchout,‖ Albert R. Hunt, Wall Street Journal, 5 January 1972; Philip Shabecoff, ―Pay Board Curbs Aerospace Rise; Steel Cuts Price,‖ New York Times, 6 January 1972; ―Aerospace Wage Settlement Disapproved by Pay Panel; Labor Members Decry Vote,‖ Wall Street Journal, 6 January 1972; and Philip Shabecoff, ―Aerospace Industry Given Week to Start on New Pact,‖ New York Times, 7 January 1972. All found in UAW Aerospace Department Collection, Box 51, Folder 27, ALUA. 389 ―Picket Line: Machinists Attempt to Organize Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 4 May 1973, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 212 claimed that a number of Grummanites seemed interested in joining the union, but he did not reveal how many workers that included. 390 Wage increases had been the major concern for workers in the past, but by 1973, IAM officials realized that with a national recession in full swing, job security had become the number one issue, particularly for those employees who did not have seniority. As a local newspaper noted, from the IAM‘s perspective, ―What better time could there be to organize Grumman? As Long Island‘s largest industrial employer, Grumman has long been a source of embarrassment to the AFL-CIO because it has always been non-union.‖391 At least one Grumman manager had grown quite concerned about the IAM‘s drive in 1973 and had developed a strategy to deal with the situation. G. Thomas Rozzi, Grumman‘s Vice President of Security and Personnel, described how the company could best turn the Machinists away by having managers address the IAM‘s issues one-on-one with any concerned employees.392 Managers could appeal to employees by tapping into the company‘s culture of paternalism and stressing the importance of teamwork and the real costs of unions, both psychological and economical. Management, Rozzi stressed, had to fight unionization. They could not become complacent just because unions had failed to 390 Ibid. 391 ―Second Union Woos Labor At Grumman,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa May 1973 (based on date clues in the document,) ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 392 Rozzi first appears as a Vice President in the Company‘s 1969 Annual Report. He then appeared as the Vice President of Security and Personnel in the Company‘s 1973 Annual Report. See and compare, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation: Thirty-Ninth Annual Report, 1968; ―Grumman Corporation: Fortieth Annual Report,1969‖; and ―Grumman Corporation: Forty-Fourth Annual Report, 1973.‖ All found in ―Annual Reports,‖ Sect A-74, NGHC. 213 organize the company in the past; they needed to actively dissuade workers from forming one. Rozzi reminded managers that We remain convinced that a third party is neither desirable nor needed for the continued successful maintenance of our relationship with each other. That success stretches over more than forty years during which time no Grumman employee has lost one hour‘s pay because of labor problems…. Our job will be to emphasize to employees the past and present benefits they enjoy without the necessity of paying dues, fines, initiation fees or other assessments and without being subject to outside orders of discipline. 393 The Vice President hoped to galvanize managers to the task at hand, telling them that convincing workers of Grumman‘s good record is ―a job that must be done well if we are to retain for both the company and its employees the system that has worked so well to our mutual advantage.‖394 But Grumman managers did not interfere with the Machinists‘ attempt to organize the company in 1973. Sal Iaccio, the IAM‘s regional Vice President, said of Grumman management, ―They let us roam at will with deliberate freedom.‖395 Yet even without management interference, the IAM‘s 1973 campaign failed to yield organized labor‘s desired result, like all of the past union drives at Bethpage. By the mid-1970s, it appears that the Auto Workers and Machinists gave up trying to unionize Grumman. The UAW would receive at least one more letter from a Grummanite asking for help during the 393 G. Thomas Rozzi to Grumman Managers, circa 1973, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, 394 Ibid. NGHC. 395 Iaccio is quoted in a newspaper article several years after he attempted to organize Grumman, see ―Grumman Accused of Intimidation,‖ Kenneth C. Crowe, unidentified newspaper, 3 August 1979, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 214 period, but the Auto Workers did not seem to respond substantially to the worker‘s request for help.396 Still, as the 1970s wore on—well after the end of the Apollo era—some Grummanites and unions continued to press to organize the company. In September 1978, the International Brotherhood of Craftsmen, Professionals and Allied Trades, Local 101, attempted to capture Grumman‘s Great River facility on Long Island. One of the union‘s pamphlets played off the company‘s can-do reputation, wondering, ―Grumman has put men on the moon. Why can‘t they take care of their employees, the backbone of the business?‖397 Local 101 seemed to make some progress at the company because it claimed to have collected approximately two hundred of the Great River plant‘s six hundred employees‘ signatures on NLRB union authorization cards. 398 This progress was enough to make the plant‘s security forces take down the license plate numbers of employees who took union literature, according to William Koenig, President of Local 396 In August 1974, UAW Local 259 in New York received an anonymous letter from a Grumman employee asking for help organizing. Apparently, some workers at the Calverton plant were considering unionizing. The handwritten letter, dated August 15, noted the following: ―Dear Sir, On Aug 23 there will be an outdoor gathering at Calverton of Grumman workers. They are trying to organize at Plant 6. You will be able to observe from Swan Pond Rd. outside the fence at 12:00 Noon. (South Gate) This is not the 1st meeting and management wants no more. This is the time for organizers. They need help now. Please forward.‖ Although the UAW definitely received the letter, no other information is contained in UAW files detailing whether the union followed up on the letter. No information on the meeting is contained in Grumman‘s corporate files either. See letter and attachments, Tony DeLorenzo to Ken Bannon, 19 August 1974, UAW Region 9A Collection, Box 152, Folder 9, ALUA. 397 Technically, the Local 101 author wrote ―Grummans,‖ not ―Grumman,‖ but for stylistic reason, I decided to write ―Grumman‖ in the body of this text. See ―Open Letter to All Grummans Employees,‖ International Brotherhood of Craftsmen, Professional and Allied Trades, Local 101, circa September 1978,‖Union Correspondence,‖ Sect A-19, NGHC. 398 The story is related in Kenneth C. Crowe, ―Grumman Accused of Intimidation,‖ unidentified newspaper, 3 August 1979, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 215 101, an act he believed squelched the drive. Koenig would also claim that some managers had spied on union officials while they met with employees at a local restaurant. The NLRB investigated Koenig‘s charges and found some merit to them; remarkably, in December 1978, Grumman posted notices in its plants promising that it would not spy on employees who took literature from unions or met with them.399 Nevertheless, the union, ultimately, never seemed to force an election. Less than a year later, in August 1979 about three hundred Grummanites on Long Island created the Association of Grumman Employees, to concentrate on the working conditions of the company‘s employees. Their four basic concerns included cost of living increases (keeping parity with the industry); pensions; insurance (health, dental, and life); 399 Ibid. A few years prior to Local 101‘s campaign on Long Island, the Grumman Corporation settled a lawsuit that had arisen because of certain covert steps that some managers at a Grumman subsidiary, in Milledgeville, GA (more than 1000 miles away from the Bethpage plant) had taken to try to assure that their 370 employee facility would not fall prey to unions. Grumman‘s Milledgeville plant manufactured fiberglass and other non-metal parts for the company‘s military aircraft. The situation began in August 1976, when Grumman sent two members from its Bethpage security staff, a Charles Briscoe and William J. McDermott, to Milledgeville to spy on meetings of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union (ACTWU). The union had tried for more than sixteen years to organize the J.P. Stevens Corporation, the country‘s second largest textile firm with more than 45,000 workers. Notably, Stevens had located one of its smaller plants in Milledgeville. Even though the Textile Workers had no designs on the Grumman shop in the small Georgia town, the company‘s mangers did not want to take any chances. They had Briscoe and McDermott spy on ACTWU meetings searching for Grumman employees. The two men also made a list of all of the license plates of the cars of the men and women who attended the meeting. Apparently, they reported this information to the town‘s mayor, police chief, some city officials, as well as a manager from the local Holiday Inn and other businessmen, who all seemed to have worked in collusion against the union. As the Union‘s chief counsel noted, the Grumman security men had operated with the ―domino theory‖ in mind—―‘If one plant was organized then another [Grumman‘s 370 employee facility] would be.‘‖ At one point, Grumman even hired an African-American consultant to screen employment applicants at the Milledgeville facility to see if they had union leanings. Ultimately, Grumman settled the union‘s lawsuit for $10,001 and agreed to help the Textile Workers with their case against J.P. Stevens. The Textile Workers‘ Deputy General Counsel, Joel Ronald Ax, is quoted in ―Grumman Settles Case with Textile Union,‖ by James Bernstein, Newsday, 2 August 1979, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. For the whole story about the Milledgeville incident, see and compare ―Grumman Settles Case with Textile Union,‖ James Bernstein, Newsday, 2 August 1979; ―Grumman Unit Says It Spied on Organizers for Clothing Workers,‖ Wall Street Journal, 2 August 1979; and Ed McConville, ―Town Officials Admit Illegal Spying to Thwart Union Organizers,‖ Washington Post, 8 August 1979. All found in ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect A-19, NGHC 216 and communication between management and workers.400 According to Association President Karl MacDonald, by August 20, the group had collected five to six hundred signatures to submit to the NLRB, a pitiably small number of Grumman‘s workforce of approximately 17,400 employees. The Association had hoped for 50% of employees, but it had not even enrolled the 30% necessary to force an election.401 By the close of the 1970s, Grumman had fought off unions successfully for more than four decades. Despite some workers‘ continued discontent with the company, the overwhelming majority of them repeatedly voted with their feet to keep Grumman union-free, and they had succeeded. In the fall of 1981, Fred Foulkes, then Director of Boston University‘s Human Resources Policy Institute, explored the habits of the nation‘s top non-union companies, in a paper for the prestigious Harvard Business Review. The essay focused on twenty-six corporations, twenty of them Fortune 500 companies.402 Foulkes discussed such companies as Black and Decker, Eli Lilly, Gillette, IBM, Polaroid, and Grumman, as well as several strategies that these companies had used to keep organized labor from penetrating their rank-and-file.403 Many of those tactics ratified Grumman‘s approach to fostering a positive corporate culture. Foulkes noted that these strategies included: ―A 400 ―Association of Grumman Employees,‖ Association of Grumman Employees, circa August 1979, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 401 ―Grumman Workers Mount Union Drive,‖ Newsday, 20 August 1979, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 402 Fred K Foulkes, ―How Top Nonunion Companies Manage Employees,‖ Harvard Business Review (September-October, 1981): 4, ―Unionization (Articles),‖ Sect. A-19, NGHC. 403 Ibid., 1. 217 Sense of Caring;‖ ―High Profits, Fast Growth and Family Ties;‖ ―Employment Security;‖ ―Promotion From Within;‖ ―Influential Personnel Departments:‖ ―Competitive Pay and Benefits;‖ ―Managements that Listen;‖ ―Careful Grooming of Managers;‖ and ―Pride and Profits.‖404 Employees at these companies also mentioned benefits, particularly health care programs like Grumman‘s Mayo and Strang Clinic programs, as key to their general sense of well-being.405 Foulkes had also discovered that workers found it important that management listen to them, as Grumman had with its ―Open Door‖ policy. 406 In sum, Foulkes had discovered management‘s keys to repelling unions, the same ones that Grumman had relied on for more than fifty years. Conclusion Grumman remained a non-union company throughout its entire history—from its birth in the early 1930s until its demise in 1994, when Northrop, the only other major nonunion American aerospace company, took over the Bethpage manufacturer. Grummanites‘ resistance to organized labor underlines the success of the company‘s paternalism in creating worker loyalty, a significant development in U.S. history given the major trend toward unionism in the aerospace industry during the Cold War of the 1950s. At the dawn of the Space Age, employees at over 90% of America‘s aerospace firms belonged to unions. Those men and women worked in a sector that employed more Americans than any other single industry, during a period when one out of every four working-class 404 ―Carefully Considered Surroundings‖ was the only other main factor. See ibid., 2 405 See the discussion about Polaroid‘s health care benefits via company doctors in ibid., 5. 406 See the general discussion about ―Managements that Listen,‖ in ibid., 5-6. 218 Americans carried a union membership card. Yet despite these figures, and regardless of the fact that Grummanites lived and worked in a region and industry that seemed to be a hotbed of organized labor, Grumman employees continually eschewed the idea of unionizing at every point in their company‘s history. Grummanites rejected unions for two main reasons—their positive embrace of the company‘s paternalistic culture, and their negative perception of the corrosive effects of unions, as demonstrated by the experiences of workers at other aerospace firms. These two factors worked together in a symbiotic relationship to keep Grumman union-free; each issue represented one side of a type of proverbial double-edged sword that seemed to determine the fate of the company‘s management and labor relations. Grumman‘s President Jake Swirbul had been the architect of the company‘s paternalism. From the firm‘s very beginning, he had tried to care for his employees as if they were his friends and colleagues, not merely his employees. While Grumman‘s corporate culture can be seen as a contrived system developed to carefully control its employees, at the same time Swirbul did seem more interested in fostering a sense of mutual respect and esteem among employees (a type of corporate welfare) than in constructing a hierarchical structure in which the company‘s parent/managers took care of their children. To be sure, Swirbul and other Grumman managers wanted a stable company, and they realized that employee satisfaction and loyalty were essential to that end. But Swirbul seemed sincere in his efforts to create a positive atmosphere where employees worked together, rather than a strict top-down structure, as his ―open-door‖ policy revealed. He was just a different type of person than managers at other aerospace companies, as demonstrated on several occasions, including the time when he made sure 219 that the child of one of Republic‘s employees received timely care for a serious medical condition. Such acts became legendary among employees. Still, during the early years of the Space Age, a few Grummanites—specifically some of the operational engineers in the Air Conditioner and Boiler Room—felt slighted by the firm and, in a seeming breakdown of paternalism, they considered joining the UAW. Not coincidentally, this move toward unionism occurred in the wake of Swirbul‘s death. Nevertheless, while the UAW was able to secured an NLRB-supervised election in 1962, the final vote—152 to 15 against unionizing—proves overwhelmingly that Swirbul‘s culture remained firmly entrenched even in a new era of company leadership. While Grumman‘s paternalistic culture definitely contributed to the employees‘ rejection of organized labor, so too did many of the workers‘ negative views of the destructive nature of unions. From their perspective, unions did little to help workers, and in many cases caused more harm than good. All Grummanites had to do was look at their colleagues‘ experiences at neighboring aerospace firms. In Queens, Brewster Aeronautical‘s employees, despite being what some have called the most ―oppositional and politically sophisticated‖ workers in the UAW, could not save their jobs or their company regardless of their efforts to seize ―Patriotic Control‖ of the firm and enlist the help of the federal government to steer their destiny.407 Similarly, when Grummanites looked at the situation at Republic Aviation, where many of their neighbors worked, they 407 For the quote, the most ―oppositional and politically sophisticated‖ workers, see Lichtenstein, Labor‘s War At Home, 129-130. The term ―Patriotic Control‖ comes from Lee, ―Defense Workers Struggle for Patriotic Control,‖ 138. 220 believed that the company had been ―ruined by unions.‖408 Republic‘s workers had to fight hard to unionize, and once they did, a series of bitter and often violent strikes ensued when they pressed for their demands; at one point, the federal government even intervened and forced them back to work. What Grummanites learned from the situations at Brewster and Republic did not bode well for the UAW when it tried to unionize the Bethpage manufacturer. For most Grummanites, the experiences of their colleagues at neighboring firms served as warnings about the dangers of unionism—very distinct cautionary tales. Grummanites‘ striking letters to their company‘s management are the most telling examples of how they internalized their own positive views of Grumman‘s paternalism and their negative attitudes towards unions. The language that Grummanites used showed their clear affection for the company. They believed that the firm treated them well and offered tremendous benefits, a circumstance that provided a logical alternative to unions.409 By the same token, their letters also reveal that many of them felt outright disgust and sometimes hatred for organized labor. They constantly questioned, mockingly, why in the world they would want to belong to a union; they did not want to take a chance with organized labor. 408 Former Grummanite Michael Hlinko has stated that Republic ―was ruined by unions.‖ See Michael Hlinko Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. 409 The thirty-one Grummanite survey/questionnaires completed for this study also overwhelming support the idea that Grumman was a fair and benevolent employer. As Grummanite Benjamin Beekman noted, the company‘s employees refused to unionize the firm because they did not want to ―ruin a really good relationship‖ and a ―wonderful company.‖ Robert Ionescu, a Grumman mechanical designer, similarly believed ―the reason I got where I could get was because there was no union.‖ As Ionescu simply opined in his closing remarks about unions, the company ―did not need one. Grumman was the best union any worker could have.‖ For these quotes see Benjamin F. Beekman, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 March 2000; and Robert Ionescu, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 December 1999. Both in the author‘s possession. 221 At the same time that Grummanites were expressing their lack of interest in unions, the UAW and the IAM were engaged in a conflict to gain superiority in the aerospace industry. The UAW had been the leading union in the aviation industry through the 1930s. But when the Auto Workers started to use abstract language that did not fully address employees‘ concerns as insightfully as the Machinists‘ words, the UAW lost its hold on that position; the IAM won its organizing campaign at Curtiss-Wright in 1942. Having lost their lead, the UAW constantly strove over the next thirty years to regain its status as the premiere union in the industry. The UAW‘s campaign at Republic in the late 1940s revealed its continued inability to properly grasp and address the issues that mattered most to workers. Their pamphlets, fliers, and handbills used anti-capitalist verbiage to try to sway workers, while the Machinists‘ literature stressed bread-andbutter, ―common-man‖-style arguments that appealed to the average worker. Even though the Auto Workers‘ publications had started moving toward more practical and understandable language and arguments by the time of the Grumman campaign—thanks to the influence of UAW organizer Forrest Innis—the change could not overcome Grummanites‘ allegiance to the company. One may ask why the IAM never launched a serious organizing campaign at Grumman. While it is true that the Machinists briefly considered unionizing the company in 1961, and then again in 1973, neither campaign met with much success. Perhaps the Machinists never seriously pursued the Bethpage firm because they knew that the company‘s culture of paternalism could not be broken, something the UAW failed to realize. Then again, perhaps the Machinists were already content with the membership of all of the aerospace firms that they had acquired over the previous thirty years, particularly 222 after they had seized Republic. Unfortunately, historical sources remain silent on the IAM‘s thinking in regard to organizing Grumman. In the late 1960s, Olson Bodies, a small subsidiary of Grumman, did unionize. Although the Auto Workers crowed that they had finally cracked Grumman, that claim stretched the truth. Located in upstate New York far from the social and cultural center of the Grumman Corporation on Long Island, Olson only employed about 270 workers during the UAW‘s drive on the company, compared to the more than 32,000 some workers at Grumman‘s main plants downstate; Olson and the Grumman Corporation were hardly one company.410 Although Olson managers treated many of their employees quite poorly, the UAW still only succeeded in capturing the plant by one vote during a very controversial NLRB-supervised election, which broke down 110 to109 for unionization. The UAW‘s success at Olson did not provide the union an inroad into Grumman. In the end, Grummanites‘ embrace of their company‘s culture of paternalism, coupled with their negative views of organized labor, kept the Bethpage firm union-free. The majority of Grummanites believed that the company treated them fairly and had their best interests at heart. Their internalization of these views led them to vehemently oppose unions and brought Grummanites like Sonny Pangallo to warn the UAW: ―Don‘t tell us we‘re starving and underpaid and ill-fed.‖411 Grummanites believed differently, and unions, particularly the UAW, were never able to make them change their minds. 410 For the number of employees at Bethpage during the Olson campaign, see "EmployeePopulation, As of 1st of Month," "Personnel," Section A-8, NGHC. 411 NGHC. Typewritten Letter, Sonny Pangallo, January 1962, ―Union Correspondence,‖ Sect. A-19, CHAPTER THREE DAVID AND GOLIATH: THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT COMES TO GRUMMAN From its very inception in the early 1930s, Grumman had established an outstanding rapport with its employees. Most Grummanites felt that the company treated them well and they forged a strong bond with the aerospace giant; they viewed the company as a very paternal and benevolent employer. As a result, most Grummanites developed a great sense of loyalty to the corporation, and such loyalty, as we saw in Chapter Two, kept labor organizers from successfully unionizing Long Island‟s single largest employer. But were all Grummanites satisfied with their individual progress at the company and the way that it treated them? Did African Americans feel a strong sense of commitment and loyalty to the company? Did they feel that they received the same treatment and opportunities as white employees? This chapter explores these issues in detail and seeks to understand the ways in which the modern Civil Rights Movement interacted with the history of the Cold War Space Race. As some scholars have insightfully noted, the year 1957 marked both the beginning of the Space Age and what several historians cite as a key moment in the modern Civil Rights Movement. In the fall of that year, the Soviet Union launched two Sputnik satellites and effectively started the Space Race. At approximately the same time, one of the first major salvos of the modern Civil Rights Movement occurred when a 223 224 battle took place in Little Rock, Arkansas over the racial integration of the city‟s Central High School. 1 Despite the fact that two such important historical movements began in roughly the same period, few scholars have attempted to explore how these movements may have affected one another. In short, the history of race relations and its interaction with the U.S. space program of the 1960s and early 1970s, particularly its relationship with the American aerospace industry, has remained largely unexplored. A few notable exceptions are Steven Moss‟s monograph NASA and Racial Equality in the South, 1961-1968 (1997), a chapter in Andrew J. Dunar and Stephen P. Waring‟s Power to Explore: A History of Marshall Space Flight Center, 1960-1990 (1999), and Kim McQuaid‟s “‟Racism, Sexism, and Space Ventures‟: Civil Rights at NASA in the Nixon Era and Beyond” (2007) (an essay about a female African American‟s lawsuit at NASA Headquarters).2 As Moss notes although there are many books about the history of NASA, its regional centers, and its culture, none—save his monograph and Dunar and Waring‟s chapter—have effectively dealt with how the influx of Space Age jobs into local communities affected the nation‟s race relations. Furthermore, only a few works even mention anything on the subject, and, when they do, 1 Notably, the Civil Rights Act of 1957 also took place that same year. For more on the subject, see Steven L. Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality in the South, 1961-1968” (M.A. Thesis, Texas Tech University, 1997) 2. 2 Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality”; Chapter IV “The Marshall Reconstruction,” in Andrew J. Dunar and Stephen P. Waring, Power to Explore: A History of Marshall Space Flight Center, 1960-1990 (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4313, 1999), 115-130; and Kim McQuaid‟s “‟Racism, Sexism, and Space Ventures‟: Civil Rights at NASA in the Nixon Era and Beyond,” in Steven J. Dick and Roger D. Launius, eds, The Societal Impact of Spaceflight (Washington, DC: NASA SP-2007-4801, 2007), 421-449. McQuaid‟s essay focuses on the story of Ruth Bates Harris, NASA‟s highest ranking female employee during the second Nixon Administration. 225 they treat the topic in only a cursory manner.3 Moss (and to a lesser extent Dunar and Waring) have attempted to rectify the situation by concentrating on how NASA used its influence as a federal agency to effect changes in racial attitudes and policies in the southern communities where its regional centers were located during the 1960s. 4 In short, Moss, Dunar, Waring, and McQuaid have asked what NASA did for civil rights in the 1960s and whether the agency effected any serious change in race relations. 5 Although these scholars have done the initial groundwork on this important subject, their studies tend to explore the subject from the “top down.” Stated differently, they generally stress the history of the interaction of race relations and the U.S. space program from the perspective of what NASA, a governmental agency, did (or did not do) to promote change; they do not investigate how African Americans interacted with the aerospace industry. 6 This chapter, on the other hand, takes up that issue by exploring how African Americans fared at Grumman. It investigates how Long Island African Americans pressed Grumman on a variety of racially oriented issues and how company managers and co-workers reacted to that pressure. To properly explore the history of race relations at Grumman during the Apollo era, it is first necessary to briefly review the changes that were occurring in federal anti- 3 Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 7-20. 4 Moss largely explores the communities in Florida and Alabama, with some minor material about the NASA communities in Mississippi and Texas. 5 Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 1-2. 6 Ibid. 226 discrimination policies and laws during the period. Such a review allows us to understand the full economic and legal context in which African Americans tried to improve their lives while working for Grumman. Affirmative Action, Plans for Progress, and Equal Employment in Early 1960s America By the beginning of the 1960s, African Americans in different regions of the country had formulated a variety of goals regarding racial progress depending on their local situations. In the Northeast, where public facilities had already been desegregated and African Americans had already secured the right to vote, their main focus was to obtain equal and fair housing, fully integrate the public schools, and, more importantly for many, to make significant socioeconomic improvement, particularly in the manner of obtaining well-paying, career-advancing jobs. 7 With the birth of the Space Age, many African Americans hoped that they would find solid employment in the aerospace industry, especially since the federal government was bankrolling the entire U.S. space program. They reasoned that Uncle Sam would not award contracts to aerospace companies that had a record of discrimination, or, at the very least, that the federal government would make sure that if such discrimination occurred, it would be corrected quickly. After John F. Kennedy‟s inauguration in 1961, many African Americans hoped that they might secure federal jobs in the aerospace industry, thanks to two actions taken 7 Robert J. Weiss, “We Want Jobs”: A History of Affirmative Action (New York: Garland Publishing, Inc., 1997), 60. 227 by the new president. Kennedy established Executive Order 10925, on March 6, 1961. The order required all federal contractors, a significant percentage of the aerospace industry, to “take affirmative action to ensure that applicants are employed, and that employees are treated during employment, without regard to their race, creed, color, or national origin.”8 In essence, the order was the first time that the federal government had required federal contractors and agencies to move beyond passive non-discrimination and actively promote fair employment by taking “affirmative action.” As a result, African Americans had reason to believe that they might secure a federal job, possibly in the aerospace field, especially after President Kennedy‟s speech on May 25, 1961, which led to Project Apollo and challenged the American aerospace industry to land a man on the Moon and return him safely to Earth before the decade was out.9 Due to all of the new aerospace workers needed to help launch the Apollo Program, and because of EO 10925, many African Americans, particularly in the major regional centers of the aerospace industry, looked at the early 1960s as a period of new hope and opportunity. On one hand, Kennedy‟s EO 10925 continued some of the anti-discrimination guidelines that previous presidential administrations had established, but, on the other hand, it also contained some new ideas about how to open up more federal jobs to 8 Quote is from ibid., 55. Some scholars have been very critical of Kennedy‟s EO 10925 because they suggest that despite the fact that he campaigned in support of several racially progressive issues, he became extremely cautious regarding racial matters once in office. They argue that he should have created new federal laws that established and oversaw fair employment, instead of just issuing an Executive Order. In all fairness, however, other scholars note that Kennedy had just won the closest U.S. presidential election in the twentieth century and he did not want to press racial issues too hard to keep from alienating southern Senators and Congressmen, which might seriously affect his ability to get other legislation passed. For more on this subject see pages 52-55. 9 Roger D.Launius, NASA: A History of the U.S. Civil Space Program (Malabar, FL: Krieger Publishing Company, 1994), 64-65. 228 minorities. The President‟s Commission on Equal Employment Opportunity (PCEEO) became the main group in charge of enforcing EO 10925. It was almost identical to President Dwight D. Eisenhower‟s President‟s Committee on Government Contracts (PCGC), which had also overseen federal employment discrimination. 10 Both groups followed a philosophy that federal employers and contractors would “voluntarily comply” with federal anti-discrimination guidelines and do their best to employ minorities.11 Simply put, each allowed federal contractors and agencies to police themselves. EO 10925 went a step further than previous administrations‟ executive orders, however, by asking federal employers and contractors to take “affirmative action” when it came to hiring. Nevertheless, because the term “affirmative action” was extremely vague and ill defined, the PCEEO would find it very difficult to enforce Kennedy‟s executive order throughout the early 1960s. 12 One way the PCEEO attempted to push federal contractors toward embracing the spirit of EO 10925 was by having each of them create an individual “Plan for Progress” (PFP) that outlined their intentions regarding minority treatment. PFPs became popular among contractors because they allowed them to create the illusion that they did not discriminate by advertising their non-discrimination pledges to the general public. Companies made it a point to take ads out in some of the nation‟s major newspapers detailing their pledges, thereby demonstrating their progressive stance on 10 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 54-56. 11 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 54-56. 12 Ibid., 55. 229 racial matters; PFPs essentially became a way for federal contractors to pat themselves on the back and congratulate each other.13 By the end of 1962, scores of major federal contractors had signed PFPs including Chrysler, Ford, General Motors, IBM, and Grumman, not to mention several others.14 As contemporary critics pointed out, PFPs contained very little beyond vague pledges; they also allowed many companies to essentially maintain the status quo by not forcing them to move beyond what they were already doing regarding racial matters. Grumman, for example, in its PFP, promised to continue its “corporate policy of nondiscrimination in recruiting, employment and placement,” as well as advertise that fact in company publications and the media (particularly minority-oriented publications and media outlets).15 The aerospace company also pledged to carry on its efforts to make sure vocational training programs continued to operate in predominantly minority community schools and colleges.16 In short, Grumman‟s PFP did little more than allow the company to proclaim that it would continue to pursue the racial policies it had already put into effect a long time prior. Still, even though many critics viewed PFPs as “more publicity than progress” and “largely meaningless,” there was at least one time when a PFP affected some 13 Ibid., 56. 14 Herman Belz, Equality Transformed: A Quarter-Century of Affirmative Action (Edison, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 1991), 19; Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 56; “Joint Statement on „Plan for Progress‟,” no date, “CORE,” Section A-12, Northrop Grumman History Center, Bethpage, NY (hereinafter cited as NGHC); and “LI Defense Industry is the Next Target in CORE Campaign,” unidentified newspaper, 6 August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 15 “Joint Statement on „Plan for Progress‟,” no date, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 16 Ibid. 230 important change. 17 The instance occurred in the Deep South at the Lockheed Aircraft Company‟s plant in Marietta, Georgia. As early as the 1940s, federal officials had begun citing the Georgia factory as a place that routinely discriminated against minorities. The company had segregated facilities and most of its African-American workers labored in positions ranging from custodial jobs to semiskilled positions. In an attempt to correct its poor record, Lockheed became one of the first companies to forge a PFP agreement with Kennedy‟s PCEEO. The two parties signed the agreement on May 25, 1961, shortly after Kennedy had put EO 10925 into effect, and, incidentally, the same day he announced his desire to put a man on the Moon before the end of the 1960s. Thanks to the arrangement, Lockheed responded to African-American employees‟ complaints of discrimination by integrating its facilities. It also began reviewing minority workers‟ records to see who qualified for promotion. 18 Two years after Lockheed‟s new plan went into effect, the Southern Regional Council and the Chicago Defender, two of the period‟s well-known champions of racial progress, proclaimed that Lockheed‟s integration process was running smoothly. 19 In short, the Lockheed PFP appeared to be a success story, at least in the then still largely segregated South. Although the Kennedy Administration had made some advances in civil rights during its first two years, such progress was too little for most African Americans. They 17 Herbert Hill of the NAACP generally found PFPs “more publicity than progress” while the Southern Regional Council felt that they were “largely meaningless.” The quotes are from Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 56. 18 19 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 55-56. Ibid.; New York Times, 18 June 1961, 1; Chicago Defender, 4 May 1963; and Lester A. Sobel, Civil Rights, 1960-66 (New York: Facts on File, Inc., 1967), 98-99. 231 wanted faster and more significant changes, and they took to the streets once again to demonstrate for them. In Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, African Americans organized mass protests against citywide segregated facilities and faced violent resistance from the local white establishment. Despite heavy media coverage of the events, Bull Connor, the local police chief, turned police dogs and fire hoses loose on the protestors; for most of the country, this incident demonstrated that significant federal legislative changes would be necessary to force racial progress nationwide. 20 While African Americans faced outright intimidation and racial hatred in the South, their northern brethren waged their own battles against a more insidious form of bigotry—job discrimination. At approximately the same time that the Birmingham demonstrations occurred, African-American workers throughout the Northeast—and in fairly close proximity to Grumman—demanded their own changes through a series of protests. In Philadelphia, African-American construction workers, with the help of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), took to the streets during the month of May 1963 and demanded that 15% of all area construction jobs go to minorities. Although construction companies and contractors did not grant all of their demands, CORE at least got assurances that the employers would practice nondiscriminatory hiring and employ more African Americans in construction jobs overall. 21 A month later, in New York City, protests occurred over the lack of minority hiring during the construction of the Harlem Hospital. Protests and demonstrations also moved to other area sites, including the 20 21 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 64-65 Notably, the NAACP did not like the agreement reached and did not support it. See Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 61. 232 Downstate Medical Center in Brooklyn. Police and demonstrators clashed and violence erupted, with hundreds of arrests occurring; some protestors referred to the police as “storm troopers” because of the tactics they used during the demonstrations. Ultimately, the protests ended when construction firms agreed to establish special recruitment and referral programs, but, once again, such programs were only voluntary on the part of the employer.22 For African-American workers in the North, the final outcomes of their protests had made one thing perfectly clear: they needed federal legislation to improve their situation. They knew they would have to continue to demand their rights, but they also knew they would have to do so through the courts. When some of them joined the massive civil rights “March on Washington” in August, and listened to Martin Luther King, Jr., deliver his “I Have a Dream Speech” from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, they knew the time seemed propitious to force significant changes in federal civil rights laws.23 Even though African Americans demanded access to more and better-paying jobs during the 1960s, particularly in the North, some scholars (both contemporary and present-day) have raised serious questions about the number of skilled African-American workers available at the time, particularly for the aerospace industry. As Herbert R. Northrup, the Chairman of the Department of Industry at the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, noted in a 1968 article for the well-known economic journal Monthly 22 Another major construction strike occurred in Elizabeth, New Jersey, in August. Police arrested seventy-seven protestors during that demonstration. See Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 61-63. 23 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 61-63. 233 Labor Review, aerospace companies had a hard time finding qualified African-American technical and professional employees. Aerospace businesses throughout the Apollo era did extensive national searches looking for African Americans to hire, but had a difficult time finding such employees. 24 By the mid-1960s, for example, Boeing, a California company and one of the main Apollo contractors, would actually claim that it had to import African-American craftsmen from the Northeast to satisfy its contractual obligations. 25 For Grumman, the situation became a serious problem. As the Boeing case suggests, the Long Island company was among several aerospace employers that had a difficult time keeping qualified African-American labor in the Northeast. One Grumman recruiter remembered that many of the most highly recruited skilled workers did not want to live in the North; they wanted to go west to California, if they had the opportunity. 26 One reason companies had such a difficult time finding qualified AfricanAmerican labor was because few blacks had as yet pursued careers in engineering, and those minority engineers employed by the aerospace industry already represented, according to Northrup, “a sizable percentage of those available.” 27 Northrup also noted 24 Notably, scholar Steven Moss has made similar discoveries about NASA‟s difficulties in hiring African Americans. As he notes, “NASA‟s greatest problem with equal employment was not the hiring of blacks but finding blacks to hire.” For more on this subject, see Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality”, 42-43, 81-82, 118-119, and 141. For the difficulties the aerospace industry faced in hiring African Americans, see Herbert R. Northrup, “In-Plant Movement of Negroes in the Aerospace Industry,” Monthly Labor Review 91 (February 1968): 23. 25 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 93. 26 “Notes from Phone Interview with Lynn McDonald of the Northrop-Grumman History Center,” 1 March 2004, in the author‟s possession. Dawkins also talks about how difficult it was for Grumman to hire African Americans compared to companies in California. See Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr. Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‟s possession. 27 Northrup, “Negro Mobility,” Monthly Labor Review 91 (February 1968): 23. Significantly, Northrup also noted about the availability of skilled African American labor: “The unfortunate plain fact is 234 that those African-American engineers who had started working for the aerospace industry, particularly those who had graduated from segregated schools, sometimes had a difficult time interacting with white-collar corporate culture. Furthermore, the aerospace industry had only started to emphasize the recruitment of minorities after the passage of several recent anti-discrimination laws.28 In July 1964, African Americans and their supporters got a significant piece of federal civil rights legislation signed into law. Passed less than a year after President Kennedy‟s assassination, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 became the first national legislative assault on employer discrimination. Title VII of the act, although a very diluted section of the law, prohibited employers with one hundred or more workers from discriminating against employees on the basis of race, creed, or gender.29 The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), a group consisting of five congressional members, three from the majority party and two from the minority, monitored all Title VII complaints. With the Civil Rights Act of 1964, African Americans started looking toward the courts as their main avenue for change, as opposed to the massive public protests of the past. As July 1965 approached—the time when African Americans could that the higher the qualifications which are required, the fewer the Negroes are qualified and the more difficult it is to gain qualifications by short run training or educational programs,” see page 25. In a similar vein, Moss notes: “Pre-existing social conditions that limited black educational and employment opportunities were the real culprits. ”See Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 90. 28 29 Northrup, “Negro Mobility,” Monthly Labor Review 91 (February 1968): 23. The number was later taken down to 50 employees or more in 1967, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 70. Belz on the other hand contends, from the beginning, it was only 25 or more employees, see Belz, Equality Transformed, 7. 235 start filing suits under the new law—scores of Africans Americans stood ready to seek justice from the EEOC.30 Unfortunately for African Americans, the EEOC seemed particularly ill-equipped to handle the multitude of complaints filed during the first year, and most of the cases thereafter. It also only wielded very limited power. From the very beginning, the EEOC was understaffed, under trained, and underfunded. The group, which never totaled more than 400 employees during the Johnson Administration, anticipated handling 2,000 cases during its first year. It instead had to deal with over 9,000.31 One of the main reasons the EEOC became so ineffective was that the Johnson Administration‟s Justice Department had been more interested in pursuing voting rights discrimination cases. 32 Another stumbling block for African Americans was that the EEOC lacked effective enforcement power. Although the group could investigate discrimination charges, it could not initiate court cases even if it found evidence of such biases.33 The only real power the EEOC could wield was to bring employers and workers together at the conference table—when it found cases of “reasonable cause” of discrimination—in the hope that the two parties could work out their differences in a “voluntary” manner. 34 As Herman Edelsberg, the 30 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 71-72. The Civil Rights Act of 1964 required African Americans to wait for one year for employees to comply with the act before they could file suits. 31 On the number of employees, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 105. For the number of cases handled, see page 83. 32 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 82-83. Title VII compliance would not become a major interest of the Justice Department until Ramsey Clark became Attorney General in 1967. 33 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 68. 34 Ibid., 83. The EEOC asked Congress for enforcement power, but failed to receive it. 236 Executive Director of the EEOC in the late 1960s, noted, the group had a very conservative viewpoint. According to Edelsberg, the commission viewed employer discrimination not as an “act of individual malice, but more an element of a pattern of customary conduct.”35 He suggested that African Americans faced limited employment opportunities not because of any conscious intent on the part of the employer to discriminate, but rather, due to that employer‟s “traditional attitudes and patterns of conduct in business.”36 James Hodgson, a former Vice President of Lockheed, told the Senate that the aerospace industry favored voluntary compliance on the part of the employer when it came to Title VII.37 On September 24, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson attempted to correct some of the shortcomings of Title VII by issuing Executive Order 11246. The new EO required federal contractors to periodically submit written “Compliance Reports” showing their level of minority employment on federally contracted projects. It also replaced Kennedy‟s PCEEO with a new Office of Federal Contract Compliance (OFCC), located in the Department of Labor. Thanks to this restructuring, the Secretary of Labor suddenly had the right to enforce nondiscrimination in government contracts. Unlike Title VII, EO 11246 also allowed the Secretary of Labor to cancel contracts, block companies from 35 Belz, Equality Transformed, 28. 36 Ibid. 37 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 136. On the subject, Hodgson stated that “voluntarism is the hallmark of successful labor relations.” In the late 1960s, President Richard Nixon‟s Secretary of Labor, George P. Shultz, would also favored voluntary compliance, see page 127 237 obtaining future jobs, and recommend cases to the Justice Department for prosecution when noncompliance occurred.38 Despite such expanded powers, EO 11246 also had some of the same problems as Title VII. For example, the new OFCC, like the EEOC, relied on voluntary employer compliance when it came to affirmative action in the workplace. The OFCC also had a culture that believed that since employers had a better understanding of their individual workplace situations from day to day, it was better to leave enforcement and improvements up to them. 39 Like the old PCEEO, the new OFCC was also understaffed and underfunded. 40 Finally, as if these problems were not enough, the OFCC had difficulty enforcing antidiscrimination cases because EO 11246‟s definition of affirmative action was very weak. Although the new EO did specify that “affirmative action” applied to “employment, upgrading, demotion, or transfer; recruitment or recruitment advertising; layoff or termination; rates of pay or other forms of compensation; and selection for training, including apprenticeship,” it still did not specifically define what “affirmative action” looked like.41 For example, OFCC Director Edward C. Sylvester defined it as “anything that you have to do to get results.”42 As with 38 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 83; and Belz, Equality Transformed, 29-30. 39 Belz, Equality Transformed, 31. Weiss claims that many of the former PCEEO workers came to work for the OFCC, brought their conservative views of employer voluntary compliance with them, and in the process, essentially influenced the new culture of the OFCC. Notably, Weiss also claims that LBJ favored voluntary compliance, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 84. 40 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 84. 41 Ibid. 42 Belz, Equality Transformed, 31. 238 Kennedy‟s EO and Title VII, Johnson‟s EO 11246 was hamstrung by its limited definitions of compliance, as well as by the conservative cultures of the groups in charge of overseeing the antidiscrimination cases. By late summer 1965, despite various attempts by two Presidents and Congress, African-American workers had only very limited and diluted legal remedies to help them secure better-paying jobs. Nevertheless, many utilized these new initiatives to pressure companies to afford them new opportunities to improve their lives. Several African-American Grummanites would be among those who pursued such remedies. CORE and African-American Grummanites Of all the civil rights groups active in the 1960s, African-American Grummanites placed their greatest faith in the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). The organization had played a prominent role in protesting for African-American workers‟ rights throughout Long Island and the Northeast. For most black Grummanites, CORE‟s local breakthroughs on Long Island and in New York made the group‟s strategies particularly appealing. In December 1962, CORE‟s two-month boycott against the Sealtest Dairy Company of New York had forced the company to agree to place a priority on hiring African Americans and Puerto Ricans. Several months later, Long Island CORE got the Meadow Brook National Bank to agree to reserve 50% of all future job openings, once again, for African Americans and Puerto Ricans. And at approximately the same time, with some help from the NAACP (the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People), CORE also pressed New York City‟s A&Ps to hire 400 African 239 Americans and Puerto Ricans over a two year period.43 Although civil rights organizations like the NAACP and the National Urban League (NUL) had a strong presence in the New York area, those groups tended to attract the greatest support among middle- and upper-class African Americans. For the average African-American worker, CORE seemed much more appealing. 44 CORE relied on numerical formulas and preferential hiring issues to try to secure increased job opportunities for minorities, especially given the fact that the federal government had failed to decisively define “affirmative action.” 45 CORE historians August Meier and Elliot Rudwick have noted that by 1962 the organization had set up specific guidelines regarding minority hiring and had begun insisting that employers recruit minorities and provide them with job training. 46 Robert Weiss, building on Meier and Rudwick‟s work, has suggested that CORE‟s victories in the Northeast during this period signaled that “a new generation of civil rights activists had become convinced that concrete, quantifiable solutions offered the only remedy to job discrimination.” 47 Weiss argues that African Americans, particularly in the North, had grown tired of waiting for gradual change and so “demanded immediate, verifiable improvement in their economic 43 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 60. 44 Ibid., 20-21. 45 Ibid., 60. 46 This is taken from Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 61, who is focusing on Meier and Rudwick. See August Meier and Elliott Rudwick, CORE: A Study in the Civil Rights Movement, 1942-1968 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1973), 187-92, 235. 47 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 60. 240 status.”48 For most working-class African Americans on Long Island, CORE not only seemed the most accessible and helpful civil rights organization, but it also seemed to have the best strategy to help them change their socioeconomic conditions. By 1965, several African-American Grummanites stood ready to seek CORE‟s help with what they perceived as employer discrimination. The year 1965 was a hopeful moment in the struggle for civil rights, particularly in opening up new job opportunities for northern African Americans. That year Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 went into full effect; beginning in July 1965, African Americans who believed that they had not received fair treatment from their employers could go to the EEOC and ask for a remedy to their problems. 49 1965 also marked the zenith of federal spending on the Apollo space program.50 If African Americans did not make some significant and quick progress in securing Apollo-oriented jobs, they might not be able to participate in the wave of new space-related positions, particularly if 48 Ibid., 60-61. 49 Ibid., 82. Notably, the first major EEOC and OFCC case of the post-Title VII era was against the Newport News Shipbuilding Company of Virginia, the largest private employer in Virginia, and a major Navy contractor. During the investigation in July 1965, Blacks “held only 32 of 2,000 supervisory positions and only 6 of more than 500 apprenticeship positions.” Soon after Title VII went into effect, however, 40 black employees, including the Reverend J.C. Fauntleroy, who headed up the local NAACP chapter, filed complaints with the EEOC. The OFCC also became involved because the employer‟s company received federal defense contracts. By March 1966, when the case concluded, more than 3,000 blacks had received promotions. Furthermore, about “60 percent of African-American workers hired after March 30” had found employment “in previously all-white departments." As Weiss notes, however, the speed with which the Newport case was resolved and its outcome were the exception, rather than the rule, nationally. Furthermore, although one of the big sticks that the OFCC had for use against companies was the curtailment of federal contracts, officials did not want to follow through with such measures because they knew it would put many people (although mainly white) out of work. This reluctance created an unsatisfactory conclusion for many blacks. For all of the quotes and more on this subject, see pages 85-87. 50 Launius, NASA, 94. 241 funding for space started to decline; as the money dried up, they reasoned, so would the number of job opportunities. With these ideas in mind, several African-American Grummanites sought out local CORE officials and asked for assistance with what they perceived to be employer discrimination. On August 5, nearly a month after the full implementation of Title VII, the Long Island office of CORE sent Grumman officials a letter stating that James Brown and Benjamin (Ben) Scott, two semi-skilled African American Grummanites, had complained to CORE about their inability to move-up in their jobs. Both men had requested transfers to more advanced and better-paying positions, but neither had received the promotion he sought. CORE specifically asked Grumman to review the two men‟s transfer requests and create a written disposition about their cases within thirty days.51 The civil rights group also called on the company to remember that it had signed a PFP back in March 1961. CORE challenged Grumman to step up and fulfill its moral commitment to that pledge. 52 From a broader perspective, CORE officials used Brown‟s and Scott‟s cases as a springboard to launch a more far-reaching attack on the company‟s racial record. In the same letter that raised the issue of the two men‟s cases, CORE claimed that "While the Grumman Aircraft Corp. has hired Negro personnel, it has apparently taken the position 51 CORE also lodged complaints on behalf of Scott and Brown with the New York State Commission on Human Rights. See "Grumman Denies CORE's Charge of Employment Bias," in Long Island Press, 6 August 1965, "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. Scott and Brown‟s full names appear in "Grumman Denies CORE's Charge of Employment Bias," in Long Island Press, 6 August 1965; and “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” Subject: Grumman Aircraft Corp., et al., 5 August 1965. Both found in "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 52 “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” Subject: Grumman Aircraft Corp., et al., 5 August 1965, "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 242 that the Negro on salary should be, if not happy, satisfied and quiet." 53 CORE went on to state that Grumman and its managers had systematically excluded African Americans and other minorities, such as Puerto Ricans, from certain divisions and positions within the company. In essence, the organization claimed that minorities had only been offered the most menial jobs like clerks, garage workers, and handymen. 54 CORE believed one of the main reasons such practices occurred was because Grumman had a secret method for evaluating its employees, “an esoteric procedure for promotion.”55 Concluding its indictment of the defense contractor, the civil rights group also claimed that Grumman “has employed a system of horizontal mobility by which Negro employees are loaned to other departments for short periods of time, thus impairing their chances for becoming proficient in any one skill and jeopardizing their chances for salary increases.”56 The civil rights group offered fifteen points of action that the company could take to significantly improve its record on race relations. The more important points included a call for Grumman “to adopt a more vigorous and aggressive policy of minority recruitment, training, and upgrading in accordance with the terms of Executive Order 10925,” and a call to move African Americans into key jobs in every department in the 53 Ibid. 54 Grumman signed its PFP on March 6, 1961. For more on this subject, see “LI Defense Industry is the Next Target in CORE Campaign," unidentified newspaper, 6 August 1965, "CORE," Sect A-12, NGHC. 55 “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” Subject: Grumman Aircraft Corp., et al., 5 August 1965, "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 56 Ibid. Grumman had a policy of shifting any personnel among various projects depending on where it needed certain manpower. 243 company, including managerial and administrative positions. 57 CORE also asked that Grumman clarify for its employees the criteria for promotion and indicate how each employee had performed on an individual basis via periodic review (some AfricanAmerican Grummanites had apparently complained to CORE that they did not know the results of their individual performance reviews). The civil rights organization also suggested that Grumman employees be allowed to elect an internal minority grievance panel so that employees could bring any cases of discrimination to the panel's attention for action. Finally, CORE wanted Grumman to submit a detailed plan within thirty days explaining how the company would accomplish these tasks, and then, within ninety days, offer proof that such actions had been taken and accomplished. 58 CORE‟s attack on Grumman represented more than a single battle against one company. Lincoln Lynch, the chairman of CORE's Long Island organization, clearly proclaimed that CORE's actions against Grumman would be just the first of many forthcoming confrontations with Long Island defense contractors. According to Lynch, discrimination against minorities among Long Island's defense contractors remained significant, and the charges against Grumman marked "the opening gun in our battle against the defense industry."59 57 Ibid. 58 Ibid. 59 Lynch noted that the Sperry Gyroscope Company of Great Neck, NY, would be CORE‟s next target. Although Lynch did not mention what CORE‟s main problems with Sperry were, it is clear that he and his colleagues were determined to attack and stamp out what they perceived to be widespread discrimination in Long Island‟s aerospace industry. See and compare “LI Defense Industry is the Next Target in CORE Campaign," unidentified newspaper, 6 August 1965; "Grumman Denies CORE's Charge of Employment Bias," in Long Island Press, 6 August 1965; “Grumman OKs CORE Points,” Newsday, 28 244 Grumman officials must have been dismayed by CORE‟s indictment of the company, which contradicted the firm‟s self-assessment and understanding of itself. Grumman had never had segregated facilities. 60 The company had maintained a stated “Open Door” policy throughout its entire history; any employee could freely discuss any problem—whether personal or job-related—with anyone in the company at any time, no appointment was necessary. Grumman managers had also encouraged employees to call each other by their first names, "whether they be with vice presidents or fellow workers.”61 And Grumman also had a “well-known esprit de corps” and had maintained an “atmosphere of teamwork”—at least as far as the company‟s managers believed— which is something that Grumman officials offered as proof that discrimination did not exist.62 To Grumman managers, CORE‟s overarching charges and demands seemed overblown and largely unfounded. Some white rank-and-file Grummanites responded immediately to CORE‟s charges against the company. As Edward Caldicott of Hempstead explained in a letter to the editor of a local newspaper: As a Grumman employe [sic], I can say that more Negroes are employed in responsible positions in Grumman than in any other place where I have worked in August 1965; and “CORE, Grumman Reach Agreement,” Long Island Press, 28 August 1965. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 60 “Joint Statement on „Plan for Progress‟,” no date, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 61 "The 'Open Door'—A Tradition at Grumman," Plane News, 22 March 1968, 3, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 62 “LI Defense Industry is the Next Target in CORE Campaign," unidentified newspaper, 6 August 1965. For more on the environment of teamwork, see "The 'Open Door'—A Tradition at Grumman," Plane News, 22 March 1968, 3. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 245 over 20 years. In the engineering group where I work, there are more than 100 engineers with a Negro in charge of the whole group. One of his assistants is a Negro. In that group, now, is another Negro engineer, and a second one was recently transferred to a different group. A similar situation exists throughout the engineering building where I work. There are also Oriental and other non-white engineers here. I discussed this news today with some of the Negro engineers, and they agreed that Grumman was the best plant on Long Island for hiring without regard to race. CORE may have plenty of grounds for complaint on Long Island, but not at Grumman. 63 As Caldicott‟s letter revealed, many white Grummanites believed that their company was quite progressive when it came to minority hiring and placement. A few weeks after CORE‟s initial charges, Grumman and the civil rights group agreed to meet and discuss their differences. CORE officials reasoned that it would be an opportunity to push the aerospace company to accept its recommendations for improving race relations and minority opportunities, but for Grumman, the meeting represented something entirely different. Company officials did not want to concede anything. For them, Grumman would only “provide information on its program of fair and equal opportunities for all of its employees, and to discuss the company's excellent response to its moral obligation under the President's Plans for Progress agreement."64 Grumman President Clinton Towl clearly stated that "the meeting has not been called to discuss fictitious discriminatory policies at Grumman."65 Company officials knew it was 63 "Was CORE Unfair to Grumman?" unidentified newspaper, no date, “CORE,” Section A-12, 64 "Draft,” Company Statement, no date, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 65 Ibid. NGHC. 246 important to have conversations with CORE, but from their perspective, the purpose of the meeting would only be to show CORE how fair the firm had been to all of its employees and to reveal the high degree of employee morale and teamwork. 66 They had adopted a siege mentality. Not surprisingly, the August 19 meeting did not represent a meeting of the minds. While Grumman officials conceded that minority progress had been poor throughout most of the country, they also believed that Grumman had always treated all of its employees fairly. They also objected to CORE's assertion that the company only considered the President's Plan for Progress a "scrap of paper." To counter such charges, company officials outlined at length what they considered the success of their programs in hiring and promoting minority workers. And while company officials noted that they had always been willing to meet and listen to groups interested in improving race relations, they questioned whether CORE legitimately represented a substantial percentage of Grumman‟s minority population. Company officials stated rather bluntly: “We are informed that CORE does not speak for any substantial number of people from Grumman's minority groups…which casts doubt on the conclusions drawn by this organization.”67 Still, after the meeting, Grumman decided it would continue to meet with CORE to discuss matters, just as long as "LINCOLN [Lynch] DOESN'T CHARGE 66 Ibid. 67 "Statement to CORE, August 19, 1965,” “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 247 ANYTHING" [emphasis in original]. 68 In a show of good faith, CORE agreed not to demonstrate against Grumman before their next meeting. 69 One of the key issues that had started to develop during talks between CORE and Grumman revolved around the number of minority workers the aerospace company employed. Ultimately, the two sides would concentrate a great deal of time and energy in analyzing employment statistics to argue their point about either the solid minority representation at the company, or the lack of it. Other firms besides Grumman faced this challenge. By the summer of 1965, employers in a variety of industries struggled with how to deal with the emerging idea of minority “quotas.” For some, the notion of quotas represented a moral issue, but for others it seemed pragmatic. Even though Title VII had been in force for a number of months, no precise legal criteria existed to govern the application of hiring formulas at that time. Businesses consequently struggled with what numbers they should use as their yardstick regarding minority employment. For example, should a company create a hiring target based on the overall minority population of an area? Or should a company‟s number of minority workers be based on the total number of those who possessed a particular skill? Furthermore, what geographical parameters should determine what constituted an “available” supply of labor? These questions illustrate the difficulties that employers faced when trying to develop their minority NGHC. 68 "IF LINCOLN DOESN'T CHARGE ANYTHING," “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 69 “Core Consultation,” photo caption, Newsday, 20 August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, 248 hiring policies. While some industries had a solid supply of skilled minority workers from which to draw, others, such as the aerospace industry, faced a much different challenge, because they had to develop their hiring targets based on a much smaller existing pool of skilled minority laborers.70 By the end of August 1965, Grumman suddenly decided to start revealing its employment statistics to the public to support its claims of non-discrimination and fair treatment.71 Company managers noted that Grumman‟s African-American employees constituted 3.6% of the company‟s workforce, a figure that they believed seemed wellbalanced given the 3.2% African-American population of Nassau County (Grumman's home county) and the 5.2% African-American population of nearby Suffolk County (the other main county from which the company drew its employees). 72 Furthermore, while the company‟s overall employment rolls had only increased about 19% from January 1965 to July 1965, the company‟s African-American workforce had increased approximately 25%.73 In fact, Grumman officials claimed that while the company‟s entire employee roster had risen by 71% from 1962 to the middle of 1965, Grumman‟s African-American workers had increased by more than 256% during the same period.74 70 For more on this entire subject, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 152. 71 See Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 72 See “Draft,” Company Statement, circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 73 See Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 74 This increase is probably not surprising given the fact that very few African Americans probably worked at Grumman in 1962. See Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 249 Grumman officials also noted that, since January 1962, most of the company‟s new African-American employees worked in more than menial positions. The most significant increase occurred in the Office and Clerical staff, a 1,320% increase (from five to seventy-one African American employees).75 Similarly, in the Technical Department, there had been a 516% increase, from thirteen to eighty minority workers.76 And AfricanAmerican Professionals had risen 578% from nine to 61 employees, while minority skilled craftsmen had risen from 120 to 378, or 215%.77 Minority employment numbers did not look as impressive in other Grumman departments. Despite company officials‟ claims that most of their new African-American employees worked in more than menial jobs, the number of African Americans working in "Service" positions had increased from 22 to 191, or 768%, since January 1962, while the number of African-American "Semi-Skilled" workers had only risen from sixteen to nineteen. Likewise, only three more African Americans had become managers since the original two had come on board in 1962. Regardless of these numbers, Grumman officials still claimed that the company had made definite progress in the hiring of African Americans over the past three years. They concluded that African Americans would only continue to reach higher and better positions in future years. After all, as of December 1964, African-American enrollment in the company‟s “Manufacturing 75 See “Draft,” Company Statement, circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 76 Ibid. 77 Ibid. 250 Training Program,” a paid program during regular work hours, stood at about ten%.78 Based on their review of the firm‟s employment statistics, it seemed obvious to company managers that African Americans were on the rise at Grumman. As the next meeting between CORE and Grumman officials approached, tensions between white and African-American Long Islanders continued to mount over the situation at the aerospace company. Irving McKnight of Roosevelt, NY, an AfricanAmerican Grummanite, added more fuel to the fire when he wrote a letter to Newsday that supported CORE's general charges. Clearly addressing local whites, McKnight‟s August 26 missive stated: "I too am a worker at Grumman, and like the majority of Negroes, I feel that we don't need your sympathy! All we want is an opportunity to live and work as all others without this misplaced pity." Turning his attention specifically to CORE's charges, McKnight noted: I don't feel that CORE is off base by making these charges against Grumman. Their practices are unfair, and we can see and feel them. We can see that the qualified Negroes are not permitted to advance—they are frozen in a step. 'Good' Negro workers are not given their due increase unless they are 'friends' of the foreman or members of the same organization to which the foreman belongs: lodge, socio-civic or even hate groups.79 78 Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, “Long Island Congress of Racial Equality,” circa August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 79 "CORE and Grumman," Newsday, 26 August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 251 McKnight ended by suggesting that anyone who didn't believe him should "make a tour of the plants, then draw conclusions based on facts. CORE never takes a stand without substantiating actions with facts that are justifiable."80 McKnight‟s letter may have been the first indication that, contrary to Grumman‟s insistence, CORE‟s charges did indeed resonate with some of the company‟s AfricanAmerican workforce. By the time of the next meeting in August, Grumman officials had decided to agree to twelve of CORE‟s fifteen demands, but only because the company claimed it had already been implementing those points ever since the firm‟s inception more than thirty years earlier. Among the enumerated points were pledges to aggressively recruit, train, and promote non-white employees, and a promise not to penalize any employees who filed discrimination complaints against the company. CORE and Grumman still disagreed about the need for 1) an internal employee panel to hear discrimination complaints; 2) the submission of a detailed plan to CORE providing proof within ninety days of the company‟s implementation of the fifteen points; and 3) a pledge to provide written notification to all employees about new job openings. Although the two groups disagreed on these issues, they did agree to meet again at the end of September. According to both sides, the meeting had been amicable and productive.81 CORE continued its aggressive campaign against the company immediately after the meeting. Although the civil rights group did not publicly protest against the firm, it did make its presence known to Grummanites inside the Bethpage plants. CORE started NGHC. 80 Ibid. 81 See “Grumman OKs CORE Points,” Newsday, 28 August 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, 252 to physically count the number of minorities entering the company‟s gates on a daily basis.82 After all, such data might come in handy when trying to combat Grumman‟s vast statistical array about the firm‟s race relations. CORE suggested that Grumman hire an African American in the personnel office to alert minorities to certain job and training opportunities, as well as to monitor their progress; the company had rejected this idea initially. 83 CORE also wanted the firm to place photographs of African American and white Grummanites working together around the plant, as well as feature AfricanAmerican Grummanites in both black and white newspapers. And finally, the civil rights group wanted the company to hold special recruitment sessions in African-American neighborhoods.84 As the September meeting approached, the editorial pages of Long Island‟s newspapers continued to focus on Grumman‟s supposed discrimination. Although some wanted to see certain Grummanites‟ lack of advancement as based solely on race, two white Grummanites clearly disagreed and aired their feelings in Newsday. Responding to Irving McKnight‟s letter, Richard J. Bartolotta of Massapequa Park said that “politics,” rather than discrimination, held McKnight back. As Bartolotta noted, politics were “not only a practice of Grumman‟s; it goes on all over the world.” But in Bartolotta‟s parlance, “politics” were not racially based per se, because politics “not only affect Negroes, but white people too.” He went on to ask “Do white people get a chance to 82 Pete Viemeister to Jack Rettaliata, 20 September 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 83 James L. Hill to Robert Bradshaw, 23 September 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 84 Ibid. 253 advance unless they know the right people? No! When the Italians or the Irish, or the Chinese first came to this country, they too were discriminated against. They didn‟t get ahead by demonstrations or picket lines. They went out and worked hard to achieve their goals. You won‟t get ahead by carrying a sign around all day.” Bartolotta concluded: “If Mr. McKnight will open his eyes, he will see that it is not only the Negroes who are frozen in step, but everyone who doesn‟t know the right people. If he can‟t see this, then he is looking through shaded eyes.” 85 Bartolotta‟s letter suggests the beliefs that one should not demonstrate against a fair employer, and, to get ahead one must work very hard—key blue-collar ideas. These two beliefs were a definite part of Grumman‟s work culture. On the same editorial page as Bartolotta‟s letter was one from a fellow white Grummanite, O. W. Magee of Hicksville. Like Bartolotta‟s letter, Magee‟s correspondence conveyed a similar pro-Grumman sentiment, as well as a devotion to the Protestant work ethic. Magee seemed clearly angered by McKnight‟s charges against Grumman. As he bluntly stated: “I would like to advise him [McKnight] to open his eyes at work and see how his fellow white workers are doing along the lines of advancement and pay increases.” Clearly addressing the supposed racial divide, he opined: I am white and I have been working on an advancement for two years now. I am well qualified for the position I‟m seeking, but since openings are scarce higher up and there are many on the list ahead of me, I realize I must have patience. Everyone I work with would like a pay increase, but we realize that Grumman has just so much money to go around. 85 "CORE and Grumman," Newsday, 16 September 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 254 So I suggest that Mr. McKnight work a little harder and have a little more patience like the rest of us, and stop using his race as an excuse. If a man is a good enough worker, advancement and pay increases will come. There aren‟t many employers who are as fair and unbiased as Grumman.86 Interestingly, white Grummanites were not the only ones who responded negatively to Irving McKnight‟s letter. Notably, Horace W. Plummer of Huntington Station, an African-American Grummanite, noted in a letter to the editor: “As one of the many Negro employes [sic] of the Grumman family, I have never been discriminated against or have had knowledge or information of such. I came up through the ranks, and with loyalty and determination I am now holding a responsible position. From my own personal experience, a qualified Negro is permitted to advance and a conscientious worker is given his due increase in salary automatically.” 87 CORE, Civil Rights, and the Labor Organizing Question As rank-and-file white and African-American Grummanites fought among themselves in the editorial pages, a new issue of considerable note developed behind the scenes among Grumman‟s top managers. Grumman officials began to link civil rights agitation with the possibility of union organizing. Charges of racial discrimination did not strike fear into the managers‟ hearts as much as the idea of labor agitation. Beginning in mid-September, Pete E. Viemeister, one of Grumman‟s personnel managers, sent J. B. 86 Ibid. 87 “CORE and Grumman,” Newsday, 27 September 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 255 Rettaliata, a Grumman vice president, a very pointed document that detailed the potential outcomes of Grumman‟s discussions with CORE, including the possibility that continued agitation might invite organized labor to get a toehold in the company. Viemeister included a flow chart, which at one end had the best possible outcome, that the issues between CORE and Grumman would be “resolved happily.” But at the other end rested the most extreme and disappointing possibility for company officials: a union election presided over by the National Labor Relations Board (NRLB) in which workers voted to unionize the company. Having already gone through an NRLB election three years earlier, company officials did not want to repeat the process. Other projected scenarios included the possibility of demonstrations, violence, and government pressure and intervention.88 In an effort to provide ammunition to counter possible labor agitation, Viemeister provided Rettaliata with several ways to understand the situation and proceed. For Viemeister, CORE had targeted the company because Grumman is a symbol. Grumman is the largest single employer on Long Island. Grumman is perhaps the most enlightened large company in the defense industry, when it comes to personnel relations. But this matters not to CORE. Making demands of Grumman, meeting with Grumman, having quasi-negotiations with Grumman— provides CORE with a forum for publicity for its interests.89 88 The document Viemeister sent to Rettaliata also included a Who‟s Who in Civil Rights, a chronology of civil rights events, and a Business Week article about CORE‟s union demonstrations around the country and how other companies had dealt with such situations. See Pete Viemeister to Jack Rettaliata, 20 September 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 89 Ibid. 256 And while Viemeister realized that Grumman needed to allow CORE to proceed in this matter, he also noted that, if necessary, Grumman could discredit the civil rights organization by pointing out that it did not speak for all African Americans, since only one in 250 African Americans belonged to the organization. As he explained, the company could argue that “No one group can speak for „the Negro.‟”90 Viemeister keyed in on the fact that some of CORE‟s leaders “ardently believed that civil rights objectives will best be achieved „when the battle is joined by union.‟” He conjectured: “Having long coveted Grumman, the AFL-CIO might be studying how best to capitalize on CORE‟s negotiations with Grumman.” He cautioned that “If CORE and Grumman get hung up on „labor relations‟ type questions, a union might move in, using that particular unresolved issue to fan employee discontent.” Despite Viemeister‟s doomfilled words, he also noted “a union might feel that using a CORE-raised issue would polarize workers against the union,” and, in turn, he suggested, that might scare labor organizers from “trying anything now.” Nevertheless, Viemeister concluded, “In any event, we should keep our ears tuned for any hint of cooperation between CORE and the AFL-CIO and head it off before it gets out of control.” 91 By the September 30 meeting, all of the jockeying among the different camps had increased the tension of the situation tremendously. Although Grumman had agreed to meet twelve of CORE‟s fifteen demands, CORE did not feel that the company was successfully proceeding to meet its other requests. The company had not set up an NGHC. 90 Ibid. 91 P.E. Viemeister to File, 21 September 1965, “CORE and unionism”, “CORE,” Section A-12, 257 interracial employee grievance panel, nor had it submitted a detailed plan within the thirty-day deadline detailing how it would meet CORE‟s demands. For CORE, it seemed as if the aerospace manufacturer believed it was enough to have agreed to the twelve points in principle; but the civil rights organizers felt the firm was only paying lip service to them. As Ruth Schwartz of CORE put it, Grumman believed it did not have to make good on all of the points because it had not been guilty of discrimination in the first place. According to Grumman, it had always been a fair employer and had treated all of its employees equally. Furthermore, to counter CORE‟s charges and clarify its own position, the company issued a statement that said that the “implementation of most of CORE‟s proposals would seriously jeopardize the efficiency and success of this mission [the space program and supplying the military with aircraft].” Overall, this meeting produced “very little progress” and only seemed to increase tension and distrust between the two groups. Nevertheless, the two sides did agree to continue talks on October 23, before which Grumman would submit to CORE a list of counterproposals. About the only positive new step that came out of the September 30 meeting was an agreement by both sides to have an annual Job Opportunity Day, where executives from some of Long Island‟s major industries would advise African Americans and other minorities about job and training opportunities in their companies. 92 92 See “Grumman: CORE‟s Demands Would Jeopardize Efficiency,” Long Island Press, 1 October 1965; and “‟Job Opportunity Day‟ Sought After Grumman Talks on Bias,” Newsday, 1 October 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 258 By mid-October, Viemeister had grown more concerned that the company‟s negotiations with CORE might not resolve agreeably and that the company would suffer the consequences. He sent Lew Evans, one of Grumman‟s senior vice presidents, a blunt memo outlining how the talks might continue, revealing that “if the current discussions with CORE end with amicable resolution, I‟ll be surprised. These „negotiations‟ could be only one step in a longer range CORE program that would include publicity-getting demonstrations. Such negotiations are often merely a means of identifying a specific issue that can be used as the basis for a more public protest.”93 Viemeister had reached these conclusions based on a book that he had learned CORE leaders had memorized by heart, Martin Oppenheimer‟s A Manual for Direct Action, which provided “strategy and tactics for civil rights and all other non-violent protest movements.” Having already delved into the book himself, he suggested that other Grumman officials read it so that they could familiarize themselves with what they could expect in their negotiations and actions with CORE. Oppenheimer‟s work exacerbated his fear that CORE would link up with labor and join in an organizing campaign against the company. Viemeister was particularly troubled by suggestions on how to target the largest business in a town. The book instructed protestors to locate an area‟s most important companies by consulting Moody‟s Industrial Manual, which was something CORE had indeed done prior to targeting Grumman. Viemeister was also concerned about “a chapter on tactics” that revealed “sixty-four different methods of non- 93 P.E. Viemeister to L.J. Evans, 13 October 1965, Inter-Office Memorandum, “Understanding CORE,” “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 259 violent action, ranging from marches, parades, picketing, leafleting, and strikes, to sitins.”94 As Grumman officials prepared for their next meeting with CORE (scheduled for the end of October), Robert Bradshaw, the company‟s Director of Personnel, sent the civil rights group a list of “counterproposals.” But the two-page document, far from being a real list of proposals, simply reiterated Grumman‟s commitment to equal employment opportunity. It also listed the ways Grumman officials believed that they had already been meeting all of CORE‟s demands for many years prior to the civil rights group‟s intervention. Grumman officials continued to believe that the company had always treated all of its employees fairly since its inception in the 1930s, and they hammered that point home with CORE. Grumman refused to let an outside organization tell it how to manage its company, because company officials believed that their policies were already “in the best interests of minority groups and in line with our responsibilities to the nation, our customers, and all of our employees.” 95 Grumman‟s stubborn response pushed CORE officials over the brink. A little more than a week after meeting with the company, Lincoln Lynch told the press that he held little hope that the two groups could resolve their differences. 96 The civil rights organization had tired of Grumman‟s “agreements in principle, which mean nothing in 94 Ibid. 95 Robert W. Bradshaw to James L. Hill, 18 October 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 96 The October meeting actually occurred on the 31st. For more information on the subject, see “CORE Says It Will Stop Talking, Start Acting in Grumman Case,” Newsday, 1 November 1965; and “CORE, Grumman Meet on Employment,” unidentified newspaper, no date. Both found in "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 260 fact.” Although Grumman had agreed to implement twelve of CORE‟s demands, and to improve minority employment, training, and promotions, in reality Grumman believed that it did not need to accede to such demands because it had already been implementing such policies for years.97 Lynch insisted that CORE would stop talking and start taking action, promising “other recourses will be resorted to if necessary.” James Hill, the organization‟s Long Island employment chairman, summed up the importance of the situation in the minds of CORE officials: “We are determined to reach an agreement that will serve as a landmark for the defense industry, not only on Long Island but throughout the United States.”98 With the end of the year approaching, the two groups had reached a standstill. CORE was preparing for battle, a battle, it seemed, that would take place somewhere other than in the conference room. Curiously, however, the battle did not begin, at least not right away. One may logically ask what happened to CORE‟s campaign against Grumman after 1965. It appears that the organization may have been distracted away from the campaign when it began putting a lot of effort into trying to solve the problems of urban renewal in the Rockville Centre section of Nassau County beginning in the summer of 1965. Residents were upset about the conditions in the village-owned slum area of Rockville Centre and 97 Grumman had not formed an internal grievance committee by November 1965, which was one of CORE‟s 12 demands, and one that Grumman had supposedly agreed to implement. However, the two groups did agree to set up a three-person panel to oversee the negotiations between the two groups. The panel would consist of one representative from each organization and one form the Nassau County Human Rights Commission. See “CORE Says It Will Stop Talking, Start Acting in Grumman Case,” Newsday, 1 November 1965; and “CORE, Grumman Meet on Employment”, unidentified newspaper, no date. Both found in "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 98 “CORE Says It Will Stop Talking, Start Acting in Grumman Case,” Newsday, 1 November 1965; and “CORE, Grumman Meet on Employment,” unidentified newspaper, no date. Both found in "CORE," Section A-12, NGHC. 261 deplored the Urban Renewal Director's refusal to correct the "inhumane conditions" there. The Long Island Chapter of CORE began staging sits-ins to protest the situation beginning in July, and they continued into the fall. CORE‟s files contain a great deal of information about the organization‟s campaign to improve that situation, but nothing more about the campaign against Grumman. Perhaps CORE had become too overextended to carry on both movements at the same time and it had to choose its battles carefully at that moment.99 Although CORE‟s local campaign at Grumman had seemed to take a backseat in 1966, several changes began occurring in civil rights law and policy that year that would nevertheless provide African-American Grummanites with a more solid foundation from which to launch a legal assault in the future. In 1966, the Office of Federal Contract Compliance instituted a policy of pre-award compliance for federal government contractors. In other words, the new initiative required that before a contractor could win a bid, it had to submit an affirmative action plan that demonstrated it could meet its civil rights obligations.100 Additionally, in October 1967, President Lyndon Johnson issued Executive Order 11375 which required employers with more than fifty employees and more than $50,000 in contracts to submit a written affirmative action compliance 99 A careful review of CORE‟s national and Long Island files and field reports reveals an almost total absence of any information about Grumman or a campaign against the aerospace giant during this period. The only mention of the situation in CORE‟s files is a single newspaper article titled “Grumman Oks CORE Points from Newsday dated 28 August 1965. The CORE files do, however, contain a wealth of information about the organization‟s efforts in Rockville Center. For more, generally, see CORE/King Papers—CORE: The Papers of the Congress of Racial Equality: Addendum, 1944-1968 (Microfilm Edition) Reel 18, Sections 108-109 at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC. The August 28 Newsday article is on Frame 1343 of this reel. 100 Belz, Equality Transformed, 32. 262 program that included goals and timetables for minority hiring. 101 Notably, in 1968, the OFCC mandated that each employer bidding on a federal contract submit a written affirmative action plan as part of the bidding process. 102 All in all, African Americans seemed to be gaining more and more legal help from the federal government at securing better-paying and higher-ranking jobs in the workplace. Big Brother In January 1968, several African-American Grummanites—believing that their company had not made significant improvements in race relations—founded an organization called Big Brother to fight for their rights. 103 Robert Caupain, an Assistant Program Manager at the company, chaired the organization. 104 Simply stated, the group wanted to provide "help and understanding for any underprivileged Grumman employee."105 Membership consisted of both African American and white workers, and all sorts of Grummanites appealed to the organization for assistance with their problems. 106 George C. Warren of East Meadow, a white Grummanite, sought Big 101 The law required that a company review and submit its compliance on a yearly basis. See Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 104. 102 Belz, Equality Transformed, 32. 103 "Black Walkout Threatened at Grumman," Newsday, 2 August 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 104 Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,” Long Island Press, 20 June 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 105 "Black Walkout Threatened at Grumman," Newsday, 2 August 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 106 “Grumman Hiring to be Probed,” Suffolk Sun, 29 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. NGHC. 263 Brother‟s help when he alleged that he was fired for refusing to wade through a garbage can to recover some used parts.107 Although historical sources remain silent about the outcome of Warren‟s appeal, the point remains that several Grummanites both black and white turned to Big Brother as a legitimate avenue to resolve their workplace issues. At about the same time, the Suffolk County Human Relations Commission, a civil rights organization located in the county with the second largest concentration of Grummanites, renewed charges about the company‟s supposed civil rights violations. In late January 1968, the commission publicly charged Grumman with failing to recruit minority groups.108 Commission Chair Ralph R. Watkins complained to Senator Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY) during one of Kennedy‟s visits to Long Island. Kennedy, realizing the significant voting bloc that Grummanites represented, measured his reply carefully. Not wanting to anger white Grummanites, he told Watkins: "I haven't received any such information… If there are any complaints, there should be an effort to work them out with Grumman.‟109 Meanwhile, the company made an official effort to reach out to the “hard core unemployed,” which obviously included many area African Americans.” 110 Grumman‟s 107 "Black Activist Group Plans Job Bias Protest," Long Island Press, 25 September 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 108 “Grumman Has Jobs for Poor,” Suffolk Sun, 29 January 1968; "'Hard-Core' Unemployed Sought," Suffolk Sun, 1 February 1968; and "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas,” Newsday, 5 February 1968. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 109 "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday, 5 February 1968, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 110 Newsday, 27 January 1968; and “Grumman Has Jobs for Poor,” Suffolk Sun,, 29 January 1968. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 264 new outreach program coincided serendipitously with the negative publicity the company faced regarding race relations and seemed to offset it. Grumman‟s “hard core unemployed” recruitment program kicked off in late January 1968 on the New York State Employment Service‟s television program “Opportunity Line.” The show featured employers describing job requirement qualifications and opportunities at their companies.111 Applicants could then respond to the employers on the show via phone, go through a short telephone interview screening process, and then obtain a formal interview date with the company. 112 Grumman‟s representatives advertised twenty-five job openings on the show, ranging from twenty production assemble positions to five secretarial jobs at the Bethpage plant.113 Notably, the representatives, in a significant break from Grumman‟s past, also promised viewers that the company would provide new employees with whatever training they needed to take on the new jobs. 114 In an added effort to reach a broader base of prospective employees, Grumman officials even promised to waive a high school diploma as a prerequisite. 115 Apparently, the television show, when coupled with newspaper advertisements, had a huge impact on the African-American community. When Grumman recruiters 111 Ibid. 112 Ibid. 113 “Grumman Will offer Jobs on New Ch. 2 Show,” Newsday, 30 January 1968, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 114 Newsday, 27 January 1968; and “Grumman Has Jobs for Poor,” Suffolk Sun,, 29 January 1968. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 115 See and compare “Grumman to Recruit in Two Poverty Areas,” Newsday, 29 January 1968; and "Grumman Seek Job Recruits," Long Island Daily Review, 31 January 1968. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 265 showed up to conduct interviews in the predominantly African-American neighborhoods of Wyandanch and North Amityville, on February 3, 1968, applicants overwhelmed them.116 Although the company had only sent one interviewer to each town, it quickly had to dispatch three more representatives to handle the crowds.117 Well over 200 applicants showed up in the two towns for interviews.118 Approximately seventy job openings existed, including several semi-skilled and skilled positions as machinists, assemblers, riveters, fiberglass processors, clerk-typists, and file clerks.119 Opening salaries for the new positions ranged from $2.00 an hour for unskilled workers and trainees, to up to $2.50 per hour for skilled workers.120 In all, 207 people interviewed for the jobs, with some waiting more than three hours to talk with a company representative. The firm hired thirty-five people on the spot and stated that after further screening and testing it would eventually employ as many as 60% of the people who applied that day. 121 116 Ibid. 117 "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday 5 February 1968, in "CORE," Section A-12, 118 Ibid. NGHC. 119 See and compare "Hunt for 'Black Energy' Proves Boon For Grumman," Long Island Press, 5 February 1968, in "CORE," Section A-12 NGHC; and Ibid. 120 “Grumman to Recruit in Two Poverty Areas,” Newsday, 29 January 1968; "Grumman Seek Job Recruits, "Long Island Daily Review 31 January 1968; and "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday, 5 February 1968. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 121 NOTE, according to Newsday, there were only 28 people hired and 169 people interviewed, but Newsday seems to have printed its story before the 8:00 PM announcement by the Suffolk Human Relations Commission, which the Long Island Press apparently waited for, and quotes specifically. For the correct numbers see "Hunt for 'Black Energy' Proves Boon For Grumman," Long Island Press, 5 February 1968; and "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday, 5 February 1968. On the length of time people had to wait in order to interview with Grumman officials, see "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday, 5 February 1968. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 266 For some of these applicants, Grumman‟s recruitment program almost seemed like a dream; one prospective interviewee commented while standing in line that "this has never happened before… I wonder if it's real, the largest employer on Long Island coming down to see us."122 From February 1968 to the early spring of 1969, the historical record is silent on the fate of African-American employees at Grumman. Although Grumman definitely hired several black employees during the Wyandanch and North Amityville interviews, sources do not reveal what happened to them. Nevertheless, a new series of civil rights battles began in Bethpage in early 1969. That spring, African-American Grummanites and their allies began a series of strategic attacks on Long Island‟s single largest employer in an effort to significantly alter their lives. In early 1969, Grumman won a more than $350 million contract to build the Navy‟s F-14 “Tomcat" fighter plane—a job that marked the largest single contract ever won by an aerospace firm up to that point—and CORE refocused its strategy around figuring out a way to use the new contract to its advantage in a campaign against Grumman.123 Even though the lunar landings were about to begin and the Apollo Program was consequently starting to downsize its workforce, CORE officials reasoned that the F-14 would still keep Grumman flush with money and jobs, and they wanted to make sure African Americans participated in the bounty. If the contract did not open up 122 "Grumman Hires 28 in 2 Poverty Areas, Newsday, 5 February 1968, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 123 In October 1969, the Great Neck News would report that the F-14 represented the largest single contract ever awarded to an aerospace firm. For more on this subject, see "Human Rights Committee 267 new opportunities for African Americans, CORE and its allies were determined to try to block the company from receiving federal funding because of the discrimination CORE had alleged. With this strategy in mind, the civil rights organization began a spring campaign against the aerospace company. On March 24, 1969, CORE and Big Brother held a major press conference in Hempstead Village, a predominantly African-American area, to discuss what they considered Grumman‟s poor race relations record. The organization wanted to launch an unprecedented media blitz against the aerospace giant in the hope that the federal government would start considering Grumman‟s equal employment record in tandem with the company‟s newly acquired F-14 contract. Long Island CORE chair Lamar Cox opened the press conference by insisting that Grumman had "consistently followed a racist policy…by refusing to place black and other minority groups in meaningful positions.”124 He claimed that except for approximately fifty staff, managerial, and engineering personnel, all of the other minorities working at Grumman held menial jobs. 125 He also asserted that only 2% of Grumman's total payroll went to compensating African-American workers at the time. 126 Sponsors Grumman Black Workers Airing of Their Grievances Here," Great Neck News, 1 October 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 124 "Grumman Accused—Denies Bias on Blacks, New York News, 25 March 1969; “Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied," Long Island Press, 25 March 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 125 "Group Charges Bias at Grumman," Suffolk Sun, 25 March 1969; and “Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied,” Long Island Press, 25 March 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 126 Ibid. 268 In the following days, Cox reported that he had fired off telegrams to the Department of Labor, the Defense Contract Administration, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, charging the federal government with “hedging on its legal obligation” to minorities.127 Trying to use Grumman‟s newly acquired F-14 contract to his advantage, Cox reminded the public that the federal government could only award contracts to companies that do not discriminate, as set down in civil rights laws. Cox noted that CORE and Big Brother (which by his account represented 500 minority Grummanites at the time) disagreed with the awarding of the Tomcat contract to Grumman, and he declared that they he would send a five-member delegation to Washington, DC, later that week to talk with Defense and Labor Department officials. Cox and Big Brother made it very clear that they intended to pursue federal charges against Grumman and wanted the government to withhold the F-14 contract from the company until the matters were resolved.128 Tiring of CORE‟s and Big Brother‟s continued allegations, Grumman decided to fight back with its own media campaign. Shortly after CORE and Big Brother‟s press conference, Company Vice President John Rettaliata presented the firm‟s own facts to the media. Grumman countered charges of racial discrimination with a set of statistics— 127 See and compare, “Acts to Defend Grumman vs. CORE,” Long Island Press, 26 March 1969; "Grumman Accused—Denies Bias on Blacks,” New York News, 25 March 1969; and “Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied," Long Island Press, 25 March 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 128 “Grumman Accused—Denies Bias on Blacks,” New York News, 25 March 1969; “Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied," Long Island Press, 25 March 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. Notably, Caupain really wanted Grumman‟s assurance that African Americans would be hired, or at least trained and used on the new $25 billion F-14 contract. See "Black Workers Protest 'Bias' at Grumman," Suffolk Sun, 5 August 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 269 figures that Rettaliata said proved that minority representation at the company stood well above the norm. Rettaliata stated that minorities at the time represented 8%, or approximately 2,150, of all Grumman employees, double the minority population of Nassau County. 129 He also noted that no employment decisions or evaluations had been made at the company, or would be made, based on a person's race, creed, or sex. And finally, Rettaliata pointed to investigations by the Defense Department's Equal Opportunity Division. DoD had periodically investigated Grumman over the years, but had never filed any complaints against the company. When Grumman did receive DoD suggestions on how to improve race relations, Rettaliata said, Grumman quickly acted on those recommendations. 130 As the aerospace giant tried to fend off charges of racial discrimination, a local official decided to enter the fray on the company‟s side. Within days of CORE‟s March 24 news conference, Lou V. Tempera, Suffolk County's Labor Commissioner, proclaimed that CORE‟s charges against Grumman were "totally unfounded." Tempera had reviewed his department's referrals to the company, and he could "strongly attest to the aggressiveness manifested by Grumman in hiring members of minority groups." He also remembered referring African Americans and Puerto Ricans to Grumman on many occasions, and said, “they were hired and placed in meaningful positions." Tempera 129 The New York News claimed that Rettaliata said that 8% of the people hired since 1968 were minorities. This fact seems incorrect compared to all of the other figures presented by different sources. For the correct information see "Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied," Long Island Press, 25 March 1969; and for the incorrect info see "Grumman Accused—Denies Bias on Blacks, New York News, 25 March 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 130 “Charge Bias at Grumman; It's Denied,” Long Island Press, 25 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 270 went on to suggest: “It is unfortunate, indeed, when such a respected organization as CORE, organized to represent the best interests of minority groups, stoops to this level of accusation against such a respected corporation.” He concluded: “Such behavior by CORE not only impairs the image of the minority group organization, but also mitigates against achievement of their objectives.” 131 In an effort to further bolster his claims, Tempera, less than forty-eight hours later, revealed that of the supposed 2,151 minority employees working at Grumman in March 1969, over 1,800 worked in professional, skilled, or semi-skilled positions, not just menial jobs. 132 CORE supporters were not happy that one of Long Island‟s Labor Commissioners had sided with Grumman on the issue of race relations, and they immediately called for his resignation. Lamar Cox opined that “any labor commissioner who sides with business without the facts cannot be trusted.”133 Cox believed that “Mr. Tempera‟s position indicates that he is not only an enemy of black people, but an enemy of labor… He sounds like a „sweetheart‟ labor commissioner and is an irresponsible bigot who has difficulty dealing with reality.” 134 Unwilling to let Cox have the last word, Tempera shot back, “It is indeed unfortunate that a representative of a respected organization such as 131 “Acts to Defend Grumman vs. CORE,” Long Island Press, 26 March 1969; and “Grumman Hiring Called Fair,” Newsday, 26 March 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 132 “Press Bias Charges Against Grumman,” Long Island Press, 28 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 133 “Tempera if Denounced for Grumman Position,” Newsday, 28 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 134 “Press Bias Charges Against Grumman,” Long Island Press, 28 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 271 CORE is willing to stoop to the level of mud-slinger in order to defend his irresponsible and unsupported accusations against Grumman.” 135 As the insults continued, George Pettengill, the new Director of the Suffolk County Human Relations Commission, also decided to weigh in on the situation, ostensibly as an impartial investigator. Despite the fact that the commission had publicly accused Grumman of racial discrimination and had lobbied Senator Robert Kennedy to investigate the firm approximately fourteen months earlier, Pettengill claimed he would investigate CORE‟s charges in an impartial and fair manner. He stressed that the commission only wanted to determine whether Grumman had violated any civil rights laws.136 As Pettengill and his organization prepared to begin the investigation, CORE and Big Brother launched yet another attack on the Long Island company. On March 28, a coalition of five CORE and Big Brother representatives carried out their promise to meet with officials at the Department of Labor‟s Office of Federal Contract Compliance in Washington, DC.137 The group, which included four Grummanites, consisted of Robert Garrett, William Page, Robert Caupain, Robert Keaton, and Richard Carruthers.138 The delegation carried with it a formal complaint 135 “Tempera if Denounced for Grumman Position,” Newsday, 28 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 136 “Grumman Hiring to be Probed,” Newsday, 29 March 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 137 “Affidavit,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Press Bias Charges Against Grumman,” Long Island Press, 28 March 1969 in "CORE," Section A-12/NGHC. 138 NGHC. “U.S. to Study Charge of Bias at Grumman,” Newsday, 1 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 272 signed by more than 600 Grumman employees that attested to the company‟s alleged racial discrimination. 139 Still, although a federal contract compliance officer informed them that their best course of action would be to file a complaint under Executive Order 11246, the group did not. Why they failed to do so is unclear.140 Nevertheless, the compliance office did forward the information from the delegation‟s visit to the Department of Defense (DoD) for investigation. 141 On April 1, Big Brother‟s Chairman Robert Caupain turned up the pressure even more by announcing that he had collected more than 200 specific written grievances from Grummanites to back African Americans‟ claims of racial discrimination. Caupain suggested that the complaints were not intended to threaten the company, but rather to help workers understand why the company did not employ any African-American foremen, plant managers, or other authority figures. Big Brother wanted to put African 139 “Grumman Hiring to be Probed,” Suffolk Sun, 1 April 1969; and “U.S. to Study Charge of Bias at Grumman,” Newsday, 1 April 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. Interestingly, Lamar Cox was assured by Grumman officials that no intimidation would occur toward the 600 plus Grummanites, both black and white, who signed the petition against Grumman in March 1969. See “U.S. to Investigate „Bias‟ at Grumman,” Long Island Press, 1 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC; and “Transcript of Proceedings,” June 19, 1970, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 140 “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Affidavit,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 141 The Labor Department said, on March 31, 1969 that it would ask the DoD to investigate CORE‟s charges against Grumman. The investigation was to commence within 60 days. See “Grumman Hiring to be Probed,” Suffolk Sun, 1 April 1969; and “U.S. to Study Charge of Bias at Grumman, Newsday, 1 April 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 273 Americans in managerial and oversight positions so that they could “pull up other black people.”142 By April 4 Grumman officials had grown increasingly angry, particularly with the Suffolk County Human Relations Commission, which had decided the prior week to investigate CORE‟s charges. When the commission requested information about Grumman‟s employment practices, the company refused to cooperate; it referred the commission to the EEOC, which had reports about the company‟s hiring record already on file. 143 Frustrated with Grumman, the commission decided to push the matter. George Pettengill quickly fired off a three-page letter about the firm‟s lack of cooperation to several U.S. Senators and local representatives, including New York Senators Jacob Javits (R) and Charles Goodell (R), Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts (D), and local representatives Otis G. Pike of Riverhead (D) and James R. Grover of Babylon (R). When the media pressed a Grumman spokesperson about Pettengill‟s letter, the spokesperson simply replied: “Why he‟s doing that is beyond me. The information is available to him and all he needs to do is write a letter. He‟s in closer contact with these agencies than he is with us.”144 Although Pettengill reassured Grumman officials that the 142 “Blacks at Grumman List Complaints,” Newsday, 2 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 143 “Suffolk Presses Grumman Probe,” Newsday, 5 April 1969; “Grumman Rejects Bid for Report,” Suffolk Sun, 4 April 1969; and “Rights Unit Seeks Grumman Data, Long Island Press, 5 April 1969. All are found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 144 NGHC. “Grumman Rejects Bid for Report,” Suffolk Sun, 4 April 1969; “CORE,” Section A-12, 274 investigation was routine and that the commission was “making no accusations of guilt or innocence,” it was obvious that Grumman was not going to cooperate.145 As Pettengill and Grumman fought, CORE and Big Brother decided to pressure the company even more by having four African American Grummanites meet with a reporter from the labor newspaper Interavia. The four men were part of the group of 200 who had submitted written complaints about Grumman‟s racial discrimination. While Long Islanders were learning about the feud between Pettengill and Grumman officials from their local newspapers, they were also reading about the experiences of Grummanites Arthur Davis, Wesley Freeman, Verlyn Curry, and Robert Barnes. 146 As Interavia revealed, Arthur Davis of Roosevelt, Long Island had accepted a position at Grumman as a dishwasher in 1967 hoping that the job would help him move up in the company once he got his foot in the door. With more than two and a half years of college experience, Davis and his interviewer both felt confident that once he joined the company, promotions would soon follow. But when Davis failed to obtain a job in the engineering department, the chemistry lab, or the data processing office, he began to realize that he could only go so far in the firm. When he asked the personnel department for help, strangely they told him they could not do anything because “their hands were 145 “Suffolk Presses Grumman Probe,” Newsday, 5 April 1969; “Grumman Rejects Bid for Report,” Suffolk Sun, 4 April 1969; and “Rights Unit Seeks Grumman Data, Long Island Press, 5 April 1969. All are found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 146 NGHC. “Grumman Keeping Us Down: Blacks,” Interavia, 4 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 275 tied.” Davis had been unable to obtain any of the positions he sought; he moved from washing dishes to being in charge of filling the company‟s vending machines.147 Wesley Freeman of Hempstead, Long Island had labored alongside Davis in the kitchen. Freeman had originally applied for a position as a Grumman drill press operator and continued to seek the job for more than four years, but never received a reply from the company. When one of Freeman‟s friends suggested that he apply for a position as a porter, however, he secured that job within two days. Although Freeman interviewed for a higher-paying position as a riveter in 1968, the personnel department still had not contacted him by the time of the Interavia interview. Freeman was washing dishes for the company at $63 a week at the time. 148 Robert Barnes of Hempstead had also suffered some of the same frustrations when he applied for a Grumman position that suited his skills and desires. Although Barnes had been in charge of a shipping office before joining Grumman in 1963, he had only secured a position in Grumman‟s maintenance department “digging holes, driving tractors, shoveling snow, or pushing a broom.” Barnes had continually applied for positions in the transportation department, but he had never secured a job there. He eventually moved out of the maintenance department and into a position as an inter-office company messenger at the rate of $2.85 an hour.149 147 At the rate of $2.55 per hour. “Grumman Keeping Us Down: Blacks,” Interavia, 4 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 148 “Grumman Keeping Us Down: Blacks,” Interavia, 4 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 149 Ibid. NGHC. 276 Verlyn Curry, also of Hempstead, was the only man in the group who had graduated from college. After receiving his police science degree from New York State Agricultural and Technical College at Farmingdale, Curry had worked for a while as a security guard for the New York World‟s Fair and several private detective firms, and as an MP for the Air Force. But when he applied for a job in Grumman‟s security office, he only received an offer to become a dishwasher. Like Davis, Curry believed that the job would allow him to get inside the company and work his way up to the position he really wanted; at least, that is what the people in the personnel department had led him to believe. But his request for a transfer to that department went unfulfilled. Still, unlike Davis and Freeman, Curry did move out of the kitchen and onto the shop floor, where he landed a position as a power brake operator at $91 a week.150 The average hourly wage of aerospace workers nationwide was $3.00 an hour at this time; at $2.30 to $2.85, these four men earned considerably less.151 Although the $3.00 an hour figure included highly skilled laborers, these men‟s desires to move into higher skilled positions had been systematically thwarted, even where education and past experience seemed to indicate their qualifications. Based on these men‟s accounts, Grumman‟s ethic of nondiscrimination seemed more philosophical than practical. By April 7, Labor Commissioner Tempera had reached his limit. Speaking to reporters about the accusations against Grumman, Tempera said: “We‟re cutting our own 150 151 Ibid. According to union representatives, the average hourly wage of aerospace workers in the Los Angeles area was approximately $3.00 per hour. See U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Hearings Before the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Utilization of Minority and Women Workers in Certain Major Industries, Los Angeles, CA, March 12-14, 1969, 90. 277 throats by continuing this name-calling and accusation… All the accusations of discrimination are being blown out of proportion.” Tempera went on to assert that Human Relations Commissioner Pettengill was “unaware of the seriousness of the situation and what it means to Long Island‟s economy. Defense contracts enable Grumman to employ 36,000 people. If those contracts are suspended, if Grumman is not allowed to compete for them, Long Island‟s labor force will suffer a tremendous blow.” Tempera concluded: “Let‟s leave it in the hands of the proper investigatory parties so we don‟t jeopardize Grumman‟s position as a competitor in this vital and valuable industry. What is the sense of possibly winning a battle and losing the war? Jobs are important for everyone, black and white.”152 Clearly, Tempera was very concerned that CORE‟s and Big Brother‟s accusations might scuttle the Grumman‟s F-14 contract. Within a week, the Department of Defense launched an investigation into Grumman‟s employment and promotion practices. The proceedings were the result of Big Brother‟s trip to Washington, DC; in addition, several African-American Grummanites had begun complaining to the New York Regional Office of the Contract Compliance Office, among other agencies, during the latter part of 1968.153 The investigation, conducted by a four-man team for New York‟s Regional Office of the Defense Supply Agency, began on April 14.154 Its main goals were to look at all aspects of Grumman‟s 152 “‟Out of Proportion:‟ Tempera Decries Grumman Probe,” Suffolk Sun, 7 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 153 “U.S. to Investigate „Bias‟ at Grumman,” Long Island Press, 1 April 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 154 “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National 278 “hiring cycle,” including recruitment, hiring, promotions, and pay rates, as well as focus on the company‟s adherence to EO 11246.155 After thoroughly plumbing Grumman‟s personnel records and interviewing several employees, the four-man team concluded its investigation three weeks later on May 10.156 A few days later, the DoD released the team‟s findings, and with the exception of a few suggestions about implementing some new affirmative action policies, with which Grumman agreed to comply right away, the report essentially cleared the company of any charges of “overt” discrimination.157 The most damning part of the report, however, noted that the company's "record and procedure for promoting equal employment opportunity were not satisfactory, and Grumman was determined not to be in compliance." Nevertheless, after quickly negotiating a revision of the company‟s policies (which included more frequent reporting and monitoring) with the New York Regional Office, on May 27 the DoD certified the aerospace giant as being in compliance with all civil rights laws and Executive Orders.158 Archives at Suitland, MD; “U.S. Begins Job Bias Study at Grumman, Newsday 15 April 1969; “Probe at Grumman Begins Tomorrow, Long Island Press 13 April 1969; and “Grumman Probe Starts Today,” Suffolk Sun 14 April, 1969, in "CORE," Section A-12/NGHC. 155 “U.S. Begins Job Bias Study at Grumman, Newsday 15 April 1969; “Probe at Grumman Begins Tomorrow, Long Island Press 13 April 1969; and “Grumman Probe Starts Today,” Suffolk Sun 14 April, 1969. All found in "CORE," Section A-12/NGHC. 156 Ibid. 157 “CORE Plans Suit to Kill Grumman Defense Contracts,” Long Island Press, 19 May 1969; “Grumman Bias Battle is Spurred by CORE,” New York News, 20 May 1969; and “CORE to file Grumman Suit,” Suffolk Sun, 19 May 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 158 “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendants‟ Motions to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” 5-6, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 693142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 279 The report angered and frustrated CORE and Big Brother, but the two organizations had a contingency plan in place. Within hours of the release of the DoD‟s report, CORE announced that it had hired the well-known New York civil rights lawyer William Kunstler to bring a lawsuit against Grumman and the federal government.159 Kunstler was the director and lead lawyer of the nonprofit Center for Constitutional Rights, which had fought for such clients as Students for a Democratic Society, the Black Panthers, the Chicago Seven, and CORE, among others. On Sunday, May 18, as Apollo 10 streaked toward the Moon with Grumman‟s Lunar Module in its payload, CORE and Kunstler announced the suit and asked the community for its support for what they believed would be a very long and costly court battle. Kunstler compared the situation between African Americans and Grumman to the biblical battle between David and Goliath. He also noted the novelty of the suit—it would be the first time a major federal contractor had been sued for discrimination. 160 Ironically, at the same time that the Long Island Press featured the stunning pictures of the Moon taken by the Apollo 10 astronauts, it also carried the story about CORE‟s lawsuit.161 159 “CORE Plans Suit to Kill Grumman Defense Contracts,” Long Island Press, 19 May 1969; “Grumman Bias Battle is Spurred by CORE,” New York News, 20 May 1969; and “CORE to file Grumman Suit,” Suffolk Sun, 19 May 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. At the time, Kunstler was still in the early stages of formulating a lawsuit strategy. There was the chance that Grumman might not even be named in the suit. The targets might instead be the secretaries of labor and defense and the members of contract compliance division that sat on the investigating committee. 160 “CORE Plans Suit to Kill Grumman Defense Contracts,” Long Island Press, 19 May 1969; “Grumman Bias Battle is Spurred by CORE,” New York News, 20 May 1969; and “CORE to file Grumman Suit,” Suffolk Sun, 19 May 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 161 “CORE Plans Suit to Kill Grumman Defense Contracts,” Long Island Press, 19 May 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 280 While Kunstler and his colleagues prepared their case, the entire Grumman workforce, regardless of race, nervously anticipated some downsizing. Although Grumman managers had logically believed that the F-14 Program would absorb many of the company‟s former Apollo workers as the lunar program wound down, a number of intertwining incidents started to occur in the summer of 1969 that forced serious reductions in the company's workforce, much to the surprise of many Grummanites. As discussed in greater detail in Chapter Five, from 1969 to 1973 Grumman faced serious problems with its F-14 contract, and it lost the primary Space Shuttle contract to North American Rockwell. These incidents combined with the period‟s major economic recession and triggered a more than four-year downward spiral at the firm, a setback that led to a series of massive layoffs. By 1973, over 15,000 engineers and workers, or about one-third of Grumman's workforce, had lost their jobs. As African Americans turned up the pressure on Grumman and the federal government in the summer of 1969, they were fighting to secure more of the shrinking number of jobs at the Long Island aerospace giant as a major round of layoffs began. On June 19, 1969, Robert Caupain called a press conference at CORE‟s Long Island headquarters in Hempstead at which he threatened to “close down the Grumman Corporation in Bethpage if discrimination practices are not halted.” Caupain warned: “We are going to make a change even if it means bloodshed.” Big Brother wanted to place qualified African Americans in meaningful positions and to stop the “intimidation by Uncle Toms and whites in managerial positions at Grumman, including… threatened layoffs if blacks continue with their lawsuit against Grumman.” Big Brother‟s leader said that the firm had already laid off about 10% of its workforce, or approximately 3,500 281 workers. He also mentioned three African Americans in Grumman‟s upper management by name—Lloyd Lee, an assistant to Jack Rettaliata; William Byas, assistant personnel director; and Ossie Williams, a corporate manager and lead engineer on the LM program—whom he believed had threatened African-American employees‟ jobs if they cooperated with CORE‟s impending lawsuit. Caupain concluded the press conference by noting that Grumman officials had “told blacks to cool off until after the summer so that promotions could be worked up.” Grumman denied all of Caupain‟s charges with the exception of the layoffs and once again decided to follow a strategy of letting statistics speak for themselves. Jack Rettaliata insisted that African Americans comprised 8% of Grumman‟s workforce, even though they only made up 4% of the population in Grumman‟s home county of Nassau. From Grumman‟s perspective, the company obviously did not discriminate.162 As the summer wore on, CORE and Big Brother collected evidence that they could use to justify a strike against Grumman. By the latter part of June, the two organizations had set up a trailer outside the company‟s gates to take depositions from African-American Grummanites about discrimination that they had experienced at the corporation.163 Then, on June 22, more than two hundred African-American Grummanites met with CORE and Big Brother for more than two hours behind closed 162 “Grumman Charged Anew With Bias,” Newsday, 20 June 1969; and “Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,” Long Island Press 20 June 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A12, NGHC. 163 NGHC. “Grumman Charged Anew With Bias,” Newsday, 20 June 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 282 doors to discuss the threat of the layoffs of minorities. 164 When the media pressed participants about what took place at the meeting, no one divulged anything. One did note, however, “It was all togetherness, baby.”165 Tensions continued to increase between Grumman and the civil rights groups throughout the summer. Within days of one of the company‟s greatest accomplishments—the historic Apollo 11 lunar landing on July 20—many Grummanites read continued press coverage of a threatened strike against the company, which would be led by Caupain and other African Americans. On August 1, Big Brother promised a walk-out by more than 1,500 black Grummanites if some recently laid-off African Americans did not regain their jobs. Caupain told reporters that twenty-three black Grummanites had just received pink slips the day before and more than two hundred had lost their jobs since May 1. Those actions, he claimed, violated an agreement that he and Grumman President Lew Evans had reached in June, in which Evans had assured Caupain that he would take steps "to insure that any planned reduction in force will not operate unfairly to the detriment of minority group employees." 166 Earlier in the year, Grumman had announced that it would gradually lay off roughly 10% of its approximately 35,000 employees over an eighteen-month period. However, Caupain claimed that African Americans represented a far greater percentage 164 Interestingly, Caupain claimed that some African Americans did not receive promotions at Grumman because they wore beards and Afros, see “Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,” Long Island Press, 20 June 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 165 "Blacks at Grumman Meet on Complaints," Newsday, 23, June 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 166 “Black Walkout Threatened at Grumman,” Newsday, 2 August 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. NGHC. 283 of those laid off than that figure suggested. He told the Department of Defense as much in a telegram. In his alert to the DoD, Caupain claimed that African Americans represented seventeen to 20% of the total number of workers recently laid off, and that action, he noted, had decimated an already meager workforce of African Americans at the company. In an effort to correct the situation, Caupain wanted to meet with Evans to get satisfaction, and he threatened that if he did not, “we'll pass the word to black brothers and sisters and we'll walk out. We'll close Grumman down." 167 Caupain applied more pressure to the company by alleging that those associated with Big Brother were the first ones being laid off. He also noted that there were no African-American representatives on the workforce reduction review board and that black Grummanites in positions of responsibility lived under intimidation; in other words, they were puppets of the company‟s white leaders—doing what they were told to do. Caupain clearly wanted the issue of seniority waived in regard to layoffs for African Americans until the number of minority workers in skilled jobs increased; he charged that seniority rules had not been applied equally between white executives and black workers.168 As he clearly noted: “How can we ever build up seniority if they keep laying us off?" 169 167 Ibid. 168 "Blacks Picket Grumman Over 'Bias'," Newsday, 5 August 1969; and "Grumman Blacks to Fight Firings," L.I. Press, 2 August 1969". Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 169 "Negro Group Pickets Grumman on Bias," Long Island Press, 5 August 1969. Notably, in a September 24, 1969 speech, Caupain supposedly said "under the federal contract compliance, law allowances are provided wherein if a company is below a certain percentage of black people. Their seniority system is unfair because for too many years black people were not afforded the opportunity to work at these various companies." See Harold J. Russell's column in "Alu…," Westbury Times, 2 October 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 284 On Monday, August 4, the date that Big Brother had threatened to strike, Caupain met with Jack Rettaliata, but he did not like the way the conversation went. Caupain claimed that twenty-three African Americans and Puerto Ricans had received pink slips the previous week, even as Grumman hired another thirty to thirty-five whites. 170 Rettaliata countered with his own statistics. The Vice President put the number of minorities laid off at eighteen, and noted that they only represented a small percentage of the more than 150 employees who had recently lost their jobs. He went on to say that of the 1,886 Grummanites who had been laid off or who had quit since May 1969, only 165 had been minorities. Rettaliata concluded that of the approximate 36,000 employees still at the company at that time, about 2,200 were African Americans. 171 Caupain pressed Big Brother‟s demands, asking Rettaliata to rehire the African Americans who had been downsized, to train minorities for use on the F-14 program, to revise the company's hiring and firing policy, and to fully disclose the company‟s records pertaining to workforce 170 Grumman actually did hire all white "engineers and college graduates" that day, while most of the 18 minority workers laid off the previous week were "primarily production workers." See "Grumman Plant Picketed By Blacks Over Layoffs," New York News, 5 August 1969; and "Blacks Picket Grumman Over 'Bias'," Newsday, 5 August 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 171 Grumman and Big Brother disagreed about the numbers of workers that were black. While Grumman claimed that 2,200 of its 36,000 employees were minorities, Big Brother claimed the figure was only 1,200. Furthermore, some newspaper reports are in conflict about the official numbers from Grumman. Newsweek, for example, reported that Grumman claimed 2,200 minorities out of 36,000 employees, whereas the Suffolk Sun reported it was 2,000 out of 35,000 employees. Based on other discrepancies in fact, the Newsweek figure seems like the more reliable of the two statistics. See and compare "Blacks Picket Grumman Over 'Bias'," Newsday, 5 August 1969; and "Black Workers Protest 'Bias' at Grumman," Suffolk Sun 5 August 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 285 reductions. Rettaliata refused, citing his belief that Big Brother was not a legitimate bargaining group.172 Caupain used the rest of his lunch hour to protest against the company by picketing near the firm‟s personnel building. Approximately sixty to seventy of his fellow African American Grummanites joined him. Although the demonstration remained peaceful, the company grew concerned about a few protest placards. Some read "Blacks work at Grumman for nothing—no respect, no money, no advancement" and "How the hell can you get seniority when you are laid off?" As his lunch hour ended, Caupain promised that he would continue to stage daily demonstrations until changes occurred.173 Little came of Caupain‟s August protests, but by the end of September he was ready to step up the rhetoric to try to rally more support for the cause. In a bold speech on the 24th, he pronounced: “The Grumman Aerospace defense industry is a giant Goliath…. and poor people are going to slay it. We will make it fall to its knees and obey the Federal employment compliance laws against discrimination and make it recognize its responsibilities to minority people.”174 Caupain‟s speech seemed calculated to drum up support for a new organization he had just formed with the help of Big Brother and 172 "Blacks Picket Grumman Over 'Bias'," Newsday, 5 August 1969; "Black Workers Protest 'Bias' at Grumman," Suffolk Sun, 5 August 1969; "Grumman Plant Picketed By Blacks Over Layoffs," New York News, 5 August 1969; and "Negro Group Pickets Grumman on Bias," Long Island Press, 5 August 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 173 Ibid. Notably, as of August 1969, the Nassau County Human Rights Commission was supposedly trying to mediate the dispute between Grumman and Big Brother. See "Blacks Picket Grumman Over 'Bias'," Newsday, 5 August 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 174 The quote is from a September 24, 1969 speech by Caupain, as noted by Harold J. Russell, an African American journalist, in Russell‟s article “Alu…” Westbury Times, 2 October 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 286 CORE—the Long Island Black Federation of Labor (LIBFL), which he hoped would help African Americans find jobs and job training, as well as ensure fair employment practices. The group planned a one-day "Black Monday" or "Black Solidarity Day" protest strike for September 29; national African-American leaders had called for the action to protest discrimination against blacks in the construction trades and other fields. 175 The LIBFL planned to meet outside the gate of Grumman's personnel office at 8:00 AM, picket until noon, and then travel by motorcade to the Ethical Humanist Society in Garden City for a rally with other social movement groups, who had signed on not only to show support for the anti-discrimination drive against Grumman, but also against all Long Island businesses that treated African Americans unfairly. 176 As Bill Page, the Vice Chairman of Long Island CORE, noted, "Grumman is only a symbol. We will hit all companies, banks and businesses on Long Island because they all discriminate."177 Despite Caupain and CORE's hopes that at least 10,000 people would show up for the protest, only five people stood at the gate near Grumman's Personnel Department at 8 175 For a brief description of the nationwide strike, see "80 Pickets at Grumman Charge Discrimination," Newsday, 30 September 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 176 For the entire story of the "Black Monday" protest and the formation of the Black Federation of Labor, see and compare “Black Activist Group Plans Job Bias Protest,” Long Island Press, 25 September 1969; "LI Blacks Urge Strikes Monday," Newsday, 25 September 1969; "Black Labor Unit is Formed on LI," Newsday, 27 September 1969; "'Black Monday' Rally is Planned on Hiring Bias," Long Island Press, 28 September 1969; "'Black Monday' Protest Off to a Slow Start," Long Island Press, 29 September 1969; "Blacks Picket Grumman Corp.," The Cincinnati Post and Times Star, 29 September 1969; "Labor Group Plans Rally," Suffolk Sun, 29 September 1969, and "Black Picket Grumman Corp.; Claim Bias in Layoffs," Jet, 30 October 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 177 "LI Blacks Urge Strikes Monday," Newsday, 25 September 1969; "Black Labor Unit Is Formed on LI," Newsday, 27 September 1969; and Black Activist Group Plans Job Bias Protest," Long Island Press, 25 September, 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 287 AM.178 By 9:00A.M., the number had only reached twenty-five, and, by the end of the demonstration at noon, only about sixty to eighty protesters, African Americans and whites, including former and then currently employed Grummanites, had shown up. 179 Ironically, Grumman security guards and Nassau County policemen, who only stood and watched the situation, outnumbered the protesters.180 Most Grummanites seemed largely unaffected by the demonstration as both African-American and white workers ignored the picket line. 181 A Grumman spokesman also noted no significant absenteeism at the company that day. 182 Although the company promised not to make any serious reprisals against the protesters, Grumman security guards did write down the names of the demonstrators as well as their license plate numbers, supposedly only to note whose pay to dock that day.183 When the group finally made its way to the Ethical Humanist Society Building in Garden City, Lamar Cox addressed them and said that their unity would help 178 "LI Blacks Urge Strikes Monday," Newsday, 25 September 1969; "'Black Monday' Rally is Planned on Hiring Bias," Long Island Press, 28 September 1969; and "'Black Monday' Protest Off to a Slow Start," Long Island Press, 29 September 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 179 While the Cincinnati Post and Jet magazine only stated that 60 protesters showed up, Newsday placed the number at about 80. See and compare "Blacks Picket Grumman Corp.," The Cincinnati Post and Times Star, 29 September 1969; "Blacks Picket Grumman Corp.; Claim Bias in Layoffs," Jet, 30 October 1969; and "80 Pickets at Grumman Charge Discrimination," Newsday, 30 September 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 180 "'Black Monday' Protest Off to a Slow Star," Long Island Press, 29 September 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 181 "Blacks Picket Grumman Corp.," The Cincinnati Post and Times Star, 29 September 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 182 "'Black Monday' Protest Off to a Slow Star," Long Island Press, 29 September 1969; "80 Pickets at Grumman Charge Discrimination," Newsday, 30 September 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 183 "Black Activist Group Plans Job Bias Protest," Long Island Press, 25 September, 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 288 end discrimination. Apparently, few attended the meeting; Newsday estimated that only eighty people came to the lunchtime rally. Still, William Page of CORE declared the entire day a success.184 By the middle of fall, CORE and Big Brother were frustrated by the lack of movement brought about by protests and direct action. As of October 1, Big Brother claimed that only approximately 1,500 Grummanites, of a workforce of more than 35,000 workers, were minorities. They insisted that that figure made up only about 4% of the workforce, in an area where minorities represented between 15% and 20% of the population.185 Caupain and his colleagues also claimed that there were “no black employees in decision-making positions; less than five in managerial positions; a few in recently created token staff positions.”186 The group went on to state: “The rest are trapped in menial jobs. More than 50% of the janitors and porters are black. Less than 3% of all salaries and bonuses paid out by Grumman are paid to black employees." 187 Following a trend that had emerged among many civil rights groups around the country by the end of the 1960s, CORE and Big Brother decided to proceed with their 184 “'Black Monday' Protest Off to a Slow Star," Long Island Press, 29 September 1969; and "80 Pickets at Grumman Charge Discrimination," Newsday, 30 September 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 185 It is important to note that Big Brother appears to have been including Puerto Ricans and other Hispanics in its 15-20% of the population figure, even through the group appears not to have stated that fact as such. For more on Big Brother‟s statistics, see "Sponsors Grumman Black Workers Airing of Their Grievances Here," Great Neck News, 1 October 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 186 "Sponsors Grumman Black Workers Airing of Their Grievances Here," Great Neck News, 1 October 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 187 Ibid. 289 threatened lawsuit, lacking any other effective strategy.188 On November 3, 1969, William Kunstler and a team of several key civil rights lawyers, including Floyd B. McKissick, a past National Director of CORE, filed a lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, with the intent of barring Grumman from receiving funding for any of its federal contracts until the company could demonstrate that it had eliminated discrimination in its operations.189 The class action suit, which included nineteen disgruntled African American Grummanites, charged the aerospace company with racial discrimination in its hiring, promotions, and layoffs. It claimed that although Grumman had agreed to eliminate such problems, it had not done so.190 Affirmative Action and Federal Civil Action 3142-69 Believing that the lawsuit would have a more powerful effect if they targeted the federal government as an instrument of racial discrimination, Kunstler and his team brought suit against Secretary of Labor George P. Shultz, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. 188 For more on the nationwide trend away from direct action and protest to turning toward the court for answers, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 82. 189 The plaintiffs‟ team of lawyers included Kunstler, McKissick (who was the National Director of CORE from January 1966 to 1968, and who at that time was working on the Soul City, NC lawsuit), Morton Stavis and Arthur Kinoy, members of Kunstler‟s staff, and Philip J. Hirschkop of Washington, DC. See “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 13, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 693142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 190 "Suit Charges Bias by Grumman Corp.," The Evening Star, 4 November 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. Although Lamar Cox had called for all African Americans on Long Island to support their cause and join in a motorcade to Washington, DC to file the lawsuit on October 25, it is unclear whether the motorcade actually took place. Given that the suit took effect on November 3, 1969, it would appear that the motorcade did not take place, at least not on October 25. Whatever the case may be, information about the planned motorcade can be found in an essay by African American columnist Harold J. Russell in "Alu…," Westbury Times, 2 October 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 290 Laird, NASA Administrator Dr. Thomas O. Paine, and Ward McCreedy, Acting Director of the Department of Labor‟s Office of Federal Contract Compliance, not the Grumman Corporation. Federal Civil Action 3142-69 specifically charged the four defendants with “knowingly permitting and condoning racial discrimination in employment by government contractors” in violation of Executive Order 11246.191 The plaintiffs particularly demanded a preliminary and permanent injunction against the allocation and use of the funds of the United States to finance, in whole or in part, racially discriminatory employment practices of a private corporation, and to declare such allocation and use violative of Executive Order 11246 of the President of the United States, …and the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.192 In other words, they insisted that the federal government cut off funding to Grumman until the company stopped discriminating. Kunstler and his team‟s lawsuit contained a number of complaints, key points, and strategic remedies. Each of the nineteen plaintiffs was an African American who was (or had been) a Grummanite, or who had sought employment at the company at least once. Some of the lawsuit‟s more specific allegations included claims that Grumman had denied African Americans employment even though whites "with no greater qualifications have been employed." 193 The company, the suit alleged, had also 191 “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 2, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 192 Ibid., 1-2. 193 Ibid., 8. 291 overlooked African Americans while whites with no greater qualifications had received promotions.194 The plaintiffs charged that Grumman laid off African American workers while retaining whites with the same skills, and they claimed that the company kept African Americans locked in the same jobs longer than whites. 195 Furthermore, the lawsuit claimed that African Americans consistently worked more menial jobs than whites at most of the company‟s facilities and that African Americans were afforded fewer educational and training opportunities than whites. 196 Finally, Federal Civil Action 3142-69 charged that black Grummanites faced more frequent disciplinary actions than whites and received harsher punishments than whites for the same offenses. 197 One of the major arguments that Kunstler and his team used was that EO 11246 required contractors who had a $1 million bid or more to show that they were in compliance with the order via “affirmative action” before the federal government could award the contract. The Executive Order required that a firm‟s first-tier subcontractors also comply. 198 But, according to Kunstler and the plaintiffs, both the federal government and Grumman had violated the order. They claimed that even though the DoD and Department of Labor‟s May 1969 review of Grumman had found the company not guilty 194 Ibid. 195 Ibid. 196 Ibid. 197 Ibid. 198 Technically, the federal government was supposed to review whether a company was in compliance with the order six months prior to the awarding of a contract. If the government found that a company had any deficiencies in compliance, then the firm and the government were to draw up a formal 292 of any “overt discrimination,” the report had uncovered some "problem areas" in implementing certain aspects of the affirmative action requirements of 11246. Kunstler and his team claimed that the report had uncovered that Grumman had failed “to adopt and implement a policy of fair recruitment and hiring of black men and women,” "to eliminate policies of racial preference in placement, promotion, and upgrading," and "to take affirmative action in selecting black employees for participation in company sponsored training programs."199 Although Grumman had agreed to draw up a new affirmative action program to remedy the situation after the DoD‟s report came out, the plaintiffs did not accept the company‟s supposed changes and progress. Kunstler claimed that "Grumman has made no significant changes in its discriminatory policies and the defendants [the government‟s representatives] have taken no steps to terminate any of the contractual relationships of the U.S. Government, or to take any other step effectively to enforce the requirements of non-discriminatory practices of government contractors." The suit declared that the "single identifiable change that has occurred following the aforesaid review is that in respect to layoffs at Grumman.” As Kunstler noted, layoffs had “been heaviest upon the blacks [sic], firstly because of discriminatory layoffs, and secondly because even the application of routine seniority rule means that blacks, newly hired because of a belated recognition of their civil rights, are the first laid off." 200 Kunstler and the plaintiffs written schedule and plan for how those problems would be solved. It was the responsibility of the federal contract compliance officer and agency to make sure that such a review took place. See ibid., 10. 199 Ibid., 11. 200 Ibid. 293 insisted that the Department of Defense strictly enforce the law as provided under Executive Order 11246.201 Having laid down a set of rather stern charges against the defendants, Kunstler and his team stood ready for a protracted battle. But they would have to wait a little while before charging ahead. As is customary in such lawsuits, the court granted the defense a three-month continuance to prepare its rebuttal to the plaintiffs‟ charges. Both sides knew the importance of the case and its implications, and they would have until February of the following year to prepare their final arguments. Grumman, the NAACP, and Affordable Housing in Oyster Bay At approximately the same time that Kunstler, CORE, and Big Brother launched their legal assault on Grumman and the federal government, the NAACP began its own campaign in Grumman's backyard, which would also affect the company and its employees, particularly its African-American workers. One of the major problems for African Americans at Grumman, and for the minorities who wanted to work there, was a serious lack of decent and affordable housing close to the factory. Keenly aware of the problem, NAACP officials realized that the recently initiated Civil Rights Act of 1968 had incorporated open housing provisions for the first time. They consequently planned 201 Ibid. 294 to use the act to help them desegregated the predominantly white communities of Long Island. 202 In mid-October 1969, almost a full month after “Black Monday,” the NAACP petitioned the town of Oyster Bay, Long Island, one of New York City's wealthiest and whitest suburbs, to rezone half its vacant land for small-lot houses.203 NAACP officials specifically wanted the town of Oyster Bay to open up approximately 1,500 acres of its undeveloped land for people needing low or moderate-income housing.204 Essentially, Long Island‟s housing laws at the time only zoned large lots for private dwellings, and although local companies like Grumman (which employed approximately 35,000 people) were located in the Oyster Bay area, very few of the firm‟s workers could afford to live there. These workers had to spend a significant portion of their incomes commuting to work every day; if African Americans and other minorities could live closer to Grumman‟s main plants, the NAACP reasoned, they might have a better chance of 202 For more on the Civil Rights Act of 1968‟s incorporation of open housing provisions, see Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 110. 203 The National Observer, 27 October 1969; "NAACP Pushes for O. Bay Housing," Newsday, 19 November 1969; "NAACP Hits Zoning Code Bias in Suburbs," Chicago Defender, 22 November 1969; and "NAACP Attacks Lily-White Suburbs," The Defender, 20 November 1969. For more on the high percentage of whites living in Oyster Bay, see "Zoning Laws Face Growing Attack in Suburbs That Curb the Poor," New York Times, 14 December 1969. As the article revealed, a New York bi-County Planning Board study on Oyster Bay discovered that from 1960 to 1965, the white population of the town rose to 348,000 from 309,000, while the number of non-whites in the area during the same time period fell from 4,600 to 3,000. Significantly, New York City had gained a half million nonwhites during the same period. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 204 The National Observer, 27 October 1969; "NAACP Pushes for O. Bay Housing," Newsday, 19 November 1969; "NAACP Hits Zoning Code Bias in Suburbs," Chicago Defender, 22 November 1969; and "NAACP Attacks Lily-White Suburbs," The Defender, 20 November 1969. Notably, the NAACP also called upon the Department of Housing and Urban Development to reject Oyster Bay's application for recertification of its Workable Program for Community Improvement. All found in “CORE,” Section A12, NGHC. 295 working there.205 Clearly, the NAACP had chosen Oyster Bay because of its strategic proximity to Grumman. Perhaps more significantly, the Oyster Bay petition represented the NAACP's first attempt to break down restrictive zoning codes in the U.S.; the civil rights organization had chosen Grumman's neighborhood as its first zoning law test case in the country.206 Realizing the significance of the issue, the Oyster Bay Town Board promised a ruling on the issue by January 1, 1970. While the NAACP waited for the town board‟s ruling, the organization‟s officials decided to seek Grumman‟s help with its rezoning case. On December 18, NAACP leaders met with Grumman and asked Long Island's largest employer to support their cause.207 The civil rights group let Grumman know that if they did not get the corporation's support, they would join CORE, Kunstler, and Big Brother‟s case. Grumman officials, knowing they had to do something whether they wanted to or not, 205 Neil Newton Gold and Paul Davidoff, two planners with the Suburban Action Institute, which was a consultant for the NAACP in its rezoning case, put this argument forth in a newspaper article for the New York Times. For more on this point, see “Zoning Laws Face Growing Attack in Suburbs That Curb the Poor," New York Times, 14 December 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 206 The National Observer, 27 October 1969; "NAACP Pushes for O. Bay Housing," Newsday, 19 November 1969; "NAACP Hits Zoning Code Bias in Suburbs," Chicago Defender, 22 November 1969; and "NAACP Attacks Lily-White Suburbs," The Defender, 20 November 1969. All found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. The NAACP was also hoping to get the local American Jewish Committee of Hempstead to join it in its fight. For a good overview and discussion of the NAACP's rezoning campaign and its effects on the country, see ibid. 207 There is a conflict in sources over the date that Grumman and the NAACP actually met. Newsday states that the meeting took place on December 18, while the Long Island Press cites December 16. See and compare "Grumman Cites Housing Needs," Newsday, 31, December 1969; and "Grumman Okays…," Long Island Press, 31 December 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 296 promised that they would issue a statement by the end of the year in response to the NAACP's ultimatum.208 On December 30, the NAACP met with the Nassau County Planning Commission to see how the rezoning campaign was progressing. The County Planning Commission thanked the NAACP for bringing the problem of limited low-income housing to its attention, but then rebuffed the group, stating that it would have to study the matter for thirty days. Although approximately 260 to 360 acres suddenly became available for use in the rezoning efforts in the Syosset-Woodbury area, neither the NAACP nor the commission discussed the matter with the press. 209 On the same day that the NAACP officials had met with the Nassau County Planning Commission, they also met with some of Grumman‟s executives. The meeting went well for the civil rights organization because of a statement the company made regarding the rezoning campaign. Although Grumman officials carefully and clearly noted that their "statement d[id] not necessarily reflect the NAACP position," and that they "we're not taking a stand in line with the NAACP or anyone else," they still declared that the company would assist the government "wherever possible to achieve the goal of 208 "Parley Set on O. Bay Housing," Newsday, 30 December 1969. Grumman officials were not totally unsympathetic to the housing problems African American employees faced. As previously noted, during the February 1968 job hiring interviews in the communities of Wyandanch and North Amityville, Grumman interviewers discussed available housing opportunities with the new hires. See "Hunt for 'Black Energy' Proves Boon For Grumman," Long Island Press, 5 February 1968. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 209 There is a discrepancy regarding the amount of acreage that had been made available. While Newsday reported that 260 acres were open, the Long Island Press stated that 360 acres had been made available. See and compare "Grumman Cites Housing Needs," Newsday, 31 December 1969; and "Grumman Okays…," Long Island Press, 31 December 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 297 adequate housing for Long Island's industrial employees." 210 They also urged Oyster Bay and other Long Island towns to "proceed energetically" with efforts to increase lowincome housing in their areas.211 Although Grumman‟s actions greatly encouraged the NAACP, the civil rights organization still noted that if the County Commission failed to rezone the requested areas by the January 1 deadline, it would seek other remedies to meet its goals, including legal action. The NAACP also hinted that a "squat-in" protest on the land in question might possibly occur.212 Considering minority housing on a more national scale, Grumman appears to deserve credit for being much more progressive on the issue than many other aerospace employers; although it was the NAACP that originally pushed the issue to the forefront, Grumman did try to open up minority housing. Compared to NASA‟s handling of minority housing in Cocoa Beach, Florida, for example, Grumman seemed much more supportive of blacks. Scholar Steven Moss reveals in his study of NASA and race relations that when the space agency started expanding into Cocoa Beach and Brevard County, local housing authority officials actually displaced African American residents by taking over “predominantly black neighborhoods in Cocoa to build public housing, apparently for use by whites, during the initial space boom,” without intervention on 210 "Grumman Cites Housing Needs," Newsday, 31 December 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, 211 Ibid. 212 Ibid and "Grumman Okays…," Long Island Press, 31 December 1969, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. NGHC. 298 NASA‟s part.213 While the NAACP continued to press the Oyster Bay housing issue throughout the winter, Kunstler and his group proceeded with their case. CORE, Kunstler, and Big Brother Have Their Day in Court By the beginning of February 1970, the struggle for improved race relations at Grumman arrived in the courtroom. After a three-month continuance, the defense team involved in Federal Civil Action 3142-69 stood ready to rebut Kunstler and the plaintiff‟s accusations on a point-by-point basis. 214 Although there were nineteen plaintiffs involved in the lawsuit, court files only reveal the circumstances surrounding six of the plaintiffs‟ work histories. The stories of those six key participants, however, exemplify the issues that many African Americans faced at Grumman, as well as the way that the aerospace giant responded to them. Wesley Freeman, the first plaintiff listed on the suit—and incidentally one of the four mentioned in the Grumman discrimination article in Interavia the previous April— had held several jobs prior to applying for a position at Grumman. After finishing high school, he had worked as a farmer in North Carolina. He had also held jobs as a shipping 213 Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 73. Moss does note that NASA did publicly support the idea of federally funded housing projects for African Americans in Brevard County, but he also suggests that the agency did not push hard on the issue because it believed that it was beyond the agency‟s purview. See page 141. 214 The defense team, as of November 1969 and based on who signed the receipt for the summons, consisted of Harry Kulick, who was representing the Department of Justice, Paulette Sca, Sylvia Ellison, a trial attorney for the Department of Labor, Mr. Stickler (perhaps Sticker), who worked for the Department of Defense, E. M. Shafer, a NASA lawyer, Irwin Goldbloom, a Department of Justice attorney who was representing the defendants William D. Ruckelshaus, Assistant Attorney General (perhaps only a signer), Thomas A. Flannery, US Attorney (perhaps only a signer), and Harland F. Leathers, a Department of Justice lawyer. For more information, see and compare “Summons”; “Stipulation for Extension of Time”; and “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment.” All found in Freeman, et al. v. 299 and receiving clerk, a machine operator, and as a porter at Mitchell Air Force Base. Right before becoming a Grumman employee, he worked as a carpet installer at a pay rate of $155 a week. Freeman originally started applying to Grumman in the mid-1960s.215 As previously mentioned, he had answered Grumman employment newspaper ads for positions that matched his skills and previous experience for several years but was unable to secure a job at the company until he applied for a position as a porter and was hired in February 1967 at the rate of $88 per week.216 About a year later, in February 1968, Freeman applied for a transfer to the production line. While the company‟s human resources people tried to place him on the line, they could not, despite his experience. That same month, Freeman applied to a training course for machine operators and made it through the initial screening process. Curiously, as defense attorneys noted, Freeman did not return for a second interview, nor did he ever explain why he failed to follow through on the training opportunity. Similarly, in June, when he was offered a more advanced position as forklift operator, he refused the job. Again, as the defense noted, he never gave a reason why. In August 1968, it finally looked as if Freeman might get his wish to transfer onto the production Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 215 Freeman first applied to Grumman on August 17, 1966 for a position in the shipping and receiving department, but there were supposedly no openings. Freeman was 27 at the time he applied. The circumstances surrounding Freeman‟s employment can be determined by comparing “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 6; and “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Wesley Freeman”, 1-4. Both found in Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 216 In a pamphlet printed by Big Brother regarding the lawsuit (date unknown), there was a picture of Freeman with a quote from him that stated: "‟A friend had advised me that I would, once in the 300 line. The company promised he could move into a position as an assembler-riveter, but just as he got ready to transfer into his new job, all transfers to the riveting line were canceled due to upcoming RIFs. Freeman had tried to transfer to a production line job for more than two-and-ahalf years while working as a porter, but by October 1969 he had reached his breaking point.217 Even though CORE officials had tried to get him placed in a production job, they could not, despite the fact that Grumman had hired several whites from outside the company for such positions, according to Kunstler.218 When Freeman left the firm, he had reached a weekly salary of $116, which had included several general and merit pay raises.219 company, stand a chance of promotion to a better-paid production line job.‟" The emphasis was in the pamphlet. 217 Even though the lawsuit‟s documents claim that Freeman had been trying to transfer for more than two-and-a-half years, and he very may well have been trying to transfer from his perspective, Grumman‟s company rules only allowed people to transfer after an initial trial employment period of approximately a year. It was Grumman‟s usual policy for an employee to be on board for a least a year before he or she was eligible to apply and transfer to a different position within the company. Some Grumman officials believed that this might have been a problem for some African Americans because they wanted to be employed and move to a new position after only three months. This situation could have been avoided if all interviewees were informed of this issue during the interview process, instead of after they were hired. See Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-office Memorandum, T.C. Shea to J. Rettaliata, 6 October 1965, “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 218 For example, Willie Page, the Vice Chair of Long Island CORE, and membership chairman for Big Brother, as well as a Grumman employee, intervened on Freeman‟s behalf and tried to get him transferred beginning in August 1968. See “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Wesley Freeman,” 3-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 219 Freeman received the following raises during his tenure at Grumman. On September 18, 1967, he received a $6 “merit” salary increase, which brought his weekly total to $94. Then, a year later, on September 20, 1968, he got an $8 “adjustment” on his weekly salary, bringing him to $102 per week. The following March, his salary increased $8 per week to $110 per a pay period, thanks to a “merit” increase. And then in June 1969, he received a “general” $6 per week increase to bring his overall total to $116 per week. See “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Wesley Freeman,” 2, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 301 Verlyn Curry, another plaintiff, and another of the four who had been mentioned in the Grumman discrimination article in Interavia, began working at Grumman in February 1966, quickly advancing to a job as a power brake operator and eventually landing a “white collar” position in the scheduling department for Production Control. Before starting at the company, Curry had held a variety of jobs, including a position as a security guard at the rate of $115 weekly. Although Curry applied for a guard job at Grumman, he was told there were no openings. In January 1966, after being laid off from his security position, Curry agreed to take a huge pay cut and accept a position as a porter at Grumman at the rate of $74 per week, plus 10% more for nights. Curry continued to try to land a position as a Grumman security officer, but could never seem to secure such a job, despite Kunstler and his team‟s claim that “white persons with no greater qualifications have been employed for such positions.” 220 The prosecution felt certain that Curry had “been denied access to a position on Grumman's security force for reasons of race and color.”221 In spite of the fact that he had started as a porter, Curry moved up in the company fairly quickly. Thanks to the intervention of Willie Page—an African-American Grummanite, as well as the Vice Chairman of the local CORE chapter and the membership chairman of Big Brother—Curry did not have to go through the mandatory 220 The quote is from “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 6, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 221 Ibid. For Curry‟s full story, see “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Verlyn B. Curry,” 1-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 302 one-year waiting period before transferring to a position as a Press Brake Operator. In July 1966, he began working in the position on the night shift. Over the next three years, Curry performed well and received five merit pay increases, as well as a general pay increase to bring his weekly salary up to $128. In March 1969, he transferred to the day shift. Five months later, Curry received another promotion—again, thanks to Willie Page‟s intervention—to a white-collar job in the scheduling department. Page had asked his friend Mort Husted, the head of the scheduling department in Production Control, to hire Curry.222 The new position consisted of checking on the progress of production. At the time of the October 1969 lawsuit, Curry was making $140 per week. Although Curry never secured a job as a company security guard, the defense team did note that he was earning a lot more money in his current position than he ever would have as a Grumman guard. He also had enough flexibility in his hours to schedule personal time to deal with a family illness. Overall, while Curry did not ultimately secure the position he wanted, he did obtain a better-paying white-collar job with Grumman than his original goal. Ronald Knight, another African-American porter at Grumman, never seemed to rise above that position, in spite of several opportunities afforded him by the company and the fact that he had a high school diploma.223 Kunstler and the prosecution team claimed that Grumman had repeatedly passed over Knight for promotion, despite the fact 222 “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Verlyn B. Curry,” 23, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 223 For a summary of Knight‟s situation, see “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Ronald Knight,” 1-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 303 that whites with lesser qualifications had received promotions or secured higher and better paying jobs than porter.224 Knight first joined Grumman in March 1962 and began working at the rate of $88 per week. Prior to that time, he had only worked as a gardener, a porter, and a stock boy, and his highest hourly wage was $1.28 per hour. In 1968, Knight began taking advantage of some of the educational opportunities Grumman provided to its employees. That year he became one of several AfricanAmerican Grummanites selected to participate in a leadership program conducted by Long Island CORE at Hofstra University and the New York State College at Farmingdale; everyone in the leadership course had been handpicked by either Bill Byas of Grumman‟s Personal Services Department, and/or Willie Page, both AfricanAmerican Grummanites. The full time general education program lasted three months and Knight received his entire Grumman salary while attending. After completing the course, he returned to work at the company full-time. To assist with the overall program, Grumman had donated approximately $1,000 to the Leadership Program and had assigned two African-American employees, Larry Dais and Dan Hester, to administer it. Although Knight seemed more than happy to attend Grumman-sponsored general education classes, he appears to have eschewed the idea of registering for specifically job-related courses at the company, despite Bill Byas‟s advice to do so. He also seemed more interested in eventually obtaining a college degree than in establishing a permanent career at Grumman. In August 1969, Knight applied to transfer to either the Production 224 “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 6-7, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 304 Planning or Business Administration Departments. Even though the company tried to honor his request, it could only find him a job in Data Operations. 225 Knight turned down the position because he claimed it would interfere with his evening classes at the New York State College at Farmingdale. Knight‟s poor job attendance record may also have harmed his chances for advancement. From 1967 to the fall of 1969, he had been absent without pay for fifty-five days and had taken more than three months of leave. When Grumman managers found him a new job as a messenger in the Accounting Department in 1969, his absences essentially blocked him from the position. Still, by the fall of 1969, Knight had received a total of seven pay raises throughout his career at Grumman and was making $124 per week. Gladys Thigpen, one of the few female plaintiffs, had only worked at Grumman for a little more than six months by the time of the lawsuit. As with several other AfricanAmerican Grummanites, people had encouraged Thigpen to apply for a position as a matron (the female equivalent of a porter), with the idea that she could transfer to a better position within the company later. Thigpen, who had six years of prior experience as a machine operator, had originally applied for a position as an “Assembly and File Clerk,” but could only obtain a job as a matron at Grumman‟s Plant 15 in Bethpage; the company claimed it did not have any assembly or file clerk positions open at the time. Thigpen, a high school dropout, started working for the company in March 1969 at $76 per week.226 225 Knight had asked the company to try to place him in three different areas: Manufacturing Engineering and Design, Data Operations, or Computer Systems. 226 Thigpen‟s story is contained in “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Gladys Thigpen,” 1-3, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 305 Despite company rules, she believed she could transfer within ninety days after beginning her employment. Thigpen‟s main complaints against Grumman stemmed from her belief that she had been denied a job transfer, as well as entry into the company's training programs. 227 The company‟s defense attorneys rebutted her claims with several points. First and foremost, company rules required new employees to wait at least a year before requesting a transfer, and the defense asserted that Thigpen should have known that rule because she had received an employee handbook that indicated that fact at the time of her employment; numerous members of her extended family were also employed by Grumman. Grumman officials also claimed that no one at the company had any knowledge or record of her requesting a job transfer, or any record of her registering for a company training program. Thigpen did receive three salary increases and one merit raise during her short employment period at the company. By the beginning of November 1969, Thigpen was making $98 per week. Minnie E. Stallworth, one of Thigpen‟s co-plaintiffs, worked at Grumman from October 1966 to August 1969 as “an electrical bench fabricator,” a skilled position. Stallworth had graduated from an Alabama trade school in the early 1960s, moved to New York, and then attended the Adelphi Business School in Mineola for a short while in 1965. Her primary job experience prior to working for Grumman had been as an electrical wirer at a local lamp company. She had also enrolled in an IBM keypunch 227 “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 7, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 306 course at some point but had never completed the course, according to the defense, although she stated she had on her employment application. In October 1966, Stallworth, in her early twenties at the time, accepted a wiring position on Grumman‟s night shift at $88 per week, a significant increase over her previous job at the lamp company, which only paid $1.82 per hour.228 Stallworth had grown upset that the aerospace company had not promoted her to a position commensurate with her skills, while she watched several white workers receive training and then promotions to IBM keypunch positions.229 She had tried for several years to get Grumman managers to take her seriously. Unfortunately, help came a little too late for her. In August 1969, Stallworth learned that she would soon lose her job as part of a series of company-wide layoffs. Jean Esquerre, an officer of the Opportunity and Development Department, told her “in furtherance of the Affirmative Action Program,” his office would try to help her find a position, but she failed the Keypunch Department‟s qualifying test. On August 29, 1969, with no other job openings available to her, Stallworth received her RIF notice. At the time, she was making $106 per week. 230 Abdulla Rahsingeda, the sixth and final plaintiff, had a strained work history at Grumman. Rahsingeda—who had changed his name from “Robert Walker”—had served 228 All of the information on Stallworth is contained in “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Minnie E. Stallworth,” 1-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 229 “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 7, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 230 She had received three pay increases during her tenure at Grumman. See ibid., 7-8. 307 as a clerk in the U.S. Army. According to Kunstler and his team, Rahsingeda began applying for a job at Grumman in the early 1960s, but the company did not hire him for more than five years. Rahsingeda only obtained a job at Grumman after filing some complaints with the state and federal agencies that oversaw workforce discrimination cases. He applied for an advertised position in Grumman‟s clerical department in the early spring of 1966, but the company‟s employment office told him no such position was open. In April, he took a job in the maintenance department and remained there for three years. During that time, many whites, according to Kunstler, obtained positions as clerks with higher paychecks and better rankings than Rahsingeda. In February 1969, Rahsingeda finally transferred to the library where he became a mail clerk, a position that he viewed as a dead-end job and beneath his abilities and qualifications. He claimed that he had tried to enroll in Grumman‟s computer training course several times, but he said he had been denied the opportunity to participate in it. 231 The defense team interpreted Rahsingeda‟s work history differently. According to them, the first record of Rahsingeda applying for a job at Grumman occurred on March 18, 1966. Although he eventually secured a Grumman job, his work history initially raised some questions among Grumman‟s personnel managers. A routine security check revealed that his preceding employer did not exist. The defense also alleged that one of his previous companies had found Rahsingeda to be unreliable, careless, and a poor worker, and subsequently fired him. That employer stated that he would not rehire him if 231 “Complaint for Injunctive and Declaratory Relief,” 7-8, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 308 given the chance. Still, because Rahsingeda had brought a letter of reference from the Commission on Human Rights of Nassau County‟s Job Development Center with him when he applied in the spring of 1966, the company decided to give him a position as a sweeper in April 1966 at the rate of $88 per week, plus 10% more for night work.232 According to the defense, Rahsingeda first requested a transfer in January 1968 to some "administrative task or other related departments," and finally secured such a position several months later. During the summer of 1968, he had interviewed for a couple of administrative jobs, but, because of upcoming RIFs and hiring freezes, he could not transfer to those positions. Finally, after receiving his high-school equivalency diploma, Rahsingeda began working as a clerk in the Grumman library in February 1969. He learned several jobs in the reading room and eventually received an assignment as a mail clerk. Rahsingeda had several opportunities to advance his skills while working in the library, but in one case he did not pursue such advantages and, in the other case, he did not make the final cut to enroll in such a program. 233 Nevertheless, by August 1969, 232 All of the above from “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Abdulla Rahsingeda,” 1-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 233 For example, while Rahsingeda was working in the library, his supervisor, Claude Gibson, noticed his interest in computer programming and offered to help him enroll in the company‟s course on the subject, but Rahsingeda never followed through on the offer. Then, in March 1969, Jim Wells of the company‟s Placement Office advised Rahsingeda about the possibility of enrolling in a “‟Commercial Programming Training Course'—a special IBM Programming Course.” The six-week course allowed employees to receive their full salary while attending. Rahsingeda, one of 61 initial interviewees for the course, did not make the final selection process for participation in the project. Of the Program‟s final 26 students, eight were African Americans and one was Puerto Rican. Phil Grey, an African American Grummanite and the Program‟s Instructor, had “interviewed all [the] candidates and decided which applicants to accept solely at his discretion." For these details, see “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Abdulla Rahsingeda,”3, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD 309 after working roughly three and a half years for Grumman, Rahsingeda had received five pay increases and was making a weekly salary of $124.234 Overall, the six defendants‟ cases reveal some very notable distinctions about the charges of racial discrimination against Grumman. On one hand, it seems obvious that many African Americans had a difficult, if not impossible, time initially securing any positions above that of porter. That position seemed the normal point of entry for blacks, and some even took pay cuts to secure those jobs. Clearly, some forms of racial discrimination were at work at Grumman. Some African Americans appeared to have been further behind whites to receive promotions. But as one EEOC commissioner noted in hearings about racial discrimination in the aerospace industry in Southern California in 1969, even though many aerospace companies‟ managers might have been doing all they could to recruit and promote minorities within their firms, a series of gatekeepers at lower levels might close the doors to promotion to minorities, whether consciously or unconsciously. 235 While there were often several Grumman employees (many of whom were African American themselves) trying to help blacks advance at the company, perhaps other employees wanted to see their white colleagues or friends advance first.236 Grumman officials struggled with the 234 “Answer of Intervener Grumman Aerospace Corporation,” Appendix A, “Abdulla Rahsingeda,” 1-4, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 235 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Hearings Before the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Utilization of Minority and Women Workers in Certain Major Industries, Los Angeles, CA, March 12-14, 1969, 45. 236 For more on this general idea, see ibid., 23. 310 same challenges every other employer faced in the late 1960s when deciding how to balance affirmative action and equal opportunity. But first, they had to acknowledge that a problem existed, and this they were not ready to do. Turning back to the courts, although Grumman and the federal government had spent a great deal of time and energy responding to Kunstler and his colleagues‟ case on a point-by-point basis, they ultimately decided to try another and more sweeping tactic to disarm Federal Civil Action 3142-69. On February 6, 1970, the defense came back to the courthouse with a motion to dismiss the entire lawsuit, or in the alternative, to secure a summary judgment. The defense cited a variety of highly technical legal reasons. First and foremost, it claimed that the court lacked jurisdiction over the case because it constituted an “unconsented suit against the United States.”237 They also argued that the plaintiffs lacked standing and had failed to show "the existence of a justiciable case or controversy." Additionally, the defense charged that the plaintiffs had not exhausted all "available administrative remedies." 238 In other words, African-American Grummanites could have properly sued the federal court under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 237 “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendants‟ Motions to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” 6, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 238 “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendants‟ Motions to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” 6-14, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 311 1964, but they had chosen not to do so.239 And finally, the defense believed the court should dismiss the case because the plaintiffs had failed to include Grumman, which they considered "an indispensable party," in the suit. 240 Overall, the defense‟s reasoning appeared strong and the case seemed like it might go by the wayside, but the court gave Kunstler and his team until April to decide how to combat the defense‟s new onslaught. When Kunstler and his team returned to the courthouse on April 22, they argued strenuously against the defense‟s motion to dismiss the case. They asserted that "the federal government had adopted a maze of executive orders and regulations" governing the equal employment opportunity aspects of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, making it virtually impossible to enforce the spirit of the law.241 Despite the fact that Grumman had agreed to make certain changes in its equal employment opportunities after the federal government‟s investigation of the firm, he and the plaintiffs believed that the only thing the firm had done is continue to target blacks for more layoffs by using seniority rules. Many African Americans had less time in the company than others slated for downsizing, and they were therefore the first to be cut.242 239 “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendants‟ Motions to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” 11, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 240 “Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Defendants‟ Motions to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment,” 6-14, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 241 “Response to Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, for Summary Judgment,” 1, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 242 Ibid., 5. 312 For Kunstler, the heart of the lawsuit was “to test the question whether there is any meaningful remedy to enforce the commitments and undertakings of the government to eliminate racial discrimination in employment by government contractors." 243 He also believed that it was disgraceful that the federal government, “which at first ignored Grumman's violation of the Executive Order and then sought to cover it up by acceptance of Grumman's undisclosed agreement to behave," would not move to truly enforce the law.244 As Kunstler put it, he felt it was “important to repeat that the plaintiffs' factual allegations are undisputed. The question before the Court is not whether Grumman discriminated; it is simply whether there is a meaningful remedy for government inaction."245 And Kunstler also wanted it known that he did not agree that the plaintiffs had failed to exhaust all their possible remedies before proceeding with the lawsuit. As he put it: “Grumman had agreed when it first got the contract not to discriminate against its employees.”246 Kunstler wondered “What kind of absurdity is it that considers a second agreement to comply with the law to be better than the first agreement which Grumman was found to have violated?"247 243 Ibid., 20. 244 Ibid., 21. 245 Ibid. 246 Ibid., 15. 247 Ibid. Kunstler and his team also made several other arguments for continuing the lawsuit, including: (1) combating the defense‟s notion that the plaintiffs did not have the standing to sue (Kunstler believed they did, see “Response to Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, for Summary Judgment,” page. 9); (2) the defense‟s idea that the case should be dismissed because of the doctrine of sovereign immunity (Kunstler claimed that the doctrine was not applicable to the case, see “Response to Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, for Summary Judgment,” page 6); and (3) the defense‟s point that the case be dismissed because "the employer (or potential employer) [Grumman] of the plaintiffs has not been 313 Another vital point that Kunstler and his team addressed in their response to the defense‟s motion to dismiss revolved around the issue of whether Grumman should join the lawsuit. On this issue, Kunstler noted: regardless of the effect on Grumman, plaintiffs are seeking relief only against the defendant federal officers, and a judgment prohibiting these officers from letting government contracts to Grumman until racial discrimination is terminated and remedied will be entirely adequate. Plaintiffs are not in this case contending that there is any violation of law by Grumman apart from its derivative obligation under the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment.248 Nevertheless, Kunstler did not want to discourage Grumman from joining in the case if it so desired. According to him, the reason he had not included the aerospace giant in the suit was because, technically, “the plaintiffs are unable to join Grumman as a defendant in this suit because it is not doing business with the District of Columbia… [T]he Company…is entirely free to intervene as a defendant if it should see fit." Kunstler dangled the bait in front of the company by noting: "The failure of Grumman to make application for intervention in this proceeding… strongly suggests that the Company does not view its participation as essential to the protection of its interests." 249 Kunstler hoped that the company would add its name to the proceedings so that he could hammer away at joined as a defendant." On this final point, Kunstler claimed that Grumman was “not subject to service of process in the District of Columbia…and it is therefore not 'feasible' to join it within the meaning of Rule 19 (A) [The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure]. See ibid., 18 for more on this final point. 248 “Response to Motion to Dismiss or, in the Alternative, for Summary Judgment,” 19, Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 249 Ibid. 314 Grumman‟s reputation. As the judge was considering the plaintiff‟s countermotion against the defense‟s argument to dismiss the case, Kunstler got his wish. On June 12, 1970, Grumman filed to intervene as a defendant in the case and ten days later received official approval for the action from the court. 250 Grumman‟s lawyers argued that it was in the company‟s best interests to continue “to be eligible to sell aircraft, aerospace and other products to the Department of Defense and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration," and, if the lawsuit continued, they argued, then the company would not be able to defend its reputation from what it considered unwarranted attacks on its race relations record.251 Grumman‟s legal team immediately argued for a dismissal of the case, based on the fact that "the Court lacks jurisdiction over the subject matter of this action and the complaint fails to cite a cause of action upon which relief can be granted."252 And, as if those arguments for dismissal were not enough, Grumman‟s lawyers also underscored the original defendants‟ insistence that the plaintiffs had not exhausted all remedies open to them; in other words, the plaintiffs 250 The court gave Grumman the right to intervene on June 22, 1970. See “Order Granting Intervention,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 251 Notably, Grumman‟s lawyer was Donald J. Mulvihill of Washington, DC. For more on this part of the case, see “Praecipe,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD; and “Motion to Intervene as a Defendant,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 252 “Motion to Dismiss,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 315 should have tried to correct their situation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.253 The interested parties did not have to wait long for an answer from the court to their motions. The decision came down on August 27, 1970, a little over ten months after Kunstler and his team had originally filed their suit. The court agreed that the plaintiffs had not pursued the proper course of action to remedy their situation; again, the plaintiffs should have complained about their treatment under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. As far as the court was concerned, Grumman had corrected all of its discriminatory ways, as attested to by the government agencies in charge of investigating racial discrimination.254 Kunstler immediately requested an appeal and got it, but the outcome was the same.255 The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit did nothing to change the lower court‟s previous ruling. By the end of 1970, Kunstler and the plaintiffs had no other legal recourse left to rectify African-American Grummanites‟ situation in the workplace. African Americans and Employment in the American Aerospace Industry 253 “Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Intervener‟s Motion to Dismiss,” Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 254 For more on this subject, see “Opinion,” which contains the actual opinion; and “Order,” which is the court‟s order to dismiss the case. Both found in Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD, 255 For the full appeal process see “Notice of Appeal”; “Original Record on Appeal”; Transcription Certification; “Civil Docket”; and Receipt from Nathan J. Paulson. All found in Freeman, et al. v. Shultz, et al., Case File 69-3142, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, Agency Box 204, National Archives at Suitland, MD. 316 During the Apollo era African-American Grummanites used numerous available avenues to raise questions and concerns about their treatment in the workplace and their ability to advance and secure better paying jobs. Ultimately, they wanted to improve their socioeconomic lives, like most Americans. It is important to place their situation in the broader historical context of what was happening to other African Americans in the aerospace industry throughout the country during the 1960s and early 1970s. By June 1969, Grumman officials reported that African Americans made up approximately 8% of the Long Island company‟s workforce.256 How did those figures compare to some of the other major aerospace companies across the country? McDonnell-Douglas, a major aerospace contractor and former NASA supplier based in the St. Louis region, faced some of the same challenges in the area of race relations as Grumman. In December 1969, for example, a major controversy emerged when the DoD awarded the company a multibillion-dollar contract for the F-15 fighter plane without reviewing the company‟s affirmative action policy. Although African Americans represented approximately 40% of St. Louis‟s population, only 7.5% of the company‟s workforce was black. Furthermore, African Americans only represented 2% of supervisors and less than 1% of the company‟s officers. After a DoD and Office of Federal Contract Compliance investigation, McDonnell agreed to an affirmative action plan in February 1970, which “‟expanded in-plant educational and training opportunities‟ for African-American workers; regular meetings of supervisors to discuss affirmative 256 The Grumman African American employment figures come from “Grumman Charged Anew With Bias,” Newsday, 20 June 1969; and “Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,” Long Island Press 20 June 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. 317 action regulations; employment and promotion „targets‟; and efforts to secure housing for African-American employees.”257 Ironically, like Grumman, McDonnell-Douglas had created and agreed to follow a “Plan for Progress” early in the Kennedy Administration.258 And, also like Grumman, McDonnell-Douglas had recruited minorities in the inner cities and at historically African American colleges, and yet it still failed to attract a sizable African-American workforce.259 The Apollo Program‟s largest aerospace contractor and supplier, the North American Rockwell Corporation (NAR), also had its share of race-related problems. Based in the Los Angeles area, NAR relied on federal contracts for 90% of its business, which included the Apollo Program‟s Command/Service Module. 260 Like Grumman and McDonnell-Douglas, NAR had adopted an affirmative action policy early in the Kennedy Administration.261 In November 1967, the National Urban League, one of the leading civil rights organizations of the era, had even presented the company with its Equality Opportunity Award because of the minority recruiting the company had accomplished. 262 257 The agreement was reached on February 10, 1970. The quote can be found in Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 143-144. 258 The information about NAR and the other California based aerospace companies comes from hearings conducted about discrimination in the aerospace, and the movie and television industries, in Los Angeles in March 1969. On NAR‟s percentage of governmental business, see U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Hearings Before the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Utilization of Minority and Women Workers in Certain Major Industries, Los Angeles, CA, March 1214, 1969, 6. 259 Ibid, 6-7. 260 Ibid., 63. 261 Ibid., 53. 262 Like all the other companies, they did heavy recruiting at African American colleges, see ibid., 56 and 64. 318 On the surface, NAR seemed to have done an outstanding job recruiting and promoting minorities. The company had put an African-American president in charge of one of its smaller divisions, and the company claimed that 3% of NAR‟s managers and officials were African Americans or other minorities. 263 However, on closer examination, NAR‟s history does not appear substantially different from other aerospace companies across the country. As of February 1969, only 8% to 9% of the company‟s approximate 94,700 employees were minorities (which included African Americans, “Mexican Americans,” “Orientals,” and “American Indians”), most working in lower paying jobs. 264 Although most of the company‟s blue-collar employees belonged to the United Auto Workers, the union rarely filed complaints on the grounds of discrimination. 265 Despite Grumman‟s fears that African Americans and labor would join forces and attempt to organize the Long Island company, it appears that blacks rarely got substantial union help in fighting discrimination in the aerospace industry. Another major Southern California aerospace contractor, Lockheed, had plants in a variety of places including Marietta, Georgia, where the first major PFP agreement was reached in 1961. Lockheed provides some similar statistics about the state of AfricanAmerican employment in the aerospace industry. In 1968, 85% of Lockheed‟s business came from federal contracts.266 According to a union official, African Americans made 263 Ibid., 59-60. 264 Ibid., 436 and 439. 265 Ibid., 57-58. 266 Ibid., 94. 319 up approximately 7% of the company‟s workforce.267 Although Lockheed had instituted a series of layoffs in 1968, company officials nevertheless claimed that they still increased the minority population by 32% that year.268 Because of downsizing, however, no African Americans received promotions in the management category in 1968. 269 Although the company had recruited among the “hard-core” unemployed in the Los Angeles area, it still had a difficult time finding substantial qualified minorities.270 Like Grumman, Lockheed had tried to recruit minorities through local television advertising and minority publications, but found that African Americans usually responded better through job fairs and personal employee contact.271 The company had problems recruiting minorities to work in its plants in the San Fernando Valley because of the seventy plus mile commute; even when minorities had the opportunity to take chartered bus rides out of the inner city and work in plants outside the LA area, fewer than 5% pursued jobs so far away from home. 272 Another major point of comparison between Lockheed, NAR, and Grumman revolved around the issue of union representation. Like NAR workers, most Lockheed 267 Company officials claimed that minorities represented about 1 out of every 10 employees. See and compare ibid., 25 and 82. 268 Ibid., 25-26. 269 Ibid., 35-36. 270 Ibid., 26-27. Notably, the company was in the process of opening up a plant for the hard-core unemployed in the Watts-Willowbrook area of South Central LA. It also had established a four-year scholarship for LA area minority youths to attend the Tuskegee Institute, see page 28. 271 Ibid., 33-34. 272 Ibid., 26 and 51. 320 employees belonged to a union, in their case, the International Association of Machinists (IAM). African Americans represented about 10% to 15% of the company‟s union membership, a substantial proportion given the under-representation of African Americans in the workforce.273 Yet equal employment had not risen to the top of the union agenda; although the union stood ready to strike for better economic conditions, it would not strike to stop discrimination. An IAM representative put it: “I am not going to try to fool you. I think we all know there is no union that goes on strike because of a condition of discrimination. I am not saying that this is right…but you have to understand that the membership votes as to whether or not you have a strike, not the leadership.” 274 Furthermore, although the IAM had an excellent apprenticeship program to train aerospace workers, it had a hard time getting African Americans into this initiative. Many black applicants failed to pass the program‟s entrance exam because of their poor educational backgrounds, and very few of those who qualified actually wanted to pursue an apprenticeship. At the IAM‟s Santa Monica apprenticeship program, for example, in 1969, only three of eighty participants were African American.275 Another important way to evaluate how African American Grummanites fared in the aerospace industry is to compare their experiences with those of African Americans employed by NASA, the leader in the space field. A comparison between the two employers‟ personnel provides an interesting juxtaposition. For example, while 8% of 273 Ibid., 86. 274 Ibid., 89-90. 275 Ibid. 321 Grummanites were African Americans in 1969, NASA‟s workforce was only about four to 5% African American during that same period. 276 Overall, while NASA did manage to employ some African Americans among its white-collar ranks during the 1960s, Grumman employed a higher percentage of black workers during the 1960s in both its general ranks and among its white-collar positions.277 As the Apollo Program was coming to a close in 1972, federal laws and affirmative action had generally failed to help most African Americans advance into more secure, better-paying, more fulfilling jobs in the aerospace industry. Why had these federal employment protections fallen short for so many African Americans? As several scholars have discovered, affirmative action had failed up to that point because equal opportunity laws essentially were ill-defined and lacked major enforcement power 276 The Grumman African-American employment figures come from “Grumman Charged Anew With Bias,” Newsday, 20 June 1969; and “Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,” Long Island Press, 20 June 1969. Both found in “CORE,” Section A-12, NGHC. For the NASA African American figures, see and compare Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 63; and Dunar and Waring, Power to Explore, 124. In 1964, the New York Times reported that of the 1,500 employees at NASA‟s Florida facilities at the time, only 11 were black. Interestingly, however, of those employees one half were professional while the others were clerical. For more details on this report, see Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 82. 277 As Steven Moss, a student of NASA‟s race relations discovered, NASA‟s administrators were not really that interested in solving racial problems—they simply wanted to get Americans to the moon. Leading NASA managers like Wernher von Braun were not altruistic when it came to race. They just knew that if they wanted money to fund the Apollo Program, then they had to placate the President and Congress on some racial issues. For more on this issue, see Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 109. Nevertheless, Moss does seem to view NASA and von Braun‟s race relations record favorably because, he claims, they used NASA‟s promise of federal contracts (the influx of millions of federal dollars and thousands of new jobs) in the segregated South to leverage a certain degree of social change and progress. As he notes, while the Apollo Program was definitely their major concern, they did do what they could “to improve the quality of life for all races in its host communities.” The quote is on page 6 but also see pages 3-6 for more general comments on this point. In the final perspective, Moss believes that NASA did a good job promoting civil rights because of its policy enforcement, NASA Administrator James Webb‟s leadership, and “the political-economic influence the agency held over contractors and within some host communities” to force certain racial changes. For his concluding ideas on this subject, see pages 139-140. 322 through the early 1970s. The laws started getting tougher in 1972, but for most African American Grummanites that was too late.278 Another major stumbling block stemmed from the fact that with so many different government agencies in charge of overseeing contractor compliance there were never any definitive standards set across the board for enforcement. Contractors were confused about what was expected of them, and some had to follow different criteria from others. 279 Similarly, the federal government‟s reliance on employers‟ voluntary compliance throughout much of the 1960s did not advance African Americans in the aerospace industry significantly. 280 Finally, and perhaps more significantly, minorities undoubtedly had serious problems securing good jobs in the aerospace industry because the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, as well as the Office of Federal Contract Compliance, the two official federal watchdog groups in charge of affirmative action compliance, were too understaffed and overburdened to effectively make sure everything went according to plan. 281 278 Belz, Equality Transformed, 31. 279 Ibid., 57. 280 Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” xii. 281 Most minorities consequently gave up on filing complaints because it just was not worth it. For example, by the mid 1970s, the EEOC had more than 125,000 cases in its backlog. Furthermore, although Nixon increased EEOC funding and personnel dramatically during his presidency, it still seemed to have left too many minorities by the wayside. In 1968, for instance, the EEOC only had about 360 employees and a $13 million budget. By 1972, they had about 1,640 employees and close to $30 million. Nevertheless, by June 1972, they still had more than 50,000 backlogged cases. As at least one scholar has noted, by the early 1970s, EEOC case investigations were nearly 2 years behind. For more on these issues, see ibid., xii, 144 and 177. As previously noted, the EEOC had very limited power, although they could investigate, if they discovered a violation, they had to wait 60 days for state laws and agencies to reconcile the differences. EEOC agents also had to conduct their investigations in private. If noting could be resolved, then the plaintiff, and not the EEOC, was to initiate the civil action. The only exception to this rule was that the attorney general could initiate a suit under Section 707 (known as 707 suits) if there was a pattern of widespread discrimination, but such suits were very rare. For more on this issue, see ibid., 71 and 105. 323 By the end of the Apollo Program many aerospace companies had gone through the same type of legal battles over racial discrimination as Grumman had in the late 1960s. Some companies won the lawsuits, while in other cases African-American workers were victorious. In 1973, for example, a racial discrimination case against McDonnell Douglas finally reached its conclusion with the company claiming a victory. An African American named Green had applied for a job at McDonnell Douglas, and, although he was qualified for the position, the company ultimately rejected him and the position remained unfilled and continued to be advertised. Ultimately, the courts sided with McDonnell because it ruled that Green, who had been a former company employee, and who had protested against the company “unlawfully,” had not been rejected because of his race, but rather because he had broken the law. In essence, as one scholar has noted, the case supported the idea that “an employer could make business decisions for any reasons he liked, provided he did not act on the basis of race.” 282 Thousands of miles away from McDonnell, in Southern California, Lockheed also faced a racial discrimination lawsuit in 1973, but it had an entirely different outcome. The Lockheed Minority and Female Coalition, founded in 1970 to fight discrimination, filed a class action lawsuit against Lockheed for denying minority access to better paying jobs. In 1973, the coalition won the suit when the firm settled by pledging to "provide several thousand jobs to people other than white males." 283 Clearly, the larger issue to take away 282 283 Belz, Equality Transformed, 59. David Beers, Blue Sky Dream (New York: Doubleday, 1996), 254-255. Notably, in the 1990s, the Lockheed Minority and Female Coalition would get fired up again and bring suit against Lockheed during the threat of layoffs during the downsizing of the military industrial complex. 324 from these cases was that, as late as 1973, McDonnell and Lockheed, two of the aerospace industry‟s giants, from two very different regions of the country, were still guilty of racial discrimination, at least in a de facto manner. Despite more than a decade of affirmative action laws, African Americans still faced a difficult time advancing to well-paying, highly skilled jobs in the aerospace industry by the close of the Apollo era. By the mid-1970s, whatever limited gains African Americans had made in securing better paying jobs quickly eroded due to the recession of 1973. As a civil rights commission concluded, by mid-1975, unemployment among nonwhites had risen to more than 14% nationwide.284 The National Urban League reached an even harsher conclusion. It estimated that unemployment among African Americans was close to 26%. Echoing a similar sentiment, the Christian Science Monitor reported in January1975 that “the overall rate of urban black unemployment now is higher than during the great depression of the 1930s.”285 Finally, although some African Americans had broken into management in the 1960s and early 1970s, by 1975, African Americans still only represented 3% of managers and 3.2% of professionals in every industry, in a country were African Americans made up about 10% to15% of the entire workforce.286 Even though some African Americans had advanced in the aerospace industry, with an average of only 7% to 8% of the total aerospace workforce, they still represented a smaller segment than in the working population. 284 The report is quoted in Weiss, “We Want Jobs,” 196-197. 285 Ibid, 197. 286 Ibid. 325 Conclusion During the Apollo era, some black Grummanites did not feel that they had received the same consideration from the company as other employees or potential workers, and they sought to remedy their situation. With the help of CORE, Big Brother, the NAACP and other civil rights groups, African Americans pressed Grumman to help them advance within the firm. When they did not receive the compensation or promotions they felt they deserved, they tried to use the new federal affirmative action policies to their advantage. When those policies failed them, for a variety of reasons including the ill-conceived concept of employer “voluntary compliance,” they turned to the courts, using newly enacted civil rights laws to redress their grievances. Their key strategy was to attack Grumman where they could hurt the company the most—financially. They called upon the federal government to withhold the F-14 contract from Grumman until the firm met their demands for equal employment opportunity. Grumman maintained that it had always treated its employees fairly, regardless of race, ever since the firm‟s beginning. Company managers honestly believed that they were taking care of all of their employees and treating them well. As African Americans began using civil rights redress to press the company to change, however, Grumman officials grudgingly began to reassess their minority workers‟ situations. Fearing that African Americans might join forces with organized labor to achieve their civil rights goals, company managers began meeting with CORE and Big Brother. While the meetings generally stalled with neither side conceding much, the talks did at least force 326 Grumman to start making a greater effort to reach out to the minority community. In some instances, the company‟s job fairs and recruitment trips paid off, but at other times, their efforts did not. As with all of the nation‟s aerospace firms, the dearth of qualified applicants meant Grumman had a difficult time recruiting African-American engineers and upper-level managers. The firm‟s East Coast location further exacerbated Grumman‟s problem; those few in-demand African-American engineers preferred going west to sunny California. Grumman‟s record of racial discrimination was no better or worse than any of the industry‟s other major companies. Although black Grummanites ultimately lost their lawsuit against the federal government, some did make limited gains at the company. The fact that many skilled African Americans only gained access to the Grumman career ladder by starting as porters demonstrates some record of discrimination. But many of those employees went on to better paying and more advanced jobs. In general, there was some record of improvement in salaries and positions at the company, well within the norm of the country‟s entire aerospace industry. And several African Americans made it into the ranks of Grumman‟s professional positions and upper management. Unfortunately, these gains were achieved just as the Apollo era was coming to a close, and the major economic recession of the early 1970s was forcing layoffs at Grumman and other aerospace firms. Near the beginning of the Space Age, Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson had declared: “Because the Space Age is here, we are recruiting the best talent regardless of race or religion, and, more importantly, senseless patterns of discrimination in 327 employment are being broken up.”287 Yet the nation‟s aerospace industry as a whole did not want to face the problem of race discrimination while it rushed to put American astronauts on Moon. It had been black pressure that had forced the enactment of new civil rights laws, and those laws gave American aerospace no choice but to try to include African Americans in the economic bounty that flowed from the Space Race. 287 Moss, “NASA and Racial Equality,” 1. The original quote is from a speech by Johnson in “The New World of Space” (speech) Proceedings of the Second National Conference on the Peaceful Uses of Space: Seattle, Washington May 8-10, 1962 (Washington, DC: GPO, 1962), 30. CHAPTER FOUR ―JUST A TAP ON THE SHOULDER…‖: GRUMMANITES AND THE AEROSPACE RECESSION OF THE LATE 1960S AND EARLY 1970S In the late 1960s, as the Apollo Program neared its goal of putting a man on the Moon, the aerospace industry began downsizing many of its workers. These were the men and women who had designed and built the hardware that would make the lunar landings a reality, but now that their jobs were finished, many companies had no more use for them; many firms simply did not have any other projects lined up that could absorb that large a workforce. No aerospace company seemed immune from the demobilization. Even Grumman, despite its paternal dedication to its employees, could do little to avoid having to lay off a substantial number of workers in the late 1960s and early 1970s. As Long Island‘s largest employer, Grumman‘s downsizing had a significant effect on its region, both psychologically and economically. This chapter explores the history of Grumman‘s layoffs through 1971. It analyzes how Grummanites reacted to the downsizing and it looks at the impact that the demobilization had on Long Island. It also places RIFed Grummanites‘ plights within a national context by comparing their experiences with that of other former aerospace workers across the country. Many Grummanites had joined the Bethpage company because of its promise of a stable job and its potential for exciting growth and far-reaching 328 329 work. Grumman‘s culture of benevolence had also drawn many to the firm. These employees were proud of their work and their company, and they were happy to identify themselves as Grummanites. But in the difficult economic climate of the early 1970s, with massive downsizing occurring, how did the layoffs and recession affect Grummanites‘ identities as part of the Grumman family? And how did they affect their identities as people? Grumman and Its First Significant Layoffs of the Space Age Grumman‘s first significant layoffs of the Space Age began in early 1967. 1 The downsizing proved difficult for the company, at least psychologically, and the firm‘s management knew it had to handle the situation carefully. At that time, the U.S. still basked in the postwar economic boom of prosperity, and layoffs seemed illogical and uncharacteristic to most Americans. Unfortunately for Grumman, the firm had needed the bulk of its manpower in the early years of the lunar program, long before Apollo emerged in the forefront of American Culture. The height of the company‘s Apollo-related 1 Several setbacks on some of Grumman‘s projects helped force the layoffs. A delay in the F-111, a swept-wing Navy fighter-jet, became just one of the issues involved. The aircraft faced weight problems, as well as power plant and computer challenges, which caused lengthy congressional hearings about the program. Senator John McClellan (D-Ark), one of the key players in the investigation claimed that the plane did not meet military requirements (even though it was supposedly Grumman‘s former TFX design). In April 1967, he noted that ―even if all of its deficiencies are corrected and no further problems arise,‖ the aircraft would still lag two years behind it original 1970 delivery schedule. Grumman had projected that the aircraft would bring in about 1$ billion in business and its delay significantly hampered the company‘s ability to keep all of its workers on the payroll. Some of the other programs that faced setbacks and forced layoffs included the phasing out of the C-2A, a twin-engine cargo plane that carried supplies between aircraft carriers and land bases; the termination of the S-2D-SE Tracker, a carrier-based antisubmarine plane, which the company had built for more than 15 years; and the retreat from maximum employment on the LM program. For more details on these issues, see ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800,‖ Newsday, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, Northrop Grumman History Center, Bethpage, NY (hereinafter cited as NGHC). 330 employment came in June 1966 and quickly dropped off soon thereafter.2 Grumman‘s layoffs began in early 1967, almost two full years before the December 1968 Apollo 8 flight around the Moon, an event that represented the first significant television coverage of the program and helped cement in America‘s collective mind that the Apollo Program had come to full fruition. The Apollo Program represented the culmination of years of racing the Russians in space, and the American public was finally starting to pay close attention. In spinning these RIFs (Reduction-in-Force) internally and externally, the challenge for Grumman was to explain the rationale for responsible reductions while still maintaining the image of preparedness and innovation that would be key to its success going forward. Grumman‘s News and Communication Department became the company‘s main office that tried to control the firm‘s public image when the layoffs began. Hank E. Bockrath and R. M. Voris ran the department and tried to spin the workforce reductions in a positive light even while Grumman prepared to downsize its LM workforce, faced serious delays in the F-111 program, and dealt with the conclusion of several of the firm‘s aircraft contracts.3 In early January 1967, Bockrath and Voris, realizing that the press 2 Grumman‘s LM staffing peaked in June 1966. At that time 7,500 employees worked on the program. Engineers represented the bulk of the workforce in a ratio of 2 to 1 to production employees. About 1000 of the LM staff did not fall strictly under the title of production or engineering, but rather fell into categories like ―Administration and Quality Control, etc.‖). The company had constructed all of the lunar modules by mid 1967. Grumman expected a ―very gradual‖ reduction in its LM workforce from 1967 through 1969. For more details, see and compare H.E. Bockrath to Glenn Nixon, 17 June 1966, ―LM-Personnel,‖ Sect. A-71; and ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800,‖ Newsday, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10. Both found in NGHC. 3 Several documents, when compared, reveal that Bockrath and Voris were the main players in the company‘s News and Communications Department. See and compare H.E. Bockrath to Glenn Nixon, 17 June 1966, ―LM-Personnel,‖ Sect. A-71, NGHC; H. Bockrath, Grumman Aircraft Engineering 331 would soon make a spectacle of the layoffs, created a brief but carefully crafted statement to try to minimize the shock of the upcoming reductions. Their January 27 press release— which notably came on the same day that Apollo astronauts Gus Grissom, Ed White, and Roger Chaffee lost their lives in the Apollo 1 fire atop a launch pad at Cape Canaveral— tried to deemphasize the downsizing in a variety of ways. The statement began by noting that, in the five years since the firm had become a major space contractor (it had won the LM contract in 1962), the company‘s employment roll had risen substantially from approximately 14,500 to more than 33,000. But given recent cutbacks in some of the firm‘s projects, the company‘s workforce had become ―larger than required to meet the needs of the company‘s responsibilities.‖4 Grumman therefore planned to reduce its hiring rate significantly, as well as decrease its payroll via ―voluntary terminations‖ (those due to ―retirement, change of jobs, poor performance, leaving the company for health reasons, etc.‖). The statement emphasized that in January and February the firm would go through some ―natural attrition‖ (via ―voluntary terminations‖), but then subtly noted that such changes would not allow the company to meet its manpower reduction goals; in other words, there would still need to be some layoffs. 5 Obviously, the company wanted to Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, 10 February 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC; Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, 8 March 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC; and Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses,‖ R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 4 Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation, Press Release, 27 January 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 5 The reductions, the statement noted, resulted from several factors including: the LM program passing its employment peak, a temporary hold on the C2 Greyhound program, the upcoming termination of the S2 Tracker series (a program that had been in production for 15 years), and the F-111 program‘s 332 emphasize ―voluntary terminations‖ as a solution to its ―excessive‖ workforce problems and only briefly suggested, in passing, that the future might hold more ―traditional‖ downsizing. An internal ―Statement Rationale‖ attached to the January 27 press release reveals that the firm‘s public relations people planned to parse their words carefully regarding the reductions. The ―rationale‖ projected that ―at some point in time in the next few weeks the press will call on the matter of what it interprets as ‗severe Grumman layoffs.‘ Rumors are rampant in and out of the company. The union will undoubtedly make the most of the situation by siccing [sic] the press upon us. Those who are pink-slipped often telephone newspapers.‖6 Curiously, Bockrath and Voris realized, regardless of the careful language they tried to use, ―you can‘t hide these things. If you try to mislead with an initial statement, the truth will [come] out in a second day story based upon the misleading statement. We have to ‗own up.‘‖7 But they planned to ―own up‖ in a very subtle manner; they seemed committed to deemphasizing the total number of workers that would face layoffs because, in their words, they had ―lumped in the poor performers in the voluntary terminations total in order to minimize the actual amount of personnel who are injustly [sic] relieved of employment (It can be defended that anyone who performs poorly does so of his own free will and chooses to suffer the consequences).‖8 The memo closed by inability to offset these setbacks due to delays in its own production. See Untitled Company Statement, 27 January 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 6 ―Statement Rationale,‖ 27 January 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 7 Ibid. 8 Ibid. 333 stressing that the company should not give the press the ―poor performers‖ figure by itself. If the media asked for it, the company would note that it could not supply the statistic because ―nobody counted the many diverse reasons why a party chooses to leave voluntarily.‖9 Grumman‘s public relations team anticipated the media‘s moves well. In early February 1967, Austin Perlow, a labor reporter for the Long Island Daily Press began questioning the company about the layoffs, which the firm projected would total approximately 300 to 400 workers.10 In a February 10 interoffice memo entitled ―The Press Knows,‖ Bockrath stated that he had successfully ―dodged the issue of how many are involved‖ by telling the press that the ―company is currently computing its immediate manpower requirements and that a figure is not available at this time.‖ 11 But as the memo concluded, Long Island‘s other major newspapers, Newsday and the Suffolk Sun, would probably start questioning the company about the situation before long and ‖it is likely both papers will follow the Press [Long Island Daily Press] story and press for essential facts to fill gaps left in their story.‖12 On March 1, 1967, one of the first newspaper reports about Grumman‘s layoffs appeared in the Suffolk Sun. The article noted that Grumman‘s peak employment of 9 Ibid. 10 H. Bockrath, Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, 10 February 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 11 Ibid. 12 Ibid. 334 approximately 33,000 employees would soon ―drop slightly.‖13 It also stated that company claimed that some workers were ―leaving voluntarily‖ and that the firm had only hired new employees on a very ―selective basis.‖14 The story stated that Grumman officials had said: ―We are not laying off.‖15 But that statement stretched the truth. The company had suggested that several of its employees ―voluntarily‖ change jobs and had targeted the ―poor‖ performers and lumped them in with the voluntary terminations. As the article drew to a close it noted that unions had stressed that ―Grumman had discharged several persons in recent weeks, and that more lay-offs may be on the way.‖16 All in all, the story went along with Grumman‘s explanation of ―voluntary‖ terminations as the main reason behind the company‘s manpower reductions. Even the article‘s title, ―Employment Drop Noted at Grumman,‖ seemed rather tame.17 But by mid-April, the layoffs seemed more prominent and damaging thanks to Newsday, Long Island‘s leading newspaper, which exclaimed in a headline ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800.‖18 The newspaper‘s April 18 article stressed that 13 ―Employment Drop Noted at Grumman,‖ Suffolk Sun, 1 March 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, 14 Ibid. 15 Ibid. 16 Ibid. NGHC. 17 Ibid. As the Grumman News and Communications Department noted in an inter-office memo about a week later, there was a distinct advantage in stating that the reductions in the workforce were occurring naturally. If the company continued to push that argument, it might work to its advantage ―when the day comes that we might have to take the second step that step will not be quite so dramatic in its impact.‖ For more details, see Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, 8 March 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 18 ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800,‖ Newsday, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A10, NGHC. 335 while the company had faced certain setbacks because of the delay of contracts and the completion of the LM‘s peak production schedule, the firm ―has let its work force drop by 800 persons.‖19 According to Newsday, Grumman had begun the year with approximately 33,400 employees on its payroll, but, by mid-April, that number had dropped to about 32,600.20 Although a layoff of approximately 2.4% of the company‘s workforce might not seem significant, the reduction still had a notable psychological impact on Grummanites and other Long Islanders.21 Newsday had also placed the reductions within the context of the ―already tight labor market on Long Island‖ which was ―expected to get even tighter this year.‖22 The newspaper had bluntly cast Long Island‘s largest employer and the nation‘s ninth largest defense contractor in a critical light, and Grumman officials were not happy. A reporter had contacted the firm before the story ran, but he did not accept the company‘s main line about the downsizing, despite attempts on the part of President Lew Evans and other corporate leaders to cast the situation in a positive light. 23 Evans came down hard on his 19 Ibid. 20 Ibid. 21 Grumman calculated its exact workforce reductions for January 1967 as follows: 559 total terminations, 476 of which were voluntary, 83 of which were discharges, and 3 of which were of an unreported nature. As of February, another 30 people had accepted voluntary terminations with another 57 still awaiting ―voluntary termination‖ status. Compared to 1966, when the total number of terminations reached 3,860, the first few months of 1967 seemed on pace to overtake the previous year‘s reductions. For more details, see handwritten statistics, circa February 1967, attached to ―Statement Rationale,‖ 27 January 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 22 ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800,‖ Newsday, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A10, NGHC. 23 The company‘s main line about the layoffs, or rather ―Employment,‖ declared: 336 public relations team as a result of the story. He wanted to control the press, but, as Voris explained to him, the situation was ―plagued with complexities somewhat greater than screwing a nut on a bolt.‖24 Evans had helped craft a company rationale earlier in the year about the reductions for the public relations team to use, but, as Voris explained to Evans, despite giving Newsday his policy statement about employment, the newspaper had chosen to interpret it, rather than use it ―directly.‖25 Voris continued on ―your guiding remarks of this morning were well received by both of us [Voris and Bockrath]. It is not that we haven‘t been doing just as you suggest (as attested to by the attached pro article) The workload at Grumman has leveled off and an adjustment in workforce is required because of a phasing out of our ASW program and a gap in our AEW program; a lack of defense funding for the COD program and the declining of scheduled effort on the LM. The EA-6B program, which is essentially a continuation of the A6A Program and the F111 Program are insufficient to compensate for the decline. Grumman however, will continue to hire personnel with special skills such as machine tool operators and electronic systems engineers. Evans may have helped craft this particular statement in early 1967. For more details on this issue, see ―Employment,‖ to Hank Bockrath, circa January or February 1967, attached to Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. For more about the reporter contacting Grumman, see Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 24 Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 25 For Voris‘s explanation about the press ignoring Evans‘s statement, see Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. For what may be Evans‘s policy statement on ―Employment,‖ see ―Employment,‖ to Hank Bockrath, circa January or February 1967, attached to Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 337 it is just a case that we lacked the finite control of this one as we have enjoyed in the main with the rest of the media.‖26 Internal company response to press coverage of the layoffs reveals the extent to which President Lew Evans involved himself directly in trying to handle perceptions. Earlier in the year, Bockrath and Voris had tried to pull together a coherent policy statement based on Evans‘s thoughts about managing the layoffs.27 Their draft statement, based on their ―best thinking at that time‖ about how to deal with "the likely event that we are questioned about a personnel reduction,‖ called for them to first ―deny emphatically that there was any sort of layoff,‖ and then to state ―we are permitting natural attrition to reduce the workforce total.‖28 They also planned to emphasize that although they had continued to hire more employees, those new hires had been very select personnel, such as machinists, electronic engineers, and radio frequency engineers, those types of personnel ―in short-supply in the industry.‖29 They added such workers to the roster at the rate of about twenty to forty per week, but ―natural attrition,‖ they argued, offset the situation by about one hundred or so every week.30 Still, the company strategically stressed that it had 26 Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 27 Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 28 The ―best thinking‖ quote is from Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Personnel Adjustments & Press Responses, R. M. Voris to L. J. Evans, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. All of the other quotes are from Hank Bockrath, Untitled Memo, 1 February 1967 ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 29 Hank Bockrath, Untitled Memo, 1 February 1967 ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 30 Ibid. 338 adopted this policy in order to avoid any serious impact on the community. And we are continuing the policy of job flexibility which permits us to reassign people, thus enabling us to cope with the knotty problem of the changing phases of various programs. This can hardly be construed as a layoff. Indeed, it is a policy designed to avoid one. 31 Media coverage reveals how difficult it was for Grumman to control even the Long Island press. On April 20, Newsday printed another negative story entitled ―No Limit Set on Job Losses, Says Grumman.‖32 The newspaper hammered away at the fact that the firm had reduced its work force by ―800 workers in three months‖ and that ―the company had set no minimum number for the size of its work force.‖33 In other words, 31 The quote is from ibid. The public relations team played devil‘s advocate and questioned certain facets of this approach in trying to sway the press. In the same memo, Bockrath detailed two arguments that opponents could seize to combat the ―natural attrition/semantic line.‖ According to Bockrath, the first problem with this type of dialogue was that it ―would have to be casually spoken, not read like it was a statement, in order to convince the reporter that nothing was prepared.‖ And second, ―the union, or pink slipped employees, may very well have called the press with seemingly a refutation of the natural attrition principle.‖ Although Grumman was a non-union company, labor leaders would use anything they could, such as the layoffs, to exploit the situation and try to get their foot in the door. The critique continued on and laid-out a possible dialogue between the News and Communication Department and the press, by noting: in the event that the press is armed with the fact that some employees were pink slipped we would then be forced to say something like: ‗Naturally, some of our people are pink slipped. It‘s not feasible in a company of 33,000 people to believe that all of our performers would be rated excellent.‘ To which the reporter would say: ‗You mean, incompetence or poor performance.‘ To which we would reply: ‗You said that, not me. I mean that in a company of 33,000 some will be better performers than others. The memo closed by noting: ―It is likely we would be forced to come up with total personnel force figures to reveal the extent that natural attrition has, or will, reduce the total employment figure.‖ For more details on this subject, see Hank Bockrath, Untitled Memo, 1 February 1967 ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 32 ―No Limit Set on Job Losses, Says Grumman,‖ Newsday, 20 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, 33 Ibid. NGHC. 339 more reductions seemed likely. Grumman had acknowledged that employment had ―leveled off‖ because of certain cuts in Department of Defense spending, and that some programs like the LM had passed peak production; indeed, the firm ―had set no fixed number below which the company could not function.‖34 The story ended by noting that Grumman officials constantly reevaluated workforce numbers ―on a weekly basis to make sure that we have enough personnel to meet all of our responsibilities and yet operate efficiently.‖35 Although the Newsday article was not overly negative, it still did not paint the most positive picture of the company‘s situation, at least not one that Grumman managers wanted headlining the largest paper on Long Island. If Grumman had written the story, it would have worded it very differently, as witnessed by a press release that the News and Communication Department had prepared just prior to the appearance of the Newsday article. Grumman‘s spin on the situation contained carefully constructed, if not somewhat tortured, language: We have reached our peak employment and are reducing the total number of employees by permitting the number of terminations to exceed the number of personnel hired. Concurrent with our growth has been an automatic increase in the number of people who leave the company. This is due both to the fact that in growing we have acquired newer people who have less of a stake in the Grumman company, as well as the fact that today‘s labor market is highly competitive.… (if we must) It is true that some of our people are being asked to leave for a variety of reasons (not properly suited to the job; personality problems or personality conflicts; insubordination; etc). 34 Ibid. 35 Ibid. 340 This number is not larger than what you would expect in a company currently employing 32,800 people. 36 Despite the negative press Grumman had received about its layoffs by the end of April 1967, the company seemed to have stabilized employment numbers. The earlier layoffs seemed to have brought the company down to a number that the firm‘s payroll could handle. A handwritten note attached to several public relations documents, intended for use by the News and Communication Department, noted that the firm had ―solved the program, stabilized and expect to be hiring again… 53 starters last week.‖37 Although the company anticipated that it would need to do some more trimming in the future as other projects ended, it seems like it had finished with downsizing–and its accompanying bad press—at least for a while. Aerospace Downsizing and the Space Program in a Regional and National Context In August 1968, layoffs in the space program became a national story when Americans began to realize that the Apollo Program had its employment limits, thanks in part to a story in the New York Times. On August 9, the newspaper announced that NASA had started to prepare sharp reductions in its workforce. Congressional budget cuts would force the space agency to release more than 1,600 employees, or approximately one out of every six NASA workers hired the previous year. An additional 2,000 NASA 36 37 Untitled statement, circa April 1967, attached to ibid. Untitled handwritten note, circa April 1967, attached to ―F-111B Trouble Cuts Grumman Payroll by 800,‖ Newsday, 18 April 1967, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 341 contract employees would also face the chopping block. 38 The space agency had submitted a $4.37 billion budget, but with the federal government needing to cut more than $6 billion in overall expenditures, NASA‘s request needed some serious paring. Estimates placed the possible reductions in NASA‘s budget anywhere from $150 million to $700 million. Programs that faced losing their funding included the development of the Nerva nuclear engine, several scientific Apollo Applications Program packages, and some unmanned scientific instruments for Mars exploration. Until Congress could sort out the space agency‘s funding, NASA would have to operate on a significantly reduced ―interim‖ budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 1969.39 Like Grumman, NASA had ―hoped to reduce its work force by attrition,‖ but as the New York Times noted, more than 4,000 NASA employees had lost their jobs in 1967 and things did not look good for many more of them in the near future. As the Times stated in closing, in some warped form of fate, ―the first launching of a manned Apollo vehicle is scheduled in about three months.‖40 Ironically, slightly above and adjacent to the story, another article celebrated Apollo Astronaut James Lovell‘s selection as the command module pilot for the upcoming Apollo 8 flight. It would be the first mission that would circumnavigate the Moon and beam back close-range views of the lunar surface, as well as the image of the Earth rising 38 Richard D. Lyons, ―NASA Preparing A Sharp Cutback,‖ New York Times, 9 August 1968, in ―LM Publicity Book 2—R. Fleisig,‖ Vertical Files, Cradle of Aviation Museum, East Garden City, NY (hereinafter cited as CAM). 39 40 Ibid. As of August 1968, NASA employed approximately 30,000 workers. See ―NASA Preparing A Sharp Cutback,‖ by Richard D. Lyons, New York Times, 9 August 1968, in ―LM Publicity Book 2—R. Fleisig,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 342 above the Moon‘s horizon; that photo would become one of the signature images of the ecological/environmental movement of the era. At the same time that aerospace workers faced the prospect of losing their jobs, the press celebrated the astronauts who would travel to the Moon in spacecraft that had been the fruits of those workers‘ hard labor. 41 NASA employees were not the only aerospace workers facing layoffs in 1968. On August 31, Newsday reported ―1,200 to Lose Jobs in Grumman Cutback.‖42 According to Grumman, it would be the first time since the end of WWII that the company had laid off more than 1,000 people.43 During that period, the firm had employed approximately 36,000 employees.44 The new reduction would occur over an eight week period due to a slowdown, or ―stretch-out,‖ in the production of the F-111A fighter. The RIFs would conclude the week of October 15.45 Joseph Dutra, Jr., the Executive Vice President of the Long Island Association of Commerce and Industry, did not view the layoffs ―as a blow to the Long Island 41 ―Navy Captain Joins Apollo Crew,‖ New York Times, 9 August 1968, in ―LM Publicity Book 2—R. Fleisig,‖ Vertical Files, CAM. 42 ―1,200 to Lose jobs in Grumman Cutback,‖ Newsday, 31 August 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, 43 Ibid. NGHC. 44 Grumman Plans Layoff of 1,200 for 8 Weeks; F-111 Cutbacks Blamed,‖ Wall Street Journal, 3 September 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC; and ibid. 45 Federal budget cuts caused the slowdown in the F-111. The DoD had announced a ―stretchout‖ of the F-111‘s production schedule. Grumman was a subcontractor on the aircraft for General Dynamics. The Bethpage company produced the plane‘s fuselage, vertical stabilizers, and its landing gear. For more details, see and compare ―Grumman Plans Layoff of 1,200 for 8 Weeks; F-111 Cutbacks Blamed,‖ Wall Street Journal, 3 September 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC; and ―1,200 to Lose Jobs in Grumman Cutback,‖ Newsday, 31 August 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 343 Economy.‖46 He tried to put a positive spin on the situation by speculating that the 1,200 employees ―would probably not be out of work very long.‖47 He claimed that they ―would practically immediately be absorbed into the work force. There has been a shortage of skilled help on Long Island, at least for the past five years.‖48 Dutra concluded that such layoffs should be expected, especially ―in an economy where a substantial amount of labor is employed by the aerospace defense industry.‖49 Union officials had a different take on the reductions. One hinted at how much they still coveted Grumman, even years after their unsuccessful unionization campaigns of the early 1960s. As Ennio ―Chip‖ Morselli, a local organizer for the United Auto Workers, stated: ―If I was working there 20 years I‘d be concerned. The people at Grumman are sort of complacent. Now they‘re starting to worry about their jobs.‖50 When pressed about what a union could do for Grummanites, however, Morselli admitted that even if it had secured the right to represent the employees, he could do little beyond trying to insure that the workers with the most seniority were the last to receive pink slips. Only a week into Grumman‘s projected eight-week autumnal layoff, it became apparent which type of workers faced the most significant reductions. A Grumman interoffice memo entitled ―Daily Analysis of Removals‖ revealed that of the 329 46 ―1,200 to Lose Jobs in Grumman Cutback,‖ Newsday, 31 August 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, 47 Ibid. 48 Ibid. 49 Ibid. 50 Ibid. NGHC. 344 terminations that had already occurred by early September, more than half came from the blue-collar sector, especially in production and manufacturing. Engineers also faced severe cutbacks, but not as many as the blue-collar workers. They only represented roughly 17% of the total RIFs.51 The report included statistics from not only the company‘s Bethpage plants, but also its Florida operations. By the end of 1968, even though blue-collar Grummanites seemed the hardest hit by the layoffs, at least they could take solace in the greater number of job opportunities open to them. Engineers, while not facing as many RIFs as production workers, had fewer job options than their colleagues on the shop floor. Very few job openings seemed to exist in the New York region for white-collar workers compared to their blue-collar counterparts. Thirty-three outside firms had made referral requests about former Grummanites during this period, but of those firms, most only offered opportunities for skilled manufacturing employees. Few of the job opportunities went to engineers. In fact, only nine of the firms had even requested professional level workers, and of those very few needed more than a handful.52 51 Some rough calculations reveal that 176 of the 329 workers (or approximately 54%) were bluecollar employees, whereas only fifty-four (or approximately 17%) were engineers. These figures are based on jobs that could only be clearly delineated as being blue-collar or engineering positions. A few more jobs may fit into these categories, but the calculations are fairly close to the correct number. The exact breakdown, by department/job, is as follows: ―Admin/Facilities: 8; Business Devel: 0; Computing Systems: 5; Contract: 1; Engineering: 43; ―…re Systems‖ 1; GFAL: 10; MATERIAL/MANUFACTURING—Material: 25; Mf‘g Eng‘g 11; Tool Eng‘g 0; Tool Fabrication: 15; Production Shops (includes some Stuart people): 140; Production Offices 10; Machine Shops 21; Machine Offices 1; Ops, Planning and Scheduling: 3; Product Support: 13; Program Dir and Contr : 3; Public Relations : 0; Quality Control: 7; Security and Pers Serv: 3; Something ―..es‖ 9; in Stuart FL: 4; Treasurer Controller: 0.‖ For the exact details, see Interoffice Memorandum, ―Daily Analysis of Removals,‖ R.E. Foster to D.E. Knowles and F. Campbell, 16 September 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 52 Only some of the larger and more famous aerospace firms like Sperry-Rand and CurtissWright needed engineers, and they only needed a few of them. For more on this subject, see Attachment, 345 In some ways, 1969 began in a promising manner for Grumman. The company won a major contract from the Navy early that year to design and built the F-14 ―Tomcat‖ (a supersonic carrier-based fighter); estimates projected that the program would bring the firm approximately $5 billion over the next decade. 53 Unfortunately for Grumman, however, the program would not help increase employment for a while because the company still had the plane in research and development; production would not begin for another eighteen months. Nevertheless, some aerospace industry analysts viewed the new contract in a very positive light. Long Island Association President William J. Casey, who would later serve as CIA Director under President Ronald Reagan, called the award a ―major milestone in the history of Long Island‘s defense industry and economic development.‖54 He believed that the F-14 agreement might create as many as 20,000 jobs over the next five years. Casey also thought it would ―go a long way toward fostering the economic well-being and general welfare of Long Island‘s economy.‖55 Regardless of the positive news about the Tomcat, Grumman still struggled financially. The company found itself caught in a quandary. On one hand, it wanted to keep experienced staff—its talent—in place so that it could successfully compete for ―Referrals—Requests from Outside Companies,‖ attached to ―Terminating Employees (Temporary Procedure), 9 September 1968, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 53 The F-14A had replaced the F-111B. Many had previously known the F-14 as the VFX. Long Island Daily Review, 16 January 1969, ―Personnel,‖ Sect. A-8, 1st Drawer of C7, NGHC. 54 Long Island Daily Review, 16 January 1969, ―Personnel,‖ Sect. A-8, 1st Drawer of C7, NGHC. Additional information about the Long Island Association and its then President William J. Casey was obtained from ―Long Island Association,‖ Wikipedia, accessed 9 October 2008, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long_Island_Association. The Association was the largest business development lobbying group on Long Island, a type of sophisticated Chamber of Commerce for the entire area. 55 Long Island Daily Review, 16 January 1969, ―Personnel,‖ Sect. A-8, 1st Drawer of C7, NGHC. 346 future aerospace contracts, but, on the other hand, it also had to reduce its overall expenses at all of its plants and field offices including Bethpage, Houston, Cape Kennedy, and White Sands, NM. The idea of keeping experienced staff in place became such a major challenge for Grumman that NASA even weighed in on the issue. In February, Joe Gavin, Grumman‘s Director of Space Programs and a company vice president, received a memo from the space agency on the subject. NASA wanted Grumman‘s key personnel to remain in place in order to support those programs currently in their mission phases. Grumman may have technically fulfilled its contractual obligations to NASA by delivering various vehicles and scientific instruments, but the space agency wanted to make sure it kept the right people in place to handle any upcoming difficulties. Grumman, likewise, wanted to assure that it retained those who had worked so closely with NASA, while the space agency continued to plan the future of the space exploration through missions like the Apollo Applications Program and the Space Station. Overall, the Bethpage firm had to try to find a balance to a hard situation with no clear solution, particularly during such difficult economic times.56 56 ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Space Programs Directive,‖ Joseph G. Gavin, Jr., to R.H. Tripp, S. Ferdman, N. Sinder, 14 February 1969, ―J.G. Gavin Memos 1969,‖ Untitled Box, Sect A-68, NGHC. For a discussion of at least one way that Grumman tried to reduce its field office expenses, while still keeping talented people in the field, see Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation Inter-Office Memorandum, ―Field Base Policy,‖ J. G. Gavin, Jr., to L. J. Evans, R. Hutton, W. M. Zarkowsky, 3 April 1969, ―J. G. Gavin Memos 1969,‖ Untitled Box, Sect. A-68, NGHC. Gavin‘s memo—a follow-up to a Senior Salary Board meeting—tried to suggest a logical way to reduce salaries at the company‘s field bases. While field assignments had previously received solid pay, Gavin believed that because the field offices were going to be reduced by at least 50% over the following two years, it became a good time to scale back pay expectations for such positions. He wanted to stress to employees the importance of taking these jobs as a good move for their professional development. In other words, he wanted to emphasize the importance of trading lower pay and a move away from the company‘s home base of operations to the field offices as a type of prestigious service to the company that would enhance an employee‘s professional development. As Gavin concluded on the subject: ―I think that if a transition 347 By the time Grumman held its annual shareholder meeting in May 1969, the tension over the issue of employee retention versus profits had become a primary concern for the corporation. Despite such struggles, the press seemed to handle Grumman in a somewhat friendly manner. Newsday‘s Long Island Business Editor, Francis Wood, who covered the meeting for the newspaper, wrote a fairly positive article about the firm, even though the story‘s title—―Grumman Plans Light Layoff: Even As Its Module Heads for the Moon, and its Basic Plane Business Booms, the Company Schedules a Summer Slowdown‖—might have seemed jarring at first.57 Wood succinctly summarized the company‘s situation in his opening paragraph by stating: While the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corp‘s lunar module streaked for the moon yesterday in a dramatic show of the firm‘s technology, the corporation‘s management back on earth wrestled with the problems of keeping the shop busy. And, they reluctantly told stockholders, there‘ll have to be some slight cuts in the work force this summer, due to a space slowdown and a lag before production starts on the Navy F-14 jet fighter.58 Nevertheless, Wood noted that the Navy had recently increased its F-14 production goals by more than 50%. That meant that the seafaring service ultimately wanted more than 700 of the supersonic fighters from Grumman—a production run that would probably last about ten years. Even though the company‘s space work would slide from 34% to 27% of could be made during a period of perhaps a year, we will save some money, gain the approval of our customers, maintain a competitive position in the industry, and perhaps ease the problem of making field site assignments as well as Bethpage reassignments.‖ 57 ―Grumman Plans Light Layoff,‖ Francis Wood, Newsday, 20 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Section A10, NGHC. 58 Ibid. 348 the firm‘s total business, thanks to the Tomcat contract, defense work would increase to 62% of the budget. Wood also noted that Clinton Towl, Grumman‘s Chairman and CEO, had stated: ―There‘ll probably be a slight reduction [in the workforce] this summer. Not substantial, percentage wise, but until the F-14 gets into production we have a greater demand for engineers than factory people.‖59 Even though Towl stressed that the layoffs would be ―slight,‖ that was far from the truth for a significant portion of Grummanites. Shortly after the conclusion of the annual shareholders meeting, Grumman released a fairly devastating press statement, at least for 10% of the workforce.60 The statement, which had at first been entitled ―Layoff Statement,‖ and then renamed ―Reduction in Force,‖ and finally ―Decrease in Force,‖ simply noted that the company would drop approximately 3,500 employees from its payroll before the end of 1969.61 The reductions would come from all major areas and 59 ―Grumman Plans Light Layoff,‖ Francis Wood, Newsday, 20 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Section A10, NGHC. Some of the other issues covered at the stockholder‘s meeting included: Grumman‘s first significant change in corporate structure since the firm‘s birth (the firm planned to diversify by become a holding company named the Grumman Corporation on July 1, of which the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation [GAEC] would become just one part of the entire entity); a significant increase in the sales of the new Gulfstream II aircraft; and the fact that Grumman had spent more than $40 million improving its facilities and adding about 500,000 square feet of new manufacturing and research space. For more details, see Francis Wood, ―Grumman Plans Light Layoff,‖ Newsday, 20 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Section A-10, NGHC. 60 One cannot determine the exact timing of the press release with any certainty. However, based on the fact that Francis Wood did not mention the statement in his May 20 article, it seems logical to assume that the release came after the shareholder‘s meeting. See and compare ibid; ―Decrease in Force,‖ Draft of Grumman Press Release, circa 19 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC; and ―Grumman to Drop 10% of Work Force,‖ Newsday, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 61 ―Decrease in Force,‖ Draft of Grumman Press Release, circa 19 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A10, NGHC. For some additional perspective on Towl‘s statement, see ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ Long Island Studies Institute, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY (hereinafter cited as LISI). 349 would mainly occur simply ―through attrition.‖ It blamed the layoffs on a stretch-out in the EA-6B program and cutbacks in the Air Force‘s bomber version of the F-111.62 Regardless of the impact a 10% layoff would have on Long Island, Newsday¸ despite its past criticism of Grumman, handled the story rather uncritically. The May 21 article entitled ―Grumman to Drop 10% of Workforce‖ noted that the company had stated that the layoffs would have only a ―slight impact‖ on Long Island‘s economy.63 A Grumman spokesperson claimed that a ―substantial portion‖ of the reductions would be ―accounted for through attrition, or normal turnover due to deaths, illness, retirement, or resignation.‖64 That same spokesperson went on to say that ―the average attrition rate varied from 50 to 120 persons per week,‖ but as the paper noted, ―he refused to say how many persons would be asked to leave or on what basis.‖65 Clinton Towl, believed that the workers could be ―easily absorbed by the surrounding industry.‖66 Fred Merrell, Executive Vice President of the Long Island Association of Commerce and Industry, concurred, saying it would be ―a comparatively light layoff, when you consider that there are close to 62 See and compare ―Decrease in Force,‖ Draft of Grumman Press Release, circa 19 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC; and ―Grumman to Drop 10% of Work Force,‖ Newsday, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 63 ―Grumman to Drop 10% of Work Force,‖ Newsday, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. The other major Long Island newspapers carried very similar, if not somewhat watered-down, versions of the Newsday story. See and compare ―Grumman to Cut Staff 10%,‖ Long Island Press, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC; ―Grumman to Cut Force 10 per cent by Dec. 31,‖ Suffolk Sun, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC; and ―Grumman to Cut force 10 per cent by Dec. 31,‖ SunTimes, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 64 ―Grumman to Drop 10% of Work Force,‖ Newsday, 21 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, 65 Ibid. 66 Ibid. NGHC. 350 940,000 employed on Long Island.‖67 The 10% drop in the workforce had a major psychological effect on Grummanites and Long Islanders, however. Layoffs during the previous fall had only totaled about 300 people.68 This time the layoffs would increase that number tenfold. In early July 1969, the Wall Street Journal reported that RIFs had started to increase throughout the entire aerospace sector, particularly at some of the largest firms. The paper claimed that aerospace industry analysts placed the layoffs at 16,000 at the larger space aerospace companies from January through July, and that figure did not included ―cutbacks caused by the cancellation of the Manned Orbiting Laboratory [MOL] program.‖69 Grumman was only the latest company to announce cutbacks, which the manufacturer projected at approximately 4,000 for the year—the projected 10% loss.70 McDonnell Douglas also planned to layoff about 7,200 employees, mostly in Southern California, due to the cancellation of the MOL program. This reduction came on top of a projected 9,000 employee downsizing already in the works.71 Even though McDonnell had secured a new contract for the F-4 Phantom II jet, widespread cutbacks still occurred at the firm. The company estimated that its employment rolls would fall to 114,000 by the end of the year, down from 123,000 the previous December (1968), or just a little under 67 Ibid. 68 ―Grumman Plans Light Layoff,‖ Francis Wood, Newsday, 20 May 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Section A10, NGHC. 69 ―Aerospace Companies Laying Off Workers As Space and Defense Projects Slacken,‖ Wall Street Journal, 8 July 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 70 Ibid. 71 Ibid. 351 10% of its workforce.72 Boeing, in Seattle, also went through some significant downsizing. In the six months from January through June 1969, the Northwest manufacturer had released about 1,000 workers a month at its main plant. The company‘s total employment had fallen from 95,000 to 89,000 during that same period. 73 Back in Bethpage, only days after one of Grumman‘s greatest triumphs—putting the first men on the Moon, thanks to the company‘s Lunar Module—employees got some more bad news. On July 24, the firm learned that NASA would terminate the Lunar Module-A Program, a project slated as part of the Apollo Applications Program (AAP). 74 The Lunar Module-A—a modified version of the ascent stage of the LM that had landed men on the Moon—would have been an integral part of an interim space station system. 75 Plans had called for the AAP to use the technology and leftover hardware from the Apollo Program. Grumman had worked on the program for more than three years and had received $12.9 million for its development, $11 million of which the company had already spent. Six hundred Grummanites had participated in the AAP‘s development. 76 Despite the 72 To its credit, McDonnell Douglas tried to help its workers who were facing layoffs find jobs. At the time of this article, the company had apparently invited more than 50 aerospace companies to its plants to try to recruit some of them. See ibid. 73 Ibid. Lockheed of El Segundo, California seemed unaffected by the slowdown in aerospace and defense spending. The company claimed that it had not planned any substantial RIFs, even though it had lost its contract for the AH56 helicopter. The firm stated that its employment would remain relatively flat at somewhere between 95,000 to 96,000 through the year. For more on this subject, see ibid. 74 ―Grumman Says Lunar Module Program Cut,‖ Suffolk Sun, 24 July 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A- 10, NGHC. 75 Ibid. 76 Ibid. 352 end of the program, a Grumman spokesperson said he felt ―very, very confident‖ that most of the 600 employees would receive reassignments to other advanced projects at the company.77 The first few months of 1970 brought a spate of more bad news for Grummanites and other Long Islanders. In January, Sperry Rand, one of Grumman‘s neighbors, announced it would layoff 250 workers, including 153 engineers. 78 Brookhaven National Laboratory, another Long Island employer, stated it would release 250, and Reeves Instrument of the Dynamics Corporation revealed that it planned to move to Westbury, Connecticut, taking a myriad of jobs with it.79 Then, on the very last Friday in February, Grumman revealed that it planned to RIF another 5,000 employees from every division in the company by the end of the year due to cuts in space and defense spending.80 And by the time the story hit the newspapers the following Monday and Tuesday, March 2 and 3, Long Islanders learned that 800 employees had already been axed by the Bethpage manufacturer; of those, only 200 had left due to ―attrition.‖ While company officials stressed that attrition had taken care of most of the layoffs in the past, that hardly seemed 77 ―Grumman Says Lunar Module Program Cut,‖ Suffolk Sun, 24 July 1969, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A10, NGHC. 78 ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, 2-2, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI. 79 80 ―Wanted: Some Teamwork,‖ Newsday, 2 March 1970, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, 2-2, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‘ LISI; and Maureen O‘Neill, ―800 Jobs at Grumman Already Eliminated,‖ Newsday, 3 March 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 353 the case this time.81 With unemployment on Long Island having increased to 4.4% in January 1970, and some projections claiming it would continue to rise in the foreseeable future, the situation looked grim for Grummanites and other Long Islanders. 82 Local officials had shown little concern about previous reductions in the workforce, believing that the former employees would quickly reintegrate into Long Island‘s economy, but Grumman‘s announcement got their attention. Three years after the company‘s first layoffs, local politicians finally began to focus some attention on the downsizing problem. Suffolk County Labor Commissioner Lou Tempera, in a report for County Executive Lee Dennison, noted, ―the spreading effects of the layoffs on Long Island‘s economy.‖ As Tempera suggested, ―These layoffs have a tendency to snowball…. It affects not only the Grumman worker but the gas station where he takes his car, his barber shop and so on.‖83 Nassau County Executive Eugene Nickerson, on the other hand, believed that the layoffs showed that local officials had to start thinking of moving toward reconversion because they ―point up the need for a broad program to help convert (Island 81 ―Effects Are Weighed in Grumman Layoff,‖ Newsday, 2 March 1970, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; and Maureen O‘Neill, ―800 Jobs at Grumman Already Eliminated,‖ Newsday, 3 March 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 82 As of January 1970, Long Island‘s unemployment rate had reached 4.4%, which meant it had risen 0.4% higher than the previous January. Each month the region‘s unemployment rate had grown. As Newsday noted, ―While the unemployment rate averaged 4.1 per cent in 1969, the same as 1968, Long Island‘s unemployment rate for the last six months of 1969 rose to 4.26 per cent, compared with an average of 3.9 per cent for the last six months of 1968.‖ See Maureen O‘Neill, ―800 Jobs at Grumman Already Eliminated,‖ Newsday, 3 March 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 83 ―Effects Are Weighed in Grumman Layoff,‖ Newsday, 2 March 1970, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. For a little more on Tempera‘s thought on the subject, see ibid. 354 industries) from military and aerospace to new growth fields in the economy.‖ 84 For Grumman, even landing a new contract did not look like it could offset the downsizing. Although the company had put a lot of time and effort into some of the preliminary designs for the Space Shuttle, one Grumman official stated that even if the company could secure ―one of the $10,000,000 awards from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration‖ for a Shuttle study contract, it ―would not brighten the labor picture‖ for the firm.85 Newsday‘s March 2 editorial entitled ―Wanted: Some Teamwork‖ offered no real solutions to the problem despite its leading title.86 The essay stressed that the 5,000 Grummanites who would lose their jobs would do so during a period when the unemployment rate on Long Island, as well as prices, would continue to rise. Ironically, even though Grumman employees had continually eschewed organized labor throughout the company‘s history, the editorial mentioned that the Long Island Federation of Labor, which represented union workers in Nassau and Suffolk County and had a membership of about 70,000, had set up a ―‘Save the Jobs Committee‘ to try to ease the impact of military and space cutbacks.‖87 Newsday called on County Executives Dennison and Nickerson to ―set up a joint task force immediately,‖ stressing ―this is a time for 84 ―Effects Are Weighed in Grumman Layoff,‖ Newsday, 2 March 1970, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 85 Ibid. 86 ―Wanted: Some Teamwork,‖ Newsday, 2 March 1970, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 87 Ibid. 355 teamwork.‖88 Its underlying tone revealed that many Long Islanders, particularly those in political office, had suddenly realized that the layoffs represented a significant problem, yet no one had ideas about how to alleviate the situation. A day after Long Islanders had received the news that Grumman would lay off 5,000 of their friends and neighbors, they also learned about perhaps a more promising future for at least some Grummanites. Newsday reported that even though the F-14, the company‘s vital new contract for a state-of-the-art supersonic jet, had encountered some problems in the U.S. House and Senate during a Senate subcommittee‘s hearing about the aircraft, the Navy had still been quite pleased with the company‘s design and handling of the jet. Grumman had met most of its performance targets with the aircraft. While some Senate subcommittee members had expressed their doubts about the program, the Navy had decided that it wanted to expand its original contract for 469 F-14s to buy more than 1,200 of the jets. Despite this apparent good news, Grumman cautioned that the additional purchase of Tomcats would not really affect the projected 5,000 person reduction because the company had assumed all along that Congress would not cut the F-14 program. The company also feared that an increase in the contract might not ultimately come to fruition; after all, the jet still had several barriers to clear on the hill before they could consider it totally safe from possible budget cuts.89 88 Ibid. 89 ―F-14 Clears First Hurdle,‖ Newsday, 3 March 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 356 One Grumman Engineer‘s Downsizing On March 5, 1970, Long Islanders and others got an up-close and personal view of the effects of Grumman‘s downsizing, if they had not already. On that day, Newsday staff writer Maureen O‘Neill published a very revealing story about one unnamed RIFed Grummanite. ―Layoff: A Grumman Engineer‘s Story‖ began poignantly: ―Just a tap on the shoulder and the Grumman engineer knew that he was already off the payroll.‖90 He drove out of the company‘s main gate and went across the street and put in an application with another firm. After calling a few friends, he ―found out that everything was frozen,‖ he said. The 49-year old engineer then ―went home to tell his wife for the second time in six years that his defense job suddenly had been wiped out.‖91 As O‘Neill noted: ―It happened on a Friday, in the afternoon . . . . Just a tap on the shoulder.‖ 92 The engineer had lost his job in early February, about four weeks before Grumman announced its 5,000 worker layoff. He had not expected to lose his position because he had been keeping busy; in fact, he believed that he would receive a transfer to a different division. But ―shortly after lunchtime,‖ his supervisor came by to tell him about his dismissal. His department head also stopped by to try to ―soften the blow.‖ 93 They informed him that even though his ―work had been satisfactory,‖ every department had to 90 Maureen O‘Neill, ―Layoff: A Grumman Engineer‘s Story,‖ Newsday, 5 March 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 91 Ibid. The newspaper noted that the engineer wanted to remain anonymous so that he could keep his job prospects open. 92 Ibid. 93 Ibid. 357 make cuts and they could not afford to transfer him. 94 Both of his superiors told him that they had been unable to sleep trying to figure out some sort of way to keep him on staff.95 The engineer found the severance process a bit jarring. As Newsday reported, he ―had to leave work right away. He headed to his desk, packed his belongings in a few boxes, and then his boss, who continued to be apologetic, helped him lug his possessions out to his car.‖96 The engineer believed that his boss was as shocked as he was about his layoff. The ―former Grummanite concluded, ‗I really didn‘t expect it and I was disappointed that I couldn‘t be placed anywhere.‘‖97 O‘Neill‘s article pointed to a very important feature of many aerospace engineers‘ mindsets during this period. Many of them had secured well-paying jobs that afforded them a certain degree of optimism and confidence, fostered in part by a lifestyle that had engendered middle-class comforts. Although the former Grumman engineer had suddenly lost his livelihood, he had adopted a ―suburban life style‖ during his years at the Bethpage company ―that breeds a confidence in the future, even if there isn‘t another paycheck for six months.‖98 O‘Neill observed that the engineer ―was prepared to stay out of work at least that long to land a job at close to the $240 a week he was getting at Grumman.‖99 Notably, economists at the time believed that most RIFed employees would find new jobs 94 Ibid. 95 Ibid. 96 Ibid. 97 Ibid. 98 Ibid. 99 Ibid. 358 within six months of their layoffs.100 Back in 1964, the engineer had panicked a bit more when he had lost his job at Sperry Gyroscope after more than twelve years of employment; the company had included him in a downsizing from 18,000 to 7,000. 101 His first RIF, more than six years earlier, had shocked him a bit, but he seemed a little more at ease after losing his Grumman position. As he sadly noted: ―Maybe I‘m getting accustomed to the idea. If it‘s never happened before…you wonder if you can pick up. You have that doubt.‖102 Even four weeks after his termination, the former Grummanite had not really altered his lifestyle that much, at least not outwardly. The family still ate steak. Their greatest financial concern had become how to deal with upcoming college tuitions for their eighteen-year old daughter and seventeen-year old son that next fall. Despite such concerns, the engineer remained fairly optimistic as he expected his children to ―get partial scholarships‖ and ―part-time jobs.‖103 His twelve- and two-year old sons still had many years to go before attending college. All he really wanted, he insisted, was ―a decent living and normal things for our children and ourselves, with a new car occasionally.‖104 The man seemed confident that he could wait a while to secure a good job. The family 100 Ibid. 101 Ibid. When the engineer left Sperry in 1964, he had had to take a $70 per week pay cut, and he had to work that job for over a year before landing a new position at Grumman. His did not make much more at Grumman than his previous job when he first started at the Bethpage company, but he eventually worked enough overtime to pull in a decent paycheck. 102 Ibid. 103 Ibid. 104 Ibid. 359 essentially lived on a $170-a-month budget, which covered everything from the mortgage to the telephone bill. And given his severance pay, money in the credit union, and his $65a-week unemployment benefit, he seemed satisfied that he and his family could survive quite nicely for a while.105 Nevertheless, he did seem a little worried that he might have to dip into savings at some point. Yet prospects for his securing a new job did not look good. At the unemployment office, he discovered that the agency had not placed anyone in a technical position in more than three months. Indeed, few jobs of any type had opened up during that period. In one instance, over 300 people applied for the same position. The unemployment office told him to keep knocking on as many doors as possible to try to find the right position, and he did that for quite a while. After more than a month of that type of hustling, however, he decided to spend most of his time on the phone calling to check on leads. He had learned that ―no one calls you back or answers your letters.‖106 By the summer of 1970, former Grummanites like the anonymous engineer, as well as many of the other unemployed Long Islanders who had suffered the effects of the layoffs, had heard some mixed news about the future of Grumman that seemed to hold some promise for reemployment. On one hand, NASA had awarded Grumman—as well as four other companies including McDonnell Douglas, North American Rockwell, Lockheed, and the Chrysler Corporation—an individual contract for a preliminary design study of the Space Shuttle. Although the award only granted the Bethpage firm enough 105 Ibid. 106 Ibid. 360 money to draw up some initial concepts that would still have to compete head-to-head with the other companies‘ plans in order to capture the final Shuttle contract, the possibility of eventually securing the right to develop and construct a new fleet of NASA spacecraft seemed hopeful.107 In the meantime, however, the situation looked bleak. The new study contract did not prevent the company from laying off more than 5,000 employees. Unemployment on Long Island had reached 4.5% in April, up from 3.6% the previous year.108 Economists and labor experts believed that the figure might reach as high as 7% by the end of the year.109 Hope remained the only motivating force for many of the RIFed workers who wanted to return to employment in the aerospace industry. But as they would soon learn, the industry‘s downsizing had affected a number of other 107 ―Transit Jobs Bring Cash to Grumman,‖ Newsday, 2 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. Right after winning the $4 million study contract for the design of the Space Shuttle in the summer of 1970 (a Phase A Follow On Study—See Chapter Five for more details), Clinton Towl, Grumman‘s Chairman and CEO, seemed optimistic. He predicted an increase in the company‘s earnings for Fiscal Year 1970, despite the firm‘s layoffs. According to the Electronic News, a trade newspaper based in New York City, the company‘s 1969 earnings of $3.06 per share became the ―second highest since 1950.‖ Obviously, some in Grumman‘s front office believed that working on the Shuttle would really help the firm significantly. For more details, see Bernard Lett, ―Long Island: Stormy Weather,‖ Electronic News, 13 July 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 108 Maureen O‘Neill, ―40% Laid Off at LI Defense Plant,‖ Newsday, 5 June 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 109 By the summer of 1970, Grumman projected its payroll would drop to 27,000 workers by the end of the year, down from about 35,000 employees in 1969. Sperry Gyroscope, while not nearly as large as its Bethpage neighbor, had laid-off 250 since the beginning of the 1970. Over one decade, that company‘s workforce had dropped from a high of 18,000 to 5,500. Similarly, Republic Aviation had also made some big cuts. The Farmingdale manufacturer had laid off some 1,200 workers since January 1970 to bring its total employee base down to approximately 3,800. Although Republic had secured, or bid on, several subcontracts, including work on the F-4, the F-14, the 747, the SST (Supersonic Transport), and a safety car for the Department of Transportation, its main problem remained that it had not won a primary contract to build its own aircraft; in other words, the firm only worked subcontracts for other firms, which did little to sustain the company. For more information on the plight of Sperry Gyroscope see ibid. For more on Republic‘s problems, see Bernard Lett, ―Long Island: Stormy Weather,‖ Electronic News, 13 July 1970, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 361 businesses throughout the country, which in turn renewed their doubts about the prospects of finding a new job, either in, or outside, of aerospace. The Trickle-Down Effects of the 1970 Aerospace Slowdown As with most recessions, the economic downturn in the aerospace industry had profoundly affected multiple U.S. business sectors, particularly by mid-1970. In July, the Electronic News, a trade newspaper based in New York City, recounted the recession‘s trickle-down effects on Long Island‘s electronics firms. The paper described the economic and work environment as extremely ―stormy,‖ at best. 110 The New York Department of Labor reported that employment at regional electronic firms had slowed significantly over the previous year. Overall, the industry had lost approximately 11% of its workforce and area aerospace employment had dipped about the same amount over that period. 111 Long Island‘s total unemployment had risen four-fold from May 1969 to May 1970, increasing from approximately 10,000 to more than 44,000. 112 Ironically, as the Electronic News reported, perhaps Long Island‘s ―biggest shot in the arm‖ might come in the form of a new $40 million IRS data-processing center slated to open shortly in western Suffolk County. The new facility would employ approximately 2,000 full-time and 2,000 part-time 110 Ibid. 111 New York Department of Labor figures show employment dipped at Long Island electronic firms from 41,600 in May 1969 to 37,100 in May 1970. Aerospace employment figures on the island fell in a similar manner from approximately 41,000 to 35,200 during the same period. For more on this subject, see ibid. 112 Ibid. 362 workers. But such jobs would not help out-of-work aerospace workers use their skills fully.113 Unemployment among the nation‘s technical elite had reached significant levels by the fall of 1970. Although Long Island had borne a significant percentage of the aerospace downsizing, the problems reached nationwide and across several industries. Electronic News noted that the aerospace industry slowdown had profoundly affected the electronics industry because of all of aerospace‘s subcontracts. On November 1, the New York Times featured an important cover story in its Sunday magazine entitled ―Down and Out Along Route 128,‖ which recounted the plight of several unemployed electrical engineers and scientists who used to work along the well-known Boston-area road that held many of the major electronics firms in the Northeast.114 The article recounted several unemployed engineers‘ stories—in essence, mini-accounts of their experiences after being RIFed. Although writer Berkeley Rice‘s article primarily focused on Boston-area electrical engineers and scientists, the piece illuminated many of the problems that Grummanites faced, while also drawing attention to many of the national trends in technical unemployment, particularly those brought on by the downturn in aerospace. The layoffs hit the Route 128 corridor hard. In early 1969, approximately 50,000 engineers and scientists worked for firms in the area, a region that contained ―one of the greatest concentrations of technical talent in the country.‖ But by the fall of 1970, over 113 Ibid. 114 Berkeley Rice, ―Down and Out Along Route 128,‖ New York Times Magazine, 1 November 1970, 28. 363 10,000, or approximately 20%, of those technical elite had received pink slips. 115 As Massachusetts employment officials revealed, unemployment among technical workers in the state had approximately tripled throughout 1970, and those numbers did not even include all of those people out-of-work who refused to ―file because of pride, or the hope that a job will turn up soon.‖116 Rice concluded that unemployment in the area had reached ―epidemic proportions.‖117 Raytheon, one of the largest employers in New England, actually closed its Space and Information Systems Division in Sudbury, Massachusetts. Before the first wave of cutbacks in 1969, Raytheon had employed over 30,000 in the region. By the fall of 1970, however, that company‘s payroll had dropped to just 3,500 workers.118 For many of the employees who retained their positions, their jobs became quite difficult. Two major issues emerged for them: harder work and an underlying and unspoken fear that they might be the next to lose their positions. Ironically, layoffs caused companies to strive for more efficiency, which meant that many of those employees who remained on-the-job had to work harder and longer hours to take on the tasks that former workers use to handle. For an employee who received an hourly wage, that change most often worked to his or her advantage because of the extra money overtime brought. For engineers, however, who worked on salary and thus did not get overtime pay, the work 115 Ibid., 29. 116 Ibid. 117 Ibid. 118 Ibid., 93. 364 became more intense. A still-employed physicist told Rice, ―There‘s a lot of talk about pulling together to save the company . . . but it‘s actually to save our jobs.‖ 119 If employees learned that someone might be RIFed, many workers stopped talking to that person altogether; it seemed that some believed that if they ignored that person, then they might not receive a pink slip themselves.120 Some professionals could not hide their contempt for the denial process linked with layoffs. As a least one engineer told Rice, retirement lunches became commonplace at many companies as firms essentially forced some employees to leave their professions early. The engineer described to Rice that these affairs became ―pretty gruesome‖ because ―about 20 or 30 guys…get up and say what a great guy he was, and he gets up and tells them how much he enjoyed working with them and everything. Eeyuch!‖121 Although many employees found themselves caught up in denial about the layoffs, some companies also deluded themselves, as well as others, with the language they used to describe the downsizing. Many of the Boston-area electronics firms developed some very sophisticated phrases to describe layoffs, just as Grumman had on Long Island. Some companies came up with ―euphemisms‖ to try to soften the blow for those who were laid off, as well as to try to deflect the media from choosing harsh words when describing the 119 Ibid., 29. 120 Ibid., 93. 121 Ibid. 365 RIFs. Some of the phrases they developed to identify unemployed workers included ―displaced,‖ ―surpluses,‖ and ―temporarily furloughed pending recall.‖122 Grumman‘s in-house newspaper Plane News featured a story in November 1970 that explained the company‘s exhaustive downsizing process. In the eleven months since January 1970, Grumman had reduced its workforce from approximately 31,700 employees to about 26,500 workers.123 Despite the company‘s early predictions that most of the reductions would occur through ―normal attrition,‖ the company discovered that only 40% of them came about in that manner.124 Grumman Vice President Tom Rozzi, Director of Security and Personal Services, stressed that the other 60% of them occurred based solely on a lack of business, not because of poor employee performances. If business improved, he stressed, than ―many of them will be recalled.‖125 Rozzi explained that an employee‘s individual department would review his or her possible RIF twice before downsizing that person. And if an employee had served with the company long-term, a corporate officer would review the case before he or she received a pink slip. A ―Termination Review Board‖—consisting of one employee from each of the company‘s eight main areas, including technical operations, security and personnel services, program management, finance, operations planning and scheduling, and product operations—also 122 Ibid., 28. 123 ―Special Report—Rozzi Reviews Work Cutback,‖ Grumman Plane News, 13 November 1970. The same thing is reported in ―Rozzi views reduction in force, says RIF completed for ‘71,‖ Grumman Plane News, 8 October 1971. Both found in NGHC. 124 Ibid. 125 Ibid. 366 met on a weekly basis to ―assure a fair and consistent approach toward terminations.‖ 126 Once targeted for termination, an employee had ten days to transfer to another department or one of the company‘s subsidiaries, if possible. But those who could not find a new position received a typical severance package, which included a set amount of pay based on their length of company service, some possible job leads, counseling if desired, information about converting their medical and life insurance to a personal account after a thirty-one day transition period, as well as details about how to obtain unemployment insurance.127 Rozzi explained that the company tried to be as ―fair and honest‖ and ―as just and objective as we can‖ in regards to the RIFs.128 He hoped ―that business conditions improve soon in the aerospace industry‖ so that he could hire people back, instead of having to continue with the layoffs.129 Despite this scrupulous process, during a period of such unstable employment, age discrimination became an issue, and one of the factors that some companies used to decide who stayed and who went. As Rice discovered, Ph.D.‘s often lost their positions before anyone else, regardless of their length of service to their companies; they had become too expensive for many firms. Human Resources departments questioned whether it made sense to pay older workers‘ high salaries when younger engineers would work harder to 126 Ibid. 127 Ibid. 128 Ibid. 129 Ibid. 367 save their own jobs and for much less money. 130 One experimental physicist, Dr. Wayne Lees, a 56-year old scientist who had lost his $23,000 job at NASA‘s Electronic Research Center (ERC) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, had once worked on environmental systems for the Apollo Program.131 Unlike many of his colleagues who scrambled to try to secure new positions right after they received their pink slips, Lees took a few months before he began his job hunt.132 He knew that his age, or rather ―experience,‖ was a detriment. As he diplomatically put it: ―When you get back a dozen answers saying, ‗You are too highly qualified for the position we have open,‘ it can mean among other things, that you are too old.... Many companies probably feel I am too highly qualified, or too expensive for 130 Berkeley Rice, ―Down and Out Along Route 128,‖ New York Times Magazine, 1 November 1970, 29. 131 Interestingly, Rice believed that in the Boston metro area, particularly at NASA‘s Electronic Research Center (ERC) in Cambridge, Massachusetts (where Lees used to work), ―federal cutbacks in this area are due more to political spite than simple economics.‖ Area employers believed that the Nixon Administration was ―deliberately punishing Massachusetts Senators Edward Brooke and Edward Kennedy for their lack of support on the A.B.M. [anti-ballistic missile], the Haynsworth-Carswell nominations and other crucial legislative matters.‖ The shuttering of the center had put more than 800 people out of work. While no scholar has made a clear connection to show that the closing of the ERC occurred due to a direct political move, many in the aerospace industry felt that politics had become one of the main drivers behind many contract awards and a variety of other issues. For example, some believe that the awarding of the Space Shuttle contract happened in this manner. Many Grummanites felt that the company had clearly won the right to the contract, but at the last minute, the Nixon Administration gave it to North American Rockwell, in Los Angeles. Some Grummanites found that a very curious move in the middle of an election year—awarding a major contract to a California company, a key election state. For more on the Space Shuttle issue, see section X of this chapter. The story surround the ERC issue is in ibid., 93-94. 132 Fortunately, Lee, like the anonymous Grumman engineer that Newsday had featured earlier in the year, had saved enough money to survive without having to work for a while. His wife, a part-time social worker, continued to bring-in a paycheck, and that money, when combined with his severance pay and unemployment check (Lee could collect up to ten months of unemployment at the rate of $74 a week), meant that the family could fare alright financially for a while. He believed that he might start his own private consulting firm if no new position emerged for him. Notably, even though many professionals lost their sense of identify when they got cut from their aerospace jobs, Lee, on the other hand, stated: ―I am a physicist . . . and I still consider myself a physicist, and a member of the profession, even though I am no longer attached to the organization.‖ For more details, see ibid., 95. 368 them.‖133 Even though Lee would have taken a lower paying job with ―lesser professional standing,‖ he did not have much luck.134 As an employee at one of the leading technical placement agencies opined about the issue of ageism, Lee and others‘ predicament was not that they were too old, per se; the tight labor market was the problem. An oversupply of workers in a tight labor market made it hard to place anyone. 135 RIFed engineers had an extremely difficult time trying to find new positions in such a depressed job market. Some out-of-work professionals placed ―Situation Wanted‖ ads in newspapers; classified sections seemed full of them. In these types of ads, unemployed workers would enumerate their special skills and experience, and state what type of position they hoped to secure.136 At one point, job competition became so intense that one company-run ad calling for an engineer elicited over 400 inquiries over a three-day period.137 As Rice noted, the whole process had become a ―humiliating experience for men accustomed to the respect due professionals.‖138 Even if these professional men and women believed that they could gain an employment advantage by keeping up with technical journals while being out of work for a while, they quickly discovered that they still remained less attractive to employers because they did not have any up-to-date hands- 133 Ibid. 134 Ibid. 135 Ibid. 136 Ibid., 28. 137 Ibid., 96. 138 Ibid. 369 on experience in the field.139 Facing incredibly difficult and depressing odds, many of the engineers and scientists, Rice noted, had ―given up the search for a job in their own field. Some are now working as rug salesmen, TV repairmen, bartenders, landscape gardeners. Those who take such nontechnical jobs in the hope of getting back into the industry when the economy improves face the danger most feared among engineers—obsolescence.‖140 Arnold Limberg, a former electronics engineer with ITEK, became one of the men who entered a new field. At 42, he had become quite bored with many aspects of his former position, and yet also quite stressed. As a tester for ITEK, he was subject to numerous demands. Limberg had often dreamt of quitting his job and becoming a handyman, and when he received his pink slip, he got the chance to make the switch. Limberg had faced a couple layoffs during his career at ITEK. The first occurred in August 1969, but then the firm rehired him the following November. Nevertheless, three months later, ITEK RIFed him again. Although he seemed fairly unconcerned during the first downsizing, by the time of his second, he knew he had to do something else to make a living. So he sent out scores of resumes and decided to start his handyman business. As he remembered from his childhood during the Depression: ―You do something or you go broke. I saw enough of that when I grew up in South Dakota in the thirties.‖ 141 139 Ibid. 140 Ibid. 141 Ibid. 370 His new business card read ―Odd Jobs: You Name It, I‘ll Do It.‖142 The new position averaged about $200 a week, quite a different salary than his former $20,000 a year job as an engineer. Still, Limberg seemed quite happy to charge only ―$5 an hour for yard work, $6 for painting, and $7 for roofing and carpentry.‖143 Notably, Limber relished one perk of his new job, the physical demands of the work; he quickly lost twenty pounds of ―office-work flab‖ doing the odd jobs.144 Limberg‘s wife Rita seemed embittered by the layoffs. She had to give up her parttime nursery school job and take on a full-time insurance position just to make ends meet. She wondered: ―How could he spend all those years studying and applying his craft…and then be suddenly told there was no use for him? In such a technical country as ours, surely a man with a master‘s degree in engineering must be needed somewhere.‖145 Rice also observed that Limberg no longer trusted his former field; he vowed never to return to electrical engineering because ―he had painfully learned it‘s not particularly stable.‖ While he admitted he had been unhappy in the profession because of all of the desk work he had done, he still noted that ―it‘s hard to break out when you‘re in good money.‖146 Shortly after Limberg‘s interview with Rice, he found an engineering position at a garbage compacting firm. It paid a lot less than his former aerospace job, but it also involved using 142 Ibid. 143 Ibid. 144 Ibid. 145 Ibid. 146 Ibid., 98. 371 machines more than his last position, so he seemed much happier at his new job than he had been previously.147 Unlike Limberg, Phil Blum, a 41-year old scientist, had been satisfied with his position at Norton Research in Lexington, Massachusetts. He made $16,500 a year and had received a great deal of press by the time he got his pink slip in May 1970. Blum had gained some fame in 1967 when his company featured him in a full-page ad in Time magazine entitled ―Norton‘s Moon Man.‖ The copy recounted how Blum had created artificial moon dust that the astronauts had used during their training in the early years of the Apollo Program.148 Ironically, after Blum lost his job, he changed his personal copy of the ad to read: ―Norton‘s Moon Man—Bites Dust.‖149 As with many families caught up in the aerospace industry‘s downsizing, Blum and his wife had to find a way to make ends meet, and as a result, they became a two-income family. Despite his Ph.D., Blum could only secure a teaching position at a local high school.150 His wife Peg returned to her nursing career, which she had abandoned after the birth of their two children. In a reversal of traditional gender norms, she started pulling in $11,900 a year, while he only made $9,300. He also had to start preparing dinner because he got home before she did. A newly hired cleaning woman took care of the family‘s other 147 Ibid. 148 Ibid., 101. 149 Ibid., 103. 150 Ibid., 101. 372 household chores.151 Even though the Blums‘ two incomes afforded them more money than Phil‘s previous salary, they still considered whether Peg ought to give up her job so that she could return home to the more traditional female role of mother and housewife. 152 Although Blum had grown somewhat bored with his old job at Norton, he still believed people viewed his new teaching position as much less prestigious. He observed that ―When I use to tell people I was a nuclear physicist they were impressed. Now, when I tell them I‘m a high school teacher, I still can‘t say it with the same feeling of pride.‖153 Although Blum‘s wife believed that their friends admired Phil for working in education, he did not agree; he told the Times that ―they tell me how much they admire me for going into teaching, but some of them really feel sorry for me.‖154 Still, Blum‘s new work, and the possibility of starting a new profession further down the road, made him feel as if he was ―just coming alive again. I feel like I‘ve been in solitary confinement all those years, and now I‘ve been liberated.‖155 Like Blum, former electrical engineer David Gernes had also grown bored with the rote nature of his job. In fact, Gernes realized that his job had not only resulted in a loss of excitement, it had also cost him a lot in his personal relationships. In an attempt to remedy the situation, the 33-year old had cofounded a company with two friends—a firm that 151 Ibid., 101 and 103. 152 Ibid., 101. 153 Ibid., 103. 154 Ibid. 155 Ibid. 373 specialized in high-powered telescopes. Shortly thereafter the firm merged with another business, but that company downsized him. For Gernes, the layoff made him question his priorities and led him to sell his stock in the corporation. He took some of his new funds and renovated two old houses and made them rental properties. His change in lifestyle had made him realize that ―as you plummet out of the corporate cloud, you suddenly discover that you‘ve never really had time to develop penetrating relationships with your wife and children. The same with your friends. You see them once a week for cocktails or a dinner party, but you don‘t really know them. I‘ve learned that what matters is people, rather than things.‖ 156 "There ARE Job Opportunities": Hopes for Reconversion For the former technical elite—former engineers and scientist like Limberg, Lees, Blum, Gernes, and many others—the first major wave of the downsizing of the aerospace sector and its symbiotic industries in the late 1960s belied an unspoken contract between the federal government and those who had answered the nation‘s call to scientific and technical arms in order to combat the Soviet Union in the wake of the Sputnik launches of 1957. The United States needed a massive influx of technical and scientific professionals to help it gain superiority in outer space and put the first men on the Moon. The new jobs promised solid salaries and prestige; the Moon was supposed to be the first link in a long chain of space-related innovations that included the construction of a Space Shuttle, an Earth-orbiting Space Station, and putting men on Mars. In short, once someone 156 Ibid. 374 committed themselves to working on the U.S. space program, it seemed as if they could look forward to a lifetime of challenging and exciting work, and being rewarded very well financially. Many were now discovering that dream would not be fully realized, however. One by one, all the promises seemed to be unraveling, from great salaries to never-ending employment. The bounty seemed to be coming to an end. Salaries in the aerospace sector and its related fields had remained flat over the 1960s, contrary to predictions for the fledgling industry when it began a little more than a decade earlier. Thus many aerospace workers entered the industry at the top of their earning potential, with little room for growth. Harold Goldberg, the head of the Greater Boston IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), noted that people thought that the engineers would always have work and receive solid compensation for it. 157 He observed that ―since the days of Sputnik, engineers have been the golden boys of industry. People always heard about those wonderful starting salaries for the graduates of MIT, but no one hears about what happens to those salaries over the years. They don‘t increase the way they do in other professional fields. There‘s sort of a ceiling on engineering salaries.‖158 By 1970, new MIT Ph.D.‘s, on average, earned $17,000 annually while holders of Master‘s Degrees received $12,000, and those with Bachelor of Science 157 At the time Rice‘s article first appeared, the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (IEEE), the largest professional society in the field, had started talking about the possibility of forming a union to protect engineers‘ jobs and standardizing employment practices in the field. Ironically, however, most of the IEEE‘s leaders served as managers, and they did not really want a union because it would not serve them well. Former engineers, who had been out-of-work for a while, were the only people clamoring to organize at this point. See ibid., 103. 158 Ibid. 375 degrees made $10,500 a year. Journalist Berkeley Rice had discovered that in order to save money, many companies had actually hired cheaper labor. Ph.D.‘s, in other words, often had a harder time getting a job than those with lesser degrees.159 Rice also revealed that many former engineers and scientists felt betrayed by the federal government; looking around, they suddenly wondered what they would do if they lost their jobs. As one former Raytheon engineer noted, ―The government has supported these areas for years with fat defense and space contracts. In many fields it was the sole source of funds. Now they come along and say they don‘t want this expertise any more. They just up and pull out all the funds and leave us high and dry, with no jobs. What the hell are we supposed to do now?‖160 For some, the answer was to teach engineers how to transfer, or ―reconvert,‖ their skills for use in another industry. The idea of retraining former technical employees, or ―reconversion‖ as it became known in the media, suddenly appeared as the way to help former engineer and scientists make the transition from one economic sector to another, and thereby keep the nation from slipping even deeper into recession. Some Long Islanders had talked about it as a way to help former Grummanites get back on their feet, but many questioned the idea. As Rice discovered, at least one technical placement agent believed that ―industry today just doesn‘t accept the idea of transfer of skills. A senior engineer is just kidding himself if he thinks he can transfer.‖161 Similarly, a senior engineer 159 Ibid. 160 Ibid. 161 Ibid., 104. 376 still employed along Route 128 expressed his doubts: ―Sure we favor a Government retraining program, but let‘s face it, why should we hire a radar engineer who has retrained as a computer man when we can get hundreds of guys who‘ve been working with computers for years? I know that sounds cold-blooded, but that‘s business.‖162 Many engineers embraced reconversion as a way to tackle broader social problems, such as pollution, affordable housing, and mass transportation. Rice concluded, however, that ―in many cases the skills involved are too exotic or specialized for such conversion, but a number of engineers and research companies would be willing to try—if the Federal money were available. They can‘t switch fields until it is.‖163 Rice concluded his New York Times article by focusing on the effects that downsizing might have on the technological future of the United States. Like Grumman, many companies grappled with the issue of keeping their technological talent in place, and what it meant if they could not succeed at retaining certain staff members. Jamie Chapman, a 33-year old with E. G. & G., astutely told Rice that some firms are getting close to the crucial stage. They‘re beginning to lose people who give them their technical competence. If you let too many of these people go, you are forced to close down a whole department. Some of these research teams took years to assemble. Once you close them down, you just can‘t build them up again quickly when market conditions change. In some fields we are systematically dismantling entire areas of technology. This is a real danger to the country‘s scientific competence. 164 162 Ibid. 163 Ibid. 164 Ibid. 377 In key technological metro areas like Boston, Long Island, Los Angeles, and many others, downsizing had done more than hurt each company‘s bottom line; it had also, it seems, started to jeopardize the future of American technological superiority. Back in Bethpage, Grumman had created a very key publication for inclusion in its employee termination package—a very thorough document entitled ―Finding a New Jobs: Steps to Success‖—which tried to reach former employees by using corporate language and a traditional business model. In this case, the job-hunter became a product for sale. Perhaps the company believed that method would connect well with engineers and other professionals. Some of the publication‘s practical and accessible advice became clear just based on the handout‘s topics, including: ―Product Analysis—Know Thyself;‖ ―Market Research—Who Can Use You?;‖ ―A Word on Employment Agencies;‖ ―Sales Promotion—Your Good Assets Advertised;‖ ―The Interview—Prepare for It;‖ and ―Closing the Deal.‖165 It also included sensible advice on how to budget and handle finances until a new job offer came, as well as numerous examples of resumes and cover letters. ―Chapter I: Before Job Hunting‖ opened by sympathizing with the reader: ―Looking for a job can be the hardest job of all. Right now, the world can look pretty bleak, but you are certainly not alone. Above all, remember two things: [a] You are intelligent and have useful skills, [b] There ARE job opportunities.‖166 It closed with more 165 ―Finding a New Job: Steps to Success,‖ Grumman Aerospace Corporation, circa November 1970, ―Employee Handbooks,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 166 Ibid. 378 encouragement: ―We join you in hoping your use of this procedure is infrequent. GOOD LUCK!‖167 Some former Grummanites did not have to wait very long before employers came looking to hire them. But the companies existed in an entirely different sector than aerospace. As 1970 came to a close, the Nassau County Employment Task Force set up a small job fair to try to connect former aerospace workers with insurance industry recruiters.168 The experiences of these engineers underline the challenges of switching professions mid-career. During the two-hour session held at the Island Inn, a local motel, insurance salesmen tried to pitch their jobs to the former engineers, who seemed less than enthused at the opportunity. As a local newspaper put it, the salesmen could have spoken in Latin for all the former engineers seemed to care. None of them really wanted to switch from aerospace to insurance; they wanted to remain in their fields, or move into tangential professions which utilized their skills.169 Some of the forty-one men who attended the job fair were willing to at least consider a position in insurance. As one of them realized, with a family to care for, and mounting bills to pay, ―you grab any kind of job just to go back to work.‖ Edward Kouttron, a former Grumman production manager who had worked at the company for 167 Ibid. 168 For more detail about the Nassau County Employment Task Force and its efforts, see and compare Lynn Rosellini, ―An Insurance Job?,‖ circa December 1970/January 1971, unidentified newspaper, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC; Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC; and Ed Lowe, ―Last Day at Work Ends in Bitterness,‖ Newsday, circa March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A61, NGHC. 169 Lynn Rosellini, ―An Insurance Job?,‖ circa December 1970/January 1971, unidentified newspaper, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 379 more than twenty-nine years, viewed the seminar in a positive light. Although he had not given up entirely on finding another aerospace-related position, he had started to consider taking on an insurance job because, ―you don‘t just sit home waiting for the phone to ring. Anything is worth a try.‖170 Similarly, a former Grumman mechanical engineer said that he was ―willing to try almost anything.‖171 The fifty-five-year old man told newspaper reporters that he wished to remain anonymous because he did not want to sabotage his employment opportunities; he believed that companies did not want to hire older workers. ―Every time I hear of a lead on an engineering job, I try it out,‖ he reported, but ―I get so close, and then I lose it. They don‘t say you‘re too old, but that‘s what they‘re thinking.‖172 For this engineer, reconversion was a myth. ―I took a civil service test for a government job, but they said I was over-qualified,‖ he said. ―They think that it‘s a joke that I want to go into something else.‖173 On the other hand, some viewed the prospect of working in the insurance industry with skepticism. One former electrical engineer said, ―I‘m just not cut out for it. I couldn‘t take it, having doors slammed in my face and phones hung up on me. It would be frustrating, and the bookkeeping would drive me up the wall.‖174 Frank Maxiner, a fortysix-year-old electrical engineer formerly with the Sperry Gyroscope Company in Great 170 Ibid. 171 Ibid. 172 Ibid. 173 Ibid. 174 Ibid. 380 Neck, simply gave up on the insurance industry because he ―was not a good salesman.‖ Aerospace engineering skills did not simply transfer to a sales position. The father of five children aged three to seventeen, had used up all of his unemployment insurance and was rapidly drawing down his pension.175 Harold E. Dort, another former mechanical engineer who had worked in the aerospace field for more than twenty-five years, did not even bother attending the seminar, despite an invitation, because ―that‘s not the career for me. I‘m still trying to get something in the field I know. I can‘t just throw it over after so long.‖176 Of the former aerospace employees who had attended the job fair, most were in their forties or fifties, had worked in the aerospace industry somewhere between ten and thirty years, and had made between $15,000 and $20,000 a year. The insurance task force, which had sponsored the workshop and had started trying to hire RIFed Grummanites and others as early as August 1970, eventually interviewed approximately 1,300 people by December 1970 for about four to five hundred insurance-related positions. Of those interviewed, about one hundred found jobs in the actuary business. Many of those had come from the ranks of Nassau County‘s unemployed, who represented approximately 5.7% of the area‘s workforce by the end of 1970. 177 175 Maxiner had earned $19,000 a year while with Sperry. After leaving the insurance industry, he had started training to become an optician. Maxiner and his family lived in Huntington Station at the time. For more information, see Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 176 Lynn Rosellini, ―An Insurance Job?,‖ circa December 1970/January 1971, unidentified newspaper, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 177 Ibid. 381 While unemployed aerospace workers scoured Long Island and the New York City region looking for work, those Grummanites who had remained at their jobs faced some of their own challenges during the ever-tightening economy. By the end of the summer of 1970, several Grummanites had started taking advances on their paychecks to make ends meet. In a period when any worker could receive a pink slip with only a moment‘s notice, the company found it necessary to generate an extensive policy memo entitled ―Handling Advance Account Balances for Employees that are RIFed.‖ The lengthy memo detailed the steps to take when an employee, who was suddenly laid off, had already taken an advance against his or her paycheck. Payback was essential, the company noted, if the employee owed the company more than his severance package allowed. The new policy became just another sign of the tough times for both the employed and unemployed.178 By the fall of 1970, aerospace unemployment had become so unstable on Long Island that the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics‘ Aerospace Resources Committee conducted a special discussion and hearing about the situation. Although the panel included several local politicians and industrialists, it had no ―working-level engineers‖ to help the committee understand the situation from a practical perspective. 179 Furthermore, the panel primarily wanted to design a program that could ―make use of the skills of unemployed aerospace professionals in government, educational, and industrial 178 ―Draft Procedure: Handling Advance Account Balances for Employee‘s that are RIF‘ed,‖ 9 September 1970, ―Personnel,‖ Sect. A-8, 1st Drawer of C-7. NGHC. 179 Although the panel did not include any ―work-level engineers‖ at the time, it promised to include some on the committee in the future. See G. Rosenthal, ―Aerospace Unemployment—Converging Spheres of Interest,‖ Astronautics & Aeronautics 8, no. 10 (October 1970): 15. 382 fields outside of aerospace.‖180 In other words, members of the panel embraced the need to help unemployed aerospace engineers find a way to transfer their skills to jobs outside of aerospace, a strategy that some contemporary economic and occupational experts found questionable. As soon as the panel finished its presentation, it got an earful from the audience, most of who consisted of unemployed aerospace workers. An industry magazine described their response: ―Several engineers expressed severe disenchantment with the industry, because of the poor outlook for employment, and because of industry‘s and government‘s apparent lack of concern for the future of unemployed aerospace professionals. This was in contrast to industry‘s courtship of engineers when projects placed a demand for hiring.‖181 The Widespread Effects of Downsizing on Grummanites and Other Long Islanders in 1971 By the beginning of 1971, the trickle-down effects of Grumman‘s downsizing were adversely affecting local businesses significantly, especially restaurants and bars. In the past, Grummanites had flocked to such establishments and spent part of their discretionary incomes at them, but now such places remained virtually empty. In January 1971, Long Islanders learned that Grumman‘s workforce would drop by another 3,000 employees by the end of the year. Grumman officials, falling back on an old company public relations tactic, announced that only about 1,800 would receive pink slips; another 1,200 would 180 Ibid. 181 Ibid. 383 technically leave their jobs as a result of ―natural attrition.‖182 Whatever the exact causes of the projected job losses, with such significant downsizing promised, area businesses suffered because many Grummanites worried whether or not they would continue to hold their jobs. Dining out became a luxury many could not afford. John Krajewski, owner of ―John‘s Oasis,‖ a restaurant which stood very close to Grumman, had noticed a significant drop in business by the beginning of 1971. In the past, he had served an average of 130 lunches a day, but with the layoffs and the recession going full-bore, he only catered to about forty patrons a day—a drop of over two-thirds. As one Grummanite noted, with the 182 In January 1971, Metalworking News and Woman‘s Wear Daily claimed that Grumman would layoff 3,000 to 5,000 workers that year. Grumman Executive Committee Chairman William T. Schwendler thought the estimate too high. When asked about the figure he noted: ―I don‘t think it‘s anything like that—I‘m sure of it. It will be the usual layoffs but nothing really big.‖ Grumman‘s Administrative Vice President John P. O‘Brien called the reports in the two papers simply ―not true.‖ Schwendler and O‘Brien knew that the company would loose or cut about 3,000 workers that year at most. They could therefore technically denounce the projection because of the upward figure of 5,000 people, particularly based on the company‘s past experiences. Schwendler‘s and O‘Brien‘s comments on these issues are in Pete Bowles, ―Layoffs Expected at Grumman,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. Officially, Grumman claimed ―about 1,800 workers will be laid off during the year…and 1,200 more will not be replaced as they retire, quit, or die.‖ These numbers match the New York Times estimates that 30% to 40% of Grumman‘s layoffs occurred through natural attrition. The Times also noted that the loss of 3,000 employees throughout the year would eventually bring the company‘s workforce down to about 23,000 Grummanites by year‘s end. For this quote, see Joseph M. Treen, ―Layoffs at Grumman: Others to Suffer, Too,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. According to Stephen Karakas, Grumman‘s Assistant to the Vice President for Public Affairs, the 1971 cuts would come from ―all major operating areas of the company.‖ Karakas also figured that the estimated ―natural attrition‖ rates for the upcoming year would fall well within the figures from 1970 when somewhere between 30% to 40% of the company‘s RIFs occurred due to deaths, resignations, or retirements. For Karakas‘s statements, see Richard Meserole, ―Grumman to Trim 3,000 from Work Force in ‘71,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. For additional information about the 3,000 person downsizing, see and compare Roy R. Silver, ―Lower Defense Spending Leads Grumman to Cut Work Force,‖ New York Times, 27 January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A10, NGHC; and ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, 2-2, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI. 384 economy getting tighter, a brown bag lunch seemed the sensible thing to do.183 The downsizing had also begun to affect even those workers unaffiliated with the aerospace industry; Krajewski had to let two waitresses go due to poor sales. 184 Summing up the effects of the downsizing, an anonymous aerospace engineer dining at a local Grumman hangout opined, ―This is a big bread-and-butter outfit, Grumman. . . . Think how many TV sets, cars, washing machines, dryers it buys every year. You have a layoff like this, it affects everybody on Long Island.‖ 185 Suffolk County Labor Commissioner Lou V. Tempera agreed with this assessment and quantified it further, noting that every Grummanite let go affected three more Long Islanders, mostly those who worked in the service industries. Tempera worried that ―when you take the total picture, it becomes quite serious.‖186 As in the past, even though everyone had endured the effects of the layoffs in one manner or another, some felt more threatened by the 1971 downsizing than others. Although engineers had faced the chopping block in the past, many of them had made decent enough salaries to have enough cash on-hand to survive while they searched for just the right job. Many blue-collar workers, however, had to make ends meet from paycheck to paycheck. Tool and die maker Robert Mauro confided that ―we‘re all very worried. I have three daughters at home. I have to make mortgage payments. I can‘t 183 Joseph M. Treen, ―Layoffs at Grumman: Others to Suffer, Too,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 184 Ibid. 185 Ibid. 186 Ibid. 385 afford to lose my job.‖187 Still, as the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics revealed, all levels of Long Island aerospace workers faced difficult times. In January 1971, for the first time in twelve years, New York City and its environs went through the largest reduction of jobs in the country, down by almost 34,000 positions. White-collar professionals, particularly draftsmen and advanced level engineers, had the hardest time finding work. 188 At the time, Grumman‘s payroll stood at approximately 27,500 employees, down some 8,500, or about 24% over the previous two years.189 Meanwhile the federal government insisted that aerospace and defense industries maintain readiness. By early January, NASA had begun to renew its concerns about keeping the most experienced Grummanites in place to support the Apollo missions. NASA‘s Apollo Program Director Dr. Rocco Petrone asked the company to assure him that its best people would remain in place in spite of the firm‘s downsizing. 190 After all, Grumman‘s engineers had been instrumental in helping the Apollo 13 astronauts return safely to Earth during their nearly tragic mission nine months earlier. Although Grumman told NASA it would try to remain as flexible as possible in the reassignment and 187 Ibid. 188 ―It Doesn‘t Pay to Be Skilled, Study Reveals,‖ circa January 1971, unidentified newspaper, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 189 Joseph M. Treen, ―Layoffs at Grumman: Others to Suffer, Too,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. Some papers placed Grumman‘s workforce as low as about 26,000 around this time. For more details, see Roy R. Silver, ―Lower Defense Spending Leads Grumman to Cut Work Force,‖ New York Times, 27 January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 190 Petrone‘s January 4 directive is mentioned in a February 1971 letter from Owen G. Morris, Manager for the Lunar Module Apollo Spacecraft Program to Joseph Gavin. See Correspondence, Owen G. Morris to Joseph G. Gavin, NASA, Manned Spacecraft Center, Houston, TX, 2 February 1971, ―NASA Letters—1970-1973,‖ Box ―Joe Gavin LM 2,‖ Sect A-91, NGHC. 386 downsizing of key personnel, it also noted that it might have to reassign people to meet the company‘s needs. But the firm‘s management maintained that it could recall any key people needed at ―a moment‘s notice for consultation or for participation during the Apollo missions as required.‖191 Still, by the beginning of March, NASA still had serious reservations that Grumman had found an acceptable solution. The space agency wanted to know about all of the company‘s potential personnel reassignments in advance. To illustrate the point, in at least one case, when Grumman transferred an employee away from the LM program on very short notice, some NASA managers became so upset that they demanded that the company start creating a reassignment schedule to reflect projected personnel changes. In short, the space agency wanted a say in who would replace whom, or at the very least, it wanted an opportunity to weigh in on the subject.192 January 1971 also saw the issue of age discrimination against older aerospace workers become very prevalent in the Northeast. The New York Times had already focused a great deal of attention on the issue in the New England region while describing the problems of RIFed scientists and electrical engineers in Boston‘s high-tech area in the fall of 1970. Now, a few months later, Long Islanders and others got an inkling of how the issue might be affecting Grummanites thanks to an article in their local paper. On January 27, Newsday reporter Drew Fetherston related that the Bethpage firm had come under some heavy criticism from some of its older employees for continuing to advertise for new college graduates in the engineering, math, and business administration fields. In one 191 Ibid. 192 Ibid. 387 month‘s time, Grumman had advertised in approximately twenty college newspapers to try to entice prospective grads to interview with the company. The ad stressed that ―Wide open is the word at Grumman,‖ suggested that many job opportunities awaited new graduates at the firm. It also tried to pull new white-collar workers in with promises that ―the white sand beaches of the Atlantic are 12 minutes away…the famed sailing reach of Long Island Sound, an 11-mile drive.‖193 From the company‘s perspective, the continued improvement of the firm necessitated recruitment. Grumman‘s employment director Dan O‘Brien noted that the company had always tried to look toward the future and bring ―new blood‖ into the firm.194 He thought new talent would help assure that the company remained strong. Unlike most aerospace firms, which had stopped recruiting altogether during the recession, Grumman continued to pursue new college grads despite such difficult economic times. O‘Brien wanted to hire approximately one hundred new graduates in 1971, despite the fact that the company claimed it had to cut the payroll by some three thousand workers that same year. Three years earlier, when the company axed some three hundred employees, it had also hired six hundred colleague graduates; then, in 1969, with approximately 3,560 workers laid off, the firm hired some three hundred new grads. Most of the new hires went into the central engineering pool; in other words, the firm had not hired them to work on a specific program—really the only generally accepted reason 193 Drew Fetherston, ―For Grumman, It‘s New Blood Despite Cuts,‖ Newsday, 27 January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 194 Ibid. 388 among most other aerospace firms to bring on new engineers during the downsizing—but rather to bring them on board and then figure out where their talents and interests lay. 195 Many older Grumman engineers, who had faced multiple RIFs, did not like the company‘s ―new blood‖ strategy; they believed that the firm used that argument to cover up the real fact that it wanted to get rid of older engineers because they cost the firm so much more than younger professionals fresh out of college.196 On average, new engineers cost the company about $180 a week, whereas more experienced engineers might earn as much as $240 a week.197 Although employment director Dan O‘Brien had heard such charges, he insisted, ―We haven‘t gotten that type of feedback directly. The man who is laid off knows that it isn‘t because of his performance, and he knows that a new man couldn‘t handle his job. You can rationalize this in many ways: the fact is simply that the money is not coming in.‖198 Grumman executives worried about the criticism. The day after Fetherston‘s ―New Blood‖ article appeared, an important interoffice memo circulated among Grumman‘s higher offices that noted that the subject of recruiting new engineers during a time of heavy layoffs was a ―topic of great concern and evaluation.‖199 Several months earlier, Grumman managers had concluded that they had to ―significantly‖ scale down their 195 Ibid. 196 Ibid. 197 Ibid. 198 Ibid. 199 ―Recruitment of New Engineers,‖ J. J. Bussolini to G. M. Skurla, Grumman Aerospace Corporation Inter Office Memorandum, ENG-SADIR-71-2M, 28 January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 389 recruiting activities to ―absolute minimum levels.‖200 At the same time, they felt that they had to maintain at least some ―token level of recruiting to insure continuity of ‗new blood‘ and to protect a rather sizeable investment that we have made in the local colleges and universities.‖201 As early as October 1970, they had decided to cut recruiting back from the regular fifty schools to about twenty and to limit their hiring of new engineering students to ―no more than‖ forty-five total.202 Grumman‘s Engineering Department heads were even moved to draw up a pointby-point rebuttal of Newsday‘s charges. They argued that from 1966 through 1969, Grumman‘s college recruiting activities brought in only about 3% to 5% of the department‘s entire workforce. That number, the department noted, ―was not even sufficient to cover our natural engineering attrition which was between 7% and 8%.‖203 To provide some perspective, by 1970 the company had only brought on board fifty-one new college graduates, which represented only 1% of the engineering staff. In 1971, that number dropped to twenty-four new hires, which represented only 0.7% of the projected 1971 staff.204 As the Engineering Department‘s upper management noted, those numbers stood well below their projected natural attrition rate. 205 Consequently, despite O‘Brien‘s 200 Ibid. 201 Ibid. 202 Ibid. 203 In 1968, the company hired 274 new engineers based on college recruiting activities, whereas in 1969, that number reached 314. See ibid. 204 Ibid. 205 Ibid. 390 Newsday assertions, in 1971 Grumman projected it would only hire twenty-four new engineers. By way of contrast, in 1970, engineering had lost 103 of its 1969 college recruitments and only replaced fifty-one.206 Grumman also defended its ―new blood‖ recruitment policy on two more counts. In a survey of fourteen other major aerospace firms‘ recruiting activities, the company discovered that only two had abandoned outreach altogether. 207 Grumman‘s Affirmative Action plan also mandated continuing recruitment. The Engineering Department noted that ―we are working in conjunction with the Personnel Department in a special effort to recruit minority group graduates. Our first graduate brought in in 1971 was a well qualified black engineer with a PhD.‖208 These memos and rebuttals constituted an all-out defense of recruitment. On the same day that the Engineering Department had generated its memo, a stunning and embittered letter went out to newspaper columnist Drew Fetherston, the author of the Newsday article. This unsigned missive, which must have come from a Bethpage resident with an interest in the plight of older engineers, also went to Grumman‘s Personnel Manager Dan O‘Brien, as well as Senators Jacob Javits and James L. Buckley. It opened: ―The infusion of fresh blood that you reported is only one aspect of an apparent preference for youth in the ailing aerospace industry; it is my own impression that the average age of 206 Ibid. 207 Ibid. 208 Ibid. 391 technical staffs has been reduced by the mass layoffs.‖209 The letter exemplified the passion some felt during these difficult times of downsizing. The author stressed that younger workers had not paid their dues like the older generation who had suffered through the Great Depression, World War II, and the postwar recovery. Although Fetherston‘s article had stressed the economic issues of downsizing—cutting higher salaries and bringing on new recruits with lower wages—as the driver behind the RIFing of older engineers, the author insisted that salaries represented only a small part of the issue. The letter noted that many of the older engineers, who had worked their way up through drafting, clerical, or technical-level jobs, would have gladly returned to those lower positions, with significant salary reductions, instead of being laid off, but the company did not give them that option.210 The letter‘s author observed that ―older employees were bumped to provide a refuge for youths‖ because they were not vested in a ―pension program.‖211 The letter‘s most stunning diatribe argued that such favoritism toward the young is unjust; and in social terms it is inefficient, since they could more easily find and adjust to new jobs, enter different fields (if only temporarily), and consider relocating. Many of the generation hit hardest by the layoffs had worse difficulties getting started than present conditions would impess [sic] on today‘s youths if they were put out to manage as best they could. The former endured depression, war and postwar readjustments; but the latter have enjoyed 209 Correspondence, Anonymous to Drew Fetherston, Bethpage, New York, 28 January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 210 Ibid. 211 Ibid. 392 continuous prosperity and were mainly exempted from the career interruption of military service.‖212 In closing, the writer noted that the distinctions being made between the older and younger generation, particularly as it related to the aerospace industry, represented a crude ―means of adjusting to a lower level of activity in an industry which ought to feel a special obligation to avoid disrupting society‘s fabric.‖213 In mid-February 1971, Grumman President Lew Evans addressed the issue of ageism, as well as a host of other company issues and policies, in an interview with the New York Times. Evans believed that Grumman‘s payroll would finally stabilize in 1971 at about 24,000, down from 37,100 two years earlier. 214 He acknowledged that the company had received much criticism for downsizing people in recent years, particularly older workers, but he argued, it had still tried to maintain its edge by hiring about sixty to seventy of the nation‘s top engineering graduates each year. Addressing the charges of ageism, Evans insisted: ―It‘s tough to explain when some people are being let go, but our figures show that about half of those who leave do so on their own for various reasons.‖215 Because the firm had to bring in $4 million a day at this time just to keep 212 Ibid. 213 Ibid. 214 Gene Smith, ―Grumman Expects to Stabilize Jobs, Leveling Off at 24,000 in 1971,‖ New York Times, 13 or 14 February 1971 (mislabeled 14 January 1971), ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI. 215 Ibid. 393 operating, holding the line on expenses was essential to maintaining corporate fiscal responsibility.216 Despite Evans‘s attempts to spin the situation as positively as possible, the reality was that unemployment in the region had reached its highest point since Long Island had started keeping specific unemployment statistics about the area some thirteen years earlier. In February 1971 Suffolk County‘s unemployment rate had reached 7.9%, whereas in Nassau County it had hit 6.2%, for a combined rate of 6.9% for all of Long Island.217 Manufacturing, which employed about 20% of Long Island‘s workforce and more than one-third of its payroll, faced some of the deepest cuts.218 February traditionally represented the worst month for employment in the region, and in February 1971 over 63,100 Long Islanders were combing the area looking for work, compared to 42,500 the previous February.219 With Grumman‘s continued layoffs, and another five hundred RIFed employees at Republic (due to that company‘s participation in the Supersonic Transport 216 Ibid. 217 See and compare Maureen O‘Neill, ―New High in LI Unemployment,‖ Newsday, circa 23 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; Stewart Ain, ―L.I. Jobless at Record High of 6.9%; 63,100 are Out,‖ Daily News, 23 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; and Ed Lowe, ―Last Day at Work Ends in Bitterness,‖ Newsday, circa March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A61, NGHC. 218 Daniel Kahn, ―Bank Sees Little LI Economic Gain,‖ Newsday, circa March/April 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 219 Maureen O‘Neill, ―New High in LI Unemployment,‖ Newsday, circa 23 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; and Stewart Ain, ―L.I. Jobless at Record High of 6.9%; 63,100 are Out,‖ Daily News, 23 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 394 (SST) Program), the situation continued to look grim for Long Islanders.220 Economists did not offer much hope either. They projected that the region‘s unemployment rate would continue to remain above 5% for at least another year.221 To provide some perspective, between 1969 and the beginning of 1971 approximately 45,000 American aerospace engineers lost their jobs; of those, about 7,500, or one-sixth of them, had worked on Long Island.222 Former Grummanites and other unemployed aerospace workers faced several common challenges in their quest for new jobs. Most of the engineers found themselves ―overqualified‖ for any job openings that came up, no matter what the field. The New 220 When the U.S. Senate killed the SST program in late March 1971, Newsday did a feature article about Tony Abbatello, one of the men at Republic affected by the death of the project. Abbatello, a tool and die man from Wyandanch, NY, had expected to be laid off after the SST went down to defeat. He had gotten pink-slipped at least ten different times during his twenty years of work in the defense industry. Abbatello and many of his former Republic colleagues blamed the loss of the SST ―on politicians, newspaper editors, environmentalists, big businessmen, the welfare system and a host of other professions, categories and systems.‖ Speaking about the mood at Republic, Abbatello opined: ―You know, the morale here is so damned low it‘s crawling. If anyone—like a kid just starting out—if anyone was to ask me about going into defense work, I‘d tell him to stay the hell away from it. You‘re a pawn in this business. All the workers in the company are pawns, moved around and hired and fired at the company‘s will.‖ Interestingly, of the 114 workers who had gotten the axe immediately after the end of the SST program, all were aged 46 to 53. After collecting all his belongs, Abbatello caught a ride home with his former Republic colleague Thomas Mulholland of Deer Park, NY. Mulholland noted that he was ―still working. But if six more guys (on the seniority list) get dropped, I‘ll be out. It‘s pretty bad in there. People inside [the plant] are disheartened. They don‘t know whether they‘ll be hit tomorrow or not. I expect to get it, myself. It hurts the work. It hurts everything, here and home with the family.‖ Ironically, Mulholland‘s car had a bummer sticker on it that read: ―$$T—Keep Long Island Green.‖ For Abbatello‘s and Mulholland‘s stories, see Ed Lowe, ―Last Day at Work Ends in Bitterness,‖ Newsday, circa March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. On the issue of Republic‘s layoffs in general, see ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, 2-2, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated— 1973,‖ LISI. 221 Daniel Kahn, ―Bank Sees Little LI Economic Gain,‖ Newsday, circa March/April 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 222 Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 395 York Times suggested that although the term ―connotes education, skill and experience,‖ it still became ―the bane of many engineers and scientists on Long Island who have been thrown out of work and onto the welfare rolls.‖223 The paper noted that ―many highechelon employes [sic] who earned $12,000 a year or more are now flooding a labor market that cannot absorb them.‖224 ―Overqualified‖ RIFed employees and their prospective employers both faced a Catch-22 situation. The Times described the challenge: ―An employe [sic] who takes a lesser job can no longer devote all his time to seeking employment in his own field. An employer who hires him is fearful that he will probably leave when a better paying job became available.‖225 Joseph O. Curry, District Superintendent of the New York State Employment Service, also noted that the term ―overqualified‖ was ―often a polite euphemism for ‗too old.‘‖226 In desperation, many took jobs well below their education and training, because they feared going on welfare. For most, welfare represented a shameful state on many levels. They believed it drained the nation of its resources; it made them feel worthless as individuals, and, perhaps most importantly, in an overwhelmingly male field, welfare 223 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 224 Ibid. 225 Ibid. Frank Bianco, a former electrical engineer with Sperry Gyroscope, echoed the New York Times‘s assessment of the issue of ―overqualification.‖ He had been out of work for more than five months and had finally given up on trying to recapture an engineering position. The former engineer from Greenlawn, New York, simply opined: ―It‘s hard for anyone in defense to get any job. People who do the hiring figure as soon as defense picks up, they will leave again.‖ See Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 226 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 396 undermined their ―manhood.‖ As Lee Filerman, Director of Nassau County‘s Office of Manpower Development noted about out-of-work engineers: ―They don‘t want to stay home with the kids because they find it embarrassing. Their wives find it difficult to have them home all day. They feel their manhood is being threatened. It‘s a devastating experience.‖227 In essence, most found their plight totally demoralizing. To avoid such humiliation, many ―overqualified‖ RIFed engineers started turning to other fields totally unrelated to the aerospace industry. 228 Sal Cavallaro, a former Grummanite, tried to forget about his previous job as an electrical engineer at the Bethpage company, but he could not. A college graduate, homeowner, and father, Cavallaro was embittered by his July 1970 layoff. He had worked for Grumman for more than four years. After spending twenty-two years of his life as an engineer, he had to take a job as a janitor. He revealed painfully that he felt ―washed up at 53.‖ ―There‘s no chance of me getting back into the field now,‖ he insisted.229 ―Even if things pick up, they‘ll hire the young kids. They‘re finished with us. But I can‘t retire till I‘m 65. So what do I do for the next 12 years? I sweep floors, right?‖230 Cavallaro concluded, ―I would never have taken this kind of job, but I was forced into it. There‘s nothing else around. My wife can‘t get a job either. She‘s been trying all along. So it‘s either this or go on welfare, 227 Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 228 Ibid. 229 Ibid. 230 Ibid. 397 and that‘s too degrading.‖231 Cavallaro‘s new job only paid him $8,000 a year, as opposed to the $17,000 a year he earned while at Grumman. 232 Newsday published numerous sad accounts in its coverage of this key local issue. In the story of Edwin Kinkaide, a former Grummanite laid off at age fifty-five, the newspaper showcased ―the inner feelings of a once-successful but now laid off engineer who currently is doing laborer‘s work, and the effect the change has had on him and on his family.‖233 Kinkaide had worked as a chemical engineer at Grumman‘s Calverton facility in a $17,000 a year position. Forced to try to make ends meet, he took a $125 a week laborer‘s job (or more than a 60% pay cut) at the Suffolk County golf course in West Sayville.234 Complicating matters, he had to work particularly hard to prove himself to his co-workers who believed him incapable of doing menial labor.235 As Newsday poetically noted, ―Kinkaide‘s 55-year old hands are more accustomed to dealing with paper and pencils than to handling a shovel. But they are getting tougher, with some pain. And so are Kinkaide and his family with some pain.‖236 Kinkaide, like many professional men of his generation, did not know what to do if he was not working. Shaped by the traditional gender roles of the era, many took menial 231 Ibid. 232 Ibid. 233 Ed Lowe, ―He Labors to Keep His Head High,‖ Newsday, undated, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, 234 Ibid. 235 Ibid. 236 Ibid. NGHC. 398 jobs in order to continue as wage-earners. Not only did they need to make ends meet, but they also wanted to feel like productive members of society. They also wanted to feel like ―men,‖ and they definitely wanted to avoid going on the welfare rolls because they saw that as total failure.237 Kinkaide‘s wife described her husband‘s response to unemployment: He goes nuts being home. We both go nuts. There were times when he was home every day that I‘d go upstairs and play solitaire while he stayed downstairs. We didn‘t know what to say to each other. I couldn‘t make him feel better. I couldn‘t do anything for him. And with the way he felt all the time, I wouldn‘t have known how to approach him even if I could have helped. Now, with this job….well, I don‘t know whether things are better or worse, really. At least he‘s doing something.238 The adjustment was equally difficult for wives. The former engineer quipped, ―Do you have any idea what it‘s like to be home every day with a woman who‘s been accustomed to running a household by herself for 30 years?‖239 Families struggled with the implications of this changed work world. Kinkaide‘s daughter had a difficult time watching her father doing menial work. While driving past the golf course one day, she saw him on the job, and, as she put it: ―I knew he was working there. But I‘d never seen him…you know, working. I pulled over to the side of 237 Notably, Kinkaide also felt that he had family prestige pulling at him. As he confided to the Newsday reporter, ―my family is an old Sayville family and we‘ve always been associated with some degree of success. That‘s something that‘s hard to let go. Hard for the whole family, and I think I feel worse than they do, just imagining how they must feel, if that makes sense.‖ See ibid. 238 Ed Lowe, ―He Labors to Keep His Head High,‖ Newsday, undated, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, 239 Ibid. NGHC. 399 the road when I saw a man digging and he looked like my father. I broke down. It just hit me. Him digging.‖240 Kinkaide had tried to shake off the implications of his situation and overcompensate in a positive manner, but somehow that seemed to make it more heartbreaking for his daughter. She related that It was hard to talk to him. He was overfriendly, over-kind, trying to make sure that you didn‘t feel uncomfortable or that you wouldn‘t feel hurt. It was so awkward. And now, well it does hurt. A man with his potential having to do something like that. I mean, he‘s my father, and when he got laid off I figured everything would turn out okay. He always comes through for us and for himself. It‘s awful. 241 The Kinkaides‘ experience pointed to the strains on hundreds of aerospace industry families across Long Island. Less typical perhaps was the fact that, despite all the psychic turmoil that Kinkaide‘s new labor caused, the family did not really need to worry about money. His years of work as an aerospace engineer during the height of the Apollo Program had helped establish a solidly middle-class lifestyle for the family. At the time of his layoff, the Kinkaides owned their $40,000 home outright and they continued to collect rent three months out of the year from their Fire Island summer house. Even if they had to dip into their family savings (which they had planned to use for a European summer vacation) and sell both their houses, Kinkaide was confident that they could still live comfortably for 240 Kinkaide‘s oldest daughter, Mrs. Susan Hubbard of East Islip, Long Island, recalled the story. For more details see ibid. 241 Ibid. 400 another ten years. Yet despite their very solid financial situation, Newsday revealed that ―the psychological strain on Kinkaide and his family is ever-present, and obvious.‖242 Newsday concluded that ―even though it did not accomplish much in the way of easing tension within the family‖ Kinkaide‘s golf course job ―did get him out of the house. It did keep him out of the state‘s unemployment office in Patchogue, where he had felt strange and embarrassed. And it did make him and his wife feel a little better.‖243 She confided: ―We‘re sort of proud that he took the job, but it‘s a funny pride, because he‘s capable of much more.‖244 Still, regardless of the overall job climate and his personal struggle, Kinkaide believed his golf course job was only temporary. Another position commensurate with his real skills would surely open up in the future.245 For some, Frederick ―Fritz‖ J. Thome, a fifty-two-year old former electronics engineer from Syosset, Long Island, became the iconic image of the troubled state of the aerospace industry and its future. A thirty-year veteran of the business, Thome had lost his $12,000 a year position at the Ford Instrument Division of the Sperry Rand Corporation. After relentlessly trying to find work as an engineer, he decided to start his own business. Both the New York Times and Newsday prominently featured a photo of him in front of his new venture, along with a story about the business. Thome operated ―Fritz‘s Hot Dogs & Soda‖ out of the back of his small pickup truck in the spring and summer months. He 242 Ibid. 243 Ibid. 244 Ibid. 245 Ibid. 401 sold his wares in the main industrial complex on Jericho Turnpike on Long Island. In addition to vending, he also worked part-time as a sexton at a local church.246 Unlike most unemployed aerospace engineers, Thome seemed quite content with his change in lifestyle, despite the fact that he made only about $30 a week as a hot dog vendor.247 He explained that ―my whole attitude changed about work and people and life itself. I now work only three or four hours a day, rather than 40 hours punching a clock in a very shaky industry. I‘m completely happy with what I‘m doing now.‖ 248 He liked being outdoors and being his own boss, not to mention not having to wear a suit or fight rush hour traffic.249 Thome and his family seemed to adjust as well as could be expected to the massive change in lifestyle caused by his downsizing. Yet regardless of all the adjustments they had made because of the ―shaky‖ nature of the aerospace industry, he did not definitively rule out a ―return to engineering if the opportunity arose.‖ 250 The identity of being an aerospace engineer seemed hard to totally jettison for most, even after so many had moved on with their lives. 246 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 247 Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 248 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 249 Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC . 250 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 402 While out-of-work aerospace engineers commonly disdained welfare as the ultimate disgrace, collecting unemployment insurance was another matter altogether. In the Long Island area, in the early 1970s, a former aerospace engineer typically received six months of unemployment insurance if he or she lost his or her job.251 Unlike welfare payments, which were government funds meant to sustain people who fallen below a certain income level, unemployment insurance was largely made up of money that employers had paid into a pool that workers could pull from if they had been laid off or lost their jobs without cause. Typically former engineers first collected unemployment insurance (while still searching for a job), then tapped into their savings if needed; in these ways, they generally avoided going on welfare if at all possible. The New York Times, for example, detailed the story of a forty-eight-year-old former mechanical engineer from East Setauket, Long Island, who followed this unemployment path almost to the letter. After losing his $18,700 a year job in the aerospace industry, the Georgia Tech graduate started collecting unemployment insurance payments while still looking for work. To help out, his wife took a part-time job. When he had been out of work for more than a year, they had to dip into their savings, which was only three months away from being totally exhausted. He told the newspaper reporter that he would have gone to extremes to avoid welfare. ―June is the end, and then it‘s sell the house,‖ the former engineer explained. ‖I didn‘t want to apply for welfare unless it 251 Twenty-six weeks was the normal amount of time for unemployment insurance on Long Island. See ibid. 403 was forced on me.‖252 Fortunately, he found work as a salesman in the investment industry.253 Another forty-year old engineer from Syosset, who had earned $29,000 a year until losing his job, ended up taking a position as an electrician at the rate of $250 a week, a pay cut of more than 50%. He continued in his new job until a union man replaced him. Like most former aerospace engineers, he rejected the notion of taking welfare. He thought it ―disgraceful,‖ but in the end he had no choice.254 The contrast between the weekly rates that these men accepted to do menial jobs with the average welfare rates on Long Island underlines how much these men despised the notion of welfare. In March 1971, according to the New York Times, a welfare recipient with a family of four received $231 a month, plus $180 grant for shelter heating, or $165 for non- heated residences.255 By contrast Kinkaide earned $125 a week in his golf course job and Thome $30 a week with his hot dog business. Obviously, some of these former engineers decided it was better to work a job than accept welfare. By the spring of 1971, the number of former workers on Long Island who received unemployment benefits and welfare checks had risen dramatically over the past twelve months. Joseph O. Curry, the District Superintendent of the New York State Employment Service, revealed that his office had processed more than double the number 252 Ibid. 253 Ibid. 254 Ibid. 255 Ibid. 404 of unemployment claims than that of the previous year. In March 1971 unemployment claims had increased by more than 13,800 from March 1970—a new record for the region.256 Welfare rolls saw a similar increase. During 1970 Long Island‘s two counties, Nassau and Suffolk, had gone through a combined 30.7% increase in welfare recipients, according to the New York Times.257 Mrs. Adele Eisenstadt, a supervisor at one of Nassau County‘s New York State Professional Placement Offices, pronounced herself ―surprised at the number and caliber of individuals appearing with welfare forms.‖258 Similarly, District Employment Superintendent Curry opined about the unemployment situation: ―the force of the economic change is such that people who have escaped the vicissitudes of the economy are now becoming involved and this includes the middle class—the guy next door.‖259 For many, a fundamental shift had occurred, a move from being comfortably middle class to having to find any way to make financial ends meet.260 And, as Curry noted, about reconversion, ―retraining is not the answer. They need jobs. There is no cure for the lack of a pay check but another pay check.‖ 261 256 Ibid. 257 In January 1970 the two counties had started with a combined 83,815 claims, but by December that number had reached 109,535. See ibid. 258 Ibid. 259 Ibid. 260 For more on this issue, see Lynn Rosellini, ―Laid-Off Engineers Grub for a Living,‖ Newsday, circa January 1971, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect A-10, NGHC. 261 Roy R. Silver ―‘Overqualified‘ L.I. Workers on Relief,‖ New York Times, 24 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 405 By the spring of 1971 the recession and downsizing in aerospace and its related industries had become such a national issue that heartbreaking stories about former engineers began to appear in the national news on a regular basis. One of the saddest and most shocking incidents occurred in Silicon Valley. Charles Mallinckrodt Jr., a thirty-fiveyear old out-of-work computer engineer from Palo Alto, California, committed suicide on the campus of Stanford University. Mallinckrodt killed himself by ingesting half a bottle of cleaning fluid and placing a plastic bag over his head. Three Stanford University students found his body beneath a tree, along with ten standard rejection letters from various companies. Mallinckrodt had grown ―despondent‖ about his inability to secure a job since he had been laid off the previous year. The local coroner thought it was ―one of the saddest cases I‘ve ever had to handle.‖262 ―A few years ago the industry literally was crying for engineers,‖ he observed. ―They were begging young people to train for jobs. Now you‘ve got thousands and thousands laid off. They can‘t get a job no matter what their qualifications.‖263 According to Department of Labor statistics, 50,000 to 60,000 engineers, scientists, and technicians lost their jobs during this period. 264 The crisis of unemployment among engineers, scientists, and technicians had become so acute by the spring of 1971 that the U.S. Department of Labor and the Department of Housing and Urban 262 ―10 Letters: Polite but Deadly,‖ unidentified newspaper, circa 17 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 263 Someone in Grumman‘s front office had clipped this newspaper story and saved it for future reference. See ibid. 264 Victor Cohn, ―New Program Will Retrain Aerospace Scientists,‖ Washington Post, 9 March 1971, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 406 Development (HUD) decided to start a reconversion program. This new pilot program proposed to retrain approximately four to six hundred unemployed engineers to tackle the problems of health care and pollution. Retraining would occur at five centers around the country, including MIT and the University of California at Berkeley. The retraining classes would last thirty days, after which a graduate‘s local community would have to hire the converted worker so that he or she could put these new skills to use.265 Although the program seemed small in scope, and its success depended on the cooperation of local communities, at least it offered some hope to some former aerospace workers. 266 Informal reconversion also took place. One business that hired some former aerospace workers—the Homeowner‘s Emergency Service (HES)—offered some very unique services to Long Islanders. The brainchild of Charles A. Koppelman, a Manhattan music publisher, the company promised to have an experienced handyman any place on Long Island within ninety minutes to repair anything, from water in the basement to squirrels in the attic.267 Aerospace workers made up at least 75% of the fifty-man workforce. Some had lost their jobs in the industry, while others, particularly aerospace production line workers, wanted an extra job to offset the loss of overtime pay, a thing of 265 Ibid. 266 More assistance for reconversion came from the Senate. On March 8, 1971, for example, Senators Charles McCurdy Mathias (R-MD) and George McGovern (D-SD) said that they would ―seek to make defense contractors contribute an eighth of their pre-tax profits to a ‗peace-time transition commission.‘‖ For more information, see ibid. 267 ―…and others tap a household market,‖ Business Week, 27 March 1971, 25-26, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 407 the past thanks to the recession.268 Leo Feinstein, a former engineer who had worked as Grumman‘s plant maintenance manager, became one of the first people the company hired. He headed up HES maintenance operations. Richard Giering, Grumman‘s former Computer Division dispatcher, became HES‘s Chief Dispatcher. 269 The ―90-Minute Men‖ earned at least $50 a week, while some received as much as $250 a week. Despite the recession, HES had more than six hundred Nassau County households subscribing to the service at the basic membership rate of $40, plus a $10 per hour charge and the cost of materials.270 Although some former Grummanites had not intended to work as handymen, HES provided them with employment and a solid salary at a crucial time during the recession and after their downsizing. The Aerospace Depression As many former Grummanites continued to cope with the recession and lack of work, the Bethpage company reached the end of an era. On June 17, 1971, Grumman‘s Lunar Module program officially concluded.271 On that date, the last manufactured LM— the twelfth operational one the firm had produced—left Long Island for Cape Kennedy.272 268 Ibid. 269 Ibid. 270 Ibid. 271 ―An Era Ends at Grumman,‖ Newsday, 18 June 1971, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undate-1973,‖ LISI. 272 The last LM‘s left Bethpage for the Cape in a ―Super Guppy.‖ Of the 12 LMs Grumman produced, NASA used approximately half of them for testing or for dress-rehearsals for the lunar landings. The other six carried the astronauts to the Moon during the Apollo 11, 12, 14, 15, 16 and 17 missions. The one used during the Apollo 13 flight acted as a ―lifeboat‖ and helped save the astronauts lives during the catastrophic mission. For more details, see ibid. 408 Over seven thousand Grummanites had worked on the spacecraft at the height of the program‘s production.273 With the shipment of the last LM, the company closed a tooling warehouse and a small training building in Hicksville, as well as two small offices in Syosset. No specific layoffs coincided with the shuttering of those facilities. However, from January 1970 through June 1971, Grumman had closed approximately 326,000 square feet of office and warehouse space, as well as plant facilities. 274 These closings had a significant cumulative impact on many employees, and the end of the LM program meant the end of work for many. By the summer of 1971, although most commentators referred to the downturn in aerospace as a ―recession,‖ others viewed it in much more drastic terms. The St. Louis Post Dispatch, for example, on the first day of summer, dubbed the situation ―The Aerospace Depression.‖275 The newspaper compared its regional contractor McDonnell Douglas with several firms in California and Seattle and concluded that the industry had entered a depression.276 At the time, McDonnell had dropped at least a third of its workforce in the period since its mid-1967 employment high of approximately 43,500.277 273 Ibid. 274 Ibid. 275 ―The Aerospace Depression,‖ The St. Louis Post Dispatch, 21 June 1971, Layoffs,‖ Sect. A- 10, NGHC. 276 Interestingly, the newspaper only focused on the St. Louis, southern California, and Seattle regions in this story. See ibid. 277 The company had pinned its future on the success of the F-15 fighter-bomber, but the plane had not done well in congressional hearings and faced possible cancelation. See ibid. 409 In one month‘s time in 1969, the firm laid off some six hundred workers.278 One of the Dispatch‘s most telling profiles observed that the layoffs have reaching into the ranks of white collar engineers, most of whom had deluded themselves into thinking they were immune from the fate of unionized production workers who have been laid off periodically over the years, and who continue to bear the brunt of the employment decline. The engineers are confused and angry but the truth as recent events have made clear is that no one is immune and even giant corporations such as Lockheed, cannot expect to be automatically bailed out by the Government.279 Engineers who had joined the aerospace industry in the wake of the Sputnik launches of 1957 had joined the sector believing they would have exciting and well-paying jobs for life, but as they had discovered, the aerospace industry did not live up to this promise of continuous and rewarding work. Interestingly, the Dispatch asserted that the ―Aerospace Depression‖ might actually have a positive effect on the nation; the newspaper claimed, like many experts of the day, that the downturn would force defense contractors to use their designing and manufacturing skills in other fields and sectors. The newspaper hoped that the depression would force the U.S. to set aerospace and national defense goals that were more sensible and legitimate than the out-of-control spending associated with the Apollo Program and the Vietnam War.280 As debate continued about the severity of the aerospace industry‘s downturn, Grumman got some good news. At the beginning of July, the firm learned it had secured 278 Ibid. 279 Ibid. 280 Ibid. 410 two new contracts. On one side, Grumman, along with McDonnell Douglas, North American Rockwell, and Lockheed, had received a four-month extension to continue working on the design of NASA‘s Space Shuttle. 281 On the other side, the U.S. Department of Transportation had awarded the Bethpage firm a $3.5 million contract to build a ―Tracked Air Cushion Research Vehicle,‖ (TACRV). Designed to travel at close to three hundred miles an hour, the TACRV would provide high-speed ground transportation. The preliminary test vehicle, slated to premier in March 1972, would run on electric power and thereby, theoretically, be silent and pollution-free; by the year 2020, the TACRV would supposedly provide swift travel between New York and Los Angeles.282 In one sense, the project represented a type of reconversion program, one that allowed aerospace engineers to use their skills to solve some of society‘s problems, in this case economical, non-polluting, rapid public transportation. Both the Space Shuttle contract extension and the TACRV contract helped keep some employees on at Bethpage. 281 Lockheed received a $1.4 million extension, whereas the other three companies each got $2.8 million extensions. Chrysler, one of the original five companies that had secured a preliminary design contract for the Shuttle in May and June of 1970, did not get an extension and dropped by the wayside at this time. For more details see ―Transit Jobs Bring Cash to Grumman,‖ Newsday, 2 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 282 Ibid; ―Grumman Gets $3.5 Million Job, Wall Street Journal, 1 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and ―Looking Ahead,‖ Newsday, 19 April 1972, 48, ―Clippings 1972,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. The TACRV prototype would have to prove itself on a 22-mile track in Pueblo, Colorado. It also had to hold at least four researchers as passengers. Engineering schematics projected that the vehicle would measure just over 50 feet long and weigh more than 60,000 pounds Designers hoped that the program would help people travel quickly between cities and outlying airports. For more details see and compare ―Grumman Gets $3.5 Million Job, Wall Street Journal, 1 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; ―Transit Jobs Bring Cash to Grumman,‖ Newsday, 2 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and ―Mr. Zarkowsky‘s Remarks at the TACRV Unveiling Ceremony, Hangar 3, Plant 4, 1110‖ Grumman Press Release, 11 April 1972, ―TACRV Information 1971-1975,‖ ―Box 39 TACRV,‖ Sect. A-28, NGHC. 411 Neither program, particularly the TACRV project, created any new jobs on Long Island, however, at least not immediately.283 In early October 1971, Tom Rozzi, Grumman‘s Vice President and Director of Security and Personnel Service, announced that the company had completed the last of its RIFs for the year. Of the 3,500 workers who lost their jobs in 1971, 50% had left due to ―natural attrition‖ factors.284 In other words, the firm only technically had to lay off about half of the workers because the other half had retired, left for other jobs, moved on for health reasons, or died.285 Rozzi did stress that if the business climate improved for aerospace, a lot of RIFed workers might receive recalls from Grumman.286 The company had a history of calling back formerly RIFed employees if it had new work for them, but those recalls might come too late for many people, particularly those who had not actually been Grumman employees, but whose jobs had still been affected by the layoffs.287 Grumman‘s downsizing had already had a profound effect on Long Island—both its people and its economy—and by the fall of 1971, those effects became widespread. As the New York Times noted about the company‘s layoffs, ―the jolt is still sending shudders 283 ―Transit Jobs Bring Cash to Grumman,‖ Newsday, 2 July 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 284 ―Rozzi views reduction in force, says RIF completed for ‘71,‖ Grumman Plane News, 8 October 1971, NGHC. 285 Ibid. 286 Ibid. 287 David A. Andelman, ―Job Losses at Grumman Send Shivers Through L.I.,‖ New York Times, 21 October 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 412 through Long Island‘s economy.‖288 Grumman‘s internal company figures projected that for every Grummanite who lost his or her job, another ―4 ½ persons somewhere in the nation‘s economy lose their jobs—and 2 ½ of these are in Nassau or Suffolk Counties.‖289 With approximately 5,700 Grummanites having lost their positions during the thirteen months between December 1969 and December 1970, the Times calculated another 14,250 Long Islanders had become unemployed.290 Grumman and its subcontractors made up about 10% of Long Island‘s total economy; approximately two hundred companies on Long Island did half of the firm‘s subcontracting work.291 In short, as the area‘s largest corporation and employer, Grumman‘s downsizing caused havoc for many people beyond just its own employees.292 Grumman‘s subcontractors felt particularly vulnerable in the fall of 1971 as the Bethpage company waited to see if it could capture the Space Shuttle contract and whether Congress would restructure the pricing of the F-14 program so that Grumman would stop losing money on the program. Most of these smaller businesses‘ actual existence depended largely on what happened with those projects. Many subcontractors had to decide, without a lot of data, whether they could afford to keep their doors open.293 288 Ibid. 289 Ibid. 290 Ibid. 291 Ibid. 292 Grumman did not become Long Island‘s largest corporation until 1967. Prior to that time, the firm basically shared that distinction with Republic and Sperry Gyroscope. See ibid. 293 Ibid. 413 The recession challenged the future innovation and effectiveness of the aerospace industry because it stunted its growth by dismantling a workforce that would be difficult to reassemble in a timely and efficient manner. This had been NASA‘s fear when Grumman had started to downsize; now the problem had trickled down to threaten even the future effectiveness of subcontractors. Magnifying the delicacy of the situation with subcontractors, a Long Islander at one of the smaller shops noted, ―over the years Grumman has been very stable. They‘re very, very efficient. But if anything happens to the F-14 and Grumman, we‘ll be in really serious trouble.‖294 According to the New York Times, approximately 10,000 Grummanites worked on the F-14 program, and the aircraft represented a contract valued at somewhere between $225 million and $250 million in October 1971; it comprised about one-quarter of the entire company‘s business.295 Nevertheless, the firm did not base its entire future on the F-14; the company also began ―pouring its heart‖ into the Space Shuttle design.296 Upper management believed it would secure that contract without any problem, bringing the company as much as $20 billion and putting up to ten thousand people to work by the mid-1980s.297 Still, a lot of that work, if it came, was more than a decade away, which did not offer much solace to the many Grummanites who worried 294 Ibid. 295 In 1970, the F-14 represented approximately one-quarter of Grumman‘s business. If the aircraft‘s contract remained stable with Grumman, it might bring in as much as $400 million in 1973 if the Navy ordered another forty-eight of the aircraft. For more on these subjects, see ibid. 296 Ibid. 297 Ibid. 414 whether they would soon receive pink slips, let alone those who had already lost their jobs and wanted to return to the firm. As 1971 came to a close, Grummanites received some mixed news about their future. As had happened several times before, the company announced its projections about the number of people it would RIF in the new year. Approximately 1,500 to 2,000 employees would face the chopping block in 1972, which would bring the company payroll down to about 22,200 workers, its lowest number in over eight years. 298 Upper management still predicted that over 50% of the layoffs would occur because of attrition due to retirements, resignations, and deaths. 299 The announcement about future layoffs stung even more because Grumman had just learned that it had lost a $70 million contract to TRW Systems in California for two high-energy astronomy observatory satellites.300 Fortunately, the loss of these contracts was offset by the news that NASA had given Grumman a six-month extension on a preliminary Shuttle design agreement.301 The $1.5 million contract extension did not promise immediate employment for the Bethpage firm, but as a Grumman spokesperson noted, if the company won the final Shuttle competition it would mean big employment further down the road. 302 Still, for the 1,500 to 2,000 298 Between 1967 and the end of 1971, the company had cut some 12,000 employees. See Chapin A. Day, ―1,500-2,000 Grumman Jobs in Danger,‖ Newsday, 3 December 1971, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 299 Ibid. 300 Ibid. 301 Ibid. 302 Ibid. 415 slated to lose their jobs over the next year, the promise of a contract much further in the future offered little comfort. 1972—The Breaking Point for Grumman and Grummanites By mid-winter 1972, the threat of further RIFs pushed Grumman—the company that had always cultivated a culture of paternalism—to the breaking point. On February 25 Newsday journalist Chapin A. Day published an important article entitled ―The Grumman Family‖ that revealed just how far the feeling of togetherness had eroded at the Bethpage firm. The story began: ―It might be called the Grumman Aerospace Corp., but to many of the giant firm‘s 23,000 employes [sic] Grumman has a feeling of family that inspired loyalty. For other workers, however, the feeling isn‘t so warm any more. The specter of layoffs has left some members of the family edgy and uncertain.‖303 Although Day found that ―few workers agree with the assessment of one worker who said flatly ‗The Grumman Family is dead,‘‖ 304 Grumman officials were even admitting that the company‘s spirit had flagged in recent years. Many Grummanites believed that ―layoffs, the firm‘s rapid growth in the late ‗60s (which brought an influx of employes [sic] from other aerospace companies) and the appearance of what one company spokesperson calls a ‗new breed‘ of employe [sic] share the blame.‖305 303 Chapin A. Day, ―The Grumman Family,‖ Newsday, 25 February 1972, 4A,―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A- 10, NGHC. 304 Ibid. 305 Ibid. 416 Downsizing figured prominently in employees‘ conversations about the causes of low morale. Everyone seemed to focus on whether they would receive the next pink slip, and as a result workplace efficiency suffered seriously. However, management insisted that the layoffs did not affect worker output. According to the firm‘s front office, if anything, the downsizing made those who still had jobs ―work harder.‖ 306 Still, employees seemed particularly unnerved by the situation and they came to dread the end of each week. The company usually RIFed workers on Fridays, generally called ―Black Fridays.‖ As one Grummanite described it: ―They start laying off at 2 PM on Friday. The supervisor walks by your desk, lays his hand on your shoulder. You are asked to go into his office. In 10 minutes, you are walked to your car and that‘s it. A few days severance pay and all the years you have put into Grumman are gone.‖307 Several old-time Grummanites opined that Grumman‘s family feeling had dwindled since Jake Swirbul‘s death in 1960. After his passing, and with the increase in defense and space spending in the mid-1960s, some Grummanites believed that the company had essentially become an impersonal bureaucracy.308 Lew Evans, the company‘s President and CEO in the early 1970s, had tried to maintain the culture of paternalism and sense of family, but some questioned whether he had successfully nurtured that spirit. As Newsday noted about Swirbul: 306 Ibid. 307 Ibid. 308 Historian Stephen Patnode has also found some Grummanites that felt that the company was become more of an impersonal bureaucracy during the late 1960s and early 1970s. For more, see Stephen Raymond Patnode, ―Labor‘s Love Lost: The Influence of Gender, Race, and Class on the Workplace in Postwar America‖ (Ph.D. diss., Stony Brook University, 2008), 269-271, 286, 297-305, 316 and 331. 417 His engaging personality and accessability [sic] to the workforce have become legend. ―The man was never above talking to anyone, whether he was a sweeper or shoveled coal,‖ one old-timer recalls…. ―Evans [the company‘s present board chairman], I think would like to consider himself another Swirbul, but Swirbuls are few and far between.309 Although Lew Evans was trying his best to carry on the culture of paternalism that Swirbul had fostered from the Great Depression to the dawn of the Space Age, that sense of family cohesiveness was seriously unraveling for some workers. The financial uncertainties of 1972 also seemed to provide an atmosphere that could help organized labor secure a toehold in Grumman, yet union leaders acknowledged that they did not have any plans to start a drive on the Bethpage firm. One local union official noted that ―at present, unionization at Grumman is beyond the budgets and energies of unions that might want to try it. Part of the problem, he says[,] would be to overcome ‗the lack of interest shown by the people over there.‘ He says that he receives ‗only about one call a month‘ from Grumman employees [sic]. ‗Seniority is the major complaint.‘‖310 Despite troubled times and the erosion of some sense of family spirit, Grummanites still felt that the company had their best interests in mind. Age discrimination and its accompanying issues became one of the most troubling subjects for Grumman‘s upper management to address while trying to keep morale high. Older Grummanites were disgruntled by the way younger workers—the ―new breed‖— 309 Chapin A. Day, ―The Grumman Family,‖ Newsday, 25 February 1972, 5A, ―Layoffs,‖ Sect. A-10, NGHC. 310 Ibid. 418 replaced them, or at the very least, forced them into lower-level jobs inappropriate to their skill sets.311 Younger workers‘ attitudes, some managers believed, posed more of a threat to the company than unions; the ―new breed‖ did not seem to care about creating a culture of family—money was their driving force. One company spokesperson observed that ―there‘s a real lack of stick-to-itiveness and loyalty in some of the new breed.‖312 He noted: ―They‘ll demand a $2,000 raise and if they don‘t get it, they‘ll stomp out and go to work somewhere else.‖313 In short, by early 1972, the company‘s cultural of paternalism had come under fire from several directions, and for some, the firm had become an unrecognizable bureaucracy. Nevertheless, many employees valued the fact that the company and its culture, as one Grummanite related, attempted to provide ―a degree of security in an insecure industry.‖314 Grumman‘s culture of paternalism had made a qualitative difference to these employees in this time of uncertainty, but would it stand the test of the economic uncertainties that the next couple of years would bring? 311 Ibid. 312 Ibid. 313 Ibid. 314 Of the 23,000 Grumman employees at this time, about 10,000 worked directly in production. The firm had about 280 different job titles during this period, including such positions as ―corporate officer, laborer, test pilot, vending machine serviceman, bricklayer, librarian, bombardier-navigator, engineer (38 varieties), cook, machinist and writer.‖ Twenty-two percent of the workforce acted in a supervisory capacity, while 28% held professional or administrative positions, and another 30% served in an engineering, technical or manufacturing job. Another 13% held office and clerical positions, while another 7% comprised service workers. For the quotes and more details, see ibid. 419 Conclusion In early 1967, the aerospace industry was already starting to lay off its Apollo workforce, almost two and a half years before the first men landed on the Moon. A sizeable labor force had been necessary to design and build the vehicles that had made the Apollo Program possible, but once the hardware was in place, and aerospace companies did not have any more projects in line, many employees lost their jobs. By the beginning of 1972, with two more Apollo missions still in the queue, the aerospace industry was in crisis. One third of the workers who had been in the industry in 1969 had been laid off by 1972, and others faced an uncertain future in the sector. No company seemed to be able to escape the relentless downsizing, not even Grumman, which had always prided itself in it paternalistic care for its employees. Many aerospace workers had joined Grumman believing it was a highly stable firm with great growth potential. They had thought that they would remain Grummanites for years to come and get to work on a variety of far reaching projects. But when many of them received pink slips during the industry‘s downsizing of the late 1960s and early 1970s, they learned quickly how short their dreams could fall. During Grumman‘s first significant layoffs of the Space Age in early 1967, the firm had tried to control the public‘s perceptions about the downsizing, but as the demobilization intensified, there was little it could do to lessen the blows. By April of 1971, the company had lost one-third of its workers within three years, a drop of over 12,000 employees. The cuts had seriously affected other Long Islanders; for every Grummanite downsized, another 2.5 Long Islanders lost their jobs. But the layoffs were not just a regional problem, they were also a national one. Some began to call the crisis an ―aerospace depression.‖ 420 Many RIFed Grummanites and other aerospace workers had their very identities shaken by the downsizing experience. It made them question their self-worth as professionals, family providers, and as people. Although some had enough personal savings to wait to see if the job market would improve, many others had to scramble to find work. And that was a challenging task. Most found that there were ―overqualified‖ for jobs and had to take positions outside the aerospace industry. Others had to take up menial work that paid them significantly less than they would have received if they had just gone on welfare. But they considered welfare a major disgrace and some even depleted their life savings in order to keep from going on the dole. Many of the men, who had been primary providers, also had to deal with the fact that their wives were now suddenly the main breadwinners of the family. This breakdown of traditional gender roles led many men to question their ―manliness.‖ Others, sadly, committed suicide. All in all, for the downsized aerospace workers of the late 1960s and early 1970s, the RIF‘s had made them contemplate their roles as workers, providers, and as men and women. For many Grummanites, it had also forced them to consider the limits of paternalism and how companies change over time. By the end of 1971, Grummanites seemed to have only one major hope for arresting the firm‘s downsizing and saving employees‘ jobs; and that hope lay in the company‘s ability to win the Space Shuttle contract. CHAPTER FIVE THE TOMCAT AND THE SHUTTLE: GRUMMAN RETOOLS FOR A CHANGED ECONOMY The year 1972 represented Grumman‘s last period of hope for turning things around; it would be a pivotal time for the firm and its employees. Several of the company‘s key programs would end in 1972; both the OAO and LM programs would conclude with last successful launches in the latter half of the year.1 For all intents and purposes, Grumman needed to secure a major new contract if it wanted to remain in the space business. To understand Grumman‘s future from 1972 onward, it is important to look at the history of the firm‘s involvement with two key programs—the F-14 ―Tomcat‖ Fighter-Jet and the Space Shuttle. Although the programs differed greatly, the company‘s work on them had an intertwining cause and effect that helped determine the fate of Grummanites, and, by extension, Long Island. Grumman officials had believed that the two projects would secure the future of the firm, but, as Grummanites would discover, such thoughts were a vain hope.2 1 The last OAO would launch and begin orbiting the Earth in August and the LM program would conclude during the Apollo 17 mission in December. 2 For a discussion of how much Grummanites looked to the F-14 and Shuttle programs to help the company‘s future growth, see William Butler, ―Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, Northrop Grumman History Center, Bethpage, NY, (hereinafter cited as NGHC). 421 422 Grumman and the F-14 ―Tomcat‖ The F-14 ―Tomcat‖ Fighter-Jet was a supersonic, twin-engine, two-seat, variableswept wing aircraft. It was the Navy‘s next-generation air superiority fighter and longrange interceptor of the early 1970s. The Tomcat incorporated the lessons U.S. airmen had learned during combat against Russian-made MiGs during the Vietnam War.3 When Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara took over the Department of Defense (DoD) in early 1961, he tried to cut expenses and find joint service solutions for various weaponry. He had planned that the Air Force and Navy would share the TFX (Tactical Fighter Experimental) aircraft, but the same design did not fully adapt properly for either service. The Navy pushed for its own fighter-jet, which became the Tomcat.4 Grumman won the F-14 contract on January 14, 1969.5 It was the company‘s first new naval aircraft contract in over fourteen years.6 The firm, which had always been one of the Navy‘s major suppliers of planes, had lost ground with the seafaring service in the 1960s, but that seemed to change with the new Tomcat agreement. The F-14 promised to keep Grumman‘s plants running for many years. 3 For a full discussion of the history of the F-14, see Richard Thruelsen, The Grumman Story (New York, NY: Praeger Publishers, 1976), 362-374; and George M. Skurla and William H. Gregory, Inside the Iron Works: How Grumman‘s Glory Days Faded (Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 2004), generally. 4 For a full discussion of the history of the TFX program, see, generally, Robert J. Art, The TFX Decision: McNamara and the Military (New York, NY: Little, Brown, and Company, 1968). 5 ―F-14A ‗Tomcat‖ Air Superiority Fighter,‖ 19 January 1972, ―F-14 Info Margiota 1/20/72,‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 6 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 315. 423 Grummanites and other Long Islanders looked to the F-14 as a major boon for the area that would provide some much needed prosperity in an ever-shrinking aerospace industry market filled with uncertainty. As work began on the first F-14 prototypes in early 1970, the Long Island Press characterized the importance of the new aircraft to Grummanites and Long Island: It is difficult to underestimate the impact of Grumman‘s $2.5 billion F-14 project as it reverberates throughout the Long Island economy…. The Navy jet fighter plane contracts will steer more than a billion dollars in wages and some $30 million in property taxes into Queens, Nassau and Suffolk during the next eight years…. The overall effect is like a shot in the arm to the island‘s economy, reaching into the retailer‘s cash register and helping the homeowner pay the burgeoning tax bills.7 Grumman itself projected that it would subcontract with some 320 firms on Long Island and in Queens, to the tune of approximately $32.8 million a year.8 Furthermore, area business leaders and politicians were ―keenly aware of the impact of the F-14 on the island‘s economy.‖9 As John Woog, the legislative counsel to the Long Island Association for Commerce and Industry, opined, the Tomcat ―is the largest single space or defense contract on Long Island. I would think it would account for the health and well-being of 12 to 15 per cent [sic] of the manufacturing work force in Nassau and Suffolk.‖10 7 Robert Weddle, ―F-14: A $2.5 Billion Bonanza for LI Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 3 February 1970, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undate-1973,‖ Long Island Studies Institute, Hofstra University, Hempstead, NY (hereinafter cited as LISI). 8 Ibid. 9 Ibid. 10 Woog is quoted in ibid. 424 Grumman President Llewellyn ―Lew‖ J. Evans was the driving force behind Grumman‘s push to secure the F-14 contract; he viewed the company‘s ability to book the job as essential to the firm‘s survival.11 Evans had served with distinction in the Army Air Corps during World War II and then obtained a law degree at Harvard. In 1947, he began working for the Navy‘s Bureau of Aeronautics (BuAer) in Washington, DC, as an assistant counsel.12 But given Grumman‘s ―familial relationship‖ with the Navy, particularly the BuAer, it did not take long for someone at the company—namely Jake Swirbul—to recognize his talents and hire him away from the government. 13 Evans joined Grumman in 1951 as part of the company‘s legal department. Although a lawyer by trade, his real talents lay in his marketing and customer relations skills. By 1960, Evans had risen to the position of Grumman‘s Vice President of Business Development.14 This new division of the company consisted mainly of lawyers, salesmen, and former military 11 For more on this issue, see Grumman‘s Comptroller Carl Palladino‘s comments on the subject in Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 108. 12 Evans had received his undergraduate degree from the University of California in 1942 before going into the Army Air Corps. For more biographical information about Evans, see Richard Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 324. 13 Political Scientist Randolph Paul Kucera notes that Grumman had developed a ―familial relationship‖ with the Navy during World War II. In his 1973 dissertation, Kucera goes on to argue that during the postwar era, Grumman‘s management cultivated a self-image of being an ―adjunct‖ to the Navy‘s Bureau of Aeronautics (BuAer). The company felt that its ―major responsibility was that of insuring the Navy pilots flew the best aircraft available and that those aircraft met Navy mission needs." Furthermore, Grumman came to identify itself as "part of a 'Navy Barn'." For more details, see Randolph Paul Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation and its ‗Familial‘ Relationship with the United States Navy‖ (Ph.D. diss., Syracuse University, 1973), 125. For the story of Swirbul hiring Evans and mentoring him, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 43-46. 14 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 323-324. 425 officers and focused on capturing new business and keeping customers happy. 15 One Grumman manager remembered, ―Before Evans came aboard, Grumman was an internal company, concentrated on engineering and product development.‖16 But after Evans began marketing Grumman, the firm became much more open to its customers and really listened to their needs. It no longer focused simply on the logic and mechanics of engineering.17 Evans had much in common with his mentor Jake Swirbul; both men were extremely personable and thrived in their relationships with employees and contractors.18 As Richard Thruelsen, a historian of Grumman, has noted: ―Both men were effervescent, articulate and constantly aware of the human factor in business and production; both brought an apparently inexhaustible supply of energy to their business lives; both had a sharp eye for new business opportunities and the drive to go after them at full steam.‖ 19 One Grummanite remembered that Evans possessed a particularly ―uplifting‖ and ―buoyant spirit‖ that always ―made work enjoyable.‖20 Evans‘s joie de vive, coupled with his ability to connect with contractors, made him indispensible to the firm, so much so, that, in 1966, when company founder Leroy Grumman retired, Evans became President of 15 Thomas J. Kelly, Moon Lander: How We Developed the Apollo Lunar Module (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001), 148. 16 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 46. 17 Ibid. 18 Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. 19 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 324. 20 Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. 426 the firm.21 Then, in July 1969, when the company expanded to become a holding company under the rubric of The Grumman Corporation, Evans became the new entity‘s President, as well as the Chairman of the Board and the Chief Executive Officer of the Grumman Aerospace Company (the main subgroup of the whole corporation, which encompassed approximately 95% of the firm‘s assets and handled all air and space matters).22 Overall, Evans became Grumman‘s key Washington operator who networked extremely well with politicians, the Navy, and NASA. He was dapper, gregarious, and well-liked.23 Because of his magnetic personality and ability to connect with people, Evans had been instrumental in helping Grumman secure the Lunar Module contract in November 1962.24 Tom Kelly, the firm‘s Chief Engineer on the LM Program, remembered that it was Evans who ―recognized that Grumman had cultural differences with NASA‖ and who helped the company win the contract by getting the Space Agency‘s leadership to understand that the LM program would not play ―second fiddle to the navy within Grumman‖—one of NASA‘s major fears given that Grumman was perceived by many to 21 Leroy ―Roy‖ Randle Grumman, a founding member of the Grumman Aircraft Engineering Company, retired in 1966 because of a serious eye ailment. He gave up his position as Chairman of the Board, but retained a seat on the board. Grumman‘s retirement left only two of the firm‘s original four founding members active in the day-to-day management of the company. Clint Towl, who had been the company‘s President since Jake Swirbul‘s death in June 1960, gave that position to Evans and took over Roy Grumman‘s old spot as Chairman of the Board. Bill Schwendler, remained the Chairman of the Executive Committee, while Albert Loening, the other semi-retired member of the quartet, retained a seat on the board. For more on this management transition, see Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 323. 22 Ibid., 322-323; and William Mathewson, ―Corporate Shift Voted at Grumman,‖ Suffolk Sun, 20 May 1969, ―Grumman Aerospace‖ Folder, Sect A-10, NGHC. 23 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 44-45. 24 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 324. 427 be an adjunct of the seafaring service.25 Then, in 1969, Evans‘s naval connections and his instinctual ability to understand and work with politicians and contractors enabled him to win the F-14 contract for Grumman.26 Evans had wanted to secure the Tomcat program at all costs because he saw it as absolutely necessary to Grumman‘s future. But in his rush to lock down the deal, he failed to negotiate aggressively with the Navy, much to the Bethpage manufacturer‘s ultimate disadvantage; the terms of the final agreement would put the company in a very precarious situation.27 As negotiated, the F-14 contract was a ―fixed-price‖ agreement that embraced the ―total procurement package concept,‖ a new type of contract developed during Robert McNamara‘s tenure as Secretary of Defense. The whole idea was based on McNamara‘s strict focus on cost-cutting and efficiency. 28 This type of agreement forced contractors to sign a fixed price, multi-year deal up front, which projected an aircraft‘s total cost from prototype through final delivery. Traditionally, customers ordered and purchased aircraft in lots that contained a certain number of planes. After the production of each lot, the customer and the contractor would renegotiate the price per plane for each new order/lot.29 The F-14 total procurement contract, however, forced Grumman to agree to the price of the full production run and all lots up front, with some minor adjustments for 25 Kelly, Moon Lander, 148. 26 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 324; and Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 42. 27 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 42. 28 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 363. 29 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 61; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. 428 inflation calculated into the agreement. The DoD believed this type of contract was the best way to make companies project their costs properly and not waste government money by renegotiating a contract for each new grouping of aircraft. 30 Grumman‘s F-14 manager George Skurla recalled that the original agreement called for the company to produce eight F-14s a month (a normal and reasonable rate at the time), or ninety-six a year, for a total of up to 463 aircraft. 31 On the surface, the fixed-price contract should have worked for Grumman, if the cost projections the company had made were correct and inflation had remained predictable. When Grumman signed the agreement on March 2, 1969, however, few could have anticipated the depth and seriousness of the recession of the early 1970s.32 Grumman relied mainly on ―a survey of national economic trends over the previous four or five years‖ to figure its profits and anticipate the future inflation rate at approximately 3%.33 Such studies did not anticipate the upcoming economic problems that 30 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 363. 31 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 55 and 61. 32 Because of the problems that the F-14 contract would cause it was ―one of the last totalpackage, procurement-type contracts issued by the Department of Defense.‖ For more on this issue, see ―Financial Background,‖ ―Grumman Advance Payment, May 31, 1974‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. Another problem with the F-14‘s ―variable quantity lot requirement‖ stemmed from the fact that the Navy could technically order as few or as many planes as it wanted. As George Skurla explained, that requirement caused major problems because ―the unit price differential between the normal and half production rates was so low that it invited the budgeteers to cut the numbers of airplanes being procured. As they got to the point where they could take advantage of that contract clause they did just that. The discussion went like this: ‗How much does the price go up if we only buy half as many?‘ ‗Well, it only costs another few percentage points.‘ ‗Oh, well, then let‘s do it, it won‘t break the contract.‖ See Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 56. 33 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 364. Most sources say that Grumman calculated a 3% inflation rate, while at least one cites 2%. For the 3 to 3.5 rates, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 108; George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s 429 would occur over the next few years. While some Grummanites hesitated to commit to the contract under those conditions, others, like Evans, kept pushing for the deal. Historian Richard Thruelsen has observed that even though some were ―not happy about the financial risks involved in the contract… how many options do you have on a competitive multibillion-dollar contract which will transform you . . . and will keep your plants and your employees busy for more than a decade?‖34 Grummanite Eugene Coll, a draftsman and design specialist who worked on the LM, put it more simply: ―Grumman was ‗forced‘ into a fixed contract on the F-14A because of dwindling contracts to keep our employees on the job.‖35 Raphael Mur, a Grumman lawyer who worked on the details of the original F-14 contract with Lew Evans, remembered that Evans coveted the F-14 program so much that he essentially allowed the DoD to dictate the terms of the agreement. Mur recalled the negotiations: ―Talk about stupidity. I don‘t like to talk ill of the dead, but Lew Evans comes up with what seemed to be a bright idea, as the archetypal super salesman. Though he was a lawyer, and a good lawyer, here he was the antithesis of a lawyer. All the things one would have anticipated as a lawyer he just chucked them all aside.‖36 Unfortunately possession; and Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 368. Tom Kelly cites a 2% rate originally, see Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. Some Grummanites felt that the company‘s managers had been a bit naïve about the inflation rate aspect of the contract. Henry Pallmeyer, a structural designer engineer on the LM and the Shuttle, for example, thought that Grumman managers were ―like babes in the woods‖ for not taking inflation fully into account. See Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000, in the author‘s possession; and Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 34 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 364. 35 Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 36 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 57. 430 for Grumman, Evans‘s approach allowed the DoD to know the lengths to which Grumman would go to secure an agreement, and the Navy knew a good deal when it saw one.37 As unconventional—or even irresponsible—as Evans‘s tactics appeared, he sincerely believed that he was doing the best thing for the company. Carl Palladino, a Grumman Comptroller, for example, said that Evans was totally convinced that the F-14 was ―the only ball game in town,‖ a make-or-break deal.38 Palladino remembered Evans arguing that ―Grumman had to win this or be out of the fighter game forever—he was absolutely convinced Grumman was going to make money on the project.‖39 By early 1971, Grumman‘s miscalculations in the F-14 contract began to cause major financial concerns. Inflation had risen considerably in the two years since Grumman had signed the F-14 agreement, due to the escalation of the Vietnam War, increased unemployment, and several other economic factors. The total rate of inflation over that period had more than doubled—a significant increase in such a short amount of time. 40 Some in Grumman‘s upper management had grown so concerned that at the end of March, Bill Zarkowsky, the President of the Grumman Aerospace Company, the firm‘s main subdivision, wrote the Navy. Although Zarkowsky‘s letter helped Grumman begin a 37 Ibid. 38 Ibid., 108. 39 Palladino added: ―Lew was in denial, not trying to mislead anyone.‖ For this quote, see ibid. For more on this issue, also see ibid., 110-111. 40 The inflation rate rose from roughly 3% in 1969 to somewhere between 8% to 10% by the first part of 1971 depending on the sources one consults. For more on this issue, see and compare Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 1976, 368; Kelly, Moon Lander, 258; Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 108; and the ―Historical Inflation Data Calculator,‖ accessed 24 December 2010, http://inflationdata.com/inflation/Inflation_Calculators/Inflation_Calculator.asp. 431 dialogue with the seafaring service about the situation, the Navy rejected a total reworking of the F-14 agreement; the Navy knew it had a good deal and it wanted to keep it. 41 As John Bierwirth, who would eventually become The Grumman Corporation‘s President, remembered about the situation: ―It was hard to convince the Navy that there was a problem.‖42 Unfortunately for Grumman, inflation would only continue to rise over the next few years. By 1972, the Navy had ordered the fourth lot of F-14s. By this time, however, even Evans recognized that the company could not continue to honor the F-14 agreement and remain in business much longer. In 1969, each aircraft had cost $8 million, but by 1972, that price had risen to $10 million per unit, or a 25% increase.43 The company calculated that it had lost approximately $65 million on the first four lots of F-14s; if Grumman failed to negotiate a new contract, it stood to lose roughly another $135 million on the planes in Lot 5 should the Navy choose to exercise its order option. 44 In January 1972, Evans wrote the Navy and explained that Grumman could not, and would not, produce any more F-14s beyond the aircraft already ordered in Lot 4 without a serious restructuring of the contract. The letter served to fuel the already heated discussions going 41 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 368-369. 42 John C. Bierwirth, Survey/Questionnaire, 31 May 2000, in the author‘s possession. 43 David A. Andelman, ―Troubled Grumman Sees F-14 as Its Key Problem,‖ New York Times, 28 August 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 44 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 370. Newsday, Long Island‘s leading newspaper, calculated that the company would only lose $105 million if it had to deliver the forty-eight planes planned for Lot 5. For more on this issue, see Joseph M. Treen, ―Could LI Survive If Grumman Went?,‖ Newsday, 23 April 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated-1973,‖ LISI. 432 on between the Navy and Grumman. Shortly thereafter, Evans suffered a heart attack, and although he would recover and continue as Grumman‘s President, the incident revealed the serious stress that some of the company‘s upper management felt as a result of the F14 debacle.45 At that time, more than nine-thousand Grummanites, or approximately 40% of the company‘s employees, worked on the Tomcat.46 By April, the F-14 situation had reached a crisis point. One reporter characterized the Tomcat‘s contract renegotiations as a ―three-cornered battle‖ between Grumman, the Pentagon, and Congress.47 On April 17, Clinton Towl, the Grumman Corporation‘s CEO and Chairman of the Board, appeared before a subcommittee of the Senate Armed Service Committee and delivered a statement that would become known as the infamous ―close the doors‖ speech. Towl tried to be as frank as possible during the hearing, contending that if the Navy placed an order for the forty-eight planes that comprised Lot 5, then: ―We‘ll close the doors. We‘ll have to. We can‘t proceed.‖48 He also told the subcommittee 45 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 369-370. 46 ―F-14A ‗Tomcat‖ Air Superiority Fighter,‖ 19 January 1972, ―F-14 Info Margiota 1/20/72,‖ Folder, , ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. For estimates on the number of Grumman employees at this time—which stood somewhere between 21,700 to 23,000 workers—see and compare ―F-14 Fighter: Navy Indicates Desire for More Planes,‖ Congressional Quarterly, 31 March 1973, 732, ―Duane Yorke—1973 (JBR)‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; and Colleen Sullivan, ―Employes [sic] at Grumman Hopeful,‖ Newsday, 19 April, 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 47 William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. 48 Towl appeared specifically before the Senate Tactical Air Power Subcommittee. See ―Financial Background,‖ ―Grumman Advance Payment, May 31, 1974‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; Richard L. Madden, ―Grumman Insists It Needs Fund Rise to Build 48 F-14‘s,‖ New York Times, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; and ―Grumman Claims that 433 that because of inflation and the inflexibility of the fixed price contract, Grumman would lose about $2.2 million on each F-14 going forward.49 And, as if the company did not have enough problems, the Bankers Trust Company of New York (Grumman‘s main creditor since the firm‘s inception some forty years earlier) planned to cut off the company‘s line of credit in a few weeks.50 Obviously, from Towl‘s perspective, Grumman could not continue to operate under such financial hardship.51 While some saw Towl‘s testimony as an outright belligerent threat, others believed that ―he was simply stating an unwelcome reality.‖52 Although most Grummanites viewed Towl‘s actions as a heroic attempt to save the company, many Americans started to view the company negatively because of the news coverage coming out of the hearings.53 As Engineer Tom Kelly recalled, Towl‘s appearance provoked ―a prolonged daily barrage of Building More F14s at Old Prices Would Force Closing of Unit,‖ Wall Street Journal, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 49 Towl also clarified that the increase in the F-14‘s price had not come from ―overruns, technical snags or deficient contractor performance,‖ but simply from a rise in inflation. For more on his testimony, see Richard L. Madden, ―Grumman Insists It Needs Fund Rise to Build 48 F-14‘s,‖ New York Times, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 50 ―Financial Background,‖ ―Grumman Advance Payment, May 31, 1974‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; Richard L. Madden, ―Grumman Insists It Needs Fund Rise to Build 48 F-14‘s,‖ New York Times, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; ―Grumman Claims that Building More F14s at Old Prices Would Force Closing of Unit,‖ Wall Street Journal, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; and Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 109. 51 Richard L. Madden, ―Grumman Insists It Needs Fund Rise to Build 48 F-14‘s,‖ New York Times, 18 April 1972, ―Clippings 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC.. 52 53 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 62. On Grummanites‘ heroic view of Towl, see Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000, in the author‘s possession. 434 negative publicity for Grumman. The company was vilified as a greedy, bloated contractor seeking a government bailout to obtain excessive profits.‖54 Because 1972 was an election year, the government planned to hang tough on the renegotiation of the F-14 contract.55 With Grumman caught in this dire situation, some Long Islanders started to dread the worst, especially because Grumman was the only major aerospace manufacturer left on Long Island. Many predicted that if the Bethpage firm went under it would cause havoc. Suffolk County‘s Labor Commissioner Lou V. Tempera noted: ―I‘m having problems with unemployment that are almost impossible now. But if we compounded that with the loss of 20,000 jobs at Grumman… I don‘t even want to think about it.‖56 Despite such fears, most Grummanites believed that the Navy would have to make some adjustments to the agreement and thereby keep the company‘s doors open. After all, as Phillip Male, a machinist and thirty-two-year veteran of the company, noted, the Navy had gotten a lot of quality products from Grumman over the years and it seemed logical that they would make some concessions.57 Still, by the time of Grumman‘s annual shareholder‘s meeting in May, the company had decided to make some unilateral fiscal changes in an effort to stop the firm‘s monetary bleeding, just in case the Navy forced it to produce the aircraft in Lot 5 at the price originally agreed upon. In one of Grumman‘s largest aircraft hangers, Clinton Towl 54 Kelly, Moon Lander, 259. 55 Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 362-371; and ibid., 259. 56 Joseph M. Treen, ―Could LI Survive If Grumman Went?,‖ Newsday, 23 April 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated-1973,‖ LISI. 57 Ibid. 435 informed more than a thousand shareholders that the company would not pay any dividends to stockholders for the first time in Grumman‘s history.58 When pressed about the future of dividends, Towl replied that he thought it would be ―imprudent‖ to discuss the matter while the F-14 contract remained so unsettled.59 Overall, the announcement seemed to serve two purposes—one very apparent, and one more subtle. On one hand, it was an obvious move to try to save money and thereby help the company become more fiscally sound. But on the other hand, it was also a slightly veiled attempt to signal to NASA that Grumman knew how to manage itself responsibly. Towl also told shareholders that ―a very substantial part of Grumman‘s future lies in our success over the next several months in winning NASA‘s current space shuttle competition.‖60 The shareholders‘ meeting took place on May 16, 1972, only a few days after Grumman had submitted its bid for the main Space Shuttle contract.61 In 1969, many Grummanites had looked to the 58 Some believed that one of the reasons the Board of Directors rescinded dividend payouts to shareholders was because the Navy and the DoD had promised the firm a $20 million short-term loan as long as Grumman agreed to forgo dividends. The military apparently intended the loan to help the company through the funding problems involved with the F-14 issues. For more information on this issue, see and compare ―Grumman‘s Net Drops Sharply,‖ New York Times, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Muriel O‘Donnell, ―Grumman Corp: New Govt Loan,‖ Long Island Commerical Review, 11 August 1972, Vol 19, # 220, Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A61, NGHC. 59 The quote is from Chapin, A. Day, ―Grumman‘s Board Votes No Dividend,‖ Newsday, 17 May 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. For additional information about the issue of dividends, see S. Murray Krameisen, Survey/Questionnaire, 22 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 60 Chapin, A. Day, ―Grumman‘s Board Votes No Dividend,‖ Newsday, 17 May 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 61 For information about the date of the Shareholder‘s Meeting, see Chapin, A. Day, ―Grumman‘s Board Votes No Dividend,‖ Newsday, 17 May 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. In regards to the date that Grumman submitted its Shuttle proposal, historian Josh Stoff cites Grumman‘s final proposal as ―Request for Space Shuttle Program,‖ Grumman 436 F-14 contract as the way to secure the firm‘s future; now, in 1972, it was the Space Shuttle contract that was the key to Grumman‘s future. But how much of a problem would the Tomcat cause for the firm as it tried to secure the Shuttle Program? The F-14 debacle would provide the context for Grumman‘s bid to build the Space Shuttle. Grumman and the Space Shuttle Grumman‘s push to win the Space Shuttle contract, and its ultimate failure to secure it, had a profound impact on the company, its workers, and its community; one cannot underestimate the event‘s significance. The firm‘s loss of the contract had a devastating psychological effect on Grummanites and other Long Islanders. The company had put its best engineers in charge of developing a sound design for the construction and implementation of the Shuttle, and, according to many contemporary aerospace insiders, the firm seemed to be the leading company that would most likely capture the contract. Many experts agreed that Grumman appeared to have the technical design edge in the Space Shuttle contract competition; after all, the firm had designed and delivered the highly successful LM, as well as multiple types of aircraft for the Navy. Grummanites believed they had a good chance of securing the project, and the firm consequently pinned its hopes and the future of the company on bringing the job home to Bethpage. When NASA and other aerospace industry engineers began concept designs for the vehicle in early 1969, the Space Agency did not invite Grumman to participate in the Aerospace Corporation, 9 Volumes, Response to NASA RFP# BC421-67-2-40P, May 12, 1972, NASA #72-74.‖ See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 57 and 77, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 437 development of the program. Nevertheless, the company decided to forge ahead with its own internally funded designs for the Shuttle from the very beginning. In essence, Grumman was a dark horse in the contractor competition for the program and struggled to gain recognition as a legitimate Shuttle engineering firm throughout the vehicle‘s entire design process. As Aerospace historian Josh Stoff described the company‘s involvement: Grumman narrowed down the wide field of design choices and selected the one vehicle which they hoped would win them the contract. Grummanites had faith, in themselves and their work, which bordered on fanaticism. They also had faith until the very end that they would win the Shuttle contract. That was one of the major reasons why they kept plugging away so hard. The three years of frequently imposed design changes were an engineering nightmare, but it would all be worth it if they won the contract.62 Stoff also eloquently summarized Grummanites‘ hopes, dreams, and dedication to the program: one should keep in mind the painstaking process that Grumman went through. Hundreds of people literally devoted years of their lives to the Shuttle program. If they won the contract, it would mean billions of dollars, jobs and prestige for the company. If they lost, it could mean their jobs and possible economic disaster for the company, for there were no other space contracts on the horizon to save this one.63 Grumman gambled on the Space Shuttle contract as the salvation of its future in aerospace. 62 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 3, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 63 Ibid., 4 438 In 1969, NASA was still considering several projects for the future of the space program; many of its leaders were still caught in the mindset of what space historian Dwayne A. Day calls the ―Von Braun Paradigm.‖ Essentially, Day argues that NASA leaders had internalized the large human space flight projects that Wernher von Braun, Willy Ley, and other space travel advocates had presented in early 1950s popular culture.64 In other words, many NASA officials were still trying to fulfill von Braun‘s main goals by finding a way to build not only the Space Shuttle, but also a space station, as well as plan for an eventual human mission to Mars.65 Upon closer examination and consideration, however, NASA officials came to realize that budgetary constraints would not allow the agency to sustain all of those programs. By the end of 1969, NASA had decided to concentrate all of its energies on developing the Space Shuttle program. 66 64 For Day‘s exploration of the ―Von Braun Paradigm,‖ see Dwayne A. Day, ―The Von Braun Paradigm,‖ Space Times (November-December 1994): 12-15; and Dwayne A. Day, ―Paradigm Lost,‖ Space Policy 11 (August 1995): 153-159. Other scholars have explored and expanded on Day‘s ideas in Roger D. Launius, Space Stations: Base Camps to the Stars (Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press), 2002, 26-27; Roger D. Launius and Howard E. McCurdy, Robots in Space: Technology, Evolution, and Interplanetary Travel (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008), 64-65; and Michael J. Neufeld, ―The ‗Von Braun Paradigm‘ and NASA‘s Long-Term Planning for Human Spaceflight,‖ in Steven Dick, ed., NASA‘s First 50 Years—Historical Perspectives (Washington, DC: NASA SP-20104704, 2010), 325-347. 65 Von Braun originally envisioned a distinct series of steps for human space flight, which he detailed in the Collier‘s articles. Engineers would build the Space Shuttle first, which would allow humans to construct a permanent space station in the Earth‘s orbit. The Space Station would then become a base from which to launch a moon mission and establish a lunar colony. A manned mission to Mars was the ultimate step in von Braun‘s vision. Obviously, the Apollo Program took some of these steps out of order, but NASA still wanted to accomplish as many of these goals as possible. For more details, see Chapter One. 66 Throughout 1969, NASA officials were still considering the possibility of developing the Space Station. In fact, the project actually received more emphasis in the planning process. By early 1970, however, they knew that it, and a human mission to Mars, stood far off in the future, if at all. For more details, see T. A. Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision: NASA‘s Search for a Reusable Space Vehicle (Washington, DC: NASA SP-4221, 1999), 223, 230, 288-289. 439 Engineers and human spaceflight advocates of the day believed that the Shuttle would create low-cost, reliable, and routinized access to space. 67 The first design studies for the Space Shuttle began in the winter of 1969. On January 31, NASA gave four companies—General Dynamics, Lockheed, McDonnellDouglas, and North American Rockwell—contracts to participate in the ―Phase A‖ feasibility study of the Shuttle.68 The project, officially referred to as the ILRV (Integrated Launch and Re-entry Vehicle) study, did not clearly define the whole Shuttle design, but rather, set out a preliminary impression of their engineering and logistical aims.69 The companies had nine months, until September 1969, to submit their work.70 Notably, the Space Agency had not invited Grumman to participate. Historian Josh Stoff has speculated that ―NASA believed that Grumman was so heavily involved in the Lunar Module program that they would not wish them to take on this additional burden.‖71 67 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 245-255. 68 Of the contractors, General Dynamics and Lockheed reported to Marshall Space Flight Center, while McDonnell-Douglas worked with the Langley Research Center, and North American Rockwell dealt with the Manned Spacecraft Center. While T. A. Heppenheimer states the contracts were $300,000 a piece, Joshua Stoff notes they were $500,000 each. For more on this issue, see and compare ibid., 222 and 255; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 6, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 69 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 9, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 70 Lockheed‘s Phase A design suggested a two-stage, fully reusable, shuttle. It was the first serious such attempt at a fully reusable design for the vehicle. Others had just assumed that some parts of the Shuttle would be disposable. See Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 331. 71 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 6, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 440 Grumman had no such qualms, however; although the company was not invited to participate, it began its own Space Shuttle effort.72 In mid-February 1970, NASA requested bids for the Phase B studies of the Space Shuttle, to clearly define the vehicle.73 The studies would focus on two-stage Shuttle designs and were expected to last eleven months at $8 million per study, and again NASA passed over Grumman.74 According to Dale Myers, NASA Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight, the goal of Phase B was ―to refine configuration concepts and establish the technical and economic feasibility of proceeding with a fully reusable system.‖75 Even though Grumman had not been selected to participate in the studies, the 72 Ibid., 7. Other evidence of Grumman‘s own in-house study—which it looks like the company planned to submit to NASA sometime in late September or early October—includes R. Fox to R. Kline, ―Earth to Earth Orbital Shuttle Study, SSP-80-8, 18 August 1969, ―Future Projects—Space Program,‖ Vertical File, Cradle of Aviation Museum, East Garden City, NY (hereinafter cited as CAM). The company‘s in-house newspaper, Grumman Plane News also contains a story about the study. See ―Going for Space Shuttle,‖ 1 December 1969, Grumman Plane News, ―Space Shuttle Papers, Articles,‖ Box 12 ―Space Shuttle Newsclippings, Misc,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. 73 Joshua Stoff claims the RFP went out on February 18, whereas T. A. Heppenheimer cites February 20. See and compare, Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 10, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 226-227. Technically, Phase B had two main proposals for study, one for the two-stage, fully reusable vehicle, and the other for the Space Shuttle‘s Main Engine (SSME). Three companies—Rocketdyne, Aerojet General, and Pratt & Whitney—got the SSME contracts at $6 million apiece. See Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 255 and 266. 74 Due to the complexity of the Space Shuttle project, several contractors teamed-up in the early 1970s on some of the Shuttle studies. For the two stage concepts, Lockheed designed an orbiter and teamed with Boeing, which worked on the boosters. On another design, NAR and General Dynamics came together, and on still another, McDonnell Douglas would team-up with Martin Marietta. For more on these pairings, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 224, and 226-227. For a more general view of the Phase B competition, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 10, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 75 Dale D. Myers to J. G. Gavin, Jr., 2 September 1970, ―NASA Correspondence,‖ ―Joe Gavin LM2,‖ Sect. A-91, NGHC. 441 firm continued its own internally funded design work on the project. At the time, Grumman was working with six different configurations, which it narrowed to two different vehicle styles (known as ―Designs 518 and 532‖), which it put forth in an unsolicited Phase B proposal. NASA agreed to accept the study for consideration as part of the competition, despite the fact that Grumman was not an official participant.76 Grumman informed the Space Agency that it intended to refine the two concepts into a single design approach.77 NASA was still involved in the process of deciding the Phase B contracts in April 1970 when the Apollo 13 disaster struck. In the midst of the crisis, Grummanite R. J. Edwards suggested that the company capitalize on the life-threatening situation that occurred during the Apollo 13 flight to stress the vital role that Grumman‘s LM was playing in saving astronauts‘ lives; he believed it would help the company gain support for its Shuttle bid. Edwards sent the following telegram to company President Lew Evans, Vice President Joe Gavin, and a few other Grumman managers: A great wave of pro sentiment is evident, re: Role being played by LM on Apollo 13. It is apparent on Radio, T.V. papers and man on the street. It is growing stronger every hour. Assuming that our three boys make the last leg of the journey to safety, and depending on whether GAC marketing strategy on the Space Shuttle would allow such a gambit—we are in a position for a real coup in newspaper advertisement. 76 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 10-11, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 77 Ibid., 12-13. 442 Underlying message of the ad should relate our role as builder of the life saving Lunar Module with our desire to build an equally excellent Space Shuttle. Two proven themes that could be used include: ―Bring em back alive;‖ It‘s ugly, but it gets you there.‖ We might even strike a deal with VW to share costs of ad using latter slogan. Would recommend one day full page ad in Washington Post, Houston Journal, N.Y. Times, and L.A. Times as a minimum.78 Regardless of Edwards‘s suggestion, Grumman again found itself shut out of the final Phase B awards. On May 12, 1970, NASA selected North American Rockwell and McDonnell-Douglas as the winners of the Phase B definition studies.79 Grummanites were stunned. Although a company spokesman simply described the situation as ―a disappointment,‖ many of Grumman‘s more than five-thousand Space Division employees were bitter, especially given all the recent praise Grumman had received for shepherding the Apollo 13 astronauts safely back to Earth in the LM. 80 ―You bring them back and this is what you get,‖ one worker exclaimed.81 As Newsday observed the day after the Phase B award announcement, ―NASA offered no explanation of why Grumman was not picked. It 78 R. J. Edward to L. J. Evans, J. G. Gavin, L. Mead, and N. MacKinnon, 16 April 1970, telegram, ―Apollo 13: Congratulatory—Messages,‖ Untitled Box, Sect A-68, NNGHC. 79 According to T. A. Heppenheimer, the two firms had won $2.9 million apiece the year before to study the feasibility of the Space Station. NASA considered the two companies clearly a cut above the rest of the other aerospace manufacturers when it came to space vehicle design. Their two-stage design studies, which would propose fully-reusable orbiters and which were originally slated at $8 million each, would eventual rise to approximately $10.8 million a piece by the end of the studies. For much more on these issues, see. Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 255, 266, 274-289 and 332. For additional information on the awarding of the Phase B contracts, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 13, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 80 The company spokesman is quoted in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 13, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 81 The Grumman worker is quoted in ibid., 13. 443 said the two factors considered by the NASA source selection board were the companies‘ technical presentations and business managements.‖82 A week later, on May 20, Evans weighed in on the situation, arguing for the company to continue its Shuttle studies. He wrote NASA Administrator Thomas Paine, Without in any way intending to be derogatory, I‘m sure you also know that we believe the shuttle requirements as defined in the recent Phase B statement of work are somewhat confining and appear to exclude the study of some promising alternative approaches. Specifically, the funded efforts now underway with McDonnell-Douglas and North American Rockwell could result in studies thoroughly responsive to the statement of work but with conclusions which may be significantly out of line with fiscal realities a year from now. This would require additional study prior to requesting a Phase C go-ahead from Congress.83 Evans also cited a personal letter he had received from Wernher von Braun, which stated it was vital that ―we do not overlook any other approaches to the space shuttle that might be promising.‖84 In essence, Evans was trying to make sure Grumman made it into the Phase C studies by arguing that NASA should keep all viable design options in play. He also hinted that the Phase B winners‘ plans and designs were too expensive and unrealistic.85 82 Newsday is quoted in ibid., 14. 83 L. J. Evans to Thomas O. Paine, 20 May 1970, ―J. G. Gavin Ltrs. 1970,‖ Untitled Box, Sect A68, NGHC. 84 85 Ibid. For a somewhat different interpretation of Evans‘s actions toward NASA, which seem to paint the chairman as more impassioned about these issues, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 264-265. 444 Others besides Evans lobbied for Grumman to continue working on the Shuttle design program, albeit in a somewhat subtler fashion. The Long Island Daily News, for example, wrote on May 23: Has Long Island—which built the lunar module that brought the Apollo 13 astronauts back safely to earth—been cut out of the space business? There was gloom in some quarters as the Grumman Aerospace Corp. was passed over earlier this month for a study contract to design a space shuttle for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The company had not given up hope of gaining a significant role in the space shuttle program. Grumman had been passed over for the initial study of the Lunar Module idea, but, on its own, came up with the best design and won that contract.86 By June, pro-Grumman allies had exerted enough influence on NASA that the Space Agency included the company in further Shuttle studies. As historian Josh Stoff has noted, some ―minority groups‖ within NASA had pushed for ―alternative approaches to the shuttle design,‖ and on June 11, the Space Agency awarded Grumman, as well as Boeing and Lockheed, ―Phase A Follow On studies worth $ 4 Million each.‖87On June 24, 86 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 14, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 87 Joshua Stoff found no evidence about whether Grumman applied pressure to secure the contract beyond Lew Evans‘s letter. While Stoff contends that all three companies received $4 million apiece, T. A. Heppenheimer claims only Grumman received that amount, while Lockheed and Chrysler, only received $1million each. Heppenheimer also notes that Grumman‘s and Lockheed‘s studies were particularly cost-effective for NASA. Both focused on partially-reusable configurations—which given NASA and the Office of Management and Budget‘s (OMB) disagreement over funding for the Shuttle (the OMB wanted to drastically cut the Shuttle‘s budget), seemed like a sound investment. With Grumman‘s expendable tank design, the orbiter could be much smaller, which brought the overall cost of the vehicle down considerably. Notably, the ―Phase-A Follow-Up Studies‖ also included some economic analyses. The Aerospace Corporation received funding to focus on payload and launch costs (at $1.6 million), while Lockheed dealt with payload effects (at $399,000), and Mathematica did cost-benefit analysis (at $400,000). For more on these issues, see and compare Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 14, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 267 and 335-337. 445 Evans received a formal letter from Dale Myers, NASA‘s Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight, announcing that Grumman had been selected to participate in the ―Alternate Space Shuttle Concepts Contract.‖88 From a technical standpoint, the Phase A Follow-On Studies, or ―The Alternative Studies,‖ were meant (according to Dale Myers), to offer ―a basis for validation of the economics of the systems being examined in the Phase B studies and… an improved understanding of potential alternative concepts from an economic and feasibility standpoint.‖89 The Alternative Studies ―were not intended to examine the alternative concepts to the depth or breadth required in a Phase B study.‖90 Fortunately for Grumman, Myers argued, ―if it ultimately becomes evident that we should proceed with a configuration significantly different from those which are currently under Phase B study, additional effort will be required prior to proceeding into final system design.‖91 Grumman made the most of this new opportunity; it strove to put forward the best possible proposal. While the company definitely wanted to become the sole primary contractor for the vehicle, it also teamed up with the Boeing Corporation to get help with 88 Joseph G. Gavin, Jr., to Dale D. Myers, 16 July 1970, ―NASA Correspondence,‖ Box ―Joe Gavin LM2,‖ Sect. A-91, NGHC. 89 Dale D. Myers to J. G. Gavin, Jr., 2 September 1970, ―NASA Correspondence,‖ Box ―Joe Gavin LM2,‖ Sect. A-91, NGHC. 90 Ibid. 91 Ibid. 446 some issues related to the Shuttle‘s booster.92 The Bethpage firm awarded Boeing (the makers of the Apollo Saturn V‘s main rocket booster) a $1.8 million contract to study the challenges and help it round out its proposal.93 On July 9 Grumman turned the new study in to NASA.94 Some space agency personal were so interested in what the Bethpage company was doing that they visited Grumman the following week, to give their ―verbal approval of the plan and study scope.‖95 At about the same time that Grumman was working on the proposal with Boeing, Joe Gavin wrote to NASA Associate Administrator for Manned Spaceflight Dale Myers to try to pressure him to officially include Grumman in future Shuttle studies. Gavin made it perfectly clear that the company wanted to compete for the final Shuttle contract. He detailed the ways Grumman had felt slighted by NASA: it had not been allowed to submit a structural test proposal to support its concepts thus far; and it had received limited NASA funding for its Alternative Concept study, compared to the funds Phase B competition winners had received. Nevertheless, Gavin stressed that his firm was committed to continuing to study and determine ―low cost options for the Space Transportation System.‖96 He closed his letter by practically begging the Space Agency to 92 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 265; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 29, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 93 Joseph G. Gavin, Jr., to Dale D. Myers, 16 July 1970, ―NASA Correspondence,‖ Box ―Joe Gavin LM2,‖ Sect. A-91, NGHC. 94 Ibid. 95 Ibid. 96 Ibid. 447 allow Grumman to participate in Shuttle testing: ―I believe that we can propose a testing program which will serve the NASA shuttle program in an outstanding fashion by taking advantage of proven Grumman facilities and competence. I would like to ask that you add our participation to the shuttle testing program. I am sure that this broadening of the test base in this time period will be a significant advantage to NASA and the program.‖97 Although Grumman had not received official word from NASA by mid-summer, many Grummanites felt confident about their work and energized by the prospect of continuing on the program. A July 1970 article in the company‘s newspaper reported the positive and upbeat atmosphere at the Bethpage firm: The pace at the Grumman Space Center in Bethpage is fast—and getting faster—as engineering teams apply their space-age experience and inventiveness to the Space Shuttle Phase A Study. ―We‘re determined to win, and so are our competitors,‖ Tom Kelly, Deputy Director of the Space Shuttle Program, said the other day. ―It‘s an extremely competitive situation, but Grumman is highly qualified, and we‘ve got the best team in the business working on this.‖ Noting that the Shuttle is the next manned space effort visible on the horizon, Kelly pointed out the importance, in dollars and jobs, of being able to continue on into the next two phases of the Space Shuttle Program; a year of advanced design work, followed by the hardware. ―We‘re aiming at Big, New business, something in the order of Two LM programs in the next two years,‖ Kelly said. 98 NASA‘s continued tacit encouragement had essentially created in Grumman an unfunded team of consultants who improved the Shuttle‘s design concept. Late in the 97 98 Ibid. Stoff quotes the Grumman Plane News article in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 15, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 448 summer, Gavin received a reply to his mid-July correspondence to Dale Myers that gave him some hope that his company would be permitted to compete for the primary Shuttle contract. Myers informed Gavin that NASA might hold an open competition to determine additional testing efforts not covered by the Phase B contractors; that decision would be finalized near the end of September.99 He noted that, ―These comments, which I hope will help clarify our intent on your Phase A effort, are not intended in any way to downgrade the significance of the study which you are performing.‖100 Historian Josh Stoff‘s assessment of Grumman‘s continued participation in the Shuttle developmental program states: Grumman was selected so that no promising concepts would be overlooked and in order to develop novel approaches to help solve the costing dilemma. As it turned out, Grumman played a major role in cutting the development costs and in re-shaping shuttle design. From the Grumman/Boeing team came a sterling influence on the whole concept, affecting not only the smaller contract studies but also the design philosophies of both Rockwell and McDonnell-Douglas. The results were major program changes and eventually the Shuttle was transformed into a very different vehicle from the one considered at the outset of Phase B.101 By the end of 1970, several high-ranking NASA officials had visited Bethpage, and had indicated that they were, according to Stoff, ―impressed by the project.‖ Some of these visitors included Dr. George Low, Acting Administrator for NASA; Dr. Kurt Debus, 99 Dale D. Myers to J. G. Gavin, Jr., 2 September 1970, ―NASA Correspondence,‖ Box ―Joe Gavin LM2,‖ Sect. A-91, NGHC. 100 101 Ibid. Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 14, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 449 Director of the Kennedy Space Center; and Neil Armstrong, former Apollo 11 Astronaut and then Deputy Associate Administrator for Aeronautics at the time.102 Jobs and the Politics of the Space Shuttle By the beginning of 1971, despite the fact that NASA was closing in on a single set of design characteristics, the future of the Space Shuttle remained an uncertainty; President Richard Nixon had still not signed off on the program. 103 With the Vietnam War 102 Ibid., 23. As T. A. Heppenheimer relates, when Grumman began its ―Alternative A‖ studies, it was considering 29 different designs in three different categories: ―two-stage fully reusable, reusable orbiter with expendable booster, and reusable orbiter with expendable propellant tankage.‖ In an effort to investigate all of these alternatives properly, the company actually supplemented NASA‘s funding of the studies with some of its own money; it figured correctly that the ―Alternative A‖ designs would play an important role in the Shuttle‘s final design. Grumman‘s Manager of the project, Lawrence Mead, favored the two-stage fully reusable vehicle overall, but he knew it would cost too much so he tried to balance designs with cost effectiveness. Eventually, the company decided to go with an expendable-tank version of the Shuttle. NASA liked the design and told Grumman to continue its studies by comparing its vehicle with the fully-reusable versions engineered by other companies. This developmental path allowed designers to whittle the Shuttle‘s size and weight down considerably—a major key to the Shuttle‘s development, particularly in regards to the overall cost. Heppenheimer notes that Grumman‘s $1.85 billion projected peak funding level for the Shuttle ―was a long way from OMB‘s requirement of $1 billion. Nevertheless, it was $350 million closer to this goal than the fully-reusable design. Moreover, in a brilliant example of having one‘s cake and eating it, Grumman proposed that the expendable tankage would actually reduce the cost per flight.‖ In sum, while Grumman‘s partially expendable design was expensive, it was still the best all-around concept NASA had at the time given all of the major design factors. For more on these issues, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 337-338 and 341. 103 On January 19 and 20, 1971, NASA and DoD officials meet in Williamsburg, VA, ―to determine a single set of design characteristics for the space shuttle.‖ The DoD wanted the vehicle to have a large payload, and it got its wish. It also wanted the Shuttle to have a 1,500 mile cross-range capability so that it could land anywhere in the US. These cross-range capabilities took into consideration the Earth‘s rotation. In other words, although the US is approximately 3,000 miles from the East Coast to the West Coast, the Shuttle, moving at speed, and including the Earth‘s rotation, would only have to fly some 1,500 miles to change its landing spot from Cape Kennedy in FL to Edwards Air Force Base in California. These design changes meant that vehicle would have to sport a delta wing. Grumman had not contemplated that type of wing in its shuttle designs up to this point, so the company‘s engineers had to start redesigning the vehicle with the new requirements. As T. A. Heppenheimer notes about the meeting, because of the Air Force‘s leading political clout on the project, and its much larger budget than NASA‘s, ―the Williamsburg agreement resembled a treaty between a superpower and a small nation.‖ For these quotes, and more details on these points, see and compare Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 24, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 233. 450 going full tilt and many Americans concerned about increased government spending during a period of rising inflation, Nixon had to consider whether the Shuttle represented a luxury the nation could afford.104 The U.S. had already achieved its goal of landing a man on the Moon, and many in government began to question whether the Shuttle was something Americans would embrace. Exacerbated by the nation‘s severe budget crisis during the recession of the early 1970s, political doubts threatened the Shuttle program. Its projected price tag keep rising considerably each month.105 Despite this uncertainty, the space agency moved forward with plans to bring the program to fruition and Grumman kept pushing toward its dream of winning the contract. On January 29, 1971, several key NASA personnel again visited the Bethpage company to review its Space Shuttle activity. They showed a particular interest in the firm‘s external hydrogen tank configuration. It seemed the leading design favored by NASA engineers and planners, providing yet another reason for Grumman‘s confidence in its Shuttle designs as the company began preparing for the next phase in the developmental process. 106 NASA planned to announce the final contract‘s RFP sometime around the end of September 1971, or shortly thereafter. The apace agency projected it would issue the winning company a contract sometime between April 1 and July 1, 1972.107 104 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 26, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 105 Ibid., 27. 106 Ibid., 27-28. 107 Ibid., 29. 451 But the Shuttle remained in political jeopardy. In early June 1971 during federal budget discussions some members of the U.S. House of Representatives tried to cut $125 million of the Shuttle‘s 1972 developmental funds; fortunately for NASA, Congressional supporters of the space program beat down the measure. Again in July, other members tried to axe the Shuttle totally from NASA‘s 1972 budget, not just once, but twice; once again, friends of the program came to its rescue.108 Further complicating matters, NASA and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) disagreed about the amount of money to allocate for the Shuttle. OMB had always viewed the Shuttle unfavorably, because it felt that the program was too expensive and not a national priority. At the reduced expenditure levels that the OMB wanted, NASA would have only been able to build the Shuttle‘s orbiter, but not its boosters.109 As one NASA engineer described it, the ―bead pushers [referring to the beads on an abacus] were trying to design the Shuttle for NASA.‖110 These political realities pressed NASA to ask its contractors to find various lower cost Shuttle options.111 108 Representative Bella S. Abzug, a Democrat representing Manhattan, was one of the most vocal critics of the space program, particularly the Shuttle. During the summer of 1971, she tried to amend the Space Authorization Bill so that the Shuttle received no funding. She could not fathom spending money on space when disease, hunger, and poor housing still persisted. Friends of NASA held her amendment off. For more on this issue, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 47, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. In the Senate, Walter Mondale, a Democrat from Minnesota became the most outspoken opponent of the Shuttle Program. He referred to the project as a ―boondoggle.‖ For more information, see ibid., 48. 109 T. A. Heppenheimer notes that in May 1971 the OMB proposed limiting NASA‘s spending to $3.2 billion over the following five years. For a more thorough discussion of the OMB‘s views of the Shuttle, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, x, 256, 267-274, and 331. 110 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 46, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 111 Ibid., 45. 452 By August 1971, some aspects of the program started to take on the air of political favoritism and pork-barreling. U.S. Representative William R. Cotter (D-Conn) requested an immediate report from NASA on the role that Dale Myers, NASA‘s Associate Administrator, had played in helping North American Rockwell secure a $500 million contract for the Space Shuttle‘s engine. The contract was the largest in NASA history (and incidentally, had been a highly sought after prize, particularly by a company in Cotter‘s Connecticut district); Myers had worked as a North American Rockwell vice president before taking a position at NASA in 1969. In an attempt to support his accusations of impropriety, Cotter cited a four-page memo from the California Space Shuttle Task Force that urged people invested in bringing the Shuttle to California to let President Nixon and his aides know their opinions. Cotter interpreted the document as ―a blueprint for arm-twisting.‖112 This California lobbying group would also cause problems for Grumman the following year; it became one of the main players in the fight to secure the Shuttle contract, but for the West Coast. 113 While Congress continued to debate the efficacy of the Shuttle throughout the summer of 1971, NASA and contract engineers concentrated on the final design of the vehicle. The designers worked on refining the program throughout most of the rest of the year. One of the first notable design changes came in July when NASA gave Grumman and the three other major contractors extensions to polish their concepts for the 112 Historian Joshua Stoff pulled Cotter‘s quotes form the August 14, 1971 issue of the Long Island Daily News. For more information on this subject, see ibid., 47-48. 113 Ibid., 47-48. 453 program.114 By mid-August, NASA, DoD, the Space Shuttle Panel of the President‘s Science Advisory Committee, and several contractors met in Woods Hole, Massachusetts and agreed that the vehicle would have one single expendable external fuel tank.115 The new design drastically cut the weight of the Shuttle and reduced the vehicle‘s cargo bay to 15 x 60 feet.116 To allow engineers to respond to these changes and perfect the Shuttle‘s launch modes, NASA issued a second Phase B extension to extend into the new year.117 Ultimately, in November, Grumman and NASA reached an agreement about the exact design the company should pursue.118 In essence, by this time, most people who had been 114 On July 1, 1971, NASA gave Phase B contract extensions of four months to Rockwell, McDonnell-Douglas, Grumman/Boeing, and Lockheed. On the 29th of that month, Grumman and Boeing gave their joint one month alternative shuttle concept update at MSC in Houston. For more details, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 30-31, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 115 The President‘s Science Advisory Committee made up the bulk of the panel at Woods Hole. Alexander Flax, President of the Institute for Defense Analyses (a Pentagon think tank) chaired the entire panel. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 39, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 362-363. 116 These refinements ruled out Grumman‘s H-33 model, which would have required two external LH2 tanks and internal LOx tanks (this is Stoff‘s emphasis). For more details, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 39, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 117 NASA issued the second extension on October 7. It was supposed to end on February 28, 1972, but could have been extended until April 30, if necessary. Rockwell, McDonnell-Douglas, the Grumman/Boeing Team, and Lockheed all received these extensions. For more details, see ibid., 40. 118 Stoff has noted that ―On November 16, 1971, Grumman and NASA agreed on a Definition of Space Shuttle Program Study. ‗The major study activity will be to define the Shuttle systems consisting of the MarkI/MarkII Orbiter with either of the two boosters on a parallel basis. Upon system selection by the NASA, work will be discontinued on all but a single system design to enable concentration of the remaining effort on the preferred design‘ Thus, the mandate of the study was to fully define a new orbiter configuration and examine the alternative boosters.‖ Stoff cites the Definition of Space Shuttle Program, NASA MSC #03820, NASA Contract 9-11160 MOD, November, 1971, 1-4. For more on this subject see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 41, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 454 involved in the design process, including contractors, agreed that Grumman‘s concept—a lightweight expendable tank with two reusable solid-propellant rockets mounted on it and a separate reusable orbiter—was the best design, given all of the Shuttle‘s different requirements, from engineering factors to overall cost.119 By late 1971, the Bethpage manufacturer stood ready to submit its final proposal with confidence, but a major stumbling block remained: President Nixon had still not approved the program. In November 1971, the White House Staff was split over the Shuttle. Influenced by OMB‘s arguments about its cost and low priority, some wanted to cancel the program.120 Others, like Chief Domestic Advisor John Ehrlichman and staffer Jonathan Rose, realized the important role that the Shuttle would play in putting people back to work, especially in the hard-hit aerospace industry. On November 22, the subject of unemployment was magnified when NASA Administrator James Fletcher promised the White House ―a direct employment of 8,800 by the end of 1972, and 24,000 by the end of 1973,‖ if the Shuttle was approved.121 Rose, particularly concerned about the issue of California‘s unemployment, paid careful attention to Fletcher‘s projection. 122 As Ehrlichman recalled in 1983, the White House realized that the Shuttle might be used to political advantage by putting people in key states back to work. Ehrlichman described job growth in these states as ―a very important consideration in Nixon‘s mind… [W]hen you 119 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 343, 345-346, and 374-375; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 256-257. 120 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 381. 121 Ibid., 414. 122 Ibid., 382-383 and 414. 455 look at unemployment numbers, and you key them to the battleground states, the space program has an importance out of proportion to its budget.‖ 123 Congress had killed the aerospace industry‘s other dream project, the Supersonic Transport (SST) plane, earlier in the year, and the loss of jobs associated with it helped sway the White House toward finally supporting the Shuttle.124 With the death of the SST, the aerospace industry ―lost something of its reputation as a recipient of undeserved largesse,‖ as historian T. A. Heppenheimer has noted.125 He suggests that fact, coupled with the reality of high unemployment, ―made it political feasible to support the Shuttle, not with interim funding from one year to the next, but as a long-term national effort.‖126 In early December, President Nixon privately endorsed the Shuttle.127 He had always had mixed feelings about the space program, because it was associated in the public‘s mind with Democrats Kennedy and Johnson. But Nixon came to believe that the Shuttle—and its associated jobs—would become his space program legacy, and he liked 123 Heppenheimer quotes from an Ehrlichman transcript from May 6, 1983. For more details, see ibid., 414-415. 124 The White House also decided to support the Shuttle because of the lack of any other serious national technological systems proposed at the time (besides the SST). In 1971, the Nixon Administration had put together the New Technology Opportunities Program (NTOP). The NTOP had asked 15 different agencies for proposals on how to get science and technology to work together to help advance the nation. The administration wanted the proposals by the end of the year for inclusion in the FY 1973 budget. One proposal that came into the NTOP called for a full-scale, high-speed rail transport in the Northeast. Other than the rail program, however, the NTOP never really received any seriously viable proposals. The NTOP was dead by the end of the year. The Shuttle consequently garnered Nixon‘s focus and approval. For more about the NTOP, see ibid., 393-395. 125 Ibid., 293. 126 Ibid., 293, 329-330 and 414-415. 127 Ibid., 386. 456 that idea. Ironically, even though the OMB had been against the Shuttle almost every step of the way, agency head George P. Schultz helped convince the President to approve.128 Originally, Nixon had leaned toward the OMB‘s recommendation for a downsized version, about $4-5 billion dollars over eight years, or about half the investment NASA wanted. 129 Once the President had decided to build the vehicle, however, he let NASA determine the final configuration and size, within reason. Because years of OMB trimming had already downsized the designs, the Space Agency had few options left. NASA did, however, make sure the final Shuttle design had a bigger cargo bay than the OMB-influenced version, something that the Air Force had demanded throughout the Shuttle‘s development.130 On January 5, 1972, Nixon officially announced his approval of the Space Shuttle Program from the ―Western‖ White House in San Clemente, California, reflecting the political significance of the decision.131 Fletcher and NASA Deputy Administrator George Low, who had played an important role in the Shuttle‘s development, witnessed the statement first hand.132 In his speech, the President stressed the civilian and reusable aspects of the Shuttle. He spoke of ―an entirely new type of space transportation system designed to help transform the space frontier of the 1970s into familiar territory, easily 128 Ibid., 390. 129 Ibid., 386 and 400. 130 On December 11, 1971, NASA Administrator James Fletcher learned that Nixon had approved the OMB‘s version of the Shuttle. Fletcher made sure that he fought for his version of the vehicle, even if it just meant a larger cargo bay. For more details, see ibid., 400-415. 131 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 48, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 410-411. 132 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 410-412. 457 accessible for human endeavor in the 1980s and ‗90s.‖133 He projected that it would ―revolutionize transportation into near space, by routinizing it.‖134 And he emphasized that ―it will go a long way toward delivering the rich benefits of practical space utilization and the valuable spinoffs from space efforts into the daily lives of Americans and all people.‖ 135 In short, the Space Shuttle would transform the lives of ordinary Americans, but it seemed no one more so than the aerospace workers who would build the Shuttle and add on to it in the future. The Space Shuttle guaranteed continued work in an industry that had promised the Moon and beyond, as well as a lifetime of employment. Within a few days of the President‘s announcement, as many had predicted, the Shuttle‘s political ramifications came to the forefront. On January 9 the New York Times reported that ―lucrative contracts are expected to be awarded this summer in the midst of a Presidential campaign in which unemployment and the economy will be issues. At least half of the Shuttle jobs are likely to go to California, which has a high rate of unemployment and which is a pivotal state in the election.‖136 The Fort Wayne JournalGazette published an even more sharply focused commentary about the high stakes involved, particularly for the companies who would win or lose the bid. The newspaper observed that 133 T. A. Heppenheimer quotes a great deal of the President‘s speech, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 412. 134 Ibid. 135 Ibid., 412-413. 136 Stoff quotes the New York Times article in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 49, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 458 the nation‘s major aerospace contractors are locked in a fierce financially crucial struggle to get a piece of the action. Winners will share in a contract that could be worth $6 Billion or more during the development and testing phases and rewards eventually could come to $14 Billion. The losers face certain layoffs, possible corporate reorganizations—or worse. ―Some companies, if they lose, will probably drop out of the space business,‖ said one aerospace executive here recently. 137 On March 17, 1972, NASA released the final RFP for the Space Shuttle.138 The space agency invited Grumman, as well as many other companies, to officially submit a proposal.139 NASA told the company that the most important factors would be the strength and soundness of a contractor‘s systems engineering and system integration; management approaches and techniques would play a more secondary role in the decisionmaking process. NASA would also strongly consider the cost aspects of the proposal, including projected cost increases. In essence, technical aspects—which included such factors as subsystems engineering, system engineering and integration, and manufacturing, test, and flight test support—were of primary importance in selecting the winning 137 Stoff quotes the March 21, 1972, Journal-Gazette, in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 61 and 77, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 138 Stoff cites the official proposal as ―Request for Proposal—Space Shuttle Program, RFP #9— BC421-67-2-40P, NASA MSC, Houston, March 17, 1972.‖ Grummanite Tom Kelly, the Chief Engineer of the LM Program, recalled that companies had sixty days to prepare their proposals. Submissions had a limit of 4,000 pages of technical and managerial information, but could have unlimited data on the financial aspects of the program. For more details on these issues, see and compare Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 54, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 428; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 257-258. 139 On March 15, right before NASA submitted the final RFP, it announced that the Shuttle would not use a solid fuel rocket booster. This move cut Boeing out of the process as they company had based its design around such a system. Grumman, therefore, submitted its own proposal. For more details, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 49-50, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 459 proposal. The management aspects—which included organization, key personnel and related experience, management approaches and techniques, and procurement approaches and techniques—would play a much more secondary role.140 Congressional funding for the Shuttle lagged behind NASA‘s release of the RFP. The U.S. House of Representatives did not officially authorize the $3.4 billion for the final research and design of the Shuttle until April 20 when it voted 277 to 60 to approve the matter.141 Despite the general approval of the program, some continued to criticize the Shuttle, however. Although Democratic Representative Bella Abzug represented New York, she sought to kill a program that could have helped one of her state‘s major contractors—Grumman.142 She insisted that she did not understand how Congress could continue to ―allow NASA to drain our resources by shooting hardware into space.‖143 Democratic Senator Walter Mondale, the program‘s most outspoken opponent agreed and tried to rally the Senate against it.144 He argued that it would cost much more than NASA said it would. He also noted that NASA had originally designed the Shuttle to work in tandem with the Space Station, which Congress was still debating. Mondale therefore 140 Ibid., 55-56. 141 Ibid., 50-51. 142 Ibid., 51. 143 The Abzug quote is from the New York Times, April 21, 1972. Josh Stoff quotes the newspaper in ibid. 144 Mondale had long been a critic of the program. He had renewed his fervor against the project shortly after President Nixon announced that he had approved the Shuttle. Some other major NASA and Shuttle opponents included Senators William Proxmire and William Fulbright. For more details, see and compare ibid; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 183-185. 460 questioned the logic of approving only part of NASA‘s Shuttle/Space Station package when another part of it might not receive a go-ahead.145 Furthermore, some in Congress had just tired of the space program; after the Apollo 11 Moon landing, people just felt, as space historian T. A. Heppenheimer put it: ―been there, done that.‖146 Another Democrat, Senator William Proxmire, an ally of Mondale‘s, stressed that each Apollo flight had cost as much as to $400 million, an amount that could house about a million people. 147 Nevertheless, despite Mondale‘s and Proxmire‘s best attempts, the Senate approved funding on May 11 by a vote of sixty-four to twenty-two.148 Within days of the Senate‘s vote, Grumman submitted its final Shuttle design to NASA; the Bethpage company‘s proposal consisted of nine volumes.149 Throughout the next several weeks, more than four-hundred NASA engineers and managers evaluated Grumman‘s submission, along with those of the other major shuttle contract 145 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 51-52, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 146 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 186. 147 Ibid. 148 Ibid.; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 51-52, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A98, NGHC. 149 Stoff cites Grumman‘s final proposal as ―Request for Space Shuttle Program,‖ Grumman Aerospace Corporation, 9 Volumes, Response to NASA RFP# BC421-67-2-40P, May 12, 1972, NASA #72-74.‖ See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 57 and 77, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 461 competitors.150 NASA kept the evaluation process a closely held secret. To ensure the fairness and impartiality of the process, the Space Agency kept each contractor‘s identity hidden from the evaluators.151 As one NASA official noted, ―We‘ve gone way overboard in keeping this thing clean…We have friends and neighbors we can‘t even talk to.‖152 The evaluation board planned to present its conclusions to NASA Administrator James Fletcher on Friday, July 22. Two days later, representatives/engineers from each of the four major firms—Grumman, McDonnell-Douglas, Lockheed, and North American Rockwell—would get ninety minutes to plead their cases at NASA Headquarters.153 Fletcher planned to make the final decision on July 25 and announce the outcome the following day.154 Historian Josh Stoff explained the significance of the decision: ―For the winner it would be a multi-Billion dollar bonanza, for the losers it could mean disaster… 150 Technically, NASA used a two board system to make new contract recommendations to NASA‘s upper management. As Grumman Vice President and former LM Chief Engineer Tom Kelly described the situation, two executive groups, the NASA Source Evaluation Board (SEB), and the Source Selection Authority (SSA), handled the main review process. As he explained: ―In NASA‘s source selection process, the SEB does not recommend a winner but evaluates the relative strengths and weaknesses of the proposals and rank orders them using a weighted scoring system for the technical and management proposals. It also evaluates the relative validity and realism of the cost proposals. The SSA considers the SEB‘s report as a major input to his deliberations but makes the selection based upon the overall best interests of the government.‖ See Kelly, Moon Lander, 274; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 61 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 151 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 61 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 152 Stoff quotes the NASA official in his work. He pulled the statement from the Long Island Daily News, July 23, 1972. See ibid., 61 and 77. 153 Ibid., 61. 154 Ibid. 462 Defense contracts were dwindling and the space program had come to a virtual halt. The Shuttle appeared to be, and was, the last major space contract to be awarded.‖ 155 Unfortunately for Grumman, while NASA evaluators were still poring over the Shuttle proposals, disaster struck. On July 9, Grumman President Lew Evans died of a massive heart attack at the age of fifty-one.156 The company‘s charismatic leader, the Grummanite who had connected the most with NASA leaders, was suddenly gone. As Tom Kelly remembered, Evans‘s death plunged the firm ―into unrelieved shock and gloom. Evans was widely liked and respected at the company, and Grummanites at all levels felt a profound sense of loss.‖157 As with Jake Swirbul‘s death a dozen years earlier, ―thousands paid their respects at his wake and funeral, with the Grumman security guards helping the Nassau County Police direct traffic.‖158 At the funeral, Grumman CEO and Board Chair Clinton Towl, the man who had given the F-14 ―close the doors‖ speech at the Senate hearings some three months earlier, asked Grumman‘s new VP of Finance John C. Bierwirth to scrutinize the F-14‘s financials and report back to him as soon as possible. Towl had left much of Grumman‘s operations and management to Evans while he cared for his wife, who had been ill for quite some 155 Ibid., 60. 156 Thurelsen incorrectly reports Evans‘s age as 52. Evans was born on August 2, 1920. For more information, see and compare Apollo News Reference, Biography, ―Llewellyn J. Evans,‖ accessed 2 January 2011, www.hq.nasa.gov/alsj/LM16_Biographies_B1-4.pdf ; and Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 324. 157 Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. 158 Ibid. 463 time.159 He knew that the Tomcat program was in bad fiscal shape; with Evans gone, he needed to know just how bad. Bierwirth reported the dire news to Towl, who had now become The Grumman Corporation‘s President: ―Give or take two weeks, by the middle of next April you‘re going to be into bankruptcy.‖160 Despite Evans‘s charisma and salesmanship, the fact remained that his F-14 contract had left Grumman in a serious financial situation. Towl and other Grumman managers were counting on the Shuttle to turn things around, but it looked as if Evans‘s death might severely hamper the firm‘s efforts to secure the contract, given the loss of his close relationship with NASA. Grumman VP Tom Kelly, the former Chief Engineer of the LM Program, felt quite secure about the company‘s final proposal, as well as his individual presentation to NASA, during the contract competition; he believed the firm would win the Shuttle. 161 As he recalled, the proposal emphasized Grumman‘s ―systems engineering and program management capabilities, proven on LM and on our major navy aircraft programs.‖162 The technical part of the proposal, although fairly conservative, also built on the ―successful 159 David A. Andelman, ―Troubled Grumman Sees F-14 as Its Key Problem,‖ New York Times, 28 August 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 160 Grummanite George Skurla quotes the conversation in Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 107. 161 While in the process of working on the Shuttle proposal, Kelly had a late-night conversation with two German engineers from Dornier Systems, a company that Grumman had worked with for a while. As Kelly remembered the conversation, ―one of the Germans asked me, ‘What will Grumman get on shuttle if you lose this competition?‘ ‗Nothing,‘ I replied. ‗Surely, with all this talent and expertise, your government would not allow it to go to waste if you lose. What then would you get? What is your loser‘s portion?‘ ‗Nothing,‘ I said again. ‗This competition is totally winner takes all.‘ They both stared at me unbelieving. Then one shook his head slowly and said, ‗Then America is indeed a very rich country. But can even a rich country afford such waste?‘‖ See Kelly, Moon Lander, 260. 162 Quoted in ibid., 259. 464 LM experience.‖163 As he remembered about his oral presentation to NASA, ―my briefing went very well, as did [Grumman Aerospace Division President Joe] Gavin‘s. It seemed to me that I had the audience enraptured; their attention never wavered, and you could see their knowing smiles and glances…. The warm reception made me and many others think we had a winner, and that our orals briefing had hit a home run.‖ 164 As the final decision deadline approached, Kelly thought Grumman would soon be celebrating a major new contract that would keep Grummanites busy for at least the next decade. The Bad News On Wednesday, July 26, 1972, after the New York Stock Exchange closed, NASA announced that it had awarded North American Rockwell (NAR) the Space Shuttle contract, estimated at about $2.6 billion.165 Some Grumman officials learned of the decision only a few hours earlier, when NASA Administrator James Fletcher called company President Clinton Towl and broke the news to him as a courtesy.166 163 Ibid. 164 Ibid., 259-60. 165 Rocketdyne, one of NAR‘s subdivisions, also won the Shuttle‘s main engine contract. That meant that except for some subcontracting work that would be doled out along the way, NAR would build the Shuttle orbiter and its engine, the two most significant contracts of the program. The agreement‘s total worth is noted in William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. For information about the announcement about the contract award, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 61 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and ―Caso to Aid Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. For information about the Shuttle‘s main engine contract, see Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 434. 166 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 432; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 62 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 465 Grummanites were shocked and demoralized. For several days after the announcement, matters grew incrementally worse for Grummanites. The day after NASA‘s announcement, the company‘s stock took an immediate tumble. Grumman‘s shares became the ninth most actively traded security of the day. North American Rockwell‘s stock, on the other hand, rose proportionally about the same amount that Grumman lost.167 For Grummanites, most of whom had participated in profit-sharing through a stock program, the stock‘s plunge did not bode well. Then, on Friday and Saturday, employees started to learn about the possibility of layoffs. Some of the projected downsizing information came from inside the company, while other pieces of the story came from the media. J. Kriklava, one of the company‘s night guards, became one of the first employees outside of management to learn about the situation. Just a little bit after midnight on Friday the 28th, a UPI reporter telephoned Kriklava looking for a comment about an article that would be appearing in the morning‘s New York Times. The story would report that more than 1,500 employees would face layoffs, two-hundred of whom would receive the axe in about three weeks. Kriklava, not a company spokesperson, passed the inquiry on to his superiors who sent it on to the Public Relations Office.168 167 William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. 168 The phone call came in at 12:25 AM. For more information, see ―Special Report—Grumman Aerospace Corporation, Guard Headquarters,‖ Guard J. Kriklava to B. A. Hill, 28 July 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 466 While some cautionary stories about the stability of Grumman‘s workforce started to appear in the New York Times and other papers, managers inside the company tried to reassure employees that Grumman would do everything possible to keep them on the job, even though most of the workers knew that the company would have to let some of them go. In an early attempt to counter the Times article, Grumman Aerospace President Joe Gavin posted a message on the company‘s bulletin boards on Friday the 28th. Speculating hopefully about how to save jobs, Gavin‘s post explained: I‘m sure that everyone at Grumman feels as I do— extremely disappointed—that NASA did not select us as prime contractor on the Space Shuttle Program. We worked long and hard on the project; we submitted a strong proposal; and we were eager to build on the success we have already demonstrated with the Lunar Module and Orbiting Astronomical Observatory. . . . The NASA decision to select North American will cause some personnel reductions at Grumman. Initially that will amount to several hundred. As for the future, any further reductions will depend on the rapidity with which we can get Shuttle subcontracting work in-house.169 Grumman‘s campaign for Shuttle subcontracting work began almost immediately after the loss of the primary contract. As Gavin and others knew very well, if Grumman wanted to avoid massive layoffs, it needed to secure a significant portion of the vehicle‘s subcontracting as soon as possible. The company got some quick help with the issue from several politicians and local officials. Senator James Buckley, for example, started pressing to assure that New York and Grumman received a solid share of the work. NASA and the 169 ―News Board,‖ 28 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Papers, Articles‖ Folder, Box 12 ―Space Shuttle Newsclippings, Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. Also quoted in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 69, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 467 Nixon Administration also wanted the jobs spread around the country; the space agency expected at least 50% of the work to go to subcontractors.170 North American Rockwell (NAR) even went so far as to promise Grumman ―substantial‖ work.171 Grumman hoped to get $1 billion in subcontracting.172 On August 3, just a week after the final award of the Shuttle contract, some of NAR‘s top officials and technical representatives flew cross-country to Bethpage to discuss the possibility of subcontracting work with Grumman. Although the meetings were just preliminary, many Grummanites were heartened by the discussions. Still, NAR officials let Grumman know that they planned to meet with other companies on their way back to California, namely McDonnell-Douglas and Lockheed.173 Although a lot of subcontracting work would be necessary, there were also several companies vying for the 170 William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. Some estimates suggested that up to 53% of the work on the Shuttle would be subcontracted out to firms other than NAR. For more information, see ―Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 171 William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. North American Rockwell promised various states a certain amount of work. Some believed that the Shuttle contract contained an implicit demand that a certain amount of subcontracting would go to each state. New York seemed as if it would get a substantial proportion of the work, with Grumman receiving the lion‘s share. For more information on these issues, see David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and ―Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 172 New York supposedly would receive $305 million in subcontracts, with Grumman getting the largest share of that money. However, it was far from the $1 billion company officials were predicting, hoping for, and projecting. For more information, see and compare ibid. 173 Arthur Jackman, ―Grumman: Glimmer of Hope,‖ Long Island Commercial Review, 4 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 468 money, and even though the primary contract had gone to a California firm, it appeared that NAR wanted to keep much of the funding in its home state. Newspapers and periodicals claimed that employment in California‘s aerospace industry would increase by some 20,000 jobs due to Shuttle subcontracting.174 Much to Grumman‘s dismay, it quickly learned that New York State would only get about $300 million in subcontracting, far from the $1 billion that Grumman officials had been hoping for—and predicting and projecting.175 Despite NAR‘s assurances of future subcontracting—albeit at a much smaller level than the Bethpage company had calculated—Grumman announced rather quickly that it would have to let some workers go. One of the same newspaper articles that carried the story of NAR‘s promise of subcontract work also noted that Grumman would issue ―several hundred‖ pink slips.176 During the first week of August, more than three-hundred Grummanites, mostly engineers who had worked on the company‘s Shuttle proposal, lost their jobs.177 A few weeks later, somewhere between 1,500 and 2,000 employees got the 174 ―Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. At the time, California‘s aerospace industry employed about 448,500 workers, far from its December 1967 record of approximately 616,000 employees. 175 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and ibid. Joe Gavin thought they should receive about $1 billion in subcontract work on the Shuttle. For more details, see Percy Watson, ―Caso and Klein to push case for Grumman sub-contracts,‖ Long Island Press, 8 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 176 William Butler, ―Grumman See Layoffs in Hundreds,‖ Sunday News, 30 July 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. 177 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; 469 axe.178 Most of the layoffs occurred in Bethpage, but employees at some of the company‘s other facilities, including Cape Kennedy and the Manned Space Flight Center in Houston, also lost their jobs. Engineers made up the greatest percentage of the reductions, but the layoffs reached every level all the way down to some maintenance workers.179 The reductions had a cascading effect on an almost daily basis. If Grumman did not shore up some Shuttle subcontracting work in a timely manner, more layoffs might follow. And the loss of jobs affected more than Grummanites. According to union officials, for every individual Grumman employee laid off four Long Islanders would lose their jobs.180 From the opposite perspective, some estimated that if Grumman had secured Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; ―Grumman Corp. lays off 300,‖ Long Island Press, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and ―3 Bleak Years of Layoffs on LI,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, 2-2, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI. 178 Sources vary as to the number released. The Long Island Press, the Long Island Commercial Review, and Josh Stoff all put forth the 1,500 employee statistic. Newsday said the number was about 1,700, while the Long Island Daily News said the statistic was as high as 2,000 workers. For more information, see and compare Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Arthur Jackman, ―Grumman: Glimmer of Hope,‖ Long Island Commercial Review, 4 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 19691972,‖ November 1983, 69, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; ―Caso Trying to Help Grumman,‖ Newsday, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and William Butler, ―Looking to Agnew on Grumman,‖ Daily News (Long Island,) 7 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 179 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and ―Grumman Corp. lays off 300,‖ Long Island Press, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A98, NGHC. 180 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC. 470 the Shuttle bid it would have employed an additional 10,000 Long Islanders over the following decade.181 In 1967, Grumman employed approximately 36,000 workers; with the loss of the Shuttle contract, employment sank to less than 24,000 workers. 182 McDonnell-Douglas also had to reduce its workforce seriously because of its loss of the Shuttle contract. The Los Angeles-based company expected to cut about 12% of its workforce, or some 92,000 employees, over the ―next‖ seventeen months, mostly in Southern California.183 NAR, on the other hand, expected to increase its workforce by more than 9,000 workers over the next few years.184 By mid-August, the issue of Shuttle subcontracting overshadowed Grumman‘s renegotiation of the F-14 debacle. On August 21, Rear Admiral Leonard Snead, the Navy‘s F-14 Project Officer, announced that he had decided to put the Tomcat contract 181 Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 182 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and ―Grumman Corp. lays off 300,‖ Long Island Press, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A98, NGHC. 183 About 1200 McDonnell Douglas employees at the company‘s St. Louis facilities would also lose their jobs, but the firm expected a quick increase of about 5,000 jobs in that metropolitan area the following year because it had secured work on the F-15 contract. See ―NAR to Alter Shuttle Subpacts Within 90 Days,‖ Electronic News, 7 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 184 NAR expected to hire some 9,000 workers by 1975/76 to accommodate the Shuttle build-up. About 2,000 to 2,500 jobs would open up in the first year alone. For more details see and compare David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Lays Off 300 After Failing to Win Contract for Space Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 2 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release,‖ ―Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; and Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 471 renegotiation process on hold for three months to wait and see whether Grumman would obtain any subcontracting work from NAR. Snead acknowledged that he had calculated that Shuttle subcontracting work would help the company with its overhead, which would help spread out the burden of the F-14‘s growing costs.185 Once again it seemed that the F-14 situation continued to affect Grumman‘s ability to secure any work or money related to the new Shuttle program. By late summer 1972, the future looked quite bleak for many Grummanites, especially given the firm‘s mounting fiscal challenges. In August, the company released its earnings report, which revealed that profits had dropped considerably underlining the dire need to tap into some of that ancillary Shuttle work.186 Yet NAR did not expect to award any subcontracting until February 1973 at the very earliest; NAR expected to take at least three months to prepare the subcontracting agreements before submitting them to NASA. It then seemed likely that the Space Agency would need at least another three months to review the awards and give them its final approval. So, in a best case scenario, 185 Chapin A. Day, ―Grumman Unsure of F-14 Delay,‖ Newsday, 22 August 1972, Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 186 During the first half of 1971, Grumman‘s profits totaled $9,397,057, compared to $5,716,031 during that same period in 1972. At the end of the first half of 1971, the company‘s earnings per a share stood at a $1.35 on the U.S. Stock Exchange. A year later, earnings per share had fallen to 84 cents. For more details on this subject, see and compare George DeWan, ―Threat to 1,350 Grumman Jobs: SpaceShuttle subcontracts would come too late, company says,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI; and ―Grumman‘s Net Drops Sharply,‖ New York Times, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 472 Grummanites would have to wait another half year before they learned if they would participate in the program.187 Even as company officials continued to press for work on the Shuttle, several Grummanites questioned NASA‘s wisdom in awarding the contract to NAR. That decision had really galled many of them. They remembered that during the Apollo 13 flight it was Grumman‘s Lunar Module that had saved the astronauts from disaster. Grumman engineer Joe Hyde bluntly recalled: ―There was an explosion in the service module that [NAR] Rockwell built. If it wasn‘t for the Lunar Module we built right here in Bethpage, we would have had some dead spacemen on our hands.‖188 Newsday reported a similar sentiment from Grummanite Joe Nieves who insisted: ―NASA should have put the emphasis on Grumman‘s past performance. It‘s Rockwell that‘s had the foul-ups. It‘s Big G who‘s pulled them out.‖189 Another Grumman engineer expressed the puzzlement of many: ―Would you believe that a company that put men on the moon, repeatedly and with such perfection, would be in the position that it is in today?‖190 As Tom Kelly bluntly 187 George DeWan, ―Threat to 1,350 Grumman Jobs: Space-Shuttle subcontracts would come too late, company says,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‖ LISI. 188 Stoff quotes Hyde in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 70, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. For other incidents of Grummanites being shocked and angered about the company‘s loss of the contract, in general, see Stoff, 62 and Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 189 Stoff quotes the July 27 Newsday article that contains Nieves‘s quote in Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 71, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 190 The engineer‘s quote is in the July 27 edition of Newsday. For more information, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 70, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 473 noted, ―NASA‘s decision left me disillusioned with the agency and with the government‘s procurement process. Past quality and performance seemed to count for little, even on a high-stakes, world-renowned program like Apollo.‖191 Adding insult to injury, even after Grumman had lost the Shuttle to NAR, the West Coast company requested that some of the Grummanites who had worked on Grumman‘s proposal come to California to help NAR with some design challenges it was having with the vehicle‘s final configuration, particularly the external tanks. Officially, NAR subcontracted Grumman for the use of these engineers‘ services. But while some Grummanites looked to this talent loan as affirmation of their ability to get the job done, others could not view the situation without a certain degree of contempt. By October more than two-hundred Grummanites had gone to the Los Angeles area to assist with the Shuttle program. Although many were not happy about it, the fact that some would have to stay for more than a year to assist with the project meant an extra year of certain employment.192 While some Grummanites fumed about NAR having secured the contract, others looked for answers in a postmortem of some of the engineering and managerial aspects of the company‘s proposal. After all, it was difficult for many Grummanites to understand 191 192 Kelly, Moon Lander, 261. Some also provided wind tunnel testing assistance as well as model design support. For more on this subject, see and compare Press Release, North American Rockwell, El Segundo, CA, 15 September 1972, ―Space Shuttle Info Fr NASA Subcontractors,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; David A. Andelman, ―Space Contracts Given Grumman,‖ New York Times, 17 September 1972, ―Space Shuttle Info Fr NASA Subcontractors,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999, in the author‘s possession; Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000, in the author‘s possession; and Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 474 why the company had lost the contract, especially given, as historian Josh Stoff has concluded: ―Whatever design NASA was favoring, Grumman was ready. On the whole, Grumman demonstrated flexibility in a very fluid situation. . . . For Grumman, this contract was far too important for it to overlook any possibilities. Indeed, Grumman was the only company passed by in Phase A to make it to make it to the final round.‖ 193 Company executives were frankly mystified, and the loss set off a round of soul-searching. Industry analysts also tried to dissect the firm‘s setback. 194 Although industry insiders sought a neat explanation, historical analysis suggests that Grumman may have lost it for a variety of reasons, and not because of a single misstep. From a technical perspective, Grumman‘s and NAR‘s Shuttle designs appeared pretty evenly matched. NASA liked both companies and their work because each firm had very recent, solid experience with the Apollo Program; Grumman had built the LM, while NAR had constructed both the Command and Service Modules.195 When NASA evaluated the two companies‘ proposals side-by-side, Grumman seemed to have a slight edge with weight and load estimates, while NAR, ironically, seemed a bit better with the vehicle‘s electrical design (light, heat, power and oxygen), even though the company‘s faulty 193 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 72, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. Long Island Press reporter Austin H. Perlow also felt that the Bethpage firm should have won the competition. He noted: ―Grumman had every reasonable expectation of winning on the basis of its sterling contributions to the Apollo Program and its outstanding presentation on the space shuttle.‖ See Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 194 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 72, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 195 Ibid., 64. Stoff cites Newsday, October 23, 1972. 475 electrical system had caused the tragic Apollo 1 fire in 1967.196 Grumman also led the contract competition with the Shuttle‘s overall structural concept, while NAR did a slightly better job with the launch complex swing arms and the vehicle‘s large cryogenic tanks.197 Overall, the two companies seemed tied when it came to the technical part of the proposal. In terms of management, both firms also seemed fairly evenly matched, but NAR appeared to score a slight edge over Grumman. Both companies had extensive managerial experience during the Apollo Program and had long proven track records. But NASA believed that Grumman favored too quick a build-up with Shuttle personnel, whereas NAR took a more gradual approach to avoid too many early expenditures.198 Some also speculate that NASA lost confidence in Grumman with Evans‘s death, fearing his loss was a major blow to the strength of Grumman‘s managerial team. The firm‘s new Aerospace Corporation President Joe Gavin, who had been the LM‘s Program Manager, did not believe that Evans‘s death had really affected the company‘s managerial strength. 199 Still, 196 After the Apollo 1 fire, NAR logically went the extra mile to make sure its electrical designs led the aerospace industry. For more information, see ibid., 65. 197 See and compare Percy Watson, ―Caso and Klein to push case for Grumman sub-contracts,‖ Long Island Press, 8 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and ibid. Stoff cites the New York Times, 28 July 1972 on this issue. 198 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 63, 65-66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 430-431. 199 David A. Andelman, ―Grumman Explains Loss on Shuttle,‖ New York Times, 8 August 1972, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info: Release‖ folder, Box #12, ―Space Shuttle; Newsclippings, Misc.,‖ Sect A-98, NGHC; Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Percy Watson, ―Caso and Klein to push case for Grumman sub-contracts,‖ Long Island Press, 8 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 476 some critics looked at Gavin as ―an unknown quantity.‖200 Grummanite Tom Kelly believed that ―Evans‘s death was a severe blow to our shuttle proposal. Of all Grumman‘s executives, Lew had established the closest personal rapport with the leaders of NASA, especially Low, Mueller, Gilruth, and Phillips. They trusted him and believed they could count on Grumman to do the right things while he was in charge.‖ 201 Kelly felt that although Gavin ―commanded NASA‘s trust and respect . . . he was not involved in political strategizing to promote the space shuttle program.‖202 Grumman F-14 Program Manager George Skurla also believed that Evans‘s death came at ―the worst possible time.‖203 Another managerial factor stemmed from the relationship that NASA had developed with each of the companies during the Apollo Program; in a strange twist, it appears that although NAR had been mainly responsible for the Apollo 1 disaster, that tragedy had actually helped the California firm and NASA grow closer, while Grumman and the Space Agency continued to work through a sometimes tricky relationship. Grumman designer Bertram Dawkins, who had worked on the LM, noted that after the Apollo 1 fire NASA ―reorganized‖ NAR ―into its own image‖ in an effort to make sure 200 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 201 Kelly, Moon Lander, 258. 202 Ibid. 203 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 42. For another Grummanite‘s view of the role Evans‘s death played in helping to scuttle Grumman‘s Shuttle bid, see Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 477 another disaster did not occur.204 That move allowed NASA to become ―comfortable dealing with them.‖205 On the other hand, although Grumman engineers had felt comfortable working with NASA and had never experienced any major safety issues, some believed that these factors had caused some Grummanites to become overconfident. As Tom Kelly speculated, ―some in the NASA hierarchy may have remembered the dark side of their relationship with Grumman on Apollo, in which Grumman appeared arrogant, holier-than-thou, a loose cannon.‖206 Furthermore, Kelly ―had long observed at meetings that NASA‘s Apollo management seemed more comfortable at North American than at Bethpage, showing closer sharing of viewpoints and preferences and never having to worry about being surprised by its contractor. I believed they considered us to be standoffish and erratic by comparison…It was possible that our hubris and customer neglect were major factors in losing the space shuttle competition.‖ 207 As William Kiesel, one of Grumman‘s fluid power engineers, concluded, ―NASA did not want to work with Grumman Management, on such a large contract.‖208 204 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. 205 Ibid. 206 Kelly, Moon Lander, 261. 207 Ibid. 208 William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. Two other major contractors—Lockheed and McDonnell-Douglas—had also entered the Shuttle contract competition, but they ranked much lower overall than Grumman and NAR. While Lockheed, for example, had a fairly low cost projection (at only $40 million above NAR‘s bid of $2.6 billion), NASA evaluators rejected the company‘s proposal as too unrealistic; the space agency just did not believe that Lockheed could build and maintain its proposed Shuttle design based on its projected budget. The firm also had not had any experience with any major space projects. As a result, Lockheed finished last in the competition. McDonnell-Douglas did not rank much higher. NASA evaluators felt that the company had essentially submitted two separate proposals under the guise of one. One part of the submission had come from McDonnell‘s St. Louis plants, while the other had come from its California 478 Setting aside the technical and managerial aspects of the Shuttle proposals, some Grummanites believed that they had lost the project based simply on cost. The firm had been quite conservative with its estimates and thus its bid represented the highest of the four companies competing for the contract; their F-14 experience had proven that Grumman could only predict the program‘s future costs to a certain extent. For some Grummanites like Joe Gavin, the bid seemed logical and realistic.209 Ultimately managers believed that their projections would protect not only the company‘s finances, but also NASA‘s budget. NAR, on the other hand, had said it could do the job for $2.6 billion, the third lowest bid. Some observers questioned whether the company could really build and maintain the Shuttle for so little. The Economist, for instance, found NAR‘s cost projections ―surprisingly low (and possibly unrealistic).‖210 Most analysts had expected bids to come in at $3.5 billion. And, ultimately, it seemed logical to assume that the five projected Shuttles would cost a little bit over $5 billion to create and operate over the next operations in Los Angeles. The technical plan was also weak and the firm‘s costs were just too high. Overall, the review board felt that McDonnell had tried to win the competition based on its past reputation of work on the Mercury and Gemini programs. As NASA Deputy Administrator George Low noted, the proposal had a general feeling of ―we are a great company and you had better give us the job because we will do the best job for you.‖ McDonnell-Douglas finished a distance third in the competition behind Grumman and NAR. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 63, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and T.A. Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 429-30. Stoff cites Newsday, October 23, 1972 on Lockheed‘s failed bid. For George Low‘s quote, see Heppenheimer, page 30. 209 Gavin also remembered that Grumman had placed the highest bid on the Tomcat contract and still secured the job (although his reasoning might not have been the best example given the issues surrounding the renegotiation of the F-14 contract). See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 63, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 210 ―Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 479 six years.211 Nevertheless, NAR won the contract with a low bid, despite some people‘s reservations about their cost-estimating.212 Shortly after NASA announced the winner of the Shuttle contract, the Space Agency polled the companies that had submitted proposals for the program; NASA wanted to know how the firms felt the competition process had been handled. As NASA Deputy Administrator George Low noted, three out of the four companies ―indicated that this had been the best and fairest competition they had ever participated in.‖213 Whatever the case, overall, most everyone concerned believed that the competition had been handled fairly. Still, recriminations abounded on Long Island. Leaving the actual proposals and final rankings aside, for some Grummanites, politics might have been the main reason that the company had failed to secure the Shuttle contract; in other words, the actions—or perhaps more precisely, the inactions—of some politicians might have been key to Grumman‘s lack of success. For example, Don Samela, a Grumman engineer who had worked on the company‘s proposal, believed that local politicians had not pushed hard 211 For more on this subject, see ibid. 212 As Grummanite Benjamin Beekman, a ―Cognizant Engineer‖ who had worked on the OAOs, the LMs and the Shuttle proposal, bluntly remembered: ―I believe cost was the determining factor. We were all very disappointed since so much effort had been put into our proposal.‖ See Benjamin F. Beekman, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 March 2000, in the author‘s possession. 213 George Low believed that McDonnell-Douglas‘s President Sanford McDonnell, the only person who thought the competition had been unfair, was just bitter and arrogant. Analyzing the situation, Low felt, ―in effect, Sandy McDonnell said that the competition was a fair one if we select McDonnellDouglas, and unfair if we select some else.‖ George Low is quoted in Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 432. Heppenheimer goes into more detail about why McDonnell may have been upset with NASA‘s decision. For more on this subject, see pages 432-434. 480 enough on Grumman‘s behalf during the final decision-making process. Samela analyzed the political situation: Sure I‘m disappointed. I worked on the thing for over two years…. We were sitting around the office talking about who would get the contract—Rockwell or Grumman. Everybody out in California was pulling for this thing. But on Long Island, you could walk down the street and ask someone about the Space Shuttle and they‘d say, ―What Shuttle?‖ We should have gotten Newsday, our Senators and Representatives behind this thing a long time ago.214 In a similar vein, Newsday reported only a few days after Grumman‘s loss of the contract that most of the local politicians, and the community, had failed to push for the Shuttle for Grumman. An industry analyst, for instance, thought that ―on Long Island there was a complete absence of concern‖ about the Shuttle.215 Representative John Wydler (RGarden City), the Chair of the Long Island Space Shuttle Task Force, complained: ―In the aerospace industry these days, it‘s the squeaking wheel that gets the grease…. We didn‘t get too much help from some political people, but also, we didn‘t get it from the whole community. A lot of people just took it far too lightly.‖ 216 Nassau County Executive Ralph G. Caso concurred with most of Wydler‘s assessment and clearly blamed New York‘s and Long Island‘s local and federal representatives for not doing enough to help.217 Some 214 Samuela is originally quoted in Newsday, July 27, 1972. Stoff pulled Samuela‘s remarks from the Newsday article. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 70, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 215 Ibid., 67. 216 Ibid. 217 Ibid. 481 Grummanites, like George Daelemans, who had been a systems engineer on the LM and OAO programs, even went so far as to link the antiwar movement and his company‘s loss of the contract. He suggested that because many people had started to disapprove of America‘s involvement in the Vietnam War, and Grumman was a defense contractor, ―the New York politicians ‗wrote-off‘ Grumman as a valuable asset to the state‘s economy and would have been just as happy to see Grumman leave or collapse.‖218 He concluded that ―the company should have moved to a Southern or Western state where it would have been a major employer.‖219 Others observers placed the political blame for Grumman‘s loss elsewhere—on a more national scale. They wondered whether President Nixon had used the Shuttle contract to his advantage during an election year. Some New Yorkers thought that Nixon had helped the contract go to a California firm—his home state—during the run up to the 1972 presidential election.220 They described the Shuttle as ―the last big award before November,‖ and called it the ―closer.‖221 This notion gained traction in certain parts of the 218 George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 219 Ibid.Grummanite George Melzer, a man who worked as a tool fabricator, also felt that politicians had not worked hard enough on the contract. See George Melzer, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 220 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 67, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 221 RCA Space Systems Marketing Manager Jack Heavey outlined this argument in a letter to Grumman‘s Shuttle Marketing Manager Saul Ferdman. One of Heavey‘s other comments and theories included the notion that Nixon thought giving the award to NAR would help him with the Western labor vote; the President already viewed the Eastern labor vote as lost. Overall, Heavey argues: ―On Monday, 24 July, Nixon wanted NAR. He concluded he had lost New York State and decided to re-enforce the Western States. NASA seemed to want GAC. The Congressional members went strong for Southern 482 country and overseas. The Economist, for example, stated: ―Not surprisingly there are suspicions in New York that the importance of the aerospace industry to California—and of California to President Nixon‘s re-election—had something to do with the choice, although the National Aeronautics and Space Administration insists that this is not so. North American had already won a $450 million contract for the shuttles‘ engines.‖222 At least one American aerospace industry analyst agreed with the assessment that politics had become the primary driver behind the contract decision. He explained: ―I don‘t think the award has anything to do with the managerial efforts of the company or the technological factor…. I think the intention of the administration was to grant the contract to a California company.‖223 Still, he seemed a bit perplexed about the political logic of such a move. He believed that California already stood solidly behind Nixon, whereas New York might have been more in play. He therefore ―thought it would have made better political sense to give the contract to Grumman with big California subcontracts. The award was surprising.‖224 At least one key participant disputes the notion that Nixon controlled the California.‖ It is unclear whether these are theories posited by Heavey or facts obtained by him. For more details, see Jack Heavey to Saul Ferdman, 28 July 1972, ―Notes for Your Post-Mortem Shuttle File,‖ ―JGG Letters—1972 Jun-Aug,‖ Untitled Box, Sect. A-68, NGHC. 222 Actually Rocketdyne, a subdivision of NAR, had won the award. See ―Shuttle Landed,‖ Economist, 5 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 434. 223 Joshua Stoff quotes the industry analyst in his work. He pulled the quote from a July 30, 1972 Newsday article. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 67, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 224 Ibid. 483 contract. According to NASA Administrator James Fletcher, Nixon stayed out of the Shuttle contract decision process. From Fletcher‘s perspective, the White House seemed genuinely indifferent about which company received the award.225 But Grummanites were not convinced. For example, close to thirty years after the final contract decision, many Grummanites remembered the Shuttle award very bitterly. At least half the Grummanites who participated in the survey created for use in this monograph believe that Nixon and party politics had a direct effect on NAR receiving the Shuttle contract.226 When asked why they think Grumman lost the competition, they had some very pointed remarks. OAO engineer Walter Muench, for example, said: ―We did win the competition. President Nixon vetoed it and gave the contract to California.‖ 227 Raymond Sala, a test engineer on the OAO, F-14 and LM programs, simply noted it was 225 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 432. 226 Fifteen out of thirty-one survey respondents cite Nixon and party politics as being a major factor, if not the only factor, in NAR‘s winning of the award. Interestingly, of the fifteen, eleven still went on to vote for Nixon in the 1972 presidential election, and, of those, only six reported being registered Republicans or members of the Conservative Party. Another seven were registered as Democrats, or started the1960s as Democrats but began voting Republican in the 1970s. One of the fifteen was an Independent, and still another only became a U.S. citizen before the 1972 election and does not remember how he voted. Furthermore, one of the die-hard Democrats did not vote for any Presidential candidate after the 1964 election because he did not feel that any were worthy of being President. For more on these issues, see and compare Laurence Van Wallendael, Survey/Questionnaire, 7 February 2000; S. Murray Krameisen, Survey/Questionnaire, 22 November 1999; George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000; Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999; Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000; Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; Michael F. Hlinko, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 December 1999; Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000; N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000; Henry L. Pallmeyer, Survey/Questionnaire, 21 February 2000; Dennis S. Riddle, Survey/Questionnaire, 3 December 1999; Robert Ionescu, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 December 1999; John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000; Daniel J. Carroll, Survey/Questionnaire, 17 November 1999; and Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000. All in the author‘s possession. 227 Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000, in the author‘s possession. 484 ―Politics. We felt cheated and were certain that Nixon interceded.‖228 Raymond Russo, a mechanic and project lead on the LM, concurred with Sala. ―It was a political decision,‖ according to Russo. ―Nixon gave it to his home state because New York did not have enough clout in Washington.‖229 Fritz Blomback had worked on the Shuttle proposal and was one of the Grummanites who eventually went to help NAR with the vehicle‘s final configuration. Blomback noted: ―I can‘t help but think Nixon wanted the state of California pretty bad.‖230 Others accepted that other issues had come into play. Some Grummanites agreed that politics were central to NAR‘s win, but others like OAO and LM systems engineer George Daelemans believed that labor relations influenced the decision. He noted: ―It had to go to a California company with a UNION! My reaction was pure disgust. I had hoped to work on the Shuttle, and [I was] concern[ed] as to what I would be doing after we launched Copernicus [the last OAO space telescope] that August.‖231 LM and OAO structural design engineer N. Roy Tegner saw the situation through a similar class lens, but with a greater emphasis on unemployment. Tegner opined: ―We heard that we were awarded the contract by NASA but [the] White House gave it to NA/R because the aerospace industry was suffering in Cal[ifornia] and needed work.‖232 Another OAO 228 Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 229 Raymond R. Russo, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 230 Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 231 George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 232 N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 485 engineer noted that politics had definitely been the major factor in the award, but suggested that Nixon had given the contract to NAR to spread the work around. He suggested that because Grumman already had the F-14 contract, the President may have concluded that it was California‘s turn to secure the next major aerospace job.233 All in all, John Caruso, a LM and F-14 design engineer, neatly summed up the feelings of many Grummanites: ―We all felt it was a raw deal made by political parties not proposal merits.‖234 On July 31, 1972, Jean Westwood, the Chair of the Democratic National Committee (DNC), helped bolster the theory that President Nixon had assisted in the awarding of the Shuttle to NAR. Five days after NASA‘s Shuttle award announcement, she publicly blamed the President for using the issue as a reelection ploy to help him win California. Westwood, who had only risen to the Chairmanship of the DNC two weeks earlier, issued a press release that not only questioned the ethics of the situation, but also suggested that Nixon‘s move was a form of payback to some of his major political contributors, five of whom happened to be board members of NAR. Westwood urged the Democratic members of Congress to look into the contract award. 235 While some looked to large-scale U.S. political machinations to explain Grumman‘s loss, others believed that some subtler, but perhaps just as potent, political 233 Walter K. Muench, Survey/Questionnaire, 14 August 2000, in the author‘s possession. 234 John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000, in the author‘s possession 235 ―Democrats Link Shuttle Award, NR Contributions to Republican Campaign,‖ Aerospace Daily, 1 August 1972, 163, ―Space Shuttle Correspondence; Grumman Info; Misc; Rockwell Info; Release‖ Folder, Box #12 Space Shuttle; Newsclippings; Misc,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. Westwood is also quoted in Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 427-428. 486 force tipped the scale in NAR‘s favor. Historian Josh Stoff has observed that some felt that Grumman was simply ―outpoliticked‖ by NAR.236 Some suspect that Dale D. Myers—a former NAR executive turned NASA administrator—might have had some important influence on the outcome, despite his comments that the decision was handled in a completely objective manner.237 Myers had served as NAR‘s Program Manager on the Space Shuttle Program until 1970, at which time he joined NASA as the Associate Administrator for Manned Space Flight.238 As part of his duties at the Space Agency, Myers put together the NASA Selection Board that evaluated the final Shuttle proposals. Some Grummanites and other observers consequently felt that he stacked the board with pro-NAR people. Yet historian T. A. Heppenheimer has found that Myers ―picked its members based on their positions within NASA and their responsibilities within the shuttle program; the only non-NASA members were from the Air Force.‖239 Furthermore, NASA Associate Administrator George Low had noted that Myers ―had fully divested himself of all his connections with North American and since this activity is so closely tied to all that he is going to do over the next several years, it was necessary that he should be 236 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 62 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 237 Ibid. 238 For Myers official NASA biography, see ―Dale D. Myers Biography‖ accessed 31 December 2010, http://www.hq.nasa.gov/office/pao/History/Biographies/myers.html. 239 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 428. 487 involved.‖240 Despite such explanations, however, some continued to view Myers‘s role in the Shuttle selection process with suspicion. Some also argue that the politics surrounding the F-14 debacle might have played an important role in Grumman‘s inability to secure the Shuttle contract. During the summer of 1972, while NASA officials were evaluating the final Shuttle bids, Grumman was still locked in heated renegotiation of the Tomcat contract with the Pentagon and Congress. By the time NASA was considering the Shuttle bids, Grumman had been lobbying for over two-and-a-half years to try to get the original F-14 agreement adjusted.241 Because of the Tomcat contract debacle, some contemporaries theorized that the DoD ―strongly pressed NASA for Grumman to first straighten out its F-14 program, rather than take on the new Shuttle program.‖242 For some Grummanites, that idea definitely seemed founded on at least one historical example. Engineer Tom Kelly remembered that the Navy had been objecting to 240 Low is quoted in ibid. 241 In 1972, Grumman told the DoD that it had miscalculated the bid on each of its F-14s by about $2 million. As Josh Stoff puts it: ―Grumman wrote off a $65 million loss on the job in 1971, skipped two dividend periods and threatened to close its doors altogether unless the contract was re-negotiated.‖ For more on these points, see Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. For additional information, see and compare Chaplin A. Day, ―Delay Seen on Grumman Decision,‖ Newsday, 12 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and Percy Watson, ―Caso and Klein to push case for Grumman sub-contracts,‖ Long Island Press, 8 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 242 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. For similar sentiments on this issue, also see Austin H. Perlow, ―LI Will Survive Grumman Crisis: Time Eases Crushing Impact on the Economy,‖ Long Island Press, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 488 having Grumman take on any large-scale non-Navy projects since the early days of the Space Age; he recalled that Grumman had actually won the Mercury Capsule contract, but then the Navy told NASA that it would appreciate it if it would award the contract to another company so that Grumman could concentrate all its efforts on producing the Navy‘s A-6 Intruder and E-2 Hawkeye aircraft.243 Other Grummanites did not think that the F-14 situation worked against the company during its Shuttle bid, however. Joe Gavin believed that people had simply blown the problem out of proportion in an effort to try to understand why that company had not won.244 The role that Grumman‘s F-14 debacle played remains open to debate. Whatever the case, in mid-August 1972, Grumman received a $20 million short-term loan from the Navy to allow it to continue to build Tomcats through the end of the year, at which point the government would renegotiate the contract. Being an election year, politicians wanted to wait until the bitter end before hammering out a new deal.245 243 Kelly relates this story in Kelly, Moon Lander, 11. George Skurla also cites Kelly‘s recollection, however, he also notes that another Grummanite, Saul Ferdman, remembers the Mercury contract competition story a little differently. Ferdman claims that Grumman and McDonnell had actually tied during the competition and that ―the Navy wrote a letter to NASA, stating that Grumman was very healthy (we had just won three major navy contracts), but that it would be appreciated if we weren‘t picked as the Mercury winner.‖ However, Ferdman also suggested that he took the Navy‘s veto power out of the process in future contract bids because ―when the lunar module came along, I saw to it that we wrote a letter first, and no more of that went on.‖ For Ferdman‘s story, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 80-81. 244 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 245 One of the loan‘s stipulations required that Grumman could not pay its shareholders a dividend until the loan had been repaid. For more details, see and compare Proposed News ReleaseAugust 16, 1972,‖ ―Advance payment Proposed News Release‖ Folder,‖ ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; ―Grumman‘s Net Drops Sharply,‖ New York Times, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; Muriel O‘Donnell, ―Grumman Corp: New Govt Loan,‖ Long Island 489 Some scholars and contemporary observers have suggested that NAR may have won the Shuttle because of perceived differences about the two companies‘ equal employment records. Like Grumman, NAR had instituted an affirmative action policy as early as the Kennedy Administration, and in November 1967, the National Urban League had presented NAR with its Equality Opportunity Award because of its outreach to the African-American community.246 Then in 1969, both companies faced very outspoken groups of black workers who charged the companies with racism and demanded more accelerated racial change, mainly in the hiring of more minorities in upper management.247 While both firms tried to increase their minority recruitment, NAR gained a slight edge over Grumman in this area, or at least that was NASA‘s perception at the time. In October 1972, NASA Official Richard McCurdy suggested that the issue may have played a role in awarding the Shuttle contract. ―We‘re not crusaders for civil rights,‖ McCurdy insisted. Commerical Review, 11 August 1972, Vol 19, # 220, Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; David A. Andelman, ―Troubled Grumman Sees F-14 as Its Key Problem,‖ New York Times, 28 August 1972, ―Unidentified Blue Notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 66, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and Dick Seelmeyer, ―Grumman may be near victory in F-14 hassle,‖ Long Island Press, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. Most politicians wanted to wait until the end of the year to put a new contract in place. However, some, like Senator Howard W. Cannon (D-Nev), the Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Tactical Airpower Subcommittee, did not want to get involved in the dispute. He stated: ―I personally am not interested in putting this off until after the election. I‘m not going to participate in something like that— not knowingly, at least.‖ For more information, see Chaplin A. Day, ―Delay Seen on Grumman Decision,‖ Newsday, 12 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 246 U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Hearings Before the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Utilization of Minority and Women Workers in Certain Major Industries, Los Angeles, CA, March 12-14, 1969, 53. Like all the other companies, NAR did heavy recruiting at historically black colleges, see pages 56 and 64. 247 Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 431-432; and Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 68, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 490 ―But the fact that North American moved forward on this front tells us something about how the company is thinking ahead, about how it‘s going to get along in its labor relations over the next ten years.‖248 Although both Grumman and NAR had pushed to increase their minority hiring and promotions at an accelerated rate from 1969 onward, NASA looked to NAR as the leader in the field.249 In some minds, NAR‘s record on affirmative action gave it a slight edge over Grumman in an otherwise evenly matched contest. Clearly, multiple factors conspired to lose the contract for Grumman, some within the company‘s control and some outside. Undoubtedly, the unresolved Tomcat controversy made it extremely difficult for NASA to choose Grumman. As Tom Kelly astutely noted, the Space Agency ―would have had much explaining to do with Congress and the American public if…[it] had selected Grumman, given its F14-tarnished image.‖250 248 Parts of McCurdy‘s quotes are contained in both Heppenheimer‘s and Stoff‘s work. For more details, see and compare Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 432; Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 67-68, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 249 As previously noted in Chapter Three, in 1969, about 8% to 9% of Grumman‘s and NAR‘s workforce consisted of minority employees, mostly in low-paying jobs. By 1972, NAR, according to Stoff, had minorities in 12% of its professional staff positions, 8% in lower management, and 7% in top management. They included African Americans, Asians, and Latinos. As T. A. Heppenheimer notes, this percentage seemed to be much higher than that of any of the other Shuttle contract bidders. Unfortunately, Grumman‘s minority statistics for 1972 are difficult to determine. Anecdotal evidence, however, suggests that Grumman continued to recruit minority aggressively during this period. For more details on these issues, see and compare ―Grumman Charged Anew With Bias,‖ Newsday 20 June 1969; ―Black Organization Threatens to Shut Down Grumman,‖ Long Island Press 20 June 1969 in "CORE," Sect. A12, NGHC; U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Hearings Before the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission on Utilization of Minority and Women Workers in Certain Major Industries, Los Angeles, CA, March 12-14, 1969, 59-60, 436 and 439; Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 72, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC; and T.A. Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 432. 250 Kelly, Moon Lander, 260. RCA Space Systems Marketing Manager Jack Heavey detailed a similar argument about Grumman‘s mismanagement of the F-14 as being a major reason the company 491 Furthermore, as historian Joshua Stoff has suggested, the mandate for the company was ―to sell themselves and their ability, not just their product.‖251 And that became extremely challenging for the company when Lew Evans, Grumman‘s political operative and charismatic leader, died suddenly only a few weeks before the final push toward NASA‘s Shuttle award. As Kelly noted, these factors merged in such a way that ―NASA management was doubtless concerned that with Evans gone and the company facing huge financial losses, Grumman would not survive, making its ability to live up to its shuttle proposal questionable.‖252 Whatever the explanation, Grumman‘s failure to win the Space Shuttle contract had a devastating effect on the company, its workers, and their community, particularly from a psychological perspective; some believed Grummanites and the firm never fully recovered from the blow. In the rollercoaster ride between 1969 and 1972, Grumman had gone from having to fund most of its own Shuttle studies to becoming one of the two leading finalists in the competition for the vehicle‘s primary contract to scrambling for Shuttle subcontracts.253 As some scholars and historical contemporaries of the 1970s have lost the Shuttle. As Heavey argued in a letter to Grumman‘s Shuttle Marketing Manager Saul Ferdman, ―Nixon can defend NAR on supporting ‗better management‘ than Grumman. NAR‘s past mismanagements [sic] and overruns are not in today‘s newspapers, whereas the F-14 is. He did have concern about Proxmire and award to GAC: ‗How can you reward Grumman with Shuttle when they blew the F14 costs.‘‖ See Jack Heavey to Saul Ferdman, 28 July 1972, ―Notes for Your Post-Mortem Shuttle File,‖ ―JGG Letters—1972 Jun-Aug,‖ Untitled Box, Sect. A-68, NGHC. 251 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 72, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 252 253 Kelly, Moon Lander, 260. Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 62 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 492 suggested, although NAR‘s and Grumman‘s proposals were almost evenly matched from a technical perspective, Grumman leadership in that area was effectively proven by the fact that the Shuttle‘s final configuration closely resembled the Bethpage‘s company‘s ultimate proposal.254 Grumman‘s external fuel tank concept was a significant contribution to the program that helped bring the Shuttle‘s cost and size down enough so that the vehicle could actually be built.255 In the end, it was Grumman‘s final model proposal that predicted the Shuttle‘s ultimate design, yet Grumman workers reaped few benefits from their superiority. Grumman‘s inability to capture the Shuttle put the company and its workers in an untenable situation with an uncertain future. As Grummanite George Skurla recalled, ―losing the space shuttle, which had the configuration Grumman created, thus had the same finality as a last chance at bat in a ball game.‖256 Another company official simply opined ―we were screwed.‖257 Nevertheless, as angry as many Grummanites were about the Shuttle loss and the resulting layoffs, they still looked to Grumman as a type of moral 254 Ibid., 62-63 and 72; Benjamin F. Beekman, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 March 2000, in the author‘s possession; Laurence Van Wallendael, Survey/Questionnaire, 7 February 2000, in the author‘s possession; Robert Ionescu, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 December 1999, in the author‘s possession; and William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000), in the author‘s possession. For a diagram that shows that Grumman‘s design was almost identical to the final model developed, see Roger D. Launius, ―Toward an Understanding of the Space Shuttle: A Historiographical Essay,‖ Air Power History 39, no. 4 (Winter 1992): 5. 255 Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 72, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 256 257 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 94. Joshua Stoff quotes the Grumman official in his work. He pulled the quote from William Stockton, Spaceliner (New York: Time Books, 1981), 47. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 62 ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 493 center in their lives. Having lost his job in September 1972 shortly after buying a new home, one engineer still believed that ―It‘s a damn good company to work for, the best I ever worked for.‖258 When asked if he felt that Grumman had let him down, the engineer replied, ―For heaven‘s sake, they‘ve done their best to keep people on. When they‘ve had to cut back, they have cut back as fairly as possible. I don‘t think management could have done any more than they really did.‖259 The End of the Apollo Era: Grumman‘s Scramble to Save its Workforce Company officials and industry analysts would continue to ponder NASA‘s Shuttle decision for years. The loss of this hoped-for contract placed the jobs of many Grummanites in a precarious position, and the constant threat of layoffs, coupled with the conclusion of several company projects and the protracted renegotiation of the very contentious F-14 contract, forced many Grummanites to fear for their futures. As employed and unemployed Grummanites tried to move forward in this atmosphere of pervasive uncertainty, two things became very clear. First, former Grummanites needed practical assistance; they needed financial aid and help finding new jobs. Second, for those Grummanites who still remained on the job, the company needed to secure some Shuttle subcontracting work in order to keep large numbers of them employed. New York politicians, on both the local and national levels, tried to help former 258 Joshua Stoff quotes the engineer in his work. He pulled the quotes from the September 12, 1972 issue of the Long Island Daily News. See Joshua Stoff, ―The Space Shuttles that Never Were: The Grumman Space Shuttle Program, 1969-1972,‖ November 1983, 70, ―Space Shuttle Reports,‖ ―Box #9 Space Shuttle,‖ Sect. A-98, NGHC. 259 Ibid. 494 Grummanites and other unemployed aerospace workers by seeking financial aid for them through the recently enacted Emergency Manpower Act of 1971. The act authorized more than $1 billion to set up the Public Employment Program (PEP) charged with creating more than 150,000 new jobs for America‘s unemployed and underemployed.260 The program represented the ―first sizeable antirecessionary public service employment effort since the Great Depression.‖261 Funding was released and spent rather quickly based on how severe unemployment was in a particular area. Most of the funds went to cover workers‘ wages.262 The law tried to help ―such groups as veterans, younger and older workers, the economically disadvantaged, welfare recipients, migrant workers, nonEnglish speakers and workers laid off due to cutbacks in the defense, aerospace and construction industries.‖ 263 Federal and local officials did not require a lot of lead time to create the new positions, mainly in the ―field of public service—in such areas as environment, health, education, public safety, crime prevention, prisons, transportation, 260 Some sources place the authorized funding as high as $2.5 billion and claim the program ―mandated that a maximum salary of $12,000 per employee could come from federal funds and (excluding teaching positions) a maximum of one-third of the jobs created could be for professionals.‖ The quote is from Linda Levine. For more details, see and compare ―228 – Statement about the Emergency Employment Act of 1971,‖ July 12, 1971, John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project [online], accessed 6 January 2010, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/we//pid=3075; and Linda Levine, ―Countercyclical Job Creation Program‖ Congressional Research Service, January 15, 2009, 3, accessed 6 January 2010, http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/92-939_20090115.pdf. 261 Linda Levine, ―Countercyclical Job Creation Program‖ Congressional Research Service, January 15, 2009, 3, accessed 6 January 2010, http://assets.opencrs.com/rpts/92-939_20090115.pdf. 262 Ibid. 263 Ibid. 495 park maintenance, recreation, rural development, and sanitation.‖264 Most people equated the new jobs with ―public works construction projects.‖265 They also viewed them as ―transitional,‖ meaning that such positions would ―lead people into permanent jobs,‖ not merely become long-term substitutes for regular employment.266 The two-year program triggered when the nation‘s unemployment rate reached ―4 ½ percent for more than 3 consecutive months.‖267 The act also allowed for separate programs in local areas with ―continuing high unemployment.‖268 In locales where unemployment remained at 6% or above for three or more months, government officials could tap an additional $250 million in funding to help their out-of-work constituents.269 In early August 1972, several New York legislators and representatives began lobbying the Nixon Administration for help in trying to secure Shuttle subcontract work; they also wanted federal monies from the Emergency Employment Act to try to retrain former Grummanites for jobs outside the aerospace field. Nassau County Executive Ralph G. Caso became one of the first New York officials to press Washington for help for Grumman in the aftermath of the company‘s Shuttle contract loss. He met with Vice President Spiro Agnew during the second week of August, as well as Astronaut William 264 ―228 – Statement about the Emergency Employment Act of 1971,‖ July 12, 1971, John T. Woolley and Gerhard Peters, The American Presidency Project, accessed 6 January 2010, http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/we//pid=3075. 265 Ibid. 266 Ibid. 267 Ibid. 268 Ibid. 269 Ibid. 496 Anders (the Executive Director of the National Space Council), and New York Senators Jacob K. Javits (R) and James L. Buckley, a member of the Conservative Party of New York.270 Caso, a Republican, had recently discussed the issues of federal spending and unemployment with Agnew at a Nassau County Republican Party function in June.271 During his rounds in DC, Caso hoped to apply enough pressure on the Nixon Administration to help Grumman secure a major share of the Shuttle subcontracting work that North American was promising to dole out in the coming months, He also wanted to obtain relief for some of the Grummanites whom the company had been forced to let go. He predicted that ―with the aid of perhaps $1-million in Federal funds from existing public service jobs and manpower programs, Nassau County could employ about 600 of Grumman‘s engineers and technical personnel until Grumman obtained expected subcontracting work from the North American Rockwell Corporation for the space shuttle program.‖272 Suffolk County Executive John V. N. Klein and William Higbe, Nassau 270 Javits wanted to help Caso out as much as possible, but he told the Long Island official that no more 1972 funding was left. Caso would have to start looking toward 1973. Richard L. Madden, ―Caso Seeking Federal Funds to Hire L.I. Engineers Laid Off by Grumman,‖ New York Times, 9 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated-1973,‖ LISI; and Percy Watson, ―Caso and Klein to push case for Grumman sub-contracts,‖ Long Island Press, 8 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 271 William Butler, ―Looking to Agnew on Grumman,‖ Daily News (Long Island,) 7 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC; and ―Caso Trying to Help Grumman,‖ Newsday, 6 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 272 For the quote, see David Fluhrer, ―Caso‘s Pleas on Grumman are Redirected,‖ Newsday, 9 August 1972, unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. For the most complete information on Caso‘s role in this situation, see and compare Richard L. Madden, ―Caso Seeking Federal Funds to Hire L.I. Engineers Laid Off by Grumman,‖ New York Times, 9 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated-1973,‖ LISI; ibid; George DeWan, ―Threat to 1,350 Grumman Jobs: Space-Shuttle subcontracts would come too late, company says,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‘ LISI; and David Breasted, ―Caso Shuffles 497 County‘s Manpower Development Commissioner, also helped apply pressure on the Nixon Administration, as did Nassau County Comptroller Angelo Roncallo (a Republican congressional candidate) and Assemblyman Joseph Margiotta.273 Caso believed that he had helped deliver a ―sizable vote‖ for Nixon in 1968 and he wanted the administration to realize that New York had still not written the President off for the upcoming fall election, if Long Island voters could be motivated to swing New York Nixon‘s way.274 As Caso appealed to the administration for help under the Emergency Manpower Act, he argued that such aid would not only help his constituents, but also the nation as a whole. By financially assisting some of Grumman‘s highly skilled former workers, the country would be in a position to quickly reassemble many of the D.C. for Shuttle Work,‖ Daily News (Long Island), 9 August 1972, unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 273 On Klein joining the fight, see William Butler, ―Looking to Agnew on Grumman,‖ Daily News (Long Island,) 7 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. Higbe‘s involvement is mentioned in George DeWan, ―Threat to 1,350 Grumman Jobs: SpaceShuttle subcontracts would come too late, company says,‖ Newsday, 10 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated—1973,‘ LISI. On Roncallo‘s and Margiotta‘s efforts, see Dick Seelmeyer, ―Grumman may be near victory in F-14 hassle,‖ Long Island Press, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. During his congressional campaign, Roncallo claimed to have a plan to help out-of-work aerospace workers get back on their feet. He argued that the federal government should pay up to a year‘s salary to anyone caught up in downsizing; essentially, he blamed the federal government for not planning ahead. Roncallo proposed using $1 billion to help some 20,000 laid off workers seek new employment, relocate, and retrain, if necessary. As he saw it, aerospace workers had helped the nation achieve great accomplishments. For more on this issue, see Bruce Lambert, Jr., ―Roncallo Has a Plan,‖ unidentified newspaper, undated, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 274 Richard L. Madden, ―Caso Seeking Federal Funds to Hire L.I. Engineers Laid Off by Grumman,‖ New York Times, 9 August 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undated-1973,‖ LISI. 498 nation‘s top aerospace engineers and workers, something that might come in handy as the Cold War continued into the 1970s.275 On August 9, 1972, on the heels of Caso‘s special appeal, the Long Island Space Shuttle Task Force, an ad hoc group of New York industrialists, government officials, and labor, technical, and educational leaders, fired off a letter to President Nixon urging him to provide interim funding to help keep ―Grumman‘s present shuttle staff‖ intact, until NAR put out its subcontracts. The task force had worked very hard to try to win the Shuttle contract for Long Island before losing it to NAR; now their letter noted, ―At this moment Grumman is uniquely equipped to perform…to assist in pre-contract planning and definition.‖276 Suffolk County Deputy Executive Arthur Bergmann approved of Caso‘s actions and agreed that the region needed the emergency funding so that Grumman could keep its engineers in place and not have to rebuild its workforce later.277 Ultimately, the funding did not come, or at least not in any appreciable form. As fall approached, 275 Dick Seelmeyer, ―Caso seeks funds to hire engineers from Grumman,‖ Long Island Press, 9 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 276 ―Aid Grumman, Nixon Urged,‖ Long Island Press, 10 August 1972, 1, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. Notably, two members of the Committee, Anthony R. Amodeo, President of the Long Island, AFL-CIO and Rocco Campanero, Executive Vice President of the AFL-CIO, while very aware that Grumman was a non-union company, also knew that helping Grumman would help many union members through a trickle-down effect. Many of the company‘s subcontractors on Long Island were union firms. 277 This special funding required hurdles too high to overcome, however; as Bergmann noted, the funding would have to be granted by ―a special manpower act or an extension of the Emergency Employment Act.‖ It would have to be approved by the Congress. Bergmann is quoted in ―LI officials to seek emergency $ in D.C., Long Island Press, 10 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. Also see ―Why Did Grumman Have to Go It Alone?,‖ Newsday, 11 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 499 unemployment on Long Island climbed to close to 8%. Many of those who were out of work were former aerospace employees.278 By December 1972, Grumman‘s two major space projects—the OAOs and the LMs—had come to an end. The last OAO had gone into orbit on August 21, and the last operational LM had launched on Apollo 17 on December 7 from Cape Kennedy. 279 For all intents and purposes, Grumman‘s involvement in these programs, except for some mission support, was finished. In essence, the Apollo era had ended for Grummanites, and with the company‘s loss of the Space Shuttle contract, and its tenuous search for subcontracting work from NAR, it looked as if Grumman might be out of the space business for good. From 1968 to the spring of 1972, approximately 14,700 Grummanites lost their jobs, even before the company had submitted its Shuttle proposal. In 1968, one year before the company‘s triumph with the Apollo 11 Lunar Module, more than 36,400 people had worked at Grumman, but by the spring of 1972, as Apollo construction started to wind down, that number had dropped to approximately 21,700. Or put another way, approximately two out of every five workers had lost their jobs.280 For many Grummanites, the end of the Apollo Program also marked the end of their careers in the aerospace industry. 278 ―Why Did Grumman Have to Go It Alone?,‖ Newsday, 11 August 1972, ―unidentified blue notebook,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect. A-61, NGHC. 279 See page B-118 of ―NASA Major Launch Record‖ in NASA Pocket Statistics, accessed 8 January 2011, http://history.nasa.gov/pocketstats/sect%20B/MLR.pdf. 280 These statistics are cited in ―F-14 Fighter: Navy Indicates Desire for More Planes,‖ Congressional Quarterly, 31 March 1973, 732, ―Duane Yorke—1973 (JBR)‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 500 F-14 Program Manager George Skurla remembered that the end of the Apollo Program created a great deal of stress for many Grummanites, including him. With fewer jobs around, some started to compete for slots at the company, and for Skurla, who was often in charge of deciding who stayed and who went, the situation was far from pleasant. Skurla recalled that shortly after the launch of Apollo 17 people down at the Cape wanted to come back [to Bethpage], and they were good. So they were bumping one another out of positions. Anybody who is vulnerable, I thought, ought to be informed as soon as possible, even a month ahead of time. ―Oh, no, you can‘t do that,‖ I was told. ―We‘ll have all kinds of trouble, sabotage, disruptions.‖ Instead, I argued: ―I don‘t want some guy we‘re going to let go a month from now—and we know it, or probably know it—buying a new house or a new car, or thinking he‘s still going to have a job. We owe it to these people.‖ I was overly sensitive to this in the minds of some of my colleagues. But I felt rotten about it. 281 Other Grummanites also remembered the end of the Apollo era with a combination of sadness, anger, and uncertainty. Some tried to remain optimistic and believed that the company would find new space projects even after the end of the Apollo Program, but others, like Daniel Carroll, who had been a technician, supervisor and group leader on several Grumman projects, echoed Skurla‘s sentiments about layoffs. 282 For Carroll, the end of the Apollo Program left him ―sad, because we felt there would be the inevitable ‗Reduction in Force.‖283 Raymond Sala, a test engineer on the OAOs, F-14, and LMs, also 281 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 100. 282 For an optimistic view, see Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 283 Daniel J. Carroll, Survey/Questionnaire, 17 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 501 felt ―sad‖ because he believed the company ―had worked on proposals that would extend space and lunar exploration.‖284 Bertram Dawkins, who had helped design the LM and worked on the Shuttle proposal, also felt a sense of loss, as well as apprehension about the company‘s future. He definitely believed that ―the end of an era had come. As it became evident that future lunar missions would not take place, it was evident that the lunar landing had served a political, not scientific mission . . . . It looked like we would turn off the lights.‖285 For Fritz Blomback, one of the people who had gone to NAR to help them with their Shuttle design in the fall of 1972, the launch of Apollo 17 brought a sense of aimlessness. Blomback remembered his frustration: ―We met the objectives. Now what‘s the next step? I think the government stumbled here and so did Grumman‘s Management.‖286 George Daelemans, who had served as a systems engineer on the OAOs and LMs, agreed that some had fallen down when it came to setting long-term objectives, but he believed that all Americans should have shared in the blame. As Daelemans noted about the end of the Apollo Program, ―it was sad. I couldn‘t believe we were throwing away the capabilities and hardware designs that could have openned [sic] space. This was the beginning of my feelings of contempt for the general public because of their shortsighted-ness [sic] and the triviality of their preoccupations.‖287 Former LM engineer John 284 Raymond Sala, Survey/Questionnaire, 24 November 1999, in the author‘s possession. 285 Bertram H. Dawkins, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 12 July 2000, in the author‘s possession. 286 Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 287 George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 502 Caruso summarized the feelings of many, when he wondered, ―where did it all go so soon?‖288 On December 12, 1972, the front page of the New York Times proclaimed ―2 Astronauts Walk in a Valley of Moon: Last Landing of Apollo Series is Smooth.‖ Under the headline was a photo of Apollo 17 Astronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt standing next to the American flag they had just planted on the lunar surface. Much to Grumman‘s chagrin, another, less encouraging story was printed directly under the triumphant headline and image; the other story was titled ―U.S. Bars Price Increase by Grumman for F-14‘s.‖ The report stated that the Navy planned to enforce the original Tomcat contract, insisting that Grumman build forty-eight more F-14s with no price increase granted.289 The Navy officially ordered the aircraft—which made up Lot 5 of the Tomcat contract—on the same day that the Times article appeared.290 About seventhousand Grummanites were working on the F-14 Program at the time, but ironically the new order was no boon to Grumman employment even in the context of the Shuttle loss.291 With each plane costing more to produce than the Navy was paying, if Grumman 288 John Caruso, Survey/Questionnaire, 9 April 2000, in the author‘s possession. 289 New York Times, 12 December 1972, ―No. 1 Letters to Grumman Shareholders, Dec 11, 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials— Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 290 By this point, Grumman had delivered 86 F-14s to the Navy. See New York Times, 12 December 1972, ―No. 1 Letters to Grumman Shareholders, Dec 11, 1972,‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 371; and Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 107-108. 291 Marc Schogol, ―Grumman Halts New F-14 Work,‖ Newsday, 12 December 1972, ―Grumman Aircraft Corp. Clippings Undate-1973,‖ Folder, LISI. 503 did not negotiate a more favorable contract with the DoD, as Clinton Towl had warned some eight months earlier, Grumman might have to close its doors. As the end of 1972 approached, Grummanites could take solace in a least one moment on the job: despite all the company‘s financial problems, Grumman still gave its employees their Christmas bonuses, estimated at a total of approximately $17 million. As new Grumman Corporation President John C. Bierworth noted, the bonuses had already been incorporated as ―part of the company‘s regular wage structure.‖292 He tried to deflect criticism by declaring, ―In Grumman we believe that performance incentives are a valid form of motivation toward excellence in performance.‖293 For some Grummanites, this would undoubtedly be the last Christmas bonus they would receive from the company, for they would soon no longer have jobs. Others just hoped the company—and their jobs— would last until at least the next holiday season. Grummanites from every level looked to 1973 for both a hopeful resolution to the F-14 problem and the procurement of some Shuttle subcontracting work. 1973—the Resolution of the F-14 Debacle and a Space Shuttle Subcontract The new year got off to a rough start for Grummanites. The Navy and Grumman remained locked in a protracted renegotiation of the F-14 contract. Some Grumman shareholders, tiring of the situation, decided to take matters into their own hands. In 292 ―F-14 Fighter: Navy Indicates Desire for More Planes,‖ Congressional Quarterly, 31 March 1973, 732, ―Duane Yorke—1973 (JBR)‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 293 Ibid. 504 February, Duane Yorke, the former Grumman Director of Supersonic Aircraft Development, organized a group called the ―Concerned Shareholders and Employees‖ (CSE). Under Yorke‘s leadership, the CSE planned to contest three of the nine company director positions that were up for reelection if Grumman did not bow out of the F-14 contract. They believed that the Tomcat agreement would ruin the company if the firm did not cancel the contract. While Grumman‘s directors claimed to know nothing about the CSE and the proxy fight, reporting in Congressional Quarterly brought the story to Congress‘s attention. The CSE believed the company could jettison the F-14 agreement, which it called an ―ongoing cancer,‖ and still keep the firm from going under by seeking a bankruptcy shield from the government.294 It thought that the Navy could replace the F-14 with a modified version of the McDonnell-Douglas F-4 Phantom.295 Fortunately for Grumman‘s directors, it looked as if the Navy and the company were close to reaching an agreement about a new Tomcat contract.296 294 ―Possible Proxy Fight Aimed at Grumman Over F-14,‖ Congressional Quarterly, 17 February 1973, March 1973, 732, ―Duane Yorke—1973 (JBR)‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 295 296 Ibid. That is not to say that Yorke and the CSE‘s idea about replacing the Tomcat with the F-4 Phantom was such a far-fetched idea. In 1971, the Navy had started to conduct studies to try to find a suitable alternative to the F-14. The DoD had realized that the fixed-price contract might cause some problems for Grumman, and it wanted to explore all of its options. However, every study concluded that no real suitable alternative to the Tomcat existed. The reports also stated that it would be cheaper for the Navy to just ―buy more F-14s than to buy half as many and supplement them with something else.‖ The quote is from page 59 of Skurla‘s book. For more details on these issues, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 58-61. 505 On March 8, 1973, Grumman and the Navy finally came to terms about the future of the F-14 agreement.297 The following day, a headline in the New York Daily News pointedly proclaimed ―Grumman & Navy Reach F-14 Accord and Firm is Saved.‖298 Grumman only had to deliver the remaining aircraft that the Navy had ordered in Lot 5, and then the contract would revert back to a more conventional type of agreement—an annual negotiation for each remaining lot of aircraft. 299 That would bring the total number delivered to the Navy to 134; it would then procure the additional 179 aircraft detailed in the original contract by negotiating for each lot from this point forward. 300 The Navy and Grumman finally reached a deal because of some behind-the-scenes discussions between Grumman Corporation President John Bierwirth and Secretary of the Navy John Warner.301 While Bierwirth had continued to follow the company line claiming that it was going to go bankrupt, the Navy finally agreed to new terms not in sympathy for Grumman‘s plight, but because, quite simply, it believed the Tomcat to be the best aircraft 297 ―Grumman Yields to Navy: Accepts Listed F-14 Price,‖ New York Times, 9 March 1973, ―Grumman Navy Reach Accord on F-14 Contract 3/8/73‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC; Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 110; and John C. Bierwirth, Survey/Questionnaire, 31 May 2000, in the author‘s possession. 298 ―Grumman & Navy Reach F-14 Accord and Firm Is Save,‖ New York Daily News, 9 March 1973, ―Grumman Navy Reach Accord on F-14 Contract 3/8/73‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 299 Ibid; and ―Grumman Yields to Navy: Accepts Listed F-14 Price,‖ New York Times, 9 March 1973, ―Grumman Navy Reach Accord on F-14 Contract 3/8/73‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 300 The original contract called for a total of 313 F-14s. See ibid. 301 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 111; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 262. 506 at the time and could not get it anywhere else.302 The seafaring service had only held out for so long because the F-14 fixed-price contract had reached a crisis during an election year and a major budget crunch.303 Without a doubt, the renegotiation of the F-14 contract kept Grumman from going under and temporarily saved thousands of jobs. On March 9, the day after the two sides had reached consensus, the New York Times reported that the new contract would allow some eight-thousand Grummanites to remain on the job, great news for Grummanites since the company had just RIFed 350 employees the previous week. 304 While many viewed the Navy as the firm‘s savior, that fact ignores some adjustments that the seafaring service had been forcing on Grumman ever since the Tomcat cost overruns had begun back in late 1970. As F-14 Program Manager George Skurla remembered about the period, ―the Navy was saying we had too many people on the F-14 program and too much overhead at Grumman in general. The Navy began to make noises about Grumman restructuring, downsizing.‖305 Skurla had been in charge of the LM Program at Cape Kennedy in the late 1960s, but the company‘s upper management called him back to 302 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 112-113. 303 According to George Skurla, the negotiations were a bit more complicated than some think. He recalls that Grumman essentially threatened the Navy with a lawsuit if it did not get a new contract. Skurla claims that Bierwirth told Warner that Grumman was going to hold a board meeting to ―make one of two decisions. Either we are going to go bankrupt and sink quietly beneath the waves. Or we are going to go into bankruptcy and sue you for breach of contract and all the costs we‘ve incurred. I‘ve got three law firms that tell me we‘ve got a reasonable shot on winning that case.‖ For more details, see Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 111. 304 ―Grumman Yields to Navy: Accepts Listed F-14 Price,‖ New York Times, 9 March 1973, ―Grumman Navy Reach Accord on F-14 Contract 3/8/73‖ Folder, ―Box F-14 Collection of Letters and Documents Ref F-14 and Government Officials—Early 1970s,‖ Sec A-51, NGHC. 305 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 98. 507 Bethpage in the late winter of 1970 to oversee the F-14 Program.306 Shortly after he returned, he began to reorganize the Tomcat staff at the Navy‘s insistence. Many of the Navy‘s top brass had been telling the company that it had a bloated staff and Skurla admitted that the program had ―put layer on top of layer, workers five deep when they should have been one deep.‖307 Unfortunately, the timing of this reorganization was bad for Grummanites, for, as Skurla noted, ―the lunar module was topping out as the F-14 was starting to settle in the groove.‖308 In an attempt to try to stem the inevitable, some Grumman managers tried to find slots for endangered workers. Fritz Blomback, a lower level F-14 manager, for example, ―placed many of my people out on loan in other areas of 306 Ibid., 97. 307 For full details about the Navy‘s complaints about Grumman being overstaffed, see ibid., 98100. The quotes are from page 99. Apparently others besides the Navy felt that Grumman had too many levels of management. As one person with some apparent knowledge of the Grumman LM program noted, the company inflated its personal levels considerable. In an anonymous letter to the author, this person detailed what they called the ―squaring principle.‖ The letter says: ―During that era if one man couldn‘t solve a problem, two men were assigned. If this still didn‘t produce a desired result then four men were assigned; hence the solution to most problems was to introduce the ‗squaring principle.‘ People were placed into management positions, [sic] that had difficult managing no tripping over their own feet. The ‗squaring principle‘ made them empire builders, and as with all such empires, talent succumbed to ‗suck-ups.‘ The ‗suck-up‘ disease once established is never eliminated…. The Cape Kennedy staffing and management was an excellent reflection of this. There is an interesting story associated with the Cape Kennedy operation in its earliest stages. As I understand the details: Before anyone was sent to Cape Kennedy, there was a chap in Bethpage that did an off site equipment loading; he then was asked to do a manpower loading, based on equipment complexity (i.e. to activate and maintain the equipment for the Apollo launches). It projected to approximately 150 engineers. This figure was shown to the then designated site manager; it was turned down as to high. The designated site manager state he was going to do the task with 30 souls. Fact shows that with careful application of the ‗squaring principal‘ and personal ego the figure grow [sic] to in excess of 500 souls; that same ‗super manager‘ went on to become Grumman Aerospace Corp. CEO.‖ See Anonymous Letter to David H. Onkst, 31 December 1999, in the author‘s possession. 308 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 98. 508 Grumman to minimize RIFs.‖309 But he had to admit, ―Eventually I had to start RIFing people—not a very enjoyable period.‖310 Skurla later remembered just how uncomfortable the period became. He had a difficult time laying off people. As he recalled: Shrinking my ‗empire,‘ cutting one layer after another out of an engineering hierarchy, had become a prime task. When I came back to New York we must have had perhaps fiftyeight hundred people in product engineering, including some secretaries. Roughly half that force was gone in eighteen months. Painful! As home department vice president, and as a company rule, I had to talk to anybody that had more than fifteen or twenty years with the company, and it could be agonizing. Some who had been given notice would come to see me, often angry and very aggressive. The best thing to do, I told them, is call on your contacts, network inside the company, help yourself, talk to anybody you know about another slot. Others would come in like sheep. Looking out my window in the afternoon at quitting time, these fellows would be carrying brown boxes, with all their stuff, slide rules, desk things. It wasn‘t hard to imagine what kind of night they would have once they got home and had to tell their families.311 His comments reveal just how the downsizing decimated the company. They also illustrate how difficult it was for RIFed workers, sometimes twenty-year employees, to leave their lifelong careers. The downsizing of the F-14 Program signaled a fundamental shift in Grumman‘s management philosophy; the company had given in to pressures from the Navy and 309 Fritz Blomback, Survey/Questionnaire, 4 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 310 Ibid. 311 Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 98-99. For another Grummanite‘s view of the Navy pressing the company to cut its overhead costs, see George L. Daelemans, Jr., Survey/Questionnaire, 31 January 2000, in the author‘s possession. 509 essentially been browbeaten into laying off employees. In the past, Grumman would have found a way to move workers from one department to another, from one project to another, rather than pink-slip them. Now with F-14 cost overruns endangering the firm‘s future, and the downsizing of the aerospace industry in general setting in, Grumman‘s managers had to accept the fact that layoffs were going to become the new norm. The economic realities of the early 1970s eroded that sense of paternalism that had characterized Grumman for so long. A new corporate reality was quickly coming to the forefront, one in which the bottom line was more important than individual Grumman workers. Shortly after the settlement of the F-14 contract dispute, Grumman finally got word about some definitive Shuttle subcontracting work. On March 29, 1973, NAR awarded the Bethpage firm a $40 million contract to build the wings for the Space Shuttle Program‘s five orbiters. Grumman‘s neighbor, the Fairchild Corporation, which now owned Republic, received a $13 million award to build the Shuttle‘s vertical stabilizers, or tail. Based on projections, when production of the Space Shuttle hit full stride the following year, the wing project would employ some five to six-hundred Grummanites.312 Grumman‘s District Representative Congressman Angelo Roncallo, had tried to get emergency funding for unemployed aerospace workers the previous year; NAR‘s awards 312 Richard Witkin, ―L.I. Concerns Get Space Contracts,‖ New York Times, 29 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; Chapin A. Day, ―Shuttle Contracts: Not Astronomical,‖ Newsday, 30 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; Mitchell R. Freedman and Dick Seelmeyer, ―Grumman Land Subcontract,‖ Long Island Press, 29 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC; Heppenheimer, The Space Shuttle Decision, 434; Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 93; and Kelly, Moon Lander, 261. 510 ―greatly pleased‖ him because he felt that it would contribute to ―the stabilities of these corporations‖ and provide ―substantial rollback in projected layoffs.‖ 313 As a Grumman spokesman quickly corrected, however, the award was essentially ―negligible‖ and would ―not have an effect on the 1,000 we said [last week] would be laid off.‖ 314 The company had already planned to cut another thousand workers by year‘s end. In March 1973, Grumman had approximately 22,500 employees on its payroll. Although the Space Shuttle contract provided a bit of ―a psychological boost‖ to the company, in essence, it had taken too long to secure.315 It was too little, too late, to save many Grummanites‘ jobs. As Newsday characterized it, ―Shuttle Contracts: Not Astronomical.‖316 Six months after the renegotiation of the F-14 contract, Newsday reported, ―The Look at Grumman—Better but Not Yet Rosy.‖317 Although the new Tomcat agreement had kept the company from bankruptcy, the firm was still going through troubled times. Ever since Towl‘s ―close the doors‖ speech almost a year-and-a-half earlier, Grumman could not get commercial banks to lend it money, and the company was forced to rely on the Navy to provide short-term loans to keep the company afloat. As a result—as Skurla and others have noted—―the Navy [had] greater-than-usual control over corporate 313 Chapin A. Day, ―Shuttle Contracts: Not Astronomical,‖ Newsday, 30 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 314 Ibid. 315 Richard Witkin, ―L.I. Concerns Get Space Contracts,‖ New York Times, 29 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 316 Chapin A. Day, ―Shuttle Contracts: Not Astronomical,‖ Newsday, 30 March 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 317 Chapin A. Day, ―The Look at Grumman—Better but Not Yet Rosy,‖ Newsday, 20 August 1973, ―Clippings 1973,‖ ―Box 5 Newsclippings,‖ Sect A-61, NGHC. 511 affairs.‖318 At this time, Grumman still had to repay another 25% of its $54 million loan to the Navy. With the company still indebted to the government, Grumman remained unprofitable.319 Technically, it would be another year before the firm secured the contract that really saved it. In 1974, the Shah of Iran signed a $2 billion agreement for eighty F14s. Ironically, it would be this contract that rescued the company; some referred to it as a ―lifeline.‖320 One of the key men responsible for brokering the agreement was John ―Jack‖ Bierwirth, The Grumman Corporation‘s new President, a man who brought different ideas and ways of doing things to the Bethpage company. Bierwirth represented a new type of leader at Grumman. His background and focus differed greatly from Grumman‘s past presidents. Although Lew Evans had been a Grumman outsider, Evans had come from the Navy‘s Bureau of Aeronautics, a group that Grumman had forged a ―familial relationship‖ with over the years.321 Bierwirth, on the other hand, came to Grumman from a field totally outside of aerospace. A lawyer by training, his first interaction with the company was to serve on Grumman‘s Board of 318 Ibid. 319 One positive outcome of the F-14 resolution was that Grumman hired some 200 more employees for the production floor between March and August. While that was definitely good news for some, the hard fact was that the number of Grumman engineers had dropped significantly, a factor that some recognized would affect ―the overall engineering capability‖ at the company. For more details, see ibid. 320 For the full story of F-14 Iranian contract, see ―Chapter 8, Iran: A Lifeline for the F-14,‖ in Skurla and Gregory, Inside the Iron Works, 114-130. Also see Thruelsen, The Grumman Story, 374; and N. Roy Tegner, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 January 2000; George Melzer, Survey/Questionnaire, 20 November 1999; William F. Kiesel, IV, Survey/Questionnaire, undated (circa November1999 – April 2000; Robert Ionescu, Survey/Questionnaire, 1 December 1999; and Eugene J. Coll, Survey/Questionnaire, 27 January 2000. All in the author‘s possession. 321 For the idea of Grumman‘s ―familial relationship‖ with the Navy‘s Bureau of Aeronautics, see, generally, Kucera, ―Grumman Aircraft Engineering Corporation and its ‗Familial‘ Relationship.‖ 512 Directors for two years while continuing to work as the Executive Vice President of the National Distillers and Chemical Corporation, a firm headed by his father, which specialized in ―products ranging from booze to brass.‖322 Bierwirth officially joined Grumman as an employee in July 1972 as the Vice President of Finance, within days of Evans‘s death.323 In November of that year, Grumman Corporation President Clinton Towl appointed the forty-eight-year old Bierwirth as his successor; Towl had stepped down to spend more time with his terminally ill wife. Bierwirth believed that his main mission as president was to diversify the company. He had correctly determined that the firm‘s past fate had been directly tied to government cont