Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Labor_Department_Act> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Labor_Department_Act abstract "The Labor Department Act, also called the Borah Act, was sponsored by Sen. William E. Borah (R) of Idaho. It was approved on 4 March 1913 (37 Stat. 736).This was the final bill signed by President William Howard Taft, separating the Bureau of Labor from the Bureau of Commerce and elevating it to a Cabinet-level agency, renaming it the Department of Labor under its 1st Secretary, Rep. William B. Wilson (D) of Pennsylvania. As a trade Unionist, Wilson resigned from Congress to accept the position which he held until 1921.The Department of Labor included: 1) the Bureau of Labor Statistics under Dr. Charles Patrick Neill, former Roosevelt Commissioner of Labor, Economics Professor at Catholic University, and the investigator of the meatpacking industry that prompted Upton Sinclair to write The Jungle 2) the Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization (INS) which was abolished on Mar. 1st, 2003 and replaced with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service (USCIS) 3) the United States Children's Bureau under Julia Lathrop. Lathrop’s father, William Lathrop of Illinois, had helped found the Republican Party in 1854, while she herself was a graduate of Vassar College, a friend of Jane Addams, and a social reformer who had worked at Hull House in Chicago. Appointed by President Taft at the agency’s creation in 1912, she served faithfully until 1921, directing research into child labor, infant and mother mortality, juvenile delinquency, mothers’ pensions, and illegitimacy.Congress forgot to grant the new Bureau of Labor a budget or Rep. Wilson a salary.".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageExternalLink STATUTE-37-Pg736a.pdf.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageID "20201119".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageLength "2576".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageOutDegree "19".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageRevisionID "670982336".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Bureau_of_Labor_Statistics.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:1913_in_law.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:62nd_United_States_Congress.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:Law_articles_needing_an_infobox.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:Legal_history_of_the_United_States.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:United_States_Department_of_Labor.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Category:United_States_federal_labor_legislation.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Hull_House.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Immigration_and_Naturalization_Service.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Jane_Addams.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Julia_Lathrop.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink The_Jungle.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Childrens_Bureau.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink United_States_Statutes_at_Large.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Upton_Sinclair.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink Vassar_College.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink William_Bauchop_Wilson.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink William_Borah.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLink William_Howard_Taft.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageWikiLinkText "Labor Department Act".
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Labor_Department_Act wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:1913_in_law.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:62nd_United_States_Congress.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:Law_articles_needing_an_infobox.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:Legal_history_of_the_United_States.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:United_States_Department_of_Labor.
- Labor_Department_Act subject Category:United_States_federal_labor_legislation.
- Labor_Department_Act type Ministry.
- Labor_Department_Act comment "The Labor Department Act, also called the Borah Act, was sponsored by Sen. William E. Borah (R) of Idaho. It was approved on 4 March 1913 (37 Stat. 736).This was the final bill signed by President William Howard Taft, separating the Bureau of Labor from the Bureau of Commerce and elevating it to a Cabinet-level agency, renaming it the Department of Labor under its 1st Secretary, Rep. William B. Wilson (D) of Pennsylvania.".
- Labor_Department_Act label "Labor Department Act".
- Labor_Department_Act sameAs Q6467167.
- Labor_Department_Act sameAs m.04ygzxd.
- Labor_Department_Act sameAs Q6467167.
- Labor_Department_Act wasDerivedFrom Labor_Department_Act?oldid=670982336.
- Labor_Department_Act isPrimaryTopicOf Labor_Department_Act.