Olga M. Madar (May 17, 1915 – May 16, 1996) was the first woman to serve on the United Auto Workers (UAW) International Executive Board.
Early life
Born in Sykesville, Pennsylvania, Madar moved to
Detroit,
Michigan during the
Great Depression. After graduating from Northeastern High School School in 1933, Madar started her career in the auto industry in 1933 on the
Chrysler assembly line. In 1938, she graduated from Eastern Michigan University (formerly Michigan Normal School) with a degree in physical education. In 1941, she joined the UAW Local 50 while working at Ford’s Willow Run bomber plant.
[Olga M. Madar. The Michigan Women's Historical Center and Hall of Fame, Michigan.] Her brother was
Elmer Madar.
Union work
According to Doug Fraser, former UAW president, Madar “was a trailblazer in the struggle for equal rights,” fighting to end racial discrimination and a champion of women’s rights.
[Stark, Sam. “Olga Madar Honored”. Solidarity. May/June 2004. United Auto Workers, Detroit, MI] In 1947, Madar led a crusade to end racial discrimination in the men and women’s bowling association. Victory came in 1952 when the white-only membership policy was removed. She was also active in organizing community recreation programs.
Madar was named to the UAW International Executive Board in 1966. She was also the first woman elected as the union’s vice president in 1970. In 1974, Madar was the force behind the creation of the Coalition of Labor Union Women (CLUW), a nonprofit organization for trade union women affiliated with AFL-CIO.[Stark, Sam. “Olga Madar Honored”. Solidarity. May/June 2004. United Auto Workers, Detroit, MI][Olga M. Madar. The Michigan Women's Historical Center and Hall of Fame, Michigan.] The CLUW was composed largely of women who felt disempowered in their individual unions. During the organization's first convention in 1974, Madar was elected its national president.[Olga Madar Collection. Retrieved April 15, 2009, Web site: http://www.reuther.wayne.edu/collections/hefa_203.htm#unittitle]
Environmentalism
In 1972, Madar said, "The chief victims of pollution are the urban poor, Blacks and workers who cannot escape their environment. Unless we join together now to stop those who pollute for profit, our cities will become ugly cesspools of poisonous pollutants.”
External links