UAW Local 674

UAW Local 674

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We are Proud UAW members based out of Cincinnati Ohio.

06/20/2026

☀️ Happy First Day of Summer!☀️

Today marks the Summer Solstice; the longest day of the year and the official start of summer. As the season shifts, may it bring opportunities for rest, connection, adventure, and growth.

Whether you’re soaking up the sunshine, spending time with loved ones, or simply finding moments to slow down, remember that taking care of yourself is just as important as caring for others.

Here’s to a season of warmth, renewal, and making memories. 🌻🌊🍉

HealingFromTheRootsUp ☀️💛

06/20/2026

On this day, June 20, 1941, the UAW and Ford Motor Company signed their first collective bargaining agreement.

Henry Ford, company founder and president, despised labor unions and was hell-bent on doing whatever was necessary to keep workers unorganized. He hired Harry Bennett to run Ford’s Service Department, the company’s internal police force and union-busting department.

Bennett, a former boxer with ties to the mob, was a ruthless enforcer of Henry Ford’s wishes. He would fire any worker he suspected was sympathetic to the union cause and wouldn’t hesitate to have workers assaulted if that meant keeping workers from organizing. Bennett was so detested for his actions that one newspaper outlet referred to him as “America's Most Reviled Corporate Thug.”

Bennett hired ex-athletes, former criminals, and tough characters into the Service Department to patrol the Rouge to keep workers from organizing.

Winning their union was a long and bitter struggle for workers at the manufacturing giant. As writer Ken Coleman wrote in a 2021 article: “The UAW-Ford conflict was years in the making.”

On March 7, 1932, thousands marched from Detroit to the Rouge Plant, protesting massive layoffs and working conditions at Ford during the Great Depression. The march became known as the Ford Hunger March. When marchers arrived in Dearborn, city police and Ford Service Department henchmen shot and killed four workers and wounded many more.

Five years later, on May 26, 1937, Ford security guards at the Rouge plant violently assaulted UAW organizers attempting to distribute pro-union leaflets in what became known as the Battle of the Overpass.

On April 1, 1941, Bennett fired eight pro-union workers at the Ford Dearborn Rouge plant. In response, workers at the plant staged a strike. Although the strike would ultimately be broken, it applied even more pressure on Henry Ford to recognize workers’ desire to unionize.

However, the greatest factor in Henry Ford's reluctant change of heart to negotiate with the UAW may have been his wife, Clara. She feared that her husband’s refusal to work with the unions would result in more riots and bloodshed and threatened to leave him if he did not sign the contract.

Faced with the proposition of his wife leaving him, Ford finally agreed to bargain with the union. The company and the UAW would sign the first-ever collective bargaining agreement on this day, 85 years ago.

📸 Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor & Urban Affairs

06/19/2026

Happy Juneteenth from the UAW!

06/19/2026
06/17/2026

Yes! Your Plan benefit covers getting advice on questions about Social Security retirement benefits, as well as Social Security disability and supplemental income benefits. To be connected to a Plan attorney who can assist, call (800) 482-7700. We are open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to serve you.

06/17/2026

It's Day Three of the UAW Constitutional Convention, and we're looking back at some of the most iconic and memorable moments from conventions past.

Delegates to the 1966 UAW Convention in Long Beach, California, made history when they elected Olga Madar as a member-at-large on the union's International Executive Board, making her the first woman to ever serve on the IEB.

Madar would later be elected the first woman Vice President of the UAW and served two terms in that capacity.

📸 Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor & Urban Affairs

Photos from UAW International Union's post 06/17/2026
06/16/2026

The new Summer 2026 issue of Solidarity Magazine is now available. You can download it here and share it with fellow UAW members.https://uaw.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/SolidarityMagazine_Spring_26-06-08-W.pdf

In this issue:
- Feature: UAW Members Win Big at VW
- Volkswagen members ratify historic first contract
- It’s Our Turn! American Axle members fight for a strong contract
- Momentum in Michigan
- Workers in the auto supply chain are organizing
- Flying Higher in Aerospace
- 800 workers at Woodward MPC unite with the UAW to win their fair share
- Mercedes-Benz Takes the Low Road
- The UAW and Mercedes workers fight to put the company back on track
- Collective Power on Campus
- Our latest organizing and contract victories in higher ed and beyond
And more!

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Address


Cincinnati, OH
45069

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 11am - 3pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 11am - 3pm
Friday 9am - 5pm