Scholars who specialize in the labour movement and working-class history in Italy have yet to study in depth the situation of staff assigned to manual jobs in the tertiary sector. There are several reasons for this: the difficulty in finding sources, especially archival ones; the “productivist bias” (i.e. the belief of many scholars that only industrial workers can be considered workers for all intents and purposes because they make use of and transform raw materials and semi-finished products);Footnote 1 and the relatively low weight of the service industry in the Italian economy until the mid-twentieth century.Footnote 2 Consequently, few historians have been interested in the main features of this sector from the perspective of the labour market, the organization of work, or the activity of trade unions.Footnote 3
The study of hotel, restaurant, and bar workers has suffered a special lack of historiographic attention in Italy, a fact that contrasts markedly with other countries, particularly the United States, where the history of waiters, but also cooks and porters, has been examined from various perspectives. In a pioneering article in 1983, Mary Lee Spence retraced the working conditions of waiters in restaurants, cafeterias, trains, and boats in the west of the United States from the second half of the nineteenth century to World War I, focusing on the evolution of the labour market and the systems of payment.Footnote 4 Dorothy Sue Cobble focused her attention on the history of American waitresses and their union organizations during the twentieth century, while Kerry Segrave analysed the economic and cultural function of tips in American society in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and their impact on the staff of hotels, restaurants, and bars.Footnote 5 Over the last twenty years, European scholars have followed these examples from North America and begun to study this group of service staff, extending the examination to cooks, to single but remarkable episodes of conflict, to the mode of operation of employment agencies, and to the ways in which the job of waiters was perceived and judged in literature or public opinion.Footnote 6 In Italy, relatively little research has been done in this field; studies realized so far were less concerned with the aforementioned topics and focused more on the waiters as a social group (the organization of their work, the practices of their recruitment, their union activity), the service staff on transatlantic steamships, and the emergence of vocational education in the tourism industry.Footnote 7
Nevertheless, none of the above mentioned studies have paid much attention to the labour unrest among hotel and restaurant workers as a whole. In Italy, above all, the specific characteristics that distinguish work in hotels and restaurants from other trades have only been superficially analysed. Furthermore, no interest has been shown in verifying the existence of a link between the nature of the job and the capacity not only of waiters, but also of cooks and other workers, to obtain better working conditions and better wages through strikes. Thus, the purpose of this article is first, to illustrate the distinctive traits of the trades in the Italian hotel and restaurant sector during the first few decades of the twentieth century, and to explain how these traits have influenced the labour movement and the type of relationship that it established with business associations. Second, the article intends to describe how and when labour conflicts involving hotel and restaurant employees have enabled them to act like “real” workers, i.e. similar to industrial workers rather than other groups of labourers such as servants, the self-employed, casual workers, etc.
Waiters, bar staff, and porters have indeed often been considered as servants, mini-entrepreneurs, and other types of non-standardized labourers. Their seasonal work, their constant contact with the lifestyle of the middle classes and the aristocracy, and their complaisance with customers (due to the expectation of gratuities, the predominant pay in the profession)Footnote 8 have made them the object of suspicion and sometimes scorn on the part of working-class representatives.Footnote 9 From the beginning of the twentieth century, hotel and restaurant managers as well as journalists have regarded subordinate occupations in the hospitality sector as the early stages of a career that could lead to becoming an owner or taking a managerial role if workers demonstrated dedication and sacrifice in performing their duties. Workers and entrepreneurs were considered part of a single community that shared the same interests. Waiters and cooks were thought to receive better wages and conditions compared to factory workers and peasants; this belief was based, to a high degree, on some biographies of maîtres and chefs of luxury hotels and restaurants.Footnote 10
Over time, this judgement consolidated itself in public opinion, among hotel and restaurant owners, among members of the trade unions of other sectors, and among scholars of the history of the working class. All of these groups have considered waiters and cooks as being more similar to professional men than to employees, not deserving to be thought of as part of the labour movement and not worthy of corresponding historiographical analysis. Above all, they were considered unable or unavailable to rebel against their bosses, the mere possibility of protests by this group to obtain a rise in wages or a reduction in working hours thus becoming almost inconceivable.
Nonetheless, influenced by socialism at the end of the nineteenth century, groups of hotel and restaurant employees formed unioni di miglioramento (improvement associations) and leghe di resistenza (resistance leagues), revealing the degrading conditions of work, the uncertainty of employment and payment, the long working hours, and the control of employment left to the intermediation of private actors, who often took advantage and extorted money from workers looking for an engagement. These associations called on employees to organize themselves and to protest against their employers in order to enhance their conditions.Footnote 11 These activities indeed came together with the first strikes by hotel and restaurant staff from 1902 onwards.
This article addresses the labour unrest of Italian hotel and restaurant staff from its beginnings, at the outset of the last century, to its temporary end, which can be set in 1923 as a consequence of the assaults of the fascist action squads and of employers’ reaction to the unrest of the so-called biennio rosso (two red years, 1919−1920). Additionally, this article aspires to answer two questions: what role did the actions of waiters, cooks, porters, and other staff play in influencing their behaviour and self-identification as a group? Were they indicative of a change towards approaches and styles in organization and contentiousness similar to those prototypically demonstrated by industrial workers?
Sources used for the research presented here include statistical data about strikes and emigration, population censuses, the Bollettino dell’Ufficio del lavoro (organ of the Statistical General Direction of the Ministry of Agriculture, Industry and Trade), issues of national newspapers (Il Corriere della Sera, La Nazione, Il Resto del Carlino, Il Secolo XIX) and of the main union and employers’ magazines in the field (Il Patto, Il Cameriere, Il Lavoratore della mensa, Il Lavoratore d’albergo e della mensa, Rivista degli alberghi), and public security documentation concerning unrest among restaurant and hotel employees, which is preserved in the Archivio Centrale dello Stato (National State Archive). In particular, the official data about strikes will be used as a starting point to develop an overall analysis of the historical evolution of the protests of these workers and to highlight some general features of the two strike waves that marked the period studied here (1902/1907−1908 and 1919−1920). While there are several limitations to these sources (to be specified at the beginning of the second section), such a quantitative approach to the study of conflicts allows us to consider waiters, cooks, and porters as an aggregate group and to study their contentiousness collectively, thus permitting comparisons with the conflicts of workers from other sectors. Meanwhile, the peculiarities of this group and the different ways they conceived union and strike action will be reconstructed, making use of trade-union journals and archival documents.
The article is divided into three sections. The first section outlines the evolution of the hotel and restaurant workforce and its unionization from the beginning of the twentieth century until 1923, and points to the occupational characteristics in this sector that affected both the way that employees’ associations functioned and their ability to put forward their demands. The second section describes the quantitative trend of strikes, analysing their main characteristics, the way they were conducted, and their outcomes. The third section summarizes the results of the analyses of the previous sections and offers some concise assessments of the conflicts promoted by serving staff.
THE HOTEL AND RESTAURANT WORKFORCE IN ITALY AND ITS UNION
The first census of hotels was formed by the Ente Nazionale per l’Industria Turistica (National Agency for the Tourism Industry) between 1923 and 1925, whereas the first census of the whole trade (which also included other establishments, such as restaurants, bars, and cafés) occurred only in 1927.Footnote 12 To evaluate, albeit approximately, the level of employment in the hotel and restaurant sector before 1925, an analysis of population censuses, which were conducted regularly every ten years from 1901, is required. It is important to consider that such records have many limitations. They underestimate both child and female labour (especially when the latter were involved in non-standardized labour relations); they do not distinguish between employed and unemployed workers, and they are subject to continuous changes in the classification of professions and in territorial extension. These factors make comparison among data over the course of time difficult.Footnote 13
After consideration of the flaws in the source material and the number of employed workers on the basis of the sufficiently accurate census of 1936 (which, contrary to earlier censuses, allows us to distinguish cooks, waiters, porters, etc. from workers in other service sectors), the number of employees at national level from 1901 to 1923 was estimated by interpolating data from the censuses of 1911, 1921, and 1931. Data concerning members of the Federazione Italiana dei Lavoratori di Albergo e Mensa (FILAM), (the National Union of Hotel and Catering Employees founded in 1907 and whose figures about members are available until 1922) were also used.Footnote 14 This union was influenced by socialism and affiliated with the Confederazione Generale del Lavoro, (CGdL), which was founded in 1906.
Caution is advised when considering the data contained in Table 1, but some observations can be made. Over the first decade of the twentieth century, the number of hotel, restaurant, and bar employees was increasing, reaching a little more than 90,000 in 1911. From 1912 to 1921, in contrast, the number of these workers decreased considerably to less than 60,000, likely due to the negative effects of World War I on tourism and consumption. The number began to increase again in the following 2 years. Furthermore, these professions underwent a partial feminization over this 20-year period. The percentage of women in the total manpower increased from 15.33 in 1901 to 21.83 in 1921. The unionization rate showed a trend that was opposite to that of employment. In comparison with unionization in 1908, the rate decreased or was stagnant until the end of World War I and began to rise substantially during the “two red years” and until the advent of fascism.
Source: Calculations based on: Italian population censuses (1901−1931); Ministero dell’Agricoltura, Industria e Commercio (MAIC), Statistica delle organizzazioni italiane dei lavoratori (Rome, 1908−1918); “Un anno di vita sezionale. Relazione morale e finanziaria”, Il Lavoratore d’albergo e della mensa, 1 February 1924, p. 4; Luciana Marchetti (ed.), La Confederazione Generale del Lavoro negli atti, nei documenti, nei congressi 1906−1926 (Milan, 1962), pp. 421−422.
Note: The numbers of male and female workers for the years 1901, 1911, and 1921 were obtained directly from the data of the censuses, whereas the numbers in the remaining years are an estimate obtained through linear interpolation of census data.
The uneven occupation trend and the slow but uninterrupted rise in female presence during the first twenty-five years of the last century are consistent with what was registered in the service sector as a whole in the same period.Footnote 15 Furthermore, the difficulties the union movement encountered when it attempted to spread among employees was in tune with the overall history of Italian industrial and agrarian unionism during that period.Footnote 16 However, the peculiar constitution of the labour market in the hotel and restaurant industry set the first hotel and restaurant workers’ organizations apart from other sectors of the labour movement and led, at least until the end of World War I, to a rather precarious existence both on a local and a national level, and a noticeable weakness of the FILAM in defending the interests of their constituency and in pushing their demands.
From the end of the nineteenth century to World War I, this sector’s labour market was characterized by extremely varied conditions of employment and wages. The workforce was divided into two fundamental categories by the actors of the time: internal and external workers. The former, which did not have direct contact with customers, included staff working in the kitchens and handling the cellars of taverns as well as workers in restaurants, bars, and cafés, cloakroom attendants, and washerwomen. Their pay consisted of a fixed wage and the possibility of receiving room and board in the workplace if they were hotel employees, or receiving board only in the case of restaurant, café, or bar employees. Workplaces were often unhealthy, especially in the case of kitchens and laundries, due to excessive heat, humidity, and poor ventilation, and the working hours could reach 16 hours a day. Although the pay of a cook could be very high (approximately 200 lire a month in 1914 in Milan), compared to other employees and manual workers in the industry and in the tertiary sector, the pay of a cellarman or a scullery boy (that is, those dealing with the carriage of wine and food from the storehouse to the place of consumption, and with dishes and laundry) barely exceeded 1 lire a day. The average wage of a cook’s assistant in Milan in 1901 did not reach 1.85 lire a day or 100 a month in 1913.Footnote 17 Employees with less-skilled positions were also less educated, often illiterate, and frequently came from the countryside or from small villages in more remote areas.Footnote 18
External staff included employees who directly served customers, such as waiters, barmen, concierges, elevator operators, porters, and governesses. Until the end of the 1880s, they were paid a fixed wage and, in some cases, could also receive a percentage of the takings. Subsequently, owners increasingly left it to these employees to maintain themselves through gratuities instead of giving them pay. This habit became established, although with great regional variations: waiters and porters in some areas relied on gratuities only; in others, they also received a type of basic pay that was very low; and in yet other areas, gratuities were collected by the chief waiter or deposited by customers in a box (the so-called tronc) and then assigned by the owner to waiters after retaining a certain percentage of the total amount.Footnote 19 In some luxury hotels and restaurants, the employees may even have paid the owner for the privilege of working in a place where there was the possibility of receiving considerable gratuities.Footnote 20 The habit of using gratuities as pay for external staff, a general trend at the end of the nineteenth century, is attributed in the scholarly discussion to the significant growth in the numbers of tourists and travellers lodging in hotels and boarding houses, as well as to the growing ranks of those who frequented restaurants and bars to consume a meal while travelling for work or leisure.
This growth was, of course, a consequence of general economic and industrial development (which in Italy had only started in the mid-1880s) and, in particular, to the spread of trains and boats as mass means of transportation. It produced an expansion of the middle classes and their out-of-household expenses as well as some boost to the hitherto aristocratic custom of travelling for leisure. The increase in customers made it more convenient for restaurant and hotel managers to resort to the good will of customers to pay their staff instead of keeping wages stable or increasing them.Footnote 21 Moreover, gratuities proved to be an excellent incentive to stimulate employees to work more hours and to pay better attention to customers. Additionally, waiters, doormen, and porters availed themselves of both room and board in hotels, and of board only in bars and restaurants.
Work hours could reach seventeen or eighteen a day, though not continuously. Waiters had to pay their assistants. Serving staff were also subject to a deduction from tips by the employer as prior security for the possible breakages of plates or stealing of silverware, and they had to pay for their own clothes and work tools (e.g. toothpicks, notebooks for orders).Footnote 22 Thus, the incomes of this profession were extremely varied and differentiated. In 1893 in Genoa, a waiter would typically earn a single lire a day. Eight years later in Milan, a waiter working downtown who received 7 lire through gratuities could only keep 3 after deductions and taxes had been applied. In 1913 in Milan, waiters’ assistants collected from 20 to 50 lire a month, whereas the income of hotel waitresses did not exceed 40 lire.Footnote 23
Similarly to what occurred in France, Belgium, and the United States during the same period,Footnote 24 given the absence of formal education for professions in the hospitality sector and the predominance of on-the-job training, both internal and external staff suffered the consequences of labour oversupply. Only skilled occupations, such as those of chefs, maîtres d’hotel, clerks, and cashiers, were sheltered from unemployment. Other employees, especially waiters, could easily lose their jobs and be replaced by a heterogeneous mass of unskilled workers migrating from the countryside and willing to work for very low wages, or students, former members of the army, vagabonds, or even decayed aristocrats.Footnote 25 Such a situation had two important effects: marked geographical mobility and company turnover as well as the importance of experience for the entire class of employees.
On the one hand, anyone who wanted to find a job was often compelled to move following the rhythm of the seasons: during winter in the resorts of the Tyrrhenian or Adriatic Sea, during spring in the cities of art (Rome, Florence, Venice, Naples), during summer in the mountains.Footnote 26 In addition to roaming around the Italian peninsula, many workers migrated abroad to learn one or more foreign languages and returned to find a new job at home; otherwise, they settled permanently in another country. Considering only delivery boys, porters, and waiters (the only categories of the sector for which data concerning emigration are available before 1921), in 1904, 3,739 of them emigrated from Italy; in 1909, this number had risen to 6,071, and in 1913, it had risen to 10,451.Footnote 27 It is probable that many of those workers returned periodically to Italy after some years of training abroad. In 1901, for example, more than 4,000 Italian hotel and restaurant employees lived in London, concentrated in Soho; however, only 30 per cent of them resided there permanently. The remainder returned to Italy as soon as they had acquired sufficient knowledge of English.Footnote 28
In contrast, lacking an employment service run by the state, private mediators and agencies that charged fees were the only means of obtaining a job for those who had no personal contacts. The mediators were often former entrepreneurs or former workers who headed small agencies, often in an inn or a tavern, making use of their professional experience and their network of contacts. Unlike the industrial sector, where large- and medium-sized companies hired workers directly, employment agencies were very common in the hospitality sector and functioned efficiently. For this reason, most employees turned to them to find jobs rapidly, while the agencies would ask one-third to one-half of the worker’s first wage as a fee for the mediation.Footnote 29 A few friendly societies of hotel and restaurant workers (which had chiefly arisen in northern-central Italy from the middle of the nineteenth century) opened employment offices for their members to compete with private mediators. In any case, the friendly societies also required the payment of fees for this service, although they were lower than those of private agencies. In October 1901, the Società Italiana degli Albergatori (SIA, Italian Association of Hotel Owners) opened an employment office without fees at its headquarters in Genoa. Anyone who wanted to benefit from this service was required to pay a lire una tantum as a membership fee. However, after two years, employers complained about the poor outcomes because few members of the association actually used it to find the employees they needed or they made their requests to the office too close to the high season to be satisfied.Footnote 30
Faced with this situation, workers experienced several difficulties in building solid organizations to defend their interests and, once they had been established, discovered how difficult it was to achieve overall improvement for the trade. Friendly societies whose aim was to provide economic and health assistance to their members in case of need were founded and managed with the support of employers,Footnote 31 and in the 1890s, circoli di fratellanza (brotherhood clubs), unioni di miglioramento and leghe di resistenza were formed, again in the central and northern areas of the peninsula. The purpose of these associations was to improve workers’ standard of living and conditions of employment, which was to be achieved by propaganda, education, and acts of protest against the entrepreneurs. The fundamental demands of the movement were expressed in meetings and rallies, as well as through petitions and complaints to the employers: the abolition of private employment agencies and of the corresponding fees for employment to be replaced by free-of-charge municipal or labour movement controlled offices; a weekly day of rest; the abolition of charges and other deductions from tips; a minimum wage; and the reduction of working hours.
A first attempt to coordinate this heterogeneous organizational structure was made in November 1892 with the creation of the Federazione Italiana delle Associazioni fra Cuochi, Camerieri, Caffettieri, Pasticcieri, Cantinieri e Personale di Bordo (Italian Federation of Cooks, Waiters, Barmen, Confectioners, Cellarmen, and Ship’s Crew), whose Central Committee was located in Florence. The Federazione was short lived, breaking up after two years because it mainly consisted of friendly societies that were not inclined to enter into conflict with employers (of the twenty-three associations that had joined, only six were other types of organizations, such as resistance leagues or brotherhood clubs), and due to financial difficulties (less than half of the associations paid the fee), as well as rivalries between the Milan and Florence leagues.Footnote 32 A new effort to create a national union was launched in October 1902 when, in the wake of the success achieved in the first great strikes of the cooks and waiters of Milan and Florence (which I will focus on in the next section), the Federazione Nazionale fra i Lavoratori della Mensa (National Federation of Catering Workers), whose Central Committee was located in Milan, was established. Despite the favourable circumstances, the lack of funds, inability to increase membership substantially (at the end of 1903, there were only 1,612 members scattered over 16 cities) and, also in this case, local rivalries led to the dissolution of the organization within a year. Subsequently, the labour movement tended to join the Camere del lavoro (Houses of Labour) of each town while waiting for the strengthening of its ranks that would make it possible to try once again to build a proper federal structure. Nevertheless, in October 1906, only eight hotel and restaurant workers’ organizations existed: the Unioni and Leghe of Milan, Genoa, Turin, Pavia, Padua, Parma, Bologna, and Rome.Footnote 33
The following year, the FILAM was founded in Rome. Twenty-four workers’ associations in seventeen cities joined, but it suffered from various deficiencies that made its attempts to elaborate a coherent programme and a set of demands rather difficult. Its first secretary, in charge until 1911, was a socialist lawyer, Giovani Pozzi, which indicates that this was an organization still a long way from being self-governed by the workers themselves. Due to the decision made at the founding meeting of FILAM to include friendly societies in the union as well, there were several disagreements on the strategies to be adopted (dialogue or conflict with the employers) as well as the organizational model (based on distinctions of trade or categories as against structured in local sections or regional committees). The perpetual rivalries between Milan, Florence, and Rome for the seat of the organization functioned as an additional drag.Footnote 34 Most importantly, however, the enduring divisions within the organization of work weakened union activism, created cleavages among workers, and prevented the creation of stable associations. This was exacerbated by the cultural stereotypes about the trade (mentioned above), which were fuelled by employers and by the rest of the labour movement and influenced the mentality of employees.
At the same time, these notions of cultural differences among the workers of the sector were actively cultivated by many of these workers themselves: the differences in payment between internal and external staff − fixed wages for the former, gratuities for the latter − created a substantial barrier.Footnote 35 Tips incited waiters and porters to work harder and to be favourably disposed towards guests and bosses in the hope of increasing their incomes; additionally, the several breaks and periods of inactivity throughout their workday meant that they were not particularly keen on a reduction of service hours. In contrast, the fixed wages of internal staff with a working environment devoid of contact with customers and long working hours positioned them much closer to unskilled factory workers. From 1907 to 1913, the FILAM position on the abolition of tipping was alternating: first, it required that tips be replaced by fixed wages; then, that they be replaced by a tax on service payable to the waiters; and finally, that the incomes of all workers be increased in general terms.Footnote 36
In any case, many waiters and doormen felt more like associates of employers or as though they were self-employed, rather than actual employees. They saw themselves as distinct from peasants and workers. Wearing an elegant suit similar to a uniform and bent on being flawless in appearance, they saw the incomes that could be gained by maîtres or concierges. Knowing that some hotel owners and restaurant keepers had begun their careers as delivery boys or waiters’ assistants, they often considered their positions as temporary or as a first step to opening their own businesses.Footnote 37 These factors, as well as the excess of supply in the labour market, were discouraging when it came to improving their status as workers and joining strikes.Footnote 38
Although these factors hampered the action of union activists, in 1902 there was a sudden, and relatively successful, explosion of conflict in this sector. This prepared the ground for a much stronger wave of unrest in 1907 and 1908. Although this wave subsequently receded, strike action occurred every year in several cities of the peninsula. If such protests demonstrated that even waiters and cooks could “rebel” like other workers, the strikes were able to mobilize the majority of employees and unite a highly fragmented group of workers only under certain conditions.
BRIEF OR HARSH, MODESTLY OR WELL-ATTENDED: STRIKES IN THE HOTEL AND RESTAURANT SECTOR
The data concerning the number of strikes, strikers, and lost working days in the hotel and catering sector are contained in the annual statistical series edited by the Ministero di agricoltura, industria e commercio (Ministry of Agriculture, Industry and Commerce). By analysing such data and comparing it with those of other sectors, it is possible to assess the state of relationships between employees and employers as well as the ability to mobilize the former by union organization. The reliability of this source, however, is limited. Several scholars have noted that these statistics do not consider political strikes and other expressions of worker protest and that the criteria underlying the survey are not accurate enough (for example, they do not distinguish the strikers by gender or age).Footnote 39 Yet, despite such flaws, the statistics about strikes can help to explain the evolution of the conflicts of subordinate classes, including hotel and restaurant staff. It is necessary to add, however, that the statistical series on strikes include hotel, restaurants, bars, etc. in the wide category of “commercial businesses” (pubblici esercizi), which also includes other establishments such as barbers’ shops, pastry shops, and bakeries. Yet, the source allows us to separate the information by sub-sectors and thus to reconstruct the trend of strikes only for hotel, restaurant, and café employees.
Table 2 overleaf shows that until the end of World War I in most years strikes were few (less than ten) and that, with the exception of the great unrests of Florence and Milan in May−June 1902 and Florence in 1908, the participation was low, usually less than 100 strikers. It is not possible to identify from the source the number of lost working days in the sector between 1907 and 1910, but, in general, it seems that the conflicts were very short. While the general strike of waiters, cooks, and delivery boys that took place in La Spezia in 1911 lasted approximately a month (resulting in a relatively high number of lost working days in that year), most others ran out of steam within a week or less. Compared with the work stoppages that occurred in the same period in the construction industry, engineering and shipbuilding, or agriculture, those in the hotel and restaurant sectors were small. This type of labour conflict, characterized by a low number of participants, low frequency, and high cost for the workers in terms of lost wages and dismissals, has been described by sociologists and economists as “primitive/traditional” or “heroic”.Footnote 40 Such strikes were a consequence of an age in which the working classes were confronted with non-acknowledgement of their civil, social, and economic rights. Furthermore, the years 1902/1907−1908 and 1919−1920, which were the peaks of these conflicts, coincided with the most turbulent periods in the industrial relations of pre-fascist Italy.Footnote 41
Source: Data on elaborations by MAIC, Direzione Generale della Statistica (DGS), Statistica degli scioperi avvenuti in Italia (Rome, ad annum).
Note: From 1903 to 1906, strikes in the hotel and catering sector were not recorded. For the years 1907, 1908, 1909, and 1910, data about lost working days regarding the hotel and catering sector are unavailable.
Taking into consideration the ratios between strikers and strikes (magnitude), lost working days and strikers (severity), and lost working days and strikes (duration), as shown in Table 3 overleaf, a similarity between the trend of average national values and the trend of the struggles of waiters and cooks is evident. Although the latter are well below the parameters recorded from 1902 to 1918 for the entire Italian labour force, irregularity seems to be shared by both, although it is more noticeable for the hospitality sector than for the economy as a whole. As for the years 1919−1920, it is evident from Tables 2 and 3 that conflicts generally increased substantially in this period. Strikes not only increased in number but they also became longer and harsher, while the number of workers participating in a single strike increased to hundreds or thousands. This hike was particularly marked in the hospitality sector: in 1920, the severity and duration of strikes in this sector went far beyond the national mean.
Source: Calculations based on: DGS, Statistica degli scioperi avvenuti in Italia; Lorenzo Bordogna and Giancarlo Provasi, “Il movimento degli scioperi in Italia (1881−1973)”, in Gian Primo Cella (ed.), Il movimento degli scioperi nel XX secolo (Bologna, 1979), p. 223, Table 6.
Note: From 1903 to 1906, strikes in the hotel and catering sector were not recorded. For the years 1907, 1908, 1909, and 1910, data about lost working days regarding the hotel and catering sector are unavailable.
* Magnitude is the ratio between strikers and strikes; severity is the ratio between lost working days and strikers; duration is the ratio between lost working days and strikes.
THE FIRST WAVE OF STRIKES: 1902 AND 1907−1908
It is possible to highlight the elements that led in each episode to the (partial or complete) defeat or success of the labour mobilization of hotel and restaurant staff, shifting from the observation of quantitative data to the actual conflictual events. When the protest aimed to obtain improvement only for a single category, involved only a part of the labour force in the place where the strike happened, or was directed against specific abuses, it was likely to fail, irrespective of whether the promoter was the union or whether the strike arose spontaneously with either high or low participation. Hotel and restaurant owners easily replaced strikers with relatives or unemployed people available in the location or summoned from outside; often, employees involved in the action returned to work within few days without results.
Some examples will illustrate this pattern. On 4 May 1907, a strike of 200 café and bar boys was proclaimed by the Unione di Miglioramento Caffettieri e Liquoristi in Turin. Strikers demanded 36 hours off each week, a working day of 12 hours, and the creation of one common employment office. Actual work stoppages, nevertheless, were scarce, and the majority of café and bar employees in the city continued working regularly. Four days later, the strike stopped, and the café and bar boys returned to service without any of these requests satisfied by the owners. The strike had not been supported by most members of the Unione di Miglioramento or by the greater part of the restaurant, coffee-bar, and brewery staff registered with the Camera del Lavoro (approximately 600 people).Footnote 42 On 1 August 1908, 40 waiters’ assistants from several hotels in the Lido of Venice, who were not registered with any union, went on strike to obtain a wage increase (their pay fluctuated between 35 and 40 lire a month). The Compagnia Italiana Grandi Alberghi, owner of the establishments in which the strikers worked, laid them off on 2 August, replacing them with new staff from outside Venice.Footnote 43 On 10 June 1910, 26 out of 65 employees of the café-brewery Gambrinus in Florence left work to protest the three-day suspension of two waiters for a breach of work discipline. The strikers asked for the withdrawal of the suspension, and on 18 June the rest of the staff joined them. The measure was confirmed, and regular service was resumed on 20 June.Footnote 44
In other circumstances, strike action had a positive outcome, depending on whether it was intended to obtain improvements for a specific category of a whole town, or even aimed to reach goals that had positive effects for all workers of the sector, such as free mediation services and a weekly day off. Another favourable factor was when the union succeeded, through a thorough preparation of union activists and the self-organization of the participants, in timing the action to happen close to relevant commercial events or high-season periods.Footnote 45 The above-mentioned strike mobilizations in Florence and Milan in 1902 are well-known examples of such successes.
In Florence on 2 May 1902, proponents of the Lega di Resistenza of cooks, waiters, and café-bar boys presented six demands to the employers (abolition of deductions from the pay of waiters; abolition of private employment agencies; introduction of a minimum wage; a maximum of working hours and a weekly day off for all workers; employment reserved for the residents of the town; and a motion to the municipal and prefecture authorities for the inspection of workplaces to ensure compliance with the current hygiene rules) and asked to discuss them within eight days − otherwise, a general strike would be declared. In the days that followed, representatives of workers and the owners of the hotel and catering establishments met to discuss each demand. The owners delayed the final decision on an overall agreement to a meeting to be held on 13 May. However, only 26 employers of the 119 operating in Florence participated in the meeting. Therefore, 647 cooks and waiters decided to protest against this by going on strike. On the morning of 14 May, the strikers published a manifesto in which they explained the reasons for the protest and apologized for the inconvenience caused to citizens.
From 14 to 15 May, many cafés and restaurants stayed closed. In those that were open, the staff consisted of relatives of the owner or workers who were not registered in the Lega. The municipal administration summoned the proprietors of the café-bars, restaurants, and even the hotels to persuade them to reach an agreement with their employees. A total of 81 owners were present at the meeting. After several debates, some requests were accepted: the introduction of an employment agency free of charges; the abolition of deductions on tips; a weekly day off; and the establishment of a maximum of 12 working hours in restaurants and 14 in hotels. As for the minimum wage, it was decided that the unskilled internal staff in hotels and restaurants were to receive 30 lire a month plus board; the internal staff in café-bars and breweries would receive 2.30 lire a day, whereas kitchen staff would be paid 2.50 lire a day. As far as luxury hotels were concerned, waiters would receive 80 lire a month, assistant waiters 50 lire, and porters 35. In second-class hotels, the wages would be 69, 40, and 30 lire a month, respectively; eventually, in third-class hotels, all waiters would be paid 30 lire and porters 20. A workers’ assembly, held the same day, accepted the concessions granted by the owners. On the evening of 16 May, the conclusion of the strike was proclaimed.Footnote 46
The reasons for the unrest in Milan were more complex. In September 1901, an Associazione per il Collocamento Gratuito fra il Personale d’Albergo, Caffè e Ristoranti (Association for Cost-Free Employment for Hotel, Café and Restaurant Staff) was formed in Milan. Its aim was to provide a free employment service to members (the fee was 1 lire per quarter) and to foster the improvement of working conditions. Through the Associazione and the Unione di Miglioramento di Cuochi, Camerieri e Affini, the workers exerted pressure on local employers in the following months through petitions and rallies, and began to use the organizations as free-of-charge employment agencies, thus circumventing the established private mediators and agencies. From February to April 1902, there were several meetings between workers’ and owners’ representatives to reach an agreement on a common office of employment without fees. However, due to the opposition of hoteliers and restaurateurs to the project, the efforts were in vain. The former, in particular, feared this office would put the control of the labour supply into the hands of socialist unionists and that this would negatively affect the “quality” of the staff available. On 29 May, the Unione sent them an ultimatum: if the owners of the hospitality establishments did not accept by June 3 the creation of a common employment office without fees (consisting of representatives of the employers and employees); the abolition of deductions from tips; the introduction of a weekly day off; a maximum of working hours; and a minimum wage for internal staff, the hotel, restaurant, and cafè workers would proclaim a strike. Following a negative response from the SIA section of Milan and the restaurant owners, on 7 June, 6,500 employees refused to work.Footnote 47
Because some businesses had remained open thanks to the help of owners’ relatives and workers not enrolled in the unions, violent clashes occurred between strikers, on the one hand, and crumiri (strike-breakers) and owners, on the other. On 8 June, approximately 100 demonstrators assaulted the managers and employees of a hotel and a restaurant in the centre of Milan. After the police had been informed, two of the attackers were arrested after a minor brawl. A waiter who had joined the protest entered a brewery and offended customers and employees; the latter physically assaulted him and he was arrested by police officers.Footnote 48 After discussions between the committees of strikers and owners (who feared the flight of customers from the city due to the disorder) and thanks to the intermediation of the Prefect, the strike came to an end on 10 June and an agreement was signed. This agreement established the creation of a free employment service funded by both parties and directed by three workers, three employers, and a person chosen by the Chamber of Commerce; the introduction of two days off a month for all employees; the abolition of deductions from tips; a fourteen-hour service maximum; and a minimum wage of 45 lire a month for internal staff.Footnote 49
Such results, nevertheless, rarely became consolidated. Where agreements were achieved after hard struggles, it was often difficult to have them enforced. In the summer of 1902, the militant activists in Milan and Florence, for example, complained that the arrangements were not put into practice. On the one hand, several owners refused to use the joint employment office and continued to charge fees to waiters; on the other, many waiters did not make use of the weekly rest day because they considered it a loss of earning opportunities.Footnote 50 In May 1903, the Milan section of SIA and the association of restaurant and café owners declared the agreement of June 1902 null and void and stopped funding the employment office, which, because the Unione di Miglioramento dei Camerieri had too few economic resources, ceased functioning some months later.Footnote 51
But also for the workers themselves it was difficult to abide by the agreement. The structure of the labour market, characterized by a high dependence on season, an imbalance of supply over demand (generating unemployment), and the replaceability of unskilled jobs, contributed to the perpetuation of differences between internal and external staff and made it difficult for the workers to respect the signed agreements. In addition, both FILAM (as shown in Table 1) and the SIA had relatively few members compared with their respective constituencies.Footnote 52 Although they were engaged to varying degrees in the conflicts and in the discussions between the two associations, most employees and employers did not feel obliged to conform to the deals these associations had reached when they believed these deals did not fit their needs. A substantive indication of this was the recurrent dysfunctionality of the employment offices created both by the labour movement and by the SIA in some cities of the north and centre from 1901 to World War I. Notwithstanding the thousands of workers who had found a job through these offices, both worker associations and hotel owners complained about the limited use of them by their members and were forced to acknowledge that the competition of private mediators and employment agencies with fees was still very strong.Footnote 53
Nevertheless, despite these difficulties, uneven results with regard to the participation of workers, numerous defeats, and only very little improvements obtained from employers (and these only with much effort), an awareness of the needs of this group of workers and their ability to mobilize had grown in the course of the struggles waged by the workers and by their unions. While the conflicts described still reflected a different situation for hotel and restaurant staff, and distinct forms of self-identification compared with industrial workers, subsequent developments indicate a change in the outlooks, demands, and behaviour of this group of workers during the first fifteen years of the twentieth century. Strikes, one might argue, in view of the increasing incidence of work stoppages in this period, played an important role in this process: through strikes, waiters, cooks, and porters began, in a difficult and convoluted way, to see themselves more in the image of industrial workers than as, for example, servants or self-employed mini-entrepreneurs.Footnote 54 This process culminated during the biennio rosso of 1919−1920.
THE SECOND WAVE: THE STRIKES OF 1919−1920
Unlike the pre-war period, the protests of the years 1919−1920 were organized and led in all locations by sections of the FILAM, and the demands that were put forward followed the programme worked out and adopted by the National Congress of the union held in Florence from 22 to 24 April 1919. At the end of May 1919, FILAM – stimulated by the significant increase in the number of members, and by the example of industrial trade unions joining CGdL, which in those months had demanded and achieved the eight-hour working day and the introduction of collective agreements – proceeded to submit to SIA a draft for a national collective agreement. In the draft, in addition to twenty-four hours off per week and free employment offices run jointly by employers and workers, a limitation of work shifts to eight hours was called for, together with collective agreements as a way of regulating employment relationships and, above all, minimum wages for both internal and external staff, and the replacement of tips with fixed pay or a percentage of takings.Footnote 55
The possibility of maintaining or abolishing gratuities as compensation for service had been discussed by both hotel owners and serving staff since the beginning of the century through to the postwar period. As in other European countries and in the United States, union organisers, journalists, and the public noted that tips generated servile and humiliating attitudes among waiters and porters towards customers and fostered their self-exploitation, the illusion of being partners and not employees, and the separation from those workers in the sector who did not receive gratuities. All involved acknowledged that it was difficult to abolish tipping because hotel and restaurant customers were used to it (while complaining about it), waiters deemed it a flexible means of increasing their income, and owners considered it a useful instrument for keeping labour costs down.Footnote 56 In spring 1919, however, disputes in several cities in central and northern Italy succeeded in replacing tips with a variable percentage on bills in catering establishments (an idea already proposed by some hoteliers shortly before World War I).
FILAM welcomed these developments and supported them without hesitation, so that, as one high state official noted, “the tip is abolished in the whole of Italy and is replaced with a compensation method that does not diminish at all the current earnings of hotel and restaurant employees”.Footnote 57 After heated debates between the representatives of the two parties in several meetings, on 2 June 1919, FILAM and SIA signed an agreement in Rome which, in fact, meant that the draft proposed by FILAM was accepted and its stipulations were to take effect on 1 July. However, possibly counting on the well-known inability of the trade union on previous occasions to enforce measures settled upon, the owners declared in the following months that they would not abide by the agreement, especially the abolition of gratuities (they justified this by pointing to the disagreements among employees on the convenience of abolishing it) and the adoption of the eight-hour work day (they said they would wait for a legal regulation on this issue in Parliament).Footnote 58 Consequently, the union activists felt free to resort to strike action to ensure measures already achieved, if only on paper.
From February to April 1920, strikes by hotel and restaurant staff occurred in several Italian towns, including some in the south. They all shared the same demands (an eight-hour work day; the abolition of tips and the adoption of fixed wages for waiters and porters or a percentage on bills; the establishment of a minimum wage; the establishment of free employment services; a weekly day off; and compulsory accident insurance). Notwithstanding the usual efforts to counter these strikes by the employers (the use of relatives and the search for strike-breakers to keep establishments open), many of them ended successfully for the workers, although the eight-hour work day was rarely obtained.Footnote 59
The strike wave kept growing and reached its peak between early May and late June, with major strikes in Bologna, Genoa, and Milan. The duration of the struggles in these three cities was particularly long (32 days in the first, 27 in the second and 53 in the third), participation was high (600 strikers in Bologna, 3,000 in Genoa, and 5,000 in Milan) and workers frequently resorted to violence. Attacks on open shops and assaults on strike-breakers occurred in these places as they had in Milan in 1902, even more so as the most important hotels and bars were protected by police cordons. Furthermore, cooks, waiters, and porters organized surveillance teams that walked through the urban centres to check how many and which hotels, restaurants, and cafés stayed closed and to force those that were open to comply with the work stoppage. These practices are in themselves remarkable as they implied the adoption of methods of maintaining discipline among strikers that had already been tried and tested in other sectors and other countries.Footnote 60
In Bologna and Milan FILAM managed to win the solidarity of other workers, such as bakers, butchers, errand boys, laundry-men, orchestral players, and street cleaners, who also decided to go on strike to force hoteliers and restaurateurs to accept the demands of the workers in the hospitality business. Finally, the struggles intensified because the trade union demanded the creation of Commissioni Interne (work councils) in workplaces, consisting of two to five employees (depending on the size of businesses) that aimed to check the enforcement of agreements and to act as permanent representative bodies of the workers towards the employers – a demand which had been adopted from strikers in factories.Footnote 61 The hoteliers strongly opposed this demand, aware that such a concession would imply a challenge to their authority and their freedom of action vis-à-vis the workforce. Through the mediation of the Prefects, the disputes ended with deals providing for a weekly day off; the replacement of tips with a fixed percentage of customer bills (from 10 to 20, depending on the locations); minimum wages for all staff; accident insurance paid by employers; the creation of a free employment office run by the two parties; the presence of a shop steward within the businesses supervising the fair distribution of the percentage to employees and the enforcement of agreements; eleven-hour work days in bars, cafés, and restaurants; and ten hours of worked time plus one hour of “presence” in hotels.Footnote 62
In view of the difficulties in achieving significant improvements in earlier mobilizations, it is surprising that FILAM was so determined and capable of resisting the strong opposition of the employers, leading to a wage rise and several regulatory advances for this group of workers. Many factors contributed to this result. First, the strikes of 1919−1920 occurred in large urban centres and not in small resorts on the coast. As indicated by a case study about San Sebastián in Spain, a strike of seasonal workers in the hospitality sector in places outside the major cities rarely succeeds in involving other forces of the labour movement. Furthermore, if the place is known and cultivated as a luxury resort for the affluent it seems all the more difficult to build up a substantial movement, as many actors involved (including many workers) want to keep up the image of tranquillity and security.Footnote 63
Second, in the biennio rosso, the massive mobilization of industrial and rural workers by the leftist trade unions was able to achieve truly remarkable improvements in terms of wages and working conditions. Thus, the hospitality and catering workers of the main cities of the peninsula and their union organization benefited from the climate of permanent social conflict, providing extra resources and the stimulus for protracted struggles. Also, this context made it easier to gain the support and solidarity of other sectors of labour, sectors that had previously looked with suspicion or indifference on waiters and their colleagues.Footnote 64
Third, while journalists and employers were still denouncing the high incomes of waiters (pointing to abundant tips and the considerable differences between hotel employees and restaurant and café employees), the income realities had profoundly changed.Footnote 65 The sharp rise in prices that occurred immediately after the war in Italy had also eroded the earnings of those who served at table, assisted tourists, or carried their luggage. Because of the increasing cost of living, customers became less generous than in the past, and, at the same time, consumer goods became more expensive. Due to the rising instability of earnings, proposals to abolish gratuities and replace them with wages or fixed percentages on bills, and to extend the weekly day off, and shorten working hours seemed a good solution to those working in the hospitality sector. This persuaded many to join FILAM and to participate in strikes to far a greater extent than before the war.Footnote 66
Finally, the inflexibility demonstrated by hotel, restaurant, and café owners in dealing with the disputes made the conflict harsher. This was partly based on their belief that their employees were not able to build up sufficient pressure for far-reaching changes in labour relations and the organization of work, and on the view that saw hotel and restaurant staff as more (subordinate) partners than workers. In doing so, employers in the hospitality sector showed the same attitude as their colleagues in other sectors, especially in industries that until then had experienced little labour unrest and in which a patriarchal and paternalist outlook had prevailed, striving for the harmonious cooperation of different social groups.Footnote 67
Unfortunately, many outcomes reached during the biennio rosso did not last long. Owing to a sharp decrease in strikes and mobilizations (at national level) from September 1920 onwards, the creation of fascist union organizations that were far more compliant with the owners than the socialist ones,Footnote 68 and increasing unemployment in the sector since 1921,Footnote 69 employers felt the tide turning. The failure of important strikes in 1921 was a signal that things had changed. On 25 January of that year, approximately 7,000 hotel, restaurant, and café employees in Rome refused to work. One month earlier, FILAM had petitioned the local section of Associazione Italiana Albergatori (AIA, the new name that SIA had adopted in the meantime) for wage increases of more than 100 per cent and working shifts of 8 hours maximum for internal staff. After the owners of hospitality establishments had refused these demands, the workers went on strike. However, many establishments were able to replace strikers with other workers (recruited from the pool of casual labourers that had swollen with rising unemployment), and the employers stated that they would only be able to offer pay raises of between 40 and 70 per cent. On 8 February, the number of strikers dropped to 2,000 and, two days later, regular service resumed in the capital city. Of those workers who had participated in the action, a few hundred remained without employment.Footnote 70
In another mobilization at the end of June 1921, a large proportion of hotel staff in Trieste went on strike because the hotel-owners did not respect some points of the agreement signed the previous year (namely, the role of a shop steward in monitoring the observance of the agreement, the use of a union-controlled employment office when hiring, and the percentage on bills not separated from the rest of the items listed). Although the strike lasted more than a month, the hoteliers did not give in. In the first days of August, a new agreement was signed, according to which the shop steward would only be authorized to check the distribution of the percentage on bills among the employees, the employment service would be in the hands of a municipal office, and the percentage for service would be shown separately on customer bills. Also, many strikers were not allowed to return to their workplaces.Footnote 71 Events such as these were both a symptom and a cause of an increasingly weakened labour movement, setting off dynamics often seen in such situations: increasing numbers of employees were no longer members of FILAM, and fewer workers could be mobilized into action against employers.
As shown in Tables 1 and 2, in 1922 the numbers of strikers and members of FILAM plummeted compared to the previous three-year period. 1922 also saw violent attacks by fascist squads on the officials and infrastructures of the union organization. In Venice, the local secretary of FILAM was beaten up by fascists; in Genoa, the cooperative café was attacked and destroyed; and in Milan, Florence, and Brescia, the union offices were devastated. Eventually, the house of the National Secretary, Ercole Viganò, was ransacked and his family threatened. At the same time, AIA began signing labour agreements with the fascist union, as happened in Milan in July, excluding the CGdL from the negotiations, and concluding in results favourable for the employers, such as an extra hour of work and the abolition of joint employment offices. Under these circumstances, it is not surprising that the Central Committee of FILAM stepped down in December 1922 leaving the organization without a central structure and thus, de facto, dissolving it. The next year, the only remaining section was the one in Milan (with 310 members) and no strikes by hotel and restaurant staff in the whole of Italy are recorded for 1923.Footnote 72 Following the data available, cooks, porters, waiters, and other workers in the hospitality sector would enter into strike action again only in 1946.Footnote 73
CONCLUSIONS
The history of conflicts promoted by hotel, restaurant, and café staff in Italy highlights several similarities and some differences between workers in the hospitality sector and those in other sectors – similarities and differences relating to the constitution of the labour market, union organization, and methods of struggle.
The abundance of labour supply, the segmentation of professional positions and of pay, the fragility of representative bodies, and the irregularity of strikes were issues common to catering and hospitality staff, on the one side, and industrial and rural workers, on the other, from the early twentieth century to the advent of fascism. Also, in the period immediately after World War I, almost all groups of workers shared a wide consensus on a need for and importance of trade unions; this led, in all sectors of the economy, to widespread and intense labour unrest, resulting in unprecedented wage rises and legal advances, which substantially improved a hitherto unfavourable employment structure. The main factors that led to the outbreak of strikes were thus similar for hotel and restaurant workers as for their colleagues in factories and in agriculture. As can be deduced by comparing Tables 1 and 2, enrolment numbers in trade unions were a major factor in the proclivity to strike.Footnote 74
At the same time, there were characteristics that were more specific (though not exclusive) to workers in the hospitality sector: sharp seasonality; instability and high geographical mobility of employment; numerous divisions among the workers (due not only to the typology of jobs but also to ideas held by employers and public opinion regarding the nature of jobs in the hospitality sector). These led union activists, for most of the years considered here, to be cautious and to start strikes only when they were sure of having the support of a sufficient number of workers both inside and outside the union. It was probably also for this reason that the strongest explosions of conflict among this group of workers occurred during the same period in which there were intense social clashes in the whole of Italy.
During the period analysed, hotel, café, and restaurant employees became acquainted with methods of collective bargaining with the owners of hospitality establishments (the formulation of a set of goals; a manifesto including formal demands; meetings with the employers to sign an agreement; in the case of faltering negotiations, the proclamation of a strike), and the methods of struggle already tried and tested by factory workers and other labourers. They also learned and put into practice actions typical of the tertiary sector, which were intended to cause serious damage to owners while simultaneously trying to avoid alienating too many of the immediate users of the service, that is, the customers. Workers in the sector thus deployed a broad array of actions.
In the course of the strike of Bologna on 16 May 1920, for example, 100 waiters acted as customers at a city centre café; they arrived together and consciously overloaded its handling capacity by all placing the same order to the owner, who managed the business with his family. The next day, they did it again in a trattoria.Footnote 75 On the other hand, both before and after World War I, strikers often made public announcements in which they apologized for the inconvenience caused by their protests. Conversely, strikers sometimes chose days for work stoppages that were close to events or seasons that attracted many clients to the hospitality establishments.Footnote 76 When employers did not move, workers would resort to more coercive and violent action to frighten patrons and to discourage them from coming to the cities.
In general, the strikes were likely to be successful (although achievements did generally not last long) when activists succeeded in becoming spokesmen for the aspirations of both internal and external staff. As evidenced by the unrest of 1902–1907/1908 and 1919–1920, the former mainly aimed for a reduction of working hours, minimum wages, and a weekly day off; the latter aspired to income stabilization (either through the abolition of deductions from tips or by replacing them with fixed percentages of customer bills) and access to a free employment service.
An examination of the conflicts of Italian hotel and restaurant employees from a quantitative and descriptive perspective is, obviously, not enough to provide a complete picture of this group of workers. Many fields of research remain to be investigated, such as the cultural importance of gratuities in shaping the attitudes of workers, or the role of legal regulations on hotel and catering activities in influencing trade-union action. For this, other sources should be explored, from literary ones to juridical ones. The intention of this article has been, on one hand, to connect the analysis of the Italian case to some of the concerns raised in studies on the history of labour markets as well as the history of waiters, cooks, and porters in other European countries and in the United States. On the other hand, it is intended to enhance the range of these studies by focusing on a neglected aspect of the history of workers in the hospitality sector: namely, the strike actions of the entire group of workers in the sector and how these functioned as means of unionization and a medium of the changing (self-)perception of the workers.
In the period between the first years of the twentieth century and the advent of fascism, hotel and restaurant employees in Italy adopted modes of struggle that were partly original and partly analogous to those of other Italian workers. Despite circumstances that, in general, dissuaded them from entering into labour conflict (strong differences in systems of pay and working conditions, cultural stereotypes fostered by employers and opinion makers, and the weakness of unions), many waiters, cooks, porters, and other workers in the sector, began to organize, mobilize, and enter into conflict. Starting from the decades in question, strikes, unrest, and petitions were important moments and mediums of the process in which they questioned deferential behaviour towards bosses and customers, on the one hand, and divisions between internal and external staff, on the other. Over time, they increasingly progressed towards being “real” workers, i.e. a group of labourers with attitudes and behaviours similar to those attributed to the prototypical industrial working class.