In 1938, about 600 workers — predominantly Black women — walked off the job in what was then the self-proclaimed “Crab Capital of the World” to protest a wage cut at the Crisfield crab-picking houses. For five weeks, the crab pickers fought to reinstate their pay. As they did, angry white mobs burned cars, invaded homes, and threatened their union representatives. Labor organizers brought in groceries; white residents blocked them from delivering them to the strikers, hoping starvation would bring them back to work.
Black women crab pickers risked it all in 1938. Maryland finally recognizes them.
July 16, 2024