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President Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act on October 24, 1938, est
Featured Event 1938 Event

October 24

FLSA Enacted: Minimum Wage and 40-Hour Week Born

President Roosevelt signed the Fair Labor Standards Act on October 24, 1938, establishing a federal minimum wage of 25 cents per hour and a maximum workweek of 44 hours (reduced to 40 hours by 1940). The law also banned child labor in interstate commerce. But the version that passed Congress was gutted by compromise. Southern Democrats demanded exemptions for agricultural workers, domestic servants, and retail employees, effectively excluding millions of Black and Hispanic workers from protection. The carve-outs were not accidental; they were the price of Southern votes. Farm laborers weren't covered until 1966. Domestic workers waited until 1974. Tipped workers were placed in a sub-minimum wage category in 1966 at $2.13 per hour, where the federal rate remains today, unchanged since 1991.

October 24, 1938

88 years ago

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