Workers as Company Assets - Set 1

Company Hospital Fund Requests

 

Context:

Many mining companies in the Keweenaw took mandatory payments out of employees’ monthly wages and pooled them in a central “hospital fund” that paid out when any worker went for treatment. A single worker paid 50 cents to cover only themself, and a married worker paid $1.00 to have their spouse and children covered as well. If this sounds similar to modern health insurance, that’s because our system is partially based upon these early versions.

Occasionally, single workers paid the married rate to add other members of their family to the fund, like parents or siblings. The following requests come from the Calumet and Hecla mining company’s head doctor. General manager James MacNaughton was the top official on site and had final say about the hospital fund. His officer, Henry Brett, looked at employee records and handwrote the information for him.

Consider what these letters reveal about company priorities. What did MacNaughton base his decisions on? Does this reveal anything about managers' power under the paternalist system?

 

William Kieri’s Hospital Fund Request

 
A historic document from the MTU Archives.

A. B. Simonson to James MacNaughton, May 29, 1914, Calumet and Hecla Mining Companies Collection, MS-002, box 47, folder 520, Michigan Tech Archives & Copper Country Historical Collections, Houghton, MI.

 

 

Reply to William Kieri’s Hospital Fund Request

 
A historic document from the MTU Archives.

James MacNaughton To A. B. Simonson, June 1, 1914, Calumet and Hecla Mining Companies Collection, MS-002, box 47, folder 520, Michigan Tech Archives & Copper Country Historical Collections, Houghton, MI.

 

 

Andrew Lundberg’s Hospital Fund Request

 
A historic document from the MTU Archives.

A. B. Simonson to James MacNaughton, June 20, 1914, Calumet and Hecla Mining Companies Collection, MS-002, box 47, folder 520, Michigan Tech Archives & Copper Country Historical Collections, Houghton, MI.

 

 

Reply to Andrew Lundberg’s Hospital Fund Request

 
A historic document from the MTU Archives.

James MacNaughton To A. B. Simonson, June 25, 1914, Calumet and Hecla Mining Companies Collection, MS-002, box 47, folder 520, Michigan Tech Archives & Copper Country Historical Collections, Houghton, MI.

 

 

Stop and Reflect:

Consider what these letters reveal about company priorities.

  • What did MacNaughton base his decisions on?

  • Does this reveal anything about managers' power under the paternalist system?

 

Historian's Perspective:

These letters uncover how much power paternalism gave to companies, and especially their managers.

The companies had access to many parts of workers’ lives with no restrictions on how they could use information, leading to rejections based on employment records instead of medical reasoning.

For example, Andrew Lundberg’s request letter briefly mentioned the health of his parents but Henry Brett's research focused on the shaky records of his four brothers. Henry Brett also wrote about “the house matter,” which was likely some conflict the Lundbergs had with company-owned housing. If they lived in a separate home not under company control, Calumet and Hecla would never have been able to use housing records to decide their healthcare.

The company viewed workers like any other asset. William Kieri’s father, John, refused to switch from an independent contract miner to a company miner. Henry Brett wrote about this because it meant the Kieris were not willing to hand over control, and since only two of five sons went on to work for Calumet and Hecla, the family’s loyalty and benefit to the company was questionable.

Managers were also in a position to let their personal beliefs affect employees’ lives. MacNaughton had reasons behind these rejections, but he didn’t consult a list of rules—he looked at worker records and decided whether he thought they had earned benefits.
 

Set 2

Proceed to the next set of documents in the Workers as Company Assets group.

Workers as Company Assets - Set 2
 

Last updated: March 31, 2025

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