Labor organizing
Kraus became active in the labor movement through work with organizing Cleveland auto workers in 1930. Dorothy Kraus helped organize the UAW Women's Auxiliary and ran strike kitchens at
Midland Steel,
Ford's Kelsey-Hayes factory, and the Flint sit-down.
Sol Dollinger and
Genora Johnson Dollinger were critical of his 1947 account of the strike,
The Many and the Few, and of Dorothy Kraus's role in the Women's Auxiliary. UAW President
Homer Martin fired Kraus in 1937, part of an effort to purge Communists from the UAW. == Later life ==
Later life
After the war, the Krauses moved to New York City and, in 1956, Paris, where Kraus worked as a European correspondent for World Wide Medical News Service. ==Awards==
Works
• The Many and the Few, University of Illinois Press, 1947, • In the City Was a Garden: A Housing Project Chronicle, Renaissance Press, 1951, • Here Is Your Union: The Story of UE 340, 1952 • The Living Theater of Medieval Art, Indiana University Press, 1967 (reprint University of Pennsylvania Press, 1972, ) • "The medieval commune at Amiens as patron of art and architecture," in Gazette des Beaux Arts 78, 1971, pp. 317-30. • Hidden World of Misericords, Authors Dorothy Kraus, Henry Kraus, Joseph, 1976, • Gold Was the Mortar: The Economics of Cathedral Building. Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1979, • Gothic Stalls of Spain, Authors Dorothy Kraus, Henry Kraus, Routledge, 1986, • Heroes of Unwritten Story, University of Illinois Press, 1994, • ''The Acquisition of Courage: One Man's Journey to Commitment in the 1930s'', Renaissance Press, 1997, ==References==