The
1934 West Coast waterfront strike began on May 9, 1934, late in Mayor Dore's first term. Longshoremen in all ports of the West Coast walked out, and in Seattle, the
Masters, Mates, and Pilots Union refused to handle cargoes as the shipping companies began recruiting
University of Washington students as strikebreakers. On May 13, two thousand strikers from
Everett and
Tacoma arrived to shore up the Seattle picket lines. This, combined with Mayor Dore's refusal to ask Governor
Clarence D. Martin to call in the
National Guard, effectively ended this strikebreaking effort. By May 15, off-shore unions also joined the strike, and the
Teamsters ceased crossing the picket lines. ==Second Term==