There are several labor history organizations in Washington, dedicated to promoting and preserving public and scholarly awareness of labor and working-class history.
The Harry Bridges Center for Labor Studies (and the Labor Archives at UW) supports students and faculty at the University of Washington in the study of labor in all of its facets. Through education and research, their mission is to develop labor studies - broadly conceived to include working people everywhere - as a central concern in higher education. The Center cultivates connections with labor communities locally and around the world, and informs policymakers about issues confronting workers. In addition, the Bridges Center founded the Labor Archives of Washington within the University of Washington Libraries, which works to preserve and make accessible the history of working people and their organizations.
The Labor and Working-Class History Archive (LAWCHA) promotes labor and working-class history within the history and social studies curricula in public schools as well as at community colleges, colleges, universities, and unions. LAWCHA also produces the journal Labor: Studies in Working-Class History, maintains a blog of labor history topics, and works with primary documents to give teachers resources to include in their curricula, among many other components of its mission and work.
The Pacific Northwest Labor History Association (PNLHA) s a non-profit association dedicated to preserving the history and heritage of workers in the Pacific Northwest. PNLHA considers the “Pacific Northwest” to be British Columbia, Oregon and Washington. It is PNLHA's belief the labor movement must know where it’s been to know where it’s going.