The National Civic Federation (NCF), founded in 1900, sought to bring business, labor, and civic leaders together to improve industrial relations. Promoted by Ralph Easley, a journalist and civic booster, the NCF was the successor to the Chicago Civic Federation which had organized a series of national conferences in the 1890s on issues like industrial arbitration and conciliation (Chicago, 1894), primary elections (New York City, 1898), United States foreign policy (Saratoga Springs, N.Y., 1898), and trusts (Chicago, 1899).
By June 1900 the NCF organizing committee had created a five hundred member advisory body that, Easley noted, included "only representative, conservative, practical men of affairs, Republicans
and Democrats. No federal or state officeholders, professional politicians, cranks, hobbyists, or revolutionists."
Samuel Gompers and
John Mitchell were among thirty-one labor leaders who accepted positions on the advisory committee.