词条 | Bradford Trades Council |
释义 |
| name = Bradford Trades Council | full_name = Bradford Trades Union Council | motto = | image = | founded = 16 July 1872 | dissolved_date = | dissolved_state = | merged_into = | members = | journal = | country = England | affiliation = | office = 17–21 Chapel Street, Bradford | website = | footnotes = }} Bradford Trades Council brings together trade unionists in and around Bradford, in West Yorkshire in England. HistoryThe first Bradford Trades Council was founded in July 1867 by six local unions. They were inspired by the London tailors' strike, but feared that it would result in a ban on trade unions. It was led by president William Angus, secretary C. D. Dewhurst, and treasurer Robert Bayes. It sent questions to the candidates in the Bradford by-election, 1867, but ultimately decided against backing either candidate. Dewhurst represented the council at the first Trades Union Congress, but he read a paper which had not been approved by the trades council. It was also found that his union had not paid its affiliation fees, so he was replaced as secretary. He had returned to the post by 1869, but the council ceased operating soon afterwards.[1] A new Bradford Trades Council was founded on 16 July 1872 at the Black Bull. It was led by president Samuel Shaftoe, vice president Robert Scott, treasurer W. Scruton, and secretary Edward Riley. In its early years, it focused on campaigning for a nine-hour maximum working day, and on providing support for unions which were in dispute.[1] From the 1880s, the council worked closely with what became the Amalgamated Society of Dyers; one of its leading figures, William Otty, became president of the trades council in 1882, and from 1897, the council was based at the trades hall which was owned by the union.[1] The Manningham Mills strike of 1890–1891 moved many leading figures on the council away from the Liberal Party. James Bartley, William Henry Drew and Joseph Hayhurst founded the Bradford Labour Union in 1891. The trades council sponsored a joint slate with the Labour Union in the municipal elections, putting up Bartley, Edwin Halford, Andrew Hopkinson, and Shaftoe, on a platform of an eight-hour day for municipal workers, and municipal contracts to employ trade union members. The council also sponsored Ben Tillett's unsuccessful candidacy in Bradford West in the 1892 UK general election. The Labour Union became part of the Independent Labour Party (ILP), and from 1902, the trades council began working with the ILP and local trade unions in the Workers' Municipal Federation (WMF). The trades council became known as the Bradford Trades and Labour Council, and was the central body for the local Labour Party, but only stood candidates in agreement with the ILP and Social Democratic Federation.[1] From 1914 to 1936, the WMF published the Bradford Pioneer.[2] The first women to become a delegate to the trades council was Julia Varley, in 1899; five years later, she was the first woman to become a member of its executive.[1] The trades council opposed World War I, prompting some local Labour councillors to ask it to drop "Labour" from its name. This was rejected, and the council continued on a radical course, supporting the Hands Off Russia campaign, and organising the 1926 UK general strike in the city.[1] It has remained active ever since, and in recent years has been known as the Bradford Trades Union Council. OfficersSecretaries1872: Edward Riley 1882: Samuel Shaftoe 1893: George Cowgill 1895: James Bartley 1899: Fred Jowett William Henry Drew 1906: Walter Barber c.1930: Revis Barber c.1948: Derek Smith 1990s: Mike Quiggin Presidents1872: Samuel Shaftoe 1875: Robert Appleyard 1877: Samuel Shaftoe 1882: William Otty 1884: Edwin Halford 1894: C. L. Robinson Theophilus Warner as of 1900: A. N. Harris 1921: Thomas William Stamford 1924: as of 1926: Harold Child 1942: Jim Backhouse 1970: Ludwig Baruch 1973: Pat Wall 1990: Ronnie Fieldhouse 2000s: Altaf Arif References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 {{cite book |last1=Ashraf |first1=Mary |title=Bradford Trades Council: 1872-1972 |date=1972 |publisher=Bradford Trades Council |location=Bradford}} 2. ^Newspapers in Special Collections, University of Bradford 4 : Organisations based in Bradford|Politics of Bradford|Trades councils|Trade unions established in 1872 |
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