4 - Unionism and cooperation Flashcards
One example of Earlier Trade Unions success
London Printers
- 1793 petitioned their masters for an incraese in wages
- They had 539 signatures
- Successfully negotiatedd an increase in wages
Grand National success
- The Combination Act were replealed in 1824
- Had over 1 million members
Grand National failures
- failed in 1834
- due to a lack of effective management and bad leadership
- as only 16,000 out of the 1 million members paidd their fees
Government’s response to Trade Unions
The Combinations Act
- Harsher punishments were favoured under the 1797 Unlawful Oaths Act
- Repealed in 1834
The Master and Servants Act
- not ammended until the Trade Union Act 1871
- In 1864, under the M&S A 10,246 working men were imprisoned
Tolpuddle Martyrs facts
Government making a statement with harsh punishmnets
- Willaim lovett’s campaign CHARTISTS) reduced their sentence
- They were issued with a free pardon in March 1836.
- sentenced under 1797 Unlawful Oaths Act
- petition had 200,000 signatures to campaign for their release
New Model Unionism factss
- The Amalgamated Society of Engineers donated £3,000 to the builders strike fund
–> as they were so well organised that they collected so much money they were able to help other unions. - the National Miners’ Association (middle-class Alexander Mcdonald) = they achieved the Miners Regulation Act of 1860 and it ensured the protection of their fair wages.
–> Macdonald was elected to the first parliamentary committee of the Trades Union Congress in 1871
TUC facts
- Formed in 1868
- Forerunner was the London trades Council
New lanark Facts
- One investor at his mill was Jeremy Bentham and the Quaker William Allen, who received a £5,000 return on their capital.
–> Jeremy Bentham critisised the amendments of the Poor Laws in his esay ‘Observations on the Poor Bill’ when Willaim Pitt (the Younger) introduced them in 1796 - However, when no one listened to his ideas, he left for America.
–> despite the Tsar of Russia visiting in 1816 = people listening? - The Mill operated from 1799-1828
- free education and built houses for the workers
- no children under 10 could work
- The Mill was closed for 4 months following the US’s ban on cotton, but Owen continued to pay his workers
- In 1834, he boasted that he maintained an annual wage of £300,000, which silenced his critics.
Co-operative and the Rochdale Pioneers facts
- In 1844, the first co-op shop was opened in Rochdale by 28 men
- Who formed the Rochdale Society of Equitable Pioneers
- By 1870, theier first shop has 5,560 members
- By the 1870s there were over 1000s shops
- However, they faced opposition becuase they were viewedd as radical: tradtional shop owners chargedd them excessive rent
Friendly Societies
- The Government did not stop FS but controlled them as they did a job for the governmnet
= Proto-welfare state - The FS Act in 1793, meant that FS’s had to register with a local Justice of Peace
- By 1815, FS insured 1/3 of the population
- The United Society was an assiciation of numerous FS = cooordinated