Britain Depth (5) Trades union militancy, 1915-27 Flashcards
What was the role of Ernest Bevin and Henry Thomas?
Thomas and Bevin formed the triple alliance at the beginning of the war. Henry Thomas was responsible for the National Union of railwaymen (NUR) became it’s general secretary in 1916. Supported Lloyd-George’s coalition government by cracking down on unofficial strikes and ensuring reasonable industrial harmony. Worked from within parliament. Worked on TUC general council 1921-24 and 1925-9.
Ernest Bevin 1916 elected to the executive committee of the NTWF . Labour loyalist defeated as candidate for central Bristol in 1918 but pivotal in forming NTWF policy during the war.
What were the effects of the war?
out of the 15 million men of the working population, 5 million in armed forces, 500,000 navy, 300,000 air force, industrial production declined rapidly, mining fell by 21.8 %. Higher demand for industrial workers meant that they were in the position to be able to negotiate. Annual inflation rate of around 25% meant wages seemed to lag behind prices. 1915 200,000 Welsh miners went on unofficial strike in South Wales.
Over 3000 strikes 1911-14 which were halted by the war.
Membership of unions grew 4m to 8m.
Industrial strife
Strikes all over the country, 5.6 million days lost in 1917 such as engineers’ strikes in Coventry 1917.
Benefits of war for unions
- Wanted to roll back the regulations of the wartime economy
- Miners working week fell from 55 to 45 hours.
- wages generally rose
- Dockers given regular contracts of employment.
What was the Triple Alliance 1914?
MFGB, NTWF, NUR united, wld allow for an effective co-ordination of strike action, placed the triple alliance ina an improved position but applied new pressures, munitions of war act 1915 was over fears of insufficient shells and ammunition production, gave private companies the power to regulate wages etc, 12.5% bonus to skilled workers but it led to strikes s it was given to all workers
What did the Munitions of war act 1915 do?
placed constraints on skilled workers in essential industries. Private companies producing munitions brought under the authority of the Ministry of Munitions. Strikes and lockouts banned. Gov dictated wages, hours and working conditions. E.g. Ministry of munitions granted a 12.5% pay rise in October 1917. Arbitrated industrial conflict. Workers needed a leaving certificate in order to switch posts.
Dilution
Unskilled workers doing skilled jobs. On the Clyde 14,000 female workers employed, causing strikes. Gov decided in 1916 when it needed miners to tunnel under German trenches at the Somme, to only recruit ppl who had become miners after 1914 and were unmarried.
Syndicalism
a movement for transferring the ownership and control of the means of production and distribution to workers’ unions.
What was the role of Manny Shinwell?
glasgow was the heart of british heavy industry, if revolution was to happen it wld happen there, member of ILP, earned fame for his militancy against the police, 1919 was key in securing the support of seafarers for the strike, served 5 months in prison, became labour MP, parliamentary secretary to the mines department in Macdonald’s 1924 labour government.
What was the role of James Maxton?
Chairman of Scottish LP 1913-19.
Condemned conflict and was a good public speaker. Worked on barges during war, organised strikes of shipping docks in the Clyde. Joined Clyde workers committee protested against munitions of war act 1915 and critical of the war. 1918 elected to national council of the LP. Involved in Fairfield strike 1915 led to the munitions of war amendment act 1916.
What were the events at the Glasgow rent stike 1915?
strikes for a pay rise, shortage of housing so increase in rents, GWHA led rent strikes spreading across the city, working men joined the protest, shipbuilders demanded better pay and conditions, had been suffragettes before the war, known as Mrs Barbours army, Nov passed Rents and Mortgage Interests restrictions act levels before the war.
WW1 raged and shipyard and munitions workers flooded into the city = overcrowding and rapacious landlords.
April - November 1915.
War fomented discontent.
By November 20,000 tenants were in arrears.
Mid-November one factor decided to prosecute 18 tenants in the small claims court to try and secure a wages arrestment order. In response, 10,000 men and women marched into the city centre bringing the roads to a standstill.
Lloyd George agreed to a new law fixing rents at pre-war prices.
What was the significance of the Glasgow rent strike 1915?
had won considerable improvement to living conditions, showed the extent of influence the labouring classes had attained under war time conditions, dramatic and successful, centre of socialism, Red Clydeside became emblematic of the trade unions growing influence.
Established a precedent for rent controls which continued to be applied to some rental agreements until 1989 (Long term).
Managed to combine industrial and domestic weights.
Barbour was able to command respect from men and women from diverse backgrounds.
What was the 40 hour strike in 1919?
once the war was over there was a dramatic increase in the number of men looking for jobs, Jan 1919 was a strike, solution to problem was to reduce the number of hours employees worked, measures were unpopular with employees and gov, Clyde and Belfast had secured working hours from 53 to 47, authorities over reacted and believed that a revolution was unfolding, gov sent tanks and troops to the city to disperse protests, known as the battle of George square, red flag raised, unrest spread to London and on the tube there were protests, Britain was on verge of revolution.
However the strike failed to spread beyond industrial Scotland as it became evident that the government were willing to use violence.
‘Black friday’
April 15th 1921. Leaders of the transport and railway unions ordered workers not to strike in sympathy
with the coal miners. Bevin reluctantly agreed to this recognising the NTWF was brittle bc the trade
depression threatened the jobs of its members. Widely seen as a betrayal of the miners. End of 1921
hunger forced miners to return to work. Eventually lead to the collapse of the alliance due to the NUR
and NTWF failing to support miners and the failure of the strike. 1921 around 85m days of work lost
but by 1923 this sank to 10 mill. Unrest 1919-21 displayed extent of change during the war and
increased influence of trade unions.
What was Red Clydeside?
At the forefront of the labour movements increasing influence. gov hoped trade unionists wld control industrial unrest, became centre of labour support, Clydeside had been at the forefront of the labour movements increasing influence. Spring 1919 Churchill remarked that trade unions were an effective device for preventing the discontent of post-war u/e and reduced wages from spiralling out of control and into all-out revolution.