Warwickshire Miners' Association

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Warwickshire Miners' Association
Founded1885
HeadquartersMiners' Offices, Bedworth
Location
  • United Kingdom
Members
9,000 (1907[1])
Parent organization
Miners' Federation of Great Britain

The Warwickshire Miners' Association was a

coal miners in the Warwickshire
area of England.

In 1885, the Newdegate family leased their Warwickshire coal mine to a Sheffield-based company, who attempted to cut costs by reducing miners' wages. This prompted miners to strike, and afterwards they formed the Warwickshire and Stafford Miners' Trade Union, which was later renamed as the "Warwickshire Miners' Association". The union's first secretary was William Johnson, who later became a local Member of Parliament.[2]

In 1889, the union was a founder constituent of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB).[3] In about 1892, it affiliated to the Midland Counties Miners' Federation, with Johnson becoming treasurer of the federation. The MFGB voted to affiliate to the Labour Party in 1909, but Johnson and the Warwickshire Miners refused to follow suit. This led to a series of disputes, and in 1912 a group of members including Walter John French split away to form the rival North Warwickshire Miners' Association. George Henry Jones became secretary of the North Warwickshire Miners, but moved to the Warwickshire Miners in 1919, and two years later was able to persuade the North Warwickshire Miners to rejoin the original union.[4][5]

At its peak, the union had 11,000 members, in 25 branches.[6]

The MFGB became the

National Union of Mineworkers
in 1944, and the Warwickshire Miners' Association became its Warwickshire District (Midlands Area), with less autonomy than before.

General Secretaries

1885: William Johnson
1917: William Johnson, Jr
1919: George Henry Jones
1947: A. J. Pratt
1960s: Vivian Francis
1970s: Dick Storer

References

  1. ^ Report on Trade Unions in 1905-1907. London: Board of Trade. 1909. p. 82-101.
  2. .
  3. ^ "Miners' Conference at Birmingham". Manchester Guardian. 9 October 1889.
  4. .
  5. ^ The Labour Who's Who. London: The Labour Publishing Company. 1924. p. 94.
  6. ^ Page Arnot, Robin (1949). The Miners: 1889-1910. Allen & Unwin. p. 373.