#tradeunionhistory — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #tradeunionhistory, aggregated by home.social.
-
#Historical #UnionSolidarity #Art.
“The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin. June 30, 1917.The symbol of the clinched fist has been a symbol of #solidarity as early as 1917. “The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin is an illustration referring to the #IWW (Industrial Workers of The World). Industrial unionism began when skilled workers were displaced by modern machinery and the #monopolization of industries. It was a union that believed industries should be controlled by the workers, benefiting the many instead of enriching the few, and create better working conditions.
In this image, the workers are uniting their arms and creating one giant fist, which represents solidarity and #unity, while holding tools, representing manual labor, while factories in the backdrop symbolize the machinery displacing the workers.
-
#Historical #UnionSolidarity #Art.
“The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin. June 30, 1917.The symbol of the clinched fist has been a symbol of #solidarity as early as 1917. “The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin is an illustration referring to the #IWW (Industrial Workers of The World). Industrial unionism began when skilled workers were displaced by modern machinery and the #monopolization of industries. It was a union that believed industries should be controlled by the workers, benefiting the many instead of enriching the few, and create better working conditions.
In this image, the workers are uniting their arms and creating one giant fist, which represents solidarity and #unity, while holding tools, representing manual labor, while factories in the backdrop symbolize the machinery displacing the workers.
-
#Historical #UnionSolidarity #Art.
“The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin. June 30, 1917.The symbol of the clinched fist has been a symbol of #solidarity as early as 1917. “The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin is an illustration referring to the #IWW (Industrial Workers of The World). Industrial unionism began when skilled workers were displaced by modern machinery and the #monopolization of industries. It was a union that believed industries should be controlled by the workers, benefiting the many instead of enriching the few, and create better working conditions.
In this image, the workers are uniting their arms and creating one giant fist, which represents solidarity and #unity, while holding tools, representing manual labor, while factories in the backdrop symbolize the machinery displacing the workers.
-
#Historical #UnionSolidarity #Art.
“The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin. June 30, 1917.The symbol of the clinched fist has been a symbol of #solidarity as early as 1917. “The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin is an illustration referring to the #IWW (Industrial Workers of The World). Industrial unionism began when skilled workers were displaced by modern machinery and the #monopolization of industries. It was a union that believed industries should be controlled by the workers, benefiting the many instead of enriching the few, and create better working conditions.
In this image, the workers are uniting their arms and creating one giant fist, which represents solidarity and #unity, while holding tools, representing manual labor, while factories in the backdrop symbolize the machinery displacing the workers.
-
#Historical #UnionSolidarity #Art.
“The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin. June 30, 1917.The symbol of the clinched fist has been a symbol of #solidarity as early as 1917. “The Hand That Will Rule the World” by Ralph Chaplin is an illustration referring to the #IWW (Industrial Workers of The World). Industrial unionism began when skilled workers were displaced by modern machinery and the #monopolization of industries. It was a union that believed industries should be controlled by the workers, benefiting the many instead of enriching the few, and create better working conditions.
In this image, the workers are uniting their arms and creating one giant fist, which represents solidarity and #unity, while holding tools, representing manual labor, while factories in the backdrop symbolize the machinery displacing the workers.
-
Very happy to have added this to my collection of trade union badges. The National Federation of Women Workers operated as a trade union from 1906-1921, before merging into the National Union of General and Municipal Workers. If you want to know more, I recommend the work of historian Cathy Hunt, who has published books on both the NFWW and its leading light, Mary Macarthur https://cathyhunthistorian.com/
#LabourHistory #TradeUnionHistory #TradeUnionBadges -
An indignant-looking pot on this Ceramic and Allied Trades Union badge. The CATU emerged from a series of mergers in 1970, but traced its roots back to the early years of the twentieth century. It eventually merged into the GMB. #TradeUnionBadges #TradeUnionHistory
-
An indignant-looking pot on this Ceramic and Allied Trades Union badge. The CATU emerged from a series of mergers in 1970, but traced its roots back to the early years of the twentieth century. It eventually merged into the GMB. #TradeUnionBadges #TradeUnionHistory
-
I believe this badge is from the United Vehicle Workers trade union that enjoyed only a brief existence before becoming part of the TGWU in 1922, though I can find no record of it incorporating “road transport’ in its name.
#LabourHistory #TradeUnionHistory #TradeUnionBadges -
#LabourHistory #TradeUnionBadges #TradeUnionHistory
Adopting this name in 1928, the National Union of Printing, Bookbinding and Paperworkers emerged from the mergers of numerous small and specialist unions, some of which traced their roots back to the 1820s. It went on to absorb further unions over the years, and in 1966 merged with NATSOPA to form the Society of Graphical and Allied Trades. Its archives are kept in the Modern Records Centre at Warwick University https://mrc.epexio.com/records/NPB -
Another trade union badge…
When the National Union of Tailors and Garment Workers merged into the GMB in 1991, it took its eye-catching scissors logo with it. The tailors’ union could trace its origins back to the 1850s, and by 1950 had around 130,000 members. But the industry’s decline saw membership halve over the next forty years. @histodons #LabourHistory #TradeUnionHistory #TradeUnionBadges