Knowledge (XXG)

Alliance Cabinet Makers' Association

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By 1867, membership of the union was only 800, but the union's high income permitted it to employ its first full-time general secretary, J. R. Smith. Membership appears to have fallen back to just 200 in two branches in 1872, but a trade boom allowed it to spread across the country, reaching 2,000
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In 1865, cabinet makers in London went on strike and won a 10% increase in wages. This success inspired them to form the "Alliance Cabinet Makers' Association". This largely followed a
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During the 1880s, the union led a successful campaign against subcontracting. The union also built up a substantial library of 1,500 volumes for members to educate themselves.
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who were closely related to union members. However, the union accepted all workers in the trade into membership, and was able to make high payments to members in need.
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Membership peaked at 5,251 in 1901. The following year, it merged with the United Operative Cabinet and Chairmakers Society of Scotland to form the
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model, requiring high contributions from members, and insisting that members only took on
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The union was long associated with radical politics, and it affiliated to the
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Stan Shipley, "The libraries of the Alliance Cabinet Makers' Association",
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members in 1877, in 28 branches. Although branches existed in
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Index

National Amalgamated Furnishing Trades Association
Finsbury Pavement
London
TUC
trade union
United Kingdom
craft union
apprentices
First International
Trades Union Congress
Adam Weiler
Marxist
London Trades Council
Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1871
picketing
Limerick
Edinburgh
Plymouth
National Amalgamated Furnishing Trades Association









ISBN
0948720069

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