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demonstrations, and in 1909 it affiliated to the
National Campaign to Promote the Break-Up of the Poor Law. However, when major strikes took place in the city in 1911, the trades council's only role was in raising funds to support the strikers. Revolutionaries became prominent on the council over
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During the early 1880s, the council gradually grew in strength, supporting workers in disputes around the docks, while also campaigning for the establishment of a free library in the town, and for better schools for working-class children. In 1886, the trades council passed a resolution permitting
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in Hull was in 1867, and further reference to it appear in the local press in the 1870s. In late 1881, the council was reorganised, and it is this date which the organisation has since regarded as its foundation. From the start, unions of dockers and sailors were strongly represented on the
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The Hull
Building Trades Council, which was founded in 1891, came to dominate the council, and its membership rebounded. By 1898, it claimed to be the second-largest trades council in the UK, and to have the largest number of representatives on local public bodies. The new
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agreement. The
Shipping Federation opposed the agreement, and ended it in 1893, locking out all workers who held union membership. The trades council raised money nationally to support the dockers, but they were defeated, and the council much weakened by this.
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61:. Maddison won a seat on the town council in 1887, but left the town two years later. In 1891, three trades council-backed candidates won seats as
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From 1905, the trades council increased its activity. That year, it organised a "Right to Work" demonstration, it began holding large
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political discussions, and it focused increasingly on securing the election of workers to the town council. That year, it hosted the
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The council grew from 5,000 members in 1889 to 20,000 in 1891, with membership among dockers booming as the union secured a
85:, the "Progressive Party". This was dissolved in 1905, and ILP members won the leading positions on the trades council.
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81:(ILP) failed to win over many supporters, and from 1898 the trades council formed an alliance with the local
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the next few years, but the council lost prominence as the local
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took over most of its political activities, and at the start of
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Contested
Coordinator: the Hull Trades Council, 1872-1914
268:Trade unions based in the East Riding of Yorkshire
53:(TUC) in the town, and trades council president
41:council, in contrast to most other towns, where
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183:Waterfront organisation in Hull, 1870-1900
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185:. Hull: University of Hull. p. 20.
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18:Hull and District Trades Union Council
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211:. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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263:Trade unions established in 1881
232:"The Trades Congress at Hull".
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234:Exeter and Plymouth Gazette
45:dominated trades councils.
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131:1901: Thomas George Hall
79:Independent Labour Party
181:Brown, Raymond (1972).
36:The first mention of a
207:Béliard, Yann (2018).
140:1916: William Duggleby
134:1906: Patrick Flanagan
125:1889: W. G. Millington
113:1883: C. N. Mullineaux
51:Trades Union Congress
152:1923: Isaac Robinson
116:1884: W. J. Strachan
59:President of the TUC
24:based in and around
236:. 7 September 1886.
253:Kingston upon Hull
164:1937: C. E. Wilson
155:1927: George Clark
149:1921: George Clark
143:1917: George Clark
26:Kingston-upon-Hull
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22:trade unions
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99:World War I
70:closed shop
247:Categories
218:1526126346
169:References
105:Presidents
90:May Day
32:History
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119:1886:
213:ISBN
16:The
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191:^
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