Chain Makers' and Strikers' Association

Chain Makers' and Strikers' Association
Founded 6 July 1889 (1889-07-06)
Date dissolved 1977
Affiliation TUC
Key people Thomas Sitch (Gen Sec)
Office location Unity Villa, Sidney Road, Cradley Heath
Country United Kingdom

The Chain Makers' and Strikers' Association was a trade union representing people involved in the manufacture of chains in the United Kingdom, principally in the West Midlands.

The union was founded in 1889 as the United Chain Makers' and Chain Strikers' Association of Saltney, Pontypridd and Staffordshire, by workers at the H. Wood & Co factory in Chester. Although chain-making was a minor industry in Chester, the union spread to the main areas of chain-making: Crewe, Pontypridd, St Helens, Shifnal and Tipton, and most importantly Cradley Heath, where the union soon relocated its headquarters.[1]

In light of its increased remit, in 1899 the union renamed itself as the "Chain Makers' and Strikers' Association".[1] It had 1,000 members by the end of the century, a majority of unionised workers in the industry.[2] The small Factory Chain Makers' Union joined in 1904.[3]

The union was involved in a major strike in Cradley Heath in 1910, when employers tried to get workers to agree in writing to accept less than agreed rates for their work. The strike succeeded in ending this practice.[2]

The union's main rival was the Union of Block Chain Makers, but by the 1910s, the two shared a general secretary in Thomas Sitch, and the Block Chain Makers was merged into the Chain Makers in 1919. Membership peaked at 1,941 in 1925, but then began a long decline, falling to only 228 in 1972.[2] Sitch's son, Charles, became general secretary on Thomas' death in 1923.[4]

The union was long affiliated to the Trades Union Congress (TUC), but it registered with the government in defiance of TUC policy, and was expelled from the TUC and the General Federation of Trade Unions in 1972. This led the union to collapse, and it was dissolved in 1977.[2]

Election results

The union sponsored its general secretary as Labour Party candidate in each general election from 1918 to 1931.[5]

ElectionConstituencyCandidateVotesPercentagePosition
1918 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch10,39747.61
1922 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch15,23251.61
1923 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch15,17449.51
1924 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch17,23551.51
1929 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch22,47953.21
1931 general electionKingswinfordCharles Sitch19,49547.12

General Secretaries

1889: Thomas Sitch
1923: Charles Sitch
1934: Albert Edward Head

References

  1. 1 2 "Records of the Chainmakers' and Strikers' Association". Archives Hub. Jisc. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Smethurst, John B.; Carter, Peter (2016). Historical Directory of Trade Unions. 6. Routledge. ISBN 1351930761.
  3. Marsh, Arthur; Ryan, Victoria (1984). Historical Directory of Trade Unions. 2. Aldershot: Gower Publishing. p. 166. ISBN 0566021617.
  4. Women Chain Makers (PDF). Dudley: Black Country Living Museum Trust. 2009. p. 14. Retrieved 6 June 2018.
  5. Parker, James (2017). Trade unions and the political culture of the Labour Party, 1931-1940 (PDF). Exeter: University of Exeter. p. 125.
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