Bill Webber (trade unionist)

William James Percival Webber (11 September 1901 12 April 1982) was a Welsh trade unionist.

Born in Swansea, Webber attended Swansea Grammar School, leaving at the age of sixteen to work as a clerk for the Great Western Railway. He also joined the Railway Clerks' Association (RCA), and became active in the Labour Party.[1]

In 1932, Webber was elected to Swansea Borough Council, and was the deputy mayor in 1942/43. From 1940, he was chairman of the National Joint Council for Local Authorities Clerical, Administrative, Professional and Technical Grades. In 1944, he stood down from the council when he became a full-time divisional secretary for the RCA.[1]

Webber was elected as assistant general secretary of the RCA in 1949, and that year also won election to the Labour Party's National Executive Committee, serving until 1953. That year, he was elected as general secretary of the renamed Transport Salaried Staffs' Association (TSSA), and also to the General Council of the Trades Union Congress (TUC).[1]

From 1954, Webber was a visiting fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford. In 1958, he was appointed to the Coal Board, and in 1961 to the Royal Commission on the Press. In 1962, he retired from all his posts except the Coal Board, of which he became a full-time member until retiring in 1967. He was knighted the following year.[1]

References

Trade union offices
Preceded by
George Thorneycroft
General Secretary of the Transport Salaried Staffs' Association
1953 1962
Succeeded by
John Bothwell
Preceded by
Jim Baty, Jim Figgins and George Thorneycroft
Railways representative on the General Council of the Trades Union Congress
19531963
With: Jim Baty (19531955)
Jim Campbell (19531957)
Albert Hallworth (19551960)
Sidney Greene (19571963)
William Evans (19601963)
Succeeded by
John Bothwell, Sidney Greene and Albert Griffiths
Preceded by
Frank Cousins and Frederick Hayday
Trades Union Congress representative to the AFL-CIO
1961
With: Claude Bartlett
Succeeded by
Harry Douglass and Anne Godwin
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