Central Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe Employees

The Central Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe Employees (German: Zentralverband der Hotel-, Restaurant- und Caféangestellten, ZVHRC) was a trade union representing hospitality workers in Germany.

Central Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe Employees
Native nameZentralverband der Hotel-, Restaurant- und Caféangestellten
Founded1920
PredecessorUnion of German Restaurant Workers
Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe Employees
Union of Chefs
Date dissolved2 May 1933 (1933-05-02)
Members29,618 (1931)
JournalGastwirtsgehilfen-Zeitung
AffiliationADGB, IUHR
Office location86-88 Elsässer Straße, Berlin
CountryGermany

The union was founded in 1920, when the Union of German Restaurant Workers merged with the Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Cafe Employees and the Union of Chefs. The union affiliated to the General German Trade Union Confederation, and internationally, to the International Union of Hotel, Restaurant and Bar Workers. By the end of 1931, the union had 29,618 members.[1]

In 1933, the union was banned by the Nazis, but it continued to organise underground, especially in Frankfurt. It printed a newspaper and sent it to a limited number of members, but in 1936, the Gestapo acquired a list of recipients and closed the organisation down.[2]

Presidents

1920: Rudolf Ströhlinger
1930: Fritz Saar

References

  1. Ströhlinger, Rudolf (1931). Zentralverband der Hotel-, Restaurant- und Caféangestellten. ADGB. pp. 2107–2108. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
  2. Ulrich, Axel (2004). NS-Herrschaft, Verfolgung und Widerstand. Mainz: Verein für Sozialgeschichte Mainz. p. 130.
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