Matchmakers' Union

Last updated
The Matchmakers' Union
Formation27 July 1888
Dissolved1903
Location
Origins The Matchgirls' Strike
Formerly called
The Union of Women Matchmakers

The Matchmakers' Union (founded as TheUnion of Women Matchmakers) [1] was a British trade union formed in 1888 following the successful Matchgirls' strike. [2] [3] On its creation, it was the largest union of women and girls in the country, [4] and inspired a wave of collective organising among industrial workers. [5] [6] [7]

Contents

Formation

The Union of Women Match Makers was formed following successful industrial action by workers at the Bryant & May factory, who challenged poor and unsafe working conditions, and low pay. [8] [9]

The inaugural meeting of the Union of Women Match Makers was held on 27 July 1888 at Stepney Meeting Hall, Stepney Green. [10] [11] The meeting was chaired by Ben Cooper, Secretary of the Cigarmakers' Trade Union. [12] W. C. Steadman of the London Trades Council [13] moved that:

This meeting is of the opinion that it is desirable that a trade union should be formed of all women matchmakers employed in, factories, and those present pledge themselves to do all in their power to make such union a success. [12]

Clementina Black of the Women's Trade Union League seconded the resolution. [12] The Pall Mall Gazette reported Black as saying:

Many ills occurred from women not taking part in public life. The world was as good as we made it, and no better. Unionists stood together to help all; not for each singly, but for the common good. But they must be persistent; not merely angry fora moment, but steadily holding together for one and all. [13]

Twelve women were elected to the committee, [12] with Annie Besant as Secretary, Herbert Burrows as Treasurer, [14] and strike organiser Sarah Chapman, elected president. [15] Burrows also proposed the election of five East End members of the London Trades’ Council to act as a consultative committee, to whom the girls might turn for advice in difficulties. [13] This too was passed. [13]

Subsequently, with money remaining from the strike fund and a benefit event, permanent premises were acquired. [10] By October of that year, over 650 members had joined the Union, which became the Matchmakers' Union - now open to both men and women. [10] [16] [17] In November, the Union sent two delegates to the International Trade Union Congress. [18]

The Union helped their fellow workers at the Bell Match factory in their own strike action, [19] and in 1888 sent 10s to support women weavers at Leeds, who had resolved to form a union. [20]

In 1896, at the International Socialist Workers and Trade Union Congress in London, the Matchmakers' Union submitted the following resolution:

That this Congress presses upon the workers of all countries in which matches are manufactured the necessity in the interest of the health of the employees, of bringing influence to bear on the respective Governments in order that the use of poisonous phosphorus shall be prohibited by law, and that till this is accomplished it appeals to all workingmen and women to buy none but non-poisonous matches. [21]

In 1901, the managing director Bryant & May announced it had stopped using yellow phosphorus. [22] The White Phosphorus Matches Prohibition Bill was passed in 1908. [23] [24] This prohibited "the use of the substance usually known as white or yellow phosphorus in the manufacture of matches". [25] This came into force in January 1910. [26]

Key figures

Influence

The Matchmakers' Union was dissolved in 1903, [7] but both the 1888 strike and subsequent unionisation exerted significant influence on the wider trade union movement. [10] [28] During the eight years following the Union's formation, the number of women trade unionists swelled from 40,000 to 118,000. [29] Graham Johnson has suggested that "the success of the matchgirls, and their subsequent Matchmaker’s Union, arguably bolstered the momentum of both the burgeoning trades unions and the Great Dock Strike the following year, paving the way for the UK’s new labour movement." [23] In 2020, a motion was tabled in Parliament remembering "the matchgirls as pioneers of gender equality and fairness at work who through their strike action and formation of the Union of Women Match Makers left a lasting legacy on the trade union movement". [30]

In 2022, the Match Girls' Strike was commemorated with an English Heritage blue plaque on the former Bryant & May factory. [11]

See also

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References

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  2. "The Matchmakers' Union". Pall Mall Gazette. 28 July 1888. p. 10.
  3. "A history of women and trade unions". Prospect. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  4. "Burrows, Herbert (1845–1922), socialist organizer". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39607 . Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  5. "British Women Trade Unionists on Strike at Bryant & May, 1888 - Description". British Online Archives. Retrieved 2022-12-30.
  6. "Bryant & May Matchmakers Strike Register - Archives Hub". archiveshub.jisc.ac.uk. Retrieved 2022-12-30.
  7. 1 2 Boston, Sarah (1987). Women workers and the trade unions. Internet Archive. London : Lawrence & Wishart. ISBN   978-0-85315-659-8.
  8. Koven, Seth (2014). The match girl and the heiress. Internet Archive. Princeton : Princeton University Press. ISBN   978-0-691-15850-1.
  9. Owen, Patricia (1989). Women and work : Patricia Owen. Internet Archive. Hove : Wayland. ISBN   978-1-85210-387-3.
  10. 1 2 3 4 University, London Metropolitan. "The Union Makes Us Strong TUC History Online". unionhistory.info. Retrieved 2022-12-30.
  11. 1 2 "Match Girls' Strike | Bryant and May works | Blue Plaques". English Heritage. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  12. 1 2 3 4 "Match-makers". Justice. 4 August 1888. p. 3.
  13. 1 2 3 4 "The Matchmakers in Council: Formation of a Union". Pall Mall Gazette. 28 July 1888. p. 11.
  14. Gorman, John (1980). To build Jerusalem : a photographic remembrance of British working class life 1875-1950. Internet Archive. London : Scorpion. ISBN   978-0-905906-26-3.
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  16. Hawksley, Lucinda (2015). March, women, march. Internet Archive. London : Andre Deutsch. ISBN   978-0-233-00445-7.
  17. Raw, Louise (2011). Striking a light: the Bryant and May Matchwomen and their place in history. London New York, N.Y: Continuum. ISBN   978-1-4411-1426-6.
  18. "International Trades' Congress". Lloyd's Weekly Newspaper. 11 November 1888. p. 8.
  19. Emsley, John (2000). The 13th element : the sordid tale of murder, fire, and phosphorus. Internet Archive. New York : John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN   978-0-471-39455-6.
  20. "Mems. from a Woman's Note-book". The Norfolk News. 3 November 1888. p. 5.
  21. International Socialist Congress (1896 : London) (1896). Agenda for the International Socialist Workers and Trade Union Congress, London, 1896 : St. Martin's Town Hall, Charing Cross Road : Monday, July 27th, and five following days. Columbia University Libraries. London : Twentieth Century Press.
  22. "Matchmakers' Union - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  23. 1 2 "The Matchgirls and Phossy Jaw: a striking tale of industrial action". ENT & Audiology News. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
  24. Bulletin of the Bureau of Labor. U.S. Government Printing Office. 1910.
  25. Jacobs, Bertram (1912). A manual of public health law. Wellcome Library. London : Sweet and Maxwell, limited.
  26. Hammond, P. W. (1992). Weighed in the balance : a history of the Laboratory of the Government Chemist. Internet Archive. London : H.M.S.O. ISBN   978-0-11-515302-0.
  27. Katanka, Michael; Frow, E.; Frow, R. (1971). Strikes: A Documentary History. Internet Archive. London: Charles Knight & Co. Ltd.
  28. McAllister, Pam (1988). You can't kill the spirit. Internet Archive. Philadelphia, PA : New Society Publishers. ISBN   978-0-86571-130-3.
  29. Rolka, Gail Meyer (1994). 100 women who shaped world history. Internet Archive. San Francisco, CA : Bluewood Books. ISBN   978-0-912517-06-3.
  30. "Early Day Motions: Sarah Chapman's grave". UK Parliament. 22 July 2020.