Oskar Allmann (born 1868) was a German trade unionist.
Allmann worked as a baker, and joined the Union of Bakers and Related Workers of Germany. In 1895, he was elected as president of the union. In 1907, he took the union into a merger which formed the Central Union of Bakers and Confectioners, remaining president of the new union. That year, he also led the formation of the International Federation of Bakers, Pastry Cooks and Allied Workers' Associations, becoming its general secretary. [1]
Allmann stood down from his trade union posts in 1918, [1] but remained involved with the trade union movement, and in 1930, his Geschichte der deutschen Bäcker- und Konditoren-bewegung was published.
The German Labour Front was the labour organisation under the Nazi Party which replaced the various independent trade unions in Germany during Adolf Hitler's rise to power.
Friedrich Ebert was a German politician of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and the first president of Germany from 1919 until his death in office in 1925.
The Free Association of German Trade Unions was a trade union federation in Imperial and early Weimar Germany. It was founded in 1897 in Halle under the name Representatives' Centralization of Germany as the national umbrella organization of the localist current of the German labor movement. The localists rejected the centralization in the labor movement following the sunset of the Anti-Socialist Laws in 1890 and preferred grassroots democratic structures. The lack of a strike code soon led to conflict within the organization. Various ways of providing financial support for strikes were tested before a system of voluntary solidarity was agreed upon in 1903, the same year that the name Free Association of German Trade Unions was adopted.
Heinrich Brandler was a German communist, trade unionist, politician, revolutionary activist, and political writer. Brandler is best remembered as the head of the Communist Party of Germany (KPD) during the party's ill-fated "March Action" of 1921 and aborted uprising of 1923, for which he was held responsible by the Communist International. Expelled from the Communist Party in December 1928, Brandler went on to become co-founder of the Communist Party of Germany Opposition, the first national section of the so-called International Right Opposition.
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John Swift (1896–1990) was an Irish trade union leader.
The International Federation of Bakers, Pastry Cooks and Allied Workers' Associations was a global union federation bringing together trade unions representing bakery workers.
Heinrich Gutermuth was a German trade union leader.
Carl Stenger was a German politician and trade union leader.
Eugen Loderer was a German trade union leader.
The Union of Food and Drink Workers was a trade union representing workers in the food and drink processing industry in Germany.
The Central Union of Bakers and Confectioners was a trade union representing workers in bakeries and related trades in Germany.
The Union of Brewery and Mill Workers and Kindred Trades was a trade union representing workers in the food and drink processing industry in Germany.
The Central Union of Butchers and Kindred Trades of Germany was a trade union representing butchers and abattoir workers in Germany.
The Union of Coopers, Cellar Managers, and Helpers in Germany was a trade union representing coopers and those in related trades, in Germany.
Hugo Poetzsch was a German trade unionist and social democratic activist.
Martin Etzel was a German trade union leader.
Reinhard Sommer is a German former trade union leader.
The Union of Printing and Paper was a trade union representing most printing industry workers in Switzerland.
The Union of Bakers and Related Workers of Germany was a trade union representing workers in the baking industry in Germany.