Postmen's Federation (original) (raw)

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Former trade union of the United Kingdom

Postmen's Federation

Predecessor Postmen's Union
Merged into Union of Post Office Workers
Founded 1891
Dissolved 1919
Headquarters Parliament Mansions, Victoria Street, London
Location United Kingdom
Members 31,000 (1906)
Key people George Harold Stuart
Affiliations TUC, Labour

The Postmen's Federation was a trade union representing postal workers in the United Kingdom.

In 1889, a "Postmen's Union" was founded in Clerkenwell by Tom Dredge and John Lincoln Mahon. This dissolved after many of its members were sacked, but two years later, C. Churchfield established the "Postmen's Federation" as a more cautious organisation. It immediately recruited 3,721 members, and survived, offering welfare benefits to members from 1895 and publishing The Postmen's Gazette.[1]

By 1901, the union was becoming more confident, and felt able to affiliate to the Trades Union Congress and the Labour Representation Committee. Membership was over 31,000 by 1906.[1]

In 1912, George Harold Stuart was elected as general secretary; Duncan Campbell-Smith describes him as the "single most impressive officer among all the postal union staffs". Under his leadership, the union began admitting women. It negotiated a merger with the Fawcett Association and the Postal and Telegraph Clerks' Association in 1919, forming the Union of Post Office Workers.[2]

General Secretaries

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1891: Charles Churchfield

1901: Alexander MacLaren

1910: T. Robinson

1912: George Harold Stuart

  1. ^ a b Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.1, pp.175-176
  2. ^ Duncan Campbell-Smith, Masters of the Post: The Authorized History of the Royal Mail