Associated Metalworkers' Union Explained

Associated Metalworkers' Union
Location Country:United Kingdom
Affiliation:Trade Union Congress, GFTU
Members:6,007 (1980)
Founded:1863
Dissolved:1999
Merged:Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union
Headquarters:92 Deansgate, Manchester

The Associated Metalworkers' Union was a trade union in the United Kingdom which existed between 1863 and 1999. It represented semi-skilled foundry workers known as iron dressers or fettlers, who were responsible for removing moulding sand and excess metal from castings.

History

The union was founded in about 1863 as the Iron Dressers' Society,[1] gradually extending its name to Iron, Steel and Metal Dressers' Society. The exact date of its foundation is unclear; the union itself gave 1868 as the date of its foundation, while the Board of Trade gave 1860. It was renamed in 1951 as the Iron, Steel and Metal Dressers and Kindred Trades Society, then in 1964 as the Associated Metal Workers Society, soon after taking its final name.[2]

In 1980, the union had a membership just over 6,000, but by 1994 this had declined to only 928 members.[3] Facing a dramatic drop in membership, it left the Trades Union Congress in 1987,[4] but subsequently rejoined. In 1999, it merged into the Amalgamated Engineering and Electrical Union.

General secretaries

1900s: C. W. Davidson

1928: Jack Wigglesworth

1958: Edward Tullock

1984: Ron Marron

References

  1. Book: Eaton. Jack. Gill. Colin. The Trade Union Directory. 1981. Pluto Press. London. 100–101.
  2. Arthur Ivor Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of Trade Unions: Volume 2, p.23
  3. Peter Carter and John B. Smethurst, Historical Directory of Trade Unions: Volume 6, p.203
  4. [Trades Union Congress]