Comité Central des Houillères de France | |
Abbreviation: | CCHF |
Predecessor: | Comité des Houillères Françaises |
Successor: | Comité d’organisation des combustibles minéraux solides |
Type: | Lobby group |
Status: | Defunct |
Purpose: | Defend coalowners' interests |
Headquarters: | 35 rue Saint-Dominique, 75007 Paris, France. |
Region: | France |
Language: | French |
The Comité Central des Houillères de France (CCHF, Central Committee of Coalowners of France) was an industrial lobby group that represented the interests of the owners of coal mines.It was active between 1887 and 1940, when the Vichy government dissolved it and placed the coal industry under government control.
A first attempt to unite the coalowners of the Loire region to defend their common interests was made in 1822, but did not last. The Union des Houillères françaises was formed in 1840 to promote the interests of the national mines and defend their common interests.It had a committee supported by a secretary in Paris who maintained records and responded to requests.The union also did not last long. The Comité des Houillères Françaises was organized from 1855 to 1869 by Amédée Burat (1809–83), a professor at the École Centrale Paris and consulting engineer to the Blanzy and Le Creusot mines.This committee provided a center for publications.
During the French Third Republic a period of prosperity for the coal mines ended after 1880 and the need for an industry organization reappeared. The Compagnie des Mines de la Loire set up a study committee on 1 July 1886 to review mining laws.Henry Darcy (1840–1926)(fr), president of the Châtillon-Commentry, Blanzy(fr) and Dourges(fr) companies, created the Comité Central des Houillères (CCHF) at the study committee's general assembly on 10 March 1887 through an expansion of that committee's powers. The purpose was to defend the interests of the French coal mining companies.
The statutes of the CCHF were adopted in 1888 and provided for a president, permanent staff, secretary general, and a monthly meeting of all member companies with one representative per company.The head office was in Paris. It moved several times before 1897 when it was established at 55 rue de Chateaudun. In 1922 it moved to 35 rue Saint-Dominique, where it remained until the committee was dissolved in 1940.The statutes were modified in 1892, 1913, 1924 and 1931, but the general organization and objectives did not change. The committee had just two presidents: Henry Darcy from 1888 to 1925, then Henri de Peyerimhoff from 1925 to 1940. Under Peyerimhoff the committee had a staff of eighteen in Paris.The CCHF canvassed its members for subjects of interest, and circulated printed reports on laws and regulations, technical innovations, legal judgements in cases involving mining and so on.
The CCHF does not appear to have had the same influence on the coal industry as that of the Comité des forges on metallurgy.Its main role was to resist pressure from the government or the unions, and it did not have power over its own members.It was only in the 1930s that it began to resemble the German cartels, but the member companies still maintained their independence.The CCHF was particularly involved in revisions to the mining laws, where it was often able to influence parliament in its favour through discreet and carefully calculated influence on politicians and senior ministry staff.The CCHF occasionally used press campaigns to influence the public.It emerged that the CCHF and the Comite de Forges were managers of Le Temps, the most authoritative newspaper of the Third Republic.
After the 1940 defeat of France in World War II, the Vichy government targeted the CCHF, Comité de Forges and Confédération générale du patronat français (CGPF), three organizations closely identified with the grand patronat of France.The organizations were dissolved and their leaders were excluded from the successor organization committees.The decree dissolving the CCHF was issued by the Petain government on 9 November 1940, and another decree on the same date placed the mining industry under state control.The CCHF was replaced by the Comité d’organisation des combustibles minéraux solides.In 1944 the Director of Mines took over and supervised the nationalization of the coal mines and creation of the Charbonnages de France by law of 17 April 1946.
Henry Darcy (1840–1926) started his career in 1863 in the Council of State, and was a prefect in several departments in 1873–77.He became chairman of the board of the Compagnie des Forges de Châtillon-Commentry et Neuves-Maisons in 1870, holding this office until his death.He was a member of the management committee of the Comité des Forges de France.In 1918 he was a co-founder of the Confédération générale de la production française.
In 1907 Henri de Peyerimhoff (1871–1953) was appointed Secretary General of the CCHF in place of Édouard Gruner, who now concentrated on technical subjects.Peyerimhoff was then in turn secretary general, vice president and from 1925 president of the committee until it was dissolved.In 1928 he wrote favorably about collective agreements in an article on Le Program Patronal in the Revue des Vivants.Peyerimhoff defended the collieries against electricity and steel interests.He was interested in subjects such as trade unionism, workers' housing, social care for workers' children and controlled recruitment of Polish workers for French mines.
Founding companies (or their locations) were:
No companies are known to have left the CCHF, although some disappeared through mergers and acquisitions.Most new French coal mining companies asked for admission.The 39 original companies rose to 100 in 1908 and 134 in 1934, then fell to 78 in 1938.Apart from the Société Mokta El Hadid, metal mines did not seek representation.From 1909 they had their own Chambre syndicale française des mines métalliques.The CCHF exchanged information with this organization and sometimes worked with it in public actions.
Publications by this committee included:
Publications by this committee included: