Central Union of Stone Workers of Germany explained

Central Union of Stone Workers of Germany
Native Name:Zentralverband der Steinarbeiter Deutschlands
Native Name Lang:German
Founded:1884
Successor:Industrial Union of Construction (E Germany)
Building and Construction Union (W Germany)
Merged Label:Banned
Members:68,033 (1928)
Publication:Der Steinarbeiter
Location Country:Germany
Affiliation:ADGB, ISSM
Headquarters:Zeißer Straße 30/32, Leipzig

The Central Union of Stone Workers of Germany (German: Zentralverband der Steinarbeiter Deutschlands) was a trade union representing stone masons in Germany.

The union was founded in 1884 in Halle, as the Association of Stonemasons of Germany, as a purely professional organisation. In 1903, it was centralised as the "Central Union of Stone Workers".[1]

From 1919, the union was affiliated to the General German Trade Union Confederation, while internationally, it was affiliated to the International Secretariat of Stone Masons. In 1924, the union absorbed the Union of Stone Setters, Pavers and Kindred Trades.[2]

By 1928, it had 68,033 members, and was based in Leipzig. Leading figures in the union included Paul Stark, Alois Staudinger, and Paul Schencke.[3]

The union was banned in 1933 by the Nazi government. After World War II, stonemasons were represented as part of the Building and Construction Union.

Presidents

1901: Paul Oswald

1902: Paul Starke

1921: Hermann Siebold

Notes and References

  1. Book: Winckler . Ernst . Zentralverband der Steinarbeiter Deutschlands, Sitz Leipzig . 1931 . ADGB . 2110 . 1 June 2020.
  2. Web site: Zentralverband der Steinarbeiter Deutschlands . Das Bundesarchiv . 1 June 2020.
  3. Book: Heyde . Ludwig . Internationales Handwörterbuch des Gewerkschaftswesens . 1931 . ADGB . Berlin . 27 May 2020.