Durham Miners' Association Explained

Durham Miners' Association
Location Country:United Kingdom
Members:105,612 (1907[1])
Full Name:Durham Miners' Association
Founded:1869
Parent Organization:MNU (1869 - 1898)
MFGB (1892 - 1893; 1908 - 1944)
NUM (1945 - 2018)
Dissolved:2018
Merged Label:Dissolved
Headquarters:Redhills, Durham
Key People:William Crawford (General Secretary and President), John Wilson (General Secretary and Treasurer), W. P. Richardson (General Secretary), Peter Lee (General Secretary), John Swan (General Secretary), Sam Watson (General Secretary and Treasurer), William House (President), James Robson (President), John Johnson (Treasurer)

The Durham Miners' Association (DMA) was a trade union in the United Kingdom.

History

The union was founded in 1869 and its membership quickly rose to 4,000, but within a year had fallen back to 2,000. In December 1870, William Crawford became the union's president, and was able to rebuild its membership, the DMA soon becoming the largest miners' union in the UK.[2]

The union saw rapid success, with the abolition of the unpopular Yearly Bond in 1872, while a short strike in 1874 began a process of agreeing wages across the county. A longer strike in 1879 was unsuccessful in preventing cuts to wages, but action in 1890 ensured that the district was the first in the county to adopt a standard seven-hour day. The prolonged strike of 1892 against a proposed 15% cut in wages ended with an agreement to accept a 10% cut.

In these early days, the DMA was part of the Miners' National Union, and supported Lib-Lab candidates; both Crawford and John Wilson serving local constituencies. Although the union affiliated to the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB) in 1892, it was expelled the following year after refusing to join the national strike. It again attempted to join in 1897, but asked to be bound only on questions of wages, which was not permitted. In particular, the Durham union opposed the Eight Hours Bill, which was strongly promoted by the MFGB. The union finally joined the MFGB in 1908, following the passage of the Eight Hours Bill. In addition, by 1900, membership had risen to 80,000.

While the union represented the large majority of miners in County Durham, some in specialist roles were represented by the Durham County Colliery Enginemen's Association, the Durham Colliery Mechanics' Association, and the Durham Cokemen's Association. The four unions worked together in the Durham County Mining Federation Board, the secretary of which was invariably the secretary of the DMA.[3]

The union became the Durham Area of the National Union of Mineworkers in 1945 and later officially became the North East Area of the NUM, although it was generally known by its former name.[4] It was dissolved in 2018.[5]

General Secretaries

1869: John Richardson

1870: A. Cairns

1871: William Crawford

1890: William Hammond Patterson

1896: John Wilson

1915: Thomas Cann

1924: W. P. Richardson

1930: Peter Lee

1935: John Swan

1945: Sam Watson

1963: Alfred Hesler

1970: J.C. (Kit) Robinson

1972: W. Malt

1979: Tom Callan

1985: David Hopper

2016: Alan Cummings

2019: Alan Mardghum

Presidents

1869: William Crake

1870: William Crawford

1871: John Forman

1900: William House

1917: James Robson

1935: James Gilliland

1945: Edward Moore

1953: James Kelly

1961: Charles Pick

1967: J.C. (Kit) Robinson

1970: Walter Malt

1972: Tom Callan

1979: Harold Mitchell

1985: David Guy

2012: Alan Cummings

2016: Joseph Whitworth

2019: Alan Mardghum

2020: Stephen Guy

Treasurers

1869: Nicholas Wilkinson

1882: John Wilson

1886: William Hammond Patterson

1890: John Johnson

1896: Thomas Cann

1915: Thomas Trotter

1932: Sam Watson

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Report on Trade Unions in 1905-1907. 1909. Board of Trade. London. 82–101.
  2. [Sidney Webb]
  3. News: Personal notes . 17 October 2018 . Colliery Guardian . 5 October 1934.
  4. Web site: DMA website . 2013-06-24 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130823011326/http://durhamminers.org/History.html . 2013-08-23 . dead .
  5. Web site: Former trade unions . Trade Union Certification Officer . 21 December 2020.