German Union of Saddlers, Upholsterers and Portfolio Makers explained

German Union of Saddlers, Upholsterers and Portfolio Makers
Native Name:Deutscher Sattler-, Tapezierer- und Portefeuiller-Verband
Native Name Lang:German
Predecessor:Union of Saddlers and Portfolio Makers
Union of Upholsterers of Germany
Successor:Industrial Union of Leather (E Germany),
Leather Union (W Germany)
Merged Label:Banned
Members:31,406 (1928)
Publication:Sattler-, Tapezierer- und Portefeuillerzeitung
Location Country:Germany
Affiliation:ADGB, IFBSOLW, IFWW
Headquarters:Michaelkirchstraße 14, Berlin

The German Union of Saddlers, Upholsterers and Portfolio Makers (German: Deutscher Sattler-, Tapezierer- und Portefeuiller-Verband) was a trade union representing leather goods and upholstery workers in Germany.

The union was established in 1920, when the Union of Saddlers and Portfolio Makers merged with the Union of Upholsterers and Kindred Trades of Germany. The union was based in Berlin and, like its predecessors, it affiliated to the General German Trade Union Confederation. It initially had 28,281 members, and by 1928, this had grown slightly, to 31,406. These figures disguised a high level of turnover, as more than half the union's members were under 30 years old.[1]

The union was banned by the Nazi government in 1933. After World War II, leather workers were represented by the Leather Union.

Presidents

1920: Peter Blum

1929: Friedrich Gerhardt

Notes and References

  1. Book: Deutscher Sattler-, Tapezierer- und Portefeuiller-Verband . 1931 . ADGB . 381 - 382 . 30 May 2020.