Irish Bookbinders' and Allied Trades Union explained

Irish Bookbinders' and Allied Trades Union
Native Name:Cumann Ceirde Cluduigte Leabar Agus a Com-Ceard i n-Eirinn
Founded:1920
Predecessor:National Union of Bookbinders and Machine Rulers
Dissolved:1983
Merged:Irish Print Union
Members:1,000 (1950s)
Location Country:Ireland
Affiliation:Irish Congress of Trade Unions
Headquarters:20 North Frederick Street, Dublin

The Irish Bookbinders' and Allied Trades Union (Irish: Cumann Ceirde Cluduigte Leabar Agus a Com-Ceard i n-Eirinn) was a trade union representing print workers in Ireland.

The union was founded in 1920 as the Irish Bookbinders' and Paper Rulers' Trade Union, by Dublin-based members of the UK-based National Union of Bookbinders and Machine Rulers. It became the "Irish Bookbinders' and Allied Trades Union" in 1938. From 1941, the Irish government required unions to obtain a license, and the National Union thereafter withdrew from Ireland, the Irish Bookbinders thereafter recruiting throughout the country; by the 1950, it had around 1,000 members.[1]

Originally part of the Irish Trades Union Congress, the union was a founding member of the rival Congress of Irish Unions. The two confederations later merged to form the Irish Congress of Trade Unions, of which the union maintained membership.[2]

In 1983, the union merged with the Irish Graphical Society and the Electrotypers' and Stereotypers' Society of Dublin and District to form the Irish Print Union.

General Secretaries

1920: Michael Colgan

1953: Terence Farrell

1960s: J. Cullen

References

  1. Arthur Marsh and John B. Smethurst, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.5, p.85
  2. Fergus A. D'Arcy and Ken Hannigan, Workers in Union, p.212