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Cover of British Trade Unions, 1707-1918, Part II

British Trade Unions, 1707-1918, Part II

Edited by W. Hamish Fraser

  • Published: 2008
  • DOI: 10.4324/9781851968312
  • Set ISBN: 9781851968312

Set Contents

1900–1911


Court decisions hostile to trade unions in the 1890s began with the case of Temperton v. Russell in 1893 when Hull unions were forbidden to try to stop Temperton delivering goods to another firm where there was a dispute. While unions were free from the charge of criminal conspiracy, officials were liable for damages for a civil conspiracy. Blacklisting of employers was also declared illegal. The legal case of Lyons v. Wilkins between 1896 and 1898 tightened what could be done by pickets during strikes. The difficult to define action of ‘watching and besetting’ was illegal. The spate of cases culminated in the Taff Vale judgement that reached the Law Lords in 1901, costing the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants £30,000 in damages and costs. The Taff Vale Railway Company sued the union as a body, and the Law Lords reversed an earlier decision of the court of appeal and accepted that the union was a legal entity capable of being sued. A few weeks later, in Quinn v. Leathem, the Lords granted damages against the Belfast Butchers’ Association for conspiring to damage Leathem, by threatening strike against his customers. The Association had tried to persuade them to impose a boycott on Leathem to get him to dismiss his non-union assistants.

Volume Contents

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    Front Matter
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    Introduction Edited by W. Hamish Fraser
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    The Picketing Case. Successful Appeal. The Taff Vale Company v. A. S. R. S and Others [1900] By Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants
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    The Law & Trade Unions: A Brief of Regent Litigation, Specially Prepared at the Instance of Richard Beli, M.P. (1901)
  • Lord Penrhyn’s Methods. The Press Gag, and How it was Burst [1902]
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      Prelims
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      The Gauntlet Picked Up: One of Many Extended to the Press
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      The Penrhyn Lock-out
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      Starving Bethesda!
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    ‘The International Transportworkers’ Federation’, Dockers’ Record (September 1903)
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    Women Workers and Parliamentary Representation [c. 1903] By Eva Gore Booth
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    To the Officers and Members of the Trades Affi liated with the Federation of Engineering and Shipbuilding Trades. Premium Bonus System [1904] By Federation of Engineering and Shipbuilding Trades of Great Britain
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    The Law Relating to Strikes and Lock-outs. Issued by the Authority of the London Trades Council (1905) By Herman Cohen
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    Enginemen and the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants. An Argument for One Union [1905] By George J. Wardle
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    Re Amalgamation. Report of Conference Held at the Deansgate Hotel, Manchester on 3 February, 1906 [1906] By Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants, General Railway Workers’ Union, United Pointsmen and Signalmen’s Society, Railway Clark’s Association
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    The Attack upon the Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants by the Amalgamated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen. The A.S.R.S. Reply [1906] By Amalgamated Society of Railway Servants
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    The Socialist Labour Party: Its Aims and Methods (1908)
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    ‘The Women’s Trade Union League’, in Women’s Trade Union League, Women Workers: A Souvenir of Women’s Labour Day, Saturday, July 17th, 1909 [1909] By Mary R. Macarthur
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    ‘Prepare for Action’, Industrial Syndicalist (July 1910) By Tom Mann
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    ‘The Transport Workers’, Industrial Syndicalist (August 1910) By Tom Mann
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    ‘Working-Class Socialism’, in Tom Mann, Symposium on Syndicalism by Active Workers, Industrial Syndicalist (November 1910) By E. J. B. Allen
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    Coal Trade Pamphlets. – No. 1. The Conflict in South Wales. March 4, 1910
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    Trade Union Funds and Party Politics (1910) By Walter V. Osbourne
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    Social-Democracy and Industrial Organisation [1911?] By H. Quelch
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    ‘The General Federation of Trade Unions’, Dockers’ Record (March 1911) By W. A. Appleton
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    Report on National Insurance and Reversal of the Osborne Judgment. Report on Special Conference Held in the Memorial Hall, Farringdon Street, London, E. C., Tuesday and Wednesday, 20th and 21st June, 1911 [1911] By The Joint Board, Representing the Parliamentary Committee of the Trades Union Congress, the General Federation of Trade Unions, and the Labour Party
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    The Great Strike - Movement of 1911 and Its Lessons [1912] By Henry William Lee
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    ‘A Minimum Wage for Miners’, Industrial Syndicalist (February 1911) By W. F. Hay; Noah Ablett
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    The Cry from the Mine and the Claim of the Miner [1911] By Robert Small
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    The Great Strike. How the Workers Found their Power; Lessons from the Coronation Strike with a Word to the Workers (1911) By Willard Phillips
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    Killing No Murder! The Government and the Railway Strike. What Caused the Recent Railway Strike? Who Settled It? For What Purpose Were the Troops Called Out? [1911] By J. Kier Hardie
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    Back Matter