The History of Trade Unionism / (Revised edition, extended to 1920)
THE HISTORY OF TRADE UNIONISM: BY SIDNEY AND BEATRICE WEBB (REVISED EDITION, EXTENDED TO 1920).
LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. 39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON FOURTH AVENUE & 30TH STREET, NEW YORK BOMBAY, CALCUTTA, AND MADRAS 1920
The thirty years that have elapsed since 1890, down to which date we brought the first edition of this book, have been momentous in the history of British Trade Unionism. The Trade Union Movement, which then included scarcely 20 per cent of the adult male manual-working wage-earners, now includes over 60 per cent. Its legal and constitutional status, which was then indefinite and precarious, has now been explicitly defined and embodied in precise and absolutely expressed statutes. Its internal organisation has been, in many cases, officially adopted as part of the machinery of public administration. Most important of all, it has equipped itself with an entirely new political organisation, extending throughout the whole of Great Britain, inspired by large ideas embodied in a comprehensive programme of Social Reconstruction, which has already achieved the position of “His Majesty’s Opposition,” and now makes a bid for that of “His Majesty’s Government.” So great an advance within a single generation makes the historical account of Trade Union development down to 1920 equivalent to a new book.
We have taken the opportunity to revise, and at some points to amplify, our description of the origin and early struggles of Trade Unionism in this country. We have naturally examined the new material that has been made accessible during the past quarter of a century, in order to incorporate in our work whatever has thus been added to public knowledge. But we have not found it necessary to make any but trifling changes in our original interpretation of the historical development. The Home Office papers are now available in the Public Record Office for the troubled period at the beginning of the nineteenth century; and these, together with the researches of Professor George Unwin, Mr. and Mrs. Hammond, Professor Graham Wallas, Mr. Mark Hovell, and Mr. M. Beer, have enabled us both to verify and to amplify our statements at certain points. For the recent history of Trade Unionism we have found most useful the collections and knowledge of the Labour Research Department, established in 1913; and we gratefully acknowledge the assistance in facts, suggestions, and criticisms that we have had from Mr. G. D. H. Cole and Mr. R. Page Arnot. We owe thanks, also, to Miss Ivy Schmidt for unwearied assistance in research.
Sidney Webb
Beatrice Webb
THE HISTORY OF TRADE UNIONISM
INTRODUCTION TO THE EDITION OF 1920
PREFACE TO THE ORIGINAL EDITION OF 1894
FOOTNOTES:
CONTENTS
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER II
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER III
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IV
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER V
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VI
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VII
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER VIII
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER IX
The Cotton Operatives
The Building Trades
Engineering and the Metal Trades
The Compositors
Boot and Shoemaking
Women Workers
The General Workers
The “Black-Coated Proletariat”
The Miners
The Railwaymen
Amalgamations and Federations
The General Federation of Trade Unions
Trades Councils
The Trades Union Congress
The Officers of the Trade Union Movement
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER X
Actions for Damages
The Taff Vale Case
The Trade Disputes Act
The Osborne Judgement
The Development of English Law
The Miscarriage of Justice
The Trade Union Act of 1913
The Rise in Status of Trade Unionism
British Trade Unionism and the War
The Revolution in Thought
The Increased Reliance on Direct Action
The Demand for the Elimination of the Capitalist Profit-maker
FOOTNOTES:
CHAPTER XI
FOOTNOTES:
APPENDICES
APPENDIX I
APPENDIX II
APPENDIX III
FOOTNOTES:
APPENDIX IV
APPENDIX V
APPENDIX VI
FOOTNOTES:
APPENDIX VII
APPENDIX VIII
INDEX
THE END
INDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACY
PROBLEMS OF MODERN INDUSTRY.
THE WORKS MANAGER TO-DAY.
THE PUBLIC ORGANISATION OF THE LABOUR MARKET.
THE BREAK-UP OF THE POOR LAW.
THE PREVENTION OF DESTITUTION.
ENGLISH POOR LAW POLICY.
GRANTS IN AID: A CRITICISM AND A PROPOSAL.
THE PARISH AND THE COUNTY.
THE MANOR AND THE BOROUGH.
THE STORY OF THE KING’S HIGHWAY.
THE HISTORY OF LIQUOR LICENSING IN ENGLAND.
THE CO-OPERATIVE MOVEMENT IN GREAT BRITAIN.
SOCIALISM IN ENGLAND.
HOW TO PAY FOR THE WAR.
FABIAN ESSAYS IN SOCIALISM.
TOWARD SOCIAL DEMOCRACY?
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S WAGES: SHOULD THEY BE EQUAL?
GREAT BRITAIN AFTER THE WAR.
THE RESTORATION OF TRADE UNION CONDITIONS.
REPORT ON THE WORKING OF THE NATIONAL INSURANCE ACT.
REPORT ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF STATE AND MUNICIPAL ENTERPRISE ALL OVER THE WORLD.
SOCIALISM AND INDIVIDUALISM.
THE BASIS AND POLICY OF SOCIALISM.
SOCIALISM AND NATIONAL MINIMUM.
Transcriber's Notes