International Federation of Glassworkers
The International Federation of Glassworkers was a global union federation bringing together trade unions representing workers in the glass industry.
History
editThe first international trade secretariat of glassworkers was established in 1892 at a conference in Fourmies, Nord. Named the International Glass Workers' Union, its headquarters were at Castleford in England, and it was led by Alfred Greenwood. It organised a second conference, in London, in 1894, but thereafter achieved little, and dissolved in 1900.[1][2]
In 1908, a conference of glassworkers was held in Paris, to found a new secretariat. This was located in Berlin until 1920, then moved to Paris. One of the smaller international trade secretariats, by 1925 it had 11 affiliates, with a total of 93,000 members. By 1935, it was moribund, and its remaining members joined the International Federation of Industrial Organisations and General Workers' Unions, which held its first glass industry sectional conference in Amsterdam in 1938.[1][3]
Affiliates
editAs of 1922, the following unions were affiliated:[4]
Union | Country | Affiliated membership |
---|---|---|
Austria | 3,798 | |
National Federation of Glass Workers | Belgium | 5,466 |
Czechoslovakia | 30,000 | |
Danish Glass Workers' Union | Denmark | 495 |
Glass Federation | France | 4,000 |
Central Union of Glassworkers | Germany | 77,948 |
Dutch Union of Glass and Pottery Workers | Netherlands | 2,266 |
Sweden | 1,000 | |
National Flint Glass Makers' Society of Great Britain and Ireland | United Kingdom | 10,000 |
General Secretaries
edit- 1908: Emil Girbig[1]
- 1921: Charles Delzant[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d Sassenbach, Johannes (1926). Twenty-five years of international trade unionism. Amsterdam: International Federation of Trade Unions. p. 102.
- ^ "Greenwood, Alfred," Dictionary of Labour Biography, vol.IX, pp.97–102
- ^ "Section conferences held". Bulletin of the International Federation of Industrial Organizations and General Workers' Unions: 72. 1956.
- ^ The American Labor Yearbook. New York: Rand School of Social Science. 1924. p. 263.