Northumberland Miners' Association
Founded | 1864 |
---|---|
Date dissolved | 1945 |
Merged into | National Union of Mineworkers |
Affiliation | Miners' Federation of Great Britain |
Country | United Kingdom |
The Northumberland Miners' Association was a trade union in the United Kingdom.
The union was founded in 1864 to represent coal miners in Northumberland, following the collapse of a short-lived union covering both Northumberland and Durham miners. Originally named the Northumberland Miners' Mutual Confident Association, it aimed for respectability, requiring high subscriptions and avoiding strikes.[1] It did not affiliate to the national body, the Miners' Federation of Great Britain, until 1907. In 1945, this became the National Union of Mineworkers, and the association became its Northumberland Area.
General Secretaries
- 1864: William Crawford
- 1865: Thomas Burt
- 1913: William Straker
- 1935: Jim Bowman
- 1950: Robert Main
- 1975: Sammy Scott
- 1985:
- 1992: Ian Lavery
- 2010: Denis Murphy
Presidents
- John Nixon
- 1872: William Grieves
- John Bryson
- 1896: Hugh Boyle
- 1907: Joseph English
- J. Hall Scott
- 1910:
- 1914: William Weir
- 1927: William Golightly
- 1940:
- 1960s: Tom Holliday
- 1977:
- 1980s: Denis Murphy
Financial Secretaries
- 1906: John Cairns
- 1918: Ebby Edwards
- 1929: John Carr
- 1939:
References
- ↑ Roy A. Church and Quentin Outram, Strikes and Solidarity: Coalfield Conflict in Britain, 1889-1966, p. 103
- National Union of Mineworkers, Northumberland Miners 1919-1939
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