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Trades Union Congress (TUC) Library Collections at London Metropolitan University

National Federation of Women Workers


IDENTITY STATEMENT

Reference code(s): GB 1924 HD 6079, HD 6135

Held at: Trades Union Congress (TUC) Library Collections at London Metropolitan University

Title: National Federation of Women Workers

Date(s): 1907-1955

Level of description: Collection

Extent: 10 items

Name of creator(s): National Federation of Women Workers (NFWW)

CONTEXT

Administrative/Biographical history:

The National Federation of Women Workers (NFWW) was formed in 1906 by Mary Macarthur. The Federation had close links with the Women's Trade Union League, with Gertrude Tuckwell serving as president of both organisations from 1908. The NFWW saw strikes as the chief means of unionising unorganised workers and probably did more than any other organisation (including trade unions) to unionise women especially during the mass strike wave of 1910-1914. The Federation was entirely unself-seeking, in that its efforts were purely for the benefit of the unions rather than its own prestige. Although its membership had risen to 20,000 by 1914, its leaders never intended that the NFWW should remain permanently as a women's union. In fact in 1921 it quietly merged with the National Union of General Workers (now the GMB). The Federation, along with many of the other women's organisations, campaigned to expose the evils of the sweated trades. Their propaganda was very effective and played a major part in inducing the Liberal government to pass the 1909 Trade Boards Act which was an attempt to fix minimum wages in certain of the most exploitative trades, usually the ones in which women predominated. (This administrative history was written by Professor Mary Davis, Centre for Trade Union Studies, London Metropolitan University c 2008.)

CONTENT

Scope and content/abstract:

Collection includes: The position of women after the war: report of the Standing Joint Committee, 1916; A comparison between the rates under certain trade boards for women, 1921; Women in the trade union movement, 1955; The Woman Worker - Journal 1907-1921; agenda of biennial conference; annual reports.

ACCESS AND USE

Language/scripts of material: English

System of arrangement:

http://catalogue.londonmet.ac.uk/

Conditions governing access:

Open to bona fide researchers by appointment, at the discretion of the TUC Librarian.

Conditions governing reproduction:

Photocopying is permitted within the terms of copyright legislation, although copying of some items including fragile material is at the discretion of the librarian.

Finding aids:

Library catalogue catalogue.londonmet.ac.uk

ARCHIVAL INFORMATION

Archival history:

Immediate source of acquisition:

Deposited with the TUC at an unknown date.

ALLIED MATERIALS

Related material:

Also held at the TUC Library are the papers of Dorothy Elliott, an organisor for the Federation, and Gertrude Tuckwell who in 1908 was elected President of the Federation.

DESCRIPTION NOTES Rules or conventions: Compiled in compliance with General International Standard Archival Description, ISAD(G), second edition, 2000; National Council on Archives Rules for the Construction of Personal, Place and Corporate Names, 1997.

Date(s) of descriptions:

2019


INDEX ENTRIES
Subjects
Trade unions | Labour relations
Women | Sex | Sex distribution
Women workers | Workers | Personnel | People by occupation | People
Working conditions | Conditions of employment | Personnel management | Organization and administration | Health services administration | Public administration | Government

Personal names
Macarthur | Mary Reid | 1880-1921 | Trade Unionist and Women's Labour Organiser | afterwards Anderson

Corporate names
National Federation of Women Workers

Places