South Wales Miners' Federation
Full name | South Wales Miners' Federation |
---|---|
Founded | 24 October 1898 |
Date dissolved | 1945 |
Merged into | National Union of Mineworkers |
Country | United Kingdom |
The South Wales Miners' Federation (SWMF), nicknamed "The Fed", was a trade union for miners in South Wales.
Foundation
The union was founded on 24 October 1898,[1] following the defeat of the South Wales miners' strike of 1898. Numerous local coal miners' union found their funds depleted and decided to merge together. They include:
Union[2][3] | Founded | Joined | Membership (1892) | Membership (1898) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Aberdare, Merthyr and Dowlais Miners' Association | 1882 | 1898 | 7,000 | 500 |
Anthracite Miners' Association | 1882 | 1898 | 3,500 | 6,050 |
Colliery Enginemen and Stokers of Neath and District | 1892 | 1900 | 55 | 186 |
Ebbw Vale and Sirhowy Colliery Workmen's Union | 1886 | 1898 | 2,500 | 3,500 |
Garw Miners' Association | 1880 | 1898 | 3,000 (1890) | |
Monmouthshire and South Wales District Miners' Association | 1887 | 1898 | 6,059 | 70 |
Monmouth Western Valley Miners' Association | 1897 | 1898 | N/A | 500 |
Rhondda District Miners' Association | 1872 | 1898 | 14,000 (1885) | Unknown |
Rhymney Valley Miners' Association | 1893 | 1898 | 2,500 (1893) | 1,917 |
South Wales Western District Miners' Association | 1869 | 1898 | 4,540 | 5,588 |
Despite its name, the new union was not a federation; the former unions were dissolved and became the basis of twenty districts, each with one or more full-time agents. By 1914, four districts had more than 10,000 members: Anthracite, Monmouthshire & Western Valleys, Rhondda No.1, and Tredegar Valley.[4]
The new union affiliated to the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB) in 1899.[5]
In the early twentieth century, a layer of activists in the union were radicalised by such events as the Cambrian Combine Dispute and Tonypandy Riot of 1910 and the hunger marches during the Depression. During this period, its leadership were aligned with the Labour Party or the Communist Party of Great Britain, and gave support to the National Unemployed Workers Movement.
Over the years, there were a few splits from the union. The Monmouthshire and South Wales Colliery Enginemen, Stokers and Surface Craftsmen's General Association left in 1903,[6] while the South Wales Miners' Industrial Union was a non-political union set up in 1926 and backed by colliery owners. After a series of strikes in the 1930s by the SWMF it was disbanded in 1938. In 1940, the SWMF also started representing miners in the Forest of Dean.
In 1945, the MFGB became the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), and the Fed became the NUM (South Wales Area), with less autonomy than before.
In 1960, the South Wales Area was expanded to include the Somerset coalfield.
Presidents of the SWMF
- 1898: William Abraham
- 1912: William Brace
- 1915: James Winstone
- 1922: Vernon Hartshorn
- 1924: Enoch Morrell
- 1934: James Griffiths
- 1936: Arthur Horner
- 1946: Alf Davies
- 1951: Will Paynter
- 1959: William Whitehead
- 1966: Glyn Williams
- 1973: Emlyn Williams
- 1986: Des Dutfield
Secretaries of the SWMF
- 1898: Thomas Richards
- 1931: Oliver Harris
- 1941: Evan Williams
- 1943: W. J. Saddler
- 1946: Evan Williams
- 1947: William Arthur
- 1951: W. H. Crews
- 1958: D. D. Evans
- 1963: David Francis
- 1976: George Rees
References
- ↑ Lewis, E.D. The Rhondda Valleys, Phoenix House: London, (1959) pg 172
- ↑ Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.2, pp.201-258
- ↑ Robin Page Arnot, South Wales Miners, p.60
- ↑ Robin Page Arnot, South Wales Miners, pp.74, 334
- ↑ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. John Davies, Nigel Jenkins, Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg827 ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6
- ↑ Robin Page Arnot, South Wales Miners, p.184
|