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{{for the 20th-century union|National Agricultural Labourers and Rural Workers Union}}
{{Infobox union
| name = National Agricultural Labourers' Union
| motto =
| mottoeng =
| image = <!-- Use full image link, e.g. [[File:Example.png|frameless]] -->
| founded = 1872
| predecessor =
| successor =
| current =
| dissolved_date = 1896
| dissolved_state = Dissolved
| merged_into =
| members = 86,214 (1874)
| journal = ''Labourers' Union Chronicle''
| country = United Kingdom
| head =
| affiliation = [[Trades Union Congress|TUC]]
| people = [[Joseph Arch]] (President)
| office =
| footnotes =
}}

The '''National Agricultural Labourers Union''' (NALU) was a [[trade union]] representing farm workers in [[Great Britain]].
The '''National Agricultural Labourers Union''' (NALU) was a [[trade union]] representing farm workers in [[Great Britain]].



Revision as of 23:57, 3 September 2016

Template:For the 20th-century union

National Agricultural Labourers' Union
Founded1872
Dissolved1896
Members
86,214 (1874)
PublicationLabourers' Union Chronicle
AffiliationsTUC

The National Agricultural Labourers Union (NALU) was a trade union representing farm workers in Great Britain.

The union's origins lay in a meeting at Wellesbourne in Warwickshire, held in February 1872. Joseph Arch, a well-known labourer and Methodist preacher, addressed a meeting which was to have been held in the Stags Head pub. However, rather than the thirty or so labourers he had expected to attend, around 2,000 workers from across south Warwickshire turned up. The meeting was held outside, Arch speaking under a chestnut tree.[1]

The success of Arch's speech led to a series of further meetings, and the election of a committee, who met at John Lewis' farmhouse in the village. On Good Friday, the committee held a meeting at Leamington Spa which established the Warwickshire Agricultural Labourers Union,[1] Arch becoming its president, Henry Taylor its general secretary, and Matthew Vincent its treasurer.[2]

The union aimed to limit working time to a nine-and-a-half hour day, and institute a minimum wage of 16 shillings a week. It supported workers who wished to emigrate, reasoning that this would reduce labour supply in Britain and drive up wages.[2] It also supported the Liberal Party's "Free Breakfast Table" policy of abolishing taxes on basic foodstuffs.[3]

The union recruited rapidly, asking new members for 6d, then 2d a week subscription. Meetings were held across the country, leading the union to become the "National Agricultural Labourers Union". By 1873, membership had reached 71,835 in 982 branches, with wages reportedly increasing by 20 to 25%. Membership peaked at 86,214 in 1874, but by now, farmers were organising in opposition to the union, employing only non-union labour and agreeing to offer standard terms of 2 shillings for a 12-hour day. More than 10,000 union members found themselves out of work; the union paid unemployment benefit, but this was unsustainable, and it gave in during July.[2]

Despite the defeat, membership initially remained high, as workers were encouraged to secretly maintain union membership while working for anti-union farmers. However, a succession of poor harvests weakened the union's position, and membership fell below 10,000 in 1887, then halved again that year; the few remaining members were concentrated in Eastern England. Industrially weak, the union turned its attention to campaigning for an extension of the electoral franchise to all adult men, and providing sickness and funeral benefits to members.[2]

In 1890, Arch began a new recruitment campaign; many workers were inspired by the London Dock strike of 1889, and membership again rose above 15,000, two-thirds of them in Norfolk. However, further strike defeats over the next few years led to wage reductions. Membership dropped quickly, falling to 1,000 in 1895. The union dissolved itself the following year.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Joseph Arch, The story of his life told by himself
  2. ^ a b c d e Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of Trade Unions, vol.2, pp.286-287, 298-299
  3. ^ Frank Trentman, 'Political culture and political economy: interest, ideology and free trade', Review of International Political Economy 5:2 Summer 1998, p. 230.