The Amalgamated Union of Machine and General Workers was a
general union representing workers in and around
Lancashire in England.
The union was founded in 1890 in
Bolton as the Amalgamated Machine and General Labourers' Union, and quickly developed a large membership, which peaked at 2,000 in 1896. That year, 210 members left to form the rival Heywood and District Union of Machine and General Labour, and the membership in general dropped dramatically, falling to a low of only 77 members in 1897.
[{{cite book , first1=John B. , last1=Smethurst , first2=Peter , last2=Carter , title=Historical Directory of Trade Unions , volume=6 , pag]
201
, isbn=9780754666837 , lccn=80-151653 , date=June 2009 , publisher=Ashgate Publishing , location=Farnham , url=https://archive.org/details/historicaldirect0004mars/page/201
Despite this dramatic fall in membership, the union survived and slowly rebuilt. By 1904 it had 650 members, and by the end of 1915 it was over 1,000. The following year, it joined the
National Union of Gasworkers and General Labourers
The National Union of General Workers (NUGW) was an early general union in the United Kingdom, the most important general union of its era.
History
The union was founded in 1889 as the National Union of Gas Workers and General Labourers by Will ...
. As a result of the merger, the Gasworkers Union renamed itself as the
National Union of General Workers.
General Secretaries
:1890:
Robert Tootill
:1901: Sam Fielding
:1906:
Robert Tootill
References
Trade unions established in 1890
Trade unions disestablished in 1916