Assistant Masters' Association

The Assistant Masters' Association (AAM) was a trade union representing male teachers in British secondary schools.

Assistant Masters' Association
Founded1891
Date dissolved1978
Merged intoAssistant Masters' and Mistresses' Association
Members40,000 (1978)
JournalThe Journal of the Assistant Masters' Association
AffiliationWCOTP
Office location29 Gordon Square, London
CountryUnited Kingdom

The union was founded in 1891 as the Incorporated Association of Assistant Masters in Secondary Schools, although it soon became the "Assistant Masters' Association", a counterpart to the Association of Assistant Mistresses (AAM). Membership of the union grew steadily, reaching 3,259 in 1910, and about 40,000 by 1978.[1]

From 1978, single-sex trade unions were prohibited, and the AMA accordingly merged with the AAM, forming the Assistant Masters' and Mistresses' Association.[1]

General Secretaries

1901: C. J. C. Mackness
1902: W. H. D. Rouse
1906: J. G. Lamb
1921: G. D. Dunkerley[2]
1939: Andrew Hutchings[2]
gollark: Unfortunately any chatlogs of that time would have been on my desktop, and thus deleted in the Great Migration.
gollark: I've forgotten, honestly, it was ages ago and I don't have logs on it.
gollark: The reason you're banned?
gollark: So there are a few issuse.
gollark: Unfortunately I expose a lot of stuff to the sandbox, and some of that has security holes.

References

  1. Marsh, Arthur; Ryan, Victoria (1980). Historical Directory of Trade Unions. 1. Farnborough: Gower. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0566021609.
  2. Walker, Geoffrey (1995). Conditions of service for secondary schoolmasters in England and Wales, 1891-1951, with special reference to the work of the Assistant Masters' Association (PDF). Retrieved 6 July 2018.
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