Coal Industry Commission Act 1919
The Coal Industry Commission Act 1919 (c 1) was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom, which set up a commission, led by Mr Justice Sankey (and so known as the "Sankey Commission"), to consider joint management or nationalisation of the coal mines. It also considered the issues of working conditions, wage and hours.
Background
A Royal Commission, led by Sir John Sankey, was called to examine the future of the mining industry. Leo Chiozza Money, Sidney Webb and R.H. Tawney were the three economists on the commission, all broadly favourable to the miners. Others were appointed from business and the trade unions.
No agreement was reached and, when the commission reported in June 1919, it offered four separate approaches ranging from full nationalisation to untrammelled private ownership.[1]
Commissioners
- Mr Justice Sankey, chairman recommended nationalisation
- Frank Hodges, recommended nationalisation
- Leo Chiozza Money
- Robert Smillie
- Herbert Smith
- RH Tawney
- Sidney Webb
- Arthur Balfour, favoured minor reforms
- RW Cooper
- Sir Adam Nimmo
- Sir Allan M Smith
- Sir Evan Williams
- Sir Arthur Duckham
See also
- UK labour law
- UK public service law
Notes
- A.J.P. Taylor (1965) The Oxford History of England: English History 1914-1945. The public impact of the report was such that, in Ben Travers' comic novel A Cuckoo in the Nest (1921), the Rev. Cathcart Sloley-Jones, under the illusion that he was addressing a Member of Parliament, "lowered his voice into a rather sinister whisper: 'What is Lloyd George's real view of the miners' report?'"
References
- AJP Taylor The Oxford History of England: English History 1914-1945 (1965)