German Textile Workers' Union

The German Textile Workers' Union (German: Deutscher Textilarbeiterverband, DTAV) was a trade union representing workers in the textile industry in Germany.

German Textile Workers' Union
Native nameDeutscher Textilarbeiterverband
Founded29 May 1891 (1891-05-29)
SuccessorTextile and Clothing Union
Date dissolvedMay 1933 (1933-05)
Members704,000 (1922)
JournalDer Textilarbeiter
AffiliationADGB, IFTWA
Office location8/9 Memeler Straße, Berlin
CountryGermany

The union was founded in 1891, at a conference in Pößneck, which brought together various local unions. In its early years, the appropriate degree of centralisation was highly controversial, but a centralised organisation gradually emerged. The union acquired the Textilarbeiter newspaper, and made it the official journal. By 1900, the union had 42,742 members, but it then increased its membership fees, and membership dropped back to 27,548.[1][2]

In 1903 and 1904, the union led the Crimmitschauer Strike, in support of a maximum ten-hour working day. This severely strained the union's finances and ultimately proved unsuccessful, but it led to a rapid increase in membership. From 1905, the union set up a regional structure, with each region led by a full-time organiser.[2]

Until the end of World War I, the union had a reputation for being very moderate, but a majority of the union supported the German Revolution of 1918–1919. It was a founding affiliate of the General German Trade Union Confederation in 1919.[2]

Membership peaked at 704,000 in 1922, but the Great Depression led to high unemployment in the textile industry, and union membership fell rapidly. By 1928, it had fallen to 310,941, of whom, 179,767 were women, a very high proportion for the time. Membership density was not as strong as other sectors, as Christian trade unions recruited well in the industry.[1][2]

By 1932, membership was down to 220,000. The union was banned by the Nazi government in 1933, and after World War II, workers in the sector were represented by the Textile and Clothing Union.[1]

Presidents

1891: Carl Hübsch
1919: Carl Hübsch and Hermann Jäckel
gollark: One thing which happens if you subdivide too finely is that discussions end up having to move across channels if the topic changes a bit.
gollark: What does that even mean, Tronzoid?
gollark: Wouldn't scanning in all the weird low-level biological stuff be hard?
gollark: You-the-mind will be in hospital, you-the-original-body will be dead.
gollark: Unlike with brains, which will keep trying to work and probably route around broken bits, but still lose functionality in the process.

References

  1. Campbell, Joan; Windmuller, John P. (1992). European Labor Unions. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 164. ISBN 031326371X.
  2. Schrader, Karl (1931). Deutsche Textilarbeiter-Verband. ADGB. p. 385387. Retrieved 29 May 2020.
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