International Federation of Tobacco Workers

The International Federation of Tobacco Workers (IFTW) was a global union federation bringing together unions representing workers involved in growing, processing or selling tobacco.

History

The idea of an international federation of tobacco workers arose in the 1880s in the Belgian and Dutch unions, which tried to interest the German Tobacco Workers' Union in participating. In 1889, a conference was held in Antwerp between the unions, and in 1890, the federation was launched. It was based in Antwerp until 1910, then in Bremen, but became moribund during World War I. It was refounded in 1918, and the headquarters were moved to Amsterdam. By 1925, the federation had 25 affiliates, with a total of 118,000 members. This then fell, and by 1935, it had only 42,000 members, in Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.[1][2]

In 1958, the federation merged into the International Union of Food and Drinks Workers' Associations, which renamed itself as the "International Union of Food, Drinks and Tobacco Workers' Associations", although some of its affiliates preferred instead to join the new Plantation Workers International Federation.[3]

Affiliates

In 1954, the following unions were affiliated to the federation:[4]

UnionCountryAffiliated membership
Danish Tobacco Workers' UnionDenmark8,942
Federation of Tobacco and MatchesFrance6,000
National Federation of State Monopoly WorkersItalyUnknown
Norwegian Union of Tobacco WorkersNorway1,296
Pan Hellic Federation of Tobacco WorkersGreeceUnknown
Tobacco Workers' UnionBelgium3,809
Tobacco Workers' UnionNetherlands3,000
Tobacco Workers' UnionSweden1,766
Tobacco Workers' UnionUnited Kingdom20,750

Leadership

General Secretaries

1890: J. Vendelmans
1892: H. Jughers
1910: Karl Deichmann[5]
1919: H. J. J. Eichelsheim[5]
1931: Ferdinand Husung[5]
1933: Edm. Olsen[5]
1938: Dirk Nak[5]
1952: Alfons van Uytven[5]

Presidents

1919: Christian Jensen[5]
1934: V. Novack[5]
1945: Marcelle Delabit[5]
gollark: Yet people don't care about learning and don't do it and do gambling.
gollark: It's not particularly hard, in my opinion, to learn basic things about probability and expected value and such. It's difficult to *internalize* them and use them all the time, but gambling is a situation which is obviously bound by them and in which you can use formal mathematical reasoning easily.
gollark: This isn't really much of an explanation.
gollark: Those are separate.
gollark: And I can't see why people go around doing gambling and failing to understand basic statistics and probability, and yet.

References

  1. Sassenbach, Johannes (1926). Twenty-five years of international trade unionism. Amsterdam: International Federation of Trade Unions. p. 113.
  2. Repertoire des organisations internationales. Geneva: League of Nations. 1936. pp. 286–287.
  3. Docherty, J. C., and Jacobus Hermanus Antonius van der Velden. Historical Dictionary of Organized Labor. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press, 2012. pp. 141-142
  4. Mitchell, James P. (1954). Directory of International Trade Union Organisations. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Labor. pp. 141–144.
  5. Yearbook of the International Free Trade Union Movement. London: Lincolns-Prager. 19571958. pp. 580–582. Check date values in: |date= (help)
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