Monmouthshire and South Wales Miners' Association

The Monmouthshire and South Wales Miners' Association was a trade union representing coal miners in south eastern Wales.

Monmouthshire and South Wales Miners' Association
FoundedJanuary 1888
Date dissolved24 October 1898
Merged intoSouth Wales Miners' Federation
Members6,059 (1892)
AffiliationMNU, MFGB
Key peopleWilliam Brace (agent)
CountryWales

Miners in Monmouthshire were organised in the 1870s in various small unions affiliated to the Amalgamated Association of Miners. This collapsed in 1875, and there was little trade union activity until 1886, when A. Stanley represented Monmouthshire miners at a conference of the Miners' National Union (MNU). This provided the spur for the formation of the Monmouthshire Miners' Association, in January 1888, which affiliated to the MNU.[1][2][3]

Unlike the Cambrian Miners' Association, the Monmouthshire Miners opposed the sliding scale of wages, whereby payments varied in accordance with the export price of coal. In 1889, the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB) was established at a conference in Newport.[4] The Monmouthshire Miners was a founding member, and the MFGB shared its position on the sliding scale. In the hope of recruiting more widely, the union changed its name to the Monmouthshire and South Wales Miners' Association.[2]

In 1892, the union joined a committee, which for the first time brought together those Welsh coal-mining unions which supported the sliding scale, and those which did not.[5] Subsequently, the employers ended the sliding scale in response to the Welsh coal strike of 1898. This led the Monmouthshire Miners to merge with the other local unions, forming the South Wales Miners' Federation.[2][1]

The union was led by Samuel Mills, its general secretary, and its agents, William Brace and Ben Davies.[6]

General Secretaries

1888: Samuel Mills
1895: Moses Severn
gollark: You don't *look* pink.
gollark: Anyway, *person with a scroll name*, *I didn't give it to them*.
gollark: They seem to have deleted some of the messages they sent in it, unfortunately.
gollark: Well, they did, it's not as if I *told* them.
gollark: I did ask, actually.

References

  1. Marsh, Arthur; Ryan, Victoria (1984). Historical Directory of Trade Unions. Gower. pp. 231, 242.
  2. Page Arnot, Robin (1967). South Wales Miners. 1. London: George Allen & Unwin. pp. 25–67.
  3. "Meetings of miners". 14 January 1888.
  4. "Miners' Conference at Newport". The Manchester Guardian. 27 November 1889. Retrieved 6 April 2016 via ProQuest.
  5. Edwards, Ness (1938). History of the South Wales Miners' Federation. London: Laurence and Wishart. p. 7.
  6. "Miners' Federation of Great Britain". South Wales Echo. 25 September 1893.
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