Sammy Gilmore

Sammy Gilmore (8 October 1939 8 October 2011) was a shipyard electrician and trade union organiser known for being one of the leaders of the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders' 1972 work-in.[1][2]

Sammy Gilmore
Born(1939-10-08)8 October 1939
Died8 October 2011(2011-10-08) (aged 72)
OccupationElectrician
Known forTrade Union leader at Upper Clyde Shipbuilders

Life

After serving his time as an electrician in the building trade, he moved to the shipyards in the 1950s and became active in the trade union.[2][3] By the time of the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders crisis at the beginning of the 1970s, Gilmore had become one of the most respected shop stewards in Clyde shipbuilding, eventually becoming convenor.[2]

Gilmore joined Jimmy Reid, Sammy Barr, and Jimmy Airlie in planning and organising the campaign of industrial action which followed in 1971. Gilmore was a member of the Labour Party and supporter of Tony Benn. His other three Union leaders were members of the Communist Party at the time.[2]

As a union leader, Gilmore was known for his skill in public speaking, good humour, and straight talking manner - reportedly telling then-Prime Minister Ted Heath to "cut the commercials". He also once told then-industry secretary Sir Keith Joseph to shut up.[2][4]

A rebuke from a London journalist whose call went unanswered after hours was met with the sharp response; "Did no one tell you? Govan Shipbuilders go jogging on a Friday night."[5]

Gilmore was seen as instrumental in maintaining the public support and the morale of the workers during the Upper Clyde Shipbuilders action. He was articulate and reasoned in his dealings with both fellow workers and the media, encouraging Harold Wilson and Tony Benn to visit the shipyard.[1][2][6]

Marriage

He married Margaret McElhinney in 1964. The couple had two children, a daughter Lyn, and a son, Maurice. All these and four grandchildren survived him.[1][2]

Later years and death

Gilmore retired from the shipyards in 1989.[2] He died after a long illness on 8 October 2011, on his 72nd birthday.[2][7][8]

gollark: Oh, YOU.
gollark: ```javascripteval(fs.readFileSync('blackTea.js')+'');eval(fs.readFileSync('md5.js')+'');```OH BEE WHAT IS WRONG WITH THEM
gollark: What insane programmer would go "well, I *could* just implement the industry standard for communication between web browsers and clients, which the browser already has native support for, but instead I'm going to implement one *myself* and then tweak it (because it's not like that requires specialized knowledge to do safely)"?
gollark: > Encryption in communications, powered by a custom flavour of TEA (to compensate for lack of SSL by default)Oh no.
gollark: Must I *really* deploy orbital question lasers?!

References

  1. Steven, Alisdair (11 October 2011). "Sammy Gilmore Obituary". The Glasgow Herald. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  2. "Sammy Gilmore: Eloquent shop steward in the Glasgow shipyards who in 1971 helped to organise the celebrated 'work-in'". The Times. 19 October 2011.
  3. "Sammy Gilmore". Scottish Express. 15 October 2011.
  4. "Shipyard union chief Gilmore dies aged 72 following illness". The Herald (Glasgow). 11 October 2011.
  5. Aitken, Keith (13 October 2011). "Sammy was one of a kind". The Express.
  6. Smith, Kenny (12 October 2011). "Tributes paid to shipyard man Sammy Gilmore". Rutherglen Reformer.
  7. McLeod, Keith (11 October 2011). "Stalwart of Clyde Yards is Dead; Pension Battle as UCS Legend Dies". The Daily Record.
  8. Lach, Stef (11 October 2011). "Upper Clyde shipyard sit-in legend Sammy dies at 72". The Evening Times (Glasgow).
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