United French Polishers' Society

The United French Polishers' Society was a trade union representing french polishers in the United Kingdom.

History

The union was founded in 1901, and appears to have largely consisted of members who split away from the Amalgamated Society of French Polishers of Great Britain and Ireland. Initially, it had 1,478 members based in ten branches, all in London. In 1903, 148 members split away to form the rival Old Alliance Society of French Polishers, but that union was not successful and rejoined in 1908.[1]

The union affiliated to the Labour Party and the Trades Union Congress. It was reluctant to merge into the National Amalgamated Furnishing Trades Association (NAFTA), the main union for the industry. In 1969, it finally merged into NAFTA's successor, the National Union of Furniture Trade Operatives.[1]

General Secretaries

1901: E. J. Rudd
1937: G. L. Richards
1952: J. E. Banham
1959: W. C. Clifton
gollark: And osmarkslisp™.
gollark: Even more than useful topics like category theory, or topology.
gollark: Linear algebra has ALL applications.
gollark: The gradient descent thing is basically moving down hills by going in whichever direction is slightly lower, except it's not hills it's higher-up regions in several million-dimensional abstract spaces of some kind.
gollark: (Apparently you can maybe get somewhat better performance from image recognition neural networks by feeding them "DCT" things which also conveniently happen to be what JPEG images contain, but almost nobody does this?)

References

  1. Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, Historical Directory of British Trade Unions, vol.3, pp.344–349
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