You are in: Display

Apprentices strike, 1941

In early 1941, an apprentices' strike started on the Clyde and spread to Lancashire. Frustrated by the slowness of negotiations led by the Amalgamated Engineering Union, the young men set up their own unofficial committees but managements refused to negotiate and 6000 apprentices stopped work. In March, the Minister of Labour set up a Court of Inquiry to examine the problem and get negotiations re-started. A new scale of wages was agreed on the basis of a percentage, according to age, of a journeyman's pay. Those in Glasgow and Clydeside returned to work, but in early April a further 6000 left work in Rochdale and Manchester. There was a threat of call-up for 1100 strikers of the right age and by April 12 all apprentices had returned to work.

Title Apprentices strike, 1941
Maker --
Production Date 1941
Format Periodical
Copyright --
Holding Institution TUC Library Collections, London Metropolitan University
Related Objects --
If you would like to contact us in relation to either the objects you see here, or the site itself, please use our Feedback Form
 Back