Henry Taylor (trade unionist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Henry Taylor (1844 – 1919) was a British trade union leader.

Henry Taylor c.1903

Born in Luton in 1844, Taylor became a carpenter, and joined the Amalgamated Society of Carpenters and Joiners (ASC&J). While based in London, he was elected as a branch secretary, and was trained in union administration by Robert Applegarth.[1]

Taylor was supportive of the National Agricultural Labourers' Union (NALU), which was founded in Warwickshire in 1872, and was elected as its first general secretary. He secured the backing of the London Trades Council for the new union.[1] Late in 1873, he set off for New Zealand, accompanying some agricultural labourers who wished to emigrate, and the following year he took a similar trip to Canada. While on this second trip, J. E. Matthew Vincent, editor of the union's newspaper, falsely claimed that Taylor was embezzling union funds. Taylor won a resulting legal case, and Vincent left the union.[2][3]

Taylor represented the union to the Trades Union Congress (TUC) on several occasions, and in 1875 he was narrowly elected to the Parliamentary Committee of the TUC.[4]

In 1876, Taylor resigned as the general secretary of NALU, in order to become an honorary emigration agent in Victoria, and was also appointed as a special commissioner for South Australia. On stepping down, he was given 100 sovereigns, and letters of thanks from several Members of Parliament were read out.[5] He later revealed that he had become disillusioned with the general secretary, Joseph Arch, and in 1879 wrote a letter arguing that Arch should not be given any administrative responsibility.[6]

Taylor married twice and died at Adelaide, South Australia in 1919.

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Groves, Reg (1949). Sharpen the Sickle. London: Porcupine Press. pp. 50–55.
  2. ^ Brown, Kevin (2013). Passage to the World: The Emigrant Experience 1807-1940. Seaforth Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-1473817043.
  3. ^ "The rival agricultural labourers' unions". Manchester Guardian. 24 December 1875.
  4. ^ "Parliamentary Committee elected at Glasgow, on Friday October 15th, for the years 1875-6". Annual Report of the Trades Union Congress: 1. 1875.
  5. ^ "[untitled article]". Hampshire Telegraph. 1 July 1876.
  6. ^ "Mr Arch and the Agricultural Labourers' Union". Jackson's Oxford Journal. 8 February 1879.
Trade union offices
Preceded by
New position
General Secretary of the National Agricultural Labourers' Union
1872–1876
Succeeded by
Robert Collier