Puneet Varma (Editor)

Tobacco Workers' Union

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Founded
  
1834

Members
  
20,630 (1980)

Office location
  
City Road, London

Date dissolved
  
1986

Affiliation
  
Trade Union Congress

Merged into
  
Technical, Administrative and Supervisory Section

The Tobacco Workers' Union was a trade union representing workers in all areas of the tobacco industry in the United Kingdom.

The union was founded in 1834 in London as the Friendly Society of Operative Tobacconists. Two years later, it expanded its membership to include tobacco cutters, dryers and stovers and was renamed the United Tobacconists Society. In 1851, it expanded again to include cigarette makers, and in 1881 it took another name, the United Operative Tobacconists throughout the Kingdom. For much of this period, the union was based in Liverpool at the houses of its successive general secretaries, but in 1918 it relocated to London.

In 1925, the association became an industrial union, admitting all workers in the tobacco industry, including women, and adopted its final name. However, the following year, it was disaffiliated from the Trades Union Congress after other unions complained that it was poaching their members. It rejoined only in 1941. In 1946, the union merged with the rival National Cigar and Tobacco Workers' Union.

In 1986, the union merged into Technical, Administrative and Supervisory Section, forming the union's new Tobacco Sector.

General secretaries

1834: Robert Stevens 1925: Andrew Boyd 1941: Percy Belcher 1964: David Burke 1967: Charles Butler 1969: Doug Grieve

References

Tobacco Workers' Union Wikipedia