Manufacturers

The Bristol Strike Wave of 1889-1890 Pt 1

More details


£1.60

Warning: Last items in stock!

 

During 1889-1890, a strike wave swept across Britain hitting many major towns and cities. Bristol was not immune. The scale and intensity of industrial unrest in the city reached a level never experienced before. The city’s labour historian Samuel Bryher depicted Bristol at this time as ‘a seething centre of revolt’. This experience set in train a qualitative change in the organisation of workers; and salutary lessons emerged for consideration for those politically active in the newly formed socialist groups, in their quest to understand the significance of the strikes based upon their philosophical outlook. The self-confidence of workers grew substantially during this period. The emergence of new unionism, representing unskilled and semi-skilled labourers, women and men, was an expression of self-reliance providing an independent organisation for workers’ collective voice. And it was the first time that Bristol women workers would be able to join a general union on an equal footing to men.

This pamphlet, the first of two, charts the tumultuous period that began in September 1889 with a small strike at John Lysaght’s galvanised iron works and ended with a lockout of boot and shoe workers in late December 1889. It was a period that shook the local elite, raising hopes of a new era of labour relations and the potential for bring about a revolutionary change in society. It was also a turning point in the lives of those intimately involved in organising and agitating against poor working conditions, particularly Miriam Daniell, Helena Born and Robert Allan Nicol, members of the Bristol Socialist Society.

 

A good looking pamphlet.



Cart  

No products

£0.00 Shipping
£0.00 Total

Cart Check out

New products

  • 101 neighbourhood witch
  • Voices of Resistance
101 Neighbourhood Witch badge
Identify yourself as your friendly neighbourhood witch.
Read more
Voices of Resistance
Prisoner writings from Palestine, Ireland, Morocco and England, Zine,...
Read more
Worth fighting for
Bringing the Rojava revolution home. by Jenni Keasden and Natalia...
Read more
The overprivileged human
Understanding and eliminating species privilege for total liberation. By...
Read more
Anarchism: arguments for and against A6
Class text by Albert Meltzer. A6 Pocketbook by Active Publishing
Read more
On the Poverty of Student life A6
A classic document from the Paris May 68 era by The Situationist...
Read more
20 reasons to abandon Christianity A6
by Chaz Bufe. A6 pocketbook, Active 2023
Read more
This has always been a war
The radicalization of a working class queer, by Lori Fox. Arsenal Pulp...
Read more
Working it
Sex Workers on the Work of Sex. Editors: Matilda Bickers, peech...
Read more
The Cargo Rebellion
Those who chose freedom. Graphic novel. Jason Chang, Ben Barson, and...
Read more
The George Floyd Uprising
Anthology edited by the Vortex Group, PM press 2023
Read more
We go where they go
The story of anti-racist action, by Shannon Clay, Lady, Michael...
Read more
Anarchism. A very short introduction
by Alex Prichard, Short Introduction series, 2nd edition, Oxford...
Read more
War and peace
Proudhon's On the Principle and Constitution of the Rights of Peoples....
Read more
Fighting in a world on fire
by Andreas Malm, Verso 2023
Read more
On Medicine as Colonialism
by Michael Fine, PM Press 2023. “A sobering diatribe on health care in...
Read more
If you saw someone... sticker
If you saw someone stealing food; no you didn'tSticker 2023
Read more
Protect what's left sticker
Design by Roger Peet, sticker
Read more
Fuck work sticker
Fuck work! sticker
Read more

» All new products