Scottish Lace and Textile Workers' Union facts for kids
The Scottish Lace and Textile Workers' Union was a special group called a trade union. It helped people who worked with textiles (like fabric and lace) in Scotland. Think of it like a club or team that works together to make sure workers are treated fairly and have good working conditions.
How the Union Started and Grew
This union began in 1890. It was first called the Newmilns and District Textile Workers' Union and Friendly Benefit Society. It started in the Newmilns area of Ayrshire, Scotland. At first, it mainly helped "twisthands," who were workers involved in making lace.
The union slowly got bigger. In 1906, it had 430 members. By 1910, more than 1,000 people had joined!
Becoming a Scottish-Wide Union
In 1916, the union changed its name to the Scottish Lace and Textile Workers' Union. This new name showed that it wanted to help textile workers all over Scotland. Its membership grew to about 2,000 people.
The union also joined a bigger group called the British Lace Operatives' Federation. This was like a team of different lace worker unions. The Scottish union was a very important part of this federation.
Staying Independent and Merging
In 1971, another big lace union from England joined a different group. But the Scottish union decided to stay on its own. It left the federation and joined two other important groups: the General Federation of Trade Unions and the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC). It was one of the last two unions in Scotland that only represented workers from one industry and was part of the STUC.
By 1982, the union had 942 members. These members were mainly in the towns of Darvel, Kilmarnock, and Newmilns. The next year, in 1983, the union joined a much larger union called the GMB. The former members of the Scottish Lace and Textile Workers' Union later became part of the GMB's new Clothing and Textiles Section in 1991.