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Monday, September 16, 2013
Sunday, September 15, 2013
NHS Pay - London Demonstration 22 September 1982
Wednesday
22 September 1982 was one of the largest acts of solidarity in the
British trade union history, with millions on strike and a national
rally in London with 120,000 taking part. There were demonstrations in
the following towns (not full list)
Aberdeen 12,000
Inverness 1,000
Elgin 500
Lerwick 400
Oban 100
Stornaway 500
Dundee 10,000
Edinburgh 10,000
Kirkcaldy 2,000
Glasgow 20,000
Dumfries 1,000
Newcastle 5,000
York 1,000
Sheffield 10,000
Barnsley 1,000
Leeds 6,000
Hull 4,000
Chesterfield 3,000
Manchester 2,000
St Helens 2,000
Liverpool 20,000
Bolton 2,000
Blackpool 400
Wigan 5,000
Leek 300
Coventry 2,000
Gloucester 500
Hereford 400
Swindon 1,000
Milton Keynes 1,200
Cambridge 2,000
Colchester 1,000
Braintree 100
Norwich 2,000
Kings Lynn 300
Harleston 500
Fakenham 100
Southampton 1,500
Bournemouth 1,000
Eastbourne 500
Yeovil 1,000
Belfast 3,000
Derry 3,000
Armagh 300
Ballymena 200
Enniskillen 350
Swansea 1,000
Aberystwyth 200
Rhondda 500
Nurses Strike 1988
An iconic picture from the 1988 nurses dispute lead by COHSE and NUPE local activists, which resulted in one of the biggest ever pay rises for nurses
Edinburgh NUPE Nurses against privatisation of hospital cleaning services
Edinburgh NUPE Nurses against privatisation of hospital cleaning services
Labels:
1988,
Clinical Grading,
Contracting Out,
NUPE,
privatisation,
UNISON Nurses
COHSE Against Pit Closures 1992
COHSE members with banners including West Midlands and Wales COHSE banners on the TUC march and rally against pit closures Sunday 25th October 1992 in heavy rain - marching from the Embankment to Hyde Park London.
Bethnal Green Hospital - The First Casualty Dept Work-In 1978
Hospital staff at Bethnal Green hospital, east London were told in October 1977 that the local Area Health Authority wanted to reduce services at the hospital to just care of the elderly. Immediately a Tower Hamlets Action Committee was established with over 700 people attending the first meeting held on 24th November 1977.
On the 26th November, 102 East London GP's signed a 13 point statement opposing the closure
Bethnal Green and Stepney Trades Union Council issued a detailed paper objecting to the plans and asking that alternatives be drawn up to develop Bethnal Green.
On the 28th January 1978 over 500 attended a march from Weavers Field to the London Hospital to protest at the closures.
In March it was agreed that a regular picketing of the hospital should take place to highlight the plight of the hospital
On the16th March 1978 at another huge meeting Bethnal Green Hospital is declared unanimously a "protected hospital"
A planned march against hospital closures in East London arranged by Plaistow Hospital campaign on 18th March is banned by the police due to events in Lewisham
30th March 1978 60,000 marches pass Bethnal Green hospital on their way to the Rock Against racism Carnival in Victoria Park
10th March a 2 hour stoppage is staged in five East London hospital's in opposition to the health cuts
30th March East London Hospital unions call strike action in nine hospitals for between six and twenty four hours, the Royal London and Mile End hospitals stop all routine work for 24 hours. 800 campaigners march to the Health Authority headquarters to protest
THE WORK-IN BEGINS
1st July 1978 at 8pm ,the time of the official closure, the hospital staff, applauded by a large crowd of local people and filmed by the News at Ten (ITV) put up a notice announcing the occupation of the casualty unit at Bethnal Green hospital. Detailed arrangements are made with medical staff, GP's , The Emergency Bed Service (EBS) to guarantee admissions and safety.
The first hospital casualty work-in in history begins with patients arriving at 8:02
On the 30th July managers arrive at the hospital threatening staff with legal action, nursing staff instruct under threat of dismissal to move, medical staff who refuse to do so are "harangued" and threatened. The Bethnal green Hospital work-in is called off on 3oth July 1978 having treated over one thousand local patients
Key individuals included - Many volunteers and Dr David Widgery ,Dr Leibson, Dr Thompson, Mr Frohn (Consultant) Sister Gainsford, Mrs Cox NUPE,, Zena Lee, Ann Sargent, Albert Vanner, Jane Salvage, Kambiz Boomla any many others
Keep Bethnal Green Hospital Campaign booklet
The NHS in East London - What Lies Ahead ? Jane Salvage and Kambiz Boomla
Bethnal Green Hospital was occupied by staff and supporters on 1st July 1978
Maude MacCallum - The Professional Union of Trained Nurses (PUTN) - the first nursing union estb 25/10/1919
A meeting was held on the afternoon of Saturday 25th October 1919 (inaugural meeting) at Mortimer Hall, Great Portland Street to establish a nursing Union - The Union for Trained Nurses.
Miss MaCallum moved a resolution that immediate steps be taken to form a professional union. Miss MacDonald seconded stating "never had there been a time of greater crisis for the nurses. thousands were out of employment because they could not secure a living wage"
The resolution to form a union was declared carried by a large majority
It is more than likely that Maude MacCallum was influenced in establishing the PUTN by her knowledge of the Irish Nurses Union
Report from the Times newspaper 27th October 1919
Maude MacCallum - Professional Union of Trained Nurses 1919
please credit this blog
Maude MacCallum
Hon Secretary Professional Union of Trained Nurses
Maude MacCallum also known as Miss E Maude MacCallum was the daughter of Mr James W. MacCallum of Dublin and granddaughter of Major John MacCallum of Dover. (her brother being John MacCallum).
Educated at St Margaret’s Hall, Dublin and subsequently entered Trinity College, Dublin, where she took all the course open to women in those days.
She also matriculated at the Royal University of Ireland before entering Nurse Training School at Adelaide Hospital, Dublin.
After obtaining her nursing qualification she joined the Nurses Co-operation then located at 8, New Cavendish Street, London. She also carried out several years war work as a nurse.
She
was elected a member of the Committee of the Co-operation and while
serving upon it, originated and, with the help of two other far-seeing
nurses, carried to a successful conclusion, the scheme for Sickness
Benefit Fund and also originated the Benevolent fund , two of the most practical pieces of work for the benefit of Nurses of the Co-operation.
It
was a personal experience which led Miss Maude MacCallum in 1919, to
found the Professional union of Trained Nurses on 25th October 1919, (The first nursing
union) for which injustice and tyranny touched her own life she realised
how defenseless were many of her colleagues under similar conditions,
and with unselfishness singleness of purpose she devoted herself
thenceforth to the betterment of the conditions of the “working nurse”
and to her protection from unqualified competition when trained.
The PUTN was registered as a Trade union in order to ensure that it should always be managed by nurses themselves.
Nurses & Trade Unionism
1921
Maude MacCallum
"Nothing within recent years has so aroused employers to action as the formation of a Nurses Trade Union
The
Professional Union of Trained Nurses worked closely with the Poor Law
Workers Trade Union (later NUCO later COHSE) and MacCallun had her own
page in the union’s journal “Monthly Notes”
We
believe the debt of gratitude which they owe her will be increasingly
appreciated, as the truth of her favorite motto “Who would be free
themselves must strike the blow” becomes more and more understood.
In
February 1920, Miss Maude MacCallum was appointed a member of the first
General Nursing Council (now Nursing & Midwifery Council NMC) by
the minister of Health at the time Christopher Addison MP.
During
her term of office she upheld the right of nurses to manage their own
affairs and opposed medical and lay domination. She consistently voted
for, and spoke in support of, proposals for the benefit of the nursing
profession and opposed many recommendations of the majority which she
considered inimical to its interest, in spite of derision and rudeness.
Speaking at the Scottish Nurses Club at 205 Bath Street, Glasgow on Friday 19th
Mach 1920 MacCallum stated “The Professional Union of Trained Nurses
must have been a much needed organisastion if one might judge from the
bitter attacks made on its organisers.
“Who
was afraid of being injured ? . besides, it would not be the nurses
themselves who would be hurt by the action, as their conditions were so
bad they could hardly be worse; besides, it was not to
be expected that so much wrath should be poured forth just to prevent
the nurses injuring themselves if they wished to do so. There must be
some other interested threatened”.
At
the same meeting she also highlighted a historical problem with nurse
attitudes to trade unionism “Disabusing the minds of her hearers that
trade unionism was synonymous with strikes, which she admitted. It was
in her own mind until she went thoroughly into the matter”.
At a meeting of the PUTN on 1st
February 1922 at 6 Nottingham Place, it was reported by the
Professional Union of Trained Nurses Chairman Mrs Winifrede Paul “seldom
have nurses been roused to such a pitch of indignation over anything as
they have been at present by the treatment of Mrs Bedford Fenwick and
the other independent nurses – including the secretary of the PUTN- have
received at the hands of the College of Nursing Ltd”
MacCallun stated in 1923 after the College of Nursing
with the help of Sir Alfred Mond Minister of Health had been able to
“pack” the General Nursing Council of 1923 to exclude opposition,
including Mrs Bedford Fenwick that the PUTN was “The principle thing that stood between them and serfdom”.
The Professional Union of Trained Nurses had by July 1921 established an “Alliance” with the Medico-Political Union (Doctors union). The PUTN was meeting regularly at the Plane Tree Restaurant, 106 Great Russell Street
Cancer) which
ultimately caused her death, she made no mention of it to her nearest or
dearest.
She finally resigned as Honorary Secretary of the Professional Union of Trained Nurses in 1926 on grounds of her health.
and Kate L Earp became Chairman and Winifred Paul Hon Secretary of the Professional Union of Trained Nurses
In her last few days she was nursed at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital in Euston (now UNISON headquarter) and died on the morning of 14th June 1926.
In her last few days she was nursed at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital in Euston (now UNISON headquarter) and died on the morning of 14th June 1926.
The British Journal of nursing November 1937 stated
"The Professional Union of Trained Nurses, the inner history of the opposition to, and defeat of, the movement broke her (MacCullun) heart. In this connection we may place on record the fact that owing to her intelligent advocacy the Labour party gave whole hearted support of the Nurses Registration Act 1919. It was the members of the Conservative Party, to their discredit who "talked out" our Bill after a thirty year struggle with reaction
Her
service was held at St Pancras Church and was conducted by Rev
Prebendary Metcalfe and Rev W.E. Kingsbury Secretary of the Actors
Union.
Suspended
at the lower end of the coffin was a laurel wreath with roses and a
message “in loving remembrance from the PUTN” tied with its colours.
Notes from various publications incl the British Journal of Nursing
by Michael Walker UNISON
Photo of MacCallum from The British Journal of Nursing July 1926
Read Sarah Claridge PUTN and NUCO posting on this site
Kate L Earp (was this Mrs Atherton Earp ? trained at Crumpsall Infirmary, Manchester, child welfare Paris, Educational organiser Infant Welfare Centre, Hampstead,)
Professional Union of Trained Nurses established on 25th October 1919 by 1920 with 268 members.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
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