Railway trade unions in Australia
Railway Unions in Australia organised labour of railway employees in Australia operated under federal and State awards - this is a partial list of known unions. Many of the unions amalgamated over time, creating a complex trail of ancestry for some of the later unions.
Federal Award unions
The following unions were based on federal - Australian wide awards [1]
- Association of Railway Professional Officers of Australia (1921 - )
- Australian Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (1926 - 1927)
- Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Enginemen (ii) (1927 - 1993)
- Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Enginemen, Commonwealth Division (1925 - 1970)
- Australian Rail Tram & Bus Industry Union, RTBU (1993 - )
- Australian Railways Union, ARU (1921 - 1993)[2]
- Australian Tramway & Motor Omnibus Employees Association (i) (1934 - 1950)
- Australian Tramway & Motor Omnibus Employees Association (ii) (1950 - 1993)
- Australian Tramway Employees Association (1910 - 1934)
- Commonwealth Engine Drivers & Firemens Association of Australia (1918 - 1925)
- Commonwealth Railway Officers Association (1917 - 1950)
- Federated Tramways Officers Association (1920 - 1949)
- National Union of Rail Workers of Australia (1982 - 1993)
- National Union of Railwaymen of Australia (i) (1933)
- National Union of Railwaymen of Australia (ii) (1938 - 1982)
New South Wales
- Australian Railways Union - N.S.W. Branch [3]
South Australia
- Australian Railways Union - South Australian Branch [4]
- Australasian Society of Engineers - South Australia [5]
Tasmania
- Australian Railways Union - Tasmanian Branch [6]
Victoria
- Australian Federated Union of Locomotive Enginemen (Victorian Division) [7]
- Australian Railways Union - Victoria [8]
- Victorian Railways Transportation Employees Association (1906 - 1950)
Western Australia
Some of the following unions were the railway related unions in Western Australia. [9]
- Association of Draughting Supervisory and Technical Employees Union
- Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees (see below, Western Australian...)
- Australian Railways Union (Western Australian Branch) [10]
- Railway Industry Council
- Rail Tram and Bus Industry Union
- Western Australian Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees' Union of Workers [11][12][13]
- Western Australian Association of State Railway Employees
- Locomotive Engine Drivers’ Firemen’s and Cleaners’ Union of Western Australian
- (earlier known as West Australian Locomotive Engine Drivers Firemens and Cleaners Union of Workers)
- West Australian Railway Officers’ Union [14][15]
- Western Australian Railway Unions Joint Executive [16]
- West Australian Vehicle Builders’ Industrial Union of Workers
Records and archives
The Noel Butlin Archives Centre at Australian National University is one of the more significant respositories of railway union records in Australia [17]
Notes
- ↑ http://www.atua.org.au/ptta/041.html
- ↑ The Australian Railways Union formed in September 1920 with the amalgamation of the Queensland Railways Union, the New South Wales Amalgamated Railway and Tramway Service Association, the Victorian Railway Union, the Railway and Tramway Employees Association of South Australia and the Tasmanian Railway Union. It was the first Australian all-grades organisation of railway workers and was federally registered on 8 February 1921. In 1993 the ARU merged with other unions to form the Rail Tram & Bus Industry Union. - see http://archives-dev.anu.edu.au/icaatom-1.3.0/index.php/australian-railways-union-tasmanian-branch-deposit-2;isad
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. N.S.W. Branch (1900), Report of the Australian Railways Union N.S.W. State Branch ... : State Secretary's report, financial statement and balance sheet, The Branch, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. Western Australian Branch (1900), On-track, A.R.U., W.A. Branch, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ Saunders, Malcolm; Lloyd, Neil (2011-11-01), "Arbitration or collaboration? The Australasian Society of Engineers in South Australia, 1904-68.(Essay)", Labour History: A Journal of Labour and Social History, Australian Society for the Study of Labour History (101): 123(22), ISSN 0023-6942
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. Tasmanian Branch (1976), Tasmanian railway review : the official publication of the Tasmanian Branch of the Australian Railways Union, The Union, ISSN 0313-2374
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. Victorian Branch; Australian Federated Union of Locomotives Enginemen. Victorian Division (1954), ABC always be careful : a manual showing how to work strictly to regulations on the Victorian railways, Industrial Print, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. Victorian Branch (1981), Gazette : official organ of the Australian Railways Union (Victorian Branch), The Branch, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ Found listed at Transport industry union records, 1899-2001 [manuscript] in Battye Library at
- ↑ Australian Railways Union. Western Australian Branch (1900), On-track, A.R.U., W.A. Branch, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ West Australian Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees' Union of Workers (1930), Rules of the West Australian Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees' Union of Workers, West Australian Amalgamated Society of Railways Employees Union of Workers, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ West Australian Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees Union of Workers (1900), Official report of proceedings of the triennial Conference, The Union, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ West Australian Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees (1902), The railway news : the official organ of the W.A. Amalgamated Society of Railway Employees, The Society, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ West Australian Railway Officers' Union (1962), Award, constitution, rules and by-laws, standing orders, Railway by-law no. 66, dated September, 1962, Perth, retrieved 24 March 2013
- ↑ Railway Officers Union (W.A.) (1896), Railway Officers Union (W.A.) records, 1896-1994, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ Western Australian Railway Unions Joint Executive (1937), 40 - hour working week : why? : what is necessary : your part, "Worker" Print, retrieved 15 February 2014
- ↑ http://archives-dev.anu.edu.au/icaatom-1.3.0/index.php/noel-butlin-archives-centre;isdiah
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