Postal and Telegraph Clerks' Association

Summary

The Postal and Telegraph Clerks' Association (PTCA) was a trade union in the United Kingdom for workers in the post office and telecommunications industries.

Postal and Telegraph Clerks' Association
Formation1881
Dissolved1919
TypeTrade union
Location
  • United Kingdom

History edit

The union was founded in 1881 as the Postal Telegraph Clerks' Association, amalgamated with the United Kingdom Postal Clerks' Association in 1914 to form the Postal and Telegraph Clerks' Association, and in 1919 amalgamated with the Postmen's Federation and the Fawcett Association to form the Union of Post Office Workers. It achieved official recognition, and as a result, in 1920 the London Postal Porters' Association, Central London Postmen's Association, Tracers' Association, Tube Staff Association, Messengers' Association and Sorters' Association all merged with it.

Leadership edit

Notable figures in the leadership of the union included the women's officer, Edith Howse.[1]

General Secretaries edit

1881: T. Wilkinson[1]
1881: T. Morris[1]
1886: J. E. Scott[1]
1890: T. D. Venables[1]
1898: C. E. Hall[1]
1903: Thomas McKinney[1]
1906: William Johnson[1]
1910: E. R. Tuck[1]
1914: J. G. Newlove[1]
1917: Albert Lynes (acting)[1]
1917: Frederick Fox Riley (acting)[1]

Lynes was elected as general secretary in 1919, but before he could take up the post, the union was merged.[1]

Organising Secretaries edit

1914: Fred Richardson[1]
1918: Horace Nobbs[1]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Clinton, Alan (1984). Post Office Workers. George Allen and Unwin. ISBN 0043310869.

External links edit