GFTU BGCM 2019 Minutes
place are still really strongly with me, but also what an education I had there.
Not only did they have their own staff who were fantastic in terms of their
knowledge and their contribution to disciplines like history and sociology, but
you were actively meeting guest speakers such as sociologists like Huw
Beynon, labour historians like Royden Harrison and some of the big figures
within the labour movement and the Labour Party – Tony Benn, Dennis Skinner
and a range of others. So the foundation that that gave me really transformed
my life going from a coalminer and then becoming a Professor of Labour
History in my current employment at the University of Wolverhampton. So I
would just like to echo what has been said about some of the institutions that
the trade union movement have used and benefitted from over the last century.
I just want to update you more specifically on two of the big projects that we
have been involved in, the GFTU and also myself as a labour historian and
some of the researchers that have been working on the history of the
movement. The first one and the ongoing one is the Dictionary of Labour
Biography which I co-edit. The Dictionary of Labour Biography started as an
idea developed by the socialist theoretician G. D. H. Cole in the 1950s, then
was taken over by John Saville. John Saville was one of the founding
members of the Communist Party Historians Group and was committed to
socialist education and really developing a broad based labour history that
would be inclusive, not just an academic history, but also getting trade
unionists and socialist activists to develop their own histories and curate their
own histories. The first volume was published in 1971. The current volume is
volume 15 and just looking at the back here and some of the organisations that
you have listed, we have got a lot of figures in here that played a key role in
building some of these organisations. A lot of the early leaders of the General
Federation of Trade Unions you will find in some of the volumes. In the next
volume which is currently in press and will be published next year we have
Mary Quaile who I think Doug mentioned earlier. So the dictionary is an
ongoing project.
The next phase, what we are trying to do is to get the whole collection digitised,
because obviously it is 15 volumes. If we could get an online version of this, it
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