Central Union of Construction Workers
The Central Union of Construction Workers (German: Zentralverband der Bauhilfsarbeiter) was a trade union representing building labourers in Germany.
Native name | Zentralverband der Bauhilfsarbeiter |
---|---|
Founded | 6 April 1891 |
Date dissolved | 1 January 1911 |
Merged into | German Construction Workers' Union |
Members | 65,572 (1910) |
Journal | Der Bauarbeiter |
Affiliation | GGD, IFBW |
Country | Germany |
The first national congress of local unions of building labourers was held in May 1889, and it agreed to launch a national journal, Der Bauarbeiter. With the repeal of the Anti-Socialist Laws, it was possible to form legal trade unions, and at the 3rd Congress of Construction Workers, in Halle, on 6 April 1891, the Central Union of Masons was established. It adopted Der Bauarbeiter as its journal.[1]
The union initially had 2,500 members. It affiliated to the General Commission of German Trade Unions, and by 1904, its membership had grown to 33,245.[2] By 1910, this had risen further, to 65,572. At the start of 1911, it merged with the Central Union of Masons, to form the German Construction Workers' Union.[1]
Presidents
- 1891: F. Krens
- 1901: Gustav Behrendt
References
- Theilberg, Rudolf (1931). Deutscher Baugewerksbund. ADGB. pp. 352–357. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
- Brunner, Louis (1905). Die Deutschen Gewertschaften 1891-1904 (PDF). Berlin: General Commission of German Trade Unions. p. 9. Retrieved 16 June 2020.