Central Union of Masons
The Central Union of Masons (German: Zentralverband der Maurer) was a trade union representing bricklayers in Germany.
Native name | Zentralverband der Maurer |
---|---|
Founded | May 1891 |
Date dissolved | 1 January 1911 |
Merged into | German Construction Workers' Union |
Members | 128,850 (1904) |
Journal | Der Grundstein |
Affiliation | GGD, IFBW |
Office location | Besenbinderhof 56, Hamburg |
Country | Germany |
Regular conferences of masons were held in Germany in the 1880s. With the repeal of the Anti-Socialist Laws, it was possible to form legal trade unions, and at the 8th Congress of Masons, in Gotha, in May 1891, the Central Union of Masons was established. It adopted Der Grundstein as its journal.[1]
The union gradually built up international contacts in the late 19th-century. In 1903, it called a conference in Berlin, to formalise these relationships by establishing the International Federation of Building Workers.[2]
The union affiliated to the General Commission of German Trade Unions, and by 1904, it was the second largest in Germany, with 128,850 members.[3] By 1910, this had risen slightly, to 169,645. At the start of 1911, it merged with the Central Union of Construction Workers, to form the German Construction Workers' Union.[1]
Presidents
- 1891: Adolf Dammann
- 1894: Theodor Bömelburg
References
- Theilberg, Rudolf (1931). Deutscher Baugewerksbund. ADGB. pp. 352–357. Retrieved 5 June 2020.
- Sassenbach, Johannes (1926). Twenty-five years of international trade unionism. Amsterdam: International Federation of Trade Unions. p. 97–98.
- Brunner, Louis (1905). Die Deutschen Gewertschaften 1891-1904 (PDF). Berlin: General Commission of German Trade Unions. p. 9. Retrieved 16 June 2020.