- James Stephens (trade unionist)
James Stephens (born
Chepstow ,Monmouthshire in south eastWales , 1821; diedMelbourne ,Australia , 14 November 1889) was astonemason ,Chartist , andAustralian trade unionist .Early years
As a youth he moved from Chepstow to nearby
Newport , then a stronghold of formativeChartism , joined the Masons' Society in 1839 and that year was seriously injured in a fall of thirty feet whilst working as a stonemason.Newport Chartist
He joined the
Chartist movement and was one of the participants inNewport Rising and the riot and retaliation at theWestgate Hotel when soldiers fired on the crowd of rebels, killing twenty. He was 'severely handled' but escaped toLondon . He worked as a stonemason atWindsor Castle but was dismissed when it became known that he was aChartist .Working on the new
houses of Parliament inWestminster he found himself among like-minded people. He was still active in Chartism but like many other supporters of the cause, increasingly directed his energies to craft unionism. He became a prominent leader of the masons, acquiring a wide experience as a union organiser.Migration to Australia in 1853
When the
Australian gold rush created an enormous demand for tradesmen, Stephens, like many other Chartists, migrated to Victoria and arrived in 1853.Leader of Men
In February 1855 the Operative Masons' Society, which had been suspended, was resuscitated, and, with
James Galloway , he formed a local branch. This meeting is seen as the genesis of the "eight-hour day movement". Stephens, using the language of the Chartists, proposed to persuade the recalcitrant by 'physical force' if necessary and to coerce the non-unionists; but a meeting of employers and operatives resolved that the eight-hour day must come into force in April 1856. On the 'glorious 21st of April' he led a major demonstration, and wrote: 'It was a burning hot day and I thought the occasion a good one, so I called upon the men to follow me, to which they immediately consented, when I marched them … to Parliament House, the men … dropping their tools and joining the procession'.Latter Years
He remained an active
trade unionist for a while, but later claimed that he was victimised for sub-contracting, of which the unions disapproved.He died in poverty in 1889.
External links
* [http://www.adb.online.anu.edu.au/biogs/A060209b.htm Biography]
* [http://www.8hourday.org.au/pdf/888_fact_02_james_stephens.pdf Eight Hour Day history factsheet]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.