- William Dronfield
William Dronfield (April 1826 -
24 August 1894 ) was a Britishtrade unionist .Born in
Sheffield , Dronfield became acompositor . In 1849, he was a founder member of theProvincial Typographical Association ,D. E. Martin, " [http://www.gencem.org/ed_resources/people/c-d/DRONFIELD/index1.html DRONFIELD, WILLIAM] ] and from 1852 to 1855 served as its President.A. E. Musson, "Trade Union and Social History"]In 1858, many Sheffield compositors were involved in a dispute with the owner of the "
Sheffield Times " newspaper. In order to buildsolidarity for their cause, they founded the Sheffield Association of Organised Trades. Dronfield was elected as its first secretary, a post he held until 1867.Through this organisation, Dronfield became active in many national campaigns; in particular, against the
Master and Servant Act , against which he helped organise a national conference in 1864.In 1865, Dronfield presented a paper on trade unions at the conference of the
National Association for the Promotion of Social Science , a bourgeois organisation which aimed to include industrial relations in its remit. However, details of his speech and the debate sparked by it were omitted from the official report. [http://www.tuc.org.uk/the_tuc/tuc-2878-f3.cfm The History of the TUC 1868-1968: Part one 1868-1899] ] A second intervention, calling for state aid foreducation , was included.Disappointment at the body's indifference to labour matters convinced him of the need for a national trade union organisation. He called a conference in Sheffield in 1866 which organised the
United Kingdom Alliance of Organised Trades , and he was elected as its secretary.Dronfield was appointed as the honorary secretary of the
Sheffield Trades Defence Committee , founded in the aftermath of theSheffield Outrages , and so gave evidence in support of the legalisation of trade union activity.Dronfield convinced two members of the
Manchester and Salford Trades Council ,William Henry Wood andSamuel Caldwell Nicholson , of the need for a national organisation, and this inspired them to call a meeting inManchester in 1868. Dronfield attended this as a representative of the Sheffield Association of Organised Trades, and played a prominent role in the proceedings. The meeting resolved to found theTrades Union Congress .Dronfield supported the
Reform League , and in order to further labour interests, he convincedAnthony John Mundella to stand as the Liberal Party candidate for Sheffield in the1868 UK general election . Mundella took a seat.Also in 1868, Dronfield became the secretary of the newly-formed
National Education League . He represented Sheffield at theWorkmen's International Exhibition in 1870, and later became asanitary inspector , calling for improvements to Sheffield's sanitation systems.Dronfield died in 1894 and is buried in
Sheffield General Cemetery .References
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