The Mary Quaile Club has published  the complete minutes of the Manchester and Salford  Women’s Trade Union Council, 1895 to 1919.

The Council was established to organise  low-paid women into trade unions  and employed organisers such as Sarah Dickenson, Eva Gore Booth and Mary Quaile who worked tirelessly to encourage women  working as upholsteresses, tailoresses, weavers, box makers etc, to form trade unions.

The original hand-written minutes of the Council came to light during the research into the life of Mary Quaile for the pamphlet Dare To Be Free, published by the Mary Quaile Club in 2015. Mary worked as the Organising Secretary for the Council from 1911 to 1919, and took the Minutes with her when the Council merged with the men’s Trades Council to form a single body in April 1919.  They were given to the Mary Quaile Club by one of her relatives.

The Minutes have been transcribed in full and are a unique item of national significance. They will be a major contribution to our knowledge of women workers and trade unionism in the late C19th and early C20th. The original volumes  have been placed in the Working Class  Movement Library in Salford.

The book may be purchased from Lulu.com

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