A group of women chainmakers on strike during the 1910.
Placards read “England's Disgrace! Help the women chain makers who are fighting for two-pence half-penny per hour" and “England’s Disgrace! Locked out after 67 years chain making. Fight for two-pence half-penny per hour”.
One of a set of five celebrating the successful strike in 1910 by the women chainmakers in Cradley Heath. Produced in conjunction with Midlands TUC.
Cradley Heath women chainmakers’ strike of 1910
“Sweated labour” was a feature of many trades at the beginning of the twentieth century. The 1909 Trade Board Act created the Chain Trade Board which set a minimum rate of pay for mainly women chainmakers working at home or small factories. Most employers resisted and used underhand methods to deny the often illiterate women workers their rights.
The National Federation of Women Workers called upon the women to stop work. Although most of the women who responded were members of NFWW, many were not and they and their families faced severe deprivations. The NFWW ran a successful campaign, increasing the number of women on strike, recruiting members and drawing in financial and moral support from across the country.
The strike was to have significance far beyond Cradley Heath – enforcing a national minimum wage for their trade.
"Women are unorganised because they are badly paid, and poorly paid because they are unorganised.” (Mary Macarthur)