1891 Australian shearers' strike
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The 1891 Shearers Strike is one of Australia's oldest and most important industrial disputes. Working conditions for shearers in 19th century Australia were atrocious. In 1891 wool was one of Australia's largest industries. But as the wool industry grew, so did the number and influence of shearers.
By 1890, the Australian Shearers’ Union boasted tens of thousands of members, and had unionised thousands of sheds. At their annual conference in Bourke in 1890, the Union laid down a new rule, which prohibited members from working with non-union workers. Soon after, shearers at Jondaryan Station on the Darling Downs went on strike over this issue. As non-union labour was still able to process the wool, the Jondaryan shearers called for help. The Rockhampton wharfies responded and refused to touch the Jondaryan wool. The unionists won the battle. This galvanised the squatters, and they formed the Pastoralists’ Federal Council, to counter the strength of the unions. The battle lines were drawn, conflict was not far away, the only question was where and when.
Many union shearers were outraged when Logan Downs Station Manager Charles Fairbain asked the shearers to sign a contract that would reduce the power of their union. On January 5 1891 the shearers announced a strike until their demands for a contract ensuring the following:
- continuation of existing rates of pay
- protection of workers rights and privledges
- just and equitable agreements
- exclusion of low-cost chinese labour (which manifest itself later as Labor Party policy - the Immigration Restriction Act, also known as the White Australia Policy)
One of the first Mayday marches in the world took place during the strike on May 1, 1891 in Barcaldine. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that 1340 men took part of whom 618 were mounted on horse. Banners carried included those of the Australian Labor Federation, the Shearers' and Carriers' Unions, and one inscribed 'Young Australia'. The leaders wore blue sashes and the Eureka Flag was carried. The "Labor Bulletin" reported that cheers were given for "the Union", "the Eight-hour day", "the Strike Committee" and "the boys in gaol". It reported the march:
- "In the procession every civilised country was represented doing duty for the Russian, Swede, French, Dane etc, who are germane to him in other climes, showing that Labor's cause is one the world over, foreshadowing the time when the swords shall be turned into ploughshares and Liberty, Peace and Friendship will knit together the nations of the earth."
Thirteen union leaders were charged with sedition and conspiracy, taken to Rockhampton for the trial, convicted, and sentenced to three years in gaol on St Helena Island Prison. The 1891 Shearers Strike is credited as being one of the factors for the formation of the Australian Labor Party.
Henry Lawson's well known poem, Freedom on the Wallaby, was written as a comment on the strike and published by William Lane in the Worker in Brisbane, May 16 1891.
See also
- Australian labour movement
- 1894 Australian shearers strike
- Eureka Stockade
References
- The shearers' war : the story of the 1891 shearers' strike (1989) Stuart Svenson, UOQ Press.
- Industrial War - The Great Strikes 1890 - 1894 (1995) Stuart Svensen ISBN 0646227971
External links
- [Australian Labor Party]
- [Australian Council of Trade Unions]
- [The Shearers Strike]
- [Striking Shearers burn boat]
- [Sydney Morning Herald Article]
- [The Ballard of 1891] - Lyrics to the famous Australian trade union song about the strike
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