Audrey Prime
Audrey Mary Prime (1915 – 2 May 2001) was a British trade unionist.
Career
[edit]Prime grew up in Sutton-in-Ashfield and attended the local grammar school.[1] She began working in local government as a shorthand typist at the town hall in Kirkby-in-Ashfield in 1936, immediately after leaving school,[2] and joined the National Association of Local Government Officers (NALGO). She was soon elected to a local union committee, then in 1944 began working full-time for the union in London. She was appointed as assistant national organiser of the union's local government section in 1957, then in 1962 as its national organiser for health staffs.[1][3] From then until 1972, she also chaired the staff side of the Whitley Council for Professional and Technical staff, and for Administrative and Clerical Staffs.[1]
Prime also became active at the Trades Union Congress (TUC), and in 1968 was elected to the General Council of the TUC, one of only two women to serve on it in this period.[1] She was the founding chair of the TUC's Health Services Committee, and also served on its Economic Committee, International Committee, Social Insurance and Industrial Welfare Committee, Employment Policy and Organisation Committee, Equal Rights Committee and Women's Advisory Committee.[4] In addition, she was a member of the Consultative Committee on Women Workers of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.[1]
In 1977, Prime retired from her trade union posts, but she continued to serve on the Royal Commission on the National Health Service, and also chaired a committee which set pay scales for TUC staff.[5]
Prime was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 1975 New Year Honours.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Who's Who in Personnel and Industrial Relations. Gower Reference Publications. 1973. p. 118. ISBN 0716102056.
- ^ Terry, Michael. "Women in power". Illustrated London News. No. 9 May 1970.
- ^ "Nalgo appoints new organising officer". The Municipal Journal. 12 October 1962.
- ^ Report of the Annual Trades Union Congress. London: Trades Union Congress. 1977. p. 569.
- ^ "General Council Report (2001)". Trades Union Congress. Retrieved 30 January 2018.