Mental Hospital and Institutional Workers' Union
The Mental Hospital and Institutional Workers' Union was a trade union in the United Kingdom.
The union was established as the National Asylum Workers' Union in 1910[1] by asylum attendants in Lancashire. George Gibson became its General Secretary in 1912, and served in post for the remainder of the union's existence.
In 1918 it organised strikes at Prestwich Hospital, Whittingham Hospital and Bodmin Hospital. It threatened to organise strikes in all the London asylums in support of a 48 hour week.[2]
In 1916, the union lost its membership in Southern Ireland to the Irish Mental Hospital Workers' Union. In 1931, it changed its name to the "Mental Hospital and Institutional Workers Union".[1]
In 1946, the union merged with the Hospital and Welfare Services Union to form the Confederation of Health Service Employees (COHSE).[1] By this stage, it had secured a very high membership amongst mental hospital staff, including the vast majority of mental hospital nurses
References
- ^ a b c Papers of the National Asylum Workers' Union and the Mental Hospital and Institutional Workers' Union held by Warwick University
- ^ Abel-Smith, Brian (1960). A History of the Nursing Profession. London: Heinemann. p. 132.
External links
- United Kingdom trade union stubs
- Trade unions established in 1910
- Trade unions disestablished in 1946
- 1946 disestablishments in the United Kingdom
- Defunct trade unions of the United Kingdom
- Healthcare trade unions in the United Kingdom
- 1910 establishments in the United Kingdom
- History of mental health in the United Kingdom
- Mental health organisations in the United Kingdom
- Trade unions based in Greater Manchester