Serial S19 - Pan-Pacific Worker

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Reference code

AU NBAC S19

Title

Pan-Pacific Worker

Date(s)

  • 1928 - 1932 (Creation)

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1 box

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Name of creator

(1871 -)

Biographical history

The Labor Council was formed by six unions in 1871. Originally it was called the Trades and Labor Council because it covered the craft unions or unions of skilled workers as well as the newly emerging unions for bush labourers. In 1894, the Trades and Labor Council of Sydney became the Sydney District of Australasian Labour Federation, only to change names again six years later in 1900 to the Sydney Labor Council. In 1908, the name was changed to the Labor Council of New South Wales. In those early days the role of the Labor Council was to stimulate the growth of trade unions. During the first thirty years, the Labor Council was dominated by two major questions: how it could help influence government and what was the best means to settle industrial disputes. Post World War II, as a result of Labor Council initiatives, the state Labor government, legislated for the 40 hour week to apply to state awards. In the 1950s the Labor Council, with the ACTU, led a campaign for equal wages to be paid to women in the workforce.

Name of creator

(1926 -)

Biographical history

The Pan-Pacific Trade Union Secretariat (PPTUS) was established as a result of a Pan-Pacific Trade Union Conference organised by the Labor Council of New South Wales held in September 1926 (see 'In the Case of Oppression: the Life and Times of the Labor Council of New South Wales p. 200), although a conference held the following year, 1927, in China has also been suggested as the time of the PPTUS's establishment.

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The Labor Council of New South Wales organised a "Pan-Pacific Trade Union Conference' in September 1926. This conference resulted in the setting up of the Pan-Pacific Trade Union Secretariat (PPTUS) to which the Labor Council was then affiliated and to which many of the Labor Council leadership were part of. The PPTUS published a journal, the Pan-Pacific Worker, which by 1929 absorbed the Council's 'Labor Monthly' journal, (see 'In the Case of Oppression: the Life and Times of the Labor Council of New South Wales p. 200). Issues held; vols. 1-4 (Apr 1928 - Jan 1932).

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