The Amalgamated Association of Beamers, Twisters and Drawers (Hand and Machine) (AABTD) was a British trade union which existed between 1866 and 2002. It represented skilled workers in the cotton industry who were responsible for preparing warpyarns prior to weaving.
History
The union was founded in 1866 as the Amalgamated Association of Beamers, Twisters and Drawers by the loose amalgamation of several district unions. It was reconstituted in 1889,[3] and officially registered the following year. In 1915, it added "Hand and Machine" to its name.[4] By this time, it had also affiliated to the United Textile Factory Workers' Association.[5]
Merged into Accrington, Church and Oswaldtwistle 1971
Ashton-under-Lyne
1860
171
Merged into Hyde and District in 1967
Bacup and District
1901
85
Merged into Rossendale Valley 1963
Bamber Bridge
1882
66
Merged into Preston 1930s
Barnoldswick
1925
N/A
Dissolved 1970. Earlier union active 1906–1970
Blackburn
1866
706
Merged into Blackburn and Bolton 1971
Bolton
1892
266
Merged into Blackburn and Bolton 1971
Burnley and District
1878
498
Dissolved 1983
Bury
1890
105
Merged into Rochdale and District 1973
Chorley and District
1892
174
Merged into Blackburn and Bolton 1971
Church and Oswaldtwistle
1867
102
Merged into Accrington, Church and Oswaldtwistle 1971
Clayton-le-Moors
1900
41
Dissolved 1920s
Clitheroe and District
1892
70
Dissolved 1940s
Colne and District
1895
214
Dissolved 1983
Darwen
1892
252
Merged into Blackburn and Bolton 1971
Earby and District
1905
33
Dissolved 1960
Farington
1903
N/A
Merged into Preston 1906
Great Harwood
1860
109
Dissolved 1950s
Hadfield and Glossop
1895
56
Merged into Hyde and District 1920s
Haslingden
1886
75
Merged into Rossendale Valley 1963
Heywood
1890
102
Merged into Rochdale and District 1973
Hyde and District
1902
72
Merged into Colne and District 1976
Leigh and Bedford
1890
67
Merged into Bolton 1940s
Littleborough
1893
60
Merged into Rochdale and District 1967
Longridge
1870
31
Merged into Preston 1950s
Macclesfield
1894
30
Dissolved 1920s
Manchester
1865
136
Dissolved 1969
Nelson and District
1893
340
Dissolved 1983
Oldham
1868
109
Dissolved 1963
Padiham
1895
101
Dissolved 1983
Preston
1866
412
Dissolved 1983
Radcliffe
1891
60
Merged into Bury 1972
Ramsbottom
1894
43
Dissolved 1940s
Rawtenstall and District
1891
60
Merged into Rossendale Valley 1963
Rishton
1893
40
Dissolved 1940s
Rochdale and District
1892
157
Merged into Colne and District 1974
Skipton and District
1905
44
Dissolved 1980
Stockport
1906
61
Merged into Hyde and District 1967
Todmorden
1892
201
Dissolved 1983
Wigan and District
1891
60
Merged into Bolton and District 1963
From 1890 until 1932, the union was led by William Cornforth Robinson, a member of the National Executive Committee of the Labour Party, who served two terms as a Member of Parliament.[8] In the 1940s and 1950s, it was led by Harry Earnshaw, also a member of the National Executive Committee.[9]
Although union membership was never large, it remained fairly steady into the 1950s, being 3,924 in 1955. However, it dropped rapidly from the 1960s onwards, as employment in the cotton industry in England declined. Many affiliates merged with each other, with the Blackburn and Bolton Districts of the Amalgamation becoming the largest single affiliate. However, that union was suspended from the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in 1972, as it had registered with the government, in defiance of TUC policy. In response, in 1974, the amalgamation expelled the union, which subsequently collapsed. The following year, the Colne, Nelson and Preston unions began working together with a common general secretary, as the North East Lancashire and Cumbrian District, representing three-fifths of the remaining membership. In 1983, they were dissolved, along with the remaining minor affiliates, and the former North East Lancashire and Cumbrian District took over the leadership of the amalgamation.[6]
By 1980, the union had only 1,065 members,[3] and by 1989 this had declined to just 470, although its members were determined not to merge into a larger union.[10] Given the precipitous decline in membership, it disaffiliated from the Trades Union Congress in 1992,[11] and eventually its remaining members transferred to Manufacturing, Science and Finance in 1998, with the union being formally dissolved in 2002.[12]