Holidays for All - TUC pamphlet, 1937

1937 1918-1939 "Holidays for All - TUC pamphlet, 1937" [T0149.jpg], 1937, Trades Union Congress The TUC first began to campaign for a paid holiday for workers in 1911. Following the passing of an International Labour Convention (ILO) on holidays in 1936, lobbying of the Baldwin Government...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Institution:TUC - Trade Union Congress Library
Language:English
Published: 1937
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10796/2A291912-34F3-4B05-AD03-49C8E70173B0
http://hdl.handle.net/10796/53E3E20B-90E4-4040-B70E-2C92E9760079
Description
Summary:1937 1918-1939 "Holidays for All - TUC pamphlet, 1937" [T0149.jpg], 1937, Trades Union Congress The TUC first began to campaign for a paid holiday for workers in 1911. Following the passing of an International Labour Convention (ILO) on holidays in 1936, lobbying of the Baldwin Government was reviewed. A committee of inquiry report in 1938 recommended the gradual introduction of a statutory right to holidays in July 1938. The Holidays with Pay Act gave workers, whose minimum rates of wages were fixed by trade boards, the right to one weeks holiday per year. The TUC, which was calling for 2 weeks' holiday for all workers, was disappointed in the limited legislation. This pamphlet, which includes the TUC's evidence to the committee of inquiry, estimates that 5,025,000 employees already enjoyed holidays with pay in some form, mainly through union negotiated collective agreements.
Physical Description:Pamphlet
TEXT