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1Published 1945“…This Glasgow tenement carries the message 'Welcome hame lads' to demobilised troops.…”
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2Published 1946“…1946 1945-1960 "May Day March - Glasgow, 1946" [HFR0146], 1946 (l-r) Prime Minister Clement Attlee, Mr Katalinga (Rhodesia trade unions) and Mr Kemp (Glasgow City Labour Party) walk in front of the Glasgow District Trades Council banner on the 1946 May Day March.…”
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3Published 7 May 1926“…1926-05-07 "Telegram - Glasgow, 7 May 1926" [g0139001.jpg], 7 May 1926 Local Organisation…”
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4Published 8 May 1926“…1926-05-08 "Letter - RCA, Glasgow, 8 May 1926" [g0621001.jpg], 8 May 1926, Railway Clerks' Association Union Reports and Correspondence…”
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5Published 1940s“…Glasgow; Strathclyde; Scotland…”
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12Published 5 May 1926“…Combining the issues of the Glasgow Herald, The Daily Record, The Bulletin, Glasgow Evening News, The Evening News, The Citizen. …”
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13Published 1914-1918“…After David Kirkwood, shop stewards' convener at Beardmores in Parkhead, Glasgow was denied access in March 1916 to new women workers, shop stewards at Beardmore and at three other munitions factories went on strike. …”
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14Published 1919“…The strike spread from Glasgow to other Scottish cities involving over 70,000 workers and there were simultaneous stoppages in London and Belfast. …”
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15Published 1968“…1968 1960-2000 "Women engineering workers' strikes, 1968" [EP0125], 1968 Press cutting from the Morning Star newspaper 25 October, 1968 reporting a strike by 2000 women at the Rolls Royce factory in Hillington, Glasgow in support of equal pay. The same article reports an equal pay strike at Brook Motors in Yorkshire.…”
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16Published 1943“…This annual report for 1943 shows 674 workers attached to the Centre and local groups operating in Birmingham, Glasgow, Leeds, Llangollen and Manchester.…”
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17Published 1981“…The train, travelled from Newcastle to London via Edinburgh, Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Birmingham, Swansea, Cardiff and Bristol. …”
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18Published 1941“…A new scale of wages was agreed on the basis of a percentage, according to age, of a journeyman's pay. Those in Glasgow and Clydeside returned to work, but in early April a further 6000 left work in Rochdale and Manchester. …”
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19Published 1942“…This editorial in Forward newspaper, published in Glasgow, 31 January 1942 condemns the government's action and the negative effect on coal production.…”
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20Published 1943“…1943 1939-1945 "Rolls Royce strike, Hillington 1943" [HFR0213], 1943 Women workers at the Rolls-Royce plant at Hillington near Glasgow objected to being paid at a lower rate than unskilled men doing the same work. …”