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Custom, Job Regulation and Dock Labour in Liverpool, 1911–39*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2008

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Abstract

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It has been said that no other British industry, with the possible exception of coal mining, can claim such a rich or conflict-prone history of labour relations as the docks. In fact the major issues of more recent years in port transport concerning the nature of employment, strike activity and restrictive practices can only be fully understood within a historical perspective. The main focus of interest, however, of the plethora of public inquiries and research studies relating to the docks over many years has inevitably been the nature of employment – especially the effects and reforms of the casual system. Far less attention has been devoted to methods of job regulation and control over work as tools of analysis, now regarded as core elements in the study of industrial relations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1982

References

1 Jackson, M. P., Labour Relations on the Docks (London, 1973), p. 3.Google Scholar

2 In particular the Final Report of the Committee of Inquiry under the Rt. Hon. Lord Devlin into Certain Matters Concerning the Port Transport Industry [Cmnd 2734] (1965). For the Liverpool docks the main references are Report of the Commission of Inquiry Into the Subject of the Unemployed in the City of Liverpool (Liverpool, 1894); Rathbone, E. F., An Enquiry Into the Condition of Dock Labour at the Liverpool Docks (Liverpool, 1904)Google Scholar; Williams, R., The First Year's Working of the Liverpool Docks Scheme (London, 1914)Google Scholar; Hanham, F. G., Report of an Inquiry into Casual Labour in the Merseyside Area (Liverpool, 1930)Google Scholar; The Social Survey of Merseyside, ed. by Jones, D. C. (Liverpool, 1934).Google Scholar

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9 The same was true of dock work in other countries such as the United States. In the Port of New York, for instance, tradition, habit and established customs and practices also had a pervasive influence. See Barnes, C., The Longshoremen (New York, 1915), p.30Google Scholar, and Jensen, V.H., Strife on the Waterfront: The Port of New York Since 1945 (Ithaca, 1974), p. 142.Google Scholar

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11 Agreement Between Master Stevedores and Master Porters of Liverpool and the National Union of Dock Labourers, February 1903, Webb Trade Union Collection, Section C, Vol. 46, British Library of Political and Economic Science, London; Agreement as to Terms and Conditions of Dock Labour in the Port of Liverpool, August 1911 (the “White Book”), Cunard Papers, Booth files.

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24 Co-ordinated employer action in labour matters was facilitated because of the increased concentration amongst employers which had taken place, such that the port transport industry on the Mersey had come to be dominated by a limited number of big shipping firms. See Hobsbawm, , Labouring Men, op. cit., p. 2l3Google Scholar. In this respect it has been pointed out that in oligopolistic-type industries “the relatively small number of largescale employers […] facilitates collective organisation and the small employers are constrained to join through the economic impossibility of their taking independent action against the unions”. Ingham, G. K., Strikes and Industrial Conflict (London, 1974), p. 42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

25 Agreement as to Terms and Conditions of Dock Labour in the Port of Liverpool, 1911.

26 DLJC, 20 January 1919. There were also health hazards from discharging particular commodities, such as dust in grain handling and the pungent and acrid atmosphere when shovelling phosphate rock. In some disputed cases the view of the Port Medical Officer of Health was sought.

27 Dock employment was dangerous since it involved working from heights, over poor flooring and in bad lighting. In 1927, for example, the factory inspectorate found that in the Port of Liverpool there were 925 dock accidents, 20 of them fatal. DLJC, 25 February 1931.

28 Ibid., 23 December 1912. The union representatives included a number of working dockers as well as officials. In practice, an exact equality of numbers from each side of the committee was unimportant, since decision taking by vote was regarded as being unlikely. Ibid., 19 November 1922.

29 Liverpool Daily Post and Mercury, 22 August 1911.

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32 Ibid., 15 July 1912 and 10 December 1919.

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34 Employers wanted fewer disputes in order to help maintain and expand the trade of the port, whilst the union had been both embarrassed and less effective on occasions because of unofficial action by its members – as in the general transport strike of August 1911 in Liverpool. Thus both stood to gain from greater centralized control of the dock labour-force.

35 Cf., Walton and McKersie, , A Behavioral Theory of Labor Negotiations, op. cit., p. 290.Google Scholar

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39 Allen, G. C. et al. , The Import Trade of the Port of Liverpool (Liverpool, 1946), p. 23Google Scholar, shows that during the period 1924‐38 Liverpool was gradually losing ground relative to other ports and that, superimposed on this trend, there was a strong cyclical influence tending to make Liverpool's share lower in the years of depression.

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43 DLJC, 8 04 and 5 12 1924. Also, by longtime local custom at the South docks a similar extra payment was made to porters handling locust beans.Google Scholar

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47 cf.Clegg, , The Changing System of Industrial Relations, op. cit., p. 27.Google Scholar

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55 Royal Commission on Transport, Minutes of Evidence, Vol. III (1930), q. 12,652. This was the proportion in the ports of London and Liverpool.

56 Committee on Industry and Trade, Survey of Industrial Relations (1926), p. 86. indicates that between 1914 and 1925 wage increases for dock labour were substantially above the general average for a group of 13 export-related industries. See also Zimmer, F., “Portable Loading and Unloading Devices for Cargo Handling”, in: Dock and Harbour Authority, I (19201921), p. 18: “The rise in the cost of manual labour automatically promotes not only the perfecting of mechanical handling devices but also their more universal doption.”Google Scholar

57 In addition to bucket elevators for hoisting or vertical transmission, for conveying grain horizontally an engineer with the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board had first invented in 1868, for use in the Liverpool docks, a belt-conveyor together with a “tripper” or throw-off carriage for discharging the load at right angles to the belt. He had originally tried moving grain by means of a “worm screw”, but found that its capacity was too low and power consumption too high. For simplicity of construction and economy of cost a rubber-and-canvas belt was most suitable. Britton, P. W., “The Transport, Storage and Manipulation of Grain”, in: Institute of Civil Engineering, Minutes of Proceedings, CXXVI (18951896), pp. 353–56Google Scholar; Zimmer, G. F., The Mechanical Handling and Storing of Materials (London, 1932), I, pp. 26, 43.Google Scholar

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62 Ibid., 7 February 1934.

63 Ibid., 12 June 1930. As an illustration of the extent of labour saving in the firm's dock sheds it was estimated that to secure the equivalent output from 5 electric trucks each operated by one man it would be necessary to employ at least 26 dock labourers. Dock and Harbour Authority, VIII (1927–1928), p. 366.

64 DLJC, 11 08 1926. These devices also had the advantage of minimizing damage to the cargo.Google Scholar

65 Ibid., 24 April 1933; DLOC. 9 May 1936.

66 Cf., J. F. B. Goodman et al. , Rule Making and Industrial Peace (London, 1977), p. 16.Google Scholar

67 DLOC, 10 07 1939.Google Scholar

68 Employers' Association of the Port of Liverpool, Committee Minutes, 12 October 1923. It was estimated that of the 15,000 men working fairly regularly at the docks only between 10,000 and 12,000 were paying subscriptions, even though probably they had all once been in good standing.

69 DLJC, 15 11 1923. Many tallies had been issued to dockers' Sons.Google Scholar

70 Employers' Association of the Port of Liverpool, Committee Minutes, 18 November 1923.

71 Ibid., 11 september 1934. Employers complained that the union was allowing the men to get into a frame of mind whereby they felt that they had only to stop work to secure their demands.

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73 Ibid., 24 February 1925.

74 Ibid., 28 November 1911.

75 Ibid., 10 October 1932. “Welting” on the Liverpool docks, whereby only half the gang worked at any given time, was more recently noted by the Devlin Committee of Inquiry (1965), p. 16.

76 DLOC, 18 June 1937.Google Scholar

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