The 1912 Brisbane General Strike in
Queensland
Queensland ( , commonly abbreviated as Qld) is a States and territories of Australia, state in northeastern Australia, and is the second-largest and third-most populous state in Australia. It is bordered by the Northern Territory, South Austr ...
, Australia, began when members of the
Australian Tramway and Motor Omnibus Employees' Association
The Australian Tramway and Motor Omnibus Employees' Association was an Australian trade union, in operation from 1910 to 1950 and from 1950 until 1993. It was founded as the Australian Tramway Employees Union, but was renamed to include bus employ ...
were dismissed when they wore union badges to work on 18 January 1912. They then marched to
Brisbane Trades Hall where a meeting was held, with a mass protest meeting of 10,000 people held that night in Market Square (also known as Albert Square, now
King George Square
King George Square is a town square, public square located between Adelaide Street, Brisbane, Adelaide Street and Ann Street, Brisbane, Ann Street (and between two sections of Albert Street, Brisbane, Albert Street) in Brisbane, Queensland, A ...
).
General Strike
The Brisbane Tramways were owned by the Brisbane Tramway Company, a mainly local owned company, linked with the former Metropolitan Tramway and Investment Company horse tramway company and the Melbourne Tramway and Omnibus Company but operated it as an English Company as the main investors - in Melbourne and Brisbane as well as England and Scotland - owned tramways on all continents, however, there were a number of inter-related companies all with Brisbane Tramways in the title. The equipment for the tramway was supplied by the General Electric Company of the USA. Joseph Stillman Badger came out with the equipment to Brisbane in 1896 to install and set up the tramways. The Company asked him to stay on as General Manager, a proposal which he accepted, becoming managing director of the Company eventually. The men wanted the right to wear the union badge. Two organisers, reportedly IWW, went to all the tramways in Australia to try to organise a simultaneous strike over the issue. Badger refused to negotiate with the union over the issue. He also refused to go into negotiations with the
Queensland Council of Unions Queensland peak union body, then known as the Australian Labour Federation. After this rebuff, a meeting of delegates from forty-three
Brisbane
Brisbane ( ; ) is the List of Australian capital cities, capital and largest city of the States and territories of Australia, state of Queensland and the list of cities in Australia by population, third-most populous city in Australia, with a ...
based Trade Unions formed the Combined Unions Committee and appointed a General Strike Committee. The
trade union
A trade union (British English) or labor union (American English), often simply referred to as a union, is an organization of workers whose purpose is to maintain or improve the conditions of their employment, such as attaining better wages ...
ists of Brisbane went out on a
general strike
A general strike is a strike action in which participants cease all economic activity, such as working, to strengthen the bargaining position of a trade union or achieve a common social or political goal. They are organised by large coalitions ...
on 30 January 1912, not just for the right to wear a badge but for the basic right to join a union. The tramway men in Broken Hill were the only ones outside of Queensland to go out on strike over the issue. The other systems tramway men had little sympathy with the cause as it had already been listed for hearing before the Arbitration Tribunal.
Within a few days, the Strike Committee became an alternative government. No work could be done in Brisbane without a special permit from the Strike Committee. The committee organised 500 vigilance officers to keep order among strikers and set up its own Ambulance Brigade. Government departments and private employers needed the Strike Committee's permission to carry out any work. The Strike Committee issued strike coupons that were honoured by various firms. Red ribbons were generally worn as a mark of solidarity, not only by people but also on pet dogs and horses pulling carts. This spread even to school children where either blue or red ribbons were worn depending on one's side. Playground brawls were common. Daily processions and public rallies were held to keep strikers occupied.
On the second day of the strike, over 25,000 workers marched from the
Brisbane Trades Hall to
Fortitude Valley
Fortitude Valley (often called "The Valley" by local residents) is an inner suburb of the City of Brisbane, the state capital of Queensland, Australia. In the , Fortitude Valley had a population of 9,708 people. The suburb features two pedestri ...
and back with over 50,000 supporters watching from the sidelines. The procession was described as being led by Labor parliamentarians, with the procession being eight abreast and two miles (3 km) long, with a contingent of 600 women. The strike spread throughout Queensland with many regional centres organising processions through their towns. The strike committee regularly issued an official Strike Bulletin to counter the expected anti-union bias in mainstream newspapers.
William McCormack and the Amalgamated Workers' Association of North Queensland (AWA) initially lent their support to the strike. However, McCormack considered the pretext for the strike to be flimsy and AWA members soon returned to work.
It was only when the strike spread to the railways that the Queensland government became concerned about the situation. At this juncture it banned processions, swore in special constables and issued bayonets to its police force. Commonwealth military officers and spare-time troops volunteered as special constables, and many of the specials wore their commonwealth uniforms into action.
Black Friday
An application by the strike committee for a permit for a march on 2 February 1912 was refused by Police Commissioner
William Geoffrey Cahill. For the extreme violence police used against unionists and supporters on that day, it came to be called Black Friday.
Despite the refusal of a permit, a crowd estimated at 15,000 turned up in Market Square. Police and Specials attacked crowds in Albert Street under the direction of Cahill, who shouted, "Give it to them, lads! Into them." Meanwhile,
Emma Miller, a pioneer trade unionist and
suffragist
Suffrage, political franchise, or simply franchise is the right to vote in public, political elections and referendums (although the term is sometimes used for any right to vote). In some languages, and occasionally in English, the right to vo ...
, led a group of women and girls to parliament house. While returning along Queen Street, members of the group were batoned and arrested by a large contingent of foot and mounted police. Emma Miller, a frail woman in her 70s barely weighing 35 kilograms, stood her ground, pulled out her hat pin and stabbed the rump of the Police Commissioner's horse. The horse reared and threw off the Police Commissioner, who sustained an injury resulting in a limp for the rest of his life. There is some debate that Miller's hatpin stabbed Cahill in the leg.
The riding down and batoning of peaceful people, many of them being elderly and women and children on the footpath, was widely condemned, not only in union papers such as the ''Worker'', but also in the more conservative papers such as ''Truth''. It was initially called ''Baton Friday'', but later came to be popularly known as ''Black Friday''.
Conservative Queensland Premier
Digby Denham
Digby Frank Denham (25 January 1859 – 10 May 1944) was a politician and businessman in Queensland, Australia. He was a Premier of Queensland and Member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly. He was the first of only two Queensland Premiers t ...
viewed the strike committee as an opposing alternate administration and said there were "not going to be two governments" and opposed all further permits for processions. It was generally viewed as more of an insurrection than a strike by the conservative media and the Government, which is what the IWW organisers had really wanted Australia wide following their success with the 1908 Sydney tramway strike. When he attempted to enlist support of the Federal Government in the use of the military, he was rebuffed by the Labor Prime Minister,
Andrew Fisher
Andrew Fisher (29 August 186222 October 1928) was an Australian politician and trade unionist who served as the fifth prime minister of Australia from 1908 to 1909, 1910 to 1913 and 1914 to 1915. He held office as the leader of the Australian ...
, member for the Queensland seat of Gympie. Fisher had also received a request for military support from the Combined strike committee, but declined this offer preferring to send a monetary donation in support of the strike.
Aftermath
Justice
H.B. Higgins in the Federal Arbitration Court ruled that the precipitating event was a lockout rather than a strike, and that the regulation refusing tramwaymen the right to wear their union badges on duty was both unauthorised and unreasonable. Higgins could not intervene in restoration of jobs.
When the Employers Federation agreed on 6 March 1912 that there would be no victimisation of strikers, the strike officially ended.
The savagery of the baton charges by the
Queensland Police Service
The Queensland Police Service (QPS) is the principal law enforcement agency responsible for policing the Australian state of Queensland. In 1990, the Queensland Police Force was officially renamed the Queensland Police Service and the old motto ...
and specials on ''Black Friday'' created a bitterness and hatred of the police which would last for several decades. The strike reinforced solidarity and collective identity of the
Australian labour movement
The Australian labour movement began in the early 19th century and since the late 19th century has included industrial (Australian unions) and political wings (Australian Labor Party). Trade unions in Australia may be formed on the basis of cra ...
in Queensland. The Denham government immediately won an ensuing election on a "Law and Order" platform and passed the ''Industrial Peace Act of 1912'' ushering in compulsory arbitration specifically to deter strikes in essential services.
Employees of the tramway company who had struck were sacked. The tramway company refused to ever re-hire these workers. When the tram system was acquired by the Queensland Government in 1922, the sacked workers were reinstated. Badges on uniforms – the cause of the strike – were forbidden even when the tram system (and later bus system) was under government and later
Brisbane City Council
Brisbane City Council (BCC, also known as Council) is the local government of the City of Brisbane, the capital city of the Australian state of Queensland. The largest local government in Australia by population, BCC's jurisdiction includes 2 ...
control and were to remain forbidden until 1980.
In the aftermath of the strike three years later, there was an electoral swing to
Labor
Labour or labor may refer to:
* Childbirth, the delivery of a baby
* Labour (human activity), or work
** Manual labour, physical work
** Wage labour, a socioeconomic relationship between a worker and an employer
** Organized labour and the labour ...
all over Queensland, and the second Queensland Labor Government was elected in 1915, led by
T. J. Ryan.
In culture
The play, ''Faces in the street : a story of Brisbane during the general strike of 1912'' : a play in two acts written by
Errol O'Neill was performed for the first time in 1983 by
La Boite Theatre.
References
External links
*
{{DEFAULTSORT:1912 Brisbane General Strike
Labour disputes in Australia
General strikes
Brisbane general strike
Brisbane general strike
January 1912
Economic history of Queensland
1910s in Queensland
1910s in Brisbane