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Swiss Typographers' Union
Swiss trade union From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Swiss Typographers' Union (German: Schweizerischer Typographenbund, STB; French: Fédération Suisse des Typographes) was a trade union representing printers, based in Switzerland.
The union was founded in 1858 in Olten, becoming the first enduring trade union in Switzerland.[1] It achieved early success by negotiating wage increases, leading many strikes, and in 1912 it achieved a closed shop agreement, in co-ordination with its Christian and liberal rivals. It was an early member of the Swiss Trade Union Federation,[2] while in 1892, it led the formation of the International Typographers' Secretariat, thereafter hosting its headquarters.[3]
By the end of World War I, the union had a national presence, although until 1926 it did not admit women or workers it considered to be less skilled.[4] By 1954, the union had 10,560 members,[5] and this rose to 15,466 by 1979. The following year, it merged with the Swiss Bookbinders' and Carton Makers' Union to form the Union of Printing and Paper.[6][2]
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Central Presidents
- 1858: Ed. Albrecht[7]
- 1862: U. Müller[7]
- 1863: Fr. Niklaus[7]
- 1864: J. Kleinert[7]
- 1865: J. Boß[7]
- 1866: F. Wittmer[7]
- 1867: K. Ehrensberger[7]
- 1868: H. Schweizer[7]
- 1870: J. Rüegg[7]
- 1872: Fabian Lack[7]
- 1874: K. Ehrensberger[7]
- 1876: H. Schweizer[7]
- 1880: J. Kummer[7]
- 1886: Friedrich Siebenmann[7]
- 1888: F. Käser[7]
- 1889: J. Frank[7]
- 1892: J. Leisinger[7]
- 1893: H. Unteregger[7]
- 1895: A. Ammann[7]
- 1898: A. Hagmann[7]
- 1900: E. Pfister[7]
- 1904: E. Blaser[7]
- 1905: F. Brosi[7]
- 1906: Fritz Verdan[7]
- 1917: Hans Grundbacher[7]
- 1922: H. Bräuchi[7]
- 1924:
- 1927: Hans Huber[7]
- 1946: Karl Aeschbacher[7]
- 1950s: Eduard Harsch
- 1967: Erwin Gerster[8]
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References
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