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Home » Protest and Politics » Trade unionism & labour disputes » Trade unions

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Banner titled 'The Mountain Ash and District Trades Council & Labour Party'
Banner titled 'South Wales Area N. U. M., Penrhiwceiber Lodge'
Blaenant Lodge, N. U. M. banner, front [image 1 of 2]
  • John Owen Jones (ap Ffarmwr) was born at Trefdraeth, Anglesey, in 1861.  He is best remembered for his unsuccesful attempts to establish a trade union on behalf of farm workers.  

Ap Ffarmwr was himself a farmer's son, but although he received some formal education he was largely self-taught.  In 1884-5, after periods of study at Aberystwyth and Manchester, he became the first full-time Welsh-language parliamentary correspondent to be employed by a Welsh newspaper in London.  His employer, the Welsh National Newspaper Company, published Liberal newspapers such as 'Y Genedl Gymreig' and 'The North Wales Observer and Express'.  He returned to Anglesey in the late 1880s to establish a private grammar school at Dwyran and it was during this period that he began voicing his concerns regarding the plight of the tenant farmers of the island.  He wrote a number of articles to 'Y Genedl Gymreig' under the pseudonym 'ap Ffarmwr' [farmer's son] in which he called for a reduction in rents, rates and tithes and a fair wage for agricultural labourers.  His attempts to establish a union on behalf of the agricultural workers was unsuccessful, however, and in 1894 he left Anglesey for south Wales when he was appointed editor of the 'Merthyr Times'.  In 1897 he moved to Nottingham where he died in March 1899.  He was buried at Dwyran, Anglesey.   

Further reading: David A. Pretty, 'The Rural Revolt that Failed: Farm Workers' Trade Unions in Wales, 1889-1950' (Cardiff, 1989).
John Owen Jones (Ap Ffarmwr), c.1890s
  • The 1930s saw a number of major disturbances and labour troubles at Taff-Merthyr Colliery, near Bedlinog, due to the problem of company unionism, which threatened to undermine the position of the South Wales Federation of Miners (the Fed).  There were a number of violent clashes between members of the Fed and non-unionists or miners who had joined the rival 'scab' or company union.  Matters came to a head in October 1934, when 250 members of the Fed were dismissed from the colliery and unemployed miners, who were not members of the Fed, were taken on to replace them.  As they made their way to the pit, protected by a large police escort, violent scenes erupted.  As many as 300 summonses were issued to people allegedly involved in the 'riots' at the colliery.

Following the punitive sentences received by the protestors there were huge demonstrations around Treharris at which S. O. Davies, Arthur Horner and others spoke. The significance of the disturbances in Bedlinog was summed up by Jim Griffiths in that they 'revealed a new spirit of revolt amongst our people' and 'determination to fight for our economic existence'.

Source:
Merthyr Tydfil Public Libraries, 'The unconquerable spirit: Merthyr Tydfil and District in the 1930s' (1993).
Demonstration against the imprisonment of rioters, Taff-Merthyr, 1936
  • This banner bears the text: 'Abercrave Lodge. N. U. M. Anthracite District.
Banner of Abercrave Lodge of the National Union of Mineworkers, 1965 [front face, image 1 of 2]