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"USDAW 'Come and join USDAW' recruitment poster" [NMLH.1992.701]



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Catalogue Number
NMLH.1992.701

Object Name
Poster

Title
'Always ahead in distributive workers interests. Come and join USDAW'

Place
Fallowfield, Manchester, Lancashire

People
Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers (USDAW)

Date
around 1950

Description
A white poster featuring a smiling woman with a speech bubble saying 'Come and join USDAW'. The image is surrounded by rings in the suffragette colours of purple, green, and white. Additional text in the image says 'Always ahead in distributive workers interests'. The union name and address are at the bottom of the poster.


Women workers typically hadn't been approached to join unions, but as more women joined the out-of-home workforce following the Second World War, unions for professions with larger numbers of women, like shop and distribution work, began to appeal to women to join in their advertising. The Union of Shop, Distributive and Allied Workers (USDAW) is a UK trade union with around 360,000 members who work across a variety of industries including call centres, warehouses and supermarkets. The union was formed in 1947 by the merger of the National Union of Distributive and Allied Workers and the National Union of Shop Assistants, Warehousemen and Clerks. Some other unions have since merged in, including the Amalgamated Society of Boot and Shoe Makers and Repairers in 1955, and the Scottish Union of Bakers and Allied Workers in 1978.


Union membership can benefit workers as it allows the union to negotiate on their behalf during grievances, to negotiate pay rises and intervene if mass redundancies are threatened. Originally, a trade union would only represent a single profession, but over time it became more practical to have larger unions representing multiple professions, as USDAW does. Over six million people in the UK are union members in 2024, but during the industrial era where people tended to stay in one profession for most of their working life, membership was much higher.

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