Winifred Baddeley

Winifred Lucy Baddeley[1] (2 December 1904[2] 20 July 1972) was a British trade unionist.

Born in Sale, then in Cheshire,[3] Baddeley worked for many years as an electrical coil winder at the Associated Electrical Industries works in Old Trafford.[4] She joined the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU) and gradually rose through the ranks, becoming a shop steward in 1941, then branch chair, chair of the women's works committee, and district representative.[3]

Baddeley was regarded as being on the right wing of the trade union movement,[4] although she campaigned strongly for equal pay for women, and argued that women's marginality in trade unions was partly due to the attitudes of many male trade unionists.[5]

In 1963, Baddeley attended the Trades Union Congress (TUC) for this first time, and was immediately elected to the General Council of the TUC; she was the first women who was not a full-time official to serve on the council.[4] During this period, she chaired the TUC's Women's Advisory Committee. She retired in 1968.[3]

In her spare time, Baddeley served as a magistrate, and on her Local Employment Committee. She married in 1963 and, unusually for the time, retained her maiden name.[3]

References

  1. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975
  2. 1939 England and Wales Register
  3. Trades Union Congress, "Obituary: Winifred Baddeley", Report of the 104th Annual Trades Union Congress, p.310
  4. "Elected to TUC Council", The Guardian, 4 September 1963
  5. Suzanne Franzway and Mary Margaret Fonow, Making Feminist Politics: Transnational Alliances Between Women and Labor, p.111
Trade union offices
Preceded by
Anne Godwin and Ellen McCullough
Women Workers member of the General Council of the Trades Union Congress
1963 1968
With: Marie Patterson
Succeeded by
Marie Patterson and Audrey Prime
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