George Carson (trade unionist)

George Carson (1848 1921) was a Scottish trade unionist.

Carson became prominent as a leader of the Scottish Tin Plate and Sheet Metal Workers' Society. In 1901, he was elected as secretary of the Parliamentary Committee of the Scottish Trades Union Congress (STUC), and in 1902 he became the leader of the associated Scottish Workers' Representation Committee. Also that year, he was elected as secretary of Glasgow Trades Council.[1]

Carson was a founder member of the Scottish Labour Party in 1888. When the Independent Labour Party was founded in 1893, Carson unsuccessfully moved that it be named the "Socialist Labour Party", and was elected to its first National Administrative Council.[2][3] In 1910, he was elected to Glasgow City Council for the Labour Party in Maryhill.[4]

References

  1. Ian MacDougall, Mid and East Lothian Miners' Association Minutes: 1894-1918, p.63
  2. David Howell, British Workers and the Independent Labour Party, 1888-1906, p.296
  3. Alan McKinlay and R. J. Morris, The ILP on Clydeside, 1893-1932: From Foundation to Disintegration, pp. 31, 46
  4. Angela Tuckett, The Scottish Trades Union Congress: the first 80 years, 1897-1977, p.86
Trade union offices
Preceded by
Margaret Irwin
Secretary of the Scottish Trades Union Congress
1901 1918
Succeeded by
Robert Allan
Preceded by
A. J. Hunter
Secretary of Glasgow Trades Council
1902 1916
Succeeded by
William Shaw
Party political offices
Preceded by
Robert Allan
Secretary of the Scottish Workers' Representation Committee
1902 1909
Succeeded by
Position abolished
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