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The factory owners were not pleased. They sacked the women who
they suspected of talking to Besant. In response, Besant helped the rest of
the women in the factory to form a trade union, which came out on strike.
With the support of some of the press and the generosity of the public, money
was collected to aid the striking women. Many people stopped buying Bryant
and May matches.
At first, the owners of the factory stated that they would not
take the strikers back into their employ. But on 21 July they gave in to the
demands of the match girls, ended the fines system and re-employed those who
had been sacked, ending the strike. However, it was to be many more years
before they stopped using the dangerous phosphorous.
This was the first time a union of unskilled workers had
succeeded in striking for better pay and working conditions. It inspired
unions across the country. Within a year, the London dockworkers were on
strike, confident that if the match girls could succeed, then so could they.
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Tuesday, December 6, 2016
Risks of Union Organizers
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