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Chippewa Boots, originally known as Chippewa Shoe Manufacturing Company, is an American manufacturer of footwear, principally men's work and recreational boots. It also manufactures a limited line of heavy and casual shoes , and some women's footwear.
In total, by 1877, the union had about 4,000 members. [2] A few women joined the union in the late 1880s, making it the first union outside the textile trades to admit both men and women. At this point, membership in the important shoe making centre of Northampton was low, with only about 600 of 15,000 shoe workers in the town holding union ...
The Boot and Shoe Workers' Union (BSWU) was a trade union of workers in the footwear manufacturing industry in the United States and Canada. It was established in 1895 by the merger of three older unions. It was affiliated with the American Federation of Labor. In 1977 it merged into the Retail Clerks International Union, part of the AFL-CIO.
National Union of Boot and Shoe Operatives (3 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Footwear industry trade unions" The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total.
National Union of Leather Workers: South Africa: 8,000 New Zealand Federated Footwear Trade Union: New Zealand: 3,544 Norwegian Union of Shoe Makers: Norway: 4,248 Norwegian Union of Hide and Leather Workers: Norway: 1,550 Rossendale Union of Boot, Shoe and Slipper Operatives: United Kingdom: 7,190 Swedish Saddlemakers' and Upholsterers' Union ...
The union was founded in 1937, when the United Shoe and Leather Workers' Union merged with the Shoe Workers' Protective Union. [1] It was affiliated with the Congress of Industrial Organizations, and by 1953, it had around 60,000 members. [2] In 1955, it transferred to the newly merged AFL–CIO. [3]