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International Typographical Union information


International Typographical Union
AbbreviationITU
Successor
  • Communications Workers of America
  • International Brotherhood of Teamsters
FormationMay 3, 1852 (1852-05-03)
DissolvedDecember 31, 1986 (1986-12-31)
TypeTrade union
Headquarters
  • Indianapolis, Indiana, US[a]
  • Colorado Springs, Colorado, US[b]
Location
    • Canada
    • United States
Secessions
  • International Brotherhood of Bookbinders
  • International Photo-Engravers Union of North America
  • International Printing Pressmen's Union of North America
  • International Stereotypers' and Electrotypers' Union
Affiliations
  • AFL–CIO
  • Canadian Labour Congress
Formerly called
National Typographical Union

The International Typographical Union (ITU) was a North American trade union for the printing trade for newspapers and other media. It was founded on May 3, 1852, in the United States as the National Typographical Union, and changed its name to the International Typographical Union at its Albany, New York, convention in 1869 after it began organizing members in Canada. The ITU was one of the first unions to admit female members, admitting women members such as Augusta Lewis, Mary Moore and Eva Howard in 1869.

Typographers were educated, economically mobile, in every major urban center with newspapers, and had the unique possibility to influence publicity in favour of their cause. This led the union to the forefront of improving working conditions. ITU President W. B. Prescott led the ITU in 1897 to win a 48-hour work week and a standard wage scale for all printers. During the Great Depression, the ITU introduced the 40-hour work week across the industry at no cost to employers as a way to share the fewer jobs available. That ITU initiative spread to other unions and has since been codified across the labor sector by federal legislation in the US establishing the 40-hour work week.

The ITU had a unique system of factional opposition in its democratic elections, documented by Seymour Martin Lipset in his co-authored book Union Democracy: The Internal Politics of the International Typographical Union (1957).[1] The local scale committees worked for a decent wage while the executive council sent ITU representatives to assist local unions in contract negotiations. All contracts had to be approved and ratified by both the Executive Council and the newspaper publisher. For most of its history, the ITU benefited from friendly and strong competition between Independents and Progressives for control of the union.

As the work of typographers declined with automation, computers and mechanization of the print media, the ITU was disbanded. In 1986, a majority of ITU mailers voted to merge with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters and the remaining typographers joined the Communications Workers of America. Before its dissolution, the ITU was the oldest union in the United States.


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  1. ^ S. M. Lipset, Union Democracy: The Internal Politics of the International Typographical Union (1957)

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