PARTICIPATING UNIONS & BANNERS
Read More >
The ‘Marching for Justice’ trade union banner exhibition opened to the public 10am-4pm during the first three weekends of May 2021. It formed part of the special May Day events in Port Adelaide, including the celebration of the centenary of the Port Adelaide Workers Memorial.
The 31 banners and pennants on display were generously loaned by South Australian unions and the Working Women’s Centre. They came from far and wide – including two Timber Workers Union banners from the CFMEU Mt Gambier Office, and the banner of the Transport Workers Union SA/NT Branch from its Darwin Office. (Attachment 1: Participating unions and banners)
The banners spoke of union diversity. They challenged narrow union stereotypes. Public and private sectors; blue, white and pink collar workers; essential services; and the Arts were all represented. Men and women workers, across low and higher paid occupations, featured. Impacts of overseas migration and language diversity were evident.
The dynamic nature of unions was illustrated in the banners and accompanying plaques. They revealed shifts over time arising from workforce and broader social changes, and union amalgamations. The general information panels accompanying the exhibition placed banners in their changing social and historical contexts.
Banner slogans speak of the hopes and aspirations of working people, not so much for individual success, but for the common good: ‘All Rights To Share. All Wrongs To Right’. They shout out what unions stood and continue to stand for. The recognition of the need for unity is central: ‘Unity Is Strength’; ‘United We Stand’. Slogans also show a broadening scope of concerns: ‘Childcare: A Right Not A Privilege’; ‘Keep People In Banking’; Working To Educate’.
Early banner slogans reflect a period when unionisation and accompanying industrial action were unlawful. To circumvent legal restrictions workers combined in Friendly Societies, pooling resources to provide support in the form of sickness and funeral benefits. The statement ‘Industry & Benevolence Unite Us In Friendship’ on the banner of the Amalgamated Society of Carpenters & Joiners illustrates this period.
By the late nineteenth century and with amended industrial legislation, banners spoke of an increasingly assertive class consciousness: ‘Abolish Wage Slavery’; No Surrender’. Calls for peace and socialism followed and persist: ‘Progress, Peace, Unity, Socialism’; ‘Building For Peace’. (Attachment 2: Banner slogans)