Photographs
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/1885/272454
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ANU Archive Item Open Access Bill Kelty(2009-09-18T06:10:23Z) Photographer: Ruth MaddisonBill Kelty was Assistant Secretary, Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1977-1983 and Secretary, Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1983-2000.ANU Archive Item Open Access Robert J L Hawke, President, Australian Council of Trade Unions with Heinz Vetter, Vorsitzender der Deutschen Gewerkschaftsbundes (DGB) (President, German Trade Union Federation)(2009-09-18T06:10:28Z) Photographer: Bonn BundesbildstelleANU Archive Item Open Access Women in the trade unions: Miles Franklin(Reproduced from Anderson, Hugh. Trade Unions in Australia. Hill of Content Archive., 2009-09-18T06:10:34Z) Photographer: not knownThrough her friendships with Rose Scott and Vida Goldstein, in the early 1900s, Franklin became involved in the feminist movement in Australia. Between 1906 and 1915, Franklin worked with fellow Australian Alice Henry for the National Women's Trade Union League in Chicago, USA.ANU Archive Item Open Access What will you tell your kids you did to stop uranium?(2009-09-18T06:10:38Z)ANU Archive Item Open Access Bob Hawke and Simon Crean at the Australian Council of Trade Unions National Congress(2009-09-18T06:10:42Z) Photographer: Ruth MaddisonANU Archive Item Open Access The New Right(Reproduced from ACTU Bulletin, Nov 1986, front cover, 2009-09-18T06:10:48Z) Photographer: not knownThe New Right with messages of 'blame the unions, blame the government, blame the taxation system' was committed to changing Australian society and the political agenda to the advantage of the wealthiest and most powerful sections of society (ref. ACTU Bulletin, Nov 1986, p. 6-9).ANU Archive Item Open Access E G Whitlam and unidentified others [occasion not known](2009-09-18T06:10:52Z)ANU Archive Item Open Access Bob Hawke, President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1969-1980(2009-09-18T06:10:58Z) Photographer: not knownIn 1969 Bob Hawke was elected President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions. He was responsible for steering the organisation through a period of enormous social change.ANU Archive Item Open Access Peter Nolan, Secretary of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1977-1983(Reproduced in ACTU Youth, 1979, p. 37, 2009-09-18T06:11:02Z)ANU Archive Item Open Access Delegates to the Australian Council of Trade Unions Executive Meeting(2009-09-18T06:11:06Z) Photographer: not knownL-R: A J White, B Lynch, W Lewis, J D Kenny, W B Evans, A E Monk (President), A R Broadby (Secretary), A Macdonald, R A King, J V Stout, G E Hayes, A B Thompson, G Dawson, W Brown.ANU Archive Item Open Access ANU Archive Item Open Access Reg Broadby, Secretary, Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1949-1956(Reproduced from ACTU Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 1, Sep 1956, p. 1, 2009-09-18T06:11:15Z)For the valediction, oration at the grave and tributes on the death of Mr Broadby, see ACTU Bulletin, Vol. 3, No. 1, Sep 1956.ANU Archive Item Open Access Bob Hawke, President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1969-1980(2009-09-18T06:11:20Z) Photographer: not knownIn 1969 Bob Hawke was elected President of the Australian Council of Trade Unions. He was responsible for steering the organisation through a period of enormous social change.ANU Archive Item Open Access Unveiling of a bronze bust of Charles Alfred Crofts(Reproduced from ACTU Bulletin, vol. 1, no. 2, Jul 1954, p. 1, 2009-09-18T06:11:25Z) Photographer: not knownPresident, Australian Council of Trade Unions, A E Monk, assisted by the Secretary Gas Employees' Union, R Schafer, unveil a bronze bust of Charles Alfred Crofts at the official opening of the new Australian Council of Trade Unions building, 30 June 1954. Crofts had been Secretary, Australian Council of Trade Unions, 1928-1944, and Secretary, Gas Employeesâ Union, 1914-1950.ANU Archive Item Open Access Women in the trade unions: assault on a non-trade unionist(Reproduced from Anderson, Hugh. Trade Unions in Australia. Hill of Content Archive, 2009-09-18T06:11:30Z) Photographer: not knownANU Archive Item Open Access Women in the trade unions: Rose Scott(Reproduced from Anderson, Hugh. Trade Unions in Australia. Hill of Content Archive., 2009-09-18T06:11:36Z)The daughter of a pastoralist and of independent means, Rose Scott devoted her life to improving women's lives. She was foundation secretary of the Women's Suffrage League of NSW and campaigned vigorously for separate prisons for women. She strongly opposed Federation.ANU Archive Item Open Access Hawke condemns the Government for lies and broken pledges(Reproduced from ACTU Bulletin, vol. 1, no. 3, Sep 1977, p. 1, 2009-09-18T06:11:40Z) Photographer: not knownâ The Fraser Government, with increasingly vicious intensity, sought to divide the community with lies and misrepresentation about the trade unions and their membersâ , Bob Hawke, President, Australian Council of Trade Unions, said in his opening address to the 1977 Congress.ANU Archive Item Open Access Want to be a 20c.millionaire?(Reproduced from ACTU Youth, Sep 1969, p. 29, 2009-09-18T06:11:44Z) Photographer: not knownUnion membership costs about 20c a week and provides members with services only millionaires can afford.ANU Archive Item Open Access All-Australian Trades Union Congress - Agenda Paper(2009-09-18T06:11:51Z)108 union delegates gathered at Melbourne's Trades Hall on 3 May 1927 to establish the Australian Council of Trade Unions.ANU Archive Item Open Access Women in the trade unions: Vida Goldstein(Reproduced from Anderson, Hugh. Trade Unions in Australia. Hill of Content Archive., 2009-09-18T06:11:56Z) Photographer: not knownVida Goldstein ran for the Australian Senate in 1903 and although she was not elected, this made her the first woman to nominate for Australian Parliament. Throughout her lifetime, Goldstein campaigned on many social issues including women's franchise, the Queen Victoria women's hosptial, peace, birth control and naturalisation laws.
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