Clip description
‘Produce Merchants’ unload perishables from a ship on the docks, possibly part of the New South Wales General Strike of 1917.
Curator’s notes
The New South Wales General Strike of 1917 was the largest union movement since the Australian maritime dispute of 1890. It occurred because the government, through the New South Wales Department of Railways and Tramways, introduced an American costing system, to determine where its workers could increase efficiency.
The railway workers were the first to strike but this soon spread to other unions including the coke-workers, seamen, miners, ship painters and dockers in Sydney including Cockatoo Island and Garden Islands, and the waterside workers in Melbourne.
The strike lasted over two months, between 2 August and 15 October 1917 but the impact of the strike lasted a lot longer. The working class of Sydney experienced a loss of livelihood and there was widespread starvation. The Lord Mayor of Sydney, RD Meagher acted as mediator and suggested the card system be introduced but that an independent tribunal be immediately appointed to investigate. However, Cabinet refused to modify its previous position.
This newsreel seems to be a little disjointed. Although intertitles are used to introduce the subject, there isn’t any explanation as to why the waterside workers are striking or what may be the outcome. For most viewers of the time however, the context would have been familiar.
The footage of waterside workers unloading perishables from a ship is vivid and provides an important visual record of this event.