AUSTRALIAN RADICAL HISTORY
MARITIME STRIKE 1878 - 1879
Anybody who thinks that the current Maritime dispute
at Webb Dock in Melbourne is a new development on the waterfront, only
has to examine the 1878 to 1879 Maritime strike to realise that little
if anything has changed. The seamen's strike in 1878 was the first
intercolonial dispute in Australia. The Australasian Steam Navigation
Company decided to replace all their Australian seamen with Chinese
seamen in late 1878. The reason:- they were paying Australian seamen
eight pounds per month, but could get away with paying Chinese seamen
three pounds per month.
Seamen in Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland went on strike on the
17th of November 1878. They were supported by miners in New South Wales
and by wharfies in the three colonies. The company was able to keep a
skeleton service going, when 21 Sydney wharfies blacklegged and loaded
ships that had Chinese crews. On Saturday the 7th of December 1878, a
crowd had gathered outside the Australasian Steam Navigation Companies
wharf and when the blacklegs had finished work and made their way home,
the crowd began hooting the strike breakers.
Sixty police on foot and six mounted troopers turned on the crowd and
beat many of the demonstrators senseless. A compromise settlement was
reached by the seamen and the company on the 2nd of January 1879. The
company agreed to discharge its Chinese crews over the next two years
and re-employ the Australian seamen whose jobs had been terminated.
The Maritime Strike in 1878 put the question of race, international
capital and labour squarely on the colonial political agenda.
International capital claimed the right to employ anyone they wanted
to. Workers from Southern China and the South Pacific were targeted by
international capital because they could get away with paying them a
pittance. Local Colonial workers found they had become the disposable
part of the labour equation. They formed associations and unions to
fight this attempt by the merchants of the late 19th Century to employ
virtual slave labour.
The early Trade Union Movement owed much of its early success to the
fact that people understood that if they didn't unite and fight for the
right to keep their jobs, everyone, both indentured workers and locals
would be the losers. It's easy, very easy to label the early union
movement as a bunch of racists, what many commentators seem to forget is
that many of the racist sentiments that were aired were caused by the
attempts of local and international merchants to use indentured Chinese
and South Seas labour to cut their operating costs. When you examine
the current Maritime dispute at Webb Dock in Melbourne, it looks like
nothing has changed. The employers will do anything control over the
docks.
by Anarchist Media Institute, Melbourne, Australia
Excerpt from Anarchist Age Weekly Review Number 286, 10th - 16th February, 1998
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