Ebby Edwards

Ebenezer Edwards (30 July 1884 6 July 1961) was a trade unionist and politician in Britain.

Born in Chevington, Northumberland, Edwards went down the coal mine at the age of 12. In 1906, he joined the Independent Labour Party, although he left after three years. In 1908, he attended Ruskin College in Oxford for ten months, but had to leave due to a lack of finances. After leaving the course, he became an early member of the Plebs' League and began to espouse Marxism.

Edwards continued working as a miner during World War I. A supporter of Robert Smillie, he opposed the war. He narrowly missed election to Parliament at the Wansbeck by-election, 1918, standing as a local Labour Party candidate, losing to Robert Mason. He lost in Wansbeck again at the 1918 general election.

Long active in the Miners' Federation of Great Britain (MFGB), Edwards was elected to increasingly important posts in the union. In 1929, he was finally elected to Parliament, as the Labour MP for Morpeth, succeeding Smillie, but lost his seat at the 1931 election. Elected as Vice-President of the MFGB in 1929, he became President in 1931 and Secretary in 1932. He also served in various posts at the Miners' International Federation.

Edwards supported the MFGB's reconstitution as the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM), and became the NUM's first Secretary in 1945, but stepped down the following year to serve on the National Coal Board, keeping this post until 1953.

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    Parliament of the United Kingdom
    Preceded by
    Robert Smillie
    Member of Parliament for Morpeth
    192931
    Succeeded by
    Godfrey Nicholson
    Trade union offices
    Preceded by
    John Cairns
    Financial Secretary of the Northumberland Miners' Association
    191829
    Succeeded by
    John Carr
    Preceded by
    Arthur Pugh and Will Sherwood
    Trades Union Congress representative to the American Federation of Labour
    1928
    With: John Marchbank
    Succeeded by
    James Bell and James Thomas Brownlie
    Preceded by
    Thomas Richards
    Vice-President of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain
    192930
    Succeeded by
    Peter Lee
    Preceded by
    Thomas Richards
    President of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain
    193132
    Succeeded by
    Peter Lee
    Preceded by
    A. J. Cook
    Secretary of the Miners' Federation of Great Britain
    193245
    Succeeded by
    Position abolished
    Preceded by
    Anne Loughlin
    President of the Trades Union Congress
    194445
    Succeeded by
    Charles Dukes
    Preceded by
    New position
    Secretary of the National Union of Mineworkers
    194546
    Succeeded by
    Arthur Horner
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