Skip to main content
Image Not Available for Federated Ship Painters' and Dockers' Union of Australia
Federated Ship Painters' and Dockers' Union of Australia
Image Not Available for Federated Ship Painters' and Dockers' Union of Australia

Federated Ship Painters' and Dockers' Union of Australia

Artist (died 1958)
Date1903
Object number00008557
NamePainting
MediumOil paint, cotton duck, varnish
DimensionsOverall: 2542 x 3080 x 40 mm
Display Dimensions: 2541 x 3080 x 63 mm
ClassificationsArt
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from the Federated Ship Painters and Dockers Union of Australia
DescriptionThis trade union banner painted by Edgar Whitbread in 1903 was commissioned by the Painters' and Dockers' Union of Port Jackson. The banner depicts the steamship NIAGARA entering dry dock. The Painters' and Dockers' Union of Port Jackson was one of the large militant unions which began in the early 1900s. The banner is inscribed 'Federated Ship Painters' & Dockers' Union of Australia. Estab. 1900. Touch One Touch All'. This was originally one side of a two sided banner. The other side (now separated) is registered as 00008558 and depicts the ship SURREY in dry dock.HistoryThis banner was originally a two-sided banner featuring the banner SURREY in dry dock on the alternate side. Edgar Whitbread was commissioned by the Painters' and Dockers' Union of Port Jackson to paint the two banners in 1903. Whitbread's detailed studies of the varied work performed by the union workers in this painting were based on sketches he made at the work site. He completed most of the work on the banner in his studio in Lewisham, Sydney, before employing a seamstress to join the two banners and embroider it with a silk braid and tassels. In 1978 restoration work was undertaken on the banner and it was used in subsequent May Day marches until 1990. At its inception in January 1900 the Painters' and Dockers' Union was called the Balmain Laborers' Union. By August 1900, it had changed its name to the Painters' and Dockers' Union of Port Jackson, and eventually the Federated Painters and Dockers Union in 1909. The Union had strong connections with Balmain as most of its early members worked as casual or unskilled labourers at Morts Dock and Engineering Workshops in Balmain. The Union disbanded in 1991.SignificanceThis banner is an example of the way in which Trade Unions used banners such as these to either promote issues that the union had won or proudly parade the work of its members.