The South African Typographical Union (SATU) is a trade union representing workers in the printing and media industries in South Africa.
The union was founded on 5 January 1898 by six local unions, including the Durban Typographical Society. Many of its founding members were immigrants from the United Kingdom who had held membership of the London Society of Compositors (LSC), and the new union's constitution was based on that of the LSC. It published the South African Typographical Journal, which was one of the key cheerleaders for a Labour Party.[1][2][3] For many years, its president was Harry Sampson.[4]
In 1980, it finally began accepting black workers, and its membership increased to 26,818.[6] It is currently affiliated to the Federation of Unions of South Africa.[8]
Further reading
Downes, Albert (1952). Printers' saga : being a history of the South African Typographical Union. SATU.
^Simons, Harold; Simons, Ray (1987). One Hundred Years of Job Reservation on the South African Mines. International Labour Office. ISBN9789221061588.
^ abMiller, Shirley (1982). Trade Unions in South Africa 1970-1980: a directory and statistics. Cape Town: Southern Africa Labour and Development Research Unit. ISBN0799204692.
^Jubber, Ken (1979). South Africa Industrial Relations and Industrial Sociology. Juta. ISBN9780702110085.