Guide to the Guide to the Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone International Collection
1914-1967


Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012

Phone: (212) 998-2630
Fax: (212) 995-4225
E-mail: gail.malmgreen@nyu.edu

© 2003 Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives. All rights reserved.
New York University Libraries, Publisher

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Machine-readable finding aid derived from a WordPerfect document dated: 2002. Machine-readable finding aid created by Brian Stevens. Description is in English.


Descriptive Summary

Creator: Postal, Telegraph and Telephone Workers' International
Title: Guide to the Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone International Collection
Dates: 1914-1967
Abstract: The Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone International was formed in 1911 in Bern as the International Federation of Posts, telegraphs, and Telephones. The anti-fascist and anti-communist PTTI eagerly sought the spread of democratic trade unionism and promoted the League of Nations. By the early 1930's, PTTI's membership surged into the hundreds of thousands. Throughout the 1950's and 1960's, the PTTI conducted research on the postal services of newly independent nations of Asia and Africa, and of Latin America and set up regional offices to integrate their postal unions. Today, the PTTI conducts educational programs and hold international conferences. In 1991, PTTI membership was more than four million and based in 65 unions in 102 nations. The collection includes material that documents PTTI's history, its organization and administrative structure.
Quantity: linear feet ( boxes)
Call Phrase: Tamiment 099

Arrangement

The files are grouped into two series; I: History (1963-1967); II: Administrative Files (1914-1966).
Folders are arranged chronologically within each series.


Historical/Biographical Note

The Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone International was formed in 1911 in Bern as the International Federation of Posts, telegraphs, and Telephones. However, the official founding conference was not held until 1920 in Milan, when postal employees realized that during World War I, the Post Office was unique in having maintained its international connections, and consequently should be developed as an instrument for world peace. The anti-fascist and anti-communist PTTI eagerly sought the spread of democratic trade unionism. It promoted the League of Nations and tried in its early years to be non-political for fear of a split between those who favored a separate trade union and those who favored affiliation with industrial unions. In the early 1920's, however, the union refused to admit the Soviet Postal Union.

Though always interested in learning from their foreign colleagues and uniting postal workers from all supposedly democratic nations, the discussions in the PTTI in the pre-WWII era seem to reflect concerns with nationalization of the postal services and employee control.

In the early 1930's, PTTI's membership surged into the hundreds of thousands, mainly of unionists from European countries. Because of communication difficulties, the implementation of Esperanto was attempted with some limited success. After 1935, the PTTI lost thousands of members as fascist forces closed PTTI offices in Vienna, Berlin, and other cities.

In 1947, the PTTI joined the World Federation of Trade Unions (WFTU) as an International Trade Secretariat. In 1949, American unions and their allies withdrew from the WFTU because of rising cold-war tensions and disagreement over the Marshall Plan. They formed the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions, and the PTTI followed suit.

Throughout the 1950's and 1960's, the PTTI conducted research on the postal services of newly independent nations of Asia and Africa, and of Latin America. The PTTI set up regional offices in these nations to integrate their postal unions into the International and to educate future leaders of the national postal unions.

Today, the PTTI conducts educational programs and hold international conferences. In 1991, PTTI membership was more than four million based in 65 unions in 102 nations.


Scope and Content Note

The 1.0 linear foot collection spans the years 1914-1967, with material evenly dispersed throughout those years. Provided in the collection is good documentation of the activities, structure, and goals of the organization. The collection, consisting mainly of reports, correspondence, bulletins, and indexes, is arranged in chronological order within each series.

Series I, History (1963-1967), contains a chapter outline plus one chapter of an unpublished book on the PTTI. This series also contains a thesis on the PTTI's history, based largely on information found in the collection.

Series II, Administrative Files (1914-1966), contains information generated by the central office of the PTTI, as well as resolutions passed in biennial congresses. Of special note in this series are the materials documenting the controversy surrounding the PTTI's 1924 refusal to admit the Soviet Postal Union.

The information documented this collection reflect the alliances, contradictions, and ideals of the larger international labor movement of this era.


Restrictions

Access Restrictions

Open for research without restrictions.

Use Restrictions

There may be some restrictions on the use of the collection. For more information, contact
Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012
Phone: (212) 998-2630
Fax: (212) 995-4225
E-mail: gail.malmgreen@nyu.edu


Access Points

Subject Names:
Subject Organizations:
Postal, Telegraph and Telephone Workers' International.
World Federation of Trade Unions.
Subject Topics:
International labor activities.
Labor unions.
Postal service--Employees--Labor unions.
Postal service--Employees.
Telegraphers--Labor unions.
Telegraphers.
Telephone companies--Employees--Labor unions.
Telephone operators.
Document Types:
Adminstrative records.
Correspondence
News bulletins.
Reports.
Typescripts.


Related Material at the Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives


Separated Material


Administrative Information

Provenance

The collection of the Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone International (PTTI) was a gift of Bruno Stein.

Preferred Citation

Published citations should take the following form:

Identification of item, date (if known); The Postal, Telegraph and Telephone Workers' International; Tamiment 099 ; box number; folder number;
Tamiment Library/Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
Elmer Holmes Bobst Library
70 Washington Square South
New York, NY 10012, New York University Libraries.


Container List

[The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in the collection.]

 

Series I: History (1963-1967)

Box Folder Title Date
1 1 History of the PTTI--Chapter Outline 1963
1 2 PTTI General Staff Matters--Chapter 5 1963
1 3 "The Postal, Telegraph, and Telephone Inter-national--1910-1945" Victor Hershkowitz 1967
1 4 Summary from International Directory of the Trade Union Movement. 1979

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Series II: Administrative Files (1914-1966)

Box Folder Title Date
1 5 Monthly Bulletin 1914
1 6 Notes of Second Congress--London 1914
1 7 Founding Congress--Milan 1920
1 8 Third Congress--Vienna 1920
1 9 Congress Resolutions 1920-1922
1 10 US Federation of Post Office Clerks 1921-1925
1 11 PTTI Reports 1922-1924
1 12 Responses to Reports 1923
1 13 Correspondence--Russian Union 1923-1924
1 14 Executive Committee Meetings 1923-1925
1 15 Report on Promotion 1924
1 16 The United Front and the PTT International 1924
1 17 Publications List 1924
1 18 Correspondence--League of Nations --Universal Postal Union 1925
1 19 Correspondence and Meetings--Russian Union 1926-1927
1 20 Executive Committee Meetings 1926-1930
1 21 Correspondence of General Secretary 1926-1930
1 22 Report--US National Federation of Postal Clerks 1926-1930
1 23 Affiliations List 1927-1929
1 24 Fourth Congress--Paris 1928
1 25 Fifth Congress--London 1928
1 26 Executive Council Meetings 1928-1930
1 27 Yearbook 1929-1930
1 28 Sixth Congress--Copenhagen 1930
1 29 Executive Committee Reports 1930-1935
1 30 Yearbook 1931
1 31 Financial Report 1931-1933
1 32 Excerpts from Post Bulletin 1931-1935
1 33 Seventh Congress--Lucerne 1932
1 34 Affiliations 1932-1935
1 35 Vienna Situation 1934
1 36 German Correspondence 1934
1 37 Letters to PTTI President 1935
1 38 Eighth Congress--Brussels 1935
1 39 Bulletin--International Committee of Clerks, Civil Servants, and Post Office Workers 1935
1 40 Information Bulletin 1936
1 41 Index to Post Bulletins 1936
1 42 Report--"The Regulation of Multiple Employment" 1936
1 43 Affiliations 1936-1939
1 44 International Federation of Trade Unions--Notes 1936-1939
1 45 Excerpts from Post Bulletin 1936-1940
1 46 Executive Committee Reports 1936-1945
1 47 Reports of International Federation of Employeesin the Public and Civil Service 1937
1 48 Ninth Congress--Paris 1937
1 49 Report on Activities 1937-1939
1 50 Tenth Congress--Brussels 1939-1940
1 51 World Trade Union Council--Paris 1945
1 52 Eleventh Congress--London 1946
1 53 Correspondence 1946-1947
1 54 World Federation of Trade Unions 1946-1947
1 55 Annual Account 1946
1 56 Executive Council Report 1948
1 57 Executive Committee Meeting--Dublin 1948
1 58 Study Tour of Eastern European Countries 1948
1 59 Index to Post Bulletins 1948-1949
1 60 Executive Committee Meeting--Zurich 1949
1 61 Post Bulletin 1949-1950
1 62 Index to Post Bulletins 1950-1959
1 63 Congress Resolutions 1951-1954
1 64 Report--"Avenues of Advancement" 1953
1 65 Executive Committee Meetings--Copenhagen, Vienna 1959-1960
1 66 Report--Study Trip to Africa 1961
1 67 Executive Committee on African, Asian, and Latin American Affairs 1961-1962
1 68 Executive Committee Reports 1961-1965
1 69 History of the International Labor Movement and ICTFU 1962
1 70 Financial Report 1962
1 71 PTTI Draft Constitution 1962
1 72 Eighteenth Congress--London 1963
1 73 Reports--eighteenth Congress 1963
1 74 PTTI Resolutions 1963
1 75 Congress--Brussels 1966
1 76 PTTI Statutes undated
1 77 The British Unions and the PTTI undated
1 78 List of Study Reports by PTTI undated
1 79 Affiliations undated
1 80 PTTI Congress Standing Orders undated

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