Assistant Masters' Association
The Assistant Masters' Association (AAM) was a trade union representing male teachers in British secondary schools.
| Merged into | Assistant Masters' and Mistresses' Association | 
|---|---|
| Founded | 1891 | 
| Dissolved | 1978 | 
| Headquarters | 29 Gordon Square, London | 
| Location | 
 | 
| Members   | 40,000 (1978) | 
| Publication | The Journal of the Assistant Masters' Association | 
| Affiliations | WCOTP | 
The union was founded in 1891 as the Incorporated Association of Assistant Masters in Secondary Schools, although it soon became the "Assistant Masters' Association", a counterpart to the Association of Assistant Mistresses (AAM). Membership of the union grew steadily, reaching 3,259 in 1910, and about 40,000 by 1978.[1]
From 1978, single-sex trade unions were prohibited, and the AMA accordingly merged with the AAM, forming the Assistant Masters' and Mistresses' Association.[1]
General Secretaries
    
- 1901: C. J. C. Mackness
- 1902: W. H. D. Rouse
- 1906: J. G. Lamb
- 1921: George Dixon Dunkerley[2]
- 1939: Andrew Hutchings[2]
References
    
- Marsh, Arthur; Ryan, Victoria (1980). Historical Directory of Trade Unions. Vol. 1. Farnborough: Gower. pp. 8–9. ISBN 0566021609.
- Walker, Geoffrey (1995). Conditions of service for secondary schoolmasters in England and Wales, 1891-1951, with special reference to the work of the Assistant Masters' Association (PDF). Retrieved 6 July 2018.
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