Lewis Leckie (1865 or 1866 – 20 March 1923) was a British trade union leader.
He was highly successful, and the union's London branches decided to collectively employ him as a full-time organiser.
[1] In 1898, Leckie was appointed as the general secretary of the AUU, initially on a part-time basis.
In 1918, he transformed the union by admitting all workers in the industry, regardless of perceived level of skill, and for the first time including women.
This biographical article about a trade unionist in the United Kingdom is a stub.