Tom Newland

Thomas George Newland (2 February 1872[1] – 14 September 1943) was a British trade union leader.

Born in Islington, Newland served with the City Imperial Volunteers during the Second Boer War.

After the war, he returned to the UK, where in 1893 he joined the National Amalgamated Society of Printers' Warehousemen and Cutters.

[2] He first came to prominence in 1905, when he moved a motion in opposition to affiliation to the Labour Representation Committee, objecting to the organisation's support of the middle class candidate Stanton Coit while it did not endorse the candidature of Harry Quelch, a member of the union, who shared Newland's membership of the Social Democratic Federation.

In 1918, he was elected as general secretary of its successor, the National Union of Printing and Paper Workers, which he took into a merger to form the larger National Union of Printing, Bookbinding and Paper Workers, continuing as general secretary.