Alan Jinkinson

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Alan_Jinkinson an entity of type: Person

Alan Raymond Jinkinson (27 February 1935 – 6 November 2022) was a British trade union leader. Jinkinson was born in Sheffield, Yorkshire on 27 February 1935, and was educated at King Edward VII School in the city. After national service in the Royal Signals, he took a place at Keble College, Oxford, gaining a degree in history, and then became, first, an accountant, and then a teacher, before joining the public service trade union NALGO (National and Local Government Officers' Association) in its education department in 1960. Jinkinson died on 6 November 2022, at the age of 87. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Alan Jinkinson
xsd:integer 23216421
xsd:integer 1121295449
rdf:langString Position abolished
rdf:langString new position
rdf:langString Deputy General Secretary of NALGO
rdf:langString General Secretary of NALGO
rdf:langString General Secretary of UNISON
xsd:integer 1983 1990 1993
rdf:langString Alan Raymond Jinkinson (27 February 1935 – 6 November 2022) was a British trade union leader. Jinkinson was born in Sheffield, Yorkshire on 27 February 1935, and was educated at King Edward VII School in the city. After national service in the Royal Signals, he took a place at Keble College, Oxford, gaining a degree in history, and then became, first, an accountant, and then a teacher, before joining the public service trade union NALGO (National and Local Government Officers' Association) in its education department in 1960. Jinkinson stood for the Labour Party in the 1962 Orpington by-election. A supporter of Hugh Gaitskell, he attacked Eric Lubbock, the Liberal Party candidate for supporting unilateral nuclear disarmament. However, Lubbock won the seat, while Jinkinson took third place with 12.4% of the vote, losing his deposit. Jinkinson also stood for Labour at Hendon North in the 1964 general election, losing but reducing the Conservative majority. He became deputy general secretary of NALGO in 1981, and succeeded John Daly as general secretary in 1990, helping to oversee the union's merger with NUPE and COHSE in 1993 to form Unison. He remained general secretary of Unison before retiring in 1996. Jinkinson died on 6 November 2022, at the age of 87.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2606

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