512 PARLIAMENTARY COLBERTISM
anworthy persons” who only made it an excuse for levying
money?; while the clothiers desired to be free to see to the
business of dressing cloth themselves? There was a conflict
between the capitalists and the Company, the members of
which were sinking to the position of wage-earners’, and
to a lowered social status, and less secure standard of life.
It is highly probable that some of the Companies which
survived, came to discharge functions which were closely
analogous to those of modern Trade Unions.
There are some cases in which the differentiation of an
smploying class was apparently due to the success of the
capitalist in exercising supervision wisely. The London
felt-makers¢ insisted that all work must be done under the
direct observation of the master, and set their faces against
the weighing out of stuff by employers, to be made up at
the worker's home. This policy appears to have commended
itself to the journeymen also, in the face of the competition
jo which they were exposed by the French immigrants, and
the trade continued to prosper on these new lines, The Felt-
makers’ Company seems to have changed in character during
the period after the Restoration, and to have become a body
of capitalist employers, rather than an association of small
masters; while during the same period an active organisa-
tion had come into existence among the men, which had
pursued a policy very similar to that which has been
generally adopted by nineteenth century Trade Unions.
The possession of material, and ability in supervision,
aswell as combined to bring about the rise of an employing class in
ariong fe the tailoring trade. In rural districts, the tailor continued to
rise of mn Visit the houses of his clients and to work upon the materials
they furnished; but in London, the customers preferred to
deal with a man who had a stock of materials. They had
the advantage of a larger choice of goods, and the head
of such a business would acquire special skill in cutting and
a knowledge of prevailing fashions. The differentiation of
the employer from the employed was almost inevitable; it
18. P.D. J. L cxu. 64. 2 8. P.D. J.L cxm. 63.
3 The clothiers of Ipswich appear to have been employing cloth-workers in
1639. 8. P.D. C. I. ccccxxv, 40, also cccexxvi. 44, 45.
4 Compare the interesting article by Mr G. Unwin on 4 Seventeenth Ceniury
Trade Union, in the Economic Journal, x. 398.
among the
felt-
makers.
In this
calling