On 6 October,
Allison's Taupiri Coal Company sacked sixteen miners at
Huntly, three of whom had recently been elected to the arbitration union's executive. The company refused another ballot and the directors declared that there was nothing to discuss with the union. Three days later the workers voted almost unanimously to strike until the sixteen men, and other miners not re-employed after a strike the previous year, were reinstated. After receiving congratulations from the UFL the miners asked the federation to take control of the dispute. Meanwhile, the Wellington shipwrights had added further grievances to their list, including demands for increased pay and holidays, and they began a strike on 18 October. The wharfies held a stop work meeting at 08:00 on the 20th and decided to refer the dispute to the UFL and returned to work, only to find that
scabs had been hired in their place. In defiance of their president another meeting was held and 1,500 workers decided "That no work shall be accepted until such time as the victimised men are re-instated". On 5 November, strike supporters clashed with mounted special constables who were riding from their base at Buckle St to Lambton station. Their mission was to escort racehorses from the station to the wharves so they could be shipped to Christchurch for the New Zealand Cup race meeting. The battle between the two parties began on Featherston Street, where specials charged strikers. Pro-strike tram drivers rammed specials on horseback, and metal spikes and detonators were thrown at horses’ feet. The specials later assumed control of the wharves. It was a decisive moment in the strike. The events in Wellington and Huntly received national attention over the next week and many
Wobblies in
Auckland and Wellington called for action. On 24 October the wharfies invaded several ships and stopped work, that same day the ship owners offered to reinstate the 1912 agreement if work was resumed, but the union rejected the proposal. In Huntly no miners or truckers went to work. The company claimed the union was breaking their agreement, though union leader
Harry Holland stated that the 'agreement' had been drafted by the company and 'agreed to' when there was no union. Recalling the events later striker
Banjo Hunter recalled "the strike fever spread like a huge epidemic wave" During the strike, younger farmers were enlisted by the government to work as special constables, known as Massey's Cossacks. These farmers worked and protected areas such as
Queens Wharf, Auckland. In Wellington 'foot specials' were recruited from middle-class urban workers. ==Interpretation==