The union dates its origin to 1847. The
Manchester Friendly Association of Operative Bakers was established in 1849, and by 1854 it was led by Thomas Hodson. Under his leadership the union first expanded to represent bakers in
Salford, becoming the first bakers' union in England to cover a wide area, though its membership remained below 200. In 1861 Hodson led the formation of the
Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers, bringing together unions in Bristol, Cheltenham, Hanley, Liverpool, London, Newcastle, Warrington and Wigan, along with his Manchester society. The new union gained prominence when its campaign for improvements in working conditions led to the
Bakehouse Regulations Act 1863. In about 1870 the union relocated its headquarters to London, but the majority of its members were still in Lancashire. Other unions gradually joined, including the South Wales Federation of Journeymen Bakers in 1893. By 1891 the union had 4,000 members, nearly half of them in London. In 1902, the union officially affiliated to the
Labour Party, which had been founded two years prior. For many years the union did not admit workers whom it considered unskilled. This led its London organiser, C. Mann, to form the rival National Union of Bakery Trade Workers in 1913. The following year the Operative Bakers agreed to accept all workers in the industry, and renamed itself as the
Amalgamated Union of Operative Bakers, Confectioners and Allied Workers of Great Britain and Ireland. Mann's breakaway union was dissolved. In 1920 the union agreed to transfer its members in the milling industry to the rival
Dock, Wharf and Riverside Workers' Union. In 2017 members of the BFAWU staged the first strikes at
McDonald's in the UK. During the
Labour Party leadership election in 2020 the union backed
Rebecca Long-Bailey. It also backed
Richard Burgon for
deputy leader. In November 2020 the union announced that it planned to consult its members on whether to remain affiliated to the
Labour Party following the suspension of former
party leader Jeremy Corbyn. In September 2021 it announced during Labour's annual conference that it would disaffiliate from the party, citing dissatisfaction with
Keir Starmer's leadership. In 2023, the Solidarity Across Land Trades union (SALT) became an affiliate of the BFAWU. ==Solidarity Across Land Trades==