National Union of Sheet Metal Workers, Coppersmiths, Heating and Domestic Engineers

The National Union of Sheet Metal Workers, Coppersmiths, Heating and Domestic Engineers was a trade union in the United Kingdom and Ireland.

History
The union was founded in July 1920 as the National Union of Sheet Metal Workers and Braziers with the merger of a number of unions, including the General Union of Tinplate Workers and the National Amalgamated Association of Tin Plate Workers of Great Britain, and fifteen local unions. It merged with the competing National Society of Coppersmiths, Braziers and Metal Workers in 1959, renaming itself the National Union of Sheet Metal Workers and Coppersmiths. Following its 1967 merger with the Heating and Domestic Engineers' Union, it took its final, lengthy name.

The last independent union for sheet metal workers, the Birmingham and Midland Sheet Metal Workers' Society, finally merged into the union in 1973.

The union approved an offer to join the Amalgamated Union of Engineering Workers' Engineering Section in 1979, but this did not go ahead and instead, in 1983, it merged into the Technical, Administrative and Supervisory Section.

Election results
The union sponsored a Labour Party candidate in the 1979 general election:

General Secretaries

 * 1920: Charles Gordon
 * 1922: Charles Hickin
 * 1941: Archibald Kidd
 * 1943: Harry Brotherton
 * 1960: Ted Roberts
 * 1962: Les Buck
 * 1977: George Guy