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  1. 21 de mar. de 2015 · The Dalfram Dispute 1938: Pig Iron Bob: Directed by Sandra Pires. With David Field, Morrison James, Rob Sheens, Susan Ling Young. You've heard the nickname, now know the story.

  2. 4 de ene. de 2018 · On November 15th 1938, 180 men on the Port Kembla wharves stopped loading scrap iron on one ship, the Dalfram. They believed the pig iron being loaded was destined for Japan to be used in the invasion of China where hundreds of thousands of innocent people were being killed.

  3. The Dalfram dispute of 1938 (15 November 1938 to 21 January 1939) was a political industrial dispute at Port Kembla, New South Wales, Australia protesting the export of pig iron from Australia to Japan during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

  4. On November 15th 1938, 180 men on the Port Kembla Wharf south of Sydney voted against loading one ship, the Dalfram and in doing so created Australian History. They knew pig iron – a type of steel ‐ from Port Kembla was being turned into bullets and bombs as Japan... Directed by: Sandra Pires.

  5. Stuart Macintyre and Les Louis (along with historians Glenn Mitchell, Drew Cottle, Greg Mallory and curator of the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Zhu ChengShan) were contributors to the documentary The Dalfram Dispute,1938: Pig Iron Bob which covers the wartime dock dispute at Port Kembla during which Robert Menzies gained the moniker ‘Pig Iron ...

  6. The Dalfram Dispute 1938: Pig Iron Bob. You’ve heard the nickname, now know the story. In October 1938, dockworkers outside Sydney refused to load the ship Dalfram, with iron destined for Japan They believed it would be used to make bullets by the Japanese during their invasion of China- they believed Australia would be next. Details. Language.

  7. www.themoviedb.org › movie › 648244-the-dalfram-dispute-1938-pig-iron-bobThe Dalfram Dispute 1938: Pig Iron Bob

    In October 1938, dockworkers outside Sydney refused to load the ship Dalfram, with iron destined for Japan They believed it would be used to make bullets by the Japanese during their invasion of China- they believed Australia would be next.