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Title: Jack White’s Writing
Author: Kevin Doyle
Date: June 2001
Language: en
Topics: Jack White
Source: Retrieved on 201-20-31 from https://web.archive.org/web/20120312171108/http://flag.blackened.net/revolt/anarchists/jackwhite.html

Kevin Doyle

Jack White’s Writing

Jack White was the author of a number of pamphlets and articles (see

below) as well as an autobiography, Misfit (Jonathan Cape, London,

1930). However at the time of his death, it seems that White may have

completed a second part of his autobiography [1] — Misfit ends c.1916.

Moreover, Albert Meltzer who knew White from his days with Spain and The

World, states [2] that White worked with Matt Kavanagh, a Liverpudlian

anarchist of Irish extraction, on a ‘survey of Irish labour and Irish

aspirations in relation to anarchism’; this would’ve been c. 1937 or

later. In the same article Meltzer also mentions ‘White’s study of the

little known Cork ‘Soviet”. As with White’s collaboration with Kavanagh,

this latter work may have been suggested to White after his exposure to

the workers self-management movement in revolutionary Spain in 1936–37.

Although it has not been conclusively established as to why, it does

beyond doubt that White’s second wife, Noreen Shanahan, either alone or

in conjunction with the White family, disposed of the bulk of her

husband’s papers in the aftermath of his death [3]. It is possible that

this may have occurred through neglect [4] or simple expediency, but it

is more likely that it was driven by White’s conflict with his wife, an

ardent Catholic, about his views on the evils of the Catholic Church and

Catholicism itself [5]. White’s arguments with his wife were well known

in his circle. [6]

Whatever the exact circumstances, it cannot be ruled out that a wider

agenda was served by the destruction of the papers. For anarchists this

is all the more tragic as these papers may well have shed a greater and

more reflective light on White’s views on anarchism in the Spanish Civil

War, as well as anarchism in relation to the revolutionary struggle in

Ireland.

[1]

R. McDonnell, Cushendun in the Glens of Antrim, 1995, p42. See also

C.E.B. Brett, Five Big Houses of Cushendun, Belfast, 1997 p69. The

source of this information is Randal McDonnel, author of a number of

booklets on touring and walks in the Glens of Antrim, from

conversations he had with Patricia English, Jack White’s niece. The

English family retained a summer home outside Cushendun and until

her recent death, Mrs English was a regular visitor to the area.

[2] J.R. White, Anarchy, Belfast, 1972. Introduction by Albert Meltzer,

p9.

[3]

R. McDonnell, op cit., p42.

[4] Information from Derrick White.

[5] Information from Derrick White.

[6] Information from Andrew Boyd. Boyd knew Jack Mulvenna, a

long-standing Belfast socialist republican, “Mulvenna often spoke of the

terrible domestic rows White would have with his wife &endash; all over

religion.”