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Title: British Syndicalism Author: Tom Brown Date: 1994 Language: en Topics: syndicalism, United Kingdom, Kate Sharpley Library Source: Retrieved on 4th October 2021 from https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/n8pktr Notes: ISBN 9781873605707
Published in the Jan/Feb 1962 issue of World Labour News
In case the critics of revolutionary industrial unionism â Syndicalism â
wish to know what it is about, let us recapitulate the main idea. What
the historians of labour call the âSyndicalist Tendencyâ in the
English-speaking world must include the IWW, the Industrial Workers of
the World and, in Britain, we cannot ignore the work of the old
Socialist Labour Party in popularising the ideas of industrial unionism,
particularly in Scotland.
At the end of the 19^(th) Century, the socially-conscious workers were
faced by a host of unions which organised disunity in the industrial
struggle. Even by 1939 there were 40 unions in engineering and most of
them might be in one factory. Worse, most of the time, most of the
unions were craft unions, such as still exist, organised not only
against the employer, but, too often, against other workers, men of
rival unions, rival crafts, and unskilled workers, who might encroach on
the preserves of the craft organisation.
At that critical time, according to the historians, Syndicalism was able
to arouse to revolt the latent discontent of the unskilled and, in an
elementary, but potent way organise struggles which gained great
advances and inspired the forgotten men and women of industry with
self-confidence.
But Syndicalists were few and only the elementary lessons of class
struggle were learned by the workers, so the unskilled became organised
in mass unions, which resembled crowds rather than organisations. Most
of these unions became amalgamated into the Transport and General
Workersâ Union and the National Union of General and Municipal Workers,
embracing between them the gas workers, the tramwaymen, the dockers,
engineering workers, roadmen, and hosts of others.
So we saw the workers divided into more than a thousand unions, skilled
against semi-skilled and unskilled, craft against craft â even between
men in one trade, but separate unions in rivalry. Iron moulders on
strike, while the machine shop worked; boilermakers locked out, while
their mates in another union worked on.
Against this disunity, Syndicalism has posed the idea of scientific
organisation, revolutionary industrial unionism. Starting where the
class struggle starts, in the factory, or other place of work, all
workers, of whatever craft, so-called semi-skilled or unskilled, male or
female, draughtsmen, clerks or storemen are organised in a branch of one
union, based on the commodity made or the service rendered.
The affairs particular to that factory would be tackled by the workers
there, in mass meetings making major decisions and electing their
delegates and committee, always with the right of recall. But there must
arise problems which also concern other workshops in the same district
and the factory branch must be federated to its kindred in the same
district, so we might have federations of, say, the South Wales miners,
shipyard workers of the Clyde, cotton workers of Lancashire, or
newspaper workers of London.
Further, there are matters which are not peculiar only to the district
of the industry, but concern all throughout the area, temporarily
historically speaking, enclosed by national boundaries. Thus the Minersâ
Industrial Union, the Port Workersâ Industrial Union and so on, thirty
or so unions would cover most of the jobs.
Further, each industrial union is dependent on the others, as a man is
dependent on his fellows, and each union would be federated to a
National Confederation of Labour, which would deal with the general
labour questions and render aid to weaker unions, or those on strike.
Of course, within this framework there is room for other federations as
and when necessary, such as federations of dockers and seamen and, in
London, a traffic federation of railmen, busmen, and underground
workers. The greatest strength of this form of organisation is its
flexibility; one weakness of trade unionism is its rigidity.
Let the man whose reasoning power is too weak to see the obvious
superiority of such a system, read labour history, let him look about
and see the obvious advantages of this potent idea, even when limited in
application.
Revolutionary syndicates are the means, once we brush the cobwebs of
prejudice from our minds, to wage struggles with much less hurt to our
people and with much greater chance of victory. But wage demands are not
enough. The day will come when the workers must decide not to ask for
another loaf, but to take over the bakery; to take, hold, own, and
control the means of production, not by walking out, but by staying in
and locking out the capitalist class. The ultimate aim of Syndicalism is
common ownership of the means of production and distribution, abolition
of the wages system, and a true democracy, the industrial democracy of
Workersâ Control.
Our critics include Labourites, Trotskyites, Stalinists, and other sorts
of Bolsheviks and almost as many varieties of Socialists as there are
permutations on the Treble Chance, as well as open supporters of
capitalism. But they have so much in common that we can deal with the
main objections, without breaking every butterfly on the wheel. It is
well to note that most, though not all, the alleged Labour and Socialist
critics, are supporters of trade unionism of the present sort, craft and
general unions.
âSyndicalism is old fashioned, it sounds like Something out of the
19^(th) Century.â The speaker is often a person who supports a union
founded about 100 years ago, or a craft union based on a mediaeval guild
and an industrial process which vanished with the Industrial Revolution.
Sometimes the statement is accompanied by a chunk of the âCommunist
Manifestoâ of 1848, or some other contemporary work (contemporary with
the first Duke of Wellington) hot off the press.
The point is not whether Syndicalism is old or new fashioned, but
whether it is likely to be efficacious in solving our present problems,
which, after all, are as old as class society. Fashion we can leave to
the House of Dior. The question of efficacy is rarely, if ever, tackled
by our opponents.
We tum now to a body of criticism which is quite different, stemming
from the belief that all that is necessary are âworkersâ or factory
committeesâ, without the continuous and thought-out organisation forms
of industrial unionism. Just workersâ committees, that is all.
But if we rule out Syndicalism and agree to committees only, then surely
the committees must have some form and some relationship to one another.
Are the councils just formed, say, in factories, or parts of factories,
to live a tiny, corporative life without forming part of a natural or
deliberate pattern? If, however, these primary bosses are to be cohesive
parts of a greater public whole, has that whole a form and pattern and
aims? Or is it amorphous?
If the committees are to have social form and pattern, then it seems to
us that they cannot attain these attributes unless they adopt the
principles of Syndicalism. The Syndicalist pattern, here outlined
briefly, and its further and more intricate forms, are splendidly
suitable for adoption by a workersâ council movement, and if our aims be
the same, there is really no conflict of means.
Syndicalists have never said that everyone must first hold a ticket in
his appropriate industrial union before anything can be done, but
advocate continuous organisation for propaganda, for learning, teaching,
demonstrating, and handing on the torch. Techniques cannot exist without
field and workshop practice and social techniques do not come from
intellectual test tubes. Truly we learn in struggle.
But always we remember that the working class are greater than the union
membership, who are the vanguard. The influence of the Syndicalists has
always been immensely greater than their numbers. The IWW moved millions
of workers in the USA, whatever its state of membership.
Published in the Sept/Oct 1962 issue of World Labour News
Syndicalists are often accused of wanting to form new industrial unions
out of turn, and even of wishing to wait until that event occurs before
taking any action. A reading of British labour history during the past
70 years, by almost any author, will prove how false is this charge. We
claim, certainly, that Syndicalist industrial unions offer a form of
organisation superior to trades unionism and, when trade union branches
are addressed on the subject, approval is almost unanimous. But when the
workers, through lack of propaganda, do not understand or desire
Syndicalism, it would serve them ill to form small, weak breakaway
unions, where the existing unions or their members comprise the only
defence of the working class, however inadequate that defence might be.
Our watchword has always been Solidarity.
In fact, the only organisation ever to adopt a policy of forming
micro-unions by artificial insemination is the Communist Party. During
the late twenties and thirties this policy was forced on the C.P. in
Britain by Moscow, despite the doubts of Pollitt and others. In 1929,
the United Garment Workersâ Union was formed as a breakaway from the
Tailorsâ and Garment Workersâ Union. The new union soon faded out.
Among seamen, the Minority Movement (a Communist front organisation) was
making some progress, led by Fred Thompson, ex-dockers; organiser of the
T.& GWU. In this case something could be said for a new union, as the
Seamenâs Union, under Havelock Wilsonâs rule, was little more than a
company union. But the C.P. took control from the M.M. and on Tyneside,
where the feeling against Wilson was most promising, declared a strike
among Arab seamen in the most confused and clownish fashion, causing a
riot between Whites and Asiatics and ensuring the stillbirth of the
well-planned Red Seamenâs Union.
Mining in Scotland held out the best chance for the C.P. to form a red
union, and a breakaway from the Lanark and Fife Minersâ Unions was
started under the title of the United Mineworkersâ of Scotland (all
breakaways are called âUnitedâ). Within a few years the total income of
the red union was insufficient to pay the wages of the officials, as
Willie Gallagher (later Communist MP for the district) wrote, and the
union quietly died. Nothing but ill came from these attempts of the
politicians to form unions of their own. When new unions are needed, it
must be the workers of the industry concerned who themselves form them.
Syndicalism however, has had a great influence on the development of
trade unionism. It is well, before going further, to point out that what
historians call âthe Syndicalist tendencyâ, as distinct from the formal
Syndicalist organisation, should include the old Socialist Labour Party,
especially in Scotland, who preached a revolutionary industrial unionism
which I have never been able to distinguish from Syndicalism, also the
I.W.W. in Britain.
Men inspired by Syndicalist thought were constantly calling for one
union for each industry, instead of the thousand-odd which existed 40
years ago. It is generally agreed that it was this propaganda which made
possible most of the amalgamations on industrial lines for the greater
cooperation of men of different unions in one factory or industry. This
may seem natural and commonplace now, but 50 years ago it seemed
impossible in the face of sectional prejudice.
The strike methods peculiar to Syndicalism, many originated by the
once-Syndicalist C.G.T., have been used by trade unionists, as well as
Syndicalists, in this country, usually with great success. When writing
the pamphlet âTrade Unionism or Syndicalism?â in 1941, I included a
short list of Syndicalist strike weapons, none of which had been used in
this country, except by Syndicalists. Now, many are commonplace. The
E.T.U. has tried them with success; busmen and railmen have since the
war used the work-to-rule strike, previously used in Britain only by
Syndicalist railmen in the North-East 40 years ago.
The practice of sympathetic industrial action, too, originated in
Syndicalist propaganda. All this and much more is testified by writers
of labour history of many shades of thought â capitalist, Socialist, and
even communist. But perhaps the greatest fruit of this revolutionary
tendency has been the shop steward and works committee movement.
The shop steward movement, as we know it, did not exist until shortly
before the 1914 war. Shop stewards existed before that, but they were
little more than card inspectors. It was the men of the syndicalist
tendency who changed that. Something to span the scores of unions in the
engineering industry was needed and the new conception of a shop
steward, and the works committee which soon followed, did just that,
being a primary form of syndicate, embracing all sections, formed at the
point of production and ready to combat the employing class on the spot.
With the outbreak of war the movement developed rapidly. Cloaked by
patriotism the cost of living soared, wages were pegged, hours ranged
from 60 to 80 a week. Soon unofficial strikes broke out in the big
industrial centres, principally the Clyde and the Tyne.
Alarmed, the Government called the union leaders to a conference in
February, 1915, where all parties, except the miners, agreed to the
abolition of the right to strike, to the dilution of skilled labour, to
State fixing of wages and to âleaving certificates.â Generally, in fact,
to what the Webbs termed âvirtually industrial conscription.â With
military conscription from 18 to 21 years, the effect was âthe
individual workman realised that the penalty for failure of implied
obedience to the foreman might be instant relegation to the trenchesâ
(Webb, History of Trade Unionism). Said the Herald (later the Daily
Herald) of July 17, 1915: âThe trade union lamb has laid down with the
capitalist lion.â
To this State slavery there could be but one defence â rapid extension
of the shop steward and shop committee movement, for the trade unions
were completely on the employersâ side. Strikes and the threat of
strikes followed, winning wage increases, especially piece work rates,
and controlling workshop conditions. The Government, faced by threats,
introduced food control and, forced by the Clyde factory committees,
controlled house rents, which were soaring.
After the war the movement was there to stay, but was confused and
bedevilled by the development of the Russian Revolution, the formation
of the Communist Party and the vast funds it obtained from abroad. The
union bureaucrats, too, saw that the shop steward was not going to
vanish, so they tried to control him. They are still trying. The
employers, after a long resistance in some cases, accepted his presence
in the factory and, in very many cases, tried to corrupt him.
Neither of these, however, were worse than the activity of the
Communists, concerned not with the winning of a straightforward class
battle of the worker, but with the interest solely of âThe Partyâ and
with carrying out the latest twist or tum of the Comintern.
Granting the premise that a class workshop organisation is necessary for
the protection and extension of the workersâ livelihood, it follows that
a party concerned only with the welfare of âThe Partyâ and its conquest
of power can only do harm to the workersâ cause. Its measure of success
is its measure of mischief.
The record of the C.P. since its entry into industry is proof enough of
this thesis â its thirst for power, its splitting of the workersâ ranks,
its slander of honest militants, the eagerness of its members to become
foremen with the necessary double-dealing that goes with that ambition,
the calling of âpolitical prestige strikesâ and the calling of them off,
the twists and turns of Holy Mother Russiaâs policy now âdown with the
boss and strike everywhereâ and next day âcollaborate, form joint
production committees, the striker is a traitor.â All this had driven
into apathy tens of thousands of good militants and confused and
disillusioned millions.
It is true that there have been many Communist shop stewards who tried
to be honest stewards and good party members at the same time, but these
men are usually sorry creatures, trying to be two opposites at once and
unhappy with both. A practising bigamist leads a simpler life. To add to
their split personality agonies, âThe Partyâ is likely to court martial
them or expel them. The men at Comintern headquarters had a proverb
about the C.P.G.B.: âThe good Communists are bad trade unionists and the
good trade unionists are bad Communists.â
A good, honest-to-goodness shop steward is worth his weight in gold to
the workersâ movement â literally if we were still paid in sovereigns â
but his is just about the most difficult of all jobs, even without the
extra snags thrown in his path by the bosses, the union officials, and
the politicians.
Yet the stewards suffer from one more difficulty. The present movement
lacks the revolutionary thought, doctrine, and training of the first
wave. The present-day shop steward, when he tries to be consistent,
feels very much alone. Ideas are social products, movements are social
movements, and men will seek to identify themselves with people of like
tendency. Now where can our sincere steward look? Leaving out the
movement of which I have written, there is nothing for him. Little
wonder, then, that so many are fooled by the politicians, grow tired,
or, in the case of the weaker brethren, are tempted by the boss.
The originals had the benefit of a revolutionary idea and fire, they had
training to hand, speaking, industrial history, and the study of such
works as Mary Marcyâs âShop Talks on Economics.â This training made them
superior to most of their opponents on the other side of the bossâs
desk.
They had a social aim, too, making them a movement in their own right,
not an appendage of another movement. The Clyde Workersâ Committee, the
strongest union force in the country at that time, proclaimed this among
its objects:
[...] to obtain an ever-increasing control over workshop conditions, to
regulate the terms upon which workers shall be employed, and to organise
the workers upon a class basis and to maintain the class struggle until
the overthrow of the wages system, the freedom of the workers and the
establishment of industrial democracy have been attained.
In the wilder parts of the Lone Star State, Texans used to tell me that
when they said âa manâ they meant a man and his horse, for a man without
a horse was only half a man. A shop steward without a social philosophy
in tune with his workshop is only half a steward.
That brings me to what Allan Flanders of Oxford University terms âthe
popular Syndicalist slogan âWorkersâ Controlâ.â The desire to alter the
Labour Partyâs âClause 4â was based on an estimate of the discontent
with nationalisation. The rebound which put it back is a sign that
social ownership is looked on as a solution of the social problem. But
socialisation cannot be reconciled to State control. If the sincere rank
and file of the Labour Party and trade unions would look back to the
early shop stewards movement, then look forward, their honesty and
idealism would find a practical mechanism in workersâ control, for the
realisation of the social ownership and democratic control of the means
of production. They would see, too, that the fashioning of the mechanism
begins now, at the coalface, the bench, and the lathe.
Published in the July/Aug 1961 issue of World Labour News
The general post-war slump hit most of British industry about
two-and-a-half years after the 1918 Armistice, but shipbuilding was in
depression almost at once, for the Coalition governmentâs policy of
âMake Germany Payâ took from her a great deal of merchant shipping and
set the German yards making ships for âreparationâ. Naturally, this
threw out of work British boilermakers and fitters.
General wage reduction in all trades, beginning with the lock-out of the
miners, took place during 1921 and 1922. After several wage cuts, the
shipyards and engineering workers were locked out in 1922 and defeated.
The unions, particularly the Amalgamated Engineering Union, lost many
members. Pessimism and defeatism prevailed. Southampton marine
engineering workers were badly hit. The wage of fully skilled men was
ÂŁ2. 7s. a week of 47 hours â that is, 1s. an hour. Compare this with
ÂŁ2.16s for the Tyne and Clyde, ÂŁ3. 0s.11d. for London, 1s. 6d. an hour
for the provincial dockers, 1s. 2d. for building labourers. (1s = 5p in
todayâs currency.)
âSemi-skilledâ, many of them highly skilled machinists, received less,
labourers less again. Holidays were unpaid, work often temporary. In
ship repairing, men stood each day in the dockyard, hoping to be picked
up for a few daysâ work after being looked over by a few men in bowler
hats, in the manner of a slave market.
In 1924, opportunity to redress the balance a little came with the âlay
upâ of Atlantic shipping for annual repairs. But few expected the long
upward fight back of the engineering workers to begin in Southampton.
Union membership as low, Scots and Northern workers did not have much
regard for the port as fighting unit. Southamptonâs two M.P.s were
Tories, each enjoying a big majority. But fight the Southampton workers
did. Led by the local AEU, the unions demanded an advance in wages. The
employers refused and referred to the employer-union agreements,
particularly the âprocedure for avoiding disputesâ, the âmachineryâ
which creaked for six months to a year over every case and reached no
decision. The union executives stood by this agreement and refused to
back the men.
The Mauretania, âBlue Ribandâ of the Atlantic, had her turbines
dismantled, the rotors slung in the engine room. Despite the threats of
the AEU and other executives, the ship repair engineering workers voted
a strike. A scratch organization had to be created at once and a strike
committee of experienced trade unionists, with necessary sub-committees
was formed.
When considering the work of this committee, one should remember that
trade union members were a minority of the workers concerned. The
strikers had to fight the employers, backed by the State and the trade
unions. No strike money was paid by the unions.
Money, then, was one of the early problems to be tackled. Local trade
union branches and AEU branches throughout the country were
circularised. Well-organised local events helped to raise cash and
strike money was paid out of this âunofficialâ fund. The financial
business of the strike was handled splendidly, though the middle-aged
fitter who was treasurer was told by the professional auditor that he,
the fitter, must know nothing about finance or he would not have carried
an odd halfpenny down through the books â and that
was the only fault he could find.
But what of the non-unionist strikers? They, too, received strike pay
with the union members â penny for penny, pound for pound. First,
however, the ânonsâ had to be got out on strike, and meetings were held
at all factory and dock gates. All, irrespective of union or non-union,
were promised a fair share of all money raised, and protection against
victimisation, âone back, all back; one out, all out,â a promise that
was honorably kept. Many of the ânonsâ had dropped their previous
membership because of the high rate of union dues, 2s. a week in the
case of the AEU, and some were still trade unionists at heart â but not
all.
There were those, too, who refused to join the strike. They had to be
encouraged by additional measures. Picket lines, good, solid, militant
picket lines were formed each morning to draw out the waverers.
Whatever, in those days, may have been the law about the âright to
peaceful picketing,â in fact the Law usually acted as though all
picketing was illegal. As an extra, a flying picket organised, squads of
loyal stalwarts, some on cycles, who met outlying blacklegs on their way
to work, often in the country lanes which were then close to Southampton
docks on the Woolston side of the Itchen.
I remember, in particular, two red-headed brothers of about 23 who took
alternate days on the flying picket. The efforts of police and assaulted
scabs to bring a prosecution against one or the other and the
defendantsâ alibis made a delightful comedy of errors.
Frequent meetings were held, so that all were kept informed and
encouraged to join in strike activities. Amusements, sports, and
concerts were organized, for boredom and personal isolation are inimical
to strike success. We had a good supply of singers, musicians, and
comedians. I doubt if such an array of talent could be mustered at
scratch today, for there was then no telly and more people developed
their own talents.
There was propaganda too. A panel of speakers was active every day,
visiting union branch meetings and anywhere else they could get a
hearing. But printed and duplicated means of presenting the strikersâ
case were insufficient. There was no national organisation directly
sympathetic to the strike cause and trade union officials were active in
the districts of trade unions to curtail support.
Tough times were ahead. The Engineering Employersâ Federation threatened
to lock out all members of the AEU and other unions concerned in the
strike â a complete lockout on a full national scale. The employer got
permission from the Government to move the Mauretania, with her engines
suspended, to be taken to Cherbourg by tug to have her overhaul
completed.
The full victory which had been just possible escaped the strikers, but
they did get a two-stage advance of 7s. a week, the first win for the
engineers since the big defeat of all trades in 1921â22.
Aircraft workers in Southampton had wanted to join the strike, but this
would not have helped the marine engineers, who were fighting other
employers â Harland & Wolff and J.1. Thomeycroft. The aircraft men
worked for A.V.Roe, Faireys, and Supermarine. Then, too, the slender
strike fund would have been more heavily drawn on. The aircraft men
pressed their claim in the climate created by the strike, and got an
advance of 15s. 8d. a week, a direct fruit of the marine workersâ
action.
Engineering workers in other parts of the country were encouraged by the
Southampton example, initiating small actions, usually in one factory at
a time, to regain a little lost ground and dispel the spirit of defeat.
One weakness of the strike was the failure to persuade the French
workers to declare black the Mauretania; lack of communication, of
international organisation and contact, were largely responsible for
this. That is one lesson. Another comes from consideration of the sort
of men who took part in the strike. Southampton was a Tory stronghold
and, as any strike to be successful must have at least 90 percent
support, many strikers must have been Tories, some Liberals, and many
non-voters. On the strike committee there was no faction which could be
defined as âleft-wingâ much less a majority, though some were more
radical than others, of course. Most were just good solid, perhaps
rather old-fashioned trade unionists, but they were quick to learn the
changing facts of life.
On the strike committee there was unity of purpose and respect of
others, from right wing to rebel. The Communist Party tried to muscle
in, sending down Pollitt and the rest of its top brass and a cohort of
full-time officials with Moscow-made slogans, âDefend the Soviet Unionâ,
âVote Labourâ, and the rest of the ragbag, but the strikers had their
own slogans â the aims of the strike. After the strike the C.P. tried to
persuade the strike committee to become the district committee of their
newly-formed Minority Movement. The offer was rejected with scorn.
This unity, mutual respect, and tolerance, a major factor of success,
was never understood by the C.P. but the militants understood the
importance of recognising, as the Prayer Book says, that there are âall
sorts and conditions of men.â
Common sense in organisation and absolute honesty in the collection,
care of, and distribution of money were also ingredients of success. All
this contrasts, as light to murky darkness, with the Communist
sponsoring of strikes in the following years, with their confusion,
sectarianism, and lack of financial frankness, the double-dealing of
their trade union bureaucrats, and the leadershipâs eagerness to get
them back to work after about the tenth day.
For the will to win is the greatest single factor in winning a strike.
Published in the May/June 1961 issue of World Labour News
When I last visited my native city of Newcastle, I saw the sports shop
of Stan Seymour, one-time footballer and director of a Cup-winning
Newcastle United. I looked up at the heavy stone walls and recalled that
the shop was a converted dwelling house, the house where my father was
born, the home of my grandfather John Brown, Radical and trade unionist.
Here and in a nearby dwelling he had been visited by Garibaldi. Best of
all, I recalled his part in the famous Nine-Hours Strike.
Journeying along the riverside amid the clanging shipyards, I remembered
the change of working hours which took place at the beginning of 1919,
one stage in a long fight. Before that there had been a nine-and-a-half
hour day and a 53-hour week, but unpaid meal breaks made a working day
of 11 hours. Then we won the 47-hour week, after World War II the
44-hour week, then 42, but even the 53-hour, five-and-a-half day week
had been a great triumph, a stage in the long climb from the depths of
the Industrial Revolution. One of the best chapters of this saga is that
of the âNine Hours Strikeâ.
During a great part of the 19^(th) Century, the trade union movement
tried to shorten the intolerably long working day by influencing
politicians to introduce âShort Hours Billsâ in Parliament, as well as
by some strike action. There was some limited success through
Parliament, for it was sometimes possible to gain the support of
Conservative politicians against the Liberals. Traditionally the Tories
were âland-owning aristocratsâ, the Liberals coal, ship, and factory
owners, believers in âLibertyâ, the liberty to work men, women, and
little children to death without State interference.
The limits of this method of obtaining a shorter working day were
clearly seen by 1870 and even before. Philanthropists and politicians
would never agree with workmen on how far the day should be shortened.
Many of the former, including Lord Shaftesbury, were opposed to trade
unionism; the Bills, such as the 10-hours Bill, were obtained on the
plea of the effects of the long hours on women and children â the reason
why mining and textiles figure so largely in the discussions â and
workers were beginning to resent gaining a shorter working day for men
by pleading the case for women. As a union paper declared, âNow the veil
must be lifted and the agitation carried on under its true colours.
Women and children must no longer be made the pretext for securing a
reduction of working hours for men.â[1]
In 1874 the Tory Government introduced, against Liberal opposition, its
shorter hours bill, entitled, âFactories (Health of Women, etc.) Billâ,
relating chiefly to the cotton mills of Lancashire, the women securing a
56-and-a-half hour week. It should be remembered that there was no
half-holiday on Saturday until the latter part of the 19^(th) Century.
Increasingly workers were losing hope in political action and turning
with stronger faith to direct action, especially to reduce the working
day and week. During 1859-60-61, there had been strikes to this end in
the London building trade, to be followed by action in many provincial
towns, gaining for many building workers a shorter working day, without,
of course, any reduction of the weekly wage. The building workers
continued to enjoy a working week shorter than that of factory workers
until recent post-war years, 50 against 53 before 1919, then 44 against
47 until 1947.
In 1866 the engineers of Tyneside debated a district strike for the
nine-hour day, but a slump ended the discussion. In 1870 the demand was
again put forward, but the Central District Committee of the Amalgamated
Society of Engineers, now the AEU [Amalgamated Engineering Union],
cautiously decided against it.
Then, early in 1871, the engineers and shipyard men of nearby Sunderland
took up the issue, decided, prepared, and acted with remarkable speed
and decisiveness. All out on April 1 and no fooling. The employers, who
had been very confident and had the support of the Durham County
authorities, with military force to back them, soon found themselves on
the losing end. After four weeks, a short strike for those days, the
workers were victorious and gained the nine-hour day.
Alarmed at the emulation that must follow such inspiring action, the
engineering employers of North East England met in Newcastle on April 8
to prepare a counter-attack. Headed by Sir W.G. Armstrong, of the
Armstrong Whitworth Company, they obtained the support of engineering
employers throughout the British Isles, who levied themselves a shilling
a head for all men employed by them.
The engineers of Newcastle and Gateshead were for strike action, but
trade strength was low. There were many unions, craft unions, but even
one craft might have several unions in one shop. And even these divided
ranks did not contain all, or even a majority of the workers in the
factories. The Webbs, with access to the well-documented records of the
strike stated that âtwo out of three of the men in the engineering trade
belonged to no Union whatsoever.â
There was the problem... a strong and wealthy foe, our side poor,
divided by a multitude of unions, and two-thirds of the men
non-unionists. A new, even if temporary, single-purpose organisation
must be created, above the exclusiveness of trade-union brotherhood, a
movement founded on a class, in class conflict.
A Rank and File Movement was formed and named the Nine Hours League. The
League included all crafts and unions and all men, unionist or
non-unionist. It took over, temporarily, the functions of the unions,
without destroying them. Its president was John Burnett, an Alnwick man,
member of the ASE district committee.
The men of Newcastle and Gateshead struck, it was a hard strike, as my
grandmother often told me, for I loved to listen to her stories over a
winterâs fire, with the wind howling down from the Cheviots, or across
the angry North Sea when she later lived near the Scottish Border. I
have since checked the details of these stories with the records and
works of historians. It is remarkable that the tales of actual events
experienced by such old people always seem to stand the test.
The national executives of the unions were lukewarm, but the local men
were full of fight. âThe five-month strike... was, in more than one
respect, a notable event in Trade Union annalsâ wrote the Webbs in their
dry manner. âOne of the most memorable strikes on record,â said G.D.H.
Cole. The strikers were mostly non-unionists and unused to organisation.
âUpwards of 8,000 men had struck, whereas only 500 of them belonged to
our society and very few to any other,â said the ASE Abstract Report of
Council Proceedings.[2]
But the League organised them â meetings, processions through the city
streets and to neighbouring towns, demonstrations on the Town Moor,
factory pickets, organisation of relief, everyone seemed busy. Agents of
the League went to distant towns and villages, sometimes walking many
miles, sometimes going to Hull, Leith, and London by coasters for a few
shillings, for the strike funds were guarded with miserly care, âEvery
possible penny must go for food.â
Although the majority of workmen could not then read or write, the need
of printed propaganda was understood. There was a minority who had
received a rudimentary education at Church and at âPennyâ schools, or
who had taught themselves to read and write. From them came a team of
writers, men who learned to read the hard way and loved their diet of
the âclassic novelsâ, Shakespeare, Tales of the Border, and poetry. This
reading, combined with a notorious Northumberland love of narrative, now
served them well.
John Brown was deputed to seek the aid of the Radical Joseph Cowan,
owner of an excellent local press, the Newcastle Daily Chronicle, to the
weekly edition (the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle) of which Kropotkin was a
regular contributor (Kropotkin often stayed with Dr. Spence Watson at
Gateshead). Gripping John Brownâs hand, Cowan promised to open the pages
of his papers to the strikers.
But the Chronicle had little more than a local circulation. The workersâ
correspondents aimed further afield, too. The Webbs, usually lofty
towards anything short of a university education, wrote: âThe tactical
skill and literary force with which the menâs case was presented
achieved the unprecedented result of securing for their demands the
support of The Times and Spectator.â[3]
Armstrong (Lord) wrote a howling protest to the Times: âWe were
amazed... we really felt that, if the League themselves had possessed
the power of inspiring that article, they could scarcely have used words
more calculated to serve their purpose than those in which it is
expressed. The concurrent appearance in the Spectator of an article
exhibiting the same bias adds to our surprise.â[4]
The poor man could never believe that some of the articles were written
by some of his fitters.
The strike lasted for five months, during the first three of which money
came in slowly, afterwards in a flood. The flood of donations from so
many parts of the country heartened the men and dismayed the employers.
Writers then and historians since have attributed the financial success
to the skill and eloquence of the now unknown writers.
Blacklegs were brought in from the extremes of the British Isles, then
hundreds were recruited from Europe. To stop the latter source of
labour, the assistance of the International Workingmenâs Association was
called, with some success. Then the IWMAâs Danish secretary in London,
Kohn, was sent to Europe to complete the job. European members of the
IWMA came to Tyneside and persuaded many blacklegs to return to their
home countries.
Five months gone, the League was growing stronger, the employers
capitulated and granted the nine-hour day, 54-hour week, without
reduction of the weekly wage. Afterwards, instead of six days of nine
hours each, it was agreed to have five of nine-and-a-half hours and one
of six-and-a-half hours, finishing at 1 p.m. on Saturday.
A later struggle knocked off one hour, blowing the factory whistle at 12
oâclock for the week-end.
The victory caused the Tynesidersâ struggle to be emulated throughout
England and in Scotland and Ireland, in other trades, especially
building, too. On the Clyde, shipbuilding workers were offered, instead
of a 60 hour week, 54 hours and a rise in wages. The rise they refused
and forced from the employers a 51 hour week at the old weekly wage,
though in a later depression they were forced to accept a 53 hour week.
From then on not political action but direct action was the method used
by the workers to secure a shorter working day and week â a fight that
is not yet over. The strike ended, the leaders of the struggle went back
to the lathe, the bench, and the shipyard â with one exception. Burnett
became General Secretary of the ASE. The names of the others are unknown
to history. I have the word of one old lady that is how they wanted it
to be.
Published in the Sept/Oct 1962 issue of World Labour News
âBut you have free speech in England. Look how the Government allows you
to use Trafalgar Square and Hyde Park for meetings.â How often we hear
such statements, usually accompanied by a rebukeful suggestion that we
ought to be grateful. The truth is we were never granted such rights.
The means of holding meetings in the streets and public places of
Britain was fought for and torn from the ruling class. Let us take first
the popular and ever-topical case of Trafalgar Square.
The year of 1886 was one of depression and on February 8, Black Monday,
a great crowd of unemployed met to hold a meeting in Trafalgar Square.
The police dispersed them and the men re-formed to march to Hyde Park to
hold their meeting. At their head walked John Burns, later a Socialist
M.P. and Liberal Cabinet minister, until he resigned in protest against
the 1914 war. Burns carried a red flag.
The orderly, quiet procession marched along Pall Mall, but on passing
the Tory Carlton Club they saw the windows crowded with well-fed,
well-drunk, wealthy Tories, who, not content with laughing at the
unfortunate unemployed, shouted sneers and insults at their ragged
clothes, their broken boots, and hungry looks.
The road was being repaired and the crowd seized the opportunity,
pelting the clubâs windows with large stones. The Toriesâ laughter
vanished with their courage. Yelling for police protection they
retreated to the back of the premises. As police reinforcements dashed
to the spot, and a general struggle began, shop windows in nearby St.
Jamesâ Street and Piccadilly were broken.
Burns and three others arrested were charged with seditious conspiracy,
but the jury refused to convict. The Lord Mayorâs Fund for the relief of
the unemployed, which had slowly crept up to ÂŁ3,000 and looked like
stopping there, suddenly leapt to ÂŁ70,000.
The following year, 1887, brought Bloody Sunday on November 13, when
another demonstration was planned in Trafalgar Square. Using the powers
given them by the Trafalgar Square Act of 1844, the Government
prohibited the meeting and procession. As in the earlier revolutionary
struggles of Paris and later St. Petersburg, the State garrisoned the
river bridges with police and infantry, preventing by merciless use of
batons, the South London workers from reaching the Square, many being
injured.
North of the river the processions were to be halted in streets leading
to Trafalgar Square, but some groups got through and one contingent, the
North London, reached the Square in procession and were met by police
and cavalry, the Life Guards. Among the wounded were John Burns and
Cunningham Grahame, a Radical M.P. Both were arrested and suffered six
weeksâ imprisonment.
G.B.Shaw opposed this fight for free speech, but Annie Besant entered
the struggle wholeheartedly. Three months later a free speech
demonstration was batoned by the police and a young worker, Alfred
Linnel, beaten to death. A great procession followed Linnelâs coffin to
the grave, where William Morris gave the funeral oration. Then the vast
crowd stood bareheaded while the Death Chant, written by Morris, was
sung:
They will not learn; they have no ears to harken,
They turn their faces from the eye of fate,
Their gay-lit halls shut out the skies that darken,
But lo! this dead man knocking at the gate.
And the refrain, often repeated in the years that followed:
Not one, not one, nor thousands must they slay,
But one and all if they would dusk the day.
The fight went on, the Square was won for free speech, but in more
recent times permission has had to be obtained from the Ministry of
Works and only one meeting at a time is allowed.
The Reform League, a continuation of Chartism demanding democratic
reform of the electoral laws, had planned a mass procession and
demonstration in Hyde Park for the evening of July 23, 1866. On the
afternoon of that day Sir Richard Mayne had notices posted throughout
London, declaring the Park closed from 5 p.m. The organisers decided to
go on to the Park and attempt a meeting there. When the great
procession, with many bands, banners, and wagons arrived at Marble Arch,
the three principal speakers, Edmund Beales, Colonel Dickinson, and
George Brooke, descended from their wagon and asked permission to enter
the Park, the gates of which were guarded by a large force of police.
After a little polite conversation and an adamant refusal, the leaders
turned away and called on the demonstrators to follow them to Trafalgar
Square. The procession â well, some of it â went along Oxford Street and
on to the Square where, after a few brief speeches and thanks to Mr.
Gladstone and others, the meeting ended.
But at the Park â oh boy! This was a Bank Holiday to remember.
In a movement which includes a large middle class, as well as a large
working class following, critical events usually find the middle class
turning to constitutional compromise after many brave words, while there
has often been a large section of the working class which has wanted to
use Direct Action. So it was on that glorious Monday.
As the procession wended its musical way along Oxford Street, the tens
of thousands who had remained, struck at the garrisoned Park in two
places. In Bayswater Road a throng hurled themselves at the massive iron
rails, which were thrown down; at the same time workers in Park Lane
tore down the park railings and the two sections joined forces in a
fight with the police.
The fight died down as the Foot Guards marched in. The workers, seeking
to fraternise, checked the troops, who halted near the gates. Then the
Horse Guards cantered in â and again the crowd cheered. Soon the cavalry
trotted off to another part of the Park and the police were again
attacked.
Now more Foot Guards marched in under orders to shoot âif necessaryâ.
Then more cavalry, the Life Guards. Many were wounded that day, but the
workers triumphed. Let us turn to a newspaper,[5] at that time Radical
and Republican, for an on-the-spot account.
The people have triumphed, in so far as they have vindicated their right
to speak, resolve, and exhort in Hyde-park. True, the gates were closed
against them, and lo! in twenty minutes after the Park all around was
one vast, gaping gate. The ordinary gates were the only closed part of
the fencing.
A long pull, a strong pull, and a push all together, down went the iron
railings and the stones on which they were fixed in hundreds of yards,
so that in less time than it takes to tell the story, the iron barriers
which excluded the people from Hyde-park were levelled to the ground, or
inclined against trees, for miles.
Then the people poured in hundreds of thousands into the park and then,
under the nose of Sir Richard Mayne, and before the masses of the
bludgeon-brigade and through the scarlet lines of Foot Guards and Life
Guards, with bayonets fixed and sabres drawn, were flanking police and
ready to charge, a meeting was held, a chairman appointed, speeches
made, and resolutions proposed, seconded, and carried.
Even more important than these two famous London spots were the market
places and street corners of Britain, where a struggle for free speech
went on for more than 100 years, until about the mid 1920s. Every city
had its meeting place, which was also a big open-air club â the Mound,
Edinburgh; the Bigg Market, Newcastle; the City Hall Square, Leeds, and
a hundred others.
Not content with such places, the radical movement and also some
religious movements, such as the Salvation Army and the Methodists,
struggled for the right to hold public meetings at any street corner
they thought suitable. At the end of last century and the beginning of
this, the free speech fights seemed to come in waves, and seasons, or at
times, city by city. Sometimes a lone agitator or preacher would
champion the cause, often successfully.
When the authorities made a general attack on public meetings, an
impromptu united front would often form and Socialists, Anarchists,
Syndicalists, and Radicals would queue up to be hauled off by the
police. I recall one such incident, told me by our late comrade, George
Cores. Brighton was having a free speech fight and, running out of
speakers, sent a call to London. George went down to Brighton, began a
street meeting and was in a police cell before he had time to sniff the
ozone. With him was a Salvation Army captain, also arrested for speaking
in the streets. After a few hours both were called to the station desk
and told they must appear in court on the following Monday, it then
being Saturday. The Salvationist would be let out on bail, but George
held in custody.
Then came a surprise. âThis is unjust,â cried the Salvationist, âif I go
this man should go too.â âItâs none of your business,â said the
inspector, âGet out.â âNot until you let this man go,â was the gallant
reply, âif he stays, so do I.â As accused persons were not provided with
chairs, the captain sat on the floor â surely the grandfather of the
Committee of 100. Dragged to the door he returned. Pleading, threats
were useless and after an hour of rather bewildered and highly emotional
contest, the preacher and the revolutionary left arm in arm â free until
Monday morning.
Free speech came the hard way. It could go the easy way.
[1] Reynolds, July 29, 1866.
[2] June 1, 1870 to December 31, 1872, page 184.
[3] History of Trade Unionism.
[4] Times, 14.9.71.
[5] Reynolds, July 29, 1866.