Showing posts with label Glasgow. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glasgow. Show all posts

Wednesday, 22 February 2017

Objectors and Resisters, 1914-18: example 1, Edward Gaitens

A passage (pp.94-95) in Robert Duncan's book directs the reader to an "undeservedly neglected novel" not published until 1948 but rooted in the experience of a Scot who opposed the First World War. The author, Edward Gaitens, was a Conscientious Objector (CO) who like many other COs spent time in prison. His work is not entirely neglected; he has an acknowledged place in Scottish literature of the 20th century and his stories of Glasgow working-class life were published and appreciated in his lifetime. What is overdue for acknowledgement and appreciation is his contribution in this novel to the literature of the First World War.


From "fair daffodils" to dungeons dark...


Canongate Classics edition, 1990
(This blurb's interpretation is open to question, to say the least).
The Introduction by Scottish writer James Campbell to the 1990 edition, although more perceptive than the blurb, touches rather briefly on the pervasive theme of the Great War:  (p.vi) "Eddy tries to spring himself from his slum prison... only to be dumped in a real prison for his idealistic opposition to the Great War..." and 'revolutionary socialist' Gaitens' attitude to it. He mentions the three convicted COs, and the depiction of Wormwood Scrubs as a hell-hole in an "amalgam of fiction and undoubted authentic direct experience." The narrative of Gorbals life includes the "world of ideas", from poetry to left-wing politics, although rooted in everyday reality




How He Wrote
The novel is in two sections of six chapters each. Book 1 is prefaced by a quotation from German poet Hans Sachs: "Wahn! Wahn! Überall Wahn! " - "Madness everywhere!" and Book 2 by "Was gilt's, was ich dir sagen kann?" -  [approximately] What can I tel you it's worth, what can we say it's all for?

Book 1 is mostly set in the pre-war background, introducing characters, setting them in context, and in the case of the younger ones describing their explorations in literature, politics and relationships, their arguments and different standpoints. Women, in some variety, are strongly present and often centre stage in scenes set in tenements, closes, streets and dance-halls. The main protagonist, Eddy Macdonnel, and his two friends Neil and Donald, attend a meeting offering an "open platform to all exponents of progressive political thought" in the Pavilion Music Hall. Among other names dropped are George Bernard Shaw, W W Jacobs, and probably the best-known of Glasgow's war resisters, John Maclean: (p.131 - Eddy wants to attend "Jonny McLean's class on the Significance of the Paris Commune").


In Chapter 6 the effects of war are being felt, with each male of an age to be conscripted constrained to make choices, whether to conform, take a principled stand or compromise. One of Eddy's brothers has already joined the Territorials although "not irresistibly driven by patriotism" and duly obeys the call; another earns comparatively big money doing work of national importance in the shipyards. The friends are opposed to the war effort but Neil argues that it's fair enough to work in protected industries on grounds of Marxian Expediency since "the only logical way to escape participation in a Capitalist war is tae live on a desert island or commit suicide". Both he and Donald opt for conscientious objection when it comes to the bit. The latter's decision is shown in his family context: the arrest of COs "always came in the small hours".  Eddy stages his own one-man demonstration in the recruiting office when it is his turn, loudly denouncing it all and ending this section on a high note of internationalist optimism and revolutionary fervour: 
(pp.135-6) ... mutinies everywhere... He believed the War would end suddenly, any time now, and the Workers all over the world would fraternize.... The great Socialist Revolution would blaze up... John McLean had said it, Guy Aldred had said it, that Glasgow would be the nucleus of World-Wide Revolution... 
 - except that, notwithstanding Eddy's (later self-mocked) heroic stance the doctor keeps right on "passing man after man into the Army and the ordeal of War". 


'Corner-boys' in the Gorbals, 1948
Something of the Gorbals world Edward knew
 was still in existence when his book was published.























The second book considers the consequences of the choices made in relation to the war, and the subsequent fate of Eddy's three older brothers (James, John, Francie) and two friends (Donald, Neil), again firmly rooted.in their families and community as these adapt to the changed world. The reader learns something of what COs have had to go through. Donald has spent time in a Corporation Mental Home after a (para)suicide bid: since the war and the Work Centre for COs "his nerves had slowly gone to pieces". He looks back on the 18 months spent in Dartmoor, remembering the comradeship and the intellectual buzz, but no longer identifies with that youthful idealism. Neil too feels alienated from former political comrades and from his formerly supportive, politically aware sisters (Christian pacifist and uncompromising revolutionary socialist). He notes that fellow members of left-wing social groupings tend to follow the opinions of leaders of their parties instead of thinking for themselves. Both men have apparently settled for conventional post-war existence in 'normal' non-ideal relationships, though not without some mental strife.

Of Eddy's own post-war existence next to nothing is said, apart from a passing mention of his being in London (the fact that a perceived 'normal' relationship was not on the cards for him as EG's alter ego may have something to do with this). Instead, Chapter 6 disrupts the chronological sequence and plunges back to one of the darkest days in the life of a CO, in prison. As well as describing some of what they had to suffer, it goes some way to suggesting how those who survived coped. Eddy is confined to his cell after reporting to the doctor and dreads the prospect of the solitary hours ahead. In the course of them he reflects on prison life and what has brought him to it, ranging over the past, analysing his complex motivation and interrogating his ideals. He refers to key points of COs' history as later confirmed by non-fictional accounts: the behaviour of prison doctors, warders, fellow prisoners including Sinn Feinersprison diet; the risk of insanity in 'solitary' - three "went mad" including one CO; the pros and cons of 'Absolutism'; alternative 'service' - road-making in the Highlands; Zeppelin raid; and the impact of the Russian Revolution.

Eddy gets through, and even achieves a sense of well-being in the end, not consoled by religion or even revolutionary fervour, nor by any self-glorifying notion of martyrdom, but thanks to his inner resources: imagination, intense awareness, capacity for enjoyment, and power of rational thought. It has not been entirely a dark day in the life of the mind. And Edward survived to bear witness, to have said what he wanted to say and be listened to, and to get on with his life, eventually finding a long-term partner.

Perhaps surprisingly - for something that so manifestly "should" be read - it's a highly readable book, whether for the first time as a sequential, unusually structured novel, or a collection of stories to keep going back to for particular episodes. 


Time for a new edition, with some notes? Or an adaptation or two in another medium?

The cover of the Canongate Classics edition is "Self-portrait, 1914", by Stanley Spencer - Striking, certainly, but is it appropriate, given that the artist was neither working-class nor Glaswegian and that he served willingly in the First World War? Apart from the great poignancy, with hindsight, of the face of a young man in 1914 (EG would have been 17 in that year) there is however another tie-in: 
"In May 1940 WAAC  [the War Artists' Advisory Committee] sent Spencer to the Lithgows Shipyard in Port Glasgow on the River Clyde to depict the civilians at work there. Spencer became fascinated by what he saw.."


How He Lived

The Pearce Register gives details of what happened to Edward in the war, as follows:
Edward Gaitens
Occupation         'unskilled labourer' - later a writer and novelist
Age        -
Birth year            1897
Year       -
Death year          1966
Soldier Number                -
Address               364, Govan St. (?)
Address 2            Glasgow
Local authority  Glasgow City
County Lanarkshire
Country                Scotland
Latitude               55.85
Longitude            -4.25
Ordnance Survey reference        NS590650
Absolutist            Yes?
Motivation          -
Military Service Tribunal                MST (Military Service Tribunal) Central Tribunal at Wormwood S. 20.12.16, CO class A, to Brace Committee
Central Tribunal                Central Tribunal Nos. W.2557 Class: A - Genuine
War Service        3 (R) H.L.I., Edinburgh; CM (Court Martial) Edinburgh 8.12.16 - 1yr.HL (With hard labour) com.to 28 days, Wormwood S.
Magistrates Court            Arrest reported 15.12.16
Magistrates Court comments     Absentee
Prison   Wormwood S.; 'spent two years in Wormwood Scrubs' (Oxford DNB)
Work Centre      HOS (The Home Office Scheme, administered by the Brace Committee) Ballachulish - 16.5.17 sent home and awaiting arrest. Agent found his work unsatisfactory.
Work Centre comments  Rejected by The Home Office Scheme, administered by the Brace Committee
WO363 false
Notes    'He was homosexual and never married'. His only novel, 'Dance of the Apprentices' (1948) contains descriptions of his time in prison as a CO
Sources                Cumbria RO(Carlisle)D/Mar/4/97; Oxford DNB (2004); NA/WO86/73/20; NA/MH47/1 Central Tribunal Minutes; Not found in NA/WO363; FH/SER/VOPC/Cases/2(4207) also FH/SER/VOPC/Cases/3(3820 and 3350 - spelling 'Gatins')
Record set          Conscientious Objectors' Register 1914-1918

It looks as though the 1916 prison sentence mentioned led to his case being considered by the Central Tribunal and his being sent to work on the Home Office Scheme at Ballachulish, then on being found "unsatisfactory" (perhaps having been involved in the unrest among COs there) he was sent back to the Scrubs for a period which would match the circumstances of 'Eddy' as above. 

Biography [Canongate]
Edward Gaitens 1897-1966), was born in the Gorbals of Glasgow. Leaving school at fourteen, he undertook a variety of casual jobs to support himself over the years. When the First World War broke out he became a conscientious objector and was imprisoned for two years in Wormwood Scrubs. In the 1930s he started to write, and his early attempts were greatly encouraged by his fellow Glaswegian, the successful dramatist James Bridie, who had become chairman of the Glasgow Citizens' Theatre at the time. A number of Gaitens' short stories were first published in the Scots Magazine. mostly based on his own life in the Gorbals, these were later collected as Growing Up and Other Stories (1942).* Six of these stories were incorporated into Dance of the Apprentices (1948), a novel of city life and the turbulent years between the First World War and the Depression. Gaitens continued to write from time to time during the years in which he lived - virtually anonymously - in London and Dublin. Growing Up ... and Dance of the Apprentices remain his only published books.

*At the time of writing this blog the short story collection is rare:
Growing Up and Other Stories. GAITENS, Edward. Published by London: Jonathan Cape, (1942). "Duplicate Proof for Retention", of the first edition. (1942)   Used   Quantity Available: 1
Price: £ 244.12 + Shipping from Canada
Description: Navy blue wrappers, 168pp. Gaitens was born in Glasgow's Gorbals and left school at the age of 14. He was imprisoned as a conscientious objector during World War I. His friend O. H. Mavor ("James Bridie") encouraged him to send stories to the Scots Magazine, later published in this collection "Growing Up". His novel "Dance of the Apprentices" (1948) is a realistic and unsentimental depiction of working-class life in Glasgow. Gaitens lived in Dublin and London for several years and died on 16 December 1966. Spine cocked and slightly worn at base, else a very good copy of a most uncommon proof. 

With the online records now available it is possible to trace more of the life, as in:
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB):
 Gaitens, Edward (1897–1966),short-story writer and novelist
... was born on 26 February 1897 at 104 South Wellington Street, in the Gorbals, Glasgow, probably fourth of six surviving children of Edward Gaitens, stationer, and his wife, Mary, née Colwell. Gaitens was educated locally and left school at the age of fourteen, taking up a succession of unskilled jobs. During the First World War he spent two years in Wormwood Scrubs prison as a conscientious objector. He was homosexual and never married.
Gaitens began writing in his middle thirties. His first short story, ‘Growing Up’, was published in the London Mercury in 1938 on the recommendation of the playwright Osborne Henry Mavor (James Bridie)*, to whom he later dedicated his only novel. His first book, Growing Up and Other Stories (1942), was well reviewed. H. G. Wells wrote to the author, ‘I do not exaggerate when I say that at least two of these stories are among the most beautiful in the English language’ (Gaitens, Dance of the Apprentices). These ten lively, social–realist pieces depict a sensitive boy observing and responding to his Glasgow background—family, shipyard work, unemployment—and discovering transcendental moments of beauty, as in ‘The Sailing Ship’. They appear to draw their inspiration from Gaitens's own experience. His long-term companion (and later literary executor) Charles Turner has been quoted as saying that ‘he put his life into his writings’ (Urquhart and Gordon [see below], 203).
Gaitens lived in London during the Second World War and served for four years as a firewatcher. He returned to Glasgow after the war, working as a night telephonist. Encouraged by an Atlantic award in literature (1946) for Growing Up, he wrote Dance of the Apprentices (1948), the novel for which he is best-known today. It is episodic in structure, six stories from Growing Up appearing, with minor alterations, as chapters in the novel. Again the book seems to be semi-autobiographical, charting the adolescent experiences of Eddy Macdonnel and his friends, the apprentices of the title. Part 1 closes as they go gladly to prison as conscientious objectors at the outbreak of the First World War. Part 2 covers the next twenty years as they come to terms with the unsatisfactory ‘world fit for heroes’ to which they have returned, but the last chapter is a strikingly detailed and bitter depiction of Eddy's—or Gaitens's—experiences in prison.
Gaitens published little else during his lifetime and his work was neglected for some years, perhaps owing to the restricted scope of his subject matter, perhaps to the ephemeral nature of his true medium, the short story. During the early 1960s, renting a basement flat in Edinburgh in poor health and considerable poverty, he sublet a room to the poet George Mackay Brown, who later wrote ‘I think his gift had deserted him, but he kept still a bright eye and an eager spirit … He had long abandoned Catholicism, but men must be believing something and Edward's religion was art’ (Brown, 159). Gaitens died of a heart attack in Deaconess Hospital, Edinburgh, on 16 December 1966.
* A pre-title page in the Canongate edition is headed "To Dr O. H. Mavor, a Glasgow man", presumably Gaitens' original dedication although this is not explained.

1901 England, Wales & Scotland Census: Govan, Hutchesontown, Lanarkshire, Scotland:
In 1901 the family were to be found at South Wellington Street in the Gorbals
     Name           Household                        Age       Birth year  Occupation       
Edward Gatens Head     Married    Male      35           1866        News Agent       
Mary     Gatens Wife      Married    Female   34           1867       -              
James   Gatens Son        -              Male      11           1890         Scholar 
John      Gatens Son        -              Male      9              1892       Scholar 
Frank     Gatens Son        -              Male      5              1896       -              
Edward Gatens Son        -              Male      4              1897       -              
-              Gatens Son        -              Male      0              1901       -              
William Caldwell  Brother-In-Law Single    Male      17     1884       Bleachfield Worker    
 Place of birth for all of the above is given as Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland.

The fictional Macdonnel family in the novel closely matches the Gaitens (spelt Gatens in the Census) household as it appeared in 1901: in the novel, Eddy has brothers called James, John and Francie, and a maternal Uncle Wullie who lives with them. ('Francie' dies young not long after the war, in a mental hospital; Frank/Francis Gaitens died in 1923.) On the other hand, the father in the book is not called Edward, and the mother usually just gets 'Mrs', perhaps distancing their sometimes harsh protrayal from the real parents.


In 1911 the family can be found via Scotland's People, once you get past another misspelling, at 364 Govan St., as a household of 9 occupying 3 rooms with 1 or more windows, and sharing the address with five other families. The parents are listed at the end of one page, their six children (and the uncle) on the next.

GAITENS EDWARD  aged 45 Brassfinisher, Foundry b.Lanark, Glasgow
GAITENS Mary aged 40
... GAITONS EDWARD 1911 M 14 [page 644/15 32/ 20] b. Hutchesontown Lanark ...


At this point. James, aged 20, was an Engineer’s Labourer; John (19) working in a Shipyard; Francis (15) an Engineering Apprentice; Edward (14) and Cuthbert (7) Scholars; and a sister, Mary, was 3 years old. William Caldwell (26) was a Lamplighter, Edward senior a Brassfinisher in a foundry. Cuthbert, if aged 7, was not the unnamed 1901 baby who may not have lived long. A few more autobiographical boxes are ticked: in the novel, as well as the 3 older brothers, Eddy has a sister, Mary, and a younger brother, Egbert - the rather incongruous choice of name is blamed on his mother - appears fleetingly. 

... and some daffodils
A different sort of tenement?
 No.37 Church Rd.
In the 1939 Register of Electors (England & Wales) 
Edward appears in the "Turner Household (2 People) 37 Church Road, Barnes M.B., Surrey, England":

Edward Gaitens 25 Feb 1897        Male      Commercial Traveller (Cereals Selling To Retail Trade)     Single

Charles Turner  14 Nov 1901        Male      Private Sec To Film Scenario Wrist [Writer] Single    

The ODNB article above refers to Gaitens' "long-term companion (and later literary executor) Charles Turner."


A section of Church Rd., SW13 including nos. 27-37
(looking over Barnes Pond).
Charles and Edward shared No.37 with two other 'households' of electors (and possibly some non-electors),  one of 4 people, the other consisting of a (married) shorthand typist whose husband, from her surname, may not have been eligible to vote.

"A lasting place in Scottish literature"
The title story of Growing Up and Other Stories (London: Jonathan Cape, 1942) - about a 14-year-old going to work in a shipyard - was published in a 1978 anthology. (As noted above, the full collection is currently available in the form of a used ‘Duplicate Proof for Retention’ of the first edition at £244.12 plus shipping from Canada).
From Modern Scottish Short Stories

In some illustrious company.


Monday, 12 December 2016

Scots Against War, 1914-18 style

Augmented BOOK REVIEW about -  

Robert Duncan, Objectors & Resisters: Opposition to Conscription and War in Scotland 1914-18 (Glasgow: Common Print/Common Weal, 2015)

Previous publications in the past few years have looked at manifestations in Britain of opposition to the First World War (refs. below) and on the impact of the war more generally in Scotland. While all these works necessarily pay some attention to aspects of the Scottish anti-war scene, Robert Duncan's informative book breaks new ground, drawing together evidence from official records and dissident, mostly left-wing press, sources. His half-dozen chapters cover not only such fairly well-known topics as the Glasgow rent strike, the imprisonment of prominent conscientious objectors (COs) - John MacLean, James Maxton - industrial unrest, and the launch of the Women’s Peace Crusade, but also many lesser-known people and events, deploying newly unearthed material. Some great group photographs and two portraits (of women, Helen Crawfurd and Agnes Dollan) enhance its attractive presentation.

The narrative runs from perspectives and protest in the prelude to war through the mass protest rallies and evolving of the anti-war position in the early months of the conflict to the growth of opposition to the threat of conscription. That threat was of course carried out in early 1916, and the longest chapters (4 and 5) deal with COs: what they said for themselves and what was said against them; their trials, testimonies, and punishment in prisons and labour camps; and their ways of surviving and coping. Finally there is an overview of repression and resistance, peace campaigns, and radical politics, 1916-1918 and the striving for a lasting peace – until the sowing of the "seeds of future conflict" at Versailles.


Without dwelling at undue length on cases of ill-treatment in barracks and prisons the book illustrates the sort of ordeals COs had to face, and the authorities' wilful incomprehension of their principled stand:

‘In my opinion Sangster is more than a little daft, and Maxton more insane than sane. Neither is accessible to reason. They are alike in their exaggerated egoism and in their want of a sense of proportion, and I should not be at all surprised if either or both of them become certifiably insane.’  - Scottish Prison Commissioner Dr James Devon on James Maxton and James Edny Sangster, two COs in Perth prison, 10 Feb.1917.
‘His mind has lost grip to a large extent. That such a man should have been a teacher is a marvel and a mystery. He may yet have to be certified. If he were liberated I do not say he would be quite sane, and he may be a cause of trouble in these times.’ – Dr Devon, report on Maxton as above, 16 June 1917. (Both quotations on p.84)

One of the individuals Duncan looks at who deserve to be more widely remembered is Dr John MacCallum, an Edinburgh graduate in Arts and Medicine who in his early 30s had become Medical Officer of Health for Ayrshire, specialising in tuberculosis (and was a Scottish rugby international). He chose to become a CO rather than seek occupational exemption, and was one of those sent to do noxious work in appalling conditions at an ‘artificial manure’ manufacturers in Broxburn, near Edinburgh, where he was victimised. He had spoken out against abusive treatment of the workers and was accused of exerting a bad influence. (p. 109) A letter of protest about his arrest and recall to the army was addressed to the Home Office in May 1917, but he was returned to Perth prison, where he served a third sentence in 1918.

There are interesting similarities between some of the book’s findings and those of researchers elsewhere, notably the harrowing experiences of COs and their capacity for resistance, the existence of support networks, the active part played by women, and the fact that jingoistic hostility, while troublesome, was less than universal. At the same time special features of the anti-war scene north of the border are brought out, such as the apparently higher incidence of ‘political’ (especially Independent Labour Party) rather than purely religious motivation for conscientious objection, and the greater disinclination for the martyrdom consequent upon maintaining ‘absolutism’ to the point of refusing all alternatives to repeated prison sentences. (p.99) 




The map of opposition is extended beyond Glasgow and ‘Red’ Clydeside to show the varying strength of the movement in other cities - considerable in industrial Dundee. It was more difficult to get the anti-war message across unmolested in Edinburgh and Aberdeen, although there were certainly supporters in each, with large rallies in the former, and Quakers from the latter providing much-needed food and encouragement to COs at Dyce camp. Names of smaller towns like Kilmarnock crop up too, but the map seems to stop short of the Highland line, not surprisingly perhaps since the sources used are mainly concerned with the more populous industrialised areas. Demographic and social factors would have made for a lower number of COs in the Highlands and Islands but there were some in even the most remote locations (see previous posts listed below). In this and other respects the research effort is already being extended as more records become generally available. Appeal tribunal records for Lothian and Peebles, used by Duncan, are now online as are those for the Isle of Lewis, and shortly after the book's publication the invaluable Pearce Register of COs with 17,426 records at time of writing was added to the Imperial War Museum website for Lives of the First World War.

[A version of this review may be published in Medicine, Conflict and Survival in due course: now online: 
free eprint available for the first 50 to click here]



References

Objection Overruled: conscription and conscience in the First World War, by David Boulton, Dent, Cumbria, Dales Historical Monographs in Association with Friends Historical Society, 2014.
Comrades in Conscience: the story of an English Community’s opposition to the Great War, by Cyril Pearce, London, Francis Boutle, 2014.
A Small Vital Flame: anti-war women in NW England 1914-1918, by Alison Ronan, Manchester, Scholars’ Press, 2014.
(Combined review of the 3 above in Medicine, Conflict and Survival - online 6 Nov 2014)
The Flowers of the Forest: Scotland and the First World War, by Trevor Royle, Edinburgh, Birlinn, 2013.


Chapter titles and selected additional notes

1. Prelude to war: perspectives and protest
            Labour Leader claimed 100 protest marches in Scotland, from the Borders to Fraserburgh

2. Wartime objection and protest in Scotland: August-December 1914
            “No war fever” in Glasgow, except in the Jingoistic press...
                    few cases of confrontation or obstruction

3. Opposing the conscription threat: 1915-early 1916
              Munitions Act: Militarisation of labour, "industrial slavery"
                   Glasgow rent strike: 40,000 households. May-Nov. 1915

4. Conscription and conscientious objection 1916-1918: testimonies and trials of objectors
               200 Local Tribunals in Scotland + 50 Appeal Tribunals - 
                    Glasgow busiest, most troubled. Supporters in gallery singing Red Flag, often. 
                    Dundee: <50 applications on opening, many moral/political, nearly all refused
                       – furious reaction in town   
                Central Tribunal test case, Cameron Roberts: setback – political objection ruled out 
                      but Exemption from Combatant Service if sincere objection to taking life.
                Case studies [more on some of these to follow] e.g. Hugh Gemell - 
                        class-war socialist, ILP: "willing to fight to defend a workers’ state."

5. Objection and punishment: prisons and labour camps
                Detention in army camps inc. Cromarty, Fort George;
                                          soldiers “kind & considerate” to CO, mutual help
                 Prison: Barlinnie, Calton, Perth. Health effects: cold, food, hard labour 
                          - almost continual solitary confinement, strict silence;
                          mental & cultural deprivation.
                          “COs developed persistent melancholia & committed suicide” - 
                       Charles Yachnies, Feb.1918, certified insane, “criminal lunatic”
                           – committed to Colney Hatch; died 27-7-18.
                  Not to waste lives as martyrs; opting to disappear; 
                            on the run, anti-war propaganda for board & lodging,
                  Work centres usually in country; compulsion, penal conditions.                                                                           Ballachulish. Cancellation of Xmas leave, 1916:
                              6 AWOL; confrontation, arrests 
                              - hunger strike in prison, threat of forced feeding. Letters, pleas in support.
                                (Primitive, reactionary diagnosis of state of mind - see Maxton above). 
                      Dundee COs refused to act as beaters on Cruachan estate 
                               - shooting birds wrong, inappropriate, against principles                                       
                      Willie McDougall, Glasgow anarchist, tried to organise strike at Dartmoor 
                       - successful escape bid, on bike - with help made it back to Glasgow,  
                        "resumed his political activities." 

6. Repression and resistance, peace campaigns, and radical politics: 1916-1918
             Range of repressive measures, disruption; police raids.
             Early 1917 Aberdeen South by-election - F Pethick-Lawrence; jingo mob.
             Women activists' aim of mobilising anti-militarist campaign 
                         with strong base among working-class women
                         Networks: tenements, streets.
              Glasgow May Day, 1918: the 1st of May was a Wednesday  - 
                   thousands took a day off  (strike, unpaid): 
                   70,000 at  Glasgow Green, 20 platforms.for speakers; "mass civil disobedience".

Plus: Introduction, End Notes, and Names Index.

Previously on this blog:-

To follow on this blog: More about some of the personalities featured in the book.

At the People's Palace, Glasgow:
"IN MEMORY OF THOSE WHO OPPOSED WORLD WAR ONE 
IN ORDER TO CHALLENGE THE PURPOSE OF THE WAR AND THE WASTE OF LIVES.
THEY ALSO CAMPAIGNED FOR SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE, 
AND AGAINST THE EXPLOITATION OF THOSE WHO LIVED IN THE CITY DURING THE WAR."