Everywhere, and Nowhere
The General
Strike: Myth and Fact
“[the General Strike]... is a revolution that is Everywhere, and Nowhere...”
(Fernand Pelloutier).
1926: A BRIEF OVERVIEW
In May 1926 2 million workers joined the only General Strike Britain has ever
seen. It lasted nine days, before being called off by the people who had called
it – the General Council of the Trades Union Congress.
The TUC leadership had unwillingly called the Strike, in support of a million
miners who had been locked out of the pits until they accepted drastic wage
cuts. The General Council had been forced into action by the overwhelming class
feeling of the members of the unions, who both strongly supported the miners
and believed a General Strike to be in their own interests in the face of an
economic assault from the bosses and the government.
The Strike was in most cases rock solid: increasing numbers of workers were
walking out, and towards its end it was spreading into other industries not
officially on strike. But the government was very well prepared, having planned
in advance - ensuring the amassing of coal stocks to make sure the miners could
be defeated and industry could keep going, recruiting volunteer strike-breakers
ahead of time, and setting up networks to organise nationally and locally.
On the ground, the strike was organized in each town or borough by Trades councils,
local committees of trade union branches, some of which formed local Councils
of Action to specifically co-ordinate activity, picketing etc. Through mass
picketing, and refusal to cross picket lines, in many areas the Strike Committees
gained total control of transport (trams, tubes etc in London), and shut down
many industries. In some places they were issuing permits to travel or open
to bosses. Local Strike Bulletins, and a national daily paper, the British Worker,
attempted to keep information flowing to strikers and supporters. Although unions
attempted to maintain order, there were regular clashes with the police, who
were busy trying to protect scabs attempting to run public transport and break
the strike in other industries…
But, afraid of the possibilities of workers escaping their control, and class
warfare overflowing their very limited aims, the TUC bureaucrats tried hard
to avoid the Strike, attempted to hamstring strikers on the ground from any
autonomous action, negotiated throughout with the government and finally called
the strike off, claiming they’d gained concessions, even though none had
been won.
Although 100,000 more workers came out on the day following the ending of the
Strike than had previously been called out, very quickly most workers returned
to work, facing worsening pay and conditions from employers made bold by the
defeat – and leaving the miners to fight alone for six months until they
were forced to give in and accept wage reductions.
This sellout did leave a powerful legacy of bitterness. At the time, and ever
since, the TUC leadership have been blamed for betraying the General Strike,
and the miners.
MYTH AND REALITY IN THE NINE DAYS
Since 1926 the events of the General Strike have become part of the mythological
catechism of the working class movement. The events of the nine days have been
held up as an example to illustrate many lessons we are supposed to learn.
The following discusses some of the myths – and some of the realities.
We’re thinking, maybe some of the lessons we need to learn are slightly
different to the ones the orthodox left traditions have maintained over the
last 87 years…
First of all, the myth of 1926 as a great climax of the class struggle.
1926 was not the climax of industrial militancy, but actually a last ditch action,
the end of the wave of militancy that had begun during World War 1 and escalated
in the immediate post-War years. 1919 and 1920 had both seen stronger strike
waves and more dangerous moments of crisis for the ruling classes. In 1919 the
government had in fact told TUC leaders that strikes had them at their mercy,
but had correctly guessed that TUC leaders would back down as they weren’t
prepared to take power. It was never their aim.
Strikes had been declining in number and effect since 1920; despite grandiose
statements of alliance by the unions, the wave of industrial militancy was in
many ways faltering. There’s no doubt that the fact that over two million
people were prepared to go on indefinite strike in support of the miners was
a magnificent display of solidarity and fellow feeling; and that many clearly
saw that standing by one group of workers was fighting in defence of all. But
it was always a defensive strike; in contrast with some of the syndicalist struggles
before World War 1, or even some of the events of 1919, it had little sense
that it could break its bounds and expand.
The General Council sold out the strike.
This is hardly disputable. It should have been hardly surprising though –
the same union leaders had been doing the same for years, (and particularly
in the potentially far more dangerous years of 1919 and 1920) - stitching up
workers and capitulating to employers. The TUC leaders were more afraid of the
workers than of the boss class, they said so, to quote J.R. Clynes of the General
and Municipal Workers union: “I am not in fear of the capitalist class.
The only class I fear is our own.” The bureaucrats inevitably became
divorced from the day to day struggles of their members, and became closer to
the boss class they dealt with.
During the Strike, the TUC did try to shut down autonomy, preventing mass meetings,
banning local strike propaganda, and restricting the issuing of permits…
Was the lack of TUC preparedness, their refusal to plan for the strike, a deliberate
tactic? Or just dithering and indecision? The TUC General Council (GC)’s
strategy seemed to be based on nothing apart from a determination not to let
strikers run things themselves.
Their other masterplan consisted of a ludicrous decision to divide workers into
a front line (transport workers, printers, dockers, builders, iron and steel
& chemical workers), to come out on strike immediately on May 3rd, and a
reserve, to be called out later (including engineers, and shipyard workers).
This left workers in many areas very isolated, where the ‘front line’
were in a minority.
In many area workers ignored this directive, or tried to: many walked out on
their own initiative; some were persuaded back to work by the Trades Councils,
or their own unions. As the TUC’s daily strike paper, the British
Worker put it:“the biggest trouble is to keep men in [ie at work]
who are not involved.”
Also the GC’s instructions were very confusing, so many workers, for instance
municipal employees, were left not knowing if they were to strike or not. Most
notoriously, workers at one Lewisham factory walked out three times, and were
ordered to go back by their union, three times, in nine days. Power workers
were supposed to supply light but not power – practically impossible;
as a result, where electric workers came out completely, they were sent back
to work. This issue was still undecided at the end of the strike. Many electricians
walked out or cut off all power on their own bat. Postal, telegraph and telephone
workers were never called out, which left communications intact – a crucial
mistake.
If all workers had been called out, it would have had a bigger impact; also
workers not called out were in practice supporting scab labour, ie using buses,
electrics, etc., or told to keep working when members of other unions in the
same workplace were on strike - which was demoralising and divisive. Great bitterness
arose after the strike because of this issue. For example, at Woolwich Arsenal,
there were many workers in several unions doing different jobs - some ordered
out, some ordered to remain. Despite strong feelings locally, and calls for
everyone to strike regardless, many wouldn’t come out without official
union backing. When those still working struck they were told to go back by
the GC; when the strike ended those who had remained at work (many reluctantly
but under union orders) were given preferential treatment, and this fractious
legacy lasted for years.
Unions did issue strike pay to all strikers – obviously this was useful
and necessary, but as with all official strikes, this did keep them under union
control. Which was bound to have had an influence on people’s thinking,
when strikers wanted to carry on after the TUC backed down.
The idea of the Strike Committees issuing permits for transport of food, coal
etc, was actually made powerful by the strength of mass picketing, keeping trams,
trains, etc from running. Where government control broke down (for example in
the North East of England) employers forced to go cap in hand to Councils of
Action. But refusal to prevent movement of all materials was another quietist
decision made by the General Council; it meant challenging the state control
of food; which the GC was unwilling to do. In fact they offered to co-operate
with the government over food distribution, but the government refused, recognizing
they had the upper hand.
Trades Councils and local unions as local brakes on action.
Although many trade unionists, and union branches, fumed at the General Council’s
betrayal, the hard reality is that it was the union structures at ground level
that ensured the defeat of the General Strike.
The vast majority of Strike Committees made no attempt to exceed the TUC’s
directives, even those who were in theory more radical politically than others,
(eg the ones controlled by the Communist Party). Some of the latter did exceed
TUC guidelines and several Trades Councils were later expelled.
The Strike Committees mostly emphasized the TUC line: strikers should stay away
from picket lines, stay off the street – go to church, do your garden
etc. Wear your war medals on demos, don’t get involved in trouble. Passivity
was the watchword: many unions made frantic attempts to organize anything to
keep people from getting involved: concerts, sports, etc. Many workers bought
into this, co-operating with police, not acting against scabs, going to church,
concerts etc, - and staying off the streets.
Certainly some of the Strike Committees made their obsession with controlling
strikers and keeping the peace clear: many strike bulletins and letters to the
TUC talk about keeping order as paramount, and dismiss, slander or disassociate
themselves from those taking part in street battles, stopping cars, attacking
scab trams and other direct actions. Or they stress the ‘problem’
of keeping at work those not ‘yet’ called out: “Our difficulty
to keep others at work… main headache keeping in workers not called out…”
etc. Many spent much energy, trying to control the workers fighting with
the cops or trying to take matters into their own hands. Many strike committees,
(for example, Wandsworth, and Willesden) set up some kind of picket defence
corps, ostensibly to defend strikers against police violence, but as much it
seems to prevent any trouble, or autonomous activity, as to shore up the picket
lines or defend them against the cops. Recruitment into defence Corps was used
to divert people away from confrontations with police.
Trades Councils had never been very radical in most cases. Many had been overtly
hostile, or at best frosty, towards the grassroots shop stewards movement in
World War 1. Although some of this movement had subsequently had some involvement
in Trades Councils, ideologically, most Trades Councils were in practice identical
with local Labour Party branches: they distrusted outbreaks of independent thinking
by rank and file workers. In practice, many Labour and union activists felt
themselves entitled to organise things for the workers, seeing themselves as
an elite with the nouse and experience to take charge. Far from seeing a General
Strike as an opening to revolution, or social change in any fundamental way,
they did however in many cases strongly believe in solidarity, and were prepared
to risk much in support of the miners.
When the strike was called off, many Councils of Action did feel the miners
had been betrayed and the strike should continue: in practice, few did carry
on. For many, integrated into the structures of the TUC, and the complex strictures
of union practice, it’s possible they simply could not conceive of a mass
wildcat continuation of the struggle.
If the TUC General Council put themselves at the head of the Strike in order
to defeat it NATIONALLY, it may not be fair to say Trades Councils put themselves
at the head of it locally with the same view – to prevent workers taking
things into their own hands. But in practice, their adherence to the TUC’s
line guaranteed the Strike’s defeat.
Many workers took autonomous action.
Despite the General Council’s line, and the tight control that trades
councils attempted to impose, thousands of workers DID take collective action
on their own initiative.
In fact it was unofficial action that sparked the outbreak of the strike, when
Daily Mail printers downed tools in protest at an anti-Union editorial; their
union leader tried to get them to go back, though later he denied this (the
myth at work: he didn’t want to be seen as one of those sellout TUC bastards?)
They had jumped the gun, leaving the General Council in the lurch, as they DIDN’T
want the strike, but the government DID, so it broke off negotiations.)
The Strike saw a mass of autonomous actions: street fighting, blocking and trashing
trams, buses, harrassing middle class drivers in their cars, stoning the police
from rooftops; in the north of England especially streets were barricaded, there
were arson attempts; miners even derailed the Flying Scotsman Edinburgh to London
train (though they had only intended to knock out the local coal train!)
To some extent this activity was increasing as the strike went on. As well as
wrecking buses and trams (smashing engines and motors, and burning vehicles,
there were incidents of scab-bashing. For instance, on Wednesday 12 May, the
last day of the strike, a strikebreaker called James Vanden Bergh, an undergraduate
at Cambridge, was found in the cab of his Central London Railway (now the underground’s
Central Line) train with head injuries. He had no memory of the attack, and
police were treating it as foul play: this was the first reported violence on
the tubes.
But in fact, there was a low level of violence compared to other mass strikes
(eg the Liverpool general strike of 1911). The Army was called in very little,
and used mainly for dramatic effect by the government. The Workers Defence Corps
did more to prevent workers violence than to stop pickets getting nicked or
bashed.Unionised workers and non-unionised workers in the Strike.
Large numbers of non-union workers, dismissed by many TUC and union bigwigs
before Strike, came out on strike, got involved in the autonomous actions, picketing
etc, and many joined unions during the nine days. This on one hand elated some
Trades Councils, but it scared the GC. There was a certain snobbery about workers
not already unionised, and a dismissal of those involved in streetfighting:
the GC line, followed by many trades councils, was all trouble was caused by
non-unionists - though this is unproveable in many cases, it’s certainly
untrue in others, in that union members were arrested for involvement in fighting.
Could it have turned out differently?
What if the Strike had lasted longer? Could it have done? Was it getting more
solid or weaker? The government had managed to force food supplies through,
eg in London, through the docks; did this show there was no chance of success?
Or merely that Strike Committees were unwilling to use any means necessary to
win the strike.
There was a lie put about by the TUC General Council that the strike was crumbling
at the end – but there is no evidence of this; the opposite in fact. They
were bullshitting to cover the fact that they were afraid of rank and file autonomy,
although in reality it was minimal.
To some extent a counter-myth has grown up, of the middle classes and posh students
actively enlisted to scab, to defeat the Strike and defend the status quo. In
daily reality this wound more people up than the idea of the suffering of the
miners – there was open class hatred for posh scabs, and to a lesser extent
for anyone trying to break the strike, eg by trying to drive to work.
But most volunteers were useless – a small minority could do anything,
most being idle and untrained for owt. Their impact has probably been over-hyped,
partly by the government, partly by the strata of the upper and middle classes
involved. They were only successful in certain areas, not at all in parts of
north, very limited even in London, and caused a number of accidents and disasters
when put to work on trains, buses and trams.
As the strike went on, with autonomous actions increasing: would all out class
war have resulted if it had gone on?
Although thousands of workers came out when they were not authorized to, although
some Councils of Action and Strike Bulletins broke the TUC rules, although many
stayed out longer after the Strike was called off, the fact is that in the end,
most workers didn’t break out of the union structures, the structures
that ensured their defeat. In reality, given the General Council’s back-pedalling
and then betrayal, and the tight control of local union branches, open escalation
of the Strike controlled from below was the only way it could have gone forward.
Some workers were said to have thought the real fight would start now, with
the TUC out of the way; if so not enough, or they didn’t or weren’t
able to act on it. But conditions were in fact loaded against them.
British Syndicalist Tom Brown later suggested that a major tactical advantage
could have been gained by the striking workers occupying their workplaces, rather
than abandoning them to the OMS and posh scabs. Possibly this is true, but the
stay-in-strike he championed was never suggested at the time; the idea was developed
only later - admittedly often successfully...
The TUC kept emphasizing the industrial nature of dispute… that the Strike
was not aimed at overthrowing the government… but in reality the only
direction to go in WAS towards challenging the state, in an all out attempt
to (at the very least) impose working class interests on the ruling class. A
mass strike NOT prepared to do this was bound to fail, in the face of the government’s
preparations and determination not to bend.
The role of the Communist Party
The Communist Party of Great Britain was involved in the Strike, and in the
day to day running of some Councils of Action. But the party was weak, small;
it had been weakened by the arrests and jailings of many members in the previous
year. The CP spent most of time before and during calling on the TUC to lead.
The CPGB’s idealogy was tightly controlled from Moscow, and its line on
the General Strike was “All power to the General Council” - in the
circumstances, a sick joke. Centralising power in the hands of the GC was precisely
the opposite of ‘All power to the Workers”. The CP made no attempt
to challenge the GC’s control, there were no attacks on passive picketing,
no discussion of Councils of Action obeying the GC, or of who was running them,
and no criticism of the daft two-wave policy. The few CP-controlled Trades Councils
and Strike Committees did sometimes push weakly for escalation but barely, and
in little more than words.
Although its always fun crying “traitor” at the TUC leaders, many
who bitterly attacked them, remained fixated on the same union structures, the
idea of capturing the leadership of the unions for the left etc. This is as
valid today, as then, many of the left groupings still spend vast amounts of
time manoevering within Broad Lefts etc in the unions… “Union leadership
would be ok if it was the right kind of leadership” – ie us. But
the Left union leaders in 1926 were as useless as the right were treacherous,
left leaders were among ones claiming a victory afterwards, in blatant defiance
of the facts… and left controlled unions still attempt to control and
hamper the autonomous activity of people struggling on the ground. The Communist
Party later became critical of left Union leaders, though they had helped them
to power! The daily practice of much of today’s union structures is one
way that class anger and resistance is controlled, diverted, channeled –
this is not to attack all union members or even branch reps, convenors etc;
it’s a structural problem that draws militant activists in and gradually
neuters them in the guise of enabling them to achieve their political aims.
It has been suggested that the Strike Committees or Councils of Action could
have provided an alternative structure take over the state, or institute dual
power or whatever. Some trotskyist critics of the GC have expressed the view
that Councils of Action should have taken more power locally, over union branches
and been more centralized bodies DIRECTING strike activity. Since most Strike
Committees just didn’t want to do this, this is pie in the sky. A Communist
International report later suggested the Councils were embryonic soviets…
this is simply not born out by reality.
After the Deluge
While national and local union structures may have ensured the defeat of the
Strike, the result was a disaster for the trade union movement. It led to a
vengeful employers offensive, wages being driven down, blacklisting of many
militants.; the government brought in savage anti-union laws. Workers also left
unions in droves, partly with the legacy of betrayal and bitterness, but also
because hamstrung unions couldn’t do much for them. After the strike there
was a tendency for bosses and unions to avoid confrontation and for employers
to maintain wage rates. Industrial collaboration improved considerably in the
years after 1926. Sir Alfred Mond – head of ICI – organised a joint
committee of union leaders and employers, for "improving efficiency
of British industry and for reducing unemployment". TUC policies were
steered towards negotiation and co-operation with bosses.
Was the General Strike a disaster which should have been avoided?
As with the 1984-85 miners strike, the government in 1926 saw in advance that
a clash of some kind with the union movement (most likely over the mining subsidy)
was inevitable, and could in fact be necessary, and desirable, as a way to clobber
the organised working class. On this basis, they laid their plans carefully,
and made sure that if and when the clash came they would win.
The government climbdown of 1925, allowing the Coal subsidy to continue, for
another few months, was merely a ruse to buy time to marshall its forces…
(much as Thatcher backed down from confronting the NUM in the early ‘80s,
waiting till the time was right…) The stocks of coal it was thus able
to build up, left it in a stronger position. The Government also pre-planned
scab labour and food distribution, after previous scares with strikes. Forming
the Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies in advance of the Strike, it
recruited strikebreakers ahead of time, and worked out ways of breaking union
control over transport particularly.
The GC and the unions, in contrast, were not ready, although with some clear
thinking this could have easily have been different. Unlike the state, the TUC
leadership wanted to avoid the strike, and did little to ready themselves, in
the hope it wouldn’t happen. While workers on the ground and some local
officials pressed for a strike to support the miners, they neither realised
that the government was better prepared, nor were able to overcome the contradictions
within the labour movement.
Many on the left, including ourselves, obsess on the myth of May 1926 as some
kind of potential revolutionary situation, thwarted by union leaders holding
back class struggle. But in reality it wasn’t: few at the TIME saw it
as more than an (admittedly huge) industrial dispute, limited to support for
the miners. It’s possible that it was doomed to failure, given the conditions
prevalent at the time. For a general strike to have contained ‘revolutionary
potential’ depended on the willingness, confidence and numbers of working
class people prepared to go beyond the trade union structures, ideology and
tactics, when it became necessary. Whatever bitterness and anger at the selling
out of the miners may have existed (and it was widespread), there was no critical
mass of people able to translate it into maintaining or extending the Strike.
Postscript:
It's not our intention here to go into detailed theoretical proposals for how
a possible future General Strike might pan out differently. But one classic
communist text we have read we did find useful, and in some ways relevant to
the events of 1926.
Rosa Luxemburg, in her book, The Mass Strike (1905), made some critiques
of how anarchists, syndicalists, and trade unionists all saw the General Strike.
She suggested that the idea of the anarchists and syndicalists of a political
general strike pre-arranged with a political aim to overthrow capitalism was
unlikely to succeed, but posited instead (based on an analysis of the 1905 Russian
Revolution) that a mass strike, evolving more organically out of people’s
immediate economic struggles in daily life, meshing together, constituted a
new phase in the class struggle, not an abstract and artificial moment plucked
from the air, but a historical development, emerging from below, not being imposed
or ordained by any higher authority, or even she suggests by an external political
radical structure like a socialist party.
Part of Luxemburg's
intent in writing The Mass Strike, it is true, was to discredit the
existing theories of the General Strike as put forward mainly by anarchists
and syndicalists, trends of radical thinking that she and other marxists were
struggling to liquidate from the working class movement, as they saw it. But
she was also engaged in a parallel battle against those within the Marxist camp
who were attempting to steer it towards a reformist position, away from the
idea of a revolutionary transfromation of capitalism; as well as being critical
of trade unionists mainly concerned with purely day to day economic gains at
the exepense of the bigger picture.
Theorists of the General Strike thus far had almost exclusively conceived of
it as a road to revolution. I’m not sure if William Benbow was the first
to think up the idea of a general strike, but in his classic pamphlet of 1832,
The Grand National Holiday of the Productive Classes, which he proposed that
the producers of the wealth, being exploited by an idle and rich minority, should
cease to work en masse, for a month, and elect a congress to begin the process
of re-ordering society in their own interests. Benbow was a radical pamphleteer
and bookseller, an activist of the National Union of the Working Classes; he
later became a leading physical force Chartist, and spread his idea of the ‘Grand
National Holiday’. The Chartists took the idea, and renamed it the Sacred
Month, and plans to introduce it and overthrow capitalism were well under way
in 1839, but were repressed by the government.
Sixty years later the French syndicalists, organized in the CGT union confederation,
developed theories in which the General Strike was central. They saw it as the
supreme weapon for the workers to overthrow capitalism and take control of society
in their own interests. One of the CGT’s founders and leading theorists,
Fernand Pelloutier, wrote about the General Strike. Two examples showing how
he and other revolutionary syndicalists saw this future strike:
“ … Every one of them (the strikers) will remain in their neighborhoods
and will take possession, first, of the small workshops and the bakeries, then
of the bigger workshops, and finally, but only after the victory, of the large
industrial plants….”
“ … Because the general strike is a revolution which is everywhere
and nowhere, because it takes possession of the instruments of production in
each neighborhood, in each street, in each building, so to speak, there can
be no establishment of an “Insurrectionary Government” or a “dictatorship
of the proletariat”; no focal point of the whole uprising or a center
of resistance; instead, the free association of each group of bakers, in each
bakery, of each group of locksmiths, in each locksmith’s shop: in a word,
free production….”
The syndicalist
line on the General Strike was very much to the fore when The Mass Strike
was written. It attempts to dismiss the prevailing ideas of the potential of
such a struggle : “It is just as impossible to 'propagate' the mass
strike as an abstract means of struggle as it is to propagate the 'revolution.'
'Revolution' like 'mass strike' signifies nothing but an external form of the
class struggle, which can have sense and meaning only in connection with definite
political situations.”
You can’t create either by going round calling for it, in other words;
it will emerge as and when needed and according to the conditions of the moment.
It is not ONE predictable fixed open and close struggle, but an inter-connected
web of movements events, themselves caused by local or specific economic conditions,
though led and expressed by people with a political idea of the movement, at
least as Luxemburg saw it.
Another nice quote: “It flows now like a broad billow over the whole
kingdom, and now divides into a gigantic network of narrow streams; now it bubbles
forth from under the ground like a fresh spring and now is completely lost under
the earth. Political and economic strikes, mass strikes and partial strikes,
demonstrative strikes and fighting strikes, general strikes of individual branches
of industry and general strikes in individual towns, peaceful wage struggles
and street massacres, barricade fighting – all these run through one another,
run side by side, cross one another, flow in and over one another – it
is a ceaselessly moving, changing sea of phenomena.”
Rosa saw it as not a method but THE form itself of workers struggle… A
rallying idea of a period of class war lasting years or decades… It cannot
be called at will by any organization even The Party! She goes further and almost
says that it cannot be directed from above or outside, though she does say elsewhere
that the socialists have to provide political leadership.
She does contrast the mass fighting strikes with one off ‘demonstration’
strikes – what the TUC or Unison calls today in other words.
Related to this, she says the successful mass strike arising in the way described
above would not/must not be limited to the organized workers: “If
the mass strike, or rather, mass strikes, and the mass struggle are to be successful
they must become a real people’s movement, that is, the widest sections
of the proletariat must be drawn into the fight.” The union structures
must recognise the common interest of unionised and non-unionised workers, in
other words (to their surprise many strike committees learnt this lesson in
practice in 1926, as unorganised workers flocked to the struggle in thousands).
She suggests minority movements are pipe dreams; “a strategy of class
struggle … which is based upon the idea of the finely stage-managed march
out of the small, well-trained part of the proletariat is foredoomed to be a
miserable fiasco.” Even though the Socialists are the leadership
of the working class, she suggests, they can’t force things through on
their own… (past tense would question that the working class needs an
external leadership, here we do differ from auntie Rosa).
Later on she talks about trade unions getting to the point where preservation
of the organization, its structure etc, becomes end in itself, or at least more
important than taking risks, entering into all out struggles, or even any at
all! Also how daily struggles over small issues often lead people to lose sight
of wider class antagonism or larger connections… Interestingly she points
out that TU bureaucracies become obsessed with the positive, membership numbers
etc, and limited to their own union’s gains, ignoring negative developments,
hostile to critics who point out the limitations to their activities. And how
the development of professional bureaucracies increase the chance of divorce
of officials etc from daily struggles… Nothing sharp-eyed folk have not
also pointed out over the last hundred years, but she was among the first to
diagnose it. (She also says the same ossification processes are dangers the
Revolutionary Party needs to beware of… showing foresights to the developments
of the communist parties and other left splinters over the following decades).
Rosa Luxemburg's ideas are interesting.. Without going into it too deeply, her
assertion that a successful general strike would have to arise organically,
meshing together from below rather than being 'called' by any committee or confederation,
looks more realistic... though Rosa would probably have dissed Fernand Pelloutier,
her vision also suggests a revolution that is 'everywhere and nowhere', part
of a tangled period of change and dual power... a future that remains open and
in our hands...
The text of the Mass Strike can be found online at:
http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg/1906/mass-strike/
THE GENERAL STRIKE IN LONDON
Some events, local organisation and conditions…
The strength of the Strike varied greatly in London. Working class areas, mainly
in the inner boroughs, and industrial areas, especially round the Docks in East
and South East London, were mostly solid. Further out and in middle class areas
things were obviously very different.
All in all it's fair to say there was no great breakdown in authority, although
there was fierce fighting in certain areas.
At the start of the Strike the tubes were shut down, trains were going nowhere,
trams and buses were virtually non-existent and the streets were blocked with
cars. Car drivers (mostly middle class) trying to get to work were often stopped
by crowds and forced to walk or told to go home!
(Many people were jailed during and after the strike for intimidation of scab
drivers and attacks on buses and private cars.)
On May 5th however the London Omnibus Company had 86 buses going, driven by
middle class volunteers (they had none out the day before).
The Ministry of Health issued guidelines to ban local Boards of Guardians, who
were in charge of giving relief (dole) to the poor and needy, from giving anything
to strikers; this was aimed at Labour-dominated boards like Poplar in the East
End. This must have had an effect at the end of the Strike, making it harder
for people to stay out.
By Thursday 6th, trams and buses were starting to run more frequently in some
areas. But this was not achieved without resistance: 47 buses were damaged by
crowds by the 7th of May. By the end of this week the TUC General Council had
started to panic; not only was it trying to negotiate with the Government in
secret, but it was stamping down on the limited autonomy of the Councils of
Action, trying to prevent them from issuing permits to travel, ordering them
instead to pass it to the National Transport Committee in London.
The Government's move to break the strikers' stranglehold on the Docks on May
8th was crucial: food supplies in London were running low, there was said to
be only 2 days supply of flour and bread in the capital. They laid their plans
with care: troops and armoured cars had been gathered in Hyde Park. At 4am,
20 armoured cars left to escort 150 lorries to the Docks. Volunteers had been
ferried into the Docks by ship to beat picket lines. The lorries were loaded
by these posh scabs while Grenadier Guards took charge of the Docks. Pickets
watched but could do little in the face of overwhelming numbers of soldiers.
The lorries were then escorted west. This show of strength seems to have overawed
the East End strikers: by the next day convoys of food were running freely in
and out of the Docks with little resistance.
According to some reports in many areas there was an air of resignation by the
10th, many people clearly believing they wouldn't win this one. This needs investigating
and obviously things varied greatly.
By Tuesday 11th tubes were being reopened by scab labour - Bakerloo, City and
South London (now Northern Line) running to most stations.
When the General Council announced the ending of the Strike, not only were the
'second wave' starting to come out, but other workers not called out had started
to strike… The GC's lying bullshit about a settlement being imminent for
the miners led to many Strike Committees initially claiming victory. When the
scale of the surrender became clear there was widespread anger and disbelief.
It is widely quoted that there more workers on strike on the 14th May, after
the end of the Strike, than the 13th. However, it has to be said that the numbers
are not so significant next to the fact that strikers could not see how to take
the struggle further, and within days most had given up. There has to be some
consciousness of what direction to go in, a desire to take things onward. In
the face of government control of the streets through use of troops, and a union
stranglehold on activity, the desire and direction weren't there.
Many workers did not go straight back to work: for two main reasons. Firstly
some angrily tried to carry on the Strike. Secondly, some were told not to return
by their unions until terms had been agreed for a return with their employers
- for many workers this meant accepting worse conditions, no strike agreements,
lower pay and working with scabs who had shat on them. Many firms took advantage
of the defeat of the Strike to screw more out of their wage slaves, refuse to
hire militants, etc. Quite a few Strike activists were not rehired and blacklisted,
in London as elsewhere.
The following accounts mostly relate to London Boroughs as they existed in 1926.
Many have now been amalgamated into larger Boroughs.
Bear in mind this is patchy and inadequate - a start towards a detailed
account of the capital in the Nine Days. Most of these notes are compiled from
the reports of local Trades Councils and Councils of Action to the TUC. So they
emphasise the local union involvement and activities of the Trades Councils.
To some extent they play up the strength of the strike, and focus mostly on
the workers in the unions.
Also clear are the attempts of the Strike Committees to “maintain order”
ie control the Strike, prevent working class crowds from controlling the streets,
restrict the extension of events. More oral histories, accounts of involvement
on the ground are needed… Some accounts are longer than others, but this
is a work in progress: we are adding more information to this about different
areas as we manage to research it, or someone sends us material.
Maybe collective research could be done and this account could be turned into
a full-blown account of the Strike in London.
GUIDE
TO ORGANISATIONS & ACRONYMS
OMS – The Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies: the government
backed organization designed to break the strike.
NUR – National Union of Railwaymen
RCA - Not sure.
URS – Union of Railway Signalmen
ETU – Electrical Trades Union
AEU- Amalgamated Engineering Union
ILP – Independent Labour Party.
TGWU – Transport & General Workers Union.
ASIE & F - Not sure
UPM - Not sure.
ASWM - Amalgamated Society of Woodcutting Machinists.
AEC - Associated Equipment Company, built buses, lorries & motorbikes.
LNW - London & North London Railway.
NORTH LONDON
ST PANCRAS
(then a Borough including Camden, Kentish Town. Although Camden Town seems to
have had a separate Strike Committee)
St Pancras had a very militant strike committee, dominated by the Communist
Party, operating however from the Labour Party HQ at 67 Camden Road. It issued
a vocal and provocative Strike Bulletin. Their HQ was raided on 10 May, the
police seized a typewriter and roneo duplicator, to prevent the bulletin being
issued. The Secretary, J. Smith was nicked. The raid was alleged to be caused
by a report in the Bulletin about an “incident in Harmood St”.
Later St Pancras Strike Committee officials were expelled from the TUC over
items in the Strike Bulletin; the TUC had ordered bulletins should not contain
anything but central publicity but the Strike Committee issued other statements
and news.
St Pancras set up a Workers Defence Corps… to maintain 'order'. The area
was solid to the end of the Strike.
In Camden Town, on the night of Saturday May 8th, there was fighting between
cops and pickets. Then on the 9th, strikers attacked a bus, so cops charged
them, hospitalising 40 strikers. Again on May 12th, there was a confrontation
here, 2 people were nicked for “interfering with traffic.”
Railwaymen and other workers were mostly solid at Kings Cross and Euston stations.
An attempt at Euston to run a train ended with the “volunteer-run
train run into the catch-points near Camden.” At Kings Cross everyone,
including the women cleaners (previously unionised) joined the strike. Here,
too, the attempt to get trains driven by middle class blacklegs backfired: “two
of the OMSers took charge of a train. They failed to open the draincocks before
starting the locomotive and the cylinder heads blew out.” There was
further incompetence: “a heavy engine has fallen into the pit of the
turntable...”
ISLINGTON
The area had a militant CP-dominated Strike Committee, reflecting the area's
long radical and left tradition, and strong workers movement. Islington Trades
Council was based at 295 Upper Street.
According to the Islington daily strike bulletin no 7 (12 May) everything was
favourable there still, the position unchanged. Mass meetings were held in Finsbury
Park, and at the Finsbury Park Empire.
At Gillespie Road School, the children had Sir John Simon's attack on the Strike
read to them instead of the usual scripture lesson!
The Holloway Tram Depot, in Pemberton Gardens, had a very militant and active
workforce in the General Strike. They had their own strike bulletin, Live Rail.
Workers at Welsbach Gas Mantle Manufacturers In Kings Cross were ordered by
the firm to work for the OMS to break the strike, or be sacked...
FINCHLEY
On 8 May, four trams were taken out of the depot by scab volunteers from the
Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies, several specials manning each
one.
City gentleman scabs also volunteered to shovel coal to keep the Mill Hill Gas
Works going.
HENDON
The Hendon Joint Strike Committee issued strike bulletins…
One or two trams were taken out on the 7th, though not without resistance: four
tramwaymen and two railworkers were arrested in the process.
TOTTENHAM and WOOD GREEN
Some social differences between Tottenham and Wood Green:
Tottenham and Edmonton were highly industrialised communities that had greater
unemployment, factory workers and trade unionists than Wood Green. It was where
east-enders came in the mid-nineteenth century with the coming of the railways
to the eastern half of the ancient parish of Tottenham. Industrialisation and
rapid population growth led to antagonism with the agricultural community in
the west of the parish. The latter was still dominated by a small group of gentry
who resented the new working classes in the area and the increased rates for
paving, lighting, sewage and schools as well as the threat of universal suffrage.
They pushed for an act of Parliament that allowed Wood Green to gain independence
as a local authority.
Monday 3rd May: plans of both sides put into action
Union headquarters: Wood Green and Tottenham Trades Councils set up emergency
committees which were to be in nearly permanent session at their headquarters
in Stuart Crescent, Wood Green and no 7, Bruce Grove, Tottenham.
A crowded meeting of railwaymen at Bourne Hall unanimously endorsed the strike
proposals. A meeting at Wood Green Bus Depot of London General Omnibus Company
employees also voted unanimously in favour of strike action.
"The response of local unionists … was probably … amongst
the best in the country. All ceased work … and few went back before the
strike was over."
‘The response of the rank and file unionists in Tottenham and Wood Green
was magnificent.’ – Avery
Government action:
All government powers were transferred to 10 civil commissioners each in charge
of a region. Each region was sub-divided into districts.
Hornsey administrative area included: Tottenham, Wood Green, Edmonton, Southgate,
Enfield, Barnet and Finchley.
Alderman A. Bath was its chairman. He received complete co-operation from all
the councils except Tottenham and Edmonton which had Labour Party majorities.
Bath attacked these two councils through the local papers.
Each district had a volunteer service committee to organise distribution of
food and fuel supplies, keep transport going and to recruit special constables.
They recruited over 12,000 volunteers (largely young and middle class) and over
1,000 special constables for the district, though recruitment was far less in
Tottenham and Edmonton than elsewhere. Also at no time was there a real shortage
of foodstuffs.
The volunteers ran the Finchley electricity works and unloaded 300 tons of butter
at London Docks at risk of attack from the dockers.
Members of local conservative and constitutional clubs met and declared, as
at Edmonton,"Everyone that is loyal to the king must give their support
to the government". Patriotism and loyalty was also declared on the
side of the strikers.
Wood Green Council met and endorsed a policy of support for the government and
volunteer services committee and ordered council employees to carry out emergency
regulations.
Tottenham council was the only one not to cooperate with the recruitment of
special constables by not distributing adverts for it, though they agreed to
maintain food and coal supplies.
To avoid trouble on the streets the council ordered parks to be made freely
available for meetings and organised games. They rejected a proposal to use
council lorries and drivers to provide public transport.
The officer in charge of the local police division, angry that the council refused
to publicise the recruitment of special constables, used his emergency powers
to order the council to close down its various street repair works. The council
dismissed the 100 council workers involved in this work and forced them on to
the dole.
As the strike got uner way, on Tuesday 4th May, the main public transport services
were shut down:
The London and North Eastern Railway closed completely;
The London General Omnibus’s busmen and tramwaymen went all out on strike
without exception.
Two small companies continued to partially operate:
The Admiral Service – 30 buses - Winchmore Hill to Charing Cross via Wood
Green.
Redburn’s – running from Enfield Highway to the City via Tottenham.
The roads were gridlocked; a car journey to the West End from Palmers Green
took 3 hours. Pedestrian casualty rates soared. At least one man injured from
falling from overcrowded bus. Some lorries were accused of taking advantage;
charging sixpence for a ride from Palmers Green to Wood Green.
60 wiremen and mainmen working for the North Metropolitan Electricity Supply
Company (‘the Northmet’) which supplied the district struck. White-collar
employees and volunteers kept supply going but a gradual breakdown was feared
by the company. At Tottenham and District Gas Company, some men were instructed
to strike on the Wednesday but they didn’t force a complete closure so
as not to inflict too much hardship on the community.
The Coal delivery men all struck. On Tuesday4th, pickets from Percy Whellock
Limited (one of the largest North London coal merchants) at Wood Green had to
watch their managing director and company secretary loading lorries with coal
for emergency deliveries to a Tottenham factory. Alderman Bath then sent volunteers.
They could only manage 50% of the usual output. Production at local factories
was severely effected.
Printing unions called out their men during Tuesday and Wednesday. The large
printing firm of Millington’s at Tottenham Hale closed down.
Road Hauliers: Tottenham Depot of Carter Paterson dismissed all its workers
on Monday 3rd May before they could strike.
Furniture makers: Management of Harris Lebus of Tottenham, employing 1,400,
closed their factory on Tuesday 4th following a walkout that evening.
Rubber factor firm, Warre, kept working despite walkout of union members.
Lamp bulb manufacturers, Ediswan’s, also kept factories in production
despite strike by the union members.
Gestetner’s, the duplicating machine makers, locked out all its 700 workers
after the few unionists walked out.
Sweet manufacturers, Barratt’s and Maynard’s in Wood Green, carried
on working though the few engineers struck. Workers were mainly young and non-unionised
women.
Screw manufacturers, Davis and Timins were unaffected.
JAP engineering works (600 workers) tried to stay open but shortage of materials
plus the absence of key men on strike forced them to strike on the Friday.
Many other smaller firms were forced to close or chose to do so.
Construction work on all building sites also stopped.
Milk and bread roundsmen were ordered by their unions to carry on working.
How many struck? Estimated numbers from the statistics of the local board of
guardians and the labour exchange:
First week: 8,654 new applications were granted for assistance in Tottenham
– nearly all from the wives of strikers - and 1,542 in Wood Green. Tottenham
Labour Exchange reported 2,000 people who, though willing to work, had been
dismissed by their firms.
Alderman Bath distributed leaflets against the strikers.
Only one printed leaflet was issued from Unionists appealing for donations to
the miner’s relief fund and a call from a Labour Party candidate appealing
for restraint and to avoid violence especially with their dealings with blacklegs.
He said “Don’t give the military, who are now all over London,
the smallest ground for saying you are breaking the peace and must be put down
by force”.
All public speeches of local labour leaders appealed for moderation. At the
first of the daily meetings at Sterling House at Wood Green, instructions were
given to all men to stay away from their places of work unless they were on
official picket duty. At Tottenham Green every night Robert Morrison spoke at
meetings of strikers with estimated attendances in excess of 2,000 people, reviewing
the days events in Parliament and asking for the preservation of order.
Most trouble was connected with the strike breaking buses and trams and the
majority of arrests were of busmen and tramwaymen.
Tuesday 4th: Redburn’s buses ran all day along Tottenham High Road to
the City.
In the evening demonstrations in Stoke Newington and Tottenham made the bus
company decide to withdraw the service to protect the safety of drivers and
conductors.
Wednesday 5th: A restricted service started - running from Enfield to Edmonton.
When Admiral buses reached Camden Town they were stoned, windows being broken
and one driver cutting his head. Admiral single-deck buses stopped and ordered
to unload passengers and return to depot by strikers.
Thursday: The Admiral service was withdrawn.
Friday: Admiral service running between Wood Green and Southgate only.
Friday 7th: LGOC buses and trams started to run again driven by one returning
tram driver and volunteers in their plus-fours.
Two tram workers were charged at Tottenham court under the emergency regulations
with removing switches from a junction box in the Hertford Road to stop volunteers
operating trams between Tramway Avenue and Stamford Hill. Evidence was based
on identification from a distance. The Tottenham bench rejected witness evidence
that they were at a strike meeting at the time. They were sentenced to one month’s
imprisonment with hard labour.
Tottenham magistrates were made up of conservatives active in local politics.
The chair was Sir William Prescott, the last of the Tottenham landed gentry
and former Tory MP for North Tottenham. Together they proved vindictive towards
trivial offenders. "A man who rode his bicycle slowly in front on an
omnibus in Wood Green High Road, and shouted over his shoulder to the passengers,
'You dirty lot of dogs', was sentenced by Prescott to a month’s hard
labour."
Wood Green police complained that as a result of this "there was constant
turmoil in Wood Green High Road with increased hostility directed at strike-breaking
buses".
Prison sentences were given for “committing an offence likely to cause
disaffection among the civilian population by impeding measures taken to obtain
the means of transit or locomotion”.
A man standing on the edge of the crowd at a political meeting in Wood Green
High Road had been told to “move along” by a special constable.
The reply had been “**** you, I am not going”.
Likewise another man was sentenced for ‘an offence likely to cause disaffection’.
After hearing a group of ‘young ladies’ admiring some middle class
volunteer bus drivers say, “Thank goodness we have got some Englishmen
left”, he replied, “Don’t call them ******* Englishmen.
They’re ******* monkeys.”
Meanwhile a scab bus driver was merely fined £2 for “driving
while drunk and driving in a dangerous manner in Tottenham High Road”
having zigzagged down Tottenham High Road just avoiding a collision with another
bus. Redburn’s, whose bus it was, paid the fine for him.
It was easier for alderman Bath to get volunteers to drive buses by recruiting
car drivers and so keep them running than it was for the trains. ‘Throughout
the general strike (and for a time afterwards) the local railway lines were
completely closed save for the morning of Wednesday 5 May. That morning a retired
engine driver joined ten drivers belonging to the NUR and one fireman to run
a skeleton service through Wood Green to Enfield. However, the LNER decided
to withdraw the service in the afternoon in view of the hostility of the strikers’.
News: Neither the TUC's British Worker, or the British Gazette, was on sale
in Tottenham or Wood Green though some copies were brought back from London
by individuals and circulated. The main source of news was from BBC broadcasts
which suppressed news the government did not want broadcast. Radios were sold
out from shops. Wood Green Library displayed a copy of news bulletins within
minutes of their being broadcast.
In the newspaper room of the library "people swarmed in to hear the
papers read aloud by those who reached them first". The local Weekly
Heralds were issued with two extra editions. Their own printers were out on
strike and picketed so they were produced on the press of a small local printer
whose identity was kept secret. "The type was set by another local
printer with the assistance of those members of the staff who were members of
the National Union of Journalists. The NUJ at the start of the strike told its
members to carry on working but not to do the jobs of other newspaper workers."
And after protests from journalists the NUJ agreed to allow them to do what
work they wanted so long as it didn’t threaten other journalists out on
strike.
"The local Heralds were strongly anti-strike in their editorials".
The owner was Mr Crusha. "His premises had to be continuously guarded
by the police because of fear of reprisals", and when distributed
to newsagents they had to have a police escort to ensure delivery. Edmonton
council decided not to place any adverts in his papers and opted not to cooperate
with his reporters in response to Mr Crusha’s ‘scathing denunciation
of the Edmonton Labour Councillors.
"The strike-breaking editions Crusha brought out achieved national publicity
by the references to them, and the use made of them, in BBC news bulletins."
The Tottenham Trade’s Council Strike Emergency Committee published the
daily Tottenham Strike Bulletin with an issue for each of the ten days of the
strike.
"The three directors of George Etherington and Son Limited of Seven
Sisters Road (a printing firm whose employees had gone on strike) printed and
distributed on each day of the crisis the Tottenham, Edmonton and North London
Leader. This contained four pages and was strongly pro-labour in content."
The Young Communist League produced the occasional ‘Young Striker’.
None have knowingly survived; most seem to have been seized by the police and
destroyed and editor, a Tottenham man, arrested.
Hardship among the strikers: "No striker was entitled to draw unemployment
pay from the labour exchanges, so any striker’s family in need …
had to turn to the Edmonton Union Board of Guardians whose district also include
Hornsey, Southgate, Edmonton, Enfield, Cheshunt and Waltham." In the
"Edmonton Union district the number of families in receipt of assistance
the week before the strike had been 7,400, most of them apparently living in
Tottenham and Edmonton. At the end of the first week of the strike the number
had risen by an extra 21,450 families to a total of just under 29,000. Of the
increase over 40% (8,654) were Tottenham families, and another 1,542 families
came from Wood Green.
At the start of the strike there was an emergency meeting of the board of guardians
to decide scales of relief." The board was made of nominees from the
local authorities and reflected political biases. After angry exchanges they
rejected a request from the local trades councils to be allowed to address the
board on anomalies in the way relief had been dispensed in the past. The board
then read to it a circular from the ministry of health stating that it was illegal
to give relief to strikers. Labour members argued that strikers had received
assistance in the past and it wasn’t considered illegal before. They were
over-ruled.
Families of strikers in need were allowed nothing for the husband, 6s for the
wife if the husband was in receipt of strike pay or 12s if he was not, with
5s for the first child of school age and 4s for every subsequent child. Local
committees were authorised to make a partial contribution towards a strikers
rent at their own discretion. For non-strikers workless because of the strike
there was a guaranteed rent contribution.
At the next meeting Labour members complained "many people, and not
only striker’s families, had been refused help unless they first sold
certain possessions including pianos."
During the strike the cost of food soared in Tottenham and Wood Green caused,
stated the local Heralds, by increased charges by road hauliers and profiteering
by shopkeepers.
Collapse of the strike:The Wood Green & Southgate Trades Council reported
the position on May 5th to be “one of solidarity. Entertainments committee
formed and other means adopted to get the men out of the streets.” They
reported that there was still a “position of solidarity”
on May 7th.
"Such news as came over the radio and through emergency editions of
newspapers was rightly believed to give a distorted picture of what was happening
in the rest of the country, and local people had only their own experiences
on which to base their conclusions."
The TUC were worried because the drain on union funds was making itself felt
and they were worried that the government would implement "its well-published
plans to arrest and imprison trade union and Labour Party officials on a vast
scale throughout the nation."
On Wednesday 12th May, it was announced there would be a BBC broadcast at 1.20pm.
There was great excitement amongst the strikers who believed the announcement
marked a victory for the miners. Rumours had started circulating during the
morning; large crowds gathered in Tottenham and Wood Green High Roads.
At Tottenham a crowd of strikers gathered outside the Trades Hall in Bruce Grove.
There were so many that they completely blocked the street as far as the High
Road, waiting to hear the details of the expected agreement. They too had no
doubt that they had assisted in achieving a great victory. In the words of the
Tottenham Strike Bulletin no. 10: “We did not expect victory
so soon. General jubilation was felt. Enthusiasm was rampant. In fact it would
be no exaggeration to say that hysterical delight prevailed all round.”
However, as the Tottenham Strike Bulletin recorded: “Immediately the
news became general, the employers in nearly every industry looked upon it as
proof that the TUC had surrendered unconditionally, and they immediately proceeded
to wholesale victimisation.”
The Herald noted in the afternoon, “the increased numbers
… of what might be described as the middle-class type of local resident
women-folk" and "many employers putting up notices outside
their premises announcing reductions in staff and stating that former employees
holding union office would not be taken back. As a result the strike dragged
on for another two to three days in Tottenham and Wood Green with the unions
demanding, but seldom getting, assurances of no victimisation."
"The railway, bus and tram companies all announced that they would take
the opportunity to get rid of 'dissident elements'. A number of local firms
such as Millington’s at Tottenham Hale made it a condition of employment
that their workmen should be non-unionists. Crusha, the proprietor of the local
Heralds imposed new conditions of work when his printers returned which
they found unacceptable. Consequently they walked out again to continue their
strike … But within a few days the men trickled back to work at the factories
and depots; all that is save for those who could not get taken back."
Although union membership fell nationally, Tottenham council insisted after
the strike that all its employees joined trade unions. "Locally in
Tottenham and Wood Green there was a new spirit of bitterness in local politics.
The pre-strike attitude, that the interests of the community as a whole required
a non-partisan approach to the major problems of local life disappeared, apparently
for good."– D. Avery
ENFIELD
Enfield Trades Council and Labour Party formed a Council of Action. Two committees
were set up to co-ordinate the activities of the Trade Unions and other bodies
within the area; also to keep in touch with neighbouring Trades Councils or
Councils of Action. One met at the Labour Party HQ at 66 Silver St, Enfield,
the other at Herewood House, in continuous session all day. Open air meetings
were held all over the area.
All workers were reported to be out solid.
Redburns Motor, a small private bus company, based in Enfield, was not unionized
and it continued to operate its fleet during the Strike. The routes through
Tottenham, Stoke Newington and Kingsland were subject to most hostility. Despite
police escorts being provided, Redburns was forced to suspend services for two
days. When services restarted on 6th May, the buses had to endure stones and
other items being thrown at them, which occasionally resulted in broken windows.
Wednesday 5th May: At Brimsdown Power Station, the union members walked
out.
2,000 people blocked the pathways of the Hertford Road to Tramway Avenue Depot
in Ponders End. "Four trams left the garage in a line, driven by officials
from the terminus. They stopped at the top of the avenue for one hour. The trams
were restarted and left with a police escort. There was no trouble due to the
presence of mounted police and a number of Specials."
At the Royal Small Arms Factory (RSAF), Enfield Lock, there was a walk-out at
midday by 800 men. (Not all the unions went on strike).
The AEU men from Ediswans lightbulb works and the other factories attended a
meeting in the market place, addressed by Mr J.McGrath, secretary of the Workers
Union.
The Co-operative Hall was chosen as the headquarters of the strikers.
Thursday, 6th May: Of 1,200 men, only 300 men of the RSAF’s workforce
were not on strike.
Midday saw the fitters and brassmakers of Ediswans come out. That evening street
lighting was reduced in Enfield.
The local press records a strikers meeting taking place at the corner of Nag’s
Head Road, Ponders End.
The council also resolved to entertain people during the strike, to keep them
off the streets. Local bands were to be asked to play in Pymmes Park. Football
and cricket matches and dancing were to be arranged.
Another resolution passed declared that no goods would be accepted for delivery,
where the labour involved replaced men called out.
On the Hertford Road, Enfield Highway, a strike driver of the London General
Omnibus Company, Philip H.L.Ashley, threw stones through the window of a Redburn’s
bus. He broke two of the windows.
Two trains ran between Enfield Town and Liverpool Street station, from 8am-6.45pm.
Several hundred city workers travelled to work by this route.
Saturday, May 8th: During the evening, there was an open-air meeting
of the Enfield Trades Council and the Labour Party at the Fountain, Enfield
Town.
Sunday May 9th: A notice appeared at the RSAF factory from the MP Colonel
Applin. It stated that their support of the TUC action was illegal, and they
were in danger of forfeiting their pension rights. However, if they returned
to work by Wednesday there would be no penalties or loss of rights. This resulted
in a meeting in the evening at the Assembly Hall, Ordanance Road.
Monday May 10th: There were pickets outside the RSAF factory. No member
of the Engineers Union went in – all the other unions did.
In Southgate, the local council in association with the government’s Volunteer
Service Committee began delivery of the British Gazette to local agents. This
service averaged about 6,000 copies a day.
At 5pm outside the council offices Mr S.H. Brown leaned over the fence and tore
down a government notice. He was arrested by a Special Constable, but escaped.
Brown fled but was caught down Bowes Road, with the help of another Special.
He was charged with destroying a government notice (his response was: “I
thought it was all rot.”)
He was fined forty shillings, or 28 days in prison.
Over in Enfield the Cable Works had to be closed down after the employees came
out on strike.
Shortly after midnight the Y sub-division of the Enfield Town Special Constables
received their mobilisation orders (later that day the TUC called out the ‘second
line’). On Wednesday Y sub-division published its request for men aged
between 20 and 45: “Preferably those with a knowledge of drill …
Volunteers are
especially required for transport purposes so that squads of Specials may be
conveyed quickly from point to point in lorries or motorcars.”
Thursday May 13th saw the return of Enfield Cable Works employees.
The union employees stayed out until they received orders to return.
The five men involved in the sabotage of the Tramway Avenue, Hertford Road on
May 5th were tried under the Emergency Powers Act. They were fined forty shillings
each.
In Edmonton, 22 men employed on Road Maintenance, returned to work.
In Parliament, Colonel Applin, was informed that no action would be taken against
the men employed by the RSAF, Enfield Lock (the TUC had decided to call off
the strike on the Wednesday).
Friday May 14th: A tram manned by volunteers ran in Enfield, as the
union drivers and conductors refusing to accept that the strike was over. Independent
buses ran on the Green Lanes route.
Saturday May 15th: The last 4 strikers employed by Edmonton Council,
reported for work.
WEALDSTONE
Wealdstone Joint Strike Committee, from their HQ at the local Co-operative Hall,
sent greetings on behalf of the NUR, RCA, URS, ETU, AEU, Transport Workers,
Building Labourers Federation, Printers, National Society of painters, to the
Secretary of the TUC, to congratulate them on “the able way in which
you are conducting the present situation…”
They must have been terminal optimists though, as, when the strike was called
off, they felt, despite the confusion as to what was going on, they stated that
“whatever the condition, it means that justice has triumphed.”
STOKE NEWINGTON
A mass meeting of several thousand strikers was held in the Alexandra Theatre,
Stoke Newington, on Sunday May 9th: hundreds were turned away.
BARNET
On 2 May before the strike, the Barnet & District Trades Council, based
at 5 York Terrace, Mays Lane, passed a resolution supporting the TUC calling
a general strike…
WEST
LONDON
WILLESDEN
Willesden: The Strike Committee formed a 200-strong 'Maintenance of Order Corps',
seemingly to prevent things getting out of their control. There was no fighting
here.
HAMMERSMITH
On 6th May, the TUC HQ sent a panicked letter after receiving reports of a “bad
riot at Hammersmith outside OMS HQ. it is said stones were thrown and police
used batons.” It seems “buses were stopped near the station,
and various parts removed by the strikers. When some of the buses returned at
8.30 pm some of the occupants began to jeer at the crowd some of which became
angry and boarded some buses roughly handling the drivers and conductors one
of whom was badly injured” (shame). “Local fascists began
to throw stones from a building near by. Later the police made a charge using
their batons, and arrested forty three people only one of which was a trade
unionist and he was released owing to a mistake being made.”
On May 7th, buses were wrecked, as strikers fought a pitched battle with cops
and fascists. 47 people were nicked.
A mass meeting of several thousand strikers was held in the Blue Hall, Hammersmith,
on Sunday May 9th.
FULHAM
Fulham Trades Council was said to be “functioning very satisfactorily”
on May 12th… Their premises (possibly in Dawes Road) were raided by the
police the night before, all members present at the meeting had their names
taken, none were nicked though.
A deputation of shop stewards from the Power Station (South of Townmead Road)
went to Fulham's Emergency Committee and asked to turn off the power to 54 firms
doing non-essential work: Fulham Borough Council refused; four days later the
Power Station workers came out on strike. But volunteers and naval ratings kept
the power station going. However,“Brothers Stirling and Calfe, of
the Electrical Trades Union, employed by Fulham Electricity Undertaking, have
been arrested this morning” (May 8th) so there was maybe trouble
over this.
PUTNEY
Two buses were stopped on the bridge on May 6th and sabotaged… this led
to “fights between local ruffs (?) and fascists, otherwise quiet.
No trade unionists took part in fights.” Yeah right. Fascists were
strong in the Putney area in the 1920s and ‘30s.
FELTHAM
Feltham Repair Depot: Workers here were heavily involved in the Strike (as they
had been in the shop stewards movement in the previous decade). They organised
very active pickets here, and produced a strike bulletin, the Feltham Tatler.
The Feltham National Union of Railwaymen (from their HQ at the Railway Tavern,
Bedfont Lane) reported on May 6th that the position was “simply splendid,
all members of all branches full of spirits. We have also had splendid reports
from surrounding districts.
Meetings for women and open meetings have been arranged, also concerts and games.
The response of the few 'nons' [meaning non-union members] here on Monday was
great… Nothing whatever moved from Feltham. 17 reported for duty on Tuesday
out of 650 employed. …”
EALING
An attempt to run trains out of the Ealing Common Depot was defeated when pickets
blocked the lines.
Ealing Joint Strike Committee reported in their Daily Bulletin on May 8th: “The
RCA position is very strong, all members standing 'four square'. More 'nons'
(non-union members) are joining up and all steps are being taken to get more
members out. The Strike Committee is issuing a special appeal to women in this
district, also they look to you to see that your wife and friends get on.
The NUR position is grand. All members still in fighting form. There are still
a few 'nons' but these are being got in.
The T&GWU have inquired if they shall recognize OMS permits of delivery
of coal. Instructions have been given in this matter… The report from
the Building Trades is to the effect that their members are responding splendidly
to the call…
Members are reminded of the mass demonstration to be held on Ealing Common tomorrow
8th may, at 3.00pm. A contingent will leave here at 2.30pm…
... issuing this daily report we would urge all members not be stampeded into
panic by the provocative utterances of the Home Secretary. The inference contained
in his broadcast appeal for special constables on Wednesday evening to the effect
that the Trade Union movement were violating law and order is quite unjustifiable…
The strikers are standing firm and they intend to conduct themselves in a quiet
and orderly manner.”
HANWELL
Hanwell Council of Action operated from the Viaduct Inn.
They reported the position solid on May 8th. However on 7th several lorries
of police and special constables and OMS'ers had taken 80 buses out of Hanwell
to the Chiswick garage. “Slight trouble was experienced with some
onlookers, a number of buses getting their windows smashed. Every effort was
made to prevent any violent demonstration, but the trouble was mainly caused
by outsiders.” Of course it was. It always is! Three people were
arrested over stonings, some people beaten up by police. The AEC factory (possibly
a bus works?), off Windmill Lane (north of the canal), built by London General
Omnibus, saw a big stoppage in the Strike.
PADDINGTON
The Borough Labour Party were involved in area's Central Strike Committee. The
situation was reported to be solid and quiet on May 6th.
A large demo to Wormwood Scrubs open space on May 6th was rammed en route by
a LNW railway van, which knocked down a striker and injured his legs. The van
turned out to be filled with members of the British Fascisti (hiding under a
tarpaulin) plus loads of barbed wire. Angry demonstrators kicked off, but were
brought under control by Labour stewards! (So the fash were not lynched sadly).
Goods other than food turned out to be being moved from Paddington Station,
some of it labeled food… as a result the Committee stopped all work and
doubled the pickets to block everything. Blacklegs were also moving coal and
coke from the local gas works.
Mass picketing stopped the single pirate bus company operating here by the 6th.
Huge mass meetings were held daily throughout the Borough.
On 8 May, Strikers were baton charged by cops. Then on Sunday 9th, 62 strikers
were nicked after mounted police charges.
There were still no buses running by the 10th, and all picketing was said to
be successful still. Another mass demo to the Scrubs was held on the 10th.
CHISWICK
Chiswick Trades Council formed a Council of Action. They reported on May 7th:
“Council have received very satisfactory reports from delegates from
councils, strike committees, picket captains, nearly all factories, works in
this area have closed down. The non-union men and in some shops women have supported
the unions solid. Everywhere splendid order is being maintained so far no trouble
has arisen with police etc. mass meetings are being held locally.”
However soldiers worked side by side with scab drivers to get buses out, from
May 5th.
SOUTHALL
Southall & District Council of Action operated from the Southall Labour
Hall… On 9th May they reported: “The response has been wonderful.
Morale of workers splendid. Railwaymen solid to a man. All other trades obeying
instructions of council, and everything working to plan. Crowded meetings. Mass
demonstrations. Men more determined as time goes on.”
Trams were overturned at Southall according to Syd Bidwell (later Labour MP
for Southall)
FULWELL
There was trouble in Fulwell, near Hounslow: "Lively scenes at Fulwell
Tram Depot were witnessed at the Fulwell tram depot between 7 and 8 o' clock
on Thursday (May 6th 1926) evening, when a crowd of about one thousand people
gathered, and some of the volunteer drivers, who were sent down by the Ministry
of Transport, and who took trams out, were pelted with eggs.
A number of women were among the crowd and some of these were amongst the noisiest.
On the whole, however the temper of the crowd was fairly good humoured, and
no serious disturbances occurred, but it is understood, that one arrest on a
minor charge was made."
(Surrey Comet, Saturday May 8 - Strike edition one page)
NEASDEN
Neasden Power Station was a crucial provider of power generation for the London
underground, and so the government put some effort into keeping it running.
Tube electricians were working, sleeping and eating here - facilities were provided
the power station and the electricity substations to ensure their smooth operation.
Food had been stockpiled in advance.
Because the scab volunteers were not skilled to the same level as the men that
they replaced an Ambulance Officer was arranged to be on duty at all times at
Neasden power station. Special constables were also present, and were also on
duty at each substation.
EAST LONDON
The East End was very solid throughout the General Strike. It was described
as “a great silent city, even quieter and more peaceful than on a
Sunday.” This was unsurprising, as East London was overwhelmingly
working class in character, with a long history of unionisation and radicalism.
But unions encouraged passivity, which sapped the local initiative. The British
Worker’s advice to East Londoners was Keep Calm... Keep Cool... Don’t
Congregate: most workers following this advice, it resulted in what they celebrated
as ‘An Easy Time For Police... no traffic whatever to attend to, no
crowds to move on....’ When surely they should have been stretched
from pillar to post.
HACKNEY
Hackney Council of Action was formed by the Trades Council together with local
union and Labour Party officials, in March 1926, as the period for ending the
government subsidy to the mines drew near.
When the strike was declared the Hackney Council of Action took over a local
boxing hall, the Manor Hall in Kenmure Road, as their headquarters. Throughout
the duration of the strike the Council of Action was in continuous session organising
the strike locally. Reports were arriving all the time from various parts of
the borough and the place took on the character of a nerve centre. Not everyone
was called out on strike at once and there were others. such as local tradesmen
who were exempted by the TUC. These tradesmen had to present themselves to the
Council of Action, give their reasons for wanting to carry on their business,
and if the Council were satisfied they were given a permit and a sticker to
be put on their vans. It stated “BY PERMISSION OF THE TUC"
and the strikers had great satisfaction sticking these on.
Public meetings were held all over the borough, particularly around the Mare
Street area and Kingsland Road, and in Victoria Park (though by Saturday May
8th, the military were occupying the Park, closing it off to the public).
Police Intimidation was always a problem for the strikers and it was in Kingsland
Road that this manifested itself in an untypical but frightening confrontation
on Wednesday 5th May. One eye witness recalls: "The whole area was
a seething mass of frightened but nevertheless belligerent people. The roads
and pavement were jammed, horse vans, lorries and 'black' transport were being
manhandled; police were there in force and I suppose that for a time things
could have been described as desperate. The crucial point came when a fresh
force of police arrived on the outskirts, I heard an officer call out, 'Charge
the bastards. Use everything you've got'. And they did. I saw men, women and
even youngsters knocked over and out like ninepins. Shades of Peterloo. If they
had been armed, apart from their truncheons and boots, Kingsland Rd would have
gone down in history as an even greater massacre."
The police carried out baton charges in other parts of Hackney on the same day
and the St. John's Ambulance set up a casualty station in Kingsland Rd a day
or so afterwards.
Mare Street Tram Depot, now Clapton Bus Garage: The men had all joined the strike
on the first day along with other transport workers and the depot was empty.
Even the canteen staff had gone home and all that was left was the picket line
outside. Suddenly, under military escort, along came a crowd of 'patriotic volunteers'
to start up a tram service. The picket line was not big enough to stop them
entering the depot but by the time this was done, word had reached the Council
of Action round the corner in Kenmure Road. Within minutes the area outside
was packed with strikers. Their attitude was that the 'blacklegs' may have got
in but they were not going to let them out! All day the crowd stayed outside
and not a tram moved. As evening approached, the poor unfortunates trapped in
the tram depot realised that their stomachs were complaining. None of them had
brought food in with them and the canteen staff were not working so they just
had to stay hungry. A few attempts to escape were made but were unsuccessful
and about midnight, the Manor Hall received a visit from the local police superintendent
He asked in the most polite way for the Council of Action to assist him in getting
the 'blacklegs' out. The reply was less polite. During the early hours of Thursday
morning, a few did escape from the depot but were chased all the way down Mare
Street, past Well Street to the Triangle where they were finally caught. At
this spot stood a horse trough full of water, so that it was a number of very
bedraggled and hungry 'blacklegs' who made their way home that day. No further
attempts were made to take any trams out from that particular depot!
Strikebreaking was enthusiastically encouraged by Hackney Borough Council. Right
from the start they issued a notice calling for volunteers to man essential
services. An office was opened in the public library opposite the Town Hall
where strikebreakers could sign on and this was kept open from 9 am to 8 pm.
The Council at that time was comprised of 100% Municipal Reformers (Tories and
Liberals who stood together on an anti socialist ticket). The Council met on
the Thursday and set up a special sub committee to discharge any emergency functions
that were needed. A squad of Special Constables were established for the protection
of municipal buildings, one of these was the Mayor's son who was 'just down
from Oxford' and was on duty at the Town Hall.
The Hackney Gazette, the local newspaper, did not appear in its usual
format as the printers had joined the strike. Instead the editor brought out
a single sheet; which makes interesting reading, especially the bulletin brought
out on the second Monday of the strike (10th May). With a headline MILITARY
ARRIVE AT HACKNEY, it went on to state that "Victoria Park has
been closed to the public. In the early hours of Saturday morning, residents
in the locality were disturbed by the rumble of heavy motor lorries and afterwards
found that military tents had been pitched near the bandstand . . . We understand
that detachments of the East Lancashire Fusiliers, a Guards Regiment and the
Middlesex Regiment have encamped in the park . . . another body of Regulars
is stationed in the vicinity of the Marshes at Hackney Wick."
Whether this was meant to frighten the strikers or not is not clear but it certainly
had no effect on the numbers out on strike in the borough. Despite scares and
rumours about people drifting back to work, the number of people on strike in
the second week was more than had come out at the beginning on the 3rd May.
All the large factories in the borough had pickets outside them Bergers Paint
Factory in Hackney Wick, Polikoff Ltd., (a clothing firm at Well Street) and
Zinkens Furniture manufacturers in Mare Street were three of the largest. All
the public utilities were either closed or being run rather badly by amateurs.
The Hackney Gazette once again reported that three boys of the Clove Club (the
Hackney Downs School 'Old Boys') were driving a train between Liverpool Street
and Chingford and that one of the volunteers at the Council's Dust Destructor
was a parson who was busy shovelling refuse into the hoppers. That probably
explains the Council ending their meeting on the Thursday with the Lords Prayer!
The end of the Strike came suddenly on Wednesday, 12th May, with most strikers
in a buoyant and confident mood. When the news came through to the Strike HQ,
the first reaction was one of disbelief. Notices were put up advising strikers
not to pay any attention to what they called 'BBC Bluff but when the official
notice of a return to work was given to them during the afternoon, reaction
was that the strike must have been successful. The Hackney Gazette
reported that 'It was publicly alleged that the miners were going back to
work without any reduction of wages. There were shouts of 'We've won!' and cheers,
while a section of the crowd began to sing The Red Flag".
However, as soon as the truth filtered through to them the reaction according
to one participant was "bloody murder". Julius Jacobs who
was active in Hackney during the General Strike remembers that 'The Bastards'
was the most favourable epithet applied to the General Council of the TUC. "Everybody's
face dropped a mile because they had all been so enthusiastic. It was really
working and victory seemed to be absolutely on the plate."
However, the strikers were still in a militant mood unlike their leaders. That
evening, a huge march took place. Several thousands of strikers took part in
a march from the Manor Hall in Kenmure Road down Mare Street and Well Street
to Hackney Wick and Homerton ending up in a mass meeting outside the Hackney
Electricity Works at the end of Millfields Road. A drum and fife band accompanied
the marchers and it was led by two men with a large banner. Before the arrival
of the marchers, police were rushed up to the Works in a lorry which was driven
at great speed through the crowd by one of the Special Constables and as the
gates were opened for it, a number of soldiers in field uniform and wearing
steel helmets were seen inside. The march was so long that after having a mass
meeting by the head of the marchers, the speakers had to go to the back of the
march which stretched for about a third of a mile and hold another one.
The return to work was orderly and in most cases without incident. A certain
amount of victimisation of militants took place but no more than anywhere else.
BETHNAL GREEN
Bethnal Green was a Labour-controlled borough. However the Council of Action
was said to be Communist Party-dominated. The Town Hall Labour rooms here were
used as the Strike Committee's HQ in the Strike. The Council of Action set up
a Women's Food Protection Committee to check prices of food stuffs and help
those in need. A crowded mass meeting was held in the Town Hall on the evening
of Sunday 9th - 100s couldn’t even get in.
The Council of Action received reports that the electricity supply was being
used for manufacturing, against agreements they'd reached - they threatened
to turn the supply off if this didn't stop.
On 10th May, the Committee reported: “The position in Bethnal Green
is still firm and we are making arrangements for the social side of the strike.
There have been no disturbances, and enthusiastic mass meetings have been held.
Picketing is proceeding smoothly.”
A Bethnal Green Works bulletin was circulated locally on May 10th by the Council
of Action.
SHOREDITCH
The Borough council was Labour controlled, and the Town Hall Labour rooms were
used as the Strike HQ.
The police visited the Trades Council office on the 10th, after the power in
the borough was turned off completely following disputes over what the juice
was being used for.
At some point the secretary of Shoreditch Labour Party was arrested, not sure
when or what for.
STEPNEY
The Communist Party dominated the Council of Action here...
POPLAR
A borough controlled by left wing Labour Party councillors, including left bigwig
George Lansbury. The strike committee, which met at the Town Hall, was said
to be Communist Party dominated (but there was a closer relation between Labour
and the CP here than elsewhere). The Poplar Strike Committee bulletin was known
as 'Lansbury's Bulletin'
On 4 May, strikers battled police in streets. Vehicles were set alight and thrown
in the river. There was more fighting the next day (special constables attacked
and wrecked three local pubs), and on the 6th, and 7th.
Government posters calling for volunteers were defaced en masse locally…
There was a food shortage in Poplar by May 11th - ironically convoys of lorries
were carrying it out of the nearby docks to the West End. Maybe a little less
peace and a bit of steaming in would have fed the locals.
The docks were totally solid, from the start; there was intense picketing here.
From the start submarines and lighters were moored in the Docks; apart from
having troops on hand, the subs supplied electricity for refrigeration of food
stored there. There seems to have been an organized attempt to try to shut this
supply to the big refining plant, where carcasses were stored, by the strikers,
but it must have failed. The Docks remained inactive till May 8th, when the
stranglehold was broken by troops protecting scabs, who unloaded food into convoys
which was then driven to the West End.
On several days especially 4 May, crowds of strikers blocked the Blackwall Tunnel:
cars were stopped, smashed and burned. The police baton charged crowds here
on May 4 and beat up strikers, casualties were taken to Poplar Hospital.
By the 11th, the Poplar Strike Committee was starting to get a bit narked with
the TUC General Council: “There has been a noticeable increase in
road traffic, much of this is not connected to transport or food... Govt propaganda
has been increased in the last few hours through posters and other subversive
methods... Intensified efforts have been made to get essential port servants
to work under police protection.
The above factors are tending to make the rank and file affected by the strike
question the correctness of the TUC publications. Local efforts to dispel these
doubts are limited.
This Council therefore respectfully submits that the time has arrived when a
general tightening of the Strike machinery should be put into effect by calling
out all workers, essential or otherwise.”
On May 12th, the workers here remained solid. Later in the day 500 dockers meeting
outside Poplar Town Hall were attacked by cops who drove through crowds in a
van, then jumped out batoning people. Later the cops raided the NUR HQ in Poplar
High St, beating up everyone found inside, including the Mayor of Poplar, who
was there playing billiards (although hilariously, the British Worker
changed this fact in their report to say that he had been “in a meeting
of his committee”!
BOW AND BROMLEY
The Bow & Bromley Strike Bulletin (issued on May 6th) indicates
the attitude of left labour leaders: George Lansbury wrote: “Don't
quarrel with the police. We can and will win without disorder of any kind. Policemen
are of our flesh and bone of our bones, and we will co-operate with them to
keep the peace.”
Could this have had an effect on the lack of attempts to prevent the convoys
of food leaving the East End docks nearby? Only mass resistance to this, probably
violent, could have stopped them, and this would have had a significant effect
on the course of the Strike in London, which only had 48 hours worth of flour
and bread at the time.
The Bow District Railways and Transport Strike Committee reported on May 6th:
“All railwaymen of Bow solid as a rock. This committee is sitting
at 141 Bow road in conjunction with the Transport workers. We are in continual
session, day and night….”
EAST HAM
5th May: “The combined meeting of workers of East Ham stands solid.”
However naval ratings were running the East Ham Power Station.
WEST HAM
The West Ham Trades Council and Borough Labour Party formed a strike committee
at their office at 11 Pretoria Road, Canning Town; a Council of Action later
ran from the ILP Hut, Cumberland Road, Plaistow. The Committee was said to be
Communist Party dominated.
They reported much confusion on May 4th among municipal employees (eg dustmen),
and gas and electricity workers, as to whether they should strike or not; all
thanks to the General Council's ludicrous battle plan.
In Canning Town, on May 4th, there was fighting between strikers and police,
after crowds stopped cars and smashed their engines.
At Canning Town Bridge, on May 5th, strikers pulled drivers off trams, leading
to a pitched battle with the cops. 2-300 strikers fought police at the corner
of Barking Road and Liverpool Road, after coppers baton charged a crowd.
The position on 10th May was reckoned “stronger than ever.”
Local Port of London clerks were being targetted by the Government to get them
to return to work in the Docks, under police protection.
A mass meeting of several thousand strikers was held in the Canning Town Public
Hall, on Sunday May 9th.
ILFORD
Ilford was more residential than industrial.
Ilford Trades Council formed a Joint Strike Committee, based at the local Labour
Hall, Ilford Hill. Local unions had their own strike committees, as elsewhere,
the Ilford Committee left it to them to sort out picketing. They also 'took
charge' (which seems to have meant co-opting them into committees) of some local
members of unions whose bureaucracy refused to issue any advice or guidelines
as to what to do (eg the AEU)
A local Strike Bulletin was issued by people not connected to the trade unions.
The Strike was said to be “All Solid” on May 5th here;
it was reported still solid by May 10th, with no trams or buses at all running,
and one or two odd trains per day. “Everything quiet and orderly,
and there has not been the slightest disturbance”
LEYTON
Leyton Trades Council set up a General Strike Committee, at their offices at
Grove House, 452, High Rd, Leyton.
The Trades Council reported “a very pleasant relationship with the
police”. Get a room, really.
WALTHAMSTOW
Walthamstow Trades Council set up an Emergency Committee, at their office/meeting
hall, at 342 Hoe St, E17. On May 6th they reported:
“The position here is as solid as a rock, have had difficulty in keeping
men at work on essential Health services. Non-unionists are flocking to our
side every hour… The electricity works running under our jurisdiction,
great number of factories have had juice for power purposes cut off… In
the main all are remaining calm and violence is exceptionally noticeable for
its absence, we are using every endeavour to maintain peace…”
Possibly a bit optimistic though, this last, since Walthamstow saw lively scenes
at some point, with Winston Churchill's coach reportedly being overturned on
Walthamstow High Street.
On 10th “all men not essential are out with the strikers.”
But the fact that many men were not getting their strike pay was causing “grave
unrest” by the 11th.
Mass meetings were held at William Morris Hall, Somers Road, and outside St
Johns Church, Brookscroft Road
The May 12th Walthamstow Official Strike Bulletin reported
“Messrs Baird & Tatlocks had their 'juice' cut off, as their output
does not come within the description of essential services… It was reported
that local cinemas were again using the screen for the spreading of strike 'news'
(I guess this means anti-strike news. typist). An undertaking has now been given
that the Gazette will be cut off entirely if it contains strike items. Careful
watch is being kept, and if any attempt is made to get behind the agreement,
the 'juice' will again be cut off.
STOP PRESS NEWS. THERE IS NO TRUTH IN THE RUMOUR THAT THE STRIKE IS OVER.”
But it was.
DAGENHAM
Local union and Labour party branches, some unemployed, and mens and women's
co-operative guilds, set up a Council of Action on May 3rd (there had been no
Trades Council here previously). It was based, or at least the secretary was
based, at 6 Arnold Road), and went into continuous session during the strike.
The CoA set its functions out as: to maintain order and discipline among the
local workers, to watch local Trade movements to maintain contact by means of
our established cycle and motor cycle with the neighbouring Barking Labour Party,
and to establish a local distress fund…
On May 8th they reported to the TUC: “All solid. Local non-union firms
all out and all joining unions… No distribution, everybody orderly. Meetings
held on (?Lution) Institute grounds every evening… Vigorous boycott of
all trades increasing…” The meeting also demanded the calling
out of all union workers, in defiance it would seem of the GC line...
Many employees of non-unionised firms came out here: 500 new recruits joined
unions in the first week of the strike. Local traders who increased prices were
boycotted by workers.
BARKING
A letter (dating from probably 8th May) from Barking Labour Party/Trades Council,
with the NUR and other organisations attached (based it seems at Railway Hotel,
Barking) to the TUC General Council, reported that the strike there was “as
solid as ever. Space being greatly indulged in and the most uniformed order
is established. Public sympathy is with the strikers, well organized meetings,
full houses, excellent speaking… the workers will fight to the end...
Barking Labour Party are supervising the distribution of meals etc, and [forcing?]
the local authorities to the utmost and are also organizing pastimes and meetings
of every description...
No notice is being taken of any notices issued other than the TUC GC.
… The railways refused to accept pay as it is being ‘made up’
by blacklegs.
March with bands being organized for Sunday. Services at the church.”
On 10th May they reported to the GC that a local “unofficial strike
committee now disbanded.” It is unclear what this was - a rival strike
committee?It could be sign that there was dissent, or Trades Council repression
of some form of self-organisation... But this is speculation.
On 11th the Barking Central Strike Committee wrote that the “situation
is exceptionally splendid, all trades answered the call 100%.
The general workers not yet called out, are eagerly awaiting the call. Industrial
side thoroughly organized, all is peaceful. Social committee set up…”
Barking Trades Council reported to the TUC that “the only difficulty
being experienced in that district is all the efforts of the Strike Committee
are required to keep the electrical workers at their duties until the General
Council informs them that they may join the strike.”
SOUTH LONDON
DEPTFORD/NEW CROSS
No 435 New Cross Road (the Labour Party rooms) was the Deptford & Greenwich
Strike Committee HQ. The Deptford official Strike Bulletin was published from
here; the Council of Action sat in continuous session.
They reported to the TUC that: “May 4th: “All tram and busmen
are solid.
Stones Engineering Works - all out.
Francis Tinworks - all out.
All dockworkers are out solid.
Grahams Engineering Works (non-federated) - all out.
There are a few firms who have not come out but we are concentrating on them
immediately.
We are arranging mass meeting in this district.
Pickets have been posted at all these works.”
May 5th: “The latest position is as follows:
Braby's Galvanised Iron Works - all out.
Scotts's Tin Works - all out.
Royal Victoria Yard (government victualling yard) - all out for the first time
in history.
Elliots Engineering Works - all out.
Port of London Clerks have been reported out but I have not been able to get
this confirmed up to now…”
On 7 May, the old bottle factory, Deptford Church Street, was the scene of heavy
picketing; pickets fought with the cops. Deptford power station was run throughout
the Strike with help from the armed forces. Along with workers who continued
at work, they stayed on site all the time. Apart from this every works in Deptford
was out in the Strike.
On 8 May, Strikers battled the old bill in Deptford Broadway, which was 'rendered
impassable by a dense crowd' according to the Kentish Mercury.
New Cross: During the strike most local works were solid on
strike, but the importation of middle class strikebreakers led to clashes at
the tram depot (now the bus garage) Volunteers including British Fascisti attempted
to take out trams from the tram depot on May 7th… it was blocked off by
pickets who had jammed tramlines with metal rods forced into tracks. 1000s blocked
the road, leading to hard fighting with the police. A full blown riot followed.
On 9 May, fighting erupted between police NS strikers leaving a mass strike
meeting at the New Cross Empire, (on the corner of Watson Street and New Cross
Road) That night armoured vehicles drove around New Cross. Several mass meetings
of strikers were held at the New Cross Empire music hall.
LEWISHAM
Mass open air meetings were held here in the Strike. But many middle class strikebreakers
were recruited from the better off parts of the Borough. Confusion was rife
here as to who was to strike and when: at a government factory here, workers
struck and went back 3 times in 9 days, although more research is needed to
find out if they were ordered back by the Trades Council.
The Chairman of the Board of guardians was said to have told men applying for
relief to sign on as Special Constables to help break the strike.
On Downham Estate, Downham, building workers on the new estate being constructed
struck on first day of General Strike but were ordered back to work by the TUC.
On Thursday 13th, some busmen went back to work when the Strike was called off,
but there was total confusion… strikers and scabs working side by side,
which led to anger of busmen, who marched on the bus garage to sort out terms.
Their way was blocked by cops, a tram came along, they broke the police line
and fought a great running battle in the streets. Some local strikers allegedly
thought that the real fight might start now, with the TUC out of the way.
GREENWICH
There was a big battle in Blackwall Lane after strikers marched on the Medway
Oil and Storage Company where 200,000 gallons of petrol and kerosene were stored.
They stoned the twenty-five policemen sent out to dispose them, were baton charged
and fought back for twenty minutes. Two men were nicked, and given five months
with hard labour. The newspaper report says that they planned to fire the fuel,
this seems unlikely, but you never know.
At 'Charlton Pier', during the General Strike there was at least one day of
fighting here, as a strike-breaking convoy and police were attacked by strikers.
I’m not sure if this is the same incident as a report of a crowd of women
in Charlton pelting supply transports with rotten vegetables, and a crowd of
blokes trying to set fire to oil storage tanks, but being driven off.
Two men in Charlton were given a six months prison sentence for trying to stop
a bus in Charlton.
WOOLWICH
Woolwich Trades Council met at the Labour Institute, Beresford Street. There
was a very long and strong left working class tradition locally, especially
in Woolwich Arsenal and the Dockyard.
On 5th May, pretty much everyone was out on strike: both the Dockyard and the
Arsenal were described as “like an industrial mausoleum. No sound
of a hammer breaks the stillness... not a wheel is turning.”
But on the 7th, Workers Union members were scabbing at the Silver’s Rubber
manufacturers, making tennis balls. This works was supplied with ”Black
Juice” (electricity produced by scab labour). The local Workers Union
official had told the men to stay at work.
All ETU men were out.
Workers at Woolwich Arsenal were all out, bar foremen, but their week’s
pay in hand from the week before was being withheld by bosses… They were
told that if they got their money they would be let go. Huge mass meetings were
being held. Feeling locally was so strong, the Woolwich librarian was attacked
after he gave two special constables a lift in his car.
On 10 May it was reported that “Everything is going strong in Woolwich.
In spite of the pin-pricking policy of the Arsenal authorities the men are remaining
firm… No trams buses or trains are running… 750 men and women have
joined the TGWU since last Thursday from the united Glass Bottle Works Charlton.”
Woolwich T&GWU reported on May 10th: “At a mass meeting comprised
of members of the above unions [TGWU, NUR, RCA,], a resolution was put and unanimously
carried that - Owing to the most unwarrantable attacks made upon our members
in various parts of the surrounding districts by police, based upon authoritative
facts, which has resulted in injuries and arrests. These attacks have happened
without provocation….”
“Workers at one big glass works” according to the British
Worker, “gave a percentage of their last week’s wages towards
the strike funds 410 joined the union... and threw in their lot with the strike...”
Confusion over the GC’s instructions caused endless problems day to day
here - at the big Siemens works, electricians came out, but other workers didn’t.
Eventually power shortage closed the factory down anyway. At Johnson & Philips,
the convenor called the workers out three times, then they were ordered back
three times. There were heavy battles outside this factory between pickets and
scabs - the scabs lost apparently!
In the Woolwich Arsenal, and Dockyard there were a number of demotions and sackings
after the General Strike. A dispute over demotions of strikers on the Woolwich
Ferry (shut throughout the strike) lasted several days after the official end
of the Strike.
In Plumstead, on Monday 10th, strikers were attacked by cops all over the area;
they raided two strikers’ houses, batoning the occupants.
In Eltham (then part of the Borough of Woolwich), the Council of Action reported
on May 10th: “satisfaction in this district. With the exception of
Kidbrooke RAF Depot, excellent. Everything is running well. We are gradually
getting our organization on good working order.
Kidbrooke: Picket has included about 60 women. Great effect. Air force officers
up at 6am getting blacks (scabs) in by lorry. Several ceased work.
Women organising and forming a section of this council.
Propaganda: British Worker selling like hot cakes. Chalking squads, meetings,
lectures, and concerts being arranged.”
Woolwich as a borough is interesting, as it had been Labour-controlled since
1919; but the Labour mayor saw the strike as a threat to public order, and feared
the subversive potential of the Communist Party (some hope -ed!) So the Council
organised concerts, plays and other events with the deliberate aim of keeping
people occupied and away from confrontation. How much this desire to prevent
trouble led to the huge effort in other areas to put on social events, can be
deduced from this explicit example.
Woolwich always had a large barracks for troops - during the strike they were
confined to barracks, apparently there was a fear that they might strike too...
WANDSWORTH
In Wandsworth, trades council secretary Archie Latta called together a Council
of Action for Friday, April 30. 48,000 copies of The Wandsworth Strike Bulletin
were distributed by the end of the strike. Wandsworth had a corps of motor and
pedal cycle dispatch riders operating for the Council of Action, and the trades
council report - confirmed by Plebs' League survey of responses to the strike
call ~ says the Borough was '100 per cent' solid during the strike. The Trades
Council also encouraged a rent strike.
St Faith's Mission Hall in 'Warple Way', was a centre for organising picketing
(This may have been near the old Warple Rd, which was where Swandon Way is now,
next to the old Gas works).
Wandsworth was one of the solidest strike areas in all of London.
There was trouble every day of the strike. Crowds were attacked by cops &
special constables every day at buildings where specials signed on for duty.
On May 7th a crowd demolished a wall for missiles; the next day a picket line
was baton charged.
BATTERSEA
On Monday, May 3, the day the strike was announced, Battersea Trades Council
formed its Council of Action, after local trades unionists returned to Battersea
from the Mayday march to Hyde Park. Local Communist-Labour MP Saklatvala had
called on the troops camped out in the park to join with the workers - he was
to be jailed days later for sedition. The CP dominated the Council of Action
here.
Crowds of marching pickets set off on the first day of the strike to Morgan's,
then Carson's paint factory, ending up after a tour through the borough at Nine
Elms. The Council of Action later endorsed the marching picket. Unsuccessful
attempts by strike-breaking 'volunteers to start a tram service led to clashes
between newly recruited police specials and pickets on Friday, May 7, at the
Clapham tram depot. And on Saturday, May 8, the left wing Councillor Andrews,
a member of the Council of Action, was arrested after addressing a meeting at
the Prince's Head, Falcon Road. When the Council of Action tried to organise
a meeting there the following day, the police banned it.
On May 8th cops baton charged strikers in Battersea. Crowds were involved in
street actions every day of the Strike.
A message sent early on Sunday to the Council of Action from F. Reeves, secretary
of the Nine Elms joint workers' committee based at the Clapham Trades Union
and Social Club, 374 Wandsworth Road (the building still stands), referred to
Friday's clash with the specials: “My committee last night strongly complained
of undue batoning by irresponsible youths called specials, and in view of the
seriousness of the position requests me to urge you to take immediate steps
to set up a Workers Defence Corps.”
A 'Special Picket Corps' was set up, its duties included strengthening any ineffective
pickets, providing bona fides for those engaged on officially endorsed work,
preventing attempts to create disturbances, and stewarding meetings. That evening
Battersea town hall was packed to hear South Wales miners' leader Noah Ablett.
He was afterwards arrested for saying he was happy repeat Saklatvala's remarks
about the army.
The Council of Action also co-ordinated the work of the trade unions in the
district, provided rooms and halls where members of the various unions could
sign on and receive strike pay, also where members from other districts could
sign. They formed a picket committee who organised pickets and supplied them
badges. They ran meetings every day in the Town Hall (Grand Hall) and gave concerts
to the strikers and their wives and children free. These were arranged by the
social committee (St John's Hall, York Rd, - was taken over as a social and
organising centre for local strikers and their families.).Their propaganda committee
published a bulletin of information (2,500 copies a day) as to the progress
of the strike in other districts, and was responsible for supplying the British
Worker. They had other committees who advised men and women as to the best method
of obtaining relief, to collect reports from other districts and the TUC.
Trouble was reported in Falcon Lane Goods Yard on May 11th when pickets were
chased by police specials. That day, the Council of Action wrote to transport
workers in Unity Hall on Falcon Grove, asking pickets to report to St Faith's
Mission Hall, Warple Way, Wandsworth, to be deployed nearby. A surviving memo
to Wandsworth reads: "We have been informed that the British Petrol
Co. Wandsworth are working in full swing. Also at Messrs. Bagg, Ryecroft Road,
Streatham, all trades are at work. Will you kindly have the matter investigated
so that necessary action can be taken."
Pickets were out in force at Garton's Saccharum Works, where the owners had
threatened to sack anyone who did not turn up for work by midday on Wednesday.
No-one turned up by midday!
Near the end of the strike, probably on Tuesday, May 11, special constables
battered trade unionists in strike committee rooms at Nine Elms' - most likely
these were in a building which still stands, close to Nine Elms cold store,
near to Vauxhall railway station.
Nine Elms Goods Yard had a very militant workforce: there had been many mass
meetings held in a dispute shortly before the General Strike.
On May 9th cops attacked strikers in Battersea. There was more trouble on May
12 after news of the end of the strike.
At Price's Candle Factory, York Road, possibly the largest employer in the area
for many years, all workers were out.
The news of the strike's ending reached Battersea 'like a thunderclap'. (According
to CP member and later pioneering trotskyist Harry Wicks) Council of Action
chair Jack Clancy had reported to the TUC 'all factories of note idle' and 'the
general spirit prevailing is magnificent', the Council of Action dispatched
him to TUC headquarters in Ecclestone Square to check on the rumours. Addressing
a packed town hall with the grim truth, Clancy was confronted with angry booing
and jeering. Wicks says Clancy was 'shattered' by the incident. The Communist
Party members handed out leaflets encouraging a continuation of the Strike -
Alf Loughton, later a trades council delegate and later still a mayor of Wandsworth
was arrested while carrying such leaflets - but Wicks believes the Communist
Party attempt to steer the strike came too late and after too much muddled analysis
in the run-up to the conflict. In any case with the exception of the railworkers,
who stayed out because of attempt at massive victimisation by the employers,
there was a relatively orderly return to work. The Council of Action continued
in form for a period, but unlike other boroughs, it could not simply return
to being a trades council, because it was composed of two halves, one acceptable
to the Labour Party and TUC, the other not.
LAMBETH
Lambeth Trades Council, based at New Morris Hall, 79 Bedford Road, SW4, turned
itself into a Council of Action. It organised different committees - the Communication
Committee had 300 vehicles for organising, carrying messages etc, They produced
the 'Lambeth Worker' strike bulletin, which was raided by the cops.
There was fighting in the street in Lambeth on 8th May.
In Vauxhall people built barricades on the south side of the Bridge… police
fought strikers in the streets, chasing them through back streets near the Embankment,
where women rained down bottles on the cops’ heads! Groups of strikers
gathered outside pubs. Author Graham Greene, then a student, was a special on
Vauxhall Bridge: later in life he thought better of it, and said he should have
been on the other side.
Kennington Park was used as a rallying point for strikers.
The Trades Council held a “very successful demo” on May
9th in Brixton’s Brockwell Park, 20,000 attended. They were planning another
for the following Sunday, and wrote to the TUC General Council asking what speaker
could they send down! (the GC had other ideas of course).
Brixton was said to be very quiet during the Strike. There was a recruiting
centre for special constables here, many were sent to other areas where there
was more trouble, eg Camberwell. Brixton and Streatham were said by the South
London press to have a full bus service running by Tuesday 11th. Lambeth Council
of Action were a bit belatedly organising a Joint Transport Committee meeting
on the 11th to try and put a stop to this. In
Brockwell Park strikers played several games of cricket - though not with the
police! No fucking Plymouth-style football-with-the-enemy here.
There was fighting in Clapham High Street on the evening of Friday 7th, when
a number of lorries occupied by strikers and sympathisers tried to block traffic.
Foot and mounted police charged and cleared the street.
BERMONDSEY
Bermondsey Borough Council was left Labour-controlled. It passed a resolution
in support of the Bethnal Green Trades Council motion attacking the Government
for cutting off negotiations with the TUC on May 2nd.
There was a riot in Tower Bridge Road, not sure on what day: 89 people were
hurt in police baton charges. There seems to have been fighting here several
times.
A bonfire of copies of the government's anti-strike newspaper, the British Gazette,
was reported in Rotherhithe on May 6th.
A mass meeting of several thousand strikers was held in Rotherhithe Town Hall,
on Sunday May 9th.
CAMBERWELL
Camberwell was a large borough, including Peckham. Camberwell Borough Council
fully supported the Government against the strikers, it was cooperative with
the Emergency Powers Act and its functionaries, and it appointed the Treasurer
and Town Clerk as the officers in charge of food and fuel.
Camberwell Trades Council organized the Strike locally. A letter to the TUC
from G.W.Silverside, General Secretary of the Dulwich Divisional Labour Party
in which he explains that at a meeting on May 3rd it was decided to collect
money and distribute literature. Also “the question of the possibility
of duplication arose” and Mr. Silverside explained that he had been
in touch with the “Secretary of the Camberwell Trades Council who
informs me that there are three duplicators available and that they are prepared
to duplicate anything that may be necessary.”
According to a post-Strike Report by the Trades Council:
“only a fortnight before the strike, [we] obtained a roneo duplicator
and a typewriter. When the possibility of a strike loomed up we made three tentative
preparations for this eventuality, viz:
(a) We enquired for an office, which we might take for a month as a minimum.
(b) (b) We obtained a lien on a hall where we might have a large meeting and
would run no danger of the hall being cancelled by opponents.
(c) We made arrangements for a Committee meeting to be called the day after
the general Strike began, if it did so begin. On May Day we thought the importance
of demonstrating was sufficient to warrant us paying for a band, banner bearers
etc, and for us to give a lead in having a good turn out. This we had organized
and we secured a fine response from Camberwell workers. Whilst on route to Hyde
Park came the news of the General Strike declaration - truly a fitting send
off, thus demonstrating to the rich loafers in the West End out power and solidarity.”
The Strike Committee organised effective picketing of workplaces. Tramwaymen
and busmen, who made up 3000 of the 8000 workers affiliated to the trades Council,
were solid, as were roadmen of the Borough Council also came out, (bar one depot
where men were reported working.) Reports which came to the Strike office as
to the need for pickets were transmitted to the Strike Committee concerned at
once by an organised messenger network.
The Trades Council concluded that: “we were not ready. We quickly improvised
machinery... Everything had to be found on the spur of the moment, and we rose
to the occasion fairly well I our own estimation., considering the difficulties
of lack of our own premises, voluntary workers, and having to set up, equip
and run an office after the Strike had commenced.”
In the Borough of Camberwell as it was then, two strike bulletins were produced,
the Camberwell Strike Bulletin and the Peckham Labour Bulletin
- both from Central Buildings, High Street, Peckham.The South London Observer
of Saturday May 15th reports that a man was convicted of selling the Peckham
Labour Bulletin. The paragraph headed “French workers refuse
to blackleg” was thought by the court to be provocative. Police Inspector
Hider in his evidence stated that it would cause “a certain feeling among
certain people”. Inspector Hider also saw copies of the Camberwell
Strike Bulletin also produced at Central Buildings on a duplicator by Eddy
Jope, who denied any connection with the Peckham Labour Bulletin.
Trams were not running, till the local electricity generating station was reopened
by naval ratings.
On May 5th, commercial vehicles were stopped & trashed here by strikers.
The trams were in the main kept off the roads. Altogether there were 12 attempts
by OMS (government organised volunteers, mostly middle class) recruits supported
by police and special constables to run trams from Camberwell Depot to New Scotland
Yard - resulting in crowds of pickets and supporters attacking scab trams, smashing
their windows and pushing them back inside, preventing them from running.
The British Worker, a daily paper put out during the Strike by the TUC, reported:
“BANNED TRAMS SCENE: An unsuccessful attempt was made shortly after
four o’clock on Wednesday afternoon to run LCC tramcars from the Camberwell
depot.
Earlier in the day two lorries with higher officials of the tramways Department
and OMS recruits arrived at the Depot, where a strong force of police had been
posted.
A large crowd, including tramwaymen, their wives and sympathisers, collected,
and when the first car came out of the Depot gates in Camberwell Green there
was a hostile demonstration.
Some arrests were made. Following this incident the cars were driven back in
to the Depot to the accompaniment of loud cheers.” (British Worker,
5th May 1926.)
Newspaper reports that “Women pickets stopped them by putting kids
in front of the vehicles” seem to be rightwing propaganda spread
at the time (by the South London Press, which was resolutely opposed
to the Strike) - there is no evidence for it!
Buses were also stoned in Camberwell on Saturday night (8th May). There were
huge public meetings at Camberwell Green, as well as at Peckham Rye and at the
triangle near the Eaton Arms, Peckham. An eye-witness account describes the
police activity during a public meeting at Camberwell Green as terrifying. He
was ten years old at the time. He had been taken by his father and was standing
on the edge of the meeting only to see waves of police with drawn truncheons
marching on the people, who broke and ran after repeated baton charges.
Camberwell Borough Guardians took a hard line during and after Strike - issued
‘Not Genuinely Seeking Work’ forms to stop strikers getting any
relief.
Many scab 'volunteers' working to defeat the strike were posh students, including
a large no. from ultra-posh Dulwich College.
Mass meetings of strikers held on Peckham Rye, and at Peckham Winter Gardens,
where a mass open air meeting of several thousand strikers, families and supporters
occurred at a social gathering held by Peckham Labour Party on the evening of
Sunday May 9th.
Tillings Bus Co., Peckham was a big employer in the area: 1200 people worked
here on the private buses. Large numbers of police specials were stationed to
ensure these buses were never stopped from running. Many Tillings workers were
out in Strike: after the end of the strike, Tillings took advantage of the defeat
to shut out unions, issuing a notice at the depot: “Men should realize
that there is no agreement in existence, the union having broken this. They
should also understand plainly that we do not propose to make further agreement
with the existing union, as this is the third occasion on which they have broken
thee agreement. Every man should fully understand these conditions before restarting.”
After the TUC sellout, there was confusion in the area. Crowds of workers gathered
at the Tram Depot, not knowing what to do. many wanted to continue the Strike
and the TUC General Council were widely denounced. Each worker had to sign a
form on future conditions of service, hours and wages. Some never got their
jobs back at all.
At the end of the Strike Camberwell Trades Council sent £10 to the Miners
from the funds collected during the Strike, continued that support as the miners
fought on alone after the TUC sellout.
The Communist Party, strong locally, produced a daily bulletin, the Camberwell
Worker, for the first week at least.
SOUTHWARK
124 Walworth Road, the local Labour Party HQ, was the local General Strike centre.
Many workers were out on strike here, the area had a long radical workers tradition.
There were fierce battles with the police in the streets of Southwark all through
the nine days of the Strike.
“The young people would wait on the roofs of the tenements along New
Kent Rd in an opportunity to rain stones and bottles on the heads of the specials
and strikebreakers in their protected vehicles below. The police would respond
with waves of violence: there were ugly scenes day esp. around Bricklayers Arms
where dockers and railwaymen gathered. A bus was stopped, emptied of passengers,
turned over and burned in the face of the police and the specials. There were
barriers everywhere and the Trades Council had control over vehicles passing
through Southwark.. The atmosphere was magnetic, men and women and children
determined to stand united. It was a family affair.”
Also in the Old Kent Road: according to anarcho-syndicalist Wilf McCartney,
during the Strike the ‘Imperial Fascisti’, an early British Fascist
group, organised a strikebreaking force, which despite regular army protection
was routed here by dockers with hammers and catering workers (of whom McCartney,
a longtime cook and organiser in the catering trade, was presumably one!) with
carving knives! the fascist scabs took to their heels and legged it on spotting
this ‘strikeforce’! (Apparently even the squaddies were pissing
thmselves!)
The Bricklayers Arms railway depot was a centre of organising, solidly picketed
throughout.
In St George's Road, on May 5th, a No.12 Tillings strike breaking omnibus to
Peckham was seized, burnt out and towed away.
Crowds battled the police daily at the Elephant & Castle; a scab-driven
bus crashed here on 6th May, killing a man. There were also battles at Heygate
Street, New Kent Road, Walworth Road, (where crowds blocked trams with railings
on the lines: bricks and bottles were chucked at police when they cleared the
lines), and Old Kent Road, where near the Dun Cow pub, a tram was overturned
by crowds… passengers were pulled off and scab drivers assaulted.
But these street gatherings at Walworth Road, Heygate St,and Elephant &
Castle, to prevent scab vehicle movements, also served as a place to swap general
chat and exchange info, organise, sometimes even becoming something like a street
carnival.
There was also occasional sabotage of scab vans and buses.
Tommy Strudwick, NUR member of Council of Action was arrested for 'spreading
disaffection' with hidden duplicator in his Swan Street room which produced
strike bulletins.
Hays Wharf, a local dock, was solid against scabbing in the General Strike,
but posh students unloaded here.
At Barclay & Perkins Brewery, Bankside, only two workers were on strike
(according to the lying rightwing toe rag South London Press); others were enrolled
as special constables!
There was mass picketing in Tooley Street every day, and this led to fighting
on Thursday 6th May: 32 people were arrested after a baton charge.
R. Hoe and Company Ltd, a printing press manufacturers in Borough Road, employed
900 men, and the printing engineering workers were amongst the best organised
and the most militant in South London.
Solidly out in the 1922 engineers lockout; from then until the General Strike
men here were said to be in “open revolt”. In 1925 AEU members here
began an overtime ban in a campaign for higher wages. In early January 1926
some were sacked and replaced by non-union labour. As a result both shifts started
a stay-in-strike. Hoe's then locked out all 900 workers, who began an 'unofficial'
10 week strike to protest the hiring of non-union workers, and to demand a £1
per week pay increase.. Hoe's went to the Employers Federation, who threatened
a national lockout in the engineering involving 500,000 men, unless the Hoe's
men went back to work. (South London Press, March 26 1926) And the
workers marched to the Memorial Hall in Farringdon Street to protest against
the threatened lockout. But the AEU ordered a return to work, saying the men
had been morally right but technically wrong. Bah!
During the General Strike Hoe’s workers struck straight away, though not
called out by the AEU, and were militant in their picketing of the firm. Stan
Hutchins reports: “At Hoe's twenty apprentices having remained at
work had the Southwark Council of Action organise a special meeting during a
dinner hour. which successfully appealed to them and to which also hesitant
lads from Waygood Otis had been invited to attend, achieving a 100 per cent
turnout.”
After the end of the General Strike, Hoe's workers were forced to re-apply individually
for their jobs. The firm considered they had sacked themselves.
At the Queens Head Pub, Southwark, two lorries full of cops ordered drinkers
out of the pub and beat them up, when strikers ran in here after roughing up
a special at Power Station…
More detailed accounts of the Strike in Southwark, Camberwell and Bermondsey
can be read in Nine Days In May.
CROYDON
According to the British Worker, in Croydon, “Ruskin House, the local
Labour Party’s headquarters, is the scene of great activity. Trade unions
are regularly reporting there, and everybody is in fine fettle.” The Strike
Committee set up a Workers Defence Corps; otherwise the main local activity
seems t have been organising “concerts of the highest quality... a cricket
team... acrobatic performances...”
A local bulletin, the Croydon Worker, was produced. The Trades Council
organised a procession on Sunday May 9th, from Ruskin House to Duppas Hill.
WIMBLEDON
Wimbledon was a largely middle class area, the strike didn't bite as much here
as elsewhere in South London. However, strikers that were out remained solid.
The local Labour Party did get involved, organising out of the Labour Hall,
at 105 Merton Road.
Women carriage cleaners at Wimbledon Park railway depot were all out.
Lots of support work and fundraising was done for the locked out miners, after
the end of the General Strike.
MITCHAM
Mitcham Council of Action reported to the TUC: “The situation here
is quiet and orderly… Branches affected by the dispute and the men are
solid. The unions affected here are as follows: T&GWU: busworkers, and general
transport; Altogether Builders, Labourers, and Constructional Workers Society,
General Workers Union.
Messrs Pascalla, chocolate workers are picketed for transport purposes and no
goods are entering or leaving their premises.
The Council of Action are holding meetings all over the district..
Police are sympathetic. The sergeant gave us a shilling for a single copy of
the British Worker.” (!!!) “We are very pleased with the
situation generally especially when we remember the crusty old tories who reside
in this district. They are forgetting their Toryism however.”
KINGSTON
Kingston & District Trades Council issued a “Victory Bulletin”
during the Strike from The Hut, Dawson Road. On Sunday 9th a demo was held in
Kingston described as “the finest that has ever been held” there.
It marched from Fairfield to the Market Place. Mr Penny, local MP, enrolled
as a Special Constable.
According to May 11th Bulletin the following workers were out:
AEU metal workers all ceased work at KLG (?).
All transport workers were out solid.
ASIE & F (any idea what this is?): all solid.
RCA, Plasterers, Municipal & General Workers, UPM (?), Sheet metal workers,
CPA, ASWM, all out.
ETU: all out but scabs working Municipal undertaking.
NUR: one signalman had gone back at Surbiton.
Malden branch solid, bar one porter who went back.
All men and women from Kollys Directories and Knapp Drewett & Sons (printers)
out.
PENGE
A Penge & Beckenham Joint Strike Committee ran from the Trades & Labour
Club, Royston Rd, Penge. They held mass meetings.
SIDCUP
On 8 May, 11 strikers were hurt here in fighting with cops.
CENTRAL LONDON
WESTMINSTER
Westminster Council of Action ran from 12 Berwick Street, SW1. A local strike
sheet was issued, the Westminster Worker.
When the strike ended, they reported that large numbers of men especially in
the printing trade, when they applied to go back to work, were being faced with
crap conditions - tear up the union card, reduced wages etc; if they refused
they would not be rehired.
The small National Fascisti group, which obviously thought the General Strike
was a big commie plot, issued a daily newssheet during the 9 days, which they
mainly distributed in the West End. The Fascists volunteered to act as strikebreakers.
Hyde Park was taken over by the government as the food depot for London during
the Strike.
No 32 Ecclestone Square, Belgravia, was HQ of the TUC. Ironically it was a former
home of Winston Churchill, who worked tirelessly to defeat the Strike... though
not as effectively as the TUC General Council! Crowds gathered outside every
day throughout the Strike, and there was a constant flow of messengers coming
and going from Strike Committees.
Wellington Barracks was the organising centre of the troops used in London during
the Strike.
Carmelite Street, off Fleet Street, was part of the old heartland of newspaper
printing. Late at night on 2 May, on the eve of the General Strike, Daily Mail
printers refused to print the paper's front page editorial attack on trade unions.
They downed tools; this led the government to break off negotiations with the
TUC, sparking the outbreak of the Strike.
Left labour paper the Daily Herald also had its offices here. The TUC had agreed
for their daily British Worker to be printed here as a strike sheet. One day,
a crowd gathered here to await copies. Suddenly cops charged the crowd, emerging
from the half-built Daily Mail building opposite. They raided the Herald building,
seized copies of the British Worker, and stopped the machinery. This led to
a stand off…but the British Worker was so unsubversive the regulations
to suppress seditious papers didn't apply! They were allowed to carry on.
The London Society of Compositors refused to go back till 16 May, 3 days after
the Strike was called off.
There was also a failed arson attack on the Times, in Printing House Square,
(near Blackfriars Station) on the afternoon of Wednesday 5th, and an attempt
by pickets that night to seize bundles of the ultra-establishment paper as it
was being loaded onto cars. The Times was kept going by members of posh London
clubs, aristos, MPs, the like.
MARYLEBONE
The Emergency Committee of the Marylebone Trades Council, at 53 Church Street,
issued daily bulletins. Mass meetings of strikers were held in the Dance hall
in Lisson Grove. Also women organized through the local Women's Co-operative
Guild, 153 Earl Street. Free concerts were held for strikers/families at the
Dance hall.
An outdoor mass meeting was held on Sunday 9th, a large crowd gathering in Church
Street. An alarm was raised when a car full of Special constables forced its
way through the crowd…
Marylebone Station was deserted throughout the strike.
FINSBURY
Finsbury Trades Council, based at 295 Goswell Road, was involved in setting
up the Council of Action. A strike committee was in continuous session. Two
local NUR branches met continuously at Friends Meeting House. The Council of
Action held hourly propaganda meetings in the early days, well attended by strikers
& their families…
They reported 1900 men of the Carriers section of the T&GWU had signed on
with them on May 4th. “The temper of the public is very good, many
are keenly following the lead of this council, and no opposition is met with
anywhere.”
Finsbury Strike Committee officials were disaffiliated by the TUC over items
in the Finsbury Strike Bulletin; the TUC had ordered bulletins should not contain
anything but central Publicity Committee-issued items. Frost, Secretary to the
Trades Council, was arrested under the Emergency Powers Act over comments about
troop movements in the Strike Bulletin.
At Smithfield Meat market, volunteers opened the Market here on 10th May, having
to be protected by many police: Smithfield had a long militant union tradition.
Farringdon Street Goods Depot, which normally handled several thousand tons
of meat and merchandise, was paralysed throughout.
Sources:
• The British Worker, official strike paper of the TUC General
Council.
• Reports from Councils of Action, Trades Councils and other union bodies
to the TUC, during the Strike.
There’s useful stuff online at: www.unionhistory.info/generalstrike
• Local Strike Bulletins: too many to list.
• Dave Russell, Southwark Trades Council, A Short history.
• History of Battersea & Wandsworth Trades Councils.
• Barry Burke, Rebels With a Cause, The History of Hackney Trades
Council.
• The South London Press, sarf London’s finest scab paper,
still the absolute pits 87 years on.
• Keith Laybourn, The General Strike, Day By Day.
• Tony Cliff & Donny Gluckstein, Marxism & The Trade Union
Struggle: The General Strike of 1926. Good account of the failings of the
TUC and the CPGB.
• Christopher Farman, The General Strike. Concentrates more on
the TUC-Govt negotiations and a general overview. Not very radical but well
written accounts of some of the behind the scenes events.
• Nine Days in May: The General Strike
in Southwark, also published by Past Tense, which gives longer accounts
of the events in the then London boroughs of Southwark, Camberwell and Bermondsey.
• On Woolwich and Greenwich: http://greenwichindustrialhistory.blogspot.co.uk/
• Syndicalist Tom Brown on 1926: http://libcom.org/library/social-general-strike-1926-failed-brown
• On the rivalry between West Ham & Millwall, as it relates to 1926:
http://libcom.org/history/millwall-not-scabs-shock
• Wilf McCartney, Dare to Be a Daniel, (published by the Kate
Sharpley Library). An account of organising in the catering trade in pre-WW1
London, with an epilogue which mentions the anecdote about the routing of Imperial
Fascisti scabs in the Old Kent Road.
• The General Strike in Tottenham and Wood Green, lecture paper,
David Avery, 1969.
• The London Borough of Enfield during the 1926 General Strike,
G. Hunt.
Plus lots of other research picked up from many sources to long to list.
More research is needed. If anyone fancies looking into events and organisation
of the Strike in their area, and sending it in to us, we will try to compile
a more detailed round up, and publish it/put it up online.