For International Socialism | |
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Workers' Socialist Federation |
Founder(s) | Sylvia Pankhurst |
Publisher | Dreadnought Publications |
Editor | Sylvia Pankhurst |
General manager | Harold Burgess |
Founded | 8 March 1914 |
Political alignment | |
Ceased publication | 14 June 1924 |
Headquarters | 152 Fleet Street, London |
Country | United Kingdom |
Circulation | 10,000(as of 1917) [1] |
Workers' Dreadnought was a communist newspaper based in London and led by Sylvia Pankhurst.
The paper was started by Pankhurst at the suggestion of Zelie Emerson, [2] after Pankhurst had been expelled from the Women's Social and Political Union by her mother and sister. The paper was published on behalf of the newly formed East London Federation of Suffragettes.
Provisionally titled Workers' Mate, the newspaper first appeared on 8 March 1914 [3] (14 March according to another source [4] or 21 March according to yet another [5] ), the day of a suffragette rally at which Pankhurst was due to speak, in Trafalgar Square, as The Woman's Dreadnought, with a circulation of 30,000,[ citation needed ], subsequently (at number 10, in May 1914) stated as 20,000. [6]
When the editor was imprisoned, Norah Smyth alternated as acting editor with Jack O'Sullivan. [7] For many years, Smyth had used her skills as a photographer to provide pictures for the newspaper of East End life, particularly of women and children living in poverty. [8]
In July 1917, the name was changed to Workers' Dreadnought, [9] which initially had a circulation of 10,000. Its slogan changed to "Socialism, Internationalism, Votes for All", and then in July 1918 to "For International Socialism", reflecting increasing opposition to Parliamentarism in the party. [10]
The paper took a strong stance against to the First World War, calling for Britain to begin peace negotiations, and speaking positively of Russia's exit from the war. [11] [12] The paper's first issue for October 1917 advocated for a peace referendum among the British Army, but before it could enter circulation the Metropolitan Police raided offices of Workers Dreadnought and destroyed the copies of the issue. [12] [13]
On 19 June 1920, Workers' Dreadnought was adopted as the official weekly organ of the Communist Party (British Section of the Third International). [14]
I write because I feel that the ultimate result of your propaganda will be further strife and blood-spilling between whites and the many members of my race... who have been dumped down on the English docks since the ending of the European war... Bourbons of the United States will thank you, and the proletarian underworld of London will certainly gloat over the scoop of the Christian-Socialist pacifist Daily Herald . [15]
Claude McKay, "A Black Man Replies" in Workers' Dreadnought (24 April 1920)
During the Post-war French occupation of the Rhineland, German communists attempted to retake the region. France employed the use of black colonial troops to halt them. Reporting on the events, the Daily Herald referred to the soldiers using terms such as "Black Scourge in Europe," and "Black Menace of 40,000 Troops". [16] Jamaican writer Claude McKay considered the papers' focus on the Black soldiers to be illogical prejudice, and a distraction from the communists' efforts against French occupation. [17] [18] McKay wrote a letter adressed to the Daily Herald's editor George Lansbury expressing these concerns. Landsbury refused to print the response, while writing back privately claiming to not be personally prejudice against black people. [16] [19] Instead, he was encoraged by a friend to send it to Sylvia Pankhurst and have it printed in Workers' Dreadnought, and did so. [15] Pankhurst asked if McKay would do write articles for the Workers' Dreadnought, and subsequently he became a regular contributer to Workers' Dreadnought, and its first black correspondent Claude McKay. [16]
The paper warned of fascism in Italy, condemned the white labourism in South Africa's Rand Rebellion, [20]
Sylvia Pankhurst was arrested under the Defence of the Realm Act for publishing articles "calculated and likely to cause sedition among His Majesty's forces, in the Navy, and among the civilian population". Claude McKay had his rooms searched. He is likely to have been the author of "The Yellow Peril and the Dockers" attributed to "Leon Lopez", which was one of the articles cited by the government in its case against Workers' Dreadnought. [21]
On 14 June 1924, Workers' Dreadnought ceased publication. [22]
Estelle Sylvia Pankhurst was an English feminist and socialist, activist and writer. Following encounters with women-led labour activism in the United States, she worked to organise working-class women in London's East End. This, together with her refusal in 1914 to enter into a wartime political truce with the government, caused her to break with the suffragette leadership of her mother and sister, Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst. Pankhurst welcomed the Russian Revolution and consulted in Moscow with Lenin. But as an advocate of workers' control, she rejected the Leninist party line and criticised the Bolshevik regime.
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Jane Hamilton Patrick, born Jenny Hamilton Patrick (1884–1971), was a Scottish anarchist of some standing, and played a crucial role in a number of radical organisations.
Norah Lyle-Smyth was a British suffragette, photographer and socialist activist.
May O'Callaghan (1881–1973) was born in Wexford. Known to many as O'C she was a suffragette and communist.
Edgar Thoreau Whitehead (1890–1956) was a British political activist, who served on the executive of the Communist Party of Great Britain but later became a fascist.
Jessie Payne was part of the deputation of working class female members of the East London Federation of Suffragettes (ELFS) that visited Prime Minister H. H. Asquith in June 1914 seeking votes for all women.
Walter Holmes (1892–1973) was a British communist activist and journalist.
Florence Mary Canning was a British suffragette and Chair of the Executive Committee of the Church League for Women's Suffrage.
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