Showing posts with label Chorlton Socialist Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chorlton Socialist Society. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 October 2024

New people new ideas, Chorlton in 1895


“The influx of a new population of lower middle class city workers who have to find room to live in the new houses erected on open spaces where a few years ago there were green pastures and golden corn fields.  These people have brought with them a new political outlook consistent with the great advance of Labour in recent years.”*

It was of course one of the outcomes of the expansion of housing across south Manchester at the end of the 19th century  that new political ideas would follow the new people settling here.

Now I have no doubt that radical politics had long been discussed in the township.

For a while the radical politician Thomas Walker had lived at Barlow Hall at the end of the 18th century and there would have been plenty of people who travelled into Manchester who would have been aware of the torrent of ideas circulating during the years after the French Revolution and well into the middle of the 1800s and at the very least would have discussed them in their homes and the pubs and beer shops.

The radical journalist Alexander Somerville walked through the lanes of Chorlton in 1847 talking to our farmers and in the decade before had been charged by the Anti Corn Law League with the task of arguing for an end to trade protectionism and may have made other visits.

Thirty years before his visit there is evidence that people had walked from Urmston and Stretford to Peterloo in 1819** and I am sure they would have been joined by weavers and labourers from Chorlton, Withington and the other townships on the southern edge of the city.

But at present all that is conjecture, although we do know that in the 1835 General Election the Whigs got 27% of the vote against the Tories here in Chorlton.  Of course the total male population was only 26 men and neither of the Whig candidates were radicals, but on the other hand they were the “progressive party” and faced an onslaught of voter intimidation from the Tories during the campaign and on the day of the election.

Sixty years later and the Chorlton-cum-Hardy Socialist Society was active.  In 1895 they had complained bitterly to the Manchester Guardian that they had been prevented from holding a meeting in the Public Hall which was a “hall built for the public, consecrated to the common good, free from the trammels of faction, open for the use of all” and following this had met the same response from “every other room belonging to a public body.”***

And so were forced to meet “on certain nights around lamp posts”**** to spread their political message.

By 1906 they at least they were afforded the same rights as other political groups and had been given permission to hold two meetings on the village green.

But it was not till 1928 that the Labour Party contested its first local election here in Chorlton achieving 1,457 votes with 14% of the total vote, and still managed 12% a month later when a second election was run.

Now this is about it.  There will be election material, more reports and stories out there which will help throw a light on how the township developed politically in the early years of the last century.

Picture; Solidarity, Walter Crane, 1887, and Percentage  of the total vote in the Chorlton Local Election November 1928

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*Davies, Rhys. J., Socialism in Surburbia, 1930
** On an August day in 1819, anything between 60,000 and 80,000 men, women and children had assembled in St Peter’s Field to listen to the case for reforming the representation of Parliament.  Just before 2 in the afternoon a unit of Cavalry charged into the crowd with their sabres.  The deaths resulting from that charge have never been exactly established but sources claimed between 11 and 15 people were killed and up to 700 injured.
*** C. Fletcher, Chorlton-cum- Hardy Socialist Society, Manchester Guardian, October 23 1895
****, Davies, p7

Tuesday, 7 April 2015

Looking for the Chorlton Socialist Society in 1908

Now I am always looking for those little bits of our history which have been lost but are now coming back out of the shadows.

So it is with the Chorlton Socialist Society which was active in the decades either side of the turn of the 20th century.

There isn’t much and what there is hints at much more.

In 1895 they had complained bitterly to the Manchester Guardian that they had been prevented from holding a meeting in the Public Hall which was a “hall built for the public, consecrated to the common good, free from the trammels of faction, open for the use of all” and following this had met the same response from
“every other room belonging to a public body.”*

The letter was signed by Charles Fletcher of 9 Chestnut Avenue who was the secretary, and in the course of the next five years there were three more secretaries who were recorded in the Labour Annual and its successor The Reformer’s Year Book**

In 1898 Mr Fred Hughes of 16 Manchester Road was secretary of a group which had 40 members and three years later he was followed by Mr J Crispin who lived at 32 Whalley Road and in 1901 by George Lee of 17 Albermarle Road.

So far little is known of these men, although a Charles Fletcher who later lived in Rusholme served during the Great War, and Mr Lee can be tracked across Chorlton from 1901 to 1911.

Charles Fletcher gave his occupation in 1915 on his Attestation papers as a lorry driver, while George Lee was a designer for a calico printing firm.

Now these were the sort of people who had been moving in to the township since the 1880s when much of New Chorlton was developed.

“The influx of a new population of lower middle class city workers who have to find room to live in the new houses erected on open spaces where a few years ago there were green pastures and golden corn fields.

These people have brought with them a new political outlook consistent with the great advance of Labour in recent years.”***

And with places like the Public hall barred to them they were forced to meet “on certain nights around lamp posts”**** to spread their political message. ****

That said by 1906 they at least were afforded the same rights as other political groups and had been given permission to hold two meetings on the village green.

Like all such groups their membership remained small but there was a steady core which took a dip in 1910 which at present is unclear.  In the previous few years it had affiliated to the Manchester & Salford Labour Representation Committee and its membership was on a parr with some of the bigger areas of the city.

In 1906 when the Labour Representation Committee changed its name to the Labour Party the Chorlton Socialist Society had debated its response to that name change.

Along with other such groups it was a branch of the Independent Labour Party which had been formed in 1893, and at the 1907 Annual ILP meeting which was to be held at Stockton-on-Tees, there were suggestions that the party should change its name.

The Pendlebury and Swinton branch along with Chorlton suggested a change to the Socialist Party while other branches came up with variations.*****

As it was the ILP retained its name and in turn affiliated to the Labour Party.

All of which may mean that after 1906 Chorlton had its own branch of the Labour Party which attracted members from the Socialist Society and that will introduce us to William Mellor who was also an active trade unionist and socilaist living in Chorlton.******

And that I guess means a return to the archives of the Peoples History Museum where no doubt I will be able to uncover a shed full more on both the society and at the start of the Labour Party here and perhaps a little more on Mr Fletcher, Mr Lee and those other secretaries.*******

We shall see.

Picture; Solidarity, Walter Crane, 1887

Additional research from Barry Clark and Morris, D 'Labour or Socialism'. Phd, University of Manchester 1982

* C. Fletcher, Chorlton-cum- Hardy Socialist Society, Manchester Guardian, October 23 1895

**Labour Annual, 1895-1900, The Reformer’s Year Book, 1900-1909

***Davies, Rhys. J., Socialism in Suburbia, 1930

****ibid Davies, page 9

*****New name for the ILP, The Manchester Guardian March 8 1906

******William Mellor, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/William%20Mellor

*******Archives & Study Centre, at the People’s History Museum, Manchester, http://www.phm.org.uk