The Arrival of the Jarrow Marchers in London, Viewed from an Interior - Thomas Cantrell Dugdale
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The Arrival of the Jarrow Marchers in London, Viewed from an Interior - Thomas Cantrell Dugdale
Areas that relied largely upon heavy industry, like the Northeast of England, were hit particularly hard by the Great Depression. On the southern bank of the River Tyne, Jarrow was just one of many industrial communities ravaged by unemployment, poverty, disease and starvation in the 1930s. Meanwhile, the National Coalition Government under Conservative Prime Minister, Stanley Baldwin, appeared to be looking the other way.
'One Nation' Conservatism had seen Baldwin steer the Tory ideology toward a much more compassionate, inclusive and interventionist position, at least in theory. Nineteenth Century Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli had contended that the divide between rich and poor had rendered Britain 'two nations', between which there was 'no intercourse and no sympathy'.
In a speech in 1924, Baldwin said;
"…We stand for the union of those two nations of which Disraeli spoke two generations ago: union among our own people to make one nation of our own people at home which, if secured, nothing else matters in the world..."
According to Conservative Historian, Lord Alistair Lexden;
"…Tory policy was reshaped to advance the cause of 'One Nation'. Social reform became the Party’s dominant preoccupation for the first time in its history. The Conservative Party, Baldwin declared at the 1929 election, regards the prosperity of trade and industry, not as an end in itself, but as a means to improve the condition of the people…"
In 1986, a Jarrow resident during this period recalled to the BBC;
"…Pathetic. The Jarrow of those days was a filthy, dirty, fallen down consumptive area in which the infantile death rate was the highest in the country, and TB was a general condition…"
Jarrow Labour MP Ellen Wilkinson later wrote;
"…There was no work. No one had a job except a few railwaymen, officials, the workers in the co-operative stores, and a few workmen who went out of the town…The plain fact is that if people have to live and bear and bring up their children in bad houses on too little food, their resistance to disease is lowered and they die before they should…"
Palmer’s Shipyard, the principal source of employment since 1851, had closed down in 1934. Government unemployment benefits in those days lasted six months, after which responsibility was handed to the Unemployment Assistance Board, from which any tangible support was difficult to access and ultimately far from adequate. Eligibility was also subject to the controversial Means Test, first introduced in 1931. This meant that the combined wages and assets of all members of the household were taken into account when deciding whether or not individual unemployment relief should be forthcoming. In the context of the time, this was particularly humiliating for unemployed men who saw it as their duty to be the family provider.
Facing indifference from Westminster, the local Borough Council initiated a non-partisan campaign to try to bring employment, in the form of a new steelworks, back to the area. Two hundred unemployed men, selected from a pool of around 1400 volunteers, would march more than 280 miles to London to petition the government to establish new industries.
The marchers set off at 11 am on October 5th, 1936. As The Manchester Guardian reported, it wasn’t a hunger march, but a protest march. This was an important distinction in the context of the time, as the hunger march movement was seen as a communist initiative, one short step away from revolution, and a movement from which the mainstream Labour Party was keen to keep its distance. The Guardian also pointed out that at that time, less than 15% of the eligible Jarrow workforce was actually in work.
The Manchester Guardian;
"…There is no political aspect to this march. It is simply the town of Jarrow saying send us work. In the ranks of the marchers are Labour men, Liberals, Tories, and one or two Communists, but you cannot tell who's who..."
"...With the marchers goes, prominently carried, the Jarrow petition for work, a huge book with about 12,000 signatures, which Miss Ellen Wilkinson, MP for Jarrow, is to present at the bar of the House of Commons on November 4th..."
One marcher later recalled to the BBC, in 1977;
"…The spirit of the men was such that we were expecting something. We were expecting to prove to the capital, at that time, that here’s men from Jarrow. The spirit they had shown all the way down…Here we are, we want work and we are going to put our case that we must have work for the benefit of our wives and children…"
The marchers reached London by the end of October. A rally was held in Hyde Park, followed subsequently by the official presentation of the petition to Parliament by Ellen Wilkinson MP. The government remained unmoved, and there proved to be little or no immediate effect on economic or industrial policy. The men returned home by train, courtesy of donated tickets.
According to the UK National Archives;
"...To add insult to injury, the Unemployment Assistance Board officials in Jarrow docked the dole of the marchers because they had not been available for work. After the Jarrow March the Cabinet resolved to convince organisers that marches were unhelpful and caused unnecessary hardship to those taking part..."
Other reports suggest that the Cabinet's attitude was more about deterring any future protest marches, rather than concern for the marchers' welfare. Even the Labour Party itself was, at best, lukewarm in its support. Ellen Wilkinson had addressed their Edinburgh conference on the issue of Jarrow, but had found the agenda dominated by discussions of the Spanish Civil War and issues surrounding rearmament. There was even criticism of the idea of the march itself, and the physical burden it placed on unemployed and starving men.
Marcher Sam Rowland suggested that while the majority of politicians seemed unconcerned, public opinion was markedly different;
"…If the march achieved anything…it made the condition and lives of people a factor that should always be brought into consideration at the top level… and not left to work out their own salvation…"
The Guardian, BBC News and multiple other sources name the last surviving Jarrow Marcher as Con Shiels, who died in 2012, and who had felt that the march had made 'not one hap’orth of difference'.
For some additional context on this, @robbielewis has a fascinating article on Con Whalen, who passed away in 2003. He was the last surviving marcher who had completed the march in its entirety.
https://www.tumblr.com/robbielewis/716998502772785152/cornelius-whalen-the-last-jarrow-marcher?source=share
The next general election was held nearly a decade later, in 1945, as World War Two was coming to an end. Memories of the Depression era National Government and the desperate times of the interwar years would be a key factor in the landslide victory for the Labour Party.
References include BBC News, Liverpool Echo, Manchester Guardian archives, Spartacus Educational, Lord Lexden (Official Historian of the Conservative Party) (Website), BBC Radio 4 - Great Lives (Ellen Wilkinson), BBC Witness -The Great Depression and The Jarrow March, BBC History-Referencing Ellen Wilkinson’s The Town that was Murdered
The Arrival of the Jarrow March [5–31 October 1936] in London, viewed from an Interior by Thomas Cantrell Dugdale [1880–1952]
15 janvier
I did a cute little timeline(ish) thing for my last year history study. I have mock exams in a few weeks so I’m trying really hard to get all my 5th year work revised. I aim to try to one topic every study session and hopefully I’ll have everything done in time. I also worked on cleaning/tidying my room so much so the only messy area is my desk! Tomorrow I’ve to sign up for French orals so I’m trying to get in early to get a good slot so I know what to aim for!
The Jarrow Crusade 1936
On October 6th, 1936, 200 selected marchers out of 1400 volunteers set off from Jarrow, to walk 280 miles to London. They took with them a petition with 12 000 signatures, urging the National Government of Stanley Baldwin to assist with the establishment of a new steelworks to mitigate Tyneside unemployment, which had reached 70 to 85% since the closure of Palmer's Shipyard. Jarrow was described as a 'filthy, dirty, fallen down consumptive area in which the infantile death rate was the highest in the country, and TB was a general condition'.
Labour MP Ellen Wilkinson wrote;
"…There was no work. No one had a job except a few railwaymen, officials, the workers in the co-operative stores, and a few workmen who went out of the town…The plain fact is that if people have to live and bear and bring up their children in bad houses on too little food, their resistance to disease is lowered and they die before they should…"
The Manchester Guardian reported;
"…There is no political aspect to this march. It is simply the town of Jarrow saying send us work. In the ranks of the marchers are Labour men, Liberals, Tories, and one or two Communists, but you cannot tell who's who..."
It wasn't unreasonable to think that Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin might have been receptive. He had previously spoken on the merits of 'one nation' compassionate conservatism, and that 'The Conservative Party regards the prosperity of trade and industry, not as an end in itself, but as a means to improve the condition of the people'.
The marchers reached London after 22 days on the road. A rally was held in Hyde Park, followed by the official presentation of the petition to parliament by Ellen Wilkinson MP. The government was unmoved, and marchers returned home by train, courtesy of donated tickets.
There was concern in parliament generally about the hunger march movement, with fears over revolutionary sentiment. Not even the Labour Party were unanimously supportive, with the Spanish Civil War and rearmament dominating the debate at that point.
The next general election was held nearly a decade later, in 1945, as World War Two was coming to an end. Memories of the Baldwin and Chamberlain National Governments and the desperate times of the interwar years would be a key factor in the landslide victory for the Labour Party, with their 'cradle to grave' Welfare State manifesto.
According to the BBC World Service, the last surviving participant of the march died in 2003. The Guardian, BBC News and multiple other sources however, name the last survivor as Con Shiels, who died in 2012, and who had felt that the march had made not one hap’orth of difference.
By 1936, the global Great Depression was laying waste to major economies across the world. Areas that relied largely upon heavy ...
This week in 1936, the Jarrow Crusaders set off for a 280 mile march from Tyneside to London. Since the closure of Palmer's Shipyard in 1934, unemployment in Jarrow had reached as high as 85%, and the marchers intended to present a petition to parliament urging government support for new industry to create local jobs.
Labour MP Ellen Wilkinson wrote of community conditions;
"...There was no work. No one had a job except a few railwaymen, officials, the workers in the co-operative stores, and a few workmen who went out of the town...The plain fact is that if people have to live and bear and bring up their children in bad houses on too little food, their resistance to disease is lowered and they die before they should...”
Infant mortality in Jarrow was the highest in Britain, and TB was described as a 'general condition'. Here's a link to a longer article about the personal and political background to the march, and what it did, or didn't, achieve in the end.
The Jarrow March
On this date in 1936, the Jarrow march began. With the marchers pretty much from the star was a stray Labrador called Paddy. At first the marchers thought the Dog would soon wander off, but after about five miles, realised he was going to stick with them, so they took good care of him as they went.
10 things you might not know about the Jarrow March:
On this date in 1936, t he Jarrow march began. 10 things you might not know about the Jarrow March: Why did it happen? It was a peacef