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locomotive #931839 2nd Mar 2015 1:54pm
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Modern social media is the 21st century version of the soap box. I'm glad i live in a society where we have the right to remonstrate and protest. If our forefathers (not being sexist but don't know a non masculine word of the same meaning) hadn't stood up and been counted, including standing on soap boxes, we would still have slavery, children up chimneys and women without the vote etc. Power to the people.

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locomotive #931849 2nd Mar 2015 4:00pm
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withthat


Referring back to the O.P somebody must know more about the use of the Birkenhead Park Grand Entrance for use of rallies?

I have been to rallies there but did not realise there was any historical relevance.

GeeMeister #931850 2nd Mar 2015 4:03pm
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Originally Posted by GeeMeister
I'm glad i live in a society where we have the right to remonstrate and protest. Power to the people.
Only just!!! What with the Gagging Order and the over zealous use of Dispersal Notices being used recently in Liverpool.

locomotive #931853 2nd Mar 2015 4:18pm
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.....and kettling! We still need to protect our democratic rights at every opportunity or lose it. Get to the ballot box.

GeeMeister #931857 2nd Mar 2015 5:04pm
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Originally Posted by GeeMeister
If our forefathers (not being sexist but don't know a non masculine word of the same meaning)


Try forebears.


Carpe diem.
GeeMeister #931870 2nd Mar 2015 6:40pm
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The book "Idle Hands, Clenched Fist" by Stephen F Kelly, is written about the "Means Test Riots" in Birkenhead in 1932, in which a lot of people ended up in hospital (police as well) all the marches set off from the Park entrance, one march in particular involved 15,000 men, mainly unemployed, marching from the Park entrance preceded by a band and banners, when the head of the march reached the PAC (Public Assistance Committee) office in Hamilton Street the last of the marchers was just leaving the park,(there were already 3,000 people at the PAC office) so that's the full length of Conway St. taken up by marching men, something to be seen. The police were breaking up the meetings at the park and were met with fierce resistance by the marchers, the Queens pub was wrecked and the Garage on the corner(now Ableworld was smashed up, the park railings were broken off and used as weapons against the police. The riots spread all round, shops in Grange road and Price St. were smashed and looted. which gave the police the excuse to force their way into peoples houses and beat everybody up,regardless of whether they were involved or not. There were also marches to Councillors houses (that would liven them up a bit).
Police were imported from Birmingham (500), Liverpool (350) and Chester. These riots and marches carried on for over a week, eventually the Council agreed a rise in the allowance of 3 shilling and 3 pence.(16p) making the rate for an able bodied unemployed man 15s3d (76p).
These rates were set by the local Councils not the Government.
The rate of unemployment at the time was one in three men out of work in Birkenhead.
These marches were mainly organised by the NUWM (National Unemployed Workmen's Movement) an offshoot of the Communist Party. The 7 ringleaders went to prison for up to 20 months hard labour, various marchers were held in custody for a few weeks.
My parents were teenagers when all this was going on, and lived by the Park entrance, but it was never mentioned at home when I was growing up.
The Means Test was discussed many a time, my Father would never claim anything, he didn't want those *******s coming into his house and telling him to sell things before they would give him any money, so the legacy lingered on. I would suggest anyone interested should go to the Library and borrow a copy, definitely an eye opener.
Anyway, to get back to the topic of speaker's corner at the Park entrance, I can remember when I was in my early teens in the late 50s, we used to do a bit of barracking on a Sunday, it never seemed to put any of the speakers off, they must have been used to it. I also knew somebody who used to speak about religion there in the early 60s.

locomotive #931873 2nd Mar 2015 7:10pm
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forebears.......thanks for that, I just couldn't bring one to mind. If forefathers is sexist and manned needed changing to staffed so as not to offend at the tunnels then what will the bears say?
Thanks locomotive..good synopsis.

Last edited by GeeMeister; 2nd Mar 2015 7:12pm.
locomotive #931876 2nd Mar 2015 8:02pm
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This is a really interesting topic, locomotive smile




They were hard times in the 20's and 30's and I have just had a read of something about it. They didn't seem to get on top of things before the next war started. Poor souls.

As follows :

" A central element of its activities was a series of hunger marches to London, organised in 1922, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1934 and 1936.[1] The largest of these was the National Hunger March, 1932, that was followed by days of serious violence across central London with 75 people being badly injured,[2] which in turn led directly to the formation of the National Council for Civil Liberties.

To the dismay of many within the wider labour movement, the Labour Party and the official trades union bodies offered little support to the legions of unemployed workers during this period. The Trades Union Congress and the National Executive Council advised Labour parties and trades councils along the route of the Jarrow Crusade not to help the marchers, although local branches were more generous."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Unemployed_Workers'_Movement

The next is an article about Frank Fields comparing on 'means tests' in 2006 to 1930's.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukn...-highest-since-the-1930s-says-Field.html



Last edited by granny; 2nd Mar 2015 8:09pm.

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locomotive #931880 2nd Mar 2015 8:29pm
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You will probably be interested in this man, Rude. Quite a lengthy article, and Birkenhead is also mentioned. Unfortunately, posting the link is not working, so apologies for this being soooo long.

Leo McGree

Leo Joseph McGree was born in 1900 in Seacombe, Cheshire, the son of an Irish father and Scottish mother. At the age of fourteen, he left school and embarked upon a number of short-lived jobs before finding work in Sheffield. It was while in Sheffield he joined the communist party and met his future wife Hetty.He moved to Edge Hill, Liverpool and at the age of 21 was elected branch secretary for the Amalgamated Society of Woodworkers union.


He was also a key figure in ensuring that the Daily Worker was distributed on Merseyside after the newspaper distribution networks refused to carry the paper because of its political content. He would meet the London train at 04.20 and he and other Communists would courier it throughout the region. He was a regular local public speaker; in one famous speech he denounced sectarianism which blighted Liverpool politics by stating “You fools, you fight each other every 12th of July and 17th of March, but forget about your empty bellies for the rest of the year”.
Leo became a doughty local election candidate for the Party, spearheading a strong tradition in the area, where Communist candidates did surprisingly well, outside of the more usually expected base of Scotland, Wales and the east end of London. The first Communist candidate in Liverpool was J. Young in St Anne's Ward in 1924; in 1925 J. Nield secured 706 or 16% of the vote in the same ward.



Leo first stood as a Communist council candidate in September 1928 for Edge Hill Ward, Liverpool. Later, he stood in Scotland North ward in 1930, receiving 18% of the vote and stood again in 1931 and 1932. He also stood for the parliamentary seat of Liverpool - Scotland, securing by 6%. Other Liverpool Communist council candidates in the 1930s were Mrs Bruce (Scotland North 1931, who received 12% of the vote), W. Fielding (Scotland North 1933), I.P. Hughes (Sandhills 1932), J F Hedley (Low Hill 1932) , A.E Cole (Kirkdale 1932), F.W. Gibson (Brunswick 1933), C.W Heaton (Croxteth 1932, Edge Hill 1933).
Leo’s work within the Communist Party was recognized with his election to the Communist Party Central Committee in 1929 to 1935. He also became a recognized leader of the unemployed in Merseyside in the 1930’s and in 1932, when major disturbances broke out in Birkenhead. On the 13th September, 10,000 unemployed demonstrated to the Public Assistance Committee with the demand for `relief for all able bodied unemployed and an increase of 3s per week, immediate supply of boots and clothes and one hundred weight of coal during winter months and starting of work schemes at trade union rates’. Joe Rawlings and Mrs Barraskill led the deputation to the Council; the local authority agreed to send a telegram to the government calling for the abolition of the means test.



However, as the demonstration dispersed the police made a number of arrests, two days later rioting broke out fuelled by indiscriminate baton charges by the police against women and children. Over 100 protesters and bystanders were hospitalised by the Police. The entire local branch committee of the National Unemployed Workers Movement were arrested. Leo was heavily involved in the protests and received a serious beating from the police and sentenced to twenty months imprisonment at Strangeways (Rawlings received a two-year sentence).



Birkenhead’s stand led to similar Unemployed demonstrations in Liverpool on 21st September, Glasgow, West Ham, Croydon, North Shield and importantly Belfast) Leo had also managed to spend some time during this period collecting funds for the striking Cotton workers in Burnley. When Mosley’s fascists tried to rally in Walton, it was Leo and local communists who organised the opposition.

At the 1946 LiverpoolCity council municipal election, Leo McGree then district secretary of the Building Trades Federation union stood as the Communist candidate for North Scotland ward. While McGree had popular support, it was clear that the Catholic Church was not going to let him be elected and Church dignitaries issued a number of statements denouncing Communism and McGree in particular.



He stood on a platform of demanding a new prefab school to replace the blitzed St Albans School and a feeding centre for children from the overcrowded St Sylvester’s School, who had to travel by tram to another school one and a half miles away for their mid-day meal. Another “menacing problem” was the delay in cleaning up the blitzed sites. It was not until four houses collapsed killing one child and injuring others did the council call a special meeting to discuss the dangers and then the Conservative councillors voted down the clean up plans.



Leo Mcgree was the only TUC delegate ever to move `reference back' of the Obituaries section of the General Council report at its annual conference, on the grounds that it included a reference to the death of former NUR leader, J H Thomas, wisely seen as a traitor owing to his role in the 1926 general strike!



McGree was elected the District President of the Confederation of shipbuilding & Engineering Unions, but in the climate of the cold war anti communism he was witch hunted by the Daily Express newspaper and then by his union, being banned from office because of his political allegiance. He remained a committed communist all his life and when he died in 1967 large crowds attended his funeral at Anfield cemetery, testifying to his local popularity.



Source: J. Arnison `Leo McGree - what a man’ (London 1980)

Michael Walker
http://www.grahamstevenson.me.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=390:leo-mcgree-&catid=13:m&Itemid=114



Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect.
~Chief Seattle
locomotive #931881 2nd Mar 2015 8:40pm
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Matters of interest 1936
The holding of meetings at the park entrance by The British Union of Fascists and Communist Party caused the Chief Constable difficulty in November, when he reported that each Sunday it had become necessary to have 70 members of the force at these meetings in order to prevent any disorder, Although disorder did not arise to any great extent. The Watch Committee finally banned the holding of meetings at the park entrance.
Taken from - Maintaining The Queens Peace
S P Thompson (sergeant) 1958


locomotive #931888 2nd Mar 2015 9:20pm
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Granny & dusty, thanks for those posts, they are both  really interesting and enlightening about an all but forgotten past. I remember reading about the men of merseyside marching to join the men of jarrow but never knew how they were abandoned by the labour party. Dark days indeed.

locomotive #931892 2nd Mar 2015 9:34pm
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Not sure why you think I would be particularly interested in Leo McGree, Granny but yeah, thanks for posting. smile

GeeMeister #931907 3rd Mar 2015 12:26am
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Originally Posted by GeeMeister
then what will the bears say?


Sod the bears; the only ones in this country are in zoos, and they don't count.


Carpe diem.
locomotive #931909 3rd Mar 2015 12:49am
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Hands off The Blue Union, Bill Hunters Website is an enlightening read on sell outs,and the fifth tier of management we call "The Union".

locomotive #931976 3rd Mar 2015 4:31pm
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Originally Posted by locomotive
I would suggest anyone interested should go to the Library and borrow a copy, definitely an eye opener.
I went to Birkenhead Central today to borrow the book. The Librarian and I searched high and low but to no avail frown On a brighter note, she has reserved the copy from Bebington for me with no fee. smile

Oh and my Grandad clearly remembers the rallies at Birkenhead Park.

Last edited by RUDEBOX; 3rd Mar 2015 4:33pm.
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