Showing posts with label communist heritage. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communist heritage. Show all posts

Sunday, May 03, 2020

When Adam delved and Eve did span


by New Worker
John Ball preaching to the rebels
correspondent

In 1381 peasants marched on London to end the hated poll tax. They demanded equal rights and an end to serfdom, and chanted: “When Adam delved and Eve did span [spin], Who then was the gentleman?” Their leaders were Wat Tyler, who may have been a former soldier, Jack Straw and John Ball, a radical priest from Colchester.
The uprising began in May, when angry villagers drove the tax collector out of Brentwood in Essex. The resistance spread like wild-fire throughout southern England. Tax records were burnt and prisoners freed from local jails by angry peasants who readily answered the call to take up arms by an underground movement called the ‘Great Society’.
These peasant armies, led by Wat Tyler in Kent and John Ball in Essex, were welcomed by Londoners enraged at the nobility’s moves to put the entire burden of the seemingly endless war in France on the backs of workers and tradesmen. Militant apprentices opened the gates of London on 13th June to join the rebels determined to punish the architects of the monstrous tax. John of Gaunt, the Duke of Lancaster, was top of the list but he was on the Scottish borders, so they made do with burning his Savoy Palace to the ground. The Lord High Treasurer Robert Hales and the Chancellor, Simon Sudbury, who was also the Archbishop of Canterbury, fled to the Tower of London. But the royal fortress fell without a fight to the peasants, who dragged them out and beheaded them on Tower Hill.
The frightened young king, Richard II, met most of the peasants’ demands, including the abolition of serfdom. But at a later meeting with the rebels at Smithfield, Tyler was provoked into an argument and then stabbed to death by William Walworth, the Mayor of London. Richard told the peasants, who held him in superstitious awe, that he would honour his pledges. But when they dispersed, the gentry rallied to take their revenge. The king repudiated all his promises and the rebel ring-leaders were hunted down and killed. Jack Straw was beheaded and John Ball was hanged, drawn and quartered at St Albans in the presence of the king soon after.
Perhaps this was an inevitable outcome. For as the Marxist historian AL Morton noted: “The peasants could combine for long enough to terrorise the ruling class but had no means of exercising a permanent control over the policy of government. A peasant State was impossible because the peasants were bound sooner or later to disperse to their villages leaving the landlords in control of the apparatus.”
The later emergence of capitalist production led to the rise of the bourgeoisie and the end of formal serfdom in England. Memories of the first great popular uprising in England were later subsumed by a new and violent struggle for power that began in the 17th century. The Peasants’ Revolt was consigned to the history books and, until recently, barely remembered on the streets of London.
These days re-enactors and guides hover around the Tower of London during the tourist season to tell the tale of the uprising that briefly brought the feudal class to its knees. There’s a plaque that marks the spot in the memorial gardens on Tower Hill where Sudbury and Hales got what was coming to them. A statue of William Walworth along with the dagger that he used to kill Wat Tyler are displayed in the Fishmongers’ Hall, near London Bridge.
There’s little else to see in honour of the peasants who marched to London against the hated poll tax. Nothing remains of John of Gaunt’s palace, although religious services continue at the Savoy chapel that was part of a London hospital built over its ruins in Tudor days. The gilded statue that stands above the entrance of the Savoy Hotel that now stands on the Strand is not the hated John but his ancestor Count Peter, who made Savoy Palace his London residence in 1263. Just outside the hotel a plaque records the torching of the Savoy “by rebels under the leadership of Wat Tyler” and the building of the “modern palace” in 1889.
In more recent times a green plaque was put up in Islington to mark the burning down of Robert Hales’ Highbury Manor house by the peasant army. It was unveiled by Tony Benn, the veteran Labour politician, in 2010. The site that later became known as ‘Jack Straw’s Castle’ is now part of north London’s urban sprawl. Local legend says that the rebel leader addressed his men from the top of a wagon on his way to London and later hid in the ruins of Hales’ mansion following the collapse of the revolt. It certainly was the name of the tavern that goes back to the early 1700s. The pub was rebuilt in the 1960s and finally closed in 2002, when it was converted to a number of luxury flats. But the rebel connection continues with the plaque on the wall of the Highbury Barn Tavern.
Pride of place goes to the triptych on the northern wall of St Bartholomew's Hospital, Smithfield that was unveiled by the left-wing playwright Ken Loach in July 2015. The slate panels that fill a blocked window bay of St Bart’s was commissioned by a local resident, Matthew Bell, and carved by Emily Hoffnung. The memorial marks the place where the peasant delegates led by Wat Tyler and John Ball negotiated the end of serfdom with the king as well as the spot where Tyler was later killed. A brass plate on the left records the words of a later Englishman, Thomas Paine, who went to America to join the fight for freedom in the 1700s and famously said: “If the Barons merited a monument to be erected at Runnymede, Tyler merited one in Smithfield.”

Fishmongers Hall is only open to the public on special occasions that are listed on its website. The Savoy Chapel is currently closed due to the COVID-9 emergency. It normally opens from Monday to Thursday from 9:00–16:00 and on Sunday from 9:00–13:00. The Highbury Barn Tavern, which is also closed for the duration of the pandemic, is a 15-minute walk away from Arsenal station. The Savoy Hotel is on the Strand near Temple tube station. St Bart’s Hospital is in Smithfield and the nearest tube is Barbican station.

Thursday, April 23, 2020

Lenin in London


Lenin's Room at Marx House
by New Worker correspondent

Most of us know that Lenin worked in London editing Iskra, the underground Russian socialist newspaper, from a room in the building now known as Marx House in Clerkenwell Green. In actual fact Lenin made five trips to London in the early 1900s, calling himself ‘Jacob Richter’ and a number of other aliases to confound the Czarist secret police who covertly monitored the activity of all the Russian opposition movements in Britain.
British Marxists and Russian tourists can explore what’s left of the Edwardian capital on  'Lenin’s London' walks, but the Bolshevik leader’s presence is barely recognised in what were his familiar haunts in the centre of the city that was, in Lenin’s days, the hub of a British empire that spanned the globe.
Their first port of call is usually the house in Clerkenwell Green where Lenin edited Iskra from April 1902 until the spring of the following year. Iskra was the organ of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) that later split into Bolshevik and Menshevik factions. The name means ‘Spark’ in Russian and it comes from a line of a poem by Alexander Odoevsky, a leading figure in the ‘Decembrist’ uprising of 1825.
The building, now owned by the Marx Memorial Library, was then a major social-democratic centre and Lenin shared an office with Harry Quelch, the director of the Twentieth Century Press. Although nothing remains of the original décor, you can still see the ‘Lenin’ room, which contains original copies of Iskra and other mementoes of Lenin’s life.
Lenin returned to London in 1905 for the third congress of the RSDLP. He stayed at a safe house in Percy Circus, in the Kings Cross area. A blue plaque marks the site today.  Another blue plaque is on the site of the rooms in Tavistock Place where Lenin stayed when he returned to London in 1908.
Sadly, a bust of Lenin is all that remains of a monument erected during the Second World War. It comes from a memorial put up during the Aid to Russia campaign at the site in Holford Square where Lenin lodged in 1902. It was removed following repeated vandalism by local fascists and the Lenin bust now stands in the Islington Museum.
Still, you can always drink to Lenin’s memory in the pubs that claim his name. There’s at least five, including the Crown Tavern in Clerkenwell Green where, it is said, Lenin first met Stalin, and the Water Rats in Grays Inn Road that also claims Karl Marx as a former patron!



Friday, November 22, 2019

Caribbean comrade remembered


Dave Horsley at the seminar

by New Worker correspondent

Comrades gathered at the Sid French library at the NCP Centre in south London last weekend to hear David Horsley talk about the life of the Jamaican communist, Billy Strachan, who did so much to help the Caribbean community in London after the Second World War.
Billy Strachan was an RAF veteran who settled in London to help found Caribbean News, Britain’s first black British monthly newspaper dedicated to Caribbean independence, socialism, and solidarity with colonial and oppressed peoples. But Strachan’s communist views and his staunch support for the Daily Worker and its successor, the Morning Star, has resulted in him being largely ignored by historians.
To redress the balance, David Horsley has written a pamphlet about Strachan’s life and he will be speaking about him at the Marx Memorial Library early in the New Year.
The Billy Strachan pamphlet, which is published by Caribbean Labour Solidarity, costs £2 and copies of this booklet are available from David Horsley, whom you can email at: ukdavid.d@gmail.com