Wilfred Risdon
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Wilfred Risdon (28 January 1896 – 11 March 1967) was a British
Early life, 1896–1920
Wilfred Risdon was born in
At the time, many Somerset coal miners moved to
Politics, 1921–1939
Around 1921, Risdon moved to
By 1929, Risdon was living in Acocks Green, Birmingham, and he was now Midlands Divisional Organiser for the ILP.[5] The following year, he organised the Easter Conference, held that year in Birmingham. By then, Mosley, although successful in cultivating Labour support in Birmingham and district, had used his own resources to finance the winning of six of the twelve available seats for Labour at the 1929 general election and was becoming increasingly pessimistic about the probability of achieving his goals of economic and social reform, even with a non-cabinet ministerial post, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. Therefore, he set about drawing up his own proposals, which were referred to as the Mosley Memorandum. After being ignored for over two months, it was finally rejected in May 1930, which convinced Mosley that resignation and criticism of the government from the backbenches was the way forward. By the autumn of that year, there was a "Mosley Group" in Parliament, including Risdon's erstwhile colleague, Aneurin Bevan. Mosley reconstituted the memorandum into a Manifesto, which was published on 13 December 1930. His thinking that the state should play a strong role in the affairs of the country and that it "should constitute a public utility organisation to turn out houses and building materials as we turned out munitions during the war" was made clear in his "immediate plan to meet an emergency situation".[6] However, by then, Mosley had already started making plans for a new political party, including an office at One Great George Street, Westminster, in January 1931, and the same month, the proposals contained in the Memorandum and the Manifesto were published as a 61-page pamphlet, A National Policy, with the authors given as Aneurin Bevan, W. J. Brown, John Strachey and Allan Young.
The New Party was founded on 1 March 1931. Risdon is known to have continued to work as Midlands Divisional Organiser for the ILP until early February[7] but since the core of Mosley's new movement was based in Birmingham (prior to the formation of the New Party, what had already become known as "Mosleyism" had been described as "Birminghamism rampant"),[8] Risdon was undoubtedly one the New Party's founder members. His first major responsibility for the fledgling party was as election agent for Allan Young at the April 1931 by-election at Ashton-under-Lyne, a Labour seat, near Manchester. Young barely saved his deposit by earning third place with 16% of the votes cast. The Labour supporters were angry at their candidate being beaten into second place and formed a raucous mob outside the polling station, but Mosley faced them down and commented to Risdon, "We saw worse than this in the war, Bill".[9] Not long afterward, Risdon was sent to Newcastle to develop a regional organisation in the North-East of England, and by the beginning of October, he had created branches in Hull, Newcastle and Gateshead.[10] Mosley meanwhile initiated a plan for an "active force" of stewards (forerunners of the later controversial "Blackshirts"), who were supplied in part by a nationwide network of athletic clubs that was aimed at British youth.[11] That was deemed necessary to prevent the violence and the intimidation that was a feature of most of the New Party's meetings, but that behaviour was not experienced only by the upstart party.
The central planning of the New Party was at best haphazard, and in July, the support for local party organisation was drastically reduced, but Gateshead was considered important enough to warrant a candidate at the 1931 general election at the end of October. RRisdon was again election agent, this time for the candidate James Stuart Barr, an old friend from Birmingham. His main rival was Ernest Bevin, for Labour. Not one of the 50 New Party candidates, including Barr, was successful at the election, which forced forcing Mosley to take stock. The party was reduced to little more than an embryonic Youth Club organisation, known as NUPA (a mnemonic for NuParty), which confirmed the view of many that Mosley appeared to be and indeed was moving towards an openly-fascist party. Risdon was left with little to do and, without a regular salary, opened an advertising agency. He retained a rump of committed New Party supporters. Meanwhile, Mosley was moving ever closer to fascism, visited Italy in January 1932 to study the Italian version at close quarters and met Benito Mussolini. In May and June, Mosley worked on "his exposition of the policy and philosophy of the new movement",[11] The Greater Britain. Risdon received his copy in September, a month ahead of publication, and set about organising a local branch for Mosley's transformed political movement, the British Union of Fascists (BUF, or "British Union") of which Risdon was a founder member. The inaugural ceremony on 1 October 1932, was attended by 32 founder members, most of whom wore black shirts.
Risdon remained in Newcastle until February 1933, when he moved to London to take up his post as Mosley's first Director of Propaganda.
By now, he was writing regularly for the organisation's three albeit not concurrent periodicals, The Blackshirt, Fascist Week and Action as well as occasionally in The Fascist Quarterly. Around then, the police-style Action Press uniform started to be issued to the most dedicated members, but Risdon positively refused to wear it. In 1936, the wearing of political uniforms was banned under the
After the disappointing results in the 1937 London municipal elections (following which Joyce and
Antivivisection, 1939–1967
Risdon had been in his new post for less than a year when he was arrested under
By January 1942, Risdon was Secretary of the LPAVS committee. Meanwhile, he encountered and developed a working relationship with
It was during his time there that Risdon wrote his Biographical Study, an appreciation of the life and work of Lawson Tait, published at the beginning of 1967. The foreword was written by Lord Dowding, who described the work as "Mr. Risdon's remarkable book".
Private life
As well as being a prolific writer, both for British Union, and the LPAVS/NAVS (for which he also wrote under the pseudonym of W. Arr,[19] he was also a keen book critic/reviewer,[20] an accomplished carpenter, garden lover and a talented artist, according to his stepson Brian, and Brian's son Gary.
Risdon met Margaret Ellen (also known as Margaret Helen or Nellie) Geen, née James, (10 March 1895 – 22 March 1981) in Birmingham, through their shared involvement in socialism. She was from Cardiff, south Wales, and already had two children, Sheila (born 1923) and Brian (5 September 1925 – 13 January 2003) from her previous marriage to Alfred Geen, a flour mill worker. She had moved to Birmingham to train as a midwife. They married at Leeds North register office in March 1935, and although Margaret was living and working in Leeds, Risdon continued living in Manchester until February 1936, when he bought a house in north west London for his family. After Risdon's death, Nellie Risdon moved to Reading, Berkshire, and she died in the Sue Ryder hospice at Nettlebed, near Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire.
References
- ^ ISBN 978-0992743109.
- ISBN 0-900178-06-X.
- ^ Worley, Matthew, ed. Labour's Grass Roots: Essays on the Activities of Local Labour Parties and Members, 1918–45
- ^ Tholfsen, Trygve R. "The Origins of the Birmingham Caucus", Louisiana State University, New Orleans; The Historical Journal, II, 2 (1959), p. 161
- ISBN 9780718501785.
- Skidelsky, Robert. Oswald Mosley. London: Papermac 1990
- ^ Minutes of the West Bromwich branch, ILP; Archives of the Independent Labour Party, series 2: minutes and related records, part 2: branch minutes and related records 1892–1950; microform; The British Library DSC Microform Research Collections
- ^ "Eight of the 17 (Labour MPs who signed the Mosley Manifesto) came from the Black Country complex, thus justifying Frank Owen's description of Mosleyism as "Birminghamism rampant". Skidelsky, Robert. Oswald Mosley. London: Papermac 1990
- ^ a b c d Cross, Colin. The Fascists in Britain. London: Barrie & Rockliff 1961
- ISBN 978-0-230-20697-7
- ^ a b Skidelsky, Robert. Oswald Mosley. London: Papermac 1990
- ISBN 9783319389158.
- Kean, Hilda. Animal Rights: Political & Social Change in Britain since 1800. London: Reaktion Books Ltd 1998
- ^ LPAVS News-Sheet no. 4, October 1940
- .
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 October 2010. Retrieved 24 July 2014.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Risdon, Wilfred. Lawson Tait – a Biographical Study. London: NAVS 1967
- ^ "Black Shirt and Smoking Beagles".
- ^ National Anti-Vivisection Society
- ^ Action, various