Fighting Talk by Mark Metcalf
Independent working class journalism.
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
Wednesday, 8 April 2026
NO GENTLEMEN HERE - HALIFAX 1842 - fund appeal for new film
NO GENTLEMEN HERE – HALIFAX 1842
HALIFAX
BORN SONGWRITER AND HISTORIAN CATHERINE HOWE BACKS THE FUND APPEAL FOR A FILM
TO REVEAL THE FORGOTTEN EVENTS OF HALIFAX 1842.
Ivor Novello Award Winner Catherine Howe, known for her 1971
album What A Beautiful Place and 1975 song Harry supports
plans to make a 10-minute film revealing, through original source material, the
events which took place in Halifax over two days in August 1842.
Filming
follows her book HALIFAX 1842: A Year of Crisis published in
2014 in which she describes a military attack upon workers in Halifax, West
Yorkshire during Britain’s first national labour strike.
Howe,
who made a number of film and TV appearances in the 60s and 70s, will be
donating her time to scripting the film which is to be co-produced by Dave
Hackney of the film company Digital Cortex and journalist Mark Metcalf with
backing from Calderdale Trades Union Council.
£5,000
is required for this work which it is hoped will increase awareness of a period
in British history that is highly significant and which has long deserved to be
remembered and commemorated.
Catherine
and Mark are happy to speak at meetings about the project to raise awareness of
the role northern county industrial operatives played in the
political reform of Britain. Already Calderdale Trades Union
Council has organised the unveiling of a plaque at the Calderdale Industrial
Museum to remember those who participated in these momentous events, as well as
a half-hour filmed documentary ‘Bread Not Bayonets’ which
associates events in Halifax 1842 with those at Peterloo Manchester in 1819.
‘Bread Not Bayonets’, directed and edited by Francesca Platt and
produced by Mark Metcalf, has been viewed by more than one thousand
people. You can see it at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0UxMadnIEA
Mark
has since made films with Dave Hackney at
https://www.youtube.com/@markmetcalf07
If
you would like to help, funds however small can be donated via Calderdale TUC,
Unity Trust Bank, Sort Code 60 83 01 Account number 20305688 Please reference
donations as HX1842
Please
also feel free to contact:
Calderdale
TUC. http://www.calderdaletuc.org.uk @calderdaletuc
info@calderdaletuc.org.uk
Mark
Metcalf: 07392 852561
Catherine
Howe: catherinehowe.contact@gmail.com
Tuesday, 7 April 2026
6 APRIL 1989 - the end of the NATIONAL DOCK LABOUR SCHEME is announced
Taken from my booklet GREAT YARMOUTH DOCKERS
https://markwrite.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/great-yarmouth-dockers.pdf
Chapter 6 National Dock Labour Scheme (NDLS) begins
In 1947, the Labour Government introduced the "Dock
Workers’ (Regulation of Employment) Scheme". The scheme, financed by a levy on the employers, was administered by
the National Dock Labour Board, and local boards, made up of equal numbers of
"persons representing dock workers in the port and of persons
representing the employers of such dockworkers". The system was to be jointly administered by
the union and bosses and this gave the former some control over hiring and
firing. It was a giant leap up from starving men fighting each other for a few
hours badly paid, dangerous work.
Each local board was responsible for keeping a register of employers
and workers, paying wages and attendance money, controlling the hiring of
labour, and responsibility for discipline.
The scheme registered all portworkers and guaranteed dockers, provided
they turned up twice a day to have their books stamped to prove their
availability, a basic minimum fallback
wage, whether there was work for them or not.
Under the scheme, dock work was considered a "job for life",
with any registered docker laid off by any of the 150 firms associated with the
scheme either being guaranteed employment elsewhere or, by 1989, a £25,000 pay
off.
The introduction of the NDLS did not though bring to an end industrial
disputes on the docks. With the TGWU refusing to make any of them official,
dockers were often forced to rely on their own industrial muscle. In 1955,
16,000 dockers in Manchester, Liverpool and Hull left the TGWU and joined a
small London-based union, the National Association of Stevedores and
Dockers. A long recognition strike was defeated.
In 1964 the Labour government appointed a
Royal Commission under Lord Devlin to investigate strikes on
the docks, and then implemented the
Commission report to 'decasualise' the
docks.
Dockers were to be taken into permanent
employment with a particular employer, instead of being hired
out for some many half-days by the Dock
Labour Board. They therefore lost a big
part of the control the union had over hiring
and firing through the Dock Labour Board,
which would only be the fallback employer
for a pool of unattached dockers who did not have a regular employer.
It meant the dock labour force could be more easily cut down over the years as modernisation took place.
Looking back, it could be argued that the
dockers' answer should have been obvious: increase workers' control and
modernise on that basis, using the advantages of modernisation to benefit the
workers. A large minority of dockers wanted the nationalisation of the ports
and most wanted to expand workers' control rather than give full control back
to the bosses.
1970 National Dock Strike
On 16 July 1970 all of the Yarmouth NDLS registered dockers joined the
national dock strike, which had been called following a TGWU national delegate
conference the previous day. As tankers
were not worked by dock labour staff at Yarmouth they were not affected.
Average earnings
Yarmouth dockers, including overtime, in the first three months of
1970, earned on average £38 17 shillings and 7d a week. The national average
was around £3 a week less and the highest earnings were at Ipswich where the
average weekly pay was £45 5 and 10d.
The national strike, the first in the industry for nearly half a
century, lasted nearly 3 weeks, led to the declaration of a State of Emergency
and was only concluded after a government-sponsored inquiry.
From the outside it appeared that it had been provoked by the national
employers’ association and the TGWU over basic weekly pay bargaining. Behind
the scenes, however, the dispute was also about the relationship between the
membership and the officialdom of the union, which had been antagonistic for
many years, plus the revolutionary changes taking place in the handing of
cargo.
Dockers took strike action for a pay rise of £11 a week. Around 47,000
dockers nationally were involved. The strike hurt imports and exports and the
British Army were placed on standby to handle food supplies but most dockers
were content to handle perishable goods and the strike was largely peaceful.
Lord Pearson was charged with ordering a court of inquiry and awarded
an average 7% pay rise, which was at first rejected by the dockers but
ultimately accepted.
The Yarmouth Mercury of Friday, July 24, 1970 reported that a
long stoppage could cause ‘real trouble’ and that since the strike then ‘except
for a few tankers, and some vessels bound for Norwich with grain cargoes, no
ships have entered the harbour.’ The strike had resulted in the Port and Haven
Commission, whose income came from tolls and charges, losing about £1800.
No shipments of vegetables or general cargo had been landed at the
Norfolk Line’s roll on roll off.
The paper reported that Yarmouth dockers had agreed that ‘if supplies
of food needed replenishing arrangements would be made for this. They will also
work supply ships in the event of an emergency involving danger to life and
limb.’
The following Friday the Yarmouth Mercury reported that news
had come through that the dockers’ national delegate conference had accepted
the proposals of the Pearson report. The paper believed that the changes would
not be of great benefit to Yarmouth dockers except for the fact that overtime rates
would be increased.
The paper also reported that in the previous week ‘six ships from
various continental ports with wheat for Norwich had been discharged by the
port of Norwich non-union dockers.’
Chapter 8 1972 National Dock Strike
On 28 July 1972 an official national dock strike began to safeguard jobs.
No cargo was to be handled by the country’s 42,000 NDLS registered dockers.
Roll-on roll-off ferries were still though set to pass through railway ports
like Dover and Folkestone.
Dockers were striking at plans for compulsory redundancies as well as
threats to their jobs from container firms using cheaper, casual labour.
TGWU National Docks Delegates voted 38 to 28 in favour of action and by
doing so rejected a special joint committee report that had been established by
the industry and headed by Lord Adlington, chairman of the Port of London
authority, and Jack Jones, TGWU general secretary. Committee members had
approved a payment scheme to pay off 2,500 unfit dockers or over 55-year-old
dockers. Dockers’ delegates from the larger ports were particularly opposed to
the proposals. Despite the existence of NDLS, between 1966 and 1972, 20,000
dockers’ jobs had been lost.
Earlier in 1972 a one-day unofficial strike, organised by the unofficial
National Port Shop Stewards Committee, was supported by 25,000 dockers and on 7
March 14,000 London dockers walked out. The Industrial Relations Act had been
passed by the Heath government with the intention of controlling wages. A key
part of this was the National Industrial Relations Act (NIRC) which had the
power to fine workers and unions. The strike action by its members’ saw the
TGWU fined.
The Trades Union Congress (TUC) policy was for non-registration with the
NIRC but the TUC, fearing for its own funds, abandoned the TGWU whose members
expected the union leadership to launch a national strike. There were strikes
against fines by Southampton, Preston and Merseyside dockers.
Action in Hull led to a court case against Walter Cunningham, chair of
Hull stewards, who refused to attend and pay a fine, risking jail.
The national unofficial campaign then saw London dock stewards’ picket
both Dagenham and UK Cold Storage but with most drivers refusing to honour the
picket line the stewards moved to picketing depots directly. This was much more
successful with lorries turned away at places such as Chobham Farm in
Stratford.
There then followed a series of court cases that on 4 July 1972 saw
Midland Cold Storage apply to the NIRC for an order to stop picketing. Seven
summoned dockers did not appear at court and they then defied a court order to
stop picketing or encouraging others to do so. On Friday 21 July arrest
warrants were issued for five dockers for contempt of court.
Four of the five were arrested the following day and sent to Pentonville
Prison. Vic Turner, the fifth, was on the picket line the following day.
Picketing was shifted to the prison and widespread dock strikes broke out with
an estimated 40,000 dockers out.
Delegates were sent to Fleet Street, the then home of the national press
and the papers were brought to halt. A prison demonstration attracted 30,000
people.
Faced with this potentially revolutionary situation the TUC, which was
previously opposed to solidarity action, was forced to call a one-day national
stoppage the following Monday. (31 July) This would have been only the second
ever general strike called by the TUC, the first having taken place in 1926.
Fearing a general strike, the government too was forced to concede. On 26
July 1972 a Law Lords ruling saw the case against the five dockers collapse.
Amidst jubilant scenes the Pentonville 5 were released the following day. 24
hours later the official national dock strike began. On 4 August the government
was forced to call a state of emergency.
All Great Yarmouth dockers who were not on holiday or sick supported the
jailed London dockers by taking strike action at the start of the week
beginning Monday 24 July. 30 Lowestoft dockers also joined the national strike.
Mr Len Chapman, the TGWU district official said that in both ports the
union “had built up a reasonable relationship with the port employers and I
regret that the Industrial Relations Act has brought about the one thing we
have managed to avoid for years.”
The official National Strike, which did not affect ships supplying gas
rigs and oil tankers bringing fuel to power stations, was supported by all 130
Yarmouth and Lowestoft dockers and close to 30 of the former managed to
persuade seven Norwich stevedores to join the strike. The strike caused fruit
to be in very short supply locally and this led to prices doubling.
On Thursday 17 August, Yarmouth dockers voted in line with the decision
of the TGWU delegate conference the same day, to return to normal working from
midnight on Sunday. However, M John Smith, branch secretary, told the Yarmouth
Messenger that “in the event of any unofficial strike action in other ports,
Yarmouth men would not handle any diverted cargo.” Smith told reporters his
branch felt a great deal had been achieved and he calculated that the backlog
of ships could be cleared in about for days if employers agreed to overtime
working.
Shop stewards from eight ports had decided to maintain an unofficial
stoppage which ultimately collapsed leaving the dockers to accept an amended
Jones-Adlington agreement. This included ending the temporary unofficial
register that allowed unregistered dockers to work on the docks.
The successful strike in 1972 did not though prevent the long-term
decline of the dock industry and the number of jobs in it, especially NDLS
jobs. By 1989 just under 9,000 dockers were covered under the NDLS and having
successful taken on and defeated, amongst others, the steel workers, miners and
printers then Margaret Thatcher, enjoying her third term in office was happy
enough to destroy another group of organised workers in the dockers.
It is a story covered in a 2016 blog article by Iain Dale, a radio
presenter these days with LBC.
From 1987 onwards, Dale worked for the National Association of Port
Employers (NAPE) and, with Nicholas Finney, his boss, whom Dale describes as
the ‘mastermind behind the lobbying campaign to get rid of this iniquitous
piece of employment legislation’, by which he means the NDLS.
He goes on to state “it remains the greatest achievement of my life” and
claims it “led to previously moribund ports having the ability to thrive.”
On
6 April 1989, the Employment Secretary, Norman Fowler,
told MPs the scheme had become 'a total anachronism' that
stood in the way of a modern and efficient ports industry. The 60 British ports who were in the NDLS argued
constantly that the ports were at an economic disadvantage and that
unregistered ports and European docks were taking their business.
In announcing
plans to bring forward legislation to scrap the NDLS, Fowler offered assurances
that any docker laid off as a result of the scheme being abolished would be
compensated up to the value of £35,000. Fowler stated that port employers would not return to using mass
casual labour. This proved not to be the case.
Strike action was held up for three months due to legal wrangles as NAPE used the courts to try and block any fightback. The port employers’ actions led to unofficial action in May 1989 at Tilbury, Liverpool, Lowestoft and Bristol. Other ports however remained at work and TGWU officials eventually persuaded strikers to return to work until all the legal restrictions that were obstructing the right to strike had been defeated in court. By the time strike action did take place the NDLS had been abolished.
A second national ballot produced a majority of 6,200 against 2,100 in
favour of strike action and on 11 July 1989 many ports stood still as dockers
mounted pickets at the gates. However, during the first couple of weeks of
action a number of small ports began to return to work and at others a number
of dockers took voluntary redundancy of up to £35,000.
Nevertheless, many dockers remained on strike but, hampered by the
anti-union laws, when they were then unable to picket out ports that had
previously been covered under the NDLS such as Felixstowe and Dover the strike
ultimately collapsed with a number of key militants, especially at Tilbury,
finding themselves victimised and out of work.
From then on – as covered in the reminiscences section that follows – all
those who had previously been covered by the NDLS found their hard-won wages
and conditions being quickly and permanently destroyed.
Six years after the NDLS was scrapped, 500 Liverpool dockers, the most
militant in the UK, were to be locked out of their workplace and after a heroic
two-year struggle (1995-97) in which they looked mainly overseas for support
they were defeated.
Thursday, 2 April 2026
God and games formed Manchester City FC
Like Everton,
Manchester City owes its origins to a Church, in this case St Mark’s Church of West
Gorton, an increasingly densely populated suburb that had been constructed on
rural land from 1800 onwards. From the moment it was consecrated in 1865 Church
organisers set out to develop a community spirit amongst local residents, many
of whom were recent work seeking immigrants from rural England, Scotland, Ireland
and the Continent, especially Italy and Germany.
With little to do or
places to meet after finishing work local youth were drawn to the thrill of
bare knuckle fighting and Scuttling involving mass battles with rival gangs
from Bradford or Miles Platting in which belts, slings, sticks and stones would
be employed as weapons. Both sides would scatter if the police came on the
scene only to reemerge at a later date.
With West Gorton also
beset with problems caused by alcohol the Church sought to develop alternative
activities and Rector Arthur Connell encouraged his parishioners to establish
community activities. This led to the construction of a new school, a gymnasium
plus a library.
By the late 1860s there
was formed locally a cricket club, but as this was never going to attract lads
involved in Scuttling, who wanted quick thrills, then in 1880, a year after a
Working Men’s Club was opened by Anna Connell, there was the setting up of the
St Mark’s (association) Football team. Captained by William Sumner, this played
its first game on 13 November 1880 – the same date as Sunderland AFC played
their inaugural game on Wearside – against the Baptist Church from
Macclesfield, who won 2-1. Whilst the majority of the home side had been born
in Manchester their parents were imports. Seven days later Newton Heath played
their inaugural match.
As to exactly who
formed the football club then historian Gary James believes that ‘as with so
many football clubs it seems unlikely that the specific person who introduced
football to St Mark’s will ever be properly identified’ but rather ‘that the
Club was borne out of actions by a variety of individuals during these
formative years. ‘
By 1883 the
football club had dropped references to the church from its name and later that
year it merged with Belle Vue Rangers to become known as Gorton AFC and in 1887
the club name was again changed, this time to Ardwick Association F.C and
turned professional by beginning to pay players their expenses.
With the world’s first
industrial city continuing to expand the official opening of the Manchester
Ship Canal by Queen Victoria in May 1894 seems to have provided, at least, some
of the inspiration for Ardwick committee to switch names to the much more grandiose
title of Manchester City Football Club around the same time. By becoming a
Limited Company the new club raised considerable funds through issuing shares.
Monday, 30 March 2026
Sunday, 29 March 2026
Invitation to Farage at Stadium of Light - a supporter responds
Tuesday, 17 March 2026
CALDERDALE DURING THE 1926 MINERS’ LOCKOUT AND GENERAL STRIKE
CALDERDALE DURING THE 1926 MINERS’ LOCKOUT AND GENERAL
STRIKE
Mark Metcalf
Pre the
strike
In the Halifax
Guardian Weekly dated 27 February 1926 there is a brief report on the
activities of Halifax Trades and Industrial Council (HTIC) in 1925. Total
income in 1925 was £102 6s 11d. It was reported that 1925 was the fifth year of
the HTIC. The report makes reference to the successful strike by textile
workers in 1925. ‘The year had been strenuous...the unemployment problem, owing
to depression in trade, had had serious consideration...The textile dispute had
their entire support, and they immediately formed a Council of Action, which,
without doubt, did much useful work in assisting both by active propaganda and
public meetings, towards the deserving victory of the workers.’
For more on the 1925 textile dispute in West Yorkshire see:-
https://leedssocialistparty.wordpress.com/2015/07/30/prelude-to-the
general-strike-the-wool-worsted-strike-90-years-on/
The 1925 Textile Strike
lasted just over three weeks and involved between 135,000 and 170,000 woollen
and worsted workers across West Yorkshire. It was resolved only after
Government intervention and it was widely viewed as a victory for the workers,
who had been facing a reduction in wages.
Combined with a temporary solution to the coal crisis in
1925, the victory by the textile workers buoyed up the whole of the trade union
movement.
The Trades
Club, Halifax, had in March 1926 a total of 18,698 members,
(I do not know if this is individual members or perhaps a figure relating to
the number of members in branches that were affiliated to the Trades Club) a
drop of 169 on the year. Income was just over £7,525 and of which £5,187 came
from the sale of refreshments, largely alcohol. There was a loss of just under
£2634 (£2,633 19s 1 d) with £388 14s 3d paid off the mortgage for the premises.
These figures and the successful strike of the textile workers show that the
trade union movement in the early part of 1926 clearly had some numbers and
strength across Halifax and Calderdale.
For those unfamiliar with the 1926 General Strike then there
is lots of information around including the following article on the BBC
website:- https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13828537
A much better article is at:- https://spartacus-educational.com/TUgeneral.htm
Also read work by Mark Metcalf at:- https://markwrite.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/lock_out_gs_booklet.pdf
‘NOT A MINUTE ON THE DAY, NOT A PENNY OFF THE PAY’ – THE 1926 MINERS’ LOCKOUT
AND THE GENERAL STRIKE
First week of GENERAL STRIKE 1926
In 1842 it was the miners of Halifax who made the first call
for a national union of mineworkers. Only weeks later the first ever General
Strike came calling in Halifax (watch ‘BREAD NOT BAYONETS – HALIFAX 1842 on the
dramatic events in which the authorities slaughtered local people https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0UxMadnIEA but the miners themselves did not take part
and over the following decades local mines were worked out and closed.
By 1926 there were no mines in Calderdale. Yet when the
General Strike on 3 May 1926 started there was immediate solidarity action
by local workers and there were no trains running with only a dozen staff
turning up for work.
“The Halifax railway stations have been closed since
Monday.’ ‘All others, including the railway clerks, are on strike...Even the
clock at Halifax station had stopped!” reported the paper on May 8, 1926.
‘Strong pickets were on duty, but everything was quiet.’ 8/05/1926
It was reported that the engineering industry was little
affected. The Halifax branch of the Typographical Association decided by a 2-1
vote not to resume work. This affected the operative staffs in the composing
and machine departments of the “Courier and Guardian” office. The stereotyping
department was already out. The paper also reported on the 8th of May that: ‘The
response to the calls by the different unions to cease work has been general
in this district; those so far affected, in addition to transport workers,
including printers, wire workers, joiners, plumbers and members of the Workers’
Union, embracing many occupations.’
On Sunday 9 May 1926 ten thousand attended the mass
meeting on Savile Park and ‘two platforms were provided and many speeches
were delivered in support of the claims of the miners and workers generally’ as
reported in the Halifax Courier and Guardian for Saturday May 15, 1926. The
numbers present were the largest in many years.
The local Master Printers Association also backed the
strike and stayed out throughout it.
At the firm of J. Blakeborough and sons, Brighouse, the
response to the strike appears to have been mixed, with some staying at work. A leaflet
was handed out at the Halifax Unemployment Exchange and elsewhere appealing to
all unemployed workers ‘not accept any instructions to sign on for any work now
stopped by order of the Trade Union Congress Council.’
This would appear to show that when asked to support the
General Strike the large majority did so in Calderdale.
More out
on strike in second week
When the strike was called off the Courier welcomed the
development and in a lengthy piece on 15 May reported: ’during the early part
of the week more operatives were brought out on strike, but the majority
returned to work when the general strike was called off.’
On the rail it was reported that ‘trouble arose with respect
to the terms of re-engagement’ and there appears to have been some continuing
actions by permanent way staff.
Organised
opposition to strike
By the end of the strike the authorities had increased the
number of Civil Constabulary Reserves to around 230 and several police
pensioners were on duty in Halifax. Over 1,000 had volunteered to help the
authorities in maintaining food supplies and a similar number (not sure if
there is duplication here) had registered as special constables. The paper
further reported that the appeal by trade union leaders for the preservation of
order had with the exception of one incident at Wheatley on Thursday been observed.
A strike breaking volunteer tramway driver Henry Metcalfe had alleged that he
had been assaulted by 3 striking tramway workers. Herbert Ackroyd, Joseph
Bottomley and Arnold Hall and, despite their solicitor contending that the trio
had done far less than had been alleged they were all sent to prison for a
month with hard labour and dismissed by their employers. (Yorkshire Evening
Post 14 May 1926)
The calling off of the 1926 General Strike by the Trades
Union Congress left the locked out miners to fight on alone until eventually
poverty forced them to concede defeat later in the year.
Trade unionists in Calderdale continued to show solidarity
with the miners and 700 people turned out for the late May Day march in 1926
and which ended with a rally at Victoria Hall with the main speakers being
Darlington Labour MP Mr A L Shepherd and Miss F Hancock of Gloucester.
A meeting on Savile Park in June to support the Miners’ was
badly attended due to prolonged, heavy rain. ‘A collection was taken on behalf
of the miners’ wives and children.’
In conclusion the 1926 General Strike was well supported in
Halifax and the Calder Valley. There were few incidents of disorder. The
numbers on strike increased at the start of week two. At the same time the
state was increasing its own organising abilities and clearly intended to
frustrate ongoing activities. In addition the decision by the Trades Union
Congress to call off solidarity action in support of the locked out miners was
not defied by trade unionists themselves due to the absence of rank and file
groups across the trade union movement and workplaces. It was to result in a
catastrophic defeat.
Brief notes on sources of materials used for this
article - there was a daily local paper at this time but, in fact, there was
better information in the weekly paper that was published each Saturday and
which was called the Halifax Courier and Guardian Weekly. The information is
patchy and so this report cannot be taken as definitive.



