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{{Short description|British politician}}
{{Short description|British politician (1860–1943)}}
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{{EngvarB|date=September 2013}}
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[[File:Benjamin Tillett and John Ward 29 July 1908.jpg|right|thumb|Ben Tillett and [[John Ward (trade unionist)|John Ward]] caricatured by [[Leslie Ward|Spy]] for ''[[Vanity Fair (UK magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', 1908]]
[[File:Benjamin Tillett and John Ward 29 July 1908.jpg|right|thumb|Ben Tillett and [[John Ward (trade unionist)|John Ward]] caricatured by [[Leslie Ward|Spy]] for ''[[Vanity Fair (UK magazine)|Vanity Fair]]'', 1908]]
[[File:Official Visits To the Western Front, 1914-1918 Q8422.jpg|right|thumb|Tillett with British troops on the western front, January 1918]]
[[File:Official Visits To the Western Front, 1914-1918 Q8422.jpg|right|thumb|Tillett with British troops on the western front, January 1918]]
'''Benjamin Tillett''' (11 September 1860 – 27 January 1943) was a British socialist, trade union leader and politician. He was a leader of the "new unionism" of 1889 that focused on organizing unskilled workers. He played a major role in founding the Dockers Union, and played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He enthusiastically supported the war effort in the First World War. He was pushed aside by [[Ernest Bevin]] during the consolidation that created the [[Transport and General Workers' Union]] in 1922, who gave Tillett a subordinate position. Scholars stress his evangelical dedication to the labour cause, while noting his administrative weaknesses. Clegg Fox and Thompson described him as a demagogue and agitator grasping for fleeting popularity.<ref>David Loades, ed., ''Reader's Guide to British History'' (2003) 2:1190–91</ref>
'''Benjamin Tillett''' (11 September 1860 – 27 January 1943) was a British socialist, trade union leader and politician. He was a leader of the "new unionism" of 1889, that focused on organizing unskilled workers. He played a major role in founding the Dockers Union, and played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He enthusiastically supported the war effort in the First World War. He was pushed aside by [[Ernest Bevin]] during the consolidation that created the [[Transport and General Workers' Union]] in 1922, who gave Tillett a subordinate position. Scholars stress his evangelical dedication to the labour cause, while noting his administrative weaknesses. Clegg Fox and Thompson described him as a [[demagogue]] and agitator grasping for fleeting popularity.<ref>David Loades, ed., ''Reader's Guide to British History'' (2003) 2:1190–1191</ref>


==Early career==
==Early career==
He was born in [[Bristol]]. He started work in a [[brickyard]] at eight years of age and was a [[Risley (circus act)|"Risley"]] boy for two years. At 12 years of age, he served for six months on a [[smack (ship)|fishing smack]], was afterwards apprenticed to a [[bootmaker]] and then joined the [[Royal Navy]]. He was invalided out of the navy and made several voyages in merchant ships. He then settled at the London Docks, and took up work as a docker.<ref name=eb>{{EB1922|wstitle=Tillett, Benjamin|inline=1}}</ref>
Tillett was born in [[Bristol]]. He started work in a [[brickyard]] at eight years of age and was a [[Risley (circus act)|"Risley"]] boy for two years. At 12 years of age, he served for six months on a [[smack (ship)|fishing smack]], was afterwards apprenticed to a [[bootmaker]], and then joined the [[Royal Navy]]. He was invalided out of the navy and made several voyages in merchant ships. Tillett then settled at the [[London Docks]], and took up work as a docker.<ref name=eb>{{EB1922|wstitle=Tillett, Benjamin|inline=1}}</ref>


==Trade union activities==
==Trade union activities==
He began his career as a trade union organiser in 1887 by forming the ''Tea Operatives and General Labourers Union'' at [[Port of Tilbury|Tilbury docks]]. Tillett and his union, renamed the [[Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers' Union]], rose to prominence during the [[London dock strike of 1889]], although the strike itself began without union involvement. Tillett also played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He was instrumental in forming the [[National Transport Workers' Federation]] in 1910, along with [[Havelock Wilson]] of the [[National Union of Seamen|Seamen's Union]].
He began his career as a trade union organiser in 1887 by forming the ''Tea Operatives and General Labourers Union'' at [[Port of Tilbury|Tilbury docks]]. Tillett and his union, renamed the [[Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers' Union]], rose to prominence during the [[London dock strike of 1889]], although the strike itself began without union involvement. Tillett also played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He was instrumental in forming the [[National Transport Workers' Federation]] in 1910, along with [[Havelock Wilson]] of the [[National Union of Seamen|Seamen's Union]].


Tillett's union was the largest of the unions which came together in 1922 to form the [[Transport and General Workers' Union]], however, it was Tillett's deputy, [[Ernest Bevin]], rather than Tillett himself, who took the major role in bringing about the amalgamation. Bevin became the General Secretary of the new union, but Tillett held the post of International and Political Secretary until 1931 and retained his seat on the General Council of the [[Trades Union Congress]] until 1932.
Tillett's union was the largest of the unions which came together in 1922 to form the [[Transport and General Workers' Union]], however, it was Tillett's deputy, [[Ernest Bevin]], rather than Tillett himself, who took the major role in bringing about the amalgamation. Bevin became the General Secretary of the new union, but Tillett held the post of International and Political Secretary until 1931 and retained his seat on the General Council of the [[Trades Union Congress]] until 1932.<ref>{{Cite web |title=“A great fire which threatens to envelop the whole metropolis:” Ben Tillett and the London Dock Strike of 1889 (By David McCulloch) |url=https://www.ngmeeting.house/blog/a-great-fire-which-threatens-to-envelop-the-whole-metropolis-ben-tillett-and-the-london-dock-strike-of-1889-by-david-mcculloch |access-date=2023-10-19 |website=Newington Green Meeting House |language=en-GB}}</ref>

By the turn of the 20th Century a blind workforce was now established in the labour market.

They were prominently employed in craft trades such as weaving, basket making and piano tuning. In an era dominated by unionisation the National League of the Blind (NLB) was registered in 1899 and was soon affiliated with both the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and Labour Party. By 1912 they had called their first strike in Bristol over non-existent pension schemes for their members a majority of whom were living in poverty.

One of the many horrors of World War One was the number of soldiers who returned home after being blinded in conflict.

Persistent lobbying by the NLB forced the Government to set up an Advisory Committee for the Welfare of the Blind. It was chaired by Tillett. His 1920 Private Members Bill titled Blind (Education, Employment and Maintenance) began the dialogue towards a new way of thinking. He set the tone when telling the chamber, 'I do not want a period of war to be the only period when we sit up and take notice. Physical deterioration should be a thing of grave concern to all of us at any period'.
<ref>https://archives.blog.parliament.uk/category/history/</ref>
His 1920 Private Members Bill titled Blind (Education, Employment and Maintenance) began the dialogue towards a new way of thinking. He set the tone when telling the chamber, 'I do not wat a period of war to be the only period when we sit up and take notice. Physical deterioration should be a thing of grave concern to all of us at any period'.


==Political career==
==Political career==
Tillett was a member of the [[Fabian Society]] and a founding member of the [[Independent Labour Party]], but subsequently joined the [[Social Democratic Federation]] instead. He also joined the [[Bristol Socialist Society]] in the 1880s, when he often travelled to that city. At the [[1892 United Kingdom general election]], he was sponsored by the [[Bradford Labour Union]] and [[Bradford Trades Council]] to stand in [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]]. He won 30.2% of the vote, but took third place and was not elected.<ref name="ashraf">{{cite book |last1=Ashraf |first1=Mary |title=Bradford Trades Council: 1872–1972 |date=1972 |publisher=Bradford Trades Council |location=Bradford}}</ref>
Tillett was a member of the [[Fabian Society]] and a founding member of the [[Independent Labour Party]], but subsequently joined the [[Social Democratic Federation]] instead. He also joined the [[Bristol Socialist Society]] in the 1880s, when he often travelled to that city. At the [[1892 United Kingdom general election]], he was sponsored by the [[Bradford Labour Union]] and [[Bradford Trades Council]] to stand in [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]]. He won 30.2% of the vote, but took third place and was not elected.<ref name="ashraf">{{cite book |last1=Ashraf |first1=Mary |title=Bradford Trades Council: 1872–1972 |date=1972 |publisher=Bradford Trades Council |location=Bradford}}</ref>


Tillett began a political career as an alderman on the [[London County Council]] from 1892 to 1898 and was a [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for [[Salford North (UK Parliament constituency)|Salford North]] from 1917 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. Before his victory at the [[1917 Salford North by-election|Salford North by-election]] in 1917, he had stood unsuccessfully for Parliament at four general elections: [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]] in [[1892 United Kingdom general election|1892]] and [[1895 United Kingdom general election|1895]]; at [[Eccles (UK Parliament constituency)|Eccles]] in [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906]]; and at [[Swansea (UK Parliament constituency)|Swansea]] in [[January 1910 United Kingdom general election|January 1910]].<ref name="craig1885-1918">{{cite book
Tillett began a political career as an alderman on the [[London County Council]] from 1892 to 1898 and was a [[Labour Party (UK)|Labour Party]] Member of Parliament (MP) for [[Salford North (UK Parliament constituency)|Salford North]] from 1917 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. Before his victory at the [[1917 Salford North by-election|Salford North by-election]] in 1917 as an independent candidate, he had stood unsuccessfully for Parliament at four general elections: [[Bradford West (UK Parliament constituency)|Bradford West]] in [[1892 United Kingdom general election|1892]] and [[1895 United Kingdom general election|1895]]; at [[Eccles (UK Parliament constituency)|Eccles]] in [[1906 United Kingdom general election|1906]]; and at [[Swansea (UK Parliament constituency)|Swansea]] in [[January 1910 United Kingdom general election|January 1910]].<ref name="craig1885-1918">{{cite book
|last=Craig
|last=Craig
|first=F. W. S.
|first=F. W. S.
Line 30: Line 40:
|isbn= 0-900178-27-2
|isbn= 0-900178-27-2
|pages=81, 316, 463
|pages=81, 316, 463
}}</ref> He often disagreed with the liberal tendencies of the Labour Party, claiming in 1918 that 'If the Labour Party could select a King, he would be a feminist, a Temperance crank, a Nonconformist charlatan...an anti-sport, anti-jollity advocate, a teetotaller, as well as a general wet blanket.'<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pugh, Martin.|title=Speak for Britain! : a new history of the Labour Party|date=2011|publisher=Vintage|isbn=978-0-09-952078-8|oclc=734100865}}</ref>
}}</ref> He often disagreed with the liberal tendencies of the Labour Party, claiming in 1918 that 'If the Labour Party could select a King, he would be a feminist, a Temperance crank, a Nonconformist charlatan...an anti-sport, anti-jollity advocate, a teetotaller, as well as a general wet blanket.'<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pugh|first= Martin|title=Speak for Britain! : a new history of the Labour Party|date=2011|publisher=Vintage|isbn=978-0-09-952078-8|oclc=734100865}}</ref>


Tillett courted controversy with some of his supporters in the labour movement through his outspoken support of Britain's involvement in the First World War, an issue which split the Labour Party. In article in the 3 July 1915 issue of ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', the pro-war writer [[G. K. Chesterton]] offered his explanation:
Tillett courted controversy with some of his supporters in the labour movement through his outspoken support of Britain's involvement in the [[World War I|First World War]], an issue which split the Labour Party. In article in the 3 July 1915 issue of ''[[The Illustrated London News]]'', the pro-war writer [[G. K. Chesterton]] offered his explanation:


:It is the moderate Socialists who are Pacifists; the fighting Socialists are patriots. Mr. Ben Tillett would have been regarded by Mr. [[Ramsay MacDonald]] as a mere firebrand; but it is precisely because Mr. Tillet was ready to go on fighting Capitalism that he is ready to go on fighting Krupp. It is precisely because Mr. Macdonald was weak in his opposition to domestic tyrants, that he is weak in his opposition to foreign ones. The wobblers who wanted a one-sided arbitration to end the strikes would to-day accept a one-sided arbitration to end the battles. But the men who wanted strikes want nothing but shells. That great artist, Mr. [[Will Dyson]], laid aside the lethal pencil with which he had caricatured the sweaters and the middlemen, and sharpened a yet deadlier one to draw all the devils in Prussia.
:It is the moderate Socialists who are Pacifists; the fighting Socialists are patriots. Mr. Ben Tillett would have been regarded by Mr. [[Ramsay MacDonald]] as a mere firebrand; but it is precisely because Mr. Tillet was ready to go on fighting Capitalism that he is ready to go on fighting Krupp. It is precisely because Mr. Macdonald was weak in his opposition to domestic tyrants, that he is weak in his opposition to foreign ones. The wobblers who wanted a one-sided arbitration to end the strikes would to-day accept a one-sided arbitration to end the battles. But the men who wanted strikes want nothing but shells. That great artist, Mr. [[Will Dyson]], laid aside the lethal pencil with which he had caricatured the sweaters and the middlemen, and sharpened a yet deadlier one to draw all the devils in Prussia.
Line 40: Line 50:
=== Opposition to Jewish immigration ===
=== Opposition to Jewish immigration ===


In contrast to his support for friendly relations between English and Irish Catholic dockworkers in the East End of London Tillett was strongly opposed to Jewish immigration.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51:3–4, 356–373, here 361</ref> Tillett associated Jewish arrivals with creating undesirable working conditions and poor housing: "the influx of continental pauperism aggravates and multiplies the number of
In contrast to his support for friendly relations between English and Irish Catholic dockworkers in the East End of London Tillett was strongly opposed to Jewish immigration.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [361]</ref> Tillett associated Jewish arrivals with creating undesirable working conditions and poor housing: "the influx of continental pauperism aggravates and multiplies the number of ills which press so heavily on us...foreigners come to London in large numbers, herd together in habitations unfit for beasts, the sweating system allowing the more grasping and shrewd a life of comparative ease in superintending their work".<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [361]</ref>

ills which press so heavily on us...foreigners come to London in large
In 1891, Tillett formulated what the historian Satnam Virdee has described as a "proto-fascist discourse" in a series of letters to the ''[[London Evening News]]''.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref> Tillett argued that Jewish workers should be removed from Britain and that British politicians were in thrall to Jewish financial power: 'Our leading statesmen do not care to offend the great banking houses or money kings.... For heavens' sake, give us back our own countrymen and take from us your motley multitude.'<ref>Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]</ref>
numbers, herd together in habitations unfit for beasts, the sweating system
allowing the more grasping and shrewd a life of comparative ease in superintending their work".<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51:3–4, 356–373, here 361</ref>


==Personal life and death==
In 1891, Tillett formulated what the historian Satnam Virdee has described as a "proto-fascist discourse" in a series of letters to the ''[[London Evening News]]''.<ref> Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51:3–4, 356–373, here 368</ref> Tillett argued that Jewish workers should be removed from Britain and that British politicians were in thrall to Jewish financial power: 'Our leading statesmen do not care to offend the great banking houses or money kings.... For heavens' sake, give us back our own countrymen and take from us your motley multitude.'<ref>Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, ''Patterns of Prejudice'', 51:3–4, 356–373, here 368</ref>
Tillett died on 27 January 1943, aged 82


==Works==
==Works==
*''A Brief History of the Dockers' Union'', commemorating the 1889 dockers' strike (1910)
* ''A Brief History of the Dockers' Union'', commemorating the 1889 dockers' strike (1910)
*''A History of the London Transport Workers' Strike'' (1911)
* ''A History of the London Transport Workers' Strike'' (1911)
*[http://contentdm.warwick.ac.uk/cdm/ref/collection/russian/id/2095 ''Some Russian Impressions'' (1925)]
* [http://contentdm.warwick.ac.uk/cdm/ref/collection/russian/id/2095 ''Some Russian Impressions'' (1925)]
*''Memories and Reflections'', an autobiography (1931)
* ''Memories and Reflections'', an autobiography (1931)


== References ==
== References ==
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* Clegg, Hugh Armstrong, Alan Fox, and A. F. Thompson. ''A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889: 1911–1933'' (1985).
* Clegg, Hugh Armstrong, Alan Fox, and A. F. Thompson. ''A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889: 1911–1933'' (1985).
* [[Schneer, Jonathan]]. ''Ben Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader'', (Croom Helm, 1982)
* [[Schneer, Jonathan]]. ''Ben Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader'', (Croom Helm, 1982)
* "Ben Tillett" in ''Dictionary of national biography 1941–1950'' (1959) 883-86 [https://archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati19411950lees/dictionaryofnati19411950lees_djvu.txt online]
* "Ben Tillett" in ''Dictionary of national biography 1941–1950'' (1959) 883–86 [https://archive.org/stream/dictionaryofnati19411950lees/dictionaryofnati19411950lees_djvu.txt online]


==External links==
==External links==
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{{s-npo|union}}
{{s-npo|union}}
{{succession box|title=General Secretary of the [[International Transport Workers' Federation]]|years=1896|before=''New position''|after=[[Robert Peddie]]}}
{{succession box|title=General Secretary of the [[International Transport Workers' Federation]]|years=1896|before=''New position''|after=[[Robert Peddie]]}}
{{succession box|title=[[Trades Union Congress]] representative to the [[American Federation of Labor]]|years=1901|with=[[Francis Chandler]]|before=[[Pete Curran]] and [[John Weir (trade unionist)|John Weir]]|after=[[Matthew Arrandale]] and [[Enoch Edwards]]}}
{{succession box|title=[[Trades Union Congress]] representative to the [[American Federation of Labor]]|years=1901|with=[[Francis Chandler]]|before=[[Pete Curran]] and [[John Weir (trade unionist)|John Weir]]|after=[[Matthew Arrandale]] and [[Enoch Edwards (trade unionist)|Enoch Edwards]]}}
{{succession box
{{succession box
| title = President and General Secretary of the [[International Transport Workers' Federation]]
| title = President and General Secretary of the [[International Transport Workers' Federation]]
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[[Category:1943 deaths]]
[[Category:1943 deaths]]
[[Category:Labour Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies]]
[[Category:Labour Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies]]
[[Category:Leaders of British trade unions]]
[[Category:British trade union leaders]]
[[Category:Members of London County Council]]
[[Category:Members of London County Council]]
[[Category:Independent Labour Party National Administrative Committee members]]
[[Category:Independent Labour Party National Administrative Committee members]]
[[Category:People from Bristol]]
[[Category:Trade unionists from Bristol]]
[[Category:Social Democratic Federation members]]
[[Category:Social Democratic Federation members]]
[[Category:Transport and General Workers' Union-sponsored MPs]]
[[Category:Transport and General Workers' Union-sponsored MPs]]
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[[Category:Royal Navy sailors]]
[[Category:Royal Navy sailors]]
[[Category:British Merchant Navy personnel]]
[[Category:British Merchant Navy personnel]]
[[Category:Independent Labour Party parliamentary candidates]]
[[Category:Independent members of the House of Commons of the United Kingdom]]
[[Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Salford North]]
[[Category:Members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Salford North]]

Latest revision as of 11:46, 16 January 2024

Ben Tillett in 1920
Ben Tillett and John Ward caricatured by Spy for Vanity Fair, 1908
Tillett with British troops on the western front, January 1918

Benjamin Tillett (11 September 1860 – 27 January 1943) was a British socialist, trade union leader and politician. He was a leader of the "new unionism" of 1889, that focused on organizing unskilled workers. He played a major role in founding the Dockers Union, and played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He enthusiastically supported the war effort in the First World War. He was pushed aside by Ernest Bevin during the consolidation that created the Transport and General Workers' Union in 1922, who gave Tillett a subordinate position. Scholars stress his evangelical dedication to the labour cause, while noting his administrative weaknesses. Clegg Fox and Thompson described him as a demagogue and agitator grasping for fleeting popularity.[1]

Early career[edit]

Tillett was born in Bristol. He started work in a brickyard at eight years of age and was a "Risley" boy for two years. At 12 years of age, he served for six months on a fishing smack, was afterwards apprenticed to a bootmaker, and then joined the Royal Navy. He was invalided out of the navy and made several voyages in merchant ships. Tillett then settled at the London Docks, and took up work as a docker.[2]

Trade union activities[edit]

He began his career as a trade union organiser in 1887 by forming the Tea Operatives and General Labourers Union at Tilbury docks. Tillett and his union, renamed the Dock, Wharf, Riverside and General Labourers' Union, rose to prominence during the London dock strike of 1889, although the strike itself began without union involvement. Tillett also played a prominent role as a strike leader in dock strikes in 1911 and 1912. He was instrumental in forming the National Transport Workers' Federation in 1910, along with Havelock Wilson of the Seamen's Union.

Tillett's union was the largest of the unions which came together in 1922 to form the Transport and General Workers' Union, however, it was Tillett's deputy, Ernest Bevin, rather than Tillett himself, who took the major role in bringing about the amalgamation. Bevin became the General Secretary of the new union, but Tillett held the post of International and Political Secretary until 1931 and retained his seat on the General Council of the Trades Union Congress until 1932.[3]

By the turn of the 20th Century a blind workforce was now established in the labour market.

They were prominently employed in craft trades such as weaving, basket making and piano tuning. In an era dominated by unionisation the National League of the Blind (NLB) was registered in 1899 and was soon affiliated with both the Trade Union Congress (TUC) and Labour Party. By 1912 they had called their first strike in Bristol over non-existent pension schemes for their members a majority of whom were living in poverty.

One of the many horrors of World War One was the number of soldiers who returned home after being blinded in conflict.

Persistent lobbying by the NLB forced the Government to set up an Advisory Committee for the Welfare of the Blind. It was chaired by Tillett. His 1920 Private Members Bill titled Blind (Education, Employment and Maintenance) began the dialogue towards a new way of thinking. He set the tone when telling the chamber, 'I do not want a period of war to be the only period when we sit up and take notice. Physical deterioration should be a thing of grave concern to all of us at any period'. [4] His 1920 Private Members Bill titled Blind (Education, Employment and Maintenance) began the dialogue towards a new way of thinking. He set the tone when telling the chamber, 'I do not wat a period of war to be the only period when we sit up and take notice. Physical deterioration should be a thing of grave concern to all of us at any period'.

Political career[edit]

Tillett was a member of the Fabian Society and a founding member of the Independent Labour Party, but subsequently joined the Social Democratic Federation instead. He also joined the Bristol Socialist Society in the 1880s, when he often travelled to that city. At the 1892 United Kingdom general election, he was sponsored by the Bradford Labour Union and Bradford Trades Council to stand in Bradford West. He won 30.2% of the vote, but took third place and was not elected.[5]

Tillett began a political career as an alderman on the London County Council from 1892 to 1898 and was a Labour Party Member of Parliament (MP) for Salford North from 1917 to 1924 and again from 1929 to 1931. Before his victory at the Salford North by-election in 1917 as an independent candidate, he had stood unsuccessfully for Parliament at four general elections: Bradford West in 1892 and 1895; at Eccles in 1906; and at Swansea in January 1910.[6] He often disagreed with the liberal tendencies of the Labour Party, claiming in 1918 that 'If the Labour Party could select a King, he would be a feminist, a Temperance crank, a Nonconformist charlatan...an anti-sport, anti-jollity advocate, a teetotaller, as well as a general wet blanket.'[7]

Tillett courted controversy with some of his supporters in the labour movement through his outspoken support of Britain's involvement in the First World War, an issue which split the Labour Party. In article in the 3 July 1915 issue of The Illustrated London News, the pro-war writer G. K. Chesterton offered his explanation:

It is the moderate Socialists who are Pacifists; the fighting Socialists are patriots. Mr. Ben Tillett would have been regarded by Mr. Ramsay MacDonald as a mere firebrand; but it is precisely because Mr. Tillet was ready to go on fighting Capitalism that he is ready to go on fighting Krupp. It is precisely because Mr. Macdonald was weak in his opposition to domestic tyrants, that he is weak in his opposition to foreign ones. The wobblers who wanted a one-sided arbitration to end the strikes would to-day accept a one-sided arbitration to end the battles. But the men who wanted strikes want nothing but shells. That great artist, Mr. Will Dyson, laid aside the lethal pencil with which he had caricatured the sweaters and the middlemen, and sharpened a yet deadlier one to draw all the devils in Prussia.

Before the First World War, Tillett had defended the idea of an international general strike in case of war, but like most trade union leaders, Tillett decided in 1914 to support the British war aims, writing a pamphlet published in 1917, "Who was Responsible for the war and why ?" in which he declared "Despite our former pacifist attitude, the forces of Labour in England have supported the government throughout the war. We realised that this is a fight for world freedom against a carefully engineered plan to establish a world autocracy".

Opposition to Jewish immigration[edit]

In contrast to his support for friendly relations between English and Irish Catholic dockworkers in the East End of London Tillett was strongly opposed to Jewish immigration.[8] Tillett associated Jewish arrivals with creating undesirable working conditions and poor housing: "the influx of continental pauperism aggravates and multiplies the number of ills which press so heavily on us...foreigners come to London in large numbers, herd together in habitations unfit for beasts, the sweating system allowing the more grasping and shrewd a life of comparative ease in superintending their work".[9]

In 1891, Tillett formulated what the historian Satnam Virdee has described as a "proto-fascist discourse" in a series of letters to the London Evening News.[10] Tillett argued that Jewish workers should be removed from Britain and that British politicians were in thrall to Jewish financial power: 'Our leading statesmen do not care to offend the great banking houses or money kings.... For heavens' sake, give us back our own countrymen and take from us your motley multitude.'[11]

Personal life and death[edit]

Tillett died on 27 January 1943, aged 82

Works[edit]

  • A Brief History of the Dockers' Union, commemorating the 1889 dockers' strike (1910)
  • A History of the London Transport Workers' Strike (1911)
  • Some Russian Impressions (1925)
  • Memories and Reflections, an autobiography (1931)

References[edit]

  1. ^ David Loades, ed., Reader's Guide to British History (2003) 2:1190–1191
  2. ^  One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Tillett, Benjamin". Encyclopædia Britannica (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company.
  3. ^ ""A great fire which threatens to envelop the whole metropolis:" Ben Tillett and the London Dock Strike of 1889 (By David McCulloch)". Newington Green Meeting House. Retrieved 19 October 2023.
  4. ^ https://archives.blog.parliament.uk/category/history/
  5. ^ Ashraf, Mary (1972). Bradford Trades Council: 1872–1972. Bradford: Bradford Trades Council.
  6. ^ Craig, F. W. S. (1989) [1974]. British parliamentary election results 1885–1918 (2nd ed.). Chichester: Parliamentary Research Services. pp. 81, 316, 463. ISBN 0-900178-27-2.
  7. ^ Pugh, Martin (2011). Speak for Britain! : a new history of the Labour Party. Vintage. ISBN 978-0-09-952078-8. OCLC 734100865.
  8. ^ Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, Patterns of Prejudice, 51: 3–4, 356–373 [361]
  9. ^ Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, Patterns of Prejudice, 51: 3–4, 356–373 [361]
  10. ^ Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, Patterns of Prejudice, 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]
  11. ^ Satnam Virdee (2017) Socialist antisemitism and its discontents in England, 1884–98, Patterns of Prejudice, 51: 3–4, 356–373 [368]

Further reading[edit]

  • Clegg, Hugh Armstrong, Alan Fox, and A. F. Thompson. A History of British Trade Unions Since 1889: 1911–1933 (1985).
  • Schneer, Jonathan. Ben Tillett: Portrait of a Labour Leader, (Croom Helm, 1982)
  • "Ben Tillett" in Dictionary of national biography 1941–1950 (1959) 883–86 online

External links[edit]

Trade union offices
Preceded by
New position
General Secretary of the International Transport Workers' Federation
1896
Succeeded by
Preceded by Trades Union Congress representative to the American Federation of Labor
1901
With: Francis Chandler
Succeeded by
Preceded by President and General Secretary of the International Transport Workers' Federation
1904
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Trades Union Congress
1929
Succeeded by
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Salford North
1917–1924
Succeeded by
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Salford North
1929–1931
Succeeded by