The Jarrow March – A Crusade for work – 80 years ago today! Betrayed by the Tories!

The Jarrow March – A Crusade for work – 80 years ago today! Betrayed by the Tories!

The Jarrow march has come to symbolise all that is wrong with inequality in this country. The Tory government of the day was quite happy to put the profits of its wealthy backers before all else and did not give a hoot for the misery and suffering that was left in the wake of their policies. That Conservative government under Stanley Baldwin was quite prepared to leave towns and cities in the north destitute and starving and did nothing to help.

The desperation in Jarrow was the direct result of government policy. The closure of Palmer’s Shipyard threw 10,000 men out of work with all the knock-on effect that had on the area. They was no welfare and families were starving.

On the 5th of October 1936 a desperate group of 200 men, backed by the Labour MP Ellen Wilkinson, set off to march 280 miles from Jarrow to London in order to hand a petition in to the Houses of Parliament.

The column of thin, hungry men, wearing flat-caps and capes to ward off the rain, played mouth-organs as they defiantly walked through towns on the way to London. They were the symbol of everything that was wrong. Poor families were starving while the rich, with their monopolies and behind the back deals, became wealthier by the minute. All over the country there were hunger marches and demonstrations. The Jarrow Crusade was one of many.

They were not marching in demand of hand-outs; they wanted work. They were not adverse to working for twelve hours a day for poor pay. They merely wanted to work and earn enough to feed their families.

The Tory government had colluded with the Bank of England to block a loan that would have brought a major Steel Works to Jarrow and alleviated the suffering.

Ellen Wilkinson, with tears in her eyes, handed in the petition and pleaded on behalf of the people of Jarrow.

The Tory government callously rejected the appeal and did nothing.

Today – as Theresa May stands up and promises to deal with inequality forgive me if I take it with a pinch of salt. We’ve heard it all before with the likes of Thatcher and Cameron. They speak the words to fool the people while still playing the same tune. They cut the money to the poor and disabled while giving to the rich. (Tax cuts for the rich – pay cuts for the poor).

Nothing has changed and never will. The Tory party was formed by the rich to look after the rich.

Actions speak louder than words. They’ll offer us sops and crow about it.

Today I’ll remember those defiant heroes of Jarrow and say a curse for Stanley Baldwin and the selfish, greedy people he represents.

6 thoughts on “The Jarrow March – A Crusade for work – 80 years ago today! Betrayed by the Tories!

  1. A few months ago I was playing gigs in Northumberland and one of them was at a Working Man’s Club in Jarrow, the Alberta, it was a great night. I subsequently researched the march, or crusade as it was called, and you can read about it here.

    https://fergysrambles.org/2019/10/31/newcastle-jarrow/

    Perhaps I am being very thick here (I have been up all night) but if the march was in October 1936 then how can it be 80 years to the day in March 2020?

    1. Hi Fergy,
      Loved your piece by the way.
      The simple answer is that it is a reblog of the piece I originally wrote four years ago. Sorry about that – but I have a lot more followers now who would not have read it when it first came out. So it is not quite to the day anymore – but it was when I wrote it.

      1. Thanks mate.

        As I say, I have been up all night and I thought my old head was going!

        Thanks so much for your kind comments, I had a great time in the Northeast and couldn’t play Jarrow and blog about it without mentionin the Crusade. It is fascination stuff.

        Fergy.

      2. Yeah – I love it up there! The people are great. The history is amazing. I am particularly interested in the social struggles.
        I loved the way your piece included everything from food to monuments and the history behind it. A nice combination and well written.

      3. Thanks again.

        It had been years since I was in the Northeast (about 30 to be precise) and I had forgotten just how friendly people there were. I suppose I have fallen into “London mode” over the years.

        As for my writing “style” (if it could be called that) I deliberately called the site “Fergy’s Rambles” as I ramble all the time, both literally and discursively. It drives some people mad but I just can’t help myself.

      4. It was a ramble Fergie but that is what made it so interesting. It went from the mundane to the esoteric. I liked it.

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