On this day … 3 December 1892

The Preston Chronicle reported the formation of a Preston Fabian Society – a branch of the socialist organisation that campaigned for a minimum wage, a free national health service and the abolition of hereditary peerages: all now achieved. This was the event that marked the birth of the Labour Party in Preston, at a time when the town’s Liberals had thrown in the political towel in the face of a string of Conservative electoral victories.

Its formation had been preceded by a series of lectures featuring leading lights in the socialist movement of the day, including Annie Besant, a strident campaigner for women’s rights. Mrs Besant addressed a large audience at the Public Hall and her message set out the path for local Fabians to follow.

Her speech was reported in the Preston Chronicle:

‘If they found at one end of the social scale the millionaire and at the other end the pauper, both of whom were unemployed, it was clear that there was something wrong. It ought not to be possible that one man should starve while another rolled in wealth. Now why should idleness and wealth go together, and why industry and poverty? Labour produced wealth but did not get it. Why? Because wealth was wrongly distributed by artificial laws made by man. If man made the artificial laws, he could unmake them, and no one should be contented until everyone who was willing to work honestly could live as human beings ought to live.’

At its first meeting at the White Horse Coffee Rooms in Friargate, the Preston Fabian Society declared its intention to campaign for the nationalisation of industry and the collective ownership of land:

‘… believing such method to be the one best calculated to emancipate labour, banish poverty, and promote liberty, equity, comfort and happiness among the people … and desiring to further the beneficent object of substituting an ordered industrial co-operation for our wasteful, anarchical competition.’

The life of that first Preston Fabian Society was to be very short indeed, for less than two months later on 21 January 1893, the members were again meeting at the White Horse Coffee Rooms to discuss changing its name to the Preston Independent Labour Party.

In the March, the change of name was urged at a meeting of the Fabians at the Public Hall by a Miss K. St John Conway, of Newnham College, Cambridge. This is how the Chronicle reported her speech:

‘Although of a slim, almost girlish appearance, Miss Conway is in many respects a remarkable young lady. She has adopted the extreme ideas of the Socialists, and her impassioned address was listened to in the most attentive manner, the spectacle of a large number of men following the words of a lady speaker with such thoughtfulness being rather uncommon in Preston. Miss Conway’s delivery is quick, clear, and forcible, and her distinct, powerful tone, and slightly defiant air are in themselves sufficient to attract notice. She has a complete mastery of the subject she had selected, and during the discussion following the lecture challenged any man present to a debate on a public platform.’

A week later the Fabians were back at the White Horse Coffee Rooms, where they were told: ‘There was not … any town in the country where a branch of the Independent Labour Party was needed so much as in Preston’. And the meeting there and then formed a Preston branch of the ILP.

At the next general election in 1895, the Preston branch of the ILP put forward a James Tattersall as their candidate (see 13 March 2023 post). He came in third behind the two Conservative candidates, the Liberals having given up any hope of unseating the Tories who held the town’s two seats for nearly half a century.

Come the 1900 election, the Preston ILP fielded Keir Hardie as their candidate, but he did no better than James Tattersall, trailing behind the Conservative candidates, although he was returned for Merthyr Tydfill, where he had also been nominated.


Source
Anyone with a Lancashire County Library card can read the Preston Chronicle and many more papers for free here: https://link.gale.com/apps/BNCN?u=lancs&aty=rpas
Annie Besant: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annie_Besant


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