May 11, at
Warwick Hall, Church Green,
Burford,
Oxfordshire OX18 4RY
The Socialist Party will have a stall at this event.
During the English Civil War of the 1640s, radicals such as
the Diggers or “True Levellers,” tried to put communal or communist ideas into
practice, calling for every able-bodied person to work and to contribute to the
common store of goods, skills, and services. Fearing the spread of such
radicalism, the English authorities destroyed their communes and arrested their
leading spokesmen.
The ideas of common ownership are part of the history of the
working people of Britain. A number of people, including Gerrard Winstanley,
started to build houses, and dig and plant their crops on the common land at St
George's Hill in Surrey. The Diggers, or True Levellers, as they described
themselves, were communists who wanted to abolish private property and unlike
any other radical grouping, they tried to put it in to practice. However, the
Digger communes lasted barely a year. They were broken by the violent hostility
of the landlords and the indifference of the poor. Ruffians were sent to the
commons to physically attack the Diggers, tearing down their houses and
trampling crops. The landlords took them to court and prosecuted them for
trespass. A smaller group of the original St.Georges Hill Diggers who moved to
close by Little Heath near Cobham received similar treatment, as did other
communes established in Wellingborough in Northamptonshire, Iver in
Buckinghamshire, Barnet in Hertfordshire, Enfield in then Middlesex, Bosworth
in Gloucestershire and a further one in Nottinghamshire. Indeed, nine of the
Wellingborough Diggers were arrested and imprisoned in Northampton jail and
although no charges could be proved against them the justice refused to release
them. The Diggers’ communist ideas were a powerful attraction to the poor. Winstanley
produced a utopian blueprint entitled Law of Freedom, a detailed plan for a
future society.
1 comment:
Six members and sympathisers were out yesterday for our stall at the Levellers Day event in Burford...We concentrated exclusively on letting the leftwingers who had come for the Levellers event know that we standing in the area. This was the first occasion that the EU manifesto itself was handed out. Pamphlet sales too including the new ones on Pankhurst, Luxemburg and Martov.
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