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To give a comprehensive account of the full life Bernard (Benny) Rothman has
led would require a long biography well beyond the space available in the
Bulletin. In the meantime this article giving a brief glimpse of his manifold
activities will have to suffice.
The Mass Trespass over Kinder Scout in 1932 has ever since then been the
subject of innumerable articles in many national and local newspapers,
magazines and journals etc. It has been the main theme of schools, conferences,
seminars, debates and lectures. Books, poems, plays, radio and television
programmes have featured it. Benny's own book ,"The Kinder Scout
Trespass", is truly a fascinating historical document and I would strongly
urge anyone who has not yet read it to beg or borrow a copy. It is a rewarding
read.
It is generally accepted now that this historic event paved the way for the
1949 National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act. April 24
th
, the date of the Trespass, has been marked over many years by
anniversary reunions and celebratory rallies supported by many leading national
figures in such organisations as the Ramblers Association, the Peak and
Northern Footpaths Society, the Open Spaces Society, the British Mountaineering
Council, The Council for National Parks, the Peak Park Planning Board, the
Council for the Preservation of Rural England, the Country Commission, the
Woodcraft Folk, Red Rope, Sheffield Campaign for Access to Moorlands, the AEEU,
NUPE and many others in the environmental field. All of them pay tribute to the
leader of the trespass, Benny Rothman, though he would be the first to point
out that he was simply taking part in a historic movement to win the people's
right to ramble freely over uncultivated land - forbidden to them by the
selfish , grouse shooting landowning classes.
Still rambling and campaigning in his 80's Benny sadly suffered a stroke in
1994, which left him confined to a wheelchair. Not that that stopped him
entirely. Together and aided by his dear wife Lily he then fought successfully
against a Council proposal to fence in and narrow a path near his home into a
passageway making it difficult for mothers with prams to reach the local
primary school. He has now retired to Essex with her to be near his daughter
and family. Requests for his advice and help, which he has always freely given,
have often been made by outdoor organisations, journalists, students and
occasionally by authors. He remains a well-known figure nationally in the
rambling and outdoor world and also generally in the environmental field on
many different issues. What is less well known is his political career, which
has played such a major role in his life. It had very humble beginnings.
Benny was born on 1
st
June 1911. In his boyhood he knew little of life outside the crowded, squalid
environment of Cheetham, a thickly populated working class district of north
Manchester. He won a scholarship to Manchester Central High School for boys but
left just as he was about to take his matriculation exam, when a kind neighbour
found a job for him. He had no option, the family was poor, his father had died
when he was 12 he had to help support his widowed mother and family.
Although Benny's uncle Arthur (Jack) Solomons who was for a few years the
national treasurer of the ILP and a friend of Jimmy Maxton and Manny Shinwell
and also involved with James Connolly in a big clothing workers strike, he
never influenced Benny politically. By contrast his aunt Ettie introduced him
to some Upton Sinclair books and the "Ragged Trousered
Philanthropists". He became an avid reader of similar works.
The job was in the motor trade. For his first two years at Tom Garner's Benny
was an errand boy. Later he started a YMCA course in geography and economics.
This interested Bill Dunn, a member of the CPGB, in discussing the subjects
with his young workmate. In 1929 Bill invited him to a local YCL. meeting. To
quote Benny he found "they were talking his language" and he drifted
into the organisation. Bill also took Benny to the Sunday night forums at the
Clarion Club in Market Street to listen to the speakers there. At Garners' he
became very outspoken on socialism and communism. In late 1929 he was arrested
for chalking on the Piccadilly pavement "Look out for the Daily Worker
Out January 1
st
1930". Despite the protest of Frank Bright, then organiser of the
Manchester C. P., Benny was taken to court and fined 7/6. His position at
Garners' was prejudiced when the Press reported the case and even more so when
Benny started selling 50/60 copies of the paper daily. This dwindled after a
short while but he still sold a few in the garage. The bosses were not pleased.
When Garners merged with Rootes rationalisation followed and inevitably the
young communist was one of the first to go. Benny was redundant.
Benny had acquired a bike (built of spare parts!). He began to discover the
countryside and very quickly developed a lifelong passion for the outdoors.
Armed with a 6p Woolworth's map he spent his 16
th
birthday climbing alone to the summit of Snowdon. He became a keen
rambler and cyclist. On joining the Clarion Cycling Club he immediately became
the minutes secretary.
In 1931 Benny helped to establish a group of the British Workers Sports
Federation and soon became its secretary for the North. He organised popular
Sunday rambles and camping and cycling weekends in the Peak District involving
workmates from Garner's and friends from the Clarion Cycling Club and Cheetham.
After the Easter 1932 camp at Rowarth the idea of the Mass Trespass took hold
and was realised a month later. Blacklisted after serving his sentence in
Leicester jail Benny went at the YCL's suggestion to N.E. Lancashire to try and
build a branch there. With his zest for sport he organised some factory
football teams and a rambling club but difficulties resulted in their demise.
He returned to Manchester after six months still unemployed. Then he worked for
a year (1933/4) at a local garage but left to get a job at AVRO's aircraft
factory in Newton Heath where he thought he could do far more industrial and
political work. Immediately he joined the AEU's Manchester 2
nd
branch he became its minutes secretary and soon was elected to be its
delegate on the Manchester and Salford Trades Council. His political activity
soon exposed his communist beliefs and before long the AVRO management found a
pretext to sack him.
The political atmosphere in Cheetham with its large Jewish population was
strongly anti-fascist and charged with the drive for peace. At this time Benny
was active in the Youth Front against war and fascism, which later merged with
Cheetham YCL. He involved himself ever more in the YCL and became secretary of
the Cheetham branch. He helped to build up the Challenge Club which while
political also had social activities such as rambles, cycle runs, gymnastics,
Sunday night dances etc. even building a 'Flying Flea'. This attracted some 500
members, of whom roughly half joined the YCL. About 75% of the members were
Jewish. Probably the appeal of such a broad organisation coupled with the
fights against the Blackshirts led by Cheetham YCL contributed to the decline
of the BWSF. At a BUF meeting on Marshall Croft its van was turned over. At
another BUF meeting opposite Crumpsall Library, Benny was arrested and bound
over for 12 months to 'keep the peace'. In 1933 he intervened when Evelyn
Taylor (later Jack Jones' wife) was physically attacked by BUF stewards as she
was heckling Mosley in the King's Hall at Belle Vue. He threw out some
anti-Mosley leaflets but then was thrown bodily over the balcony but luckily
his fall was broken by a blackshirt below. The brutality shown at that meeting
by the blackshirts was reported to a counter meeting that evening in the Free
Trade Hall and later to Parliament which led to the passing of the Public Order
Act. Some 60 years later he was involved in a TUC education project with Danish
trade unionists on tackling racism and fascism as part of the European Year of
the Older Person.
Not long before he left AVRO's Benny married the mill girl he had met at a
peace camp, his comrade Lily Crabtree, who came from a communist family in
Rochdale. They lived briefly in Failsworth then settled in Timperley in 1936 so
that Benny could be nearer his new job as a fitter at Metro-Vicks in Trafford
Park. Soon he began selling the 'Daily Worker' in the factory, though not
openly. He collected contributions regularly in support of Aid to Spain. At a
big meeting in the Free Trade Hall he volunteered to be an ambulance driver but
was frustrated by not being accepted, largely because he was an inexperienced
driver. Moreover it was felt that he could better help the cause through his
trade union and factory work.
When Benny condemned Chamberlain for the Munich agreement in 1938 he was
called a warmonger and ostracised by his Labour Party workmates although a year
later there was some realisation that Munich had not brought "Peace in our
time". Again when the Soviet-German non-aggression pact was signed Benny
had a rough period at work, the pact being seen as a sell-out by the
treacherous Russians. Benny was very strongly anti-Hitler and thought that the
stand taken by Harry Pollitt as to the anti-fascist nature of war was correct.
He joined the Home Guard.
Metro-Vicks was a conglomeration of factories, then employing some 22,000
workers, the biggest industrial complex in Europe. Just prior to World War II
breaking out Benny, after two years as shop steward in his department, became
the delegate to the Works Committee for the 800 to 900 workers in the West
Works switchgear and about another thousand on radar work in West Works 5. He
had won the respect of nearly 2000 workers as a first class trade unionist ever
alert to their interests, especially their working conditions and piece-rates.
In 1942 he helped set up the Timperley branch of the AEU and served 11 years as
one of its officials. He became later the senior AEU Works Committee delegate.
Under his leadership West Works became 100% trade unionised, a band of united
shop stewards had weekly meetings and led every struggle in Metro-Vicks for
wage increases, against management manoeuvres to interfere with piece-rates,
and many other related issues. Benny edited the bulletin to keep their
department up to date with authentic information. Small wonder that instead of
spending the agreed one hour a day on union work he would often spend 8 to 10
hours, almost full-time!
As the war progressed Benny helped to establish a Joint Production Committee
and secured agreement on increased output without change to ordinary norms and
conditions, which boosted production greatly. On one job the bonus rose to
6/700 %! Girls newly recruited into the factory were initially given
unsatisfactory low rates. Benny immediately blasted his way through the normal
procedures to see higher management. The girls then got guaranteed new prices
for their work.
By 1944 Benny was selling daily 70/80 copies of the 'Daily Worker' in the
factory. This was emulated by one of his stewards in another department. Some
of his stewards joined the CPGB branch there. Strong support was given by
Benny's department to left-wing candidates in local elections. He regretted the
CPGB's later mistake in switching from factory to area branches, considering
that its leadership of the trade union movement in the Metro-Vicks factories
was thereby much weakened. After the war Benny was on the Post-War Planning
Committee. Without a change to alternative work redundancies ensued. Over the
next twelve months despite Benny's battle to save the jobs they were lost.
A dispute arose in November 1951 when a welder was told to do a fitter's job.
Benny called a meeting with management permission. The men struck for an
hour and the proposal was dropped. The management seized on Benny's taking part
in the hour's stoppage as an excuse to sack him. Nearly 3,000 men struck
immediately to protest at this blatant victimisation. The AEU Manchester
District Committee supported the men. They remained out for eight days. The
Strike Committee printed leaflets and a small paper called 'Unity' in defence
of the right to strike and lobbied the AEU EC to recognise the strike. This was
refused, although they allowed dispute benefits. The Strike Committee then
became the Re-instatement Committee and in March 1952 the 75 AEU Metrovick shop
stewards confirmed their view that Benny had been victimised. The management
conceded that an application for re-employment by Benny could be considered
'after a reasonable time'. Reasonable was never defined. Benny started work at
Staveley Machine Tools of Broadheath. He had won his point at Metro-Vicks but
wouldn't go back.
The foregoing is but a part of a much longer story. Researches are continuing
into the archives left by Benny at the Working-Class Movement Library into the
years after 1951. These cover his 20 years service as chairman both of the shop
stewards' committee and convenor at the Kearns-Richards factory (of Staveley
Tools) and the Broadheath shop stewards' forum, his service on the Manchester
AEU's district committee, at different times as secretary and president of
Altrincham Trades Council, on its executive and later on that of Trafford
Trades Council, and as delegate to the Lancashire and Cheshire Federation of
Trades Councils.
They cover his leadership of many campaigns for wage and cost of living
awards, against redundancies and closures, against the Industrial Relations,
Criminal Justice and Public Order bills, his Parliamentary lobbying on these
and later on pensioners' issues. He organised strong groups in Trafford in
support of the Grunwick strikers and later of the miners. Letters from Benny
were frequently in the 'Altrincham Guardian' and other local papers and he
wrote a weekly column for the 'Timperley Independent'. He edited the monthly
newsletter of Altrincham CP and was the Communist candidate in municipal
elections for Dunham Ward. Benny advised the CPGB Congress, where he was a
delegate, on its resolution on 'Access to the Countryside'. He advised also on
the CP's Pensioner Advisory Committee.
After the collapse of the CPGB he was involved in the Communist Campaign
Group's work which led to the establishment of the CPB. In 1982 Benny formed
the Kinder Scout Advisory Committee and in 1989 the Rivington Pledge Committee
and was secretary of both. He led the campaign against the privatisation of
water authority land, and took part in Public Enquiries on Ashton Moss,
Kingswater Park and Davenport Green. He supported the efforts of Friends of the
Earth, Greenpeace, Worldwide Fund for Nature etc. to protect the environment
and also fought against the motorway spoliation of the countryside as at
Twyford Down. Ever vigilant on rights of way he also encouraged urban access in
his 'Aspects of Altrincham' articles. Prominent in the fight against the
military use of Holcombe Moor and other areas of open land and in the CND
national action at Coulport on Loch Long, he was also active in Altrincham CND
and TU CND, and became a delegate to the CND annual conference. He gave slide
shows to peace groups to show the true picture of the Soviet view of
disarmament. He was a member of the National Insurance Tribunal, the Family
Practitioner Committee of Trafford Health Authority and the Pensioners' Liaison
Forum.
Yet however prodigiously busy he was he still made time to tend his allotment
and supply tomatoes and other produce to the annual Daily Worker/Morning Star
bazaars the list of his activities seems endless. In 1990 the AEU gave
Benny its highest award, the Special Award of Merit. In 1996 the Ramblers'
Association executive made him an honorary life member. His genial but militant
leadership, always based on his close touch with the working class, has made an
immense contribution to its history. This selfless, untiring political and
environmental workaholic is truly a living legend
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Benny Rothman died at 1.30pm Wed. 23rd Jan 2002, aged 90, after a massive
stroke.
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