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Walter Greenwood was born in Ellor Street in 1903 in that area of Salford which
he called HANKEY PARK. He described it as a district in which,"the identical
houses of yesterday remain, still valuable in the estate market even though the
cost of their building, not to mention a highly satisfactory profit, has been
paid for over and over again by successive tenants".
1
His parents and grandparents were workers who encouraged him to develop the
family traditions of radicalism, the love of books and music. He also inherited
their determination to escape from the "jungles of tiny houses cramped and
huddled together" in which "men and women are born, live, love and die and pay
preposterous rents for the privilege of calling the grimy houses 'home'".
2
After an elementary education at the local school in Langworthy Road, he left
at thirteen. He supplemented the family income while still at school by working
as a milk-roundsman's lad and then as a pawnbroker's clerk. He then tried his
hand as an office boy, a stable boy, a clerk, a packing case maker, a sign
writer, a car driver, a warehouseman and a salesman, never earning more than a
pittance. Several times he was unemployed and experienced the degradation of
being on the dole.
3
Encouraged by his family, by James Openshaw, a Labour Councillor who later
became Mayor of Salford and by Rev. Samuel Proudfoot, Vicar of St. Thomas
Church at Pendleton, he started writing. He began making observations of the
scenes that he saw about him. The actual writing of LOVE ON THE DOLE was
preceded by ten years of preparation spent in the slums of Salford and on the
fringes of the working class movements of the twenties and early thirties.
Salford was one of the earliest industrial centres in England. It developed
with the textile industry and the steam engine. In the inter-war years, it was
rapidly overtaken as a centre of heavy industry by the newly developing
industrial nations such as America, Germany and Japan. Much of Salford's plant
was out of date and uneconomic.
In the depression of the late twenties and early thirties, many local
long-established firms went out of business and many highly skilled men found
themselves in the dole queue alongside their brethren who were designated
'unskilled' or 'labourers'. Greenwood captured that situation in the advice
Larry Meath gave to young Harry Hardcastle on his first day at Marlowe's, the
huge engineering works in Trafford Park. "You're part of a graft, Harry," he
said. "All Marlowe's want is cheap labour, and the apprentice racket is one of
their ways of getting it."
4
Marlowe's was Metropolitan Vickers
5
and it was one of the few large engineering works to remain open during the
recession mainly due to orders from Russia for generating plant. Unemployment
reached a record figure of just under three million by the beginning of 1933.
Marlowe's was able to take on boys at fourteen knowing that they could be
thrown out when they reached a man's wage at twenty one. "The day was Monday.
The Saturday previous, Harry's apprenticeship had come to an end." Together
with the other young men who had been taken on at the same time, he was
dismissed and had to join the dole queue with the older men whom he had seen
shuffling along the pavement outside the Labour Exchange.
Although Greenwood did not work in an engineering factory, his descriptions
have the ring of truth. The foundry, the forge, the rivetting shop are all
vividly described. He must have been round the factory and talked to the
workers.
However, there is an essential difference between his descriptions of the
scenes in the works where he was obviously fascinated by the sheer beauty and
immensity of the production processes and his attitude towards the unemployed
demonstration which is central to the book. He felt little involvement and saw
himself as an observer standing on the side-lines watching others taking part.
The world economic crisis in 1929 found a Labour Government no match for the
capitalists whose main aim was to place the burden of the crisis squarely on
the shoulders of the workers. A committee under the chairmanship of Sir George
May was set up to look at national expenditure. Their report forecast a budget
deficit of one hundred and twenty billion pounds. Immediate decisions were
taken to introduce stringent cuts in public expenditure. Unemployment Benefit
(the dole) was to be cut by ten percent and it was also recommended that Health
Insurance, Maternity and Child Welfare should be reduced.
A split occurred in the Cabinet. Ramsey MacDonald, Philip Snowden and Jimmy
Thomas joined with Conservatives and Liberals to form a National Government. In
the General Election that followed, the Labour Party was defeated and the newly
formed government proceeded to press home the projected cuts with a vicious
disregard for the workers.
The Civil Service, teachers and public employees as well as the armed services
were all included. The sailors were ordered a cut of a shilling per day. They
decided not to accept it and on 15th September, 1931, the Fleet at Invergordan
refused to sail. Meetings were held in barracks and on board and the government
was forced to retreat and revise the cuts.
Unemployment Benefit, however, was severely reduced, from eighteen shillings
to fifteen shillings and three pence. In addition, the hated MEANS TEST
6
graphically described by Greenwood, came into operation at the beginning of
September. Harry Hardcastle was informed that his dole was to stop because his
father's dole and his sister Sally's meagre earnings were considered sufficient
to keep him. His vision of getting married and setting up home was shattered at
a blow.
The Unemployed Workers' Movement led a fight-back. Huge demonstrations were
held throughout the country and the severe handling of the unemployed by the
Police assumed disgraceful proportions. The Salford demonstration that
Greenwood describes was held on 1st October, 1931.
Greenwood was obviously present because his descriptions of people are
identifiable. He was seen on the edge of the crowd making observations to
incorporate in his story. The "diminutive, pugnacious individual" who mounted
guard over the big drum was a Scotsman, Hughie Graham. He kept marching time
with his beats as the procession of "shabby fellows, scrawney youths mostly
wearing caps, scarves and overalls, coughing and spitting" set off towards the
Town hall and the City Council which was meeting to discuss the implementation
of the cuts.
The "stocky, wire-haired fellow speaking in a strong Scots accent" was Tommy
Morris. The "insistent clamour of a hand bell" was supplied by Alex Armstrong,
a rambler and outdoor enthusiast whose love of life took him to Spain to fight
against the Fascist invaders. He lost his life in the Battle of Jarama in
February, 1937.
Edmund Frow was "the finely featured young man" who was depicted as the leader
of the demonstration and who was "set upon by a couple of constables, knocked
down savagely, and frog-marched away by three hefty policemen". What Greenwood
did not see was the scene inside the Town Hall where those who had been
arrested were battered by police truncheons with unprecedented cruelty and
disregard for life or limb. Edmund Frow ended the day in hospital with a broken
nose.
7
The Larry Meath in the story was Larry Finley.8 Greenwood portrayed him as the
hero and in part, both he and Harry Hardcastle are autobiographical sketches.
Harry's early experiences follow fairly closely, the pattern of Greenwood's
life in Ellor Street. His descriptions of life in Hankey park were not
exaggerated. The Salford Branch of the Unemployed Workers' Movement conducted a
survey in Ellor Street at the time and found that few houses had furniture
because it had been pawned or burned for fuel. Food consisted of bread,
margarine and a cup of tea. Salford was designated a distressed area, but cuts
in Poor Law Relief continued to be applied. It is difficult to imagine what
this meant in human misery, but the fictionalised account in LOVE ON THE DOLE
gives a more graphic picture than any statistics could convey.
Larry Finley
8
(who was killed off in the story as a victim of consumption) lived and made a
significant contribution both to working class organisation as a shop steward
and in the Amalgamated Engineering Union, but also as a philosopher and
historian. He was involved in research into labour from primitive communism to
capitalism and had completed one section before he died on 27th October, 1974.
Another piece of work on Inflation and Marxist Theory was published in MARXISM
TODAY in May, 1974. It is possible that Finley and Greenwood had long
discussions at Ashfield Labour Club where much of LOVE ON THE DOLE was written.
LOVE ON THE DOLE was Greenwood's first novel. It is an important contribution
to working class literature. Harold Laski commented, "to convey so
imaginatively and with such insight the tragedy of the poor is a noble service
as well as a distinguished contribution to letters."
9
He did try to become involved in Labour politics by joining the Labour Party
and standing as a candidate in local elections. But he decided it was not his
scene and took himself away to the Isle of Man to write at least nine more
novels in addition to articles, stories and film, radio and television scripts.
In his first election in Seedley ward in 1933, the year the novel was
published, he polled over a thousand votes against his Liberal opponents'
fourteen hundred. The following year he stood in St Matthias, one of the worst
slum wards in Salford and won the seat by 750 votes. A survey conducted in the
ward in 1931 described it as "a district of large works and factories with high
chimneys and overshadowing walls under which are huddled congested slum houses,
mean streets, running at odd angles, designed only from the point of view of
the most rigid economy of ground. Here and there is a narrow overhung passage
twisting into a confined croft or court, or an ill-paved, badly drained, narrow
alley, in which rubbish collects." Many of the houses were rat infested. Most
lacked elementary amenities and decencies and there were no open spaces for
children to play in. Out of 950 houses visited by the Inspectors, 257 were
found to be in a state of bad repair with leaking roofs, stripped plaster,
broken flooring and rotten woodwork. Continually throughout the enquiry, the
Inspectors were "struck by the courage and perseverance with which the greater
number of tenants kept their houses clean and respectable under most adverse
conditions ... all honour is due to those brave housewives who, whilst waiting
for better conditions are straining so hard to improve their present
environment."
10
Greenwood must have found his year as a City Councillor both depressing and
frustrating. It took a world war and vast changes in social attitudes before
Salford became able to tackle the problems with which it was beset.
LOVE ON THE DOLE did not make an immediate impact when it was published, but
when it was dramatised by Ronald Gow and shown at The Garrick Theatre,
Altrincham, it became a best seller. There were three impressions in 1933, two
in 1934 and it was then re-printed four times in 1935 and annually after that.
The income from the sales were sufficient to allow Greenwood to 'emigrate' to
the Isle of Man where he spent the rest of his life.
It is interesting that the social conditions found in Salford in the inter-war
years are not only reflected in Greenwood's novel but also in L.S. Lowry's
paintings.
11
There are many similarities between their work. Both mirrored the appalling
conditions of the time and both had an obvious sympathy for the under-dog
suffering the cruel effects of the capitalist system. But both distanced
themselves from the workers they portrayed so graphically. Their work was a
commentary rather than an involvement. Lowry's small almost dwarfed figures
indicate a lack of confidence in the ability of the working class to control
their own lives. They were victims and as such deserved to have their plight
depicted in prose or paint. But they were not shown as activists in the labour
movement. That was outside the comprehension of both Greenwood and Lowry. Their
mission was to remain on the fringes observing without becoming involved.
They never grasped the truth that it is not enough to interpret the world, the
point, however, is to change it.
NOTES
1 Salford is the twin city of Manchester. They are either side of the River
Irwell. Salford's story is often inextricably mixed with Manchester's. Salford
was the medieval Hundred and therefore senior to the village of Manchester. But
Manchester overtook Salford in importance as the centre of the textile industry
during the eighteenth century. Salford developed rapidly after the technical
changes known as the industrial revolution. From being a small town whose
inhabitants worked in their own homes and on farms to supply the family needs,
it became a centre of industry and reflected the tensions and contradictions
associated with rising capitalism.
2 GREENWOOD, Walter. LOVE ON THE DOLE Jonathan Cape. 1948 Chapter 1.
3 The Dole: a term of contempt used to indicate those who had to accept
Unemployment Benefit and Relief from the National Assistance Board. The
implication was that it was a charitable hand-out to work-shy and lazy
recipients.
4 LOVE ON THE DOLE Chapter 6.
5 Metropolitan-Vickers: originally Westinghouse Brake Company, an American
firm, it became part of Associated Electrical Industries and later part of the
General Electrical Combine.
It was one of the largest manufacturers of electrical generating plant as
well as other electrical equipment.It was sited in Trafford Park adjacent to
the Ship Canal. Many Salford people worked there.
6 The Means Test: This assessed the family wage as a basis for Unemployment
Benefit.Often young people were made responsible for keeping their parents
which made many of them leave home.
There was also a "genuinely seeking work" clause by which unemployed people
had to supply proof of their efforts to find work. If they were unable to
provide proof, they were taken off Benefit.
7 FROW, E. and R. RADICAL SALFORD Neil Richardson, 1984.
8 FROW, Edmund and Ruth. Dictionary Of Labour Biography. Edited by Joyce M.
Bellamy and John Saville.Macmillan. Vol.4, 1977. Entry on FINLEY, Lawrence.
page 80.
9 Harold Laski letter to Walter Greenwood quoted on dust jacket of Jonothan
Cape edition of LOVE ON THE DOLE 1948.
10 Survey by the Salford Women Citizens' Association on Housing Conditions In
The St. Matthias Ward. Salford 1931.
11 LOWRY, Laurence Stephen. Born 1st November, 1887. Died 23rd February, 1976.
Moved from Manchester to Salford when he was 22. Worked as a rent collector.
1915-20 began to develop his interest in the industrial scene. Elected Royal
Academician 1962. Received Freedom of The City of Salford 1965. His work has
been widely acclaimed.
SOURCES
BRANSON, Noreen and HEINEMAN, Margot: BRITAIN IN THE NINETEEN THIRTIES.
Weidenfield and Nicolson. 1971.
HUTT, Allen: THE CONDITION OF THE WORKING CLASS IN BRITAIN. Martin Lawrence.
1933.
WINCOT, Len: INVERGORDON MUTINEER. Weidenfield and Nicolson. 1974.
KLAUS, H.Gustav: THE SOCIALIST NOVEL IN BRITAIN. Harvester Press. 1982.
See also
National Unemployed Workers Movement
(NUWM)
and
Ewan MacColl:
The formative years
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