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X-WR-CALNAME:North East Labour History
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://nelh.net
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for North East Labour History
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TZID:UTC
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190601T090000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190601T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190423T161503Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210102T183615Z
UID:3336-1559379600-1559408400@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Newcastle University: Annual Chartism Day Conference 2019
DESCRIPTION:Chartism 2019 – Booking Form \n9.00–9.15           Registration. \n 9.15–9.30          Introduction and Welcome (Joan Allen and Richard Allen\, Newcastle). \n9.30–10.15         Tom Scriven (Manchester). ‘Chartism’s electoral strategy and the bifurcation of Radicalism’. \n10.15–11.00       Joan Allen (Newcastle). ‘Chartist trials\, 1839: Revisited’. \nBreak \n11.30–12.15       Mike Greatbatch. (Independent). ‘William Parker: A Chartist Life’. \n12.15-13.00        Joe Stanley (Sheffield Hallam). ‘Protest and Popular Politics amongst the Yorkshire Miners\, 1786-1839’. \n Lunch \n2.00–3.00           Keynote Lecture: Robert Poole (UCLAN). ‘Peterloo and Chartism’ – title tbc  \n 3.00–3.45           Mark Bennett (Durham). ‘Chartism’s legacy: the reform debate in Yorkshire\, 1859-67’. \nBreak \n 4.15-5.00            Matt Roberts (Sheffield Hallam). ‘The Visual and Material Culture of Chartism’. \nEnd of Conference \n Sponsors: with grateful thanks to School of History\, Classics and Archaeology\, Newcastle University\, and The Society for the Study of Labour History
URL:https://nelh.net/event/newcastle-university-annual-chartism-day-conference-2019/
LOCATION:Room 2.16. Armstrong Building\, Queen Victoria Road\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE1 8QB
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190531T143000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190609T193000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190508T092202Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190508T092526Z
UID:3400-1559313000-1560108600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Various Venues: Carrying David\, Ed Waugh's newest play about NE boxer Glenn McCrory and his brother David
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://nelh.net/event/various-venues-carrying-david-ed-waughs-newest-play-about-ne-boxer-glen-mcrory-and-his-brother-david/
LOCATION:Various North East Venues
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190524T180000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190524T180000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190429T141318Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190429T142031Z
UID:3353-1558720800-1558720800@nelh.net
SUMMARY:NELHS Event\, Tantobie Community Centre\, Peter Brabban: The War came early to Sleepy Valley
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://nelh.net/event/tantobie-community-centre-the-war-came-earkly-to-sleepy-valley/
LOCATION:Tantobie Community Centre\, The Playing Fields\, Tantobie\, DH9 9TJ
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190522T140000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190821T140000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190423T171406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190423T171406Z
UID:3348-1558533600-1566396000@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Sunderland Community Lectures 2019
DESCRIPTION:Why waste a day in the house?  Woodwork paints itself if you leave it long enough….Your son will do the ironing….Gardens benefit from neglect and abandonment….Someone else will do the cooking…. \nWhat else can you do…? \nCome along to the Sunderland Community Lectures which are running throughout Summer 2019 and which are themed around “Crossings” because of the opening of the new cable-stayed Northern Spire Bridge \nThe Sunderland Community Lectures are free. They are on Wednesday afternoon in the University of Sunderland’s Sir Tom Cowie Lecture Theatre\, Prospect Building\, Sir Tom Cowie Campus at St Peter’s\, St Peter’s Way\, Sunderland SR1 3SD. \nThe lectures begin on 22 May commencing at 2.30pm and are approximately one hour in duration. They run through to 21 August. Do arrive in the Prospect Building between 2.00pm – 2.30pm to register before the lecture begins. \nThere is (pay) parking in the grounds of the campus. The St. Peter’s Metro Station is within a few minutes walking distance. Alternatively a regular bus service runs from the Park Lane Bus Station to St Peter’s Campus itself. \nCome along\, better still – come along and bring a friend! \nStuart Miller \nPROGRAMME \n22nd May The Causes of the Tay Bridge Disaster (Eric Fletcher) (When the Tay Bridge was opened on the 1st June 1878 it was described as a marvel of Victorian engineering. Seven months later during a violent storm the central part of the bridge collapsed plunging a train and 75 people\, 85ft down into the Tay. The lecture will look at how the design\, construction\, operation and maintenance of the bridge contributed to the disaster and the crucial role played by the personality of designer Thomas Bouch) \n5th June From Tyne to Tweed in old postcards (George Nairn) (Having made other journeys in County Durham by old postcards in previous lectures George will now undertake a journey from the Tyne to the Tweed along “Northumberland’s lordly strand”) \n 19th June The Lake Baikal Ferry (Alan Owen) (In 1895 a contract between the Russian Imperial Government and Sir W G Armstrong Whitworth & Co Ltd was signed for a unique icebreaking ferry to operate on Lake Baikal as part of the new Trans-Siberian Railway. By June 1896 it had been delivered in flat-pack form. It was launched in 1899 and operated until 1918. This lecture will describe how the crossing of the largest freshwater lake in the world was achieved through the skills of North East Engineers) \n 17th July The Biddick Ferryman (David Inch) (In the 18th Century a ferry-boat service operated between North and South Biddick on the River Wear. For a period the ferryman was a man named James Drummond. Was he a simple ferryman or was he someone of quite amazing status ? This talk explores a fascinating local legend) \n 7th August Crossing the Tyne (Pat Lowery) (The Romans built the first bridge over the Tyne and a fort to protect the crossing. Since then several bridges and tunnels have been built to transport people and goods from one side to the other. This lecture will look at some of the river crossings both above and below the river\, their construction and use\, and stories of the people who built and used them) \n 21st August The Wearmouth Bridge (Stuart Miller) (The first Wearmouth Bridge at Sunderland was the second iron bridge in the world\, and much more ambitious than that at Ironbridge. It was soon added to the “bucket list” of contemporary travellers. This talk will explore the background to the building of the bridge\, describe its novel construction and outline the intriguing controversy about who was responsible for the design) \n 
URL:https://nelh.net/event/sunderland-community-lectures-2019/
LOCATION:University of Sunderland’s Sir Tom Cowie Lecture Theatre\, St Peter's Way\, Sunderland\, SR1 3SD
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190517T143000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190517T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190430T141113Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190430T141318Z
UID:3388-1558103400-1558110600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Lit and Phil: Remembering Dr Eric Wade (1939-2018)\, a Commemoration
DESCRIPTION:As you may know\, sadly\, Dr Eric Wade passed away last year. We are planning the above event where we’ll be sharing memories and stories about Eric. \nWe have arranged a programme of speakers who knew him well.  However\, if you’d like to add your own informal stories about Eric\, then please email Mick Goulding\, our MC\, and we’ll happily arrange to have them included on the day. Mick’s email is: michael.goulding00@gmail.com \nLight refreshments will be available. \nIf you would like to come along then could you please let Harold Dobson (email: hfdobson@btinternet.com) know for seating and catering purposes. \n  \n 
URL:https://nelh.net/event/lit-and-phil-remembering-dr-eric-wade-1939-2018-a-commemoration/
LOCATION:The Lit & Phil\, 23 Westgate Road\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE1 1SE\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190517T123000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190518T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190510T170031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190510T170031Z
UID:3407-1558096200-1558195200@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Newcastle University. Conference:  The Global Challenge of Peace: 1919 as a Contested Threshold to a New World Order
DESCRIPTION:  \n  \n  \n  \nFree admission\, please register: matt.perry@newcastle.ac.uk \n \nOrganised by Labour and Society Research Group and Conflict and Revolution Research Strand of Newcastle University \n  \nFriday 17 May 2019 \n12.30 – 13.00     Registration and Coffee \n13.00 – 14.30     Panel 1: The Dynamics of Contention in 1919\, Chair: TBC \nJacopo Perazzoli (University of Milan): The General Strike of July 1919: Lenin\, Wilson and their Influences on Italian Socialism \nJude Murphy (WEA) and Nigel Todd (WEA): How did military/civilian dynamics shape matters with the return and demobilisation of millions of military personnel? \nGordon J Barclay and Louise Heren (Independent Scholars): The Battle for George Square\, 1919: myth\, memory and reality in Red Clydeside \n14.30– 15.00      Tea and Coffee \n 15.00 – 15.45     Keynote Lecture – Chair: Máire Cross \nProfessor Tyler Stovall (University of California\, Santa Cruz): The Black and the Red:  the Elaine\, Arkansas Massacre of 1919. \n 16.00 – 17.30     Panel 2:     Contentious Politics from Below\, Chair: TBC \nProfessor Claudia Baldoli (University of Milan): “Do as in Russia”: The Italian Peasant Movement in 1919 \nMatt Perry (Newcastle University): The 1919 mutinies in the French Armed Forces: Colonialism\, Ethnicity and the Remaking of the French left \nProfessor Máire Cross (Newcastle University): Blessed are the peacemakers! The presence of ideas of nineteenth-century French socialists in twentieth-century pacifism \nReception / Dinner \n  \nSaturday 18 May 2019: ARMB 2.16  \n09.30 – 11.00     Panel 3: Colonialism and Race   \nChair: Joe Redmayne \nNeelam Srivastava (Newcastle University): Sylvia Pankhurst in 1919: Feminism\, communism\, and Interwar Internationalism \nPaul Griffin and Elizabeth Martin (Northumbria University): The “Race Riots” of 1919: Within and Beyond Exceptional Moments in Glasgow and South Shields \nWillow Berridge (Newcastle University): Iraqi Perspective on Gertrude Bell \n 11.00 – 11.30     Tea and Coffee \n11.30 – 13.00     Panel 4: Reaction and Non-Reaction \nChair: Rob Dale  \nChristopher Loughlin (Newcastle University): The Forward March of Reactionary Working-Class Politics? Democratic Authoritarianism and “Modernity” in Britain and Ireland\, 1919 \nProfessor Tim Kirk (Newcastle University): 1919: Revolution\, Counter-revolution and Fascism in Austria. \nJeffrey Johnson (Providence College): The “Soviet Ark” in Context: The Buford and the Anti-Radicalism of 1919 \n13.00 – 14.00     Lunch \n14.00 – 15.30     Panel 5: Transnational Interactions in 1919  \nChair: Matt Perry \nSarah Hellawell (Sunderland University): Women as Peacemakers: The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom in Zurich\, 1919 \nMegan Trudell (Newcastle University): Soldiers\, Veterans and Volunteers for Gabriele D’annunzio’s occupation of Fiume \nEstela Rukseniene (Independent Scholar): British Military Missions as Intermediaries between Western Europe and Lithuania in 1919-1920s. \n15.30 – 16.00              Closing Comments (Rob Dale)
URL:https://nelh.net/event/newcastle-university-conference-the-global-challenge-of-peace-1919-as-a-contested-threshold-to-a-new-world-order/
LOCATION:Room 2.16. Armstrong Building\, Queen Victoria Road\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE1 8QB
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190511T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190512T160000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190429T162518Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190429T172254Z
UID:3369-1557568800-1557676800@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Tanfield: The Tommy Armstrong Society presents BANNERS - an exhibition of over 20 Mining Bannners + music from Allen Crawford and Bethany Elen
DESCRIPTION:For more info please contact info@bethanyelen.co.uk \n \n 
URL:https://nelh.net/event/tanfield-the-tommy-armstrong-society-presents-banners-an-exhibition-of-over-20-mining-bannners-music-from-allen-crawford-and-bethany-elen/
LOCATION:St Margaret’s Church\, Tanfield\, Stanley\, DH9 9PX
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190510T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190510T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190430T140624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190430T140624Z
UID:3386-1557514800-1557514800@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Wallsend Memorial Hall: Banner Theatre's 'Spirit of 1868'
DESCRIPTION:A terrific performance\, and a real\, rollicking\, introduction to the 150-year history of the TUC.  Get your tickets at https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/whats-on/wallsend/wallsend-memorial-hall/banner-theatre-spirit-of-1868/2019-05-10/19:00. \nEvent Flyer
URL:https://nelh.net/event/wallsend-memorial-hall-banner-theatres-spirit-of-1868/
LOCATION:Wallsend Memorial Hall & People’s Centre\, 10 Frank St\,\, Wallsend\, NE28 6RN
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190507T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190507T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190225T105433Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190429T141934Z
UID:3273-1557255600-1557255600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:NELHS First Tuesday: Mike Fraser will talk about Sir Charles Trevelyan of Wallington – Northumberland’s Upper-Class Socialist MP
DESCRIPTION:Sir Charles Trevelyan was a controversial Northumberland politician who was involved in some of the most significant political developments of the first half of the twentieth century. \nHe served in the Liberal Government from 1909 until he resigned in protest against the decision to go to war. During the war he formed a pressure group to campaign for more democratic control of foreign policy and for a negotiated peace. He transferred his allegiance to the Labour Party in 1918 and was elected as MP for Newcastle Central in 1922. \nTrevelyan was appointed to the first Labour Cabinet as President of the Board of Education\, a post he returned to when the Labour Party formed a second Government in 1929. Following his resignation from the Government in 1931 he remained active in the Labour movement as an advocate of Socialist policies. He famously left his Northumberland estate to the National Trust and he also had an interesting personal life. \nMike will discuss all aspects of his career and will ask was he the most left-wing person ever to serve in a British government?
URL:https://nelh.net/event/first-tuesday-mike-fraser-will-talk-about-sir-charles-trevelyan-of-wallington-northumberlands-upper-class-socialist-mp/
LOCATION:Old George Inn\, Old George Yard\, Newcastle\, NE1 1EZ
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190505T103000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190505T170000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190423T155605Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190423T160121Z
UID:3330-1557052200-1557075600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Star and Shadow Cinema\, Newcastle. DIY Democracy: from Peterloo to the Present
DESCRIPTION:A showing of Mike Leigh’s latest celebrated film Peterloo with speakers / workshops on Peterloo and its aftermath\, Protest in the 1960s and the current fight for women’s pension rights \nTickets via https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/date/642615 covering the Star and Shadow’s catering: a hot lunch\, tea\, coffee and cake all day \n£10\, waged and £5\, pay as you feel\, low income \nOrganised by the Workers Educational Association\, North East History and Heritage Branch \nFurther information from 0191 212 6100 \n DIY Democracy 5 May 2019
URL:https://nelh.net/event/star-and-shadow-cinema-newcastle-diy-democracy-from-peterloo-to-the-present/
LOCATION:Star and Shadow Cinema\, Warwick Street\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE2 1BB
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190504T110000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190504T110000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190430T135925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190430T140307Z
UID:3380-1556967600-1556967600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Tyne & Wear May Day March and Rally
DESCRIPTION:Assemble 11.00am at the bandstand\, Exhibition Park.  March leaves at 11.30am for rally 12 noon at Grey’s Monument. Rally speakers include Mick Cash (RMT general secretary)\, Susan Grey (vice-chair\, Venezuela Solidarity Campaign) and Dan Carden MP (acting Shadow Secretary of State for International Development).  Bring banners! Volunteers needed for stewarding.
URL:https://nelh.net/event/tyne-wear-may-day-march-and-rally/
LOCATION:Exhibition Park\, Newcastle upon Tyne
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190402T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190402T190000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20181110T102600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190122T115352Z
UID:3127-1554231600-1554231600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:First Tuesday: Joe Redmayne\, The Post-War Labour Unrest 1919 – 1921: The Consolidation of Socialism and the transition from Syndicalism to Communism in the Durham Coalfield
DESCRIPTION:The presentation will offer an analysis on the nature and significance of the British political\, social and economic turmoil in the post-war period 1919-1921 and which could be labelled the ‘Post-War Labour Unrest’ due to the rapid rise in industrial strife. The field of enquiry is to use the Durham Coalfield and the Durham Miners’ Association (DMA) as a case study to highlight national issues at a regional level. It seeks to explore the nature of socialism of grassroot activists under institutions such as trade unions\, the Labour Party and the emerging Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) and focuses on the dialogue of class representation to better understand the competing visions of the socio-political world. It analyses the complex relations between political discourse\, structure and agency\, the industrial and political spheres\, leaders and led\, reformers and revolutionaries. In other words\, an examination of the ways in which political actors and discourse operated through trade union (and other) organisations; interacted with structural/contextual conditions in appealing to discontented miners. Furthermore\, the talk will investigate what different sections of trade union members expected of their leaders and government as well as the extent to which their leaders and government recognised their wishes. \nThe presentation will provide a better understanding of the complexities of the British Left identity at a time when the Labour Party had just been reformed and the CPGB was emerging. In doing this\, it will help our understanding of what happened to the pre-war DMA rank-and-file movements during the ‘Great Labour Unrest 1910-1914’\, with many of the leaders becoming union bureaucrats after the war and taking on a more passive role. Consequently\, this created discontent with other rank-and-file members who would become associated with the CPGB and would advocate for a more forceful approach of ‘direct-action’ against the government and employers.  \nBy exploring the various political discourses\, it becomes clear that class was about the representation of a socio-economic phenomenon between competing views of how society should operate. This was a time the working-class in Britain was pushing forth their view of equality rather than preservation of private-ownership. A Socialist Commonwealth: a system of society which the production\, distribution and exchange of all life’s primal necessities should be owned and controlled by the State in the interests of all the people in the State instead of by private-ownership. For many miners\, socialism was the establishment of a new system of society\, based not on competition\, but seen as a system based on co-operative and communal effort: ‘each man for all\, and all for each’. They envisaged that socialism could change the motive for production – production for the use – instead of merely profit; which would finally bring about the entire elimination of private profit in production\, distribution and exchange within society. This was an idealistic view\, but many believed it could be achieved. It was this political discourse represented by the Labour Party members which would help County Durham to become a bastion of socialism and consequently gaining the majority of constituency seats in 1922. \nJoe Redmayne is an MA student at Newcastle University
URL:https://nelh.net/event/first-tuesday-joe-redmayne-the-post-war-labour-unrest-1919-1921-the-consolidation-of-socialism-and-the-transition-from-syndicalism-to-communism-in-the-durham-coalfield/
LOCATION:Old George Inn\, Old George Yard\, Newcastle\, NE1 1EZ
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20190330T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20190330T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20190223T144934Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190223T144934Z
UID:3270-1553972400-1553979600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:San Ghanny Choir\, Strong Hands & Strong Hearts\, Stories and Songs from Occupied Palestine
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://nelh.net/event/san-ghanny-choir-strong-hands-strong-hearts-stories-and-songs-from-occupied-palestine-2/
LOCATION:Quaker Meeting House\, 1 West Avenue\, Gosforth\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE3 4ES
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20170916T093000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20170916T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20170726T080906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210102T184823Z
UID:2073-1505554200-1505579400@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Day School: Fifty Years of Activism
DESCRIPTION:Venue: University of Northumbria\, Ellison Building\n\n9:30am to 4:30pm\, Saturday 16 September 2017\nCoffee and registration\, Room A001\, A Block\, Ellison Building\, City Campus\, University of Northumbria. There is level access from the Northumberland Road entrance to the Ellison building. \nA collaboration between the Histories of Activism Group at Northumbria University\, and the North East Labour History Society.\nThis day school will reflect on the last fifty years in the North East\, and especially the great changes that have occurred in politics\, culture and society. \nThe workshops will focus on specific subjects such as Labour Activism and Music and we believe it will revive the spirit of the History Workshop conferences. The backgrounds of the participants will be mixed\, including academics presenting their research\, as well as activists and historians working outside of a formal academic framework. \nWe are most grateful to the North East Area Miners’ Social Welfare Trust Fund for their support for this and other NELH Jubilee events. \nTo book your place in this Day School\, please let us know on moderator@nelh.net. Attendance is free\, and coffee and lunch will be provided.\n\nFifty Years of Activism\n9:30 – 10:00 Coffee and Registration \n10:00 – 10:05 Welcome and introduction: Dr Avram Taylor\, Histories of Activism Group\, Northumbria University \n10:05 – 11:00 Plenary\, Keynote Speaker: Dr John Charlton\n \n11:00 – 11:30 Coffee \n11:30 –   1:00 Four Parallel Workshops: \nWe Can Swing Together? Region \, Politics and Change in NE Popular Music since the mid-’60s. Workshop Leader\, Dr Jude Murphy  A presentation interspersed with some video clips and community singing. Looking at rock\, pop\, folk and jazz as well as some rap and recent multicultural stuff. Then discussions on: NE music as an expression of regional identity\, NE music’s relationship to politics and international events\, NE music and change over time  \nLabour Activism: Workshop Leader\, Ben Sellers \nWomen and the Women’s Movement: Workshop Leader\, Dr Liz O’Donnell. During this session Dr Julie Scanlon will be talking about her research into the 1976 Women’s Liberation Conference held in Ponteland. \nEnvironmental Activism: Workshop Leader\, Sandy Irvine \n1:00 –   2:00 Lunch \n2:00 –   3:00 Three Parallel Workshops \nThe Peace Movement: Workshop Leader\, John Creaby. The early Sixties are often recognised as the Peace Activism decade\, but the Fifty years to date have seen further activism. Culminating in the Stop the War coalition of activists groups the continuance of the question of “no war” or ” just war”\, which has always been a dichotomy within the movement\, has again been to the fore. \nPolitics: Workshop Leader\, Nigel Todd \nCooperatives: Workshop Leader\, Professor Tony Webster \n3:00 –   4:00 Two Parallel Workshops \nTrade Unions and the World of Work: Workshop Leader\, John Stirling will begin with a brief overview of the changes in work and trade unions over the last 50 years and focus on changing ideas about ‘workers control’ to illustrate developments. He will then welcome discussion from participants about how they see the past and envisage the future. \nGrowth of Ethnic Diversity in the North East: Workshop Leader\, Dr Avram Taylor \n4:00 –   4:30 Concluding Remarks: Dr Matt Perry \n  \nTo book your place in this Day School\, please let us know on moderator@nelh.net. Attendance is free\, and coffee and lunch will be provided.\n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nKeynote Speakers:\nDr John Charlton \nJohn Charlton taught in High Schools and at Leeds Polytechnic and Leeds University. He is the author of several books including Hidden Chains: The Slavery Business and North East England (2008)\, Don’t you hear the H Bombs Thunder: Youth and Politics on Tyneside (2009) and A Brief History of Radicalism in North East England (2013). He is active in the North East Labour History Society. \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n  \n  \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\n  \nDr Matt Perry\, Newcastle University \nMatt Perry has taught broadly across Twentieth Century European History. He has research interests in British and French labour and social history\, particularly in the fields of protest and social memory. He has also published on questions of general historiography in particular the Marxist school of history \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n___________________________________________________________________________________________\nWorkshop Leaders:\nJohn Creaby – The Peace Movement \nJohn Creaby: chair North East Labour History Society\, CND supporter since 1958\, chaired local Anti Apartheid\, Chile Solidarity and other progressive international groups\, full time trades union official 1968- 1995\, international & European Trade union groups\, Labour Party member since 1958 – held local and Regional Positions including Regional Vice Chair. Awarded MPhil by Durham University for mature student research. \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nSandy Irvine – Environmental Activism\n \n \nSandy Irvine is a member of Newcastle Green Party\, having originally joined the then Ecology Party back in the early 1980s. He first became politically active in 1966 joining Huddersfield Young Socialists. He became interested in ecological politics after reading the ‘Limits to Growth’ report and the ‘Blueprint for Survival’. He is one of NE regional co-representatives on the Green Party’s regional council and is currently its co-chair. He was a member of the Ecologist magazine editorial board for many years. He co-authored A Green Manifesto for McDonalds and a pamphlet Beyond Green Consumerism for Friends of the Earth. Prior to retirement\, he worked in a local Further Education college where his specialism was Film Studies. He also spent a year on secondment at Northumbria University as an environmental policy advisor. His M.Sc. was a thesis on reforesting the uplands. He has been very active in local land use battles triggered by the pro-growth strategies of local and national government\, especially the Newcastle-Gateshead ‘Core Strategy’ development plan. He has written a number of book reviews for the NE Labour History journal. \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nDr Jude Murphy – Culture and Music \n \nAbsolutely fascinated by music and history and why people pursue authenticity via encounters with a real or imagined cultural past. I teach and research\, and record oral history. Much of what I’ve explored and published to date has been about the cultural construction of place and identities. I sing and play flute/sax/bass/whatever-chordal-instrument-fits-the-tune. Jazz mostly\, with a fair old dash of folk\, and I’ve shamelessly plied my more lounge-oriented musical trade in some of the best hotels in the world. I lead community vocal workshops because singing is really good for body and soul and it’s a joy to help people open up their voices. \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nDr Liz O’Donnell – Women and the Women’s Movement \nLiz O’Donnell taught history in further and higher education in the North East for three decades before becoming an outreach worker with Northumberland Archives at Woodhorn. She has also worked on a wide range of heritage projects\, including as oral history coordinator for the NELHS Popular Politics Project (2009-11). Her research interests are broad\, but primarily focus on women’s involvement in social and political movements in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Liz is a member of the Women’s History Network and on the International Advisory Panel of Quaker Studies\, the journal of the Quaker Studies Research Association. \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nDr Julie Scanlon – Women and the Women’s Movement \nDr Julie Scanlon is interested in feminist activism and representations of gender and sexuality in contemporary culture and has published in these areas. A version of the talk she is giving at this workshop has been published in the book Re-Reading Spare Rib\, ed. Angela Smith (Palgrave: 2017). She was an academic until May 2017\, spending the last 12 years at Northumbria University\, and is now pursuing her interests in social justice\, gender equality and personal development beyond academia. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nBen Sellers – Labour Activism \n \n  \n  \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n________________________________________________________________________________________________________ \nJohn Stirling – Trade Unions and the World of Work \nJohn Stirling is the retired head of Social Sciences at Northumbria University. He worked for many years as a trade union tutor both in the UK and beyond and has more recently worked part time at Newcastle University and Ruskin College. He is currently Chair of Education for Action (Durham) and Membership Secretary of the North East Labour History Society. \n  \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nDr Avram Taylor – Growth of Ethnic Diversity in the North East \nAvram Taylor is a Senior Lecturer in History at Northumbria University. Much of his teaching and research reflects an interest in theoretical issues and the philosophy of history\, as well as a concern with class\, gender and ethnicity. Avram’s thesis has been published as: Working Class Credit and Community since 1918 (Palgrave\, 2002). His second book\, co-authored with Don MacRaild\, Social Theory and Social History\, reflected his ongoing interest in the relationship between history and theory. He has been working on the Jewish community in Glasgow for a number of years and has published extensively on this topic.\n \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nNigel Todd – Politics \n \nNigel Todd is a Newcastle Labour Councillor\, chairs the UK Co-operative College and was North East Regional Director of the Workers’ Educational Association. He has published several books and articles on North East political history\, including an autobiography of Joseph Cowen\, and histories of anti-fascism\, and anarchist and socialist land colonies. \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n____________________________________________________________________________________________\nProfessor Tony Webster – Cooperative Movement \nTony’s main research interests are in the history of the British Empire (particularly the business history of the empire)\, and the history of the British Co-operative movement. Tony works closely with the Co-operative Group in Manchester and the co-operative movement in the north-east of England. He is a Governor of the Co-operative College in Manchester\, and sits on the executive committee of the National Co-operative Archive. \n  \n  \n  \nReturn to day-school timetable \n 
URL:https://nelh.net/event/day-school-fifty-years-of-activism/
LOCATION:Northumbria University
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160705T190000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160705T210000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20160616T151037Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160616T152417Z
UID:547-1467745200-1467752400@nelh.net
SUMMARY:NELH First Tuesday Meeting: 5 July 2016\, Remembering Ruskin College
DESCRIPTION:The North East Labour History Society presents a ‘First Tuesday’ event led by two formers students of Ruskin College\, the home of trade union education. Rob Turnbull and Nigel Todd will reflect on their time at Ruskin and how it shaped their lives and this will be followed by a discussion that will also look to the future of working class education both at Ruskin and for the labour movement. All are welcome.
URL:https://nelh.net/event/first-tuesday-5-july-2016-remembering-ruskin-college/
LOCATION:The Miners’ Hall\, Redhills\, Durham\, Flass Street\, Durham City\, DH1 4BE
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20160701T093000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20160701T163000
DTSTAMP:20260403T201831
CREATED:20160607T135559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20160607T135559Z
UID:445-1467365400-1467390600@nelh.net
SUMMARY:Open Day: Reflections of Newcastle 1914-18
DESCRIPTION:Reflections of Newcastle 1914-18 is a Lit & Phil collaboration with Northumbria University\, Newcastle College and November Club to explore the intellectual\, cultural and social life of Newcastle during the First World War\, concentrating in and around the Lit & Phil. The research is being developed into a city centre trail beginning and ending at the Lit & Phil through the creation of an interactive eBook which will be published on 1 July 2016. This eBook will be promoted to community groups\, schools and visitors as a historical and educational tool and creative project to help people explore the city and its historical buildings and areas of interest in relation to World War 1\, as well as the Lit & Phil itself. \nMore details on: \nCan you help? Reflections of Newcastle 1914-1918
URL:https://nelh.net/event/open-day-reflections-of-newcastle-1914-18/
LOCATION:The Lit & Phil\, 23 Westgate Road\, Newcastle upon Tyne\, NE1 1SE\, United Kingdom
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR