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British Union of Fascists

The British Union of Fascists (BUF) was a British fascist political party formed in 1932 by Oswald Mosley. Mosley changed its name to the British Union of Fascists and National Socialists in 1936 and, in 1937, to the British Union. In 1939, following the start of the Second World War, the party was proscribed by the British government and in 1940 it was disbanded.

British Union of Fascists

BUF

1 October 1932

Maximum 40,000 (1934 estimate)[6]

  Red   White   Blue
  Black (customary)

The BUF emerged in 1932 from the electoral defeat of its antecedent, the New Party, in the 1931 general election. The BUF's foundation was initially met with popular support, and it attracted a sizeable following, with the party claiming 50,000 members at one point. The press baron Lord Rothermere was a notable early supporter. As the party became increasingly radical, however, support declined. The Olympia Rally of 1934, in which a number of anti-fascist protestors were attacked by the paramilitary wing of the BUF, the Fascist Defence Force, isolated the party from much of its following. The party's embrace of Nazi-style antisemitism in 1936 led to increasingly violent confrontations with anti-fascists, notably the 1936 Battle of Cable Street in London's East End. The Public Order Act 1936, which banned political uniforms and responded to increasing political violence, had a particularly strong effect on the BUF whose supporters were known as "Blackshirts" after the uniforms they wore.


Growing British hostility towards Nazi Germany, with which the British press persistently associated the BUF, further contributed to the decline of the movement's membership. The party was finally banned by the British government on 23 May 1940 after the start of the Second World War, amid suspicion that its remaining supporters might form a pro-Nazi "fifth column". A number of prominent BUF members were arrested and interned under Defence Regulation 18B.

Relationship with the suffragettes[edit]

Attracted by ‘modern’ fascist policies, such as ending the widespread practice of sacking women from their jobs on marriage, many women joined the Blackshirts – particularly in economically depressed Lancashire. Eventually women constituted one-quarter of the BUF's membership.[39]


In a January 2010 BBC documentary, Mother Was A Blackshirt, James Maw reported that in 1914 Norah Elam was placed in a Holloway Prison cell with Emmeline Pankhurst for her involvement with the suffragette movement, and, in 1940, she was returned to the same prison with Diana Mosley, this time for her involvement with the fascist movement. Another leading suffragette, Mary Richardson, became head of the women's section of the BUF.


Mary Sophia Allen OBE was a former branch leader of the West of England Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). At the outbreak of the First World War, she joined the Women Police Volunteers, becoming the WPV Commandant in 1920. She met Mosley at the January Club in April 1932, going on to speak at the club following her visit to Germany, "to learn the truth about of the position of German womanhood".[40]


The BBC report described how Elam's fascist philosophy grew from her suffragette experiences, how the British fascist movement became largely driven by women, how they targeted young women from an early age, how the first British fascist movement was founded by a woman, and how the leading lights of the suffragettes had, with Oswald Mosley, founded the BUF.[41]


Mosley's electoral strategy had been to prepare for the election after 1935, and in 1936 he announced a list of BUF candidates for that election, with Elam nominated to stand for Northampton. Mosley accompanied Elam to Northampton to introduce her to her electorate at a meeting in the Town Hall. At that meeting Mosley announced that "he was glad indeed to have the opportunity of introducing the first candidate, and ... [thereby] killed for all time the suggestion that National Socialism proposed putting British women back into the home; this is simply not true. Mrs Elam [he went on] had fought in the past for women's suffrage ... and was a great example of the emancipation of women in Britain."[42]


Former suffragettes were drawn to the BUF for a variety of reasons. Many felt the movement's energy reminded them of the suffragettes, while others felt the BUF's economic policies would offer them true equality – unlike its continental counterparts, the movement insisted it would not require women to return to domesticity and that the corporatist state would ensure adequate representation for housewives, while it would also guarantee equal wages for women and remove the marriage bar that restricted the employment of married women. The BUF also offered support for new mothers (due to concerns of falling birth rates), while also offering effective birth control, as Mosley believed it was not in the national interest to have a populace ignorant of modern scientific knowledge. While these policies were motivated more out of making the best use of women's skills in state interest than any kind of feminism, it was still a draw for many suffragettes.[43]

was a suffragette.

Mary Sophia Allen

was previously Unionist Member of Parliament for Belfast West.[44] Material in the National Archive shows that Allen acted as an MI5 agent within the BUF.[45]

William Edward David Allen

was previously Labour Member of Parliament for Peckham.[46]

John Beckett

was an officer in the RAF and, after the war, a Soviet spy.[47][48]

Frank Bossard

was a member of the House of Lords.

Patrick Boyle, 8th Earl of Glasgow

was a racing motorist and motoring journalist.[49]

Malcolm Campbell

was a journalist.[50]

A. K. Chesterton

(known as 'Cimmie') was the second daughter of George Curzon, Lord Curzon of Kedleston, and the wife of Oswald Mosley until her death in 1933.

Lady Cynthia Curzon

was a suffragette.

Norah Elam

was previously Labour Member of Parliament for West Renfrewshire.[49]

Robert Forgan

John Frederick Charles Fuller was a military historian and strategist.[49][51]

Major General

was leader of the Billy Boys gang from Glasgow.[52]

Billy Fullerton

was the captain of the England cricket team.

Arthur Gilligan

was an English conductor.[53]

Reginald Goodall

Louis Greig was a British naval surgeon, courtier and intimate of King George VI.[54][55]

Group Captain

was a prominent member and later Mosley's personal secretary.

Jeffrey Hamm

was the owner of the Daily Mail and a member of the House of Lords.[56]

Harold Sidney Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere

was leader of the Blackshirts.[49]

Neil Francis Hawkins

was a member of the House of Lords.[57]

Josslyn Hay, 22nd Earl of Erroll

later nicknamed 'Lord Haw-Haw', became naturalized as a German citizen and broadcast pro-Nazi propaganda from German territory.[49]

William Joyce

was a Jewish boxing champion; he left the party after it became overtly antisemitic.[58]

Ted "Kid" Lewis

David Freeman-Mitford, 2nd Baron Redesdale

Diana Mitford

was a BUF leader in Derby and later south Wales.

Tommy Moran

was a suffragette and head of the BUF's women's section.

Mary Richardson

Sir was a pilot and businessman.[49]

Alliott Verdon Roe

Edward Frederick Langley Russell, 2nd Baron Russell of Liverpool

[54]

was a member of the House of Lords.

Edward Russell, 26th Baron de Clifford

was a member of the House of Lords.[59]

Hastings Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford

was the party's Director of Public Policy.[49]

Alexander Raven Thomson

a Nazi collaborator who became the last person executed in the United Kingdom for a crime other than murder.

Theodore Schurch

Frank Cyril Tiarks

was the manager of the England cricket team and Yorkshire Cricket Club.

Frederick Toone

was a writer, best known for his 1927 work Tarka the Otter.[60]

Henry Williamson

Despite the short period of its operation the BUF attracted prominent members and supporters. These included:

The television serial Mosley (1998) portrayed the career of Oswald Mosley during his years with the BUF. The four-part series was based on the books Rules of the Game and Beyond the Pale, written by his son Nicholas Mosley.[61]

Channel 4

In the film (1964), the BUF appears to be the ruling party of German-occupied Britain. A Mosley speech is heard on the radio in the scene before everyone goes to the movies.

It Happened Here

The first depiction of Mosley and the BUF in fiction occurred in 's novel Point Counter Point (1932), in which Mosley is depicted as Everard Webley, the murderous leader of the "BFF", the Brotherhood of Free Fascists; he comes to a nasty end.

Aldous Huxley

alternative history

's novel '48 (1996) has a protagonist who is hunted by BUF Blackshirts in a devastated London after a biological weapon is released during the Second World War. The history of the BUF and Mosley is recapitulated.

James Herbert

In 's novel Night Over Water, several of the main characters are BUF members. In his book Winter of the World, the Battle of Cable Street plays a role and some of the characters are involved in either the BUF or the anti-BUF organisations.

Ken Follett

The BUF also appears in ' book The Leader (2003), in which Mosley is the dictator of Britain in the 1930s.

Guy Walters

The British humorous writer satirized the BUF in books and short stories. The BUF was satirized as "The Black Shorts",[62] rather than "shirts", because all of the best shirt colours were already taken. Its leader was Roderick Spode, the owner of a ladies' underwear shop.

P. G. Wodehouse

The British novelist satirized the BUF and Mosley in Wigs on the Green (1935). Diana Mitford, the author's sister, had been romantically involved with Mosley since 1932.

Nancy Mitford

In the 1992 Acorn Media production of 's One, Two, Buckle My Shoe with David Suchet and Philip Jackson, one of the supporting characters (played by Christopher Eccleston) secures a paid position as a rank-and-file member of the BUF.

Agatha Christie

The BUF and Oswald Mosley are alluded to in 's novel The Remains of the Day.

Kazuo Ishiguro

The BUF and Mosley are shown in the BBC version of (2010) in which two of the characters are BUF supporters.

Upstairs, Downstairs

The ' song "The Sick Bed of Cuchulainn", from their album Rum Sodomy & the Lash (1985), refers to the BUF in its second verse with the line "And you decked some fucking blackshirt who was cursing all the Yids".

Pogues

's first novel, Boxer, Beetle (2010), portrays the Battle of Cable Street.

Ned Beauman

C. J. Samson's novel Dominion (2012) has Sir Oswald Mosley as in a "post-Dunkirk peace with Germany alternate history thriller" set in 1952. Lord Beaverbrook is Prime Minister of an authoritarian coalition government. Blackshirts tend to be auxiliary policemen.

Home Secretary

In the film (2010), a brief shot shows a brick wall in London plastered with posters, some of them reading "Fascism is Practical Patriotism" and others reading "Stand by the King". Both sets of posters were put up by British Blackshirts, who supported King Edward VIII. Edward was suspected of fascist leanings.[63]

The King's Speech

used the British Union of Fascists' insignia as a theme in her 2018 BBC One adaptation of Agatha Christie's The A.B.C. Murders.[64]

Sarah Phelps

's novel Mad Hatter (2019) features her father James Larratt Battersby as a member of the BUF.

Amanda K. Hale

Mosley was portrayed by in Series 5 and 6 of the BBC show Peaky Blinders as the founder of the BUF.[65]

Sam Claflin

The legacy of BUF is a theme of the final episode of season 8 of the detective series .

Father Brown

List of British fascist parties

(1997)

Mosley

The symbol

flash and circle

– an incident between BUF members and anti-fascists in Worthing on 9 October 1934

Battle of South Street

- affiliated Canadian party

Canadian Union of Fascists

Caldicott, Rosemary (2017) Lady Blackshirts. The perils of Perception - Suffragettes who became Fascists, Bristol Radical Pamphletteer #39.  978-1911522393

ISBN

Cross, Colin (1963). The Fascists in Britain. St. Martin's Press.

Dorril, Stephen (2006). Blackshirt: Sir Oswald Mosley and British fascism. London: Viking.  978-0670869992.

ISBN

Drabik, Jakub. (2016a) "British Union of Fascists", Contemporary British History 30.1 (2016): 1–19.

Drábik, Jakub. (2016b) "Spreading the faith: the propaganda of the British Union of Fascists", Journal of Contemporary European Studies (2016): 1-15.

Garau, Salvatore. "The Internationalisation of Italian Fascism in the face of German National Socialism, and its Impact on the British Union of Fascists", Politics, Religion & Ideology 15.1 (2014): 45–63.

(1983). Fellow Travellers of the Right: British enthusiasts for Nazi Germany, 1933-39. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0192851161.

Griffiths, Richard

(2006). "Hurrah for the Blackshirts!": Fascists and Fascism in Britain between the Wars (1st ed.). London: Pimlico. ISBN 9781844130870.

Pugh, Martin

Thurlow, Richard (2006). Fascism in Britain: From Oswald Mosley's Blackshirts to the National Front (rev. ed.). London: Tauris.  978-1860643378.

ISBN