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Speakers' Corner

A Speakers' Corner is an area where free speech open-air public speaking, debate, and discussion are allowed. The original and best known is in the north-east corner of Hyde Park in London, England. Historically there were a number of other areas designated as Speakers' Corners in other parks in London, such as Lincoln's Inn Fields, Finsbury Park, Clapham Common, Kennington Park, and Victoria Park. Areas for Speakers' Corners have been established in other countries and elsewhere in the UK.

For other uses, see Speakers' Corner (disambiguation).

(since 1978)

Tony Allen

Jacques Arnold MP (see the Hyde Park Tories)

Michael 'Lord' Barker (1970s, 1980s)

[12]

Martin Besserman (since c. 1978)[14][15]

[13]

Lou Brotherton MP (see the Hyde Park Tories)

(since 1918)

Catholic Evidence Guild

John Goss (see the Hyde Park Tories)

Diane Hamilton (since 1980s)

[16]

Christopher Horne (see the Hyde Park Tories)

Jim Huggon (1970s, 1980s)[18]

[17]

The Hyde Park Tories (1966 - 1975) (Bryan Morgan-Edwards, John Goss, Lou Brotherton MP, Christopher Horne, Sir Ian MacTaggart, Jacques Arnold MP, William List and others)

William List (see the Hyde Park Tories)

Peter Lumsden (c. 1980–2007)

[19]

Sir Ian MacTaggart (see the Hyde Park Tories)

(c. 1920–43)

Vincent McNabb

Bryan Morgan-Edwards (see the Hyde Park Tories)

Robert Ogilvie (1960s–1980s)[21]

[20]

(1970s)

Derek Prince

(1947–c. 1978)

Philip Sansom

Norman "The Walker" Schlund (1960s–1980s)

[22]

(1921–c. 1970) (with Maisie Ward)

Frank Sheed

(since 1904)

Socialist Party of Great Britain

(1950–c. 1995)

Donald Soper, Baron Soper

(since 2013)

Hatun Tash

Bonar Thompson (1920–1960)

[23]

(1919-c. 1970) (with Frank Sheed)

Maisie Ward

(1947–c. 1985)

John Webster

Mohammed Hijab

Ali Dawah

Adnan Rashid

Muhammed Ali

Arul Veluswamy

Shamsi (DUS Dawah)

Other countries[edit]

Australia[edit]

There is a Speakers' Corner in The Domain, Sydney, established in 1878. The speakers talk every Sunday afternoon from 2 pm until 5 pm, and have a website. Official outdoor "free" speech first appeared in the hustings and hanging grounds of Hyde Park Sydney in 1874. Free speech in this form was banned following a serious riot between Catholics and Orangemen. However, following the formalisation of free speech in Speakers' Corner in London it was decided in 1878 that The Domain would be the place for free speech in Sydney.


In Diary of a Voyage to Australia, New Zealand and other lands (published 1896), the Christadelphian preacher Robert Roberts wrote: "On the west side [of a particular location] is a feature peculiar to Sydney in all the world - a preaching park. There are of course, parks in other cities where open-air spouting is practiced on Sundays, such as Hyde Park, in London : but there is no city in the world where a park on such a scale is used by all classes of religious people. It is a wooded enclosure, like a nobleman's park in England, kept in capital order, both as regards the turf under foot, and the tall and noble trees that give shelter overhead from the sun." "All the sects and denominations use it. There is none of the sense of infra dig that associates itself with out-door preaching in England.""Every denomination has its own tree." "The various religious bodies hold their meetings sufficiently apart to make no interference one with the other. It is a sort of weekly babel of religious tongues - recognised and patronised by the whole community"


Other Speakers' Corners are found in Brisbane outside Parliament House, and in King George Square. In Melbourne, Speakers' Corner was originally held in Birrarung Marr where the original site is still visible. This site has lost some popularity over the years and Speakers' Corner (Now called "Speakers' Forum") is currently held outside the State Library of Victoria on Sunday afternoon from 3 pm.

Unfinished Business (1964) by Maisie Ward, the story of her and Frank Sheed's meeting at Speaker's Corner, and the Catholic Evidence Guild.

The Instructed Heart: Soundings at Four Depths (1979) by Frank Sheed, telling his side of the story of him and Maisie Ward and their lives as outdoor speakers.

A Summer in the Park – A Journal of Speakers' Corner (2004) by Tony Allen, foreword by

Ken Campbell

The Speakers (1964) by . The book features William MacGuinness, Axel Ney Hoch, John Webster, Jacobus van Dyn, Norman Schlund, Alfred Reynolds and other Speakers' Corner regulars from the 1960s

Heathcote Williams

Hyde Park Orator. Autobiographical reminiscences (1933) by Bonar Thompson. With a portrait. Foreword by

Seán O'Casey

Speakers' Corner – an anthology (1977) Edited by Jim Huggon. With a foreword by .

Philip Sansom

But Mr Speaker, It would create Anarchy! (c. 1975) by Jim Huggon

Bonar Thompson, the Old Days of Carnearney: An Examination of the Life and Times of Bonar Thompson, the Hyde Park Orator (1991) by R. H. Foy

Around the Marble Arch. Wit and Humour of the Hyde Park Orators (1939) by F. W. Batchelor

The History of Soapbox Oratory. Part one: prominent speakers of the Sydney Domain (1994) by Stephen Maxwell

Speakers' Corner: The Conceptualisation and Regulation of a Public Sphere (2000) by J. M. Roberts. Dissertation, University of Cardiff.

Roberts, John Michael. 2008. "Expressive free speech, the state and the public sphere: a Bakhtinian-Deleuzian analysis of 'public address' at Hyde Park". Social Movement Studies: Journal of Social, Cultural and Political Protest. 7:2 (September 2008), pp. 101–119.

From Where I Stand (Hansib, 1987) by Roy Sawh

A Saint in Hyde Park: Memories of Father Vincent McNabb, O. P. (1950) by Edward A Siderman

Wer andern eine Rede hält – Speakers Corner London (1981) by K. H. Wocker, photographs by J. D. Schmidt

Answering Back. Donald Soper answers your questions (1953) by Donald Soper

The Domain Speaker. Humour, Politics, Satire, Revolution, Human Rights, Historical, Pictorial, Vicious Wit (1981) by Victor Zammit

Stilled Tongues: From Soapbox to Soundbite (1997) by Stephen Coleman

The Future of Ideas: The Fate of the Commons in a Connected World (2001) by Lawrence Lessig

'Only in London': Speakers' Corner, Marble Arch. Past, Present, and Future (if any). An illustrated sourcebook (2010) by Reinhard Wentz

Speaker's Corner Teacher Guide. KS3 History and Citizenship (2011) [Produced by The Royal Parks(Agency)] 22 pp

"Speakers' Corner: Where all speech reigns free" (2017)

[37]

appeared at the Speakers' Corner in Hyde Park, London, impersonating a Scientologist while filming his 2008 comedy/documentary film Religulous.

Bill Maher

BBC 3 produced a program with Tony Allen on heckling as a lost art for the election in 2005. It was based around teaching two people how to heckle at Speakers' Corner.

Episode 24 of Season 6 of the comedy TV series had the Bundy family paying a visit to Speakers' Corner.

Married... with Children

In , the adult Damien passes through Speakers' Corner, hears a priest there speaking of the Antichrist, and looks uneasy as the priest seems to recognise him.

Omen III: The Final Conflict

interviews a man who regularly attends Speakers' Corner, claiming to have discovered "the secret to eternal youth". The interview is an extra, featured on Ricky Gervais's DVD entitled FAME.

Karl Pilkington

Speakers' Corner appears in one of the early issues of the comic book The Invisibles (later reprinted in the first Invisibles graphic novel, Say You Want A Revolution).

Grant Morrison

The BBC produced a program on the Park Police.

The lyrics of British rock group ' song "Industrial Disease" (from the Love Over Gold album) refer to Speakers' Corner: "I go down to Speakers' Corner, I'm thunderstruck; they got free speech, tourists, police in trucks. Two men say they're Jesus; one of them must be wrong. There's a protest singer, he's singing a protest song".

Dire Straits

Episode 3 season 1 BBC contestants have to speak at Speakers' Corner to prove their public speaking skills.

The Speaker

In by V. S. Naipaul, the main character, visiting London for the first time, expects to see large, radical, excited crowds at Speakers' Corner. Instead he encounters "an idle scatter of people around half a dozen talkers, with the big buses and the cars rolling indifferently by all the time" and speakers with odd, "very personal religious ideas," such that their families "might have been glad to get them out of the house in the afternoons."

Half a Life: A Novel

song "Strange Time, Sad Time" from his album "Love Is the Law" (Pulsar 1969) contains the lyric "In London England, people take a walk... Great Times, Love Times... to Speakers Corner to tell their talk... Great Times, Love Times

Graham Bond

Free speech zone

Over three hundred fine art b&w pictures from Speakers' Corner since 1991

Light Creatures

Documentary (60 minutes) by Gavin White and Duncan Walsh. 2009

Speakers'Corner: You have the right to remain vocal

The web site contains radio and video archives of speeches, discussions and soundscapes from Speakers' Corner Hyde Park since 2003 broadcast on Resonance104.4fm Listen Live Weekly at 3 pm on Tuesday, 6pm on Thursday, 3:30 pm on Saturday, (London Time) Producer Heiko Khoo .

The Speakers' Corner web site from Hyde Park.

an oral and visual history of Speakers' Corner

Sounds from the Park