The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Flags on Red Clydeside: The day mean welcome to Oswald Mosley

Fascists was run out of Scotland is remembered as TV hit puts him in the plot

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Clockwise from main: Sam Claflin as Oswald Mosley in Peaky Blinders; Mosley leads his Black Shirts in 1934; scene from Peaky Blinders; and The Bridgeton Team look a bit Peaky in Glasgow’s East End in 1914 was opposition, but the violence was a one-off.”

Razor battles in the early 1930s were common, according to Dr Bowd – but the melee at Glasgow Green was an unusual sight in Scotland.

“As the 1930s went on there were clashes between communists and fascists, a faint echo of the last days of the Weimar Republic,” added Dr Bowd. “Political meetings were a form of mass entertainm­ent. But the rough house stuff was more for sectarian battles, like the Billy Boys in Glasgow and Kormack’s Kaledonian Klan in Edinburgh. The communists had a particular penchant for the razor. Though the use of razors was a broader social phenomenon, notably in the No Mean City of Glasgow.”

The battle at Glasgow Green was described by Mosley, who escaped without injury, as “the best meeting I ever had”.

It didn’t do his popularity any favours, however. Mosley was nominated as rector of Glasgow University and, only a month after the fracas, was soundly trounced in the election.

He polled only 4% and was comprehens­ively beaten by Scottish nationalis­t Compton Mackenzie, author of Whisky Galore.

By the time of the outbreak of the Second World War, the British Government interred 1,000 fascists and only three were in Scotland.

“Throughout the ’30s, Glasgow became a bit of a no-go area for Mosley’s legions,” said Dr Bowd.

“The BUF failed to make significan­t headway in a Scotland that was a restless part of the UK and riven by sectarian hatred.”

The fearsome Billy Boys gang – led by Billy Fullerton – weren’t involved in the Glasgow Green incident. Fullerton later became a member of Mosley’s British Union of Fascists.

Ironically, it was the anti-catholic stance widespread in Scotland at the time which helped foster suspicion about Mosley – and was one of the key reasons fascism didn’t gain a foothold north of the border.

“Scottish Unionists might have been natural allies, but Mosley suggested a united fascist Ireland, which was largely the end of any support from the likes of the Scottish Protestant League, which had enjoyed some success in Scottish politics,” added Professor Maitles.

“Alexander Radcliffe of the Scottish Protestant League warned in 1935 about fascism being in alliance with the Pope to smash Protestant­ism.

“Although Radcliffe visited Hitler in 1939 and was quite taken by German fascism. He came back and began speaking about the need for fascism in Scotland.

“But by then there were moves towards war, and the feelings against fascism were strong in Scotland.”

The anti-catholic feeling was just one reason why Mosley and fascism was given short shrift by Scots.

“Along with the anti-catholic fault line which Mosley couldn’t bridge, there were several reasons why his brand of fascism didn’t take hold here,” added Professor Maitles. “The BUF claimed they had branches from Wick to Dumfries but it’s estimated at their height they never had more than 400 members across Scotland.

“The economy here wasn’t as bad as it was in 1930s Germany so there wasn’t an environmen­t of unemployme­nt for them to exploit.

“We also had a first past the post electoral system which makes it difficult for new parties to get elected.

“One of the crucial reasons fascists didn’t succeed is that, everywhere they tried to build, they were opposed by the left.”

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 ??  ?? On stage: Matthew Macfadyen as Jeeves and Stephen Mangan as Bertie
On stage: Matthew Macfadyen as Jeeves and Stephen Mangan as Bertie

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