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Jack Fitzgerald (c. 1873 – 16 April 1929) was a founding member of the Socialist Party of Great Britain. Fitzgerald was an Irishman who had settled in London, and had joined the socialist movement after becoming a secularist , embracing socialism after attending a debate between secularist Charles Bradlaugh and socialist Henry Hyndman . [ 1 ] "
This is a list of notable current and former members of the Socialist Party of Great Britain. Where available, their term of membership is indicated. A. S. Albery (1904) E. J. B. Allen (1904–1906) Alexander Anderson (1904–1926) Moses Baritz [1] Robert Barltrop; Dan Billany (1931–1933) John Bird (1950s) Adam Buick (1962–) F. K. Cadman ...
Jack Fitzgerald: Founded: 12 June 1904 ... The Socialist Party of Great Britain ... it formed the genesis of the British Socialist Workers Party.
Pages in category "Socialist Party of Great Britain members" The following 32 pages are in this category, out of 32 total. ... Jack Fitzgerald; R. M. Fox; G. Alec ...
Ethical socialism is a variant of liberal socialism developed by British socialists. [ 19 ] [ 20 ] It became an important ideology within the Labour Party of the United Kingdom . [ 21 ] Ethical socialism was founded in the 1920s by R. H. Tawney , a British Christian socialist , and its ideals were connected to Christian socialist, Fabian , and ...
John Fitzgerald (1775–1852), British MP for Seaford 1826–32; John FitzGerald, Baron FitzGerald (1816–1889), Irish judge and politician; Sir John Fitzgerald (brewer) (1857–1930), Lord Mayor of Newcastle upon Tyne, England, 1914–1915; Jack Fitzgerald (1873–1929), founding member of the Socialist Party of Great Britain
Socialist Standard. Socialist Party of Great Britain. November 1932. ISSN 0037-8259. Barltrop, Robert (1975). The Monument: The Story of the Socialist Party of Great Britain. London: Pluto Press. pp. 36–39. ISBN 0-904383-00-8. Perrin, David A. (2000). The Socialist Party of Great Britain: Politics, Economics and Britain's Oldest Socialist ...
In 1911 this idea came to realisation when a Socialist Unity Conference was held, bringing together representatives of the SDF, the left wing of the ILP, the network of clubs associated with The Clarion newspaper, and various local socialist societies. [40] Together these groups formed a new organisation, the British Socialist Party.