Migrants in a crowded Poplar market, 1904
The Guardian
The feared immigrants were mainly East European Jews. In the Pale of Settlement, they were allowed to live on a permanent basis. From 1880s on, with the terrible anti-Semitic pogroms, many fled. 150,000 settled in the UK, including my Russian grandmother. Then there were other Russians and Poles, Italians and Germans who moved to the East End, and were seen to lower living standards in the UK.
Emerging trade unions were worried that low-skilled migrants accepting long hours and low pay would undermine real English workers’ struggles. During the 1890s, the Trades Union Congress/TUC passed 3 resolutions calling for immigration controls.
Jewish trade unionists wrote the remarkable Voice from the Aliens to counter a nasty resolution at the 1895 congress. They unionised themselves and made strenuous efforts to cooperate with existing labour bodies. Influential non-Jewish activists in William Morris’ Socialist League supported them, as did tailors’ leader George Macdonald etc. But the dockers’ leader, Ben Tillett, described Jewish immigrants as the "scum of the continent who made slums even more foetid and congested".
BBL Poster, 1902
The Daily Mail continued its campaign against the arrival of Jews from Russia: "In Feb 1900, a British liner called the Cheshire moored at Southampton, carrying refugees from anti-Semitic pogroms in Russia. They had breakfasted on board, but they rushed as though starving at the food. These were the penniless refugees and when the relief committee passed by they hid their gold, and fawned and whined, and in broken English asked for money for their train fare."
Initially the BBL was most interested in protectionism, although it soon emphasised more rabid anti-foreigner rhetoric. Henry Norman Wolverhampton MP publicly deplored the UK being made into the "dumping ground for the scum of Europe". He joined the campaign and advised other nations to "disinfect their own sewage".
The Eastern Post and City Chronicle happily reported BBL activities and demanded that the government end the foreign flood which had submerged East London. Within months the league claimed 45,000 members, although a member was anyone who signed the BBL's petition. The League promoted its cause with large meetings, with guards whose role was to eject disruptive opponents.
The BBL’s East End strongholds in Shoreditch, Bethnal Green and Limehouse solidified around the immigrant ghetto of Aldgate and Whitechapel. BBL members, mostly local factory workers or unemployed, were convinced by BBL propaganda that their precarious work situation (low pay, overcrowded housing, poor sanitation) was caused by immigrants. But Captain Shaw also boasted of his elite recruits: Oxford graduates, city merchants and 40 Tory MPs.
The league’s opening rally in 1901 drew opponents. BBL supporters wrote to the press about socialist foreigners upsetting the meeting. Local newspapers noted that 260 big brawny stewards roughly ejected foreigners. So when the BBL held another large rally at the People’s Palace Mile End in Jan 1902, the 4,000 supporters were again protected by guards. [A technique later used by the British Fascists]
BBL supporters filled a petition pressing MPs to halt immigration. When the government launched a Royal Commission on Alien Immigration in 1903, Evans-Gordon chaired it and set the agenda. The Royal Commission investigated the BBL’s own charges - that immigrants:
arrived destitute and dirty;
practised insanitary habits;
spread infectious diseases;
were a burden on the rates;
dispossessed native dwellers;
caused native tradesmen to lose trade;
worked for rates below local workers;
included criminals, prostitutes and anarchists; and
formed a non-assimilating community.
arrived destitute and dirty;
practised insanitary habits;
spread infectious diseases;
were a burden on the rates;
dispossessed native dwellers;
caused native tradesmen to lose trade;
worked for rates below local workers;
included criminals, prostitutes and anarchists; and
formed a non-assimilating community.
Britain is the Promised Land and immigrants are undesirable
The Royal Commission struggled to back up its charges in its 1903 report. After all, the immigrants themselves lived in overcrowded conditions and mostly worked 12+ hours a day. Their dedication to education and self-improvement denied claims that the migrants lowered living standards.
Still the Tory government passed Britain’s first modern immigration law, 1905 Aliens Act. Although the word Jew did not appear in this Act, the legislation was largely seen as a success for the BBL, which could then close down.
This Act put an end to the Victorian Golden Age of migration which had benefited from cheaper transport costs and growing labour demands. The Alien Act’s most important provision was that Leave to Land would be refused to those migrants who could not support themselves. To screen the migrants properly, the Act allowed them to disembark only in approved ports where an Immigration and a Health Officer could inspect them.
By the time the Act passed, the Tories had fallen to Liberals in a landslide. The discretionary powers were transferred to the new Home Secretary, Herbert Gladstone, who used them to instruct all members of the Immigration Board. From 1906 the press was allowed to attend board meetings and in 1910 immigrants were permitted legal assistance. The refusal rate under the new Act was low although some groups, eg gypsies, were disproportionally affected. The act remained for eight years before being subsumed into the more stringent 1914 Alien Restriction Act.
Nothing is new; the League left behind a legacy of support for far-right groups. Enoch Powell warned of rivers of blood, Oswald Mosley wanted forced repatriation of Caribbean immigrants who flooded in, Margaret Thatcher spoke of Britain’s towns being swamped and Nigel Farage said parts of Britain were like a horrid foreign land.
By the time the Act passed, the Tories had fallen to Liberals in a landslide. The discretionary powers were transferred to the new Home Secretary, Herbert Gladstone, who used them to instruct all members of the Immigration Board. From 1906 the press was allowed to attend board meetings and in 1910 immigrants were permitted legal assistance. The refusal rate under the new Act was low although some groups, eg gypsies, were disproportionally affected. The act remained for eight years before being subsumed into the more stringent 1914 Alien Restriction Act.
Tailoring workshop, East End c1910
The Guardian
Nothing is new; the League left behind a legacy of support for far-right groups. Enoch Powell warned of rivers of blood, Oswald Mosley wanted forced repatriation of Caribbean immigrants who flooded in, Margaret Thatcher spoke of Britain’s towns being swamped and Nigel Farage said parts of Britain were like a horrid foreign land.
7 comments:
At present, the British fully support the Kiev regime, whose idols are Stepan Bandera and Roman Shukhevych, who killed more than a million Jews during World War II.
That's why I don't want to know anything about Great Britain.
The Stepney Bishop and the Conservative MP for Stepney both had the same strong views. No wonder the initial establishment of the League happened in the Stepney Meeting House.
The Jewish Historical Society of England was founded in 1893, the oldest historical and learned such society in Europe. The society, based in London, has active branches throughout England. The aim of the society is to make the results of historical scholarship for both a general and specialist audience.
The number of Jews arriving from Russia, Poland and Romania were shown to be only a quarter of the foreign population arriving between 1893-1902.
As I knew none of this I feel like I have learnt something and that's always a good thing
Nothing changes, It's shameful to read of such activities and groups.
This detailed account underscores how economic insecurity, xenophobia, and political opportunism coalesced in late 19th-century Britain to fuel anti-immigrant sentiment, particularly against Eastern European Jews, shaping policies and public opinion in ways that echo into our present
I've learnt more Hels. The migrants worked long hours, they deserved better.
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