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Radical History Blog
The Fight for Democracy in South Wales: Finding the Chartists' Cave
On Saturday 8th September, three valiant members of the Radical Tea Towel team, Tim, Bea and Luke, plus Luke's brother Adam and Moss the dog, ventured forth in the wind and rain to find the cave on Mynydd Llangynidr, high on the moors above the village of Trefil, in Blaenau Gwent, South Wales...
Annie Kenney: Working Class Heroine
Across history, radical movements for democratic change have often been led by members of the upper classes.
Mary Wollstonecraft: Finding Feminism in the French Revolution
It takes a brave person to stand up and back a revolution. Sometimes it takes an even braver one to call out its weaknesses.
Jane Addams and Hull House: A True Chicago Story
History gives us many examples of cities which have shown a special talent for producing radical politics. 'Rote Wien' (Red Vienna) was known as a socialist stronghold between the wars until the Nazis marched in.
The Crazy Horse Memorial and its Lasting Message
In the early 1940s a Lakota Indian Chief, Henry Standing Bear, wrote to the Polish-American architect Korczak Ziolkowski and asked if he'd be willing to build a to commemorate Native American history.
Martin Luther King jr and the Speech That Changed the World
It's 55 years today that "" delivered his beautiful speech: 'I Have a Dream', at the 1963 'March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom'. I know that you've probably heard people go on about the greatness of this speech before.
Divide & Rule: The Brutality of the British Empire
One of the favourite lies told by Britain's imperial apologists is that the decolonisation of the British Empire was 'bloodless'.
How Cricket's Greatest Ever Side Stood up to Racism
The recent mistreatment of the by the Home Office has been catching some much-needed headlines of late. But it's not as if Britain had been a paradise for residents of its former colonies until now.
1936, the People's Olympiad & German Anti-Fascists
It irks me a bit when people phrase things in terms of "the British did this" or "the Mexicans did that". An adjective like 'British' or 'Mexican' denotes millions of people - millions who aren't going to do the same thing in a given situation.
Simón Bolívar: South America's 'El Libertador'
History counts - born today in 1783 - as one of its great winners. That's a fair point. Bolívar - 'South America's ' - did win countless battles in his long wars of liberation against the Spanish Crown in South America.