Adolphe Smith Headingley
Adolphe Smith Headingley (1846–1924) was a British left-wing political writer. Half-French, Smith Headingley was a member of the First International and took part in the Paris Commune. In 1877–78, he wrote and published the magazine series Street Life in London with photographer John Thomson, to raise awareness of the plight of the city's poor. Smith Headingley played a key role in organising the 1882 International Trades Union Congress and served as an interpreter at successive conferences from 1886 to 1905. It was Smith Headingley that, in the 1890s, popularised the singing of the socialist anthem "The Red Flag" to the tune of "O Tannenbaum".
Biography
[edit]Smith Headingley was born in 1846 and was half French.[1][2] A left-wing political writer (under the name Adolphe Smith) and activist he was a member of the First International (1864–1876).[2] He joined the Paris Commune in 1871 and narrowly escaped execution when the commune was suppressed by the French Army.[3][2]
Smith Headingley worked with photographer John Thomson to produce the magazine series Street Life in London between 1877 and 1878.[2] The 12-issue monthly publication documented the lives of the poor in the city and was intended to raise public awareness of the issue. The authors acknowledged that they had been inspired by a similar project from the early 1870s, London Labour and the London Poor, by photographer Richard Beard and journalist Henry Mayhew.[4][2] Smith Headingley contributed 24 of the essays in the work and Thomson 12. Critical opinion considered Smith Headingley's contributions to be more detailed and socially relevant.[2] The series was later compiled into a book.[4]
After Street Life in London Smith Headingley continued to write on social matters and became renowned as a left-wing campaigner for social reform.[2] Using his fluency in French he played a key role in organising the International Trades Union Congress of November 1882.[5] Smith Headingley became known as "Mr. Interpreter" in trade unionist circles.[6] He served as an interpreter at successive meetings of the International Trades Union Congress from 1886 to 1905.[2]
In the 1890s Smith Headingley popularised the singing of the socialist anthem "The Red Flag" to the tune of "O Tannenbaum".[2][7][8] Its author Jim Connell had intended the tune to be sung to the Jacobite tune "The White Cockade", associated with the Irish nationalist movement that Connell supported.[7][2] Connell disapproved of the change of tune, to which the song remains most closely linked, as he regarded "O Tannenbaum" as "church music" and conservative by nature.[7]
Smith Headingley was an associate of English writer and socialist Henry Hyndman and of the women's suffragists Sylvia, Christabel and Adela Pankhurst.[3][6] Smith Headingley died in 1924.[2] His eulogy was written by barrister and campaigner Ernest Belfort Bax who described him as an "excellent socialist".[9]
References
[edit]- ^ Marx, Karl (2001). Karl Marx, Frederick Engels: Letters, January 1887 – July 1890. Lawrence & Wishart. p. 252.
- ^ a b Holmes, Rachel (15 December 2020). Sylvia Pankhurst: Natural Born Rebel. Bloomsbury USA. p. 62. ISBN 978-1-4088-8041-8.
- ^ a b Bogre, Michelle (12 November 2012). Photography as Activism: Images for Social Change. CRC Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-136-09710-2.
- ^ Stafford, David (1971). From Anarchism to Reformism: A Study of the Political Activities of Paul Brousse Within the First International and the French Socialist Movement, 1870–90. Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 332. ISBN 978-0-297-00238-3.
- ^ a b Gould, Frederick James (1928). Hyndman, Prophet of Socialism. Hyndman Literary Committee by G. Allen & Unwin. p. 210.
- ^ a b c Millar, Stephen (2020). Sounding Dissent: Rebel Songs, Resistance, and Irish Republicanism. University of Michigan Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-472-13194-5.
- ^ Smith, Laurajane; Shackel, Paul; Campbell, Gary (23 May 2012). Heritage, Labour and the Working Classes. Routledge. p. 204. ISBN 978-1-136-69853-8.
- ^ Griffith, William E. (1966). European communism, 1965, by W.E. Griffith. East Germany, by Carola Stern. M. I. T. Press. p. 464.