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Broadfield Revisited: Some Scottish Catholic Responses to Wealth, 1918–40

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

Bernard Aspinwall*
Affiliation:
University of Glasgow

Extract

You do need to be very romantic to accept the industrial civilization’, wrote G. K. Chesterton. ‘It does really require all the old Gaelic glamour to make men think Glasgow is a grand place. Yet the miracle is achieved, and while I was in Glasgow I shared the illusion.’ The industrial dream suited the Scots. Here was a really romantic vista suited to a romantic people. On a visit in 1919, Eric Gill was far more pointed: ‘Love God and do what you will’ would never lead you to a life in Glasgow. On one of his many visits, Rev. Vincent McNabb, the Dominican, declared a walk through the Glasgow slums demonstrated the futility of the money standard of civilization. Only a return to the land could bring real wealth and contentment. In similar vein John Ruskin and his active local following in the city confidently awaited the collapse of industrialism. William Cassels, the President of the Glasgow Ruskin Society, championed these ideas in lectures, pamphlets, and reading guilds. Impressed by Rerum Novarum and associated with local Catholics in the Single Tax movement, he and a socialist friend had spent some time with Edward Carpenter’s communal land experiment. Glasgow, the Second City of the Empire and the epitome of the Victorian acquisitive society, had a remarkably prolific record in spawning alternative social visions. Catholics were to draw on these native experiences and their own traditions in founding the Scottish Land Colonisation Association. Rev. Professor John McQuillan was their inspiration. Their farm, Broadfield, Symington, Lanarkshire, was a practical statement about their attitudes to wealth.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1987

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References

1 Chesterton, G. K., A Miscellany of Men (London, 1912), p. 109 Google Scholar. Evelyn Waugh, Brideshead Revisited (London, 1945) opens in Glasgow.

2 Eric Gill, Art Nonsense (London, 1929), p. 10.

3 Rev.McNabb, V., Nazareth or Social Chaos (London, 1933), p. 13 Google Scholar. F.Valentine, Fr. Vincent McNabb (London, 1955) is disappointing on land.

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5 Cassels, W., Wealth, Definitions by Ruskin and Mill Compared. A Paper Before the Ruskin Society of Glasgow, 23 Jan. 1882 (Glasgow, 1882)Google Scholar; The Social Problem: Work Vs. Waste (Glasgow, 1885); J. March, Back To the Land: The Pastoral Impulse in Victorian England from 1880 to 1914 (London, 1982), pp. 207–8. His obituary is in Land and Liberty, Mar. 1923. Such progressive ideas were common following the First World War: F. C. Howe, The Land and the Soldier (London, 1919), pp. 232–7 and F. E. Green, The Awakening of England (London, 1919 edn).

6 For example, Garnett, R. G., Co-operation and Owenite Socialist Communities in Britain, 1825–45 (Manchester, 1972)Google Scholar and Harrison, J. F. C., Robert Owen and the Owenites in Britain and America (London, 1969).Google Scholar

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8 This paragraph is based on H. Shove, The Fairy Ring of Commerce (Birmingham, 1931); V. McNabb, The Church and The Land (London, 1925);. McQuillan et al., Flee To The Fields: A Symposium (London, 1934); S. Gilley, ‘Catholics and Socialists in Glasgow, 1906–12’, pp. 160–200 in K. Lunn, ed., Hosts, Immigrants and Minorities: Historical Responses to Newcomers in British Society, 1870–1914 (Folkestone, 1980). My emphasis differs from T. Gallagher, ‘Scottish Catholics and the British Left, 1918–39’, IR 34 (1983), pp. 17–42.

9 See Fitzpatrick, T. A., Catholic Secondary Education in South West Scotland before 1972: Its Contribution to The Changing Status of the Catholic Community in the Area (Aberdeen, 1986).Google Scholar

10 Glasgow Observer [hereafter cited as G.O.], 2 Jan. 1926.

11 Phillimore, J. S., ‘Liberalism in Outward Relations’, Essays in Liberalism by Six Oxford Men (London, 1897), pp. 13174, 202 Google Scholar. The others included Belloc and J. L. Hammond. His obituary is in G.O., 20 Nov. 1926. S. N. Miller,‘J. S. Phillimore: A Memoir’, Wiseman Review, 234 (1960–1), 316–34, and 235 (1961–2), 23–47.

12 Obituary in S.C.D. (1965); his The Achievement of the Middle Ages (London, 1928) and G.O., 27 June 1931, annual weekend conference Catholic Social Guild.

13 For example, Patrick McGlynn, Dr Grillo, S. N. Miller, H. Brennan, Denis Brogan contributed to the Catholic Social Guild summer conference, G.O., 4 Aug. 1928. J. S. Phillimore’s confident assertive views, reprinted in ‘The Prospects of the Catholic Church in Scotland’, Dublin Review, 171 (1922), pp. 183–98, gave rise to tremendous controversy in Glasgow.

14 Lawrence, E. P., Henry George in the British Isles (Lansing, Mich., 1957)Google Scholar; A. P. Dudden, Joseph Fels and the Single Tax Movement (Philadelphia, 1971). Scots trace these ideas back to Patrick Dove and Rev. James Begg. J. M. Davidson, Precursors of Henry George (New York, 1967). See J. H. Muirhead, Land and Unemployment (London, 1935), p. viii.

15 For example, Land and Liberty, Oct. 1923, for general Catholic influence; Dec. 1923, May 1923 for McQuillan. The paper and its predecessor, Land Values carried considerable material from The Irish Weekly.

16 (London, 1925); Wright claimed to have supported the idea for forty years in a letter in L.F.T.P., April 1930. On MacLaren, Land Values, Dec. 1922.

17 For example, Gill, E., ‘Indian Sculpture’, Blackfriars, 3 (1922–3), pp. 207.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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19 Sacred Heart Lecture Programmes 1918–19 in Edinburgh, SCA. On the background see J. P. Corrin, Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc: The Battle Against Modernity (Athens, Ohio, 1981) and M. Canovan, G. K. Chesterton: Radical Populist (New York, 1977), p. 20. On Hughes, S.C.D. (1922), pp. 277–80 and J. McQuillan, New Witness, 21 March 1921.

20 G.O., Belloc—12 April, 20 Sept., 11 Oct.; G.K.C—25 Oct. 1919. Flood’s Irish Republican sympathies blend with James Connolly’s view of monastic co-operation in Labour in Ireland (Dublin, 1917), p. 318.

21 See G.O., 20 Sept. 1919; 5 Jan. (Baker); 7 Feb. (Jarrett); 12 April (Belloc); 11 Dec. 1920 (Baker); 12, 26 Nov. 1921 (McNabb); 11 Feb. 1922 (Reeves), and many more. Edinburgh 1931 was the first post-Reformation Dominican house in Scotland. Flood holidayed with McNabb, G.O., 31 July, 7 Aug. 1920.

23 Gill, E., Sacred and Secular (London, 1940), p. 39.Google Scholar

24 His books, TheRat Pit (London, 1915) and Children of the Dead End (London, 1914).

25 His background can be seen in P. Bew, The Land League Ideal: Achievements and Contradictions’, pp. 77–92 in P. J. Drudy, ed., Ireland: Land Politics and People (Cambridge, 1982).

26 G.O., 6 Nov. 1920.

27 See McEntee, G. P., The Social Catholic Movement in Great Britain (New York, 1927)Google Scholar. G.O., 3 Sept. 1921. O’Hea came on tours at least twice a year throughout the inter-war period.

28 For example, G.O., 3, 17 Sept. 1921. Numerous other citations could be given.

29 For example, G.O., 11 Dec. 1920. The size and frequency of meetings was amazing.

30 Belloc, Hilaire, Europe and the Faith (London, 1920)Google Scholar is the classic statement. Also A. J. Penty,,A Guildsman’s Interpretation of History (London, 1920).

31 G.O., 2 Aug. 1924.

32 See James Handley, The Irish in Scotland (Glasgow, n.d.), pp. 335–62.

33 New Witness, 18 Feb. 1921. Between 1920 and 1922 the paper published numerous similar articles and letters from McQuillan.

34 L.F.T.P., Jan. 1931; G.K.’s Weekly, 20 Mar. 1926.

35 See Sewell, B., Two Friends John Gray and André Raffalovich (Aylesford, 1963)Google Scholar. See their numerous contributions to Blackfriars from 1926 to 1933. André wrote under the name Alex Michaelson. Edinburgh National Library of Scotland, Gray MSS contains many Gill—Raffalovich letters 1914–20.

36 MacDonagh, M., The Life of William O’Brien (London, 1928), pp. 28, 11314, 14856, 179 Google Scholar. G. K. Chesterton, What’s Wrong With The World (London, 1910), pp. 292–3 stressed the 1903 act.

37 Blatchford, R., Merrie England (London, 1895), p. 19.Google Scholar

38 G.O., 8, 29 Mar., 5 April 1919. Another is G.O., 5 Nov. 1921.

39 G.O., 4 Aug. 1923.

40 G.O., 9 Aug. 1924.

41 Bishop Martin of Argyll and Rev. A. Campbell, S.J. followed parties. G.O., 6 Sept. 1924. McQuillan’s supporter Bishop G. Graham opposed emigration and preferred land settle ments. G.O., 31 July 1926. An English Catholic Emigration Society was set up in 1927. Tablet, 16 Feb. 1929 and 19 Aug. 1930.

42 For example, L.F.T.P., Jan., April 1931; A. Diamant, Austrian Catholics and the First Republic: Democracy, Capitalism and the Social Order, 1918–34 (Princeton, 1960), esp. pp. 60–1, and R L. Camp, The Papal Ideology of Social Reform: A Study in Historical Development, 1878–1967 (Leiden, 1969), pp. 1–103.

43 For example, C. Dawson, ‘Catholicism and Economies’, Blackfriars, 5 (1924), pp. 89–101, and D. Gwynn in Blackfriars, 4 (1923–4), pp. 1035–44.

44 See Catholic Who’s Who (London, 1932–4, 1952). W. R Titterton wrote a very perceptive Chesteron (London, 1936); the reactionary Rev. H. E. G. Rope, Forgotten England (London, 1931);S. B.James, a fascinating autobiography, Adventures of A Spiritual Tramp (London, 1928).

45 Return To Chesterton (London, 1952), pp. 226–7. She tends to overlook her several visits to Glasgow: Unfinished Business (London, 1964), as does F. Sheed, The Church and I (New York, 1974). See G.O., 21 May 1938.

46 G.O., 17 June, 29 July, 19 Aug. 1933.

47 Letter in G.O., 29 July 1933.

48 G.K.’s Weekly, 14 Mar. 1935.

49 G.K.’s Weely, 2 July 1928.

50 G.O., 14, 28 Nov. 1931. J. D. Coates, Chesterton and the Edwardian Cultural Crisis (Hull, 1984), pp. 49. 134, 219.

51 See Gill, E., Sacred and Secular (London, 1940), pp. 55, 14950, 179.Google Scholar

52 Penty, A. J., Post Industrialism (London, 1922)Google Scholar, esp. p. 19. Patrick Ford’s similar land ideas circulated widely in Britain, J. P. Rodecheko, Patrick Ford and His Search For America (New York, 1976), pp. 35–42.

53 See Gill, E., Money and Morals (London, 1934), pp. 256 Google Scholar; on Glasgow, pp. 41–4; H. E. Humphries, Liberty and Property: An Introduction to Distributism (London, n.d.), pp. 8–9, 38 and H. Robbins, The Sun of Justice: An Essay on the Social Teaching of the Catholic Church (London, 1938), p. 146.

54 Land and Liberty, May 1925.

55 Bowie, J. A., The Future of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1939), pp. 1023 Google Scholar for tables.

56 G.K.’s Weekly, 15 Feb. 1930. Also V. McNabb and H. Shove, The Catholic Land Movement (London, n.d.), p. 9.

57 Hoyland, J. S., Digging for a New England (London, 1936), p. 171.Google Scholar

58 He gave a full account in G.O., 14 Nov. 1931; 7, 14, 21 Jan. 1933.

59 L.F.T.P., July 1930. The same view appears in J. W. Scott, Unemployment: A Suggested Policy (London, 1925), p. 21.

60 G.K.’s Weekly, 23 Mar. 1933. He and McNabb were already familiar to them, 11 June, 18 June 1927, 28 Sept. 1929. Their reading included F. N. Blundell of the old Catholic Conservative gentry, A New Policy For Agriculture (London, 1931).

61 G.O., 29 Jan., 24 Dec. 1927.

62 L.F.T.P. July 1932; Glasgow Herald, 26 Feb., 27 April 1929; 30, 31 May 1930; 19, 28 Mar. 1932; Church of Scotland General Assembly Reports: Social Work (1931), p. 528; (1932), p. 481; (1933), p. 449.

63 S.C.D. (1932), p. 303.

64 G.O., 24 Oct. 1931; 30 Jan., 30 April 1932.

65 L.F.T.P., Jan. and April 1932. Rev. Daniel had sixteen men at work. That seems to have more in common with J. W. Scott, Self-Subsistence for lhe Unemployed (London, 1935). Canon Galbraith (1879–1960) served with H.L.I. in the First World War, later distinguished for great public service. S.C.D. (1961).

66 Wallop, G. V., Famine in England (London, 1938).Google Scholar

67 L.F.T.P., Jan. 1931.

68 L.F.T.P.,July 1932.

69 L.F.T.P., April-July 1932.

70 G.O., 21 Jan. 1933; H. Robbins in G.K.’s Weekly, 3 Aug. 1933; Glasgow Evening News, 21–3 Nov. 1931; V. McNabb at Glasgow C.Y.M.S., G.O., 18 Mar. 1933.

71 G.K.’s Weekly, 1 Mar. 1930.

72 G.K.’s Weekly, 2 Mar., 16 Nov. 1933.

73 G.K.’s Weekly, 20 Oct. 1929. Jesse Collings’ influence persisted, L.F.T.P., July 1932. Birmingham had also supported Henry George. See J. Collings, Land Reform (London, 1906).

74 G.K.’s Weekly, 15 Nov. 1930; Table, 5 Sept. 1931. See his ‘Fresh Fields’, English Review, 57 (1933). PP. 508–18. H. Robbins also came, L.F.T.P., Oct. 1932.

75 Baker, V., New England: A Way to Economic Freedom by Means of Catholic Land Settlements (London, 1935)Google Scholar; Hoyland, Digging For A New England.

76 L.F.T.P. ran 1930–2. Contributors included Eric Gill, V. McNabb, H. Robbins, H. E. G. Rope, K. L. Kenrick, and many others. R Jebb, ‘The New Settlers’, Blackfriars, 11 (1930), pp. 587–97, gave full support.

77 G.O., 2 May, 14 Nov. 1931.

78 See Curd, T. W. C., ‘Marydown: A Catholic Land Colony’, Month, 162 (1933), pp. 2239 Google Scholar; Mgr. Dey, ‘The Catholic Land Movement’, Month, 161 (1933), pp. 303–9; Tablet, 21 Nov. 1931; 28 Jan., 27 May, 8 July, 23 Sept. 1933; 3 Sept. 1934; 5 Jan, 16 Mar., 22 June 1935. In 25 April 1936 it denounced mismanagement.

79 Letter from Rev. H. Bishop, President of the American body, Land for The People, April 1932, and R. P. Witte, Twenty Five Years Crusading: a History of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference (Des Moines, 1948), pp. 80, 229–30. E. S. Schapiro, ‘Catholic Agrarian Thought and the New Deal’, CathHR 65 (1979), pp. 583–99. For similar earlier American Catholic notions, see T. W. Collens, Eden of Labour (New York, 1876) and R. C. Reinders, ‘T. Wharton Collens: Catholic and Christian Socialist’, CathHR 52 (1966), pp. 212–33.

80 G.O., 1 May 1937. He often visited U.S.A G.O., 5 Oct. 1930, 28 Aug. 1930.

81 Wicutt, W. P., ‘The Southern Agrarians’, G.K.’s Weekly,Google Scholar 28 June 1934 and The American Review, 1 and 2 (1933–4) to which both Distributists and Agrarians contributed numerous essays.

82 Piehle, M., Breaking Bread: The Catholic Worker and the Origins of Catholic Radicalism in America (Philadelphia, 1982), pp. 71, 116.Google Scholar

83 Murtagh, J. G., A People on the March: A Tale of Acadie (Dublin, 1946).Google Scholar

84 G.K.’s Weekly, 31 Oct. 1931, 10 Jan. 1932. G.O., 6 Feb. 1937.

85 G.K.’s Weekly, 31 Oct. 1935.

86 G.O., 18 Mar., 17 June 1933.

87 For example, G.K.’s Weekly, 19 July 1930, 16 May 1931.

88 Rev. John Crerand (1903–36), b. Donegal; at Cambuslang, 1927–36, S.C.D. 1938, pp. 390–1. G.O., 5 April 1940. The chapel was transferred to Biggar.

89 See J. S. Phillimore, New Witness, 24 Sept. 1920.

90 Rev. V. McNabb in G.K.’s Weekly, 28 Aug. 1926.

91 Abundance 1937–8. The Mitchell Library, Glasgow holds two copies.

92 For example, G.O., 3, 24 April 1937.

93 R. F. Russell, ‘The Revival of Scodand’, GJC’s Weekly, 9 April 1932. Scottish Catholics seem to have avoided English excesses. A Hastings, ‘Some Reflections on the English Catholicism of the late 1930’s’, pp. 107–25, in his ed., Bishops and Writers: Aspects of the Emergence of Modem Catholicism (wheathampstead, 1977); A Scharf, The British Press and Jews under Nazi Rule (New York, 1064), pp. 18–19; C. Holmes, Anti-Semitism in British Society, 1876–1939 (London, 1979), pp. 59, 201, 210; British Fascism, ed. K. Lunn and R. C. Thurlow (London, 1980), pp. 34–6, 103–6. G. C. Lebzelter, Political Anti-Semitism in England, 1918–1939 (London, 1978) for Presbyterian hostility.

94 For example, G.O., 4 Nov. 1939; 16 June 1939. He shared his impatience with the official Church with his host, Eric Gill, Christianity and the Machine Age (London, 1940) and Work and Property (London, 1932), p. 103. See H. Robbins, ‘The Secret Battle’, Tablet, 24 June 1939; G. C. Heseltine, ‘Feeding Ourselves’, English Review, 56 (1933), pp. 413–24. They were gready influenced by Viscount Lymington, Famine in England (London, 1938).

95 L.F.T.P., Oct. 1931, July 1932.

96 A.Spark (1883–1964) Min. of Blythswood-St. Matthews, Fasti Ecc. Scot. He had warmly preached in support of McQuillan, L.F.T.P., July 1930.

97 G.K.’s Weekly, 5 Nov. 1936.

98 Rev. J. O’Connor, G.K.’s Weekly, 17 Dec. 1936; W. R Titterton, 11 Feb.; V. McNabb, 11 Mar. 1937.

99 Their gende weekly articles in G.O. echoed H. Belloc, An Essay On The Restoration of Property (London, 1936).

100 Heseltine, G. C., The Change: Essays on the Land (London, 1927), P. 97.Google Scholar

101 G.O., 27 Jan. 1934, obituaryof Denis Brogan, sen.

102 Chesterton, G. K., ‘A Defence of Penny Dreadfuls’, The Speaker, 16 Mar. 1901, p. 649 Google Scholar. Rev. Francis Tierney, former chaplain to two colonies, to writer, 1986, conveys the enthusiasm of the time.

103 Fr. Archangel of Scotland (London, 1896), pp. 3–4, 41. He also wrote about a model Catholic settlement, A Vanished Arcadia: Being Some Account of the Jesuits in Paraguay, 1607 to 1767 (London, 1924). The Glasgow Catholic cinema magnate Green had fourteen theatres. His family married into the Kemp Catholic cinema family: G.O., 10 June 1922, 27 June 1936, 22 Jan. 1938.

104 G.O., 23 April 1938.