How trespassing 'crystallised' Ewan MacColl's songwriting
- Published
On 24 April 1932, hundreds of ramblers walked on to private land in the Peak District to claim a "right to roam".
The mass trespass saw working class walkers from Manchester and Yorkshire scale Kinder Scout in Derbyshire and battle with game keepers and police.
Among them was a young unemployed communist from Salford called Jimmy Miller who, driven by his experiences that day, would go on to become a world-famous political singer.
He would later change his name to Ewan MacColl, the writer of classics like Dirty Old Town and The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face, which won him a Grammy in 1972.
At the beginning of the 1930s though, he was an "angry young man" who was out of work, a member of the Young Communist League and ready to ramble his way to a revolution, according to his biographer Ben Harker.
He said MacColl was "an enthusiastic rambler and a communist" who found himself taking a central role in the run-up to the trespass.
"The communist movement was in control of the British Worker's Sports Federation in the early 1930s and brought a more militant edge to it - it was that the drove the campaign for the Mass Trespass forward," he said.
"MacColl did a lot of pre-publicity for it. He talked about [in later life] duplicating leaflets and giving them out.
"He was himself going rambling every weekend - and during the week as well, as he was unemployed - and he'd try to get people to go along."
Dr Harker said MacColl "felt very powerfully that access to the countryside was a birthright which had been denied to working class people by industrialisation and capitalism".
"He felt that this was robbery and that [in taking part in the trespass] they were simply retrieving a right that was historically theirs," he said.
'Revolutionary fervour'
The University of Salford lecturer said rambling was seen as a militant activity by MacColl.
"He really thought he was going to see a revolution in his lifetime and certainly, MacColl saw the Peak District as an extensive gymnasium in which he was getting into peak physical condition ready for the class struggle," he said.
"It seems extraordinarily romantic now, but he really did see it that way. He was a young guy full of revolutionary fervour."
On the day of the illegal ramble, MacColl was one among the crowd, with the formidable Benny Rothman leading the charge up the hill and being arrested, along with four others, for incitement and riotous assembly.
Dr Harker said the day - coupled with MacColl's experience at the Battle of Bexley Square, which saw police clash with jobless workers in Salford six months earlier - had a profound effect upon him.
"They were two formative moments for a young militant," he said.
"To experience the violence at Bexley Square and the unbelievably harsh sentences following the trespass, these were unbelievably profound lessons for him which added steel to his political convictions.
"They didn't convert him to anything but they ingrained in a decisive way what was already there."
They also brought him to the attention of MI5, who monitored his theatre and musical work, BBC performances and general political activity for the next two decades.
Most importantly for music fans though, Dr Harker said the trespass led to him writing his "first important song", The Manchester Rambler.
"There is another song he wrote called Mass Trespass 1932, which he never recorded," he said.
"It's a very raw-throated rallying cry - a very powerful yawp of outrage and anger.
"But Rambler is the song where it all comes together. He'd written these rather earnest agitprop pieces prior to that, but in Rambler, he manages to pull together a political perspective with a more lyrical style.
"It crystallises his songwriting and that's the first time it happens."
- Published8 March 2012