1888
Hello Gwyneth. Actually, both socialists AND anarchists were there in 1888. Indeed, that was about the year when the anarchists began to get the upper hand.
Have you had a go at Rocker's "The London Years"? Good read.
Cheers.
LC
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Books
Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostHi Gwyneth
another one for your book list then
"The world that never was" Alex Butterworth
Not the easiest of reads perhaps but quite interesting, especially regarding the communards
All the best
Dave
Duly noted. The list is getting longer :-).
Best wishes,
Gwyneth/C4
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Anarchy
Hi Gwyneth
another one for your book list then
"The world that never was" Alex Butterworth
Not the easiest of reads perhaps but quite interesting, especially regarding the communards
All the best
Dave
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Anarchists
Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostUnless the anarchists paved the yard for free, I would say it was 'professionally' paved. And the material used looks like granite 'setts', known colloquially as cobbles and bog standard for paving in LV London.
MrB
I believe the anarchists arrived ten years later, along with Rudolph Rocker, who rocked, in my opinion. At the time it was a socialist club, new members had to be proposed by a member of the club and accept the principles of socialism. Or so I have read.
Not that there was a very great difference between anarchism, trades unionists and socialists and all three were disliked by the authorities (to say the least). The picture of an anarchist as a little man with a long coat and a smoking bomb in his hand is a little misleading. Anarchists wanted to do away with governments, it is true, and I can sympathise to some extent, seeing the present crop of greedy incompetents, but where they fell down was the belief that all people, left to their own devices, would help their neighbour(s). Nice dream, but wouldn't ever work. Although between the three of them, conditions for working men (and women) did improve.
Best wishes,
C4
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Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostHi Velma
Philip's book indicates it's likely the yard was repaved during the 1892 improvements to the property...the now famous picture dates from June or July 1900
All the best
Dave
lm sorry but I do not have the Hitchinson book-- just a limited library.
With Dave's recent discussion of then and now, I'm reconsidering whether a woman would go all the way to the privy to dust herself off and make herself presentable
Wandering around that yard sounds daunting -- considering the deep darkness, the possibility of slipping, falling, maybe winding up even more dirty/muddy than she already was.
I can see her getting off the street to straighten herself out, brush herself off, and pop a freshner into her mouth.
But would she really have wandered further in the dark and mud with uncertain footing than she had to?
curious
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how likely is it that the court or yard was paved with stone?
Philip's book indicates it's likely the yard was repaved during the 1892 improvements to the property...the now famous picture dates from June or July 1900
All the best
Dave
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same
Hello Michael. Thanks.
"Poirot isn't real, but the Ripper was."
They are real--or not--in the same way. Both are merely stories; both contain elements of reality.
Cheers.
LC
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Originally posted by MrBarnett View PostUnless the anarchists paved the yard for free, I would say it was 'professionally' paved. And the material used looks like granite 'setts', known colloquially as cobbles and bog standard for paving in LV London.
MrB
It could happen.
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I'm not saying they did a terrible job, but it wasn't professionally paved.
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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Originally posted by lynn cates View Post
Seriously, a couple days ago I watched one of my favourite Poirot episodes.
When Hercule sums up, there is one chap, McNeil who insists that Ridgway is the culprit. More than once the great detective must remind poor McNeil that Ridgway had nothing to do with it.
On the other hand, a one-track mind has advantages--it rarely derails.
Mike
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It was not professionally paved. Do you have Philip Hutchinson's book?
Yours truly,
Tom Wescott
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