The spread of socialist ideas in Wales from the 1880s to the run up to World War One is revealed in a new book by a Cardiff University academic.

Wales and Socialism: Political Culture and National Identity before the Great War is a major new study by Dr Martin Wright of the School of History, Archaeology and Religion which uncovers a lively socialist political culture with roots both deeper and earlier than previously recognised.

The lost pioneers of Welsh socialism

Through detailed research, Dr Wright recovers from obscurity some of the lost pioneers of Welsh socialism and examines their ideas and identities. Emerging pioneers from across the nation include:

Congregational Minister, D.D. Walters

Originally from Sketty, Walters promoted socialism among the Coracle fishermen of the River Teifi in rural West Wales, when serving as a Nonconformist minister at Newcastle Emlyn. He travelled Wales delivering his great speech O Gaethiwed i Ryddid (From Slavery to Freedom), which analysed world history since the Garden of Eden from a socialist perspective.

Nationalist turned socialist, Robert Jones Derfel

Welsh nationalist-turned socialist, Derfel moved from his native Meirionnydd to Manchester, where he wrote numerous pamphlets and newspaper articles in his native Welsh to convert his fellow countrymen to socialism. He was among the first of the Welsh socialists to consider the relationship between his Welsh national identity and the aspirations of internationalist socialism.

School teacher, David Thomas

Author of the most important Welsh book on socialism Y Werin a’i Theyrnas (The Common People and their Kingdom), Thomas of Talysarn, Caernarfonshire worked to promote the independent Labour Party in north Wales. One of the most diligent and devoted of all socialist activists, he initiated an effort to ‘clothe socialism in Welsh dress’ in the early twentieth century.

Medical doctor, Dr David Rhys Jones

Originally from rural Cardiganshire, David Rhys Jones emigrated to Australia, and then returned to his native land to practice as a doctor in Cardiff. He was instrumental in the establishment of Fabian Societies in Cardiff and Llandysul in the 1890s, and he promoted socialism by speaking on socialist platforms in Cardiff and the south Wales valleys as well as writing for the Welsh press.