This site is about people who have been involved in the continuing struggle for social justice in Leicester. It gives a short biography of those individuals (now deceased) who tried to improve the life of their fellow citizens. The sites provides a reminder of their contribution and says something of the issues they faced and the obstacles they had to overcome. It also includes people from Leicester's hinterland.

There is no scientific test for inclusion in this Who's Who other than my judgement. I therefore take full responsibility for any omissions, accidental or otherwise. I have not listed any living people and the length of an individual’s entry does not necessarily reflect their historical importance. In most cases, it just reflects the amount of information that has survived. Some people have been left out simply because too little was recorded about them. I have only sought to chronicle that part of a person's life which was lived in or is relevant to the history of Leicester. The site gets updated when more information comes to light. Since the I began this site, death has inevitably led to additional entries, so these pages continue to be a work in progress.

If you have more information, or would like to correct a mistake, please get in touch. Any suggestions about people who could be included will be welcome. Not all my sources have been fully listed and I will try and update this in due course. If you have a photo or picture of someone, I would be pleased to have a copy. If you use material from this site, an acknowledgement would be appreciated.

Leicester's Radical History

Leicester has a radical tradition that can be traced back to the end of the 18th century through Chartists, Abolitionists, Reformers, Owenites and Radicals. After 1850, this tradition was subsumed in the radical wing of Liberal Party. During the 1880-90s, new working class organisations emerged and the character of the 20th century Labour Movement took shape. By 1900, Leicester already had a pre-eminent place in British Labour history. The City’s radical inheritance meant that the local socialist, co-operative and Labour movements were more advanced than in many other towns. In the early 1900s, Leicester not only had a national trade union based in the City, but was also the national centre of co-operatively owned factories. Its retail co-operative society had grown from humble beginnings into a large enterprise that provided a market for the goods from the local co-op factories. There was a well established branch of the Independent Labour Party whose MP became leader of the Labour Party and eventually its first prime minister.

Those who fought against the Poor Law, the Means Test in the 1930s and who campaigned for woman’s suffrage or against racism in the 1970s or war in the 1980s may have belonged to different times, but they share common aims and motivation. The fights and campaigns that they waged, gained us universal suffrage, a welfare state and greater equality. In remembering these campaigners we can begin to understand something of our city’s history and commemorate the efforts of those who made history from the grass roots.

How to navigate

Use the above index or click on the letters on the top right and scroll down until you find the person you want. Alternatively, use the search function.