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Alice Wheeldon

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Alice Wheeldon
Born(1866-01-27)27 January 1866
Derby, England
Died21 February 1919(1919-02-21) (aged 53)
Derby, England
NationalityBritish
OccupationPeace activist

Alice Ann Wheeldon (27 January 1866 – 21 February 1919) was a British supporter of suffrage and anti-war campaigner. She was convicted in 1917, along with her daughter, Winnie, and son-in-law, Alfred Mason, of conspiracy to murder the Prime Minister, David Lloyd George. At least some of the evidence given in the case against them appears to have been fabricated on behalf of "a government eager to disgrace the antiwar movement".[1]

Early life

Alice Ann Marshall was born in Derby, England, the daughter of an engine driver who had worked as a house servant when young. In 1886 she married William Augustus Wheeldon, who was a widowed train driver and later a commercial traveller. They had three daughters, Nellie (born 1888), Harriette Ann (Hettie) (born 1891) and Winnie (born 1893), and a son, William Marshall (Willie, born 1892). Willie's application for exemption from military service as a conscientious objector was rejected in 1916.

Political activism

Wheeldon was a socialist. She was a friend of members of the Socialist Labour Party, although a source of membership is not known. On arrest, police reported finding copies of Socialist and The Tribunal in her house.[2]

She and her children, who shared her feminist political views, were active in the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) until Britain joined in the First World War, when she disagreed with the WSPU's strong support for the War and, later, conscription. With her family, including her daughters Hettie and Winnie and son Willie, Wheeldon expressed her opposition to the War, joining the No-Conscription Fellowship.[3]

The Wheeldon family supported young men opposing conscription in Derby where Alice supported the family by selling secondhand clothes in her shop at 29 Pear Tree Road, where she and her family lived.[1]

Arrest

In custody at Derby Police Station, January 1917: a police matron, Hettie Wheeldon, Winnie Mason, and Alice Wheeldon

It was known that the Wheeldon family was sheltering young men "on the run" from conscription. In December 1916 Alexander Gordon, a secret agent from the Ministry of Munitions (MI5),[citation needed] arrived at the Wheeldon home, claiming to be a conscientious objector on the run. Alice Wheeldon took him in for the night and confided in him. He invented the fiction that the work camps for conscientious objectors provided under the Home Office Scheme were guarded by dogs. Gordon called his immediate superior, Herbert Booth, introducing him to Alice as an army deserter. A package containing two vials of curare and two of strychnine was sent to her. The package was intercepted and it was claimed that these chemicals were intended to kill guard dogs at a work camp. This claim formed the basis of the case against the family when the family were arrested on 30 January 1917. Alice, Hettie, Winnie and Winnie's husband, Alfred Mason, were all charged with conspiracy to murder the Liberal Prime Minister David Lloyd George and Labour Party cabinet minister Arthur Henderson.

Trial

The Attorney-General, F. E. Smith, went to Derby himself. The trial was moved to the Old Bailey, London, where he prosecuted the case in person. The trial began on 6 March 1917; Smith refused to call Gordon as a witness or divulge his name or whereabouts, thus preventing his being cross-examined.

Alice was sentenced to ten years' penal servitude, Alfred Mason (aged 24) was sentenced to seven years and Winnie (aged 23) to five years, even though the jury recommended mercy on account of their youth.[1] Hettie was acquitted. Alice was sent to Aylesbury Prison, where she went on intermittent hunger strike; she was later moved to Holloway.

Three days after the conviction, the Amalgamated Society of Engineers published an open letter to the Home Secretary that included the following: "We demand that the Police Spies, on whose evidence the Wheeldon family is being tried, be put in the Witness Box, believing that in the event of this being done fresh evidence will be forthcoming which will put a different complexion on the case."[3]

Review of the Wheeldon case

In January 2012 the BBC reported on a campaign to clear Wheeldon's name, quoting Dr Nicholas Hiley of the University of Kent, who said the case against her was "shaky". Hiley said that during the First World War MI5 had become "very fixated on political opposition to the war" and that the Wheeldons' unusual combination of beliefs (Marxists, atheists, vegetarians, supporters of the suffragettes and conscientious objectors), had drawn MI5's attention. Hiley described Alex Gordon (in reality William Rickard) as an "unbalanced fantasist" who was "spectacularly unreliable": a convicted blackmailer, he had twice been declared criminally insane and was released from the high-security psychiatric Broadmoor Hospital only two years before being employed by MI5. Hiley went on to suggest that Rickard's department of MI5 was facing closure at the time of Mrs Wheeldon's arrest and the case against her and her family was fabricated to justify the department's being kept open.[4][5]

Death

Wheeldon was released from prison on licence on 31 December 1917 at the request of Lloyd George. Her health permanently weakened, she died of influenza during the pandemic a little over a year later in 1919. At her funeral, Willie placed a red flag over his mother's coffin and her friend John Smith Clarke, still evading police as a conscientious objector on the run, was the only speaker. Her daughters, Winnie and Hettie, were too ill to attend the funeral. Wheeldon's grave was not marked as there was concern it would be defaced.[1]

Hettie died in 1920; in that year she had married Arthur MacManus, first chairman of the Communist Party of Great Britain.

Willie Wheeldon emigrated to Russia in 1921, and eventually took Soviet Union citizenship. During the Stalinist purges, he was arrested on 5 October 1937 and shot on Christmas Day of that year.[6]

Memorial

Blue Plaque on the building where Alice Wheeldon lived
Blue Plaque on the building where Alice Wheeldon lived

In 2013 Derby City Council and Derby Civic Society erected a Blue Plaque as a memorial at 29 Pear Tree Road, Derby.[7]

Bibliography

  • "Wheeldon, Alice Ann", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • Jackson, John (2007) "Losing the plot", History Today, May 2007
  • Rippon, Nicola, (2009) The Plot to Kill Lloyd George: The Story of Alice Wheeldon and the Peartree Conspiracy, ISBN 978-1-84563-079-9
  • Rowbotham, Sheila, Friends of Alice Wheeldon, Pluto Press, 1986
  • Wood, Val and Whitehead, Bill (2013) "Alice Wheeldon" Derby, UCU

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d Hochschild, Adam (2011). To End All Wars – a story of loyalty and rebellion, 1914–1918. Boston New York: Mariner Books Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 252, 254, 261–2, 352. ISBN 978-0-547-75031-6.
  2. ^ TNA DPP 1/50 List of Exhibits
  3. ^ a b "Alice Wheeldon biography". Spartacus Educational. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
  4. ^ "Fight to clear Derby suffragette Alice Wheeldon's name". BBC News Online. 19 January 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2012. video report
  5. ^ "Evidence 'clears' David Lloyd George murder plotters". BBC News Online. 3 September 2012. Retrieved 3 September 2012. video report
  6. ^ Hochschild (2011), p. 231, based on Comintern personnel files, Moscow, 495/198/537
  7. ^ "List Of Derbeians To Be Honoured". Derby Evening Telegraph. 12 February 2013. Retrieved 12 February 2013.