Joseph Clayton
Appearance
Joseph Clayton (1868-1943) was an English freelance journalist and biographer. A writer of numerous books, he covered areas of trade union and socialist history, but also religious figures and history.[1]
Life
He was a Christian Socialist as an undergraduate at the University of Oxford. He became an organiser of the Independent Labour Party, and supported socialist causes.[2] In 1896 he was an ILP member in Leeds.[3]
He edited The New Age in 1907, successor to Arthur Compton-Rickett,[4] before it was sold to a group backing A. R. Orage and Holbrook Jackson;[5] Clayton knew Orage from the ILP.[6] He was a convert to Catholicism in 1910. He was a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society.[7]
Works
- Father Dolling (1902) on Robert William Radclyffe Dolling
- Grace Marlow (1903) novel
- John Blankset's Business (1904) novel
- Bishop Westcott (1906)
- The Bishops as Legislators (1906)
- The Truth about the Lords: our new nobility, 1857-1907 (1907)
- Robert Owen, Pioneer of Social Reforms (1908)
- Wat Tyler and the Peasant Revolt (1909)
- The True Story of Jack Cade (1910)
- Leaders of the People: studies in democratic history (1910)
- The Rise of the Democracy (1911)
- Robert Kett and the Norfolk Rising (1912)
- Co-operation and the Trade Unions (1912)
- Father Stanton of St Albans, Holborn (1913)
- Trade Unions (1913)
- Economics For Christians (1924)
- The Historic Basis of Anglicanism: A short survey of the foundations of the Anglican Communion (1925)
- The Rise and Decline of Socialism in Great Britain 1884-1924 (1926)
- Continuity in the Church Of England (1928)
- St Hugh of Lincoln (1931)
- Sir Thomas More. A Short Study (1933)
- The Protestant Reformation in Great Britain (1934)
Notes
- ^ Fergus Kerr OP, The First Issue, New Blackfriars, Volume 84, Issue 992, pages 434–447, October 2003. Online abstract
- ^ http://newspapers.nl.sg/Digitised/Page/malayansatpost19271231.1.39.aspx
- ^ http://libcom.org/files/Liberty%20UK%20%28Apr%201896%29.pdf, p. 8 of PDF.
- ^ http://dl.lib.brown.edu/mjp/pdf/martin02.pdf, at p. 23.
- ^ John Carswell, Lives and Letters, London, 1978, ISBN 0-571-10596-3, p 32.
- ^ http://www.modjourn.org/render.php?id=mjp.2005.00.001&view=mjp_object
- ^ Joseph Clayton, Irish Catholics and the British Labour Movement, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review, Vol. 14, No. 54 (Jun., 1925), pp. 284-294.