| Author: Michael Bailey This is the abstract of an article published in Labour History Review (2025), 90, (2). Read this article. |
Although there are relatively large bodies of interrelated literature concerning trade unions, industrial politics, workers’ education and leisure in post-war Britain, little has been written about the importance of Wortley Hall (also known as ‘The Workers’ Stately Home’ or ‘Labour’s Home’) as a popular educational and holiday centre for the British labour movement and organized working-class. Drawing on previously unpublished archival and oral-history materials, this article is principally concerned with documenting Wortley’s founding ethos as a proletarian venue and the pioneering efforts by local rank-and-file leaders to raise sufficient finances to secure the hall’s future as a little ‘oasis of socialism’. It also considers Wortley’s wider significance apropos of post-war debates concerning adult education and how the hall related to similar institutions; the considerable increase in country house sales and enthusiasm for finding alternative uses for them in the immediate post-war years; like examples of non-profit holiday centres aimed at working-class people; how Wortley was born out of and contributed to the political culture of the labour movement in South Yorkshire; and, finally, to what extent support for the hall was the product of wider currents and tensions within the labour movement, including both the role of the Communist Party and the prevalence of post-war concerns over communist influence. The article is structured to deal with these issues via an empirical, chronological narrative approach to Wortley’s early years. As such, it represents a modest contribution to the current resurgence of interest in post-war labour institutions and the British left.
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