Wednesday, 2 March 2016

One Hundred Years Ago Today

Here:

The Military Service Act came into force on 2 March 1916, and Quakers nationally are marking the centenary.

Our new online exhibition, Matter of conscience: Quakers and conscriptiongives an overview of the introduction and impact of the Act.

The story involves the hard work of three Quaker MPs who fought for the Act to include an exemption for men who had a religious or moral objection to violence and military service;.

Furthermore, they fought for the exemption to be based solely on an individual basis, not aimed at groups, such as former exemptions from military service which had been granted to certain groups in society including the Quakers themselves.

All three men would suffer for taking this stance, facing charges of encouraging shirkers, and being painted in an unpatriotic light at the time of greatest distress for the nation.

It would also cost all three their seats at the next election in 1918.

The Quaker MPs were Arnold Stephenson Rowntree (1872-1951), T. Edmund Harvey (1875-1955), and Sir John Emmott Barlow (1857-1932).

The Library holds a small collection of parliamentary election addresses for John E. Barlow and more extensive collections of personal papers for Rowntree and Harvey, as well as various publications by and about them.

Rowntree and Harvey were very active Friends and therefore also feature heavily among the central archives of the Society, from the Friends War Victims Relief Committee, which Harvey was involved with creating, to the Friends First Day Schools Association, which engaged much of Rowntree’s time after the war.

Arnold Stephenson Rowntree was a member of the close knit network of Quaker Rowntree and Cadbury families.

He was educated at Bootham School in a fiercely anti-conservative environment, and became a Liberal MP for York in 1910.

While at Bootham he became close friends with T. Edmund Harvey who would later become his brother-in-law.

After Bootham he started working for his uncle, Joseph Rowntree at the confectionery company of the family name, where he would end his working life on the Board of Directors, retiring in 1941.

His attitude to the war was quite complex.

Although a pacifist, he was a committed Liberal and believed everything possible had been done to avoid the war.

He also understood the urge to self-sacrifice which drove young men to sign up, which helped shape his belief in non-combatant alternative service.

This led to his central role in the establishment of the Friends Ambulance Unit in 1914.

T. Edmund Harvey was also educated at Bootham, then at Yorkshire College (now University of Leeds) and Oxford.

He spent time studying in Germany and France, developing an understanding of these countries that would stand him in good stead in the years to come.

After a time working at the British Museum, he became warden of Toynbee Hall in the East End of London, the first university settlement – a centre of social service and reform.

He entered the House of Commons in 1910 as a Liberal MP for West Leeds.

He was an impressive orator and his speech during the debate on the Military Service Bill was a key moment for pacifists.

Arnold Rowntree described it as a great moment and claimed he did not bother to speak after, as planned, as he could not better it.

Harvey also argued for kind treatment of Germans resident in Britain during both World Wars.

He helped set up Friends War Victims Relief Committee in 1914 and contributed to the relief effort throughout the war and after into the 1920s.

While both Rowntree and Harvey worked hard to gain a civilian option for alternative service for conscientious objectors (C.O.s) who refused to come under military command, even in non-combatant roles, many absolutists saw this as a compromise and therefore a betrayal.

Their attitude is reflected in a letter from Rowntree to his wife, 6 Jan 1916:

“I have Richard Roberts here tonight and he says all the Fellowship of Reconciliation men are dead against alternative service and I think are out to break the machine.”

John Emmot Barlow, Liberal MP for Frome, Somerset, came from an old Quaker family near Stockport.

Educated at Grove School, Tottenham, he became a business man in his father’s Manchester firm dealing in import and export of various goods.

He married Anna Maria Heywood Denman, who campaigned for women’s suffrage and international understanding, and herself stood for Parliament in 1922.

Barlow’s family reflected the divisions of the time: although he was strongly opposed to conscription, one of his sons served in the army and was severely wounded in World War I.

Another son joined the FEWVRC in foreign relief work. Barlow didn’t play on his son’s military actions in the next election though, when faced with accusations of letting his country down, and lost his seat in 1918.

All three men would suffer at the 1918 election for their association with the anti-conscription pacifist movement.

While Harvey stood down in 1918, Barlow and Rowntree both lost the election to Conservative candidates.

John Barlow continued to be involved in local government into later life, and Rowntree and Harvey would go on to be engaged in various areas of work tackling social issues and taking on roles in Quaker committees.

We hold two main collections of personal papers from Arnold S. Rowntree which give slightly different angles on his work during the war.

TEMP MSS 558 is a collection of personal papers including letters.

The wartime letters show the stress he was under, how busy a time it was, and give personal insight into the people he was working alongside and their reactions to unfolding events.

TEMP MSS 977 consists mainly of working papers and official correspondence from Rowntree’s time as an MP, providing an insight into how a backbencher lobbies and influences to gain ground on an unpopular position.

Among other material on T. Edmund Harvey, we have his papers as chairman of the Committee for Work of National Importance (the Pelham Committee, of which he became chair following Lord Pelham’s death) TEMP MSS 835.

As well as official documents such as minutes and papers, this collection contains a large amount of correspondence from and on behalf of COs, and is an important resource for World War I researchers.

Again this adds a very personal dimension, as well as the official view of the effect conscription had on men in World War I.

For more information, please check out our online exhibition, Matter of conscience: Quakers and conscription.

Read more about continuing Quaker work for Peace.

Look out for more displays and blog posts on World War I throughout the year, here and on our Facebook page.

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