Fownhope’s Heart of Oak Society traces its roots to the age of friendly societies, when communities provided their own safety net. Its anniversary celebrations reveal a tradition still very much alive, says MARK SEDDON
TRADE UNION banners will be proudly raised and marched through Wakefield in West Yorkshire on Saturday May 13 for the annual With Banners Held High festival.
The festival is a celebration of trade unionism and working people, inspired by the miners’ strike against pit closures of 1984-85, which has its 40th anniversary next year.
The first festival took place on the 30th anniversary of the strike and the event has become one of the north’s key celebrations of the labour movement.
Through marches, music, schools and political debate, campaigners in Tower Hamlets are using the 90th anniversary of Cable Street to inspire resistance to modern racism. GLYN ROBBINS explains
The Home Secretary’s recent letter suggests the Labour government may finally deliver on its nine-year manifesto commitment, writes KATE FLANNERY, but we must move quickly: as recently as 2024 Northumbria police destroyed miners’ strike documents
The Big Meeting isn’t simply nostalgia, it’s a happy day and a day to show resistance. HEATHER WOOD explains why
MOLLIE BROWN reports on this year’s festival in honour of the ‘seven men of Jarrow’ deported to Australia for union activity 193 years ago


