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Jarrow March
The people of the North East of England,
mainly miners and shipworkers, were suffering even more than
the rest of the country with unemployment. On 5th of October
1936, 200 men, known as the Jarrow Marchers, set off from
Jarrow to London to lobby Parliament.
The march was a desperate attempt
to find jobs to support Jarrow men and their families. It
was also a bid for respect and recognition, not only for the
people of Jarrow, but for others in a similar situation all
over the country.
The marchers had no resources other
than their own determination, and some good boots supplied
by the public. During the march, wherever the marchers stopped
for the night, the local people found them shelter and provided
them with food.
The route they took, with overnight
stops, was as follows:
Jarrow to Chester le Street
(12 miles)
Chester le Street to Ferry Hill (12 miles)
Ferry Hill to Darlington (12 miles)
Darlington to Northallerton (16 miles)
Northallerton to Ripon (17 miles)
Ripon to Harrogate (11½ miles)
Harrogate to Leeds (15½ miles)
Leeds to Wakefield (9 miles)
Wakefield to Barnsley (9¾ miles)
Barnsley to Sheffield (13½ miles)
Sheffield to Chesterfield (11¾ miles)
Chesterfield to Mansfield (12 miles)
Mansfield to Nottingham (14½ miles)
Nottingham to Loughborough (15 miles)
Loughborough to Leicester (11¼ miles)
Leicester to Market Harborough (14½ miles)
Market Harborough to Northampton (14½ miles)
Northampton to Bedford (21 miles)
Bedford to Luton (19 miles)
Luton to St Albans (10¼ miles)
St Albans to Edmonton (11 miles)
Edmonton to London Marble Arch (8½ miles)
When the marchers arrived in London, almost one month later,
a petition of 12,000 signatures was handed into Parliament
by Ellen Wilkinson, the Labour MP for Jarrow. The Prime Minister
of the day, Stanley Baldwin, refused to see any of the marchers'
representatives.
The march achieved little at the time.
It was the outbreak of World War II three years later that
finally brought sufficient work to Jarrow to relieve the poverty.
The Jarrow March is one of the defining
moments in British history, alongside the Peasants' Revolt
of 1381 and the Tolpuddle Martyrs of 1834, in the emancipation
of ordinary citizens.
The last surviving member of the march,
Cornelius 'Con' Whalen died on the 17th September 2003 aged
93.
The article used for this page is available for download under
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of the GNU Free Documentation License. This content is
taken from Wikipedia and can be found at the following link
[Original
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