William Mellor (journalist)

William Mellor (1888–1942) was a left-wing British journalist.

A Guild Socialist during the 1910s, Mellor worked closely with G. D. H. Cole, founding the National Guilds League with him in 1915.[1] He joined the Daily Herald in 1913 as a journalist, and was imprisoned during the First World War as a conscientious objector, returning to the Herald on his release.[2]

He was a founder-member of the Communist Party of Great Britain in 1920, but resigned in 1924. He became editor of the Herald in 1926, succeeding George Lansbury when the Trades Union Congress took over the paper, and was fired in 1930 soon after Odhams Press took half-ownership with the TUC. He was the first editor of Tribune 1937–38, but was sacked after falling out with Stafford Cripps over the latter's proposal for a Popular Front of socialist and non-socialist parties against fascism. For the last ten years of his life, though married with a family, he conducted an affair with the young Barbara Castle.[3]

Works

  • (with G. D. H. Cole) The Meaning of Industrial Freedom, 1918
  • Direct Action, 1920.
  • The co-operative movement and the fight for socialism, 1933

References

  1. Geoffrey Foote, The Labour Party's political thought: a history, Routledge, 1986, p. 107
  2. Martin Ceadel, Pacifism in Britain, 1914–1945 : the defining of a faith. Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1980. ISBN 0198218826 (p.47).
  3. Andrew Rosthorn (24 July 2014). "How Cyril Smith Outwitted Barbara Castle in the Strange Case of the Paedophiles at the Home Office". Tribune. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
Media offices
Preceded by
Hamilton Fyfe
Editor of the Daily Herald
1926–1930
Succeeded by
W. H. Stevenson
Preceded by
New position
Editor of Tribune
1937–1938
Succeeded by
H. J. Hartshorn
Party political offices
Preceded by
Stafford Cripps
Chairman of the Socialist League
1936–1937
Succeeded by
Organisation dissolved



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