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Intro by Phil Meyler
“I
have the strongest and deepest objection to the all too common Irish habit of
breaking a man's heart by misunderstanding him while he is alive and canonising
him as soon as he is dead. I might almost say, because he is dead.” (Where
Casement Would Have Stood Today, 1936. Jack White) *************************** Misfit
traces Jack White’s life up to 1916. His life after that is somewhat sketchy.
He went off to White
wrote “The Significance of Sinn Féin” in 1918, a short pamphlet that
attempted to explain the political and parliamentary success of Sinn Féin in
the aftermath of the execution of the Rising leaders. However, increasingly
influenced (like many of his contemporaries) by the news of the successful
Russian Revolution, his politics moved sharply leftward. After
a series of arrests and prison terms for agitating (Dublin 1920, Edinburgh 1921)
he was proposed as a candidate 'in the interests of the Workers' Republic' for
Donegal in the1922 Free State elections. At this time Donegal was a hotbed of
worker militancy and political struggle and possibly could have won a seat but
White soon withdrew his candidature, declaring he was a 'Christian Communist'.
He declared that 'he was not prepared to go forward as the representative of any
class or party, but only on the principle of voluntary change to communal
ownership of the land and the gradual withering of the poisoned branches of
standing armies, prisons and the workhouse system.' It was not quite what the
Donegal electorate wanted to hear. Jack
White, throughout the 1920s, was active in a host of organisations including The
Irish Workers League and The Workers Party of Ireland, moving between Jack
White was active in the Revolutionary Workers Party in In
the mid-30s White gravitated to the Republican Congress and was associated with
the ex-Serviceman's section in At
the age of 57, in 1936, White travelled to
Spain
(as
part of a Red Cross ambulance crew) to help fight Fascism. Here he made contact
with the members of the Anarchist CNT-FAI and POUM, just as Orwell had done, as
described in Homage To Cataluna. White was forceful and always pushed himself
up to the front line and insisted on meeting everyone of any interest to him.
Impressed by the social revolution that was unfolding in In
December 1936, the Socialist Party of Cataluna which had shared power with the
anarchists (CNT) in the Popular Front Valencia Government had declared their
intention to do away with the duality of power which existed in Cataluna where
armed militias had taken control of the streets and certain strategic public
buildings and wanted to return control to the National Republican Guard (police)
and the Assault Guards. Armed militias erected barricades and a General Strike
was called which spread all over Barcelona
. The
anarchist Minister in the Popular Front Central Government, Garcia Oliver,
called for an end to the barricades and the CNT and UGT as well as the Trotskyst
POUM (which did not want to alienate the CNT, their conduit to the Valencia
Government) called on the workers to return to work. Only
some small organisations, like The Friends of Durutti, (Anarchist) named after
Buenaventura Durruti, the skillful militant anarcho-syndicalist and military
tactician who had been killed in the attempt to save White
was radical in his Anarchism, as he had been radical in all else. He wrote in
The Meaning of Anarchism, republished below; “So I must perforce be an
uncontrollable…An uncontrollable is an anarchist who has stuck to Anarchy and
who is not, therefore, primarily, concerned with the shades or strata of
Capitalism but with revolution by direct action; who believes with Marx that the
emancipation of the workers must be the work of the workers themselves and with
Bakunin and Kropotkin and Maletesta that free humanity must be substituted for
the State and that when Anarchists take part in a Government, they allow
themselves to be deflected from their proper task and become corrupted by
association with the instrument of tyranny. The first false step in Jack
White was unlucky in marriage; he was married twice, both to middle-class devote
Catholic women. His arguments with his wives are infamous and renowned. It was
an unfortunate and contradictory side to his troubled life that he never found a
proper soul mate; a Protestant looking for the nationalist Catholic wife who
could temper his aristocratic background; he was a military captain to the end.
These were his personal failures. The only thing is that he admitted them and
criticised himself for them. Returning
to However
at the time of his death, White had completed a second part of his
autobiography, a Misfit 2. Moreover, Albert Meltzer who knew White from his days
with ‘Spain and The World’, states that White, around 1937-8 worked with
Matt Kavanagh, a Liverpudlian anarchist of Irish extraction, on a 'survey of
Irish labour and Irish aspirations in relation to anarchism'. In the same
article Meltzer also mentions 'White's study of the little known Cork
“Soviet”‘, which was influenced by his exposure to the workers
self-management movement in revolutionary Spain in 1936-37. Unfortunately these
writings have been lost to history. The writings, which did survive, are now
preserved in the Kate Sharpley Library in Although
it has not been conclusively established as to why these documents were
destroyed, there is little doubt that White's second wife, Noreen Shanahan,
either alone or in conjunction with the White family, disposed of the bulk of
her husband's papers in the aftermath of his death. It is possible that this may
have occurred through neglect or simple expediency, but it is more likely that
it was driven by White's conflict with his wife, an ardent Catholic, about his
views on the evils of the Catholic Church and Catholicism itself; see his
article “The Catholic Church; Fascism’s Ally” which follows. It is quite
probable that other articles in a similar vein existed in his notes. Whatever
the exact circumstances, the destruction of these papers is a tragic loss for
Irish history and especially for the history of Anarchism in the Spanish Civil
War, as well as anarchism in relation to the revolutionary struggles in White
inherited the family home and lands of White Hall by his father's will in 1912,
but the inheritance was deferred as long as his mother lived; she died in 1935.
In the interval, White had received a regular income from the rent and sale of
the lands attached to the estate; this had been supplemented by occasional
income from journalistic efforts. Although he had spent short periods at White
Hall (and nearby Cushendun) in the intervening years, it wasn't until 1938 that
he was able to live at the family home in Broughshane for any prolonged period.
But despite the relative isolation of Broughshane, he appears to have remained
in regular contact with his political associates, although the outbreak of World
War 2 was to paralyse any real work. White
made a final and brief reappearance in public life during the 1945 General
Election campaign. Proposing himself as a 'Republican Socialist' candidate for
the Antrim constituency, he convened a meeting at the local Orange Hall in
Broughshane to outline his view. But he never actually got his name on the
ballot paper. Six
months later Jack White died from cancer in a In
many ways White is an unsung hero of the Irish Revolution and sadly forgotten by
all but a few on the international scene. He is barely cited in Irish academic
history. “The History of the Irish Working Class,” (Berresford Ellis, 1972)
fails to even refer to him and outside a certain few anarchists groups there has
been no talk about him at all. The semi-official academic version of Irish
history, “The Making of the Modern Albert
Meltzer, the London Anarchist who knew White well in the 30s wrote “He told me
once he had originally accepted the principle of libertarian socialism in It
is a shame that Jack White’s later autobiography was lost, as it could have
shed much light on both the
1
The Making of Modern 1
Anarchy, JR White. With an introduction by Albert Meltzer. entitled
“From Loyalism to Anarchism”. (1981). Meltzer had many meetings with
both Jack White and the Limerick born anarchist, Matt Kavanagh,
throughout the 1930s and White discussed many of his ideas with him. 2. Much
of the information here is taken from the excellent article by Kevin Doyle
(2001) on the Workers Solidarity Movement website at
http//flag.blackened.net/revolt/anarchists/jackwhite/bio.htm. It is by far
the most thoroughly researched article on Captain White to date.
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