Well, no, not exactly but local activist Edward Hennem's recollection of a November evening in 1917 when he and his young friends tried to start the revolution in Harringay suggests a possible catalyst:
and one or two other youngsters [from the NLHL*] took an apple box to Fairfax Road, Harringay, outside the baker's shop** at 8 pm one murky November evening, to proclaim our baptism for the Red Flag - one chairman, one heckler, plus me -17 years of age.
We got no audience, a cat sitting on the hot grills of the bakehouse, and a policeman. . . . after a speech lasting 25 minutes. . . the copper asked us if we were going home - we were depressed that we had not influenced the nation. But, that policeman became the local leader of the police strike and an active worker in the movement. I like to think that my speech started him thinking.
*The North London Herald League based in Grand Parade Harringay
**Note the reference to a bakery in Fairfax Road
taken from The Police Strikes by Ken Weller
Tags for Forum Posts: 1917, NLHL, fairfax road, revolution
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