When Jennie was three years old James and Euphemia
were persuaded to take over the management of a hotel and theatre in Cowdenbeath, that had formerly being run by
Jennie's grandmother. Trade was affected by the fact that it was a Temperance Hotel and did
not sell alcohol.
In 1912 James Lee decided to give up the hotel and
once again became a miner. Jennie became a regular visitor to Mr. Garvie's
Bookshop in Cowdenbeath. Garvie was blind and used to read to him from his
favourite book, A History of the Working Classes. Another family friend, Jim
Beveridge, lent Jennie a copy of the Ragged Trousered Philanthropist by Robert Tressell. Jennie
Lee was also very fond of the Happy Prince by Oscar Wilde.
James Lee was chairman of the local branch of the Independent Labour Party. Jennie
accompanied her father to these meetings and heard several leading socialists
including James Maxton and David Kirkwood. Lee
like most members of the ILP was opposed to Britain's involvement in the First World War. In the
newspapers she read about Aneurin Bevan, a nineteen
year old miner from South Wales, who refused to take part in the war. Bevan,
who was later to marry Jennie Lee, told the local magistrates: "I am not
and never have been a conscientious objector. I will fight, but I will choose
my own enemy and my own battlefield and I won't have you do it for me."
As a fourteen year old schoolgirl, Jennie
remembered the excitement of her father and friends when they heard news of the
Russian Revolution. After
the war James Lee was one of the leaders of the Hands off Russia movement that
attempted to counterbalance the campaign led by Winston Churchill to
invade Russia.
Jennie wanted to go to university but her parents
were unable to afford the fees. However, with support from the Carnegie Trust, who
agreed to pay half her fees and the Fife Education Authority, who awarded her a
grant of £45 a year, she was able to become a student at Edinburgh University.
At university Jennie joined the Labour Club, the
University Women's Union and the editorial board of the Rebel Student. One of
Jennie's first campaigns was to have Bertrand Russell elected
as Rector of the university. Russell a pacifist and campaigner for women's
rights was a popular figure with university students at that time. During the First World War Russell
was sacked from his post as a lecturer at Cambridge University and
imprisoned for his involvement with the No-Conscription Fellowship (NCF),
an organisation that encouraged men to refuse war service.
Jennie was a great reader and favourite authors at
university included H. N. Brailsford, Bertrand Russell, H. G. Wells and Olive Schreiner. It was
while at university in Edinburgh that
Jennie gained her first experience of public speaking. Jennie could often be
found on the Mound in Princess Street making speeches on Socialism and
votes for women on the same terms as men. Jennie also attended weekend schools
organised by the National Council of Labour Colleges where she met Ellen Wilkinson for the
first time.
During the General Strike Jennie
returned home to give support to the miners. She had just won a MacLaren
Bursary, which she was able to hand over to her family struggling on her
father's strike pay. When the strike was over James Lee, like many union
activists, was sacked, blacklisted and after four months unemployment was
forced to take work as a manual labourer.
Jennie's political work did not interfere with her
studies and she left University of Edinburgh with a
degree in education and law. She taught at her school in Cowdenbeath but after
an impressive speech at the 1927 National Conference of the Independent Labour Party, Jennie
was invited to become the ILP candidate for North Lanark.
Jennie Lee was elected to Parliament at a
by-election in February 1929 when she turned a 2,028 Conservative majority
into a Labour majority of 6,578. At twenty-four she was the
youngest member of the House of Commons. The
Labour leadership selected Margaret Bondfield and the
Chief Whip, Tom Kennedy, to introduce Jennie into Parliament. Jennie rejected
the idea and insisted that two old friends from Scotland, Robert Smillie and James Maxton, should
be her sponsors. This was the first of many conflicts that she was to have with
the leadership of the party over the next few years.
Jennie's first speech in the House of Commons was a
fierce attack on Winston Churchill and his
budget proposals. Afterwards she congratulated Jennie on her speech and told
her that he also wanted to help the poor but she had to understand that:
"The richer the rich became, the more able they would be to help the
poor".
In the House of Commons Jennie's
closest friend was Frank Wise, one of the leaders of the Independent Labour Party. Wise
was married and although he considered the possibility of divorce, they
eventually decided against it. As she pointed out in a letter to Wise: "I
feel that divorce and marriage would do both of us immense harm. Certainly
public non-Catholic opinion is becoming more tolerant about divorce, but in
triangles where all three parties are fairly equal as to age and other matters.
The situation where a man has lived with one woman for twenty years, and
becomes attached to another woman about twenty years younger, is too many
unpleasant types, to be lightly accepted."
Another close friend was Aneurin Bevan, who represented
Ebbw Vale in South Wales. Jennie was particularly impressed with Bevan's attack
on David Lloyd George. The two
young MPs had much in common. They both had fathers who were miners who had
suffered terrible industrial defeats in 1919, 1921 and 1926. As she wrote
later: "We were both now pinning our hopes on political action. We were
eager to test to the full the possibility of bringing about basic socialist
change by peaceful, constitutional means.
Jennie was totally opposed to Ramsay MacDonald and the
National Government he formed in 1931. Like most Labour MPs who refused to support MacDonald, Jennie was
defeated in the 1931 General Election. Over
the next couple of years Jennie spent her time writing articles for the ILP New
Leader and on lecture tours of the United States and Canada.
In 1931 G.D.H. Cole created the Society for
Socialist Inquiry and Propaganda (SSIP). This was later renamed the Socialist League. Other
members included William Mellor, Charles Trevelyan, Stafford Cripps, H. N. Brailsford, D. N. Pritt, R. H. Tawney, Frank Wise, David Kirkwood, Clement Attlee, Neil Maclean, Frederick Pethick-Lawrence, Alfred Salter, Gilbert Mitchison, Harold Laski, Frank Horrabin, Ellen Wilkinson, Aneurin Bevan, Ernest Bevin, Arthur Pugh, Michael Foot and Barbara Betts. Margaret Cole admitted
that they got some of the members from the Guild Socialism
movement: "Douglas and I recruited personally its first list drawing upon
comrades from all stages of our political lives." The first pamphlet
published by the SSIP was The Crisis (1931) was written by Cole and
Bevin.
According to Ben Pimlott, the author of Labour and the Left (1977):
"The Socialist League... set up branches, undertook to promote and carry
out research, propaganda and discussion, issue pamphlets, reports and books,
and organise conferences, meetings, lectures and schools. To this extent it was
strongly in the Fabian tradition, and it worked in close conjunction with
Cole's other group, the New Fabian Research Bureau." The main objective
was to persuade a future Labour government to implement socialist policies.
In November 1933, Frank Wise collapsed and died. The
following year she married Aneurin Bevan. Jennie
Lee was defeated again at North Lanark in the 1935 General Election. Jennie
remained involved in politics, and was especially active in trying to persuade
the British Labour movement to create a Popular Front with
other European groups in an attempt to stop the spread of fascism in the 1930s.
In 1940 Lord Beaverbrook,
Minister of Aircraft Production, employed Jennie Lee in his department. She
later left to work as a journalist for the Daily Mirror. In the 1945 General Election, she won
the mining constituency of Cannock in Staffordshire. In the government formed
by Clement Attlee,
Jennie's husband, Aneurin Bevan, was
made Minister of Health and was responsible for the introduction of the
National Health Service.
Jennie Lee agreed with Aneurin Bevan about
most political issues, but was unhappy with his decision to reject unilateral
nuclear disarmament at the 1957 Labour Party Conference. However, she was
aware that his decision was based on what he thought was best for the Labour
movement and was deeply shocked with the way he was treated by fellow
socialists during and after his speech. For as he had told her, "I can
just about save this Party, but I shall destroy myself in doing so."
After the 1964 General Election Lee was
appointed arts minister and was responsible for what Harold Wilson later
called the greatest achievement of his Labour Government, the
setting up of the Open University. She retired from the House of Commons in 1970
when she was created Baroness Lee of Asheridge.
Jennie Lee died in 1988.
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