Oswald Mosley – Fascism in Britain Documentary

    The man known to history as Oswald Mosley was born  
    on the 16th of November 1896 on 
    Hill Street in Mayfair in London.
    His father was Sir Oswald Mosley, fifth baronet 
    Mosley. The baronetage had been introduced in  
    Britain in the seventeenth century as a rank of 
    minor nobility. The Mosleys were a lower-ranking  
    scion of the British aristocracy with considerable 
    financial independence. The Mosleys traced their  
    lineage all the way back to the twelfth century 
    and the early stages of Norman rule in England.  
    Sir Oswald served for a time in the military 
    during Oswald Jr’s youth, notably in Egypt,  
    a British protectorate which had been effectively 
    conquered in 1882 to secure Britain’s interest in  
    the Suez Canal and the sea route it provided 
    to British India. Young Oswald’s mother was  
    Katharine Maud Edwards-Heathcote also a 
    member of the British minor nobility with  
    strong familial ties to the military. The family 
    was also extremely wealthy, a near ancestor,  
    Sir John Heathcote, having emerged as a 
    major business figure in Staffordshire  
    in the late eighteenth century in the early 
    stages of the Industrial Revolution. Oswald  
    was the first of Katharine and Oswald Sr’s 
    three children. They had two further sons,  
    Edward and John Arthur, born 
    respectively in 1899 and 1901.
    Oswald’s youth was troubled one in some 
    significant ways. Though he clearly benefited from  
    growing up as a member of a wealthy aristocratic 
    family, his parents’ marriage was not a happy  
    one and as the eldest of their three children he 
    was inevitably front and centre in dealing with  
    their marital problems. The conflicts between 
    Oswald Sr. and Katharine usually focused on his  
    adultery and over-bearing nature, bordering 
    on physical aggression. Eventually Oswald’s  
    parents separated in all-but name. Meanwhile 
    Oswald Jr., who was known primarily to family  
    members in his youth as Tom to distinguish 
    him from his father and his grandfather,  
    who also was called Oswald, was sent to live with 
    his grandparents at Apedale Hall in Staffordshire,  
    a large country estate. There he was apparently 
    spoiled by his grandparents for several years  
    before being sent to West Downs Preparatory 
    School and then on to the Winchester College,  
    an elite school which had been originally set up 
    in the fourteenth century and which acted as a  
    feeder college to Oxford University in a time when 
    one’s class dictated their educational aspirations  
    in Britain. At Winchester Mosley excelled 
    in several sports, becoming both a boxer  
    and a fencer. His proficiency in the latter was 
    notable and had he been born in a different age  
    and to a different social background he might 
    well have ended up as a professional fencer.
    When he was just sixteen Mosley left Winchester. 
    Unlike others he didn’t head for Oxford,  
    but rather for the Royal Military College at 
    Sandhurst. In the nineteenth century the sons  
    of the British royal family had begun serving 
    in the British Royal Navy and armed forces and  
    it soon became a well-established tradition 
    that sons of the nobility should serve in the  
    military or navy for some period of time in 
    order to further the interests of Britain’s  
    extensive empire. Following in this tradition 
    Oswald arrived in Sandhurst in 1913. By that  
    time he had already developed a reputation as 
    having a quarrelsome personality, regularly  
    getting drunk and picking fights when out and 
    about Sandhurst. In the early summer of 1914,  
    he was expelled from the Military College 
    for his behaviour after he participated in  
    a brawl in which he fractured his right ankle. 
    Luckily for Mosley, within weeks Europe rapidly  
    marched towards the First World War after the 
    assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand,  
    the heir to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, 
    in Sarajevo in late June. Due to this,  
    he was accepted back into the military and was 
    commissioned into the 16th the Queen’s Lancers,  
    a cavalry unit, as British forces prepared 
    to head to France where a large proportion of  
    the most intense fighting would play out on 
    the Western Front over the next four years.
    Early in the war both sides had grasped the 
    potential of aerial warfare. The first plane had  
    only been successfully flown in late 1903 by the 
    Wright Brothers at Kitty Hawk in North Carolina,  
    but immediately upon the outbreak of the conflict 
    in the late summer of 1914 the British, French,  
    Germans and others realised the potential of 
    aircraft, first for flying reconnaissance missions  
    and then as devices to break the military deadlock 
    on the ground. Mosley quickly became interested in  
    joining the incipient British Royal Flying Corps 
    and began training as a pilot. His fleeting career  
    in the air-force proved disastrous. He quickly 
    completed his pilot’s training. Then in May 1915,  
    while demonstrating his flying abilities in 
    front of his mother at Shoreham, he crashed  
    his plane. The impact shattered his right ankle 
    which had only recently healed from the fracture  
    caused during the riot that he was involved in at 
    Sandhurst a year earlier. The double injury to his  
    ankle exacerbated the wound and made it unlikely 
    it would heal 100%. Then, to compound matters,  
    he headed back to France to fight in the trenches 
    before it was fully healed. After re-exacerbating  
    the wound again he was informed that if he didn’t 
    head back to England to convalesce there was a  
    possibility of amputation. Mosley followed 
    doctor’s orders when so informed in 1916,  
    but his ankle never fully recovered and for the 
    rest of his life he walked with a slight limp.
    Mosley saw active service at the Battle of Loos on 
    the Western Front in France in the autumn of 1915,  
    where he passed out from the pain in his leg, but 
    his return to England early the next year left him  
    effectively confined to administrative duty at the 
    Foreign Office and in the Ministry of Munitions  
    for the rest of the First World War. Nevertheless, 
    his eagerness to serve in France and the fact  
    that it had left him with a permanent injury 
    had gained him some respect in political and  
    aristocratic circles. As the war came to an 
    end he was consequently contacted by senior  
    figures in the Conservative Party with an eye 
    towards contesting the 1918 general election.  
    He was duly elected for the constituency 
    of Harrow, where he won easy election in  
    an uncompetitive race. Thus, just weeks after 
    turning 22, he entered the British parliament  
    as its youngest member. He began to make his 
    mark there based on his oratorical abilities,  
    his speech-delivery being far better than 
    most of the other members of the house. He  
    served as the representative for Harrow for the 
    next six years, gaining re-election in 1922.
    These were also important years in Mosley’s 
    personal life. In the late 1910s he began a  
    relationship with Cynthia Blanche Curzon, a 
    daughter of George Curzon, first Marquess of  
    Kedleston and Earl Curzon. Curzon had served as 
    Viceroy of British India between 1899 and 1905,  
    as head of the burgeoning Air Board 
    for a time during the war and finally  
    emerged as Secretary of State for Foreign 
    Affairs in 1919. He would become leader of  
    the House of Lords in the mid-1920s and was 
    both wealthy and powerful. He suspected Mosley  
    wanted to marry his daughter for her wealth 
    and social status, but he nevertheless gave  
    the union his blessing and Oswald and Cynthia 
    were married in May 1920. A daughter and a son,  
    Vivien and Nicholas, followed in the first years 
    of the marriage, and belatedly a third child,  
    Michael, was born after a long gap in 1932. 
    Other than this veneer of family stability,  
    their marriage was a chaotic one in which Oswald 
    unleashed chaos amongst the Curzons. He engaged  
    in an affair with Cynthia’s younger sister 
    Alexandra for a time and also Grace Curzon,  
    Cynthia’s stepmother who had married Lord Curzon 
    in 1917, his first wife, Cynthia’s mother,  
    having died many years earlier. There were other 
    affairs Mosley engaged in, but these ones with  
    his wife’s sister and stepmother were clearly of 
    a level of moral dubiousness that was unusual.
    Despite the peculiar nature of their marriage, 
    Cynthia and Oswald shared many similar political  
    views and she appears to have even influenced him 
    substantially in the 1920s. She was a supporter of  
    the Labour movement and later in the 1920s 
    even became a supporter of Leon Trotsky,  
    the powerful member of the Soviet Union government 
    who eventually fled from Russia after a power  
    struggle with Joseph Stalin. Oswald too ended up 
    drifting to the left politically in the 1920s.  
    In 1922 he ‘crossed the floor’, a well-known 
    euphemism for when someone changed political  
    parties in the British parliament to join a 
    rival party. Historically ‘crossing the floor’  
    was associated with individuals moving between the 
    Conservatives and the Liberals, the two dominant  
    parties during the nineteenth century, but in the 
    post-war period Labour had outflanked the Liberals  
    to become the major rivals of the Conservatives. 
    When Oswald absconded from the Conservatives in  
    1922 he initially sat as an independent, but in 
    1924 he eventually joined Labour. His principal  
    motive in doing so was opposition to the manner in 
    which the British government had handled the Irish  
    War of Independence fought between 1919 and 1921, 
    particularly the use of the notorious Black and  
    Tan irregulars and the atrocities they committed 
    against the civilian population in Ireland. More  
    broadly, Mosley’s views on economic policy were 
    drifting left of the Conservatives in the 1920s  
    and Labour, at least for a time, seemed like 
    a good home for his revised political stance.
    Mosley’s decision to cross the floor led to a 
    temporary hiatus in his political career. In  
    October 1924 the first ever Labour government, a 
    minority administration led by Ramsay MacDonald,  
    collapsed after less than a year. In the 
    election which was held at the end of  
    October Mosley was put forward to run in 
    the Ladywood constituency in Birmingham,  
    something of a Chamberlain family stronghold 
    that supported the Conservatives. Labour lost  
    the wider election nationally by a large margin, 
    primarily because the Liberal vote collapsed and  
    transferred to the Conservatives, but in Ladywood 
    Mosley came very close to unseating Chamberlain,  
    a future British Prime Minister. In fact he 
    may have actually done so. On the first count  
    Chamberlain was apparently elected by just seven 
    votes. Mosley understandably demanded a recount.  
    On the second effort Mosley emerged as the 
    victor by a margin of two votes. Eventually,  
    on the final count, Chamberlain’s vote appeared 
    to suddenly jump by nearly a hundred votes,  
    and he won by a majority of 77. Mosley’s political 
    career was briefly on hiatus, though he had given  
    Chamberlain such a scare that in the next election 
    he switched to the safer seat of Edgbaston.
    With his parliamentary career temporarily at an 
    end, Mosley and Cynthia went travelling. In the  
    1920s they visited various parts of Europe and 
    the British Empire, notably India where Cynthia  
    had spent some of her earliest years when 
    her father was viceroy there and where the  
    Curzons were well-respected. There Mosley met 
    with Mahatma Gandhi, the leader of the Indian  
    independence movement. It is an indication of 
    the contradictions which characterised Mosley  
    that he could, despite displaying a clear 
    streak of virulent Anti-Semitism and racism  
    in other respects in later years, demonstrate his 
    respect for Gandhi after meeting him in the 1920s,  
    while the Indian political leader, for his 
    part, also stated that Mosley had made a  
    favourable impression on him. Meanwhile, as 
    he was out of parliament in the mid-1920s,  
    Mosley kept an eye on developments at 
    Westminster and the Labour Party was anxious  
    to have a skilled orator representing 
    them again in parliament. Therefore,  
    when the Smethwick seat in Staffordshire 
    fell vacant in 1926, Mosley was an obvious  
    candidate to stand in his mother’s native 
    region. He won the campaign that December  
    and so after a hiatus of two years returned 
    to Westminster. Two years later he would also  
    ascend to the minor nobility as he succeeded as 
    sixth baronet Mosley on the death of his father.
    Over the next several years Mosley steered his 
    way towards a senior position within the Labour  
    shadow cabinet while the Conservatives governed 
    for nearly a five-year period following their  
    earlier victory in the 1924 election. It was 
    not until an election was held in May 1929,  
    nicknamed the ‘Flapper Election’ owing to it 
    being the first British election in which women  
    in their twenties were allowed to vote, that the 
    political situation changed. Although the Wall  
    Street Crash would not occur for several months 
    yet, the election was fought against a backdrop  
    of some early economic warning signs and rising 
    unemployment in Britain, factors which saw Labour  
    make extensive gains over the Conservatives and 
    returned MacDonald to 10 Downing Street as Prime  
    Minister of a new minority government. Mosley had 
    hoped for a senior cabinet appointment, but had  
    to make do with the lesser position of Chancellor 
    of the Duchy of Lancaster, an office which centres  
    on administration of the royal estate. MacDonald 
    did not wish to alienate a figure who he viewed  
    as full of promise and whom many in political 
    circles in the 1920s viewed as a potential leader  
    of Labour and future Prime Minister. Hence, 
    MacDonald gave him some unofficial duties in  
    solving the unemployment problem, but Mosley was 
    generally impeded in his efforts by more senior  
    Labour Party stalwarts who had been involved 
    in the party’s economic policy-formation for  
    decades. As this occurred, his frustrations with 
    his position in the Labour administration grew.
    The events of the late 1920s and early 1930s 
    were to determine the course of the rest of  
    Mosley’s life. In the autumn of 1929, after 
    a half decade of intense economic growth as  
    Europe was rebuilt following the First World War 
    and the civil wars that had followed through 1923,  
    the economy in Europe and the Americas became so 
    overheated that it resulted in the Wall Street  
    Crash, one of the largest financial meltdowns in 
    history. As is well known, the Great Depression  
    followed, a period of economic decline and 
    stagnation that saw tens of millions of people  
    lose their jobs and a level of deprivation amongst 
    the poor of countries like Britain, Germany and  
    the United States that is without equal in modern 
    times. The Great Depression also led to massive  
    political fluctuations in Europe and the western 
    hemisphere that led to the collapse of centrist  
    governments. From 1930 onwards political 
    extremes on the left and right were once  
    again in vogue. For Mosley the crisis of the Great 
    Depression led to him once again reconsidering his  
    political stances as he came to conclude that 
    the Labour Party did not have the ability or  
    the ideas to meet the economic crisis head on. 
    Having flirted with the Conservatives in years  
    gone by and now the Labour movement, he would 
    from 1930 onwards hew his own political path.
    The first major sign of Mosley’s increasingly 
    independent streak was seen in 1930 when he  
    drew up and released what is now known as the 
    Mosley Memorandum. The Memorandum was Mosley’s  
    blueprint for how Britain could pull itself out 
    of the Great Depression. In it he called for the  
    implementation of high tariffs on imports of goods 
    from other European countries in order to protect  
    British industry and commerce in the midst of the 
    crisis, a measure which he believed would increase  
    employment at home. Where goods had to come into 
    Britain from abroad he proposed that they should  
    be sourced from parts of the British Empire 
    rather than obtained from the United States,  
    Germany, France or other competitors. He also 
    called for the nationalisation of certain  
    British industries, a radical overhaul of 
    the educational system to ensure British  
    men and women stayed in education for longer 
    and more people went on to higher education,  
    while other features of the memorandum aimed 
    towards reducing the highly class-based nature  
    of British society. Effectively what Mosley 
    was aiming towards was a state-led version  
    of a knowledge economy where the aim was to 
    create a broad and dynamic middle class. While  
    Mosley is a very controversial figure today, 
    there is no denying the fact that there were  
    attractive elements to the Memorandum and it 
    was widely praised at the time by economists,  
    including John Maynard Keynes, the most 
    important economist of the first half of  
    the twentieth century. Over half a century later 
    policy analysts in the British Conservative Party  
    reconsidered it as a means of responding to 
    the economic downturn of the early 1990s.
    As much as the Memorandum was praised by figures 
    like Keynes at the time, it was clear to Mosley  
    that it would not be accepted as the basis of 
    the Labour Party’s economic policy. He quickly  
    decided to split with the party. However, unlike 
    Winston Churchill, whose family was somewhat close  
    to the Mosleys and who had once crossed the 
    floor from the Conservatives to the Liberals  
    only to come back again to the Conservatives in 
    the 1920s, Mosley would not return to the Tories,  
    nor would he join the Liberals, which were a 
    rapidly declining force in British politics  
    once support for the Labour Party expanded in 
    the 1920s. Instead, Mosley formed his own party,  
    calling it the New Party. Formally established 
    in the spring of 1931, it immediately emerged as  
    a minor parliamentary group as Mosley convinced 
    half a dozen fellow Labour MPs to join him. Its  
    main policy platform was the Mosley Memorandum. 
    Ultimately the New Party lasted for only year for  
    in 1932 Mosley formed a new organisation and 
    amalgamated the New Party into it. He called  
    it the British Union of Fascists. Meanwhile, the 
    New Party lost its parliamentary representation  
    quickly as its main figures, including Mosley, 
    lost their seats in the 1931 general election.
    It is worth pausing in our story to consider the 
    politics of Europe in the 1930s. The economic  
    and social crisis wrought by the Great Depression, 
    combined with the fears of a communist takeover of  
    much of Europe following the establishment of the 
    Soviet Union near the end of the First World War,  
    had created a general desire for a new form of 
    politics in Europe, one which combined elements  
    of radical nationalism and also elements 
    of socialism. This curious mix of left and  
    right wing politics is typically identified as 
    fascism today and is associated with extreme  
    racial views, but contemporaries would have 
    understood it more as a form of corporatism,  
    the idea that the citizens of a country would be 
    unified in a corporate manner in furthering and  
    advancing their nation’s cause in a way which 
    was both nationalistic but also socialistic in  
    the sense that the wellbeing of the middle and 
    lower classes was to be favoured as much as the  
    upper classes. While it has enormously sinister 
    overtones today as a result of the barbaric  
    racial elements which were incorporated into 
    this fascist politics, when Mosley established  
    the British Union of Fascists in 1932 those same 
    negative overtones did not yet exist. Moreover,  
    what he was doing was entirely in keeping with the 
    general drift of politics in the western world at  
    that time. Nearly every country in Central Europe 
    adopted some form of fascism or corporatism in the  
    mid-1930s, so did Portugal and Spain, and even 
    in countries where corporatist parties did not  
    rise to power such as in Ireland, there were 
    still quasi-fascist movements during the 1930s  
    that had major links to the political 
    establishment. As such, what Mosley was  
    doing in the early-to-mid-1930s, 
    needs to be viewed in context.
    The period when Mosley was establishing the New 
    Party and then the British Union of Fascists in  
    1931 and 1932 were also years of continuing 
    infidelity in his marriage. The new object of  
    his affections in the early 1930s was Diana 
    Guinness, a scion of the Mitford family, a  
    British aristocratic family that could trace their 
    lineage all the way back to the Norman Conquest in  
    the eleventh century. Diana was married to Bryan 
    Guinness, a member of the wealthy Anglo-Irish  
    brewing dynasty, and as with Oswald, she had 
    children from her first marriage. Nevertheless,  
    she divorced her husband in 1932 and her affair 
    with Oswald became more and more serious over  
    time. For his part he had repeatedly 
    asserted his intention to leave Cynthia,  
    though one suspects he might never have done so 
    had fate not intervened in 1933 as Cynthia died  
    at just 34 years of age from complications of 
    peritonitis which in turn had emerged following  
    an operation for appendicitis. With this, Oswald 
    and Diana were able to pursue their relationship  
    more openly and they soon emerged as the most 
    prominent couple in the world of British fascism,  
    with Diana espousing the political movement 
    faithfully, having come from a family which  
    was keenly divided between adherents of 
    fascism and socialism. It was not until  
    1936 that Oswald and Diana eventually married. 
    They would have two sons, Alexander and Max.
    The British Union of Fascists had mixed success 
    in the 1930s. Its membership grew to over 50,000  
    people and it began to acquire support from 
    elements of the established British media such as  
    the Daily Mail newspaper which once ran a headline 
    proclaiming, quote, “Hurray for the Blackshirts!”  
    in reference to the blackshirt uniform which 
    Mosley had the members of the BUF adopt. It found  
    particular success in certain parts of London and 
    other urban centres where unemployment was high  
    as a result of the Great Depression and there was 
    growing anti-migration sentiment. However, it met  
    with very little electoral success, not contesting 
    the 1935 general election and holding no more than  
    a few seats on local councils at various points in 
    the 1930s. This is how things stood for the most  
    part throughout the decade. But while the BUF 
    did not have any real parliamentary presence,  
    they were still a factor in British political life 
    that could not be avoided, with their distinctive  
    uniforms, their rallies and Mosley’s oratory. 
    Even those who reviled the BUF politically had to  
    admit that Oswald was perhaps the most effective 
    political speaker in the country during the 1930s.
    If the BUF met with little electoral success 
    in the 1930s this was perhaps largely owing  
    to concerns about the party’s connections to 
    European fascism and in particular with Nazi  
    Germany. The Nazis under Adolf Hitler had 
    come to power there in 1933. Much of their  
    rhetoric centred on reviving Germany after the 
    humiliation of the First World War and the Treaty  
    of Versailles that had been imposed on Germany in 
    1919. With their talk of Germany’s re-emergence as  
    the greatest power on the continent, many in 
    Britain were uneasy about this new political  
    experiment being orchestrated from Berlin and 
    what implications it might have for Britain and  
    for peace in Europe. Despite the general unease 
    with Hitler, Mosley positively cozied up to the  
    Nazis. When he and Diana were married in 1936 the 
    ceremony was carried out in Germany at the home of  
    the Nazi propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels. 
    Mosley was also a great admirer of the Italian  
    fascist leader, Benito Mussolini. In 1937 he began 
    an initiative to establish a pro-German radio  
    station broadcasting from the Channel Islands. 
    It was all enough to give many in Britain pause  
    as to where Mosley’s political loyalties 
    lay and what his motives were with the BUF.
    Hand in hand with his growing ties to the 
    fascist movements on the continent was an  
    adoption of an increasingly xenophobic and 
    antisemitic stance by Mosley and the BUF,  
    particularly towards the Jewish community in 
    Britain. There was also a more virulent form  
    of anti-migration rhetoric in Mosley’s 
    political statements towards groups such  
    as the Irish and the peoples of the British 
    Empire in regions like India and South Africa,  
    a development which points towards a fundamental 
    shift in his own political views from the more  
    tolerant figure of the 1920s. All of this came to 
    a head on the 4th of October 1936 in the Battle of  
    Cable Street in the East End of London. That 
    day a march was held by Mosley and the BUF,  
    one which would involve separate divisions of 
    the Blackshirts and their supporters proceeding  
    from the Tower of London to Bethnal Green and 
    Shoreditch where speeches would be made by Mosley  
    and others. In response, a separate counter-march 
    was organised by a coalition of anti-fascists  
    including the British communists, trade unionists 
    and groups representing both the Jewish and Irish  
    communities in London. Barricades were also 
    erected by those opposed to Mosley’s event,  
    primarily on Cable Street to impede their march, 
    thus the name ‘The Battle of Cable Street’. The  
    Metropolitan Police managed to prevent the 
    event from boiling over into major violence,  
    with well over a hundred people arrested. 
    Overall, it demonstrated the growing racism  
    of the BUF movement, but also the determination 
    of many different groups in London to unite to  
    oppose them. A petition to try to prevent 
    the march garnered over 100,000 signatures  
    and the government moved afterwards to pass 
    the Public Order Act of 1936 which prohibited  
    large gatherings in which paramilitary uniforms 
    like those of the Blackshirts would be worn.
    The late 1930s were an increasingly fractious 
    period in the history of the BUF. On the  
    continent, Germany was rapidly rearming in a 
    breach of the terms of The Treaty of Versailles,  
    while in the spring of 1938 it violated another 
    major tenet of the peace treaty of 1919 by  
    entering a political union with Austria to create 
    a ‘Greater Germany’. No sooner was this undertaken  
    than Hitler began pressing Britain, France and 
    Italy to be allowed to annex the Sudetenland,  
    a region of Czechoslovakia where a majority 
    of people spoke German and identified as being  
    ethnically German. Eventually the British and 
    French caved to pressure from Hitler at the Munich  
    Conference of September 1938, but warned that any 
    further acts of aggressive expansion would lead to  
    war. As these events played out, Mosley and the 
    BUF became ever more controversial in England.  
    At a rally in Liverpool late in 1937 members of 
    the public pelted Mosley with rocks after he gave  
    a fascist salute to the crowd. Yet he continued 
    to have a loyal following. At the Britain First  
    rally held at Earl’s Court Exhibition Hall on 
    the 16th of July 1939, 30,000 people attended  
    the largest indoor political rally in British 
    history. There Mosley enflamed the crowd with  
    talk of how a Jewish conspiracy was leading 
    Britain to war with countries that should be  
    its natural allies and that the coming general 
    election, which was due to be held in 1940,  
    would be bought and sold by Jewish financiers and 
    those who controlled the media. It was a clear  
    manifestation of the degree to which Mosley had 
    adopted the ideological beliefs of German Nazism.
    Even as Mosley was presenting his conspiracy-laden 
    and antisemitic speech to his loyal base of  
    followers at Earl’s Court, Europe was plunging 
    into war. In March 1939 Hitler and the Nazis  
    abandoned the promises made at Munich the previous 
    autumn and annexed the rest of Czechoslovakia,  
    with the city of Memel stripped from Lithuania 
    at the same time. Their attention then turned  
    to Poland. The Nazis began an aggressive 
    campaign to convince Europe of Germany’s  
    rights to Polish territory. In August 1939, 
    just weeks after Mosley’s Britain First rally,  
    a non-aggression pact was signed between Germany 
    and its ideological enemy, the Soviet Union,  
    paving the way for the Nazis to invade Poland on 
    the 1st of September after a false flag operation.  
    As German tanks rolled over the eastern border, 
    London and Paris declared war on Berlin. The  
    Second World War remained a largely European 
    affair for months thereafter, with little  
    major action. The Germans and Russians quickly 
    overran Poland and carved it up between them,  
    but little occurred in the winter of 1939 and 
    the spring of 1940, so much so that some began  
    to call the war a phoney war. It wasn’t until 
    the late spring that the next steps were taken  
    when Denmark and Norway were quickly occupied 
    by the Germans and then the German Wehrmacht  
    began massing on the western border for 
    the long awaited invasion of France.
    In Britain, Mosley’s position was utterly 
    compromised by these events. As the leader  
    of the British fascist movement and as someone 
    who had made no secret of his ties to the regime  
    in Berlin he was now viewed as the leader of a 
    potential fifth column, a British equivalent of  
    Vidkun Quisling, the former Norwegian former 
    minister of defence who had formed a fascist  
    party there in 1933, the Nasjonal Samling or 
    ‘National Gathering’. Quisling had facilitated  
    the Nazi occupation of Norway in April 1940 and 
    later became the head of Nazi Norway. Mosley  
    was perceived as a potential British version of 
    Quisling. Yet there was also the possibility that  
    he might be useful for the British government. 
    There was no shortage of individuals in late 1939  
    and into 1940 in Britain, many within government 
    circles, that believed Britain would be better  
    off reaching an arrangement with Hitler and the 
    Nazis and combining against the Soviet Union  
    and other radical movements on the far left of 
    the political spectrum. In calling throughout  
    the first months of the war for a negotiated 
    peace Mosley was positioning himself as someone  
    who could negotiate with Berlin on Britain’s 
    behalf if the tide swung in favour of peace.
    Whatever ambitions Mosley might have held to 
    become the architect of peace were scuttled  
    in just a few weeks in May 1940. Early that 
    month, in response to a growing crisis over  
    the wartime leadership of Mosley’s old rival from 
    the 1924 general election, Prime Minister Neville  
    Chamberlain, was forced to step down as Prime 
    Minister. He was succeeded by Winston Churchill,  
    a figure who had consistently warned about the 
    threat posed by the Nazis during the 1930s and  
    who was committed to war with Germany. With 
    this Mosley hopes of negotiating peace terms  
    ended. Moreover, the same day that Churchill 
    took office, the 10th of May 1940, German army  
    divisions invaded neutral Belgium and then headed 
    into north-eastern France. The campaign which  
    followed was a disaster for the French and the 
    British Expeditionary Force, the latter of which  
    only narrowly avoided complete destruction at 
    Dunkirk. With the fall of France and a potential  
    German invasion of Britain on the horizon, the 
    British government moved to secure its position  
    domestically. In late May, Mosley was arrested 
    and interned under Defence Regulation 18B. This  
    emergency legislation had been passed in September 
    1939 at the beginning of the war to allow for the  
    arrest and detention of suspected enemies of the 
    state during wartime without charge or trial. It  
    was primarily utilised in the years that followed 
    against the British Union of Fascists and members  
    of the Irish nationalist movement in Northern 
    Ireland who were opposed to the partition of  
    the island back in 1921. Mosley would be 
    held for three years under Regulation 18B.
    The terms of Mosley’s internment during the 
    Second World War were not as onerous as they  
    might have been, in considerable part owing 
    to the intervention of the Prime Minister.  
    Although their political views had diverged 
    enormously during the 1930s to occupy the  
    polar opposites of the political spectrum in 
    Britain, Churchill had admired Mosley back in  
    the 1920s and viewed him as a figure of great 
    potential. In 1940, he arranged for Mosley to  
    be held under favourable conditions at Royal 
    Holloway Prison. His wife Diana was detained  
    as well in the summer of 1940 after giving birth 
    to their son Max. She was allowed to join Oswald,  
    apparently due to the direct intervention of 
    Churchill. The reasons for this lay with the  
    tangled paternity of Churchill’s wife Clementine. 
    Clementine’s mother Blanche had been known for her  
    infidelity during her lifetime and it was widely 
    suspected that Clementine’s father was actually  
    Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford, Diana Mosley’s 
    grandfather. Diana’s family apparently appealed  
    to Clementine and Churchill in 1940 to ensure 
    that Diana and Oswald were interned together.  
    Meanwhile, their children from their first 
    marriages and their marriage to one another  
    were looked after by several different family 
    members during their period of detention.
    Oswald spent three years in prison. He and 
    Diana were not charged, for though they had  
    come under very reasonable suspicion as 
    the leading figures of British fascism,  
    they were not technically guilty of having 
    committed any crime. By 1943 their detention  
    had become something of a cause celebre in 
    British politics. This was related to the  
    changing circumstances of the war. While Mosley 
    had been arrested in the direst days in 1940  
    as France was about to fall and the Battle of 
    Britain lay ahead, the nature of the conflict  
    had altered dramatically from late 1941 onwards 
    as the German assault on the Soviet Union failed  
    to strike the killer blow before the Russian 
    winter set in and the United States joined the  
    war following the attack on Pearl Harbour by 
    the Japanese. 1942 saw the Western Allies turn  
    the tide in the North Africa campaign against the 
    Italians and Germans and in the summer of 1943  
    they opened a Southern Front in Italy. Meanwhile 
    the Battle of Stalingrad was won by the Russians  
    in the autumn and winter of 1942. With this the 
    course of the war had changed enormously in favour  
    of the allies and any danger that Mosley and other 
    British fascist leaders had posed was effectively  
    nullified. Consequently, after a major debate in 
    the House of Commons in the early winter of 1943,  
    the Mosleys were released. They would still spend 
    the remainder of the war under house arrest.
    Oswald and Diana spent the last year and a half 
    of the war living with Mitford relatives and at  
    the Shaven Crown Hotel in Oxfordshire. Their 
    movements were restricted and they were kept  
    under police supervision, but they were reunited 
    with their children and were given a large degree  
    of liberty. The press covered their movements 
    extensively. This was also a period when news of  
    the Holocaust of six million of Europe’s Jews and 
    the mass murder of other groups such as the Romani  
    and Sinti people by the Nazis began arriving to 
    Britain in the final months of the war as camps  
    were liberated across Europe. In these months 
    and the years that followed the war Mosley never  
    expressed any regret for his involvement with the 
    Nazis in the 1930s or the Anti-Semitism of the  
    British Union of Fascists. Moreover, in years to 
    come he would become one of the leading voices in  
    Britain in efforts to argue that the Holocaust had 
    been exaggerated or that it had been orchestrated  
    by rogue elements within the SS rather than 
    having been directly ordered by Hitler and the  
    other senior members of the Nazi regime. As such, 
    while Mosley’s politics moved on to other concerns  
    in the post-war period, he never expressed any 
    contrition for his role in the fascist politics  
    of the 1930s and the genocidal programmes 
    which had resulted from it on the continent.
    With the end of the war in Europe in the early 
    summer of 1945 Mosley was now free to return  
    to his life without any further punishment. One 
    might have expected him to be happy enough to live  
    a private life, enjoying his family’s extensive 
    wealth and staying out of politics after spending  
    half a decade in prison and under house arrest. 
    Furthermore, he was not in good social standing  
    after the war in a way which might merit a 
    political comeback. This did not deter Mosley  
    in the slightest. After reconnecting with many 
    of those who had been involved in the BUF prior  
    to its prohibition on the 23rd of May 1940, 
    the very same day that Mosley was arrested,  
    he began plotting his political comeback. 
    To this end in 1946 and 1947 he published  
    two political memoirs and defences of his conduct 
    in the 1930s, respectively entitled My Answer and  
    The Alternative. My Answer, in particular, set 
    out to portray Mosley as a British patriot who  
    had been unjustly maligned during the war years. 
    His argument was that he could not have known what  
    would transpire from 1939 onwards and though it 
    would have fallen on deaf ears in the mid-1940s  
    there had been many prominent political figures 
    who had not exactly been virulently opposed to  
    the Nazis back in the 1930s, notably Britain’s 
    wartime leader during the First World War, David  
    Lloyd George, and the former British monarch, 
    Edward VIII. Having presented these arguments  
    in his books, Mosley returned to politics 
    in 1948 when he formed the Union Movement.
    In many ways the Union Movement was a return 
    to his old politics. The party certainly fell  
    far on the right of the political spectrum, 
    its economic views were corporatist and it  
    continued the anti-Semitism of the interwar 
    fascist movements, with Mosley trying to make  
    political capital out of developments in the 
    Levant where the Zionist movement had become  
    violently opposed to the British Mandate 
    administration in the two years following  
    the end of the Second World War. But where 
    the Union Movement differed from Mosley’s  
    pre-war political ideology was in its promotion 
    of pan-Europeanism. In his 1947 book, The Answer,  
    Mosley laid out a theory that Europe had been 
    moving inexorably towards a greater union for  
    several centuries, beginning with the formation 
    of large nation states such as the United Kingdom,  
    Spain, Germany and Italy out of much smaller 
    polities during the late medieval and early  
    modern periods. Mosley’s conclusion was that the 
    formation of a European supra-national state,  
    one which would unite countries like Britain, 
    France and Germany after centuries of conflict,  
    was inevitable. Such a state would operate on 
    the basis of a centralised European authority,  
    with individual countries retaining large degrees 
    of autonomy, but acting in union with one another  
    on a wide array of issues, particularly 
    economic policy. In this way, Mosley argued,  
    the new movement, which he called ‘Europe a 
    Nation’, would be able to walk its own relatively  
    independent line without being dominated by 
    either the United States or the Soviet Union in  
    the emerging post-war Cold War order. Thus, very 
    quickly after the end of the Second World War,  
    Mosley sought to rehabilitate himself as a 
    major advocate of pan-Europeanism or a form  
    of European nationalism as a replacement to the 
    national socialism and corporatism of the 1930s.
    There is no disguising the fact that what Mosley 
    was arguing for in the post-war years was very  
    much a political movement that mirrored 
    how the European Coal and Steel Community,  
    then the European Economic Community and 
    finally the European Union would develop,  
    though Britain was slow to embrace involvement 
    in the European project and was a hesitant member  
    for four decades before pulling out in the late 
    2010s. Perhaps it was this British ambivalence  
    to the growing pan-European movement which led to 
    the Union Movement meeting with little success,  
    though it was much more likely that the very 
    support of Mosley would have made the British  
    public even less supportive of involvement with 
    the inaugural ECSC in the 1950s. The British press  
    had not forgotten the Mosleys’ wartime betrayal 
    and at the start of the 1950s Oswald and Diana  
    with their younger children moved to Ireland, a 
    country where anyone ostracised from the British  
    political system was welcome, no matter how 
    dubious the road which had led to their disgrace.  
    The Mosleys lived there for several years, an 
    exile which was made more favourable by the fact  
    that several of Diana Mitford’s siblings also had 
    ties to Ireland, Deborah Mitford, for instance,  
    having married into the Cavendish family which 
    had extensive estates in the south of the country.
    As much as Mosley might have tried to embrace 
    a less controversial form of politics in  
    the post-war years and attempted a political 
    comeback, his politics retained their racist  
    edge. Two developments in the 1950s emphasise 
    this. The first of these related to Africa. In  
    the aftermath of the war Britain was unable to 
    ignore calls for independence from many of its  
    colonies. After India and Pakistan acquired 
    their independence in 1947 calls escalated  
    for the same in Africa where the British 
    held lands covering much of southern Africa  
    around modern-day Zimbabwe, Botswana and Zambia, 
    extensive territories further north around Uganda,  
    Kenya and Sudan and other lands to the west in 
    Nigeria and Ghana. Mosley’s solution to calls for  
    independence was a form of continent-wide 
    Apartheid whereby the European powers,  
    Britain and France being the two nations who 
    controlled huge swathes of the continent,  
    would divide their colonies into white and 
    black controlled areas, mirroring in many ways  
    the system which had been created in South Africa 
    in the late 1940s to preserve the position of the  
    white minority Afrikaner community there. 
    Mosley’s proposals were soon abandoned,  
    especially in the aftermath of the disastrous Suez 
    Crisis of 1956 and the British and French began  
    granting independence to nations all across the 
    continent. Mosley would remain an ardent supporter  
    of the Apartheid regime in South Africa for the 
    remainder of his life, visiting there in the 1960s  
    long after the Apartheid movement had started to 
    become controversial internationally. Furthermore,  
    he continued holding business interests in South 
    Africa throughout the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.
    The second episode which was revelatory of 
    Mosley’s racial views in the post-war period  
    occurred in Britain itself in the late 1950s. 
    In the immediate aftermath of the war, Britain,  
    like many other European countries, had been 
    left with a large labour shortage owing to the  
    death of hundreds of thousands of young men 
    during the war. Where Germany, for instance,  
    had turned to countries like Turkey for foreign 
    workers, Britain reached out to its empire. In  
    the course of the late 1940s tens of thousands 
    of people began arriving from the Caribbean and  
    other regions, the so-called Windrush Generation, 
    named after the HMS Empire Windrush, a ship that  
    had arrived with one of the first large numbers of 
    Caribbean migrants in 1948. By the mid-1950s the  
    growing influx of people from overseas into London 
    and England more broadly was creating increasing  
    inter-community hostility in some parts of 
    England’s major cities, especially during periods  
    of low employment when people born in England 
    perceived the newcomers as taking jobs they might  
    otherwise have acquired. This led in the autumn 
    of 1958 to the Notting Hill Race Riots in the  
    Notting Hill area of London. A week of violence 
    saw attacks on people of West Indian descent and  
    scores of arrests. Mosley’s reaction was to return 
    to England and run for election in the Kensington  
    district of London in 1959, fashioning his 
    campaign around exploiting racial tensions in the  
    capital. Some of the proposals he mooted during 
    the campaign were regressive in the extreme,  
    not just favouring a ban on further migration 
    from the empire or what remained of it, but also  
    proposing forced deportations of those who had 
    arrived in the decade or so after the war and a  
    ban on intermarriage. It was as close to a major 
    political breakthrough that he would ever have in  
    the post-war years, capturing nearly 10% of the 
    vote, though ultimately failing to win a seat.
    In the aftermath of his failed election bid in 
    1959 Mosley relocated with Diana to Paris. They  
    spent the remainder of their lives for the most 
    part in Orsay, a wealthy suburb on the outskirts  
    of the city. From here he began efforts to 
    try to co-ordinate with other pan-European,  
    far-right political movements in other countries. 
    This led in the 1960s to the formation of the  
    National Party of Europe, an umbrella organisation 
    which included Mosley’s Union Movement in Britain,  
    the Deutsche Reichspartei in West Germany, 
    the Italian Social Movement and Jeune Europe  
    in Belgium, all far-right parties with elements 
    of neo-fascism in their workings. A manifesto  
    released in 1962 foreshadowed many elements 
    of what would become the European Union,  
    calling for a European parliament and other 
    federal measures of that kind. But others harked  
    back to the corporatist politics of the right in 
    the 1930s in declaring the movement’s antipathy  
    to both communism and capitalism. Effectively 
    it called for a third way whereby Europe would  
    separate itself off from both the US and the USSR, 
    while another proposal was for the dismantling  
    of the United Nations and its replacement with a 
    tripartite body which would be formed of the US,  
    the USSR and the new European supra-national 
    state. A final novel element to it was the  
    description of parts of Africa as constituting 
    part of Europe, clearly a provision that was  
    designed to keep the Maghreb under European 
    control in order to generate support for the  
    movement in France as that country was still 
    at war to try to retain control over Algeria.
    The National Party of Europe met with 
    very little success in the 1960s or 1970s,  
    though its policy platform is curious in 
    retrospect as offering an alternative view of  
    pan-Europeanism at a time when the founder members 
    of the European Steel and Coal Community were only  
    beginning to consider the idea of a more formal 
    union between their countries. Interestingly,  
    while the far right has generally become opposed 
    to European federalism in the intervening decades,  
    in the 1960s far right parties were in favour of 
    federalism, though of a kind which sought to curb  
    migration from overseas and implied a land grab of 
    North Africa. Meeting with little success in the  
    initiative, Mosley began writing an autobiography 
    in the second half of the 1960s, one which would  
    build on the political defence he had first 
    provided in My Answer back in 1946. My Life was  
    published in 1968. It was hardly an attempt to 
    seek redemption for his past political life,  
    but rather sought to explain away certain 
    criticisms of him which had been made over  
    the years, with Mosley being unrepentant in 
    his views that Europe should be a continent  
    for Europeans and claiming that his politics in 
    the 1930s was a response to the ineffectiveness  
    of both Labour and the Conservatives.

    By the time My Life was published in 1968  
    Mosley had entered his seventies. His health 
    was gradually declining. He had made one last  
    effort to gain election in Britain in 1966 and 
    after a fresh humiliation in which he acquired  
    less than 5% of the vote he effectively resigned 
    himself to the end of his political career. The  
    Union Movement was wound up in the early 1970s 
    and was replaced by the National Front as the  
    main far-right party in Britain. By the time it 
    began in the mid-1970s to gain some popularity  
    in Britain as the UK entered the worst economic 
    crisis it had seen since the Great Depression,  
    Mosley was suffering from Parkinson’s in France. 
    His last years were spent largely uninvolved in  
    active politics owing to poor health and old age. 
    He died in Orsay on the 3rd of December 1980 at 84  
    years of age. A small funeral was held in Paris 
    after which Oswald was cremated and his remains  
    were scattered around the famous Pere Lachaise 
    Cemetery. Just over two years later, his eldest  
    son, Nicholas, born in 1923 of his first marriage 
    to Cynthia, published a two-volume biography of  
    his father and the Mosleys’ family life. Oswald 
    had requested Nicholas, who he had a difficult  
    relationship with, to write it, making his private 
    papers fully available to allow him to do so.  
    The work was generally critical of Oswald and his 
    political career while humanising him as a father.
    Oswald Mosley was a complex figure. It would be 
    easy today to dismiss him as simply a would-be  
    fascist dictator of Britain, and admittedly there 
    were many elements of that kind to his politics.  
    Yet his political views in the 1930s should not 
    be read entirely in light of what the Nazis did  
    across Europe in the late 1930s and first half 
    of the 1940s. There were different types of  
    corporatism and fascism, such as Franco’s regime 
    in Spain. Similarly Mosley’s form of corporatism  
    was different to what was being espoused in 
    Germany. Moreover, his economic policies were  
    endorsed by a large cross section of leading 
    British economists during the Great Depression,  
    while his pan-Europeanism after the Second World 
    War foreshadowed the general drift of politics  
    within what has become the European Union. 
    However, these complicating factors aside,  
    there is absolutely no doubt that Mosley also 
    advocated for a form of racial hierarchy,  
    one which displayed acute Anti-Semitism and 
    also called for racial segregation across  
    Africa where much of the continent would 
    have been transformed into an expanded  
    version of Apartheid South Africa. As such, 
    while his political views were complicated,  
    they were also not entirely estranged 
    from the racial fascism of Nazism.
    What do you think of Oswald Mosley? Should he 
    be perceived as a straight forward fifth-column  
    of the Nazi movement within Britain or 
    was he a more complex figure? Please let  
    us know in the comment section, and in the 
    meantime, thank you very much for watching.

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    22 Comments

    1. Suggestions for future episodes:
      Roman Emperor Commodus
      Roman Emperor Caracella
      OSU Football coach Woody Hayes
      Alexander the Great
      Bob Wian-Founder of "Bob's Big Boy"
      Clarence Saunders-Founder of "Piggly Wiggly"
      Film Director Stanley Kubrick
      Film Director Alfred Hitchcock
      Milton S. Hershey-Founder of "Hersheys"
      Davey Crockett-"King of the wild frontier"
      President Andrew Jackson
      OSU Football Running Back Archie Griffin
      Lee Falk-Creator of "The Phantom" (Comic Book Superhero)
      James O'Barr-Creator of "The Crow" comic book series
      Chely Wright-Counrty Singer and LGBT activist

    2. So Mosley was in favour of a supranational organisation and European Parliament.

      He’s considered far right.

      The Guardian frames Farage as far right, a man that ultimately engineered the country’s exit from that supranational organisation declaring himself surplus to requirements in the European Parliament.

      And the Guardian was in favour of staying put.

      Take from that what you will.

    3. All the names
      of notable figureheads in history, (suggested by supporters of this channel), are worthy of a separate video.

      However, none any more or less prominent figures, are more deserving than Enoch Powell.

      A most interesting candidate, who was eventually and largely so, ignored by history, despite all the contraversy he stirred up at the peak of his dubious newsworthiness.

    4. A fascinating and very well made documentary – thank you so much! Though my parents lived through the post WWI era, WWII, and its aftermath, they said a great deal about Enoch Powell (another subject for a People Profile, perhaps?) but little about Mosely, who would have been a very prominent and divisive figure during that time. Mosely was clearly complex (not to mention very priveliged) but I am immensely glad that his success was limited. Seeing those clips of him in his black shirt, ranting to his adoring followers, is ominously reminiscent of Mussolini. The UK would have gone down a very dark path had he been able to convince more people that his way was the right one.

    5. My Grandfather supported him in the late 1930s. Mosely wanted Britain to avoid a second war with Germany. Its a pity he did not succeed in that endeavour.

    6. 32:00 Right! Oswald Mosley just woke up one morning and decided that 'Jews', and by that __ he probably did not mean the Ethiopian and Yemeni Jews __ were to blame for prolonging WW1, …
      We should all forget about the fact that Churchill's main financiers were European Jews!
      Naaaaa! All Henry_Strakosch and Ernest_Cassel got out of rescuing him from bankruptcy was the membership of the Bullingdon Club!

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