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Beatrice Webb

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
English sociologist, economist, feminist and social reformer (1858–1943)
"Beatrice Potter" redirects here. For the author of children's literature, seeBeatrix Potter.
"Martha Beatrice Webb" redirects here. For the physician, seeMartha Beatrice Webb (medical doctor).

The Lady Passfield
Portrait of Webb, 1894
Born
Martha Beatrice Potter

(1858-01-22)22 January 1858
Died30 April 1943(1943-04-30) (aged 85)
Liphook, Hampshire, England
Occupation(s)Sociologist, economist
Spouse
Parent(s)Richard Potter
Laurencina Heyworth
FamilyCatherine Courtney (sister)
Sir Stafford Cripps (nephew)
Barbara Drake (niece)
Kitty Muggeridge (niece)

Martha Beatrice Webb, Baroness Passfield,FBA (néePotter; 22 January 1858 – 30 April 1943) was an Englishsociologist, economist,feminist andsocial reformer. She was among the founders of theLondon School of Economics and played a crucial role in forming theFabian Society. Additionally, she authored several popular books, with her most notable beingThe Co-operative Movement in Great Britain andIndustrial Democracy, co-authored by her husbandSidney Webb, 1st Baron Passfield, where she coined the term "collective bargaining" as a way to discuss the negotiation process between an employer and alabor union.[1][2] As a feminist and social reformer, she criticised the exclusion of women from various occupations as well as campaigning for the unionisation of female workers, pushing for legislation that allowed for better hours and conditions.[3]

Early life

[edit]

Beatrice Webb (née Potter) was born inStandish House in the village ofStandish, Gloucestershire. She was the youngest of nine daughters of businessmanRichard Potter and Laurencina Heyworth, the daughter of a Liverpool merchant;[4] Laurencina was friends for a time with the prolific Victorian novelistMargaret Oliphant during the 1840s. Both women were campaigning in Liverpool at the time (see Margaret Oliphant,Autobiography, edited by Elizabeth Jay, pages 25–26). Her paternal grandfather wasLiberal Party MPRichard Potter, co-founder of theLittle Circle, which was key in creating theReform Act 1832.

Beatrice faced tragedy with her sisters: one, Blanche, died by suicide in 1905 in her own house; her oldest sister, Lallie, then died due to overdose the next year in 1906. It was believed at the time that both incidents were caused by their marital relationships.[5] Yet, Beatrice struggled with this idea because of her beliefs of gender roles and equalities:

Sidney (left, seated) and Beatrice Webb (second right, seated) with Beatrice's sister Margaret Hobhouse, née Potter, (third left, seated) and Margaret's family; circa 1900

Beatrice freely acknowledged male mental superiority and agreed with Spencer that women's education needed, above all, to include instruction in household duties. She believed that a woman needed definite home duties to fulfill and someone to be dependent on her love and care.[6]

From an early age Webb wasself-taught and cited as important influences the cooperative movement and the philosopherHerbert Spencer.[7] After her mother's death in 1882 she acted as a hostess and companion for her father. In 1882, she began a relationship with twice-widowed Radical politicianJoseph Chamberlain, by then aCabinet minister inWilliam Gladstone's second government. He would not accept her need for independence as a woman and after four years of "storm and stress" their relationship failed.[8]

Marriage in 1892 toSidney Webb established a lifelong "partnership" of shared causes. At the beginning of 1901, Webb wrote that she and Sidney were "still on our honeymoon and every year makes our relationship more tender and complete."[8]

She and her husband were friends with the philosopherBertrand Russell.[9]

My Creed and My Craft

[edit]

Beatrice Webb left an unfinished autobiography, under the general titleMy Creed and My Craft. At her death, aged 85, the only autobiographical work she had published wasMy Apprenticeship (1926). The posthumously issuedOur Partnership (1948) covered the first two decades of her marriage to Sidney Webb between 1892 and 1911 and their collaboration on a variety of public issues.

In the preface to the second work,[10] its editors refer to Webb's:

desire to describe truthfully her lifelong pursuit of a living philosophy, her changes of outlook and ideas, her growing distrust of benevolent philanthropy as a means of redeeming 'poor suffering humanity' and her leaving of the field of abstract economic theory for the then practically unexplored paths of scientific social research.

In 1926, when Webb had begun to prepare the second volume,Our Partnership, only to be repeatedly distracted by other more pressing commitments, the book's editors report her finding it difficult to express "her philosophy of life, her belief in the scientific method, but its purpose guided always by religious emotion."[11]

A pioneer in social research and policymaking

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One of Beatrice's older sisters,Catherine, became a well-known social worker. After Catherine marriedLeonard Courtney, Beatrice took over her work as a voluntary rent-collector in themodel dwellings atKatharine Buildings,Wapping, operated by theEast End Dwellings Company.[12]

Beatrice andSidney Webb working together in 1895

The young Beatrice also assisted her cousin by marriageCharles Booth in his pioneering survey of the Victorian slums of London, work which eventually became the massive 17-volumeLife and Labour of the People of London (1902–1903).

These experiences stimulated a critical attitude to current ideas of philanthropy.

In 1890, Beatrice Potter was introduced toSidney Webb, whose help she sought with her research. They married in 1892, and until her death 51 years later shared political and professional activities. When her father died in January 1892, leaving Potter an endowment of £1,000 a year, she had a private income for life with which to support herself and the research projects she pursued.

The Webbs became active members of theFabian Society. With the Fabians' support, Beatrice Webb co-authored books and pamphlets on socialism and theco-operative movement includingThe History of Trade Unionism (1894) andIndustrial Democracy (1897). In 1895, the Fabians used part of an unexpected legacy of £10,000 from Henry Hutchinson, a solicitor fromDerby, to create theLondon School of Economics and Political Science.[13][14] Beatrice Webb also became one of the founding members of the Fabian Women's Group in 1908. As a member of the Fabian Women's group, she helped push for equal pay and supported the role of women in local government.[15]

Contributions to the theory of the co-operative movement

[edit]

Beatrice Webb made a number of important contributions to the political andeconomic theory of the co-operative movement.

In her 1891 bookThe Cooperative Movement in Great Britain, based on her experiences in Lancashire, she distinguished between "co-operative federalism" and "co-operative individualism". She identified herself as a co-operative federalist, a school of thought which advocatesconsumer co-operative societies. She argued that consumers' co-operatives should be set up asco-operative wholesale societies (by forming co-operatives in which all members are co-operatives, the best historical example being the EnglishCo-operative Wholesale Society) and that thesefederal co-operatives should then acquire farms or factories.

Webb dismissed the idea ofworker co-operatives where the people who did the work and benefited from it had some control over how it was organised, arguing that – at the time she was writing – such ventures had proved largely unsuccessful, at least in ushering in her form of socialism led by volunteer committees of people like herself.[16] Examples of successful worker cooperatives did of course exist, then as now.[citation needed] In some professions they were the norm. However, Webb's final book,The Truth About Soviet Russia (1942), celebratedcentral planning.[citation needed]

She also is credited with introducing the concept of "collective bargaining."[1] "Collective bargaining" defines the process in which unions discuss with their employers the conditions, hours, pay, and safety of their work environment.[17][18]

1909 Minority report to the Royal Commission

[edit]
Main article:Minority report (Poor Law)

For four years Beatrice Webb was a member of theRoyal Commission on the Poor Laws and Relief of Distress 1905-09. TheConservative government ofA. J. Balfour established the commission, which issued its final report to theLiberal government ofH. H. Asquith.[19][20] Beatrice was the lead author of the dissentingminority report. This sketched the outlines of aWelfare State which would:

...secure a national minimum of civilised life ... open to all alike, of both sexes and all classes, by which we meant sufficient nourishment and training when young, a living wage when able-bodied, treatment when sick, and modest but secure livelihood when disabled or aged.

With the minority report, she advocated for more aid towards those who were disabled and supported the use of outside relief for infants inworkhouses, which often were in poor condition and unsafe. TheMinority Report emphasized proper medical care and child-well as provisions needed to thePoor Law.[21]William Beveridge, future author of the 1942Beveridge Report that introduced the welfare state in the United Kingdom, worked as a researcher for the Webbs on the Minority Report.[22] He was later appointed director (1919–1937) of the London School of Economics.

Rivalries on the Left, 1901–1922

[edit]
Chalk drawing of Beatrice Webb byJessie Holiday, circa 1909

The influence of the Webbs on the Fabian Society and its policies was attacked byH. G. Wells. For a time, he joined the Society but was critical of its cautious approach: "They permeate English society with their reputed Socialism about as much as a mouse may be said to permeate a cat."[23] For her part, Beatrice voiced disapproval of Wells' "sordid intrigue" with the feministAmber Reeves, the daughter of a veteran FabianMaud Pember Reeves.[24] Wells responded by lampooning the couple in his 1911 novelThe New Machiavelli as Altiora and Oscar Bailey, a pair of short-sighted, bourgeois manipulators.

Other rivals from theleft of the Fabian Society at that time were theGuild Socialists led by the historian and economistG.D.H. Cole. Cole and his wife Margaret would later run the Fabian Research Bureau.

In 1913, the Webbs andHenry Devenish Harben, husband of suffragist and fellow Fabian,Agnes Harben, co-founded theNew Statesman, a political weekly edited byClifford Sharp with contributions from many philosophers, economists, and politicians of the day, includingGeorge Bernard Shaw andJohn Maynard Keynes.

The Webbs became members of theLabour Party in late 1914. At the end of World War I, Beatrice collaborated with her husband Sidney in his writings and policy statements such asLabour and the New Social Order (1918). She also campaigned for his successful election in 1922 to the parliamentary seat of coastalSeaham, a mine-working community inCounty Durham.

Soviet Communism

[edit]

In 1928, the Webbs moved toLiphook in Hampshire, where they lived until their deaths in the 1940s. Soon Sidney was a minister in the new Labour government. Observing the wider world, Beatrice wrote of "Russian communism and Italian Fascism" as "two sides of the worship of force and the practice of cruel intolerance" and she was disturbed that "this spirit is creeping into the USA and even ... into Great Britain."[25]

The frustrations and disappointments of the next few years – the election of a narrow Labour majority of MPs in May 1929, the Great Depression which began later that year, the agreement of fellow FabianRamsay MacDonald, after the October 1931 election, to form and head aNational Government, thereby splitting the Labour Party – partly explain why Beatrice and Sidney began to look on the USSR and its leader Stalin with different eyes.[original research?]

Beatrice and Sidney Webb during their trip to theSoviet Union in 1932

In 1932, Webb was elected aFellow of the British Academy (FBA); she was the first woman elected to the fellowship.[26] That year, Sidney and Beatrice, now in their 70s, spent two months from 21 May to late July in theSoviet Union. Their views about the Soviet economic experiment were published three years later in a massive volume, over 1,000 pages in length, entitledSoviet Communism: A New Civilisation? (1935). Most of the text was written by Sidney Webb and based on a copious study of publications and statistics provided by the Soviet embassy in London. In 1933 he made a further "fact-finding" trip to the USSR before publication, accompanied by their nieceBarbara Drake, a prominent trade unionist and member of the Fabian Society, and byJohn Cripps, the son of their nephewStafford Cripps.[citation needed]

Historians have criticised the Webbs for her supposition that the methods they had developed in analysing and formulating social policy in Britain could be applied to the Soviet Union. Their book promoted and encouraged an uncritical view of Stalin's conduct, during agrarian centralisation in thefirst five-year plan (1928–1933), the creation of thegulag system, and the extensive purges of the 1930s.[27] Trotskyist historianAl Richardson later described their 1935 account of the USSR as "pure Soviet propaganda at its most mendacious".[28]

According toArchie Brown, there also seemed to be an element of deliberate deception. In the third edition ofSoviet Communism: A New Civilisation (1941), for instance, the Webbs voiced the opinion that in 1937 "strenuous efforts had been made, both in the trade union organisation and in the Communist Party, to cut out the deadwood".[29] This phrase was used to reassure a wider public about the damning accusations against former leading Bolsheviks. In her diaries, Beatrice expressed her disquiet at the opening of theMoscow Trials in the summer of 1936,[30] and after the conviction ofNikolai Bukharin in March 1938.[31]

Soviet Communism: A New Civilization? – in later editions the question mark was dropped, as was any public doubt the Webbs might have about the nature of the USSR – has since been roundly condemned. In the preface to an anthology ofLeft Book Club publications,[32] for instance, British historianA. J. P. Taylor is quoted as callingSoviet Communism: A New Civilization "the most preposterous book ever written about Russia". In the early 1930sMalcolm Muggeridge, one of Beatrice's own family by marriage, and himself the son of a Fabian, told her in no uncertain terms of his horrified disapproval of the Soviet system.[citation needed]

She was among those listed in the German-compiled"Black Book".[33]

Ivan Maisky, theSoviet Union's ambassador to the United Kingdom during much ofWorld War II, was friendly with Webb. In a conversation with Webb on 10 October 1939, Maisky quoted her as saying "Churchill is not a true Englishman, you know. He has Negro blood. You can tell even from his appearance."[34]

Extended family

[edit]
Beatrice and Sidney Webb atPassfield,c. 1923

In 1929 Webb's husband,Sidney Webb, becameBaron Passfield and a member of the House of Lords. Between 1929 and 1931 he served asSecretary of State for the Colonies andSecretary of State for the Dominions in Ramsay MacDonald's Labour government. Beatrice did not refer to herself as Lady Passfield or expect others to do so.

Sidney and Beatrice Webb never had any children. In retirement, Beatrice would reflect on the success of their other progeny.[35] For instance, in 1895 they had founded theLondon School of Economics withGraham Wallas and George Bernard Shaw:

In old age it is one of the minor satisfactions of life to watch the success of your children, literal children or symbolic. The London School of Economics is undoubtedly our most famous one, but theNew Statesman is also creditable—it is the most successful of the general weeklies, actually making a profit on its 25,000 readers, and has absorbed two of its rivals,The Nation and theWeek-End Review.

Meanwhile, the connections by marriage of their numerous nieces and nephews made Beatrice and Sidney part of the emerging new Labour establishment. Beatrice's nephewSir Stafford Cripps, son of her sister Theresa, became a well-known Labour politician in the 1930s and 1940s. He served as British ambassador to Moscow during the Second World War and later asChancellor of the Exchequer underClement Attlee. Margaret, yet another Potter sister, married the Liberal politicianHenry Hobhouse, making Beatrice Webb an aunt of peace activistStephen Henry Hobhouse and of Liberal politicianArthur Hobhouse.[36] Another sister, Blanche, married surgeonWilliam Harrison Cripps, brother to Theresa's husbandCharles Cripps, 1st Baron Parmoor.

A dissonant voice entered the family afterKatherine Dobbs, the daughter of Beatrice's youngest sister Rosalind, married the journalistMalcolm Muggeridge. In the early 1930s, the young couple moved to Moscow, full of enthusiasm for the new Soviet system. Muggeridge's experience of reporting from the Soviet Union for theManchester Guardian, however, made him highly critical of the Webbs' optimistic views of the Soviet Union.[37] On 29 March 1933 Beatrice referred in her diary to "Malcolm's curiously hysterical denunciation of the USSR and all its works in a letter to me...."[38] The following day she noted thatThe ManchesterGuardian had printed "another account of the famine in Russia, which certainly bears out Malcolm's reports."[39]

Yet, wrote Muggeridge, Beatrice "went on wanting to see Kitty and me." On their last visit, Beatrice showed her niece's husband a portrait of Lenin: "She had set the picture up as though it were a Velazquez, with special lighting coming from below."[40]

Death and legacy

[edit]

When Beatrice Webb died in 1943, she was cremated atWoking Crematorium. The casket containing her ashes was buried in the garden of their house in Passfield Corner, as she had requested. Lord Passfield's ashes were also buried there when he died four years later.

Beatrice Webb, 1943

Shortly afterward, the nonagenarianGeorge Bernard Shaw launched an ultimately successfulpetition to have the remains of both moved toWestminster Abbey. They now lie buried in thenave of the Abbey, close to the ashes of their Labour Party colleaguesClement Attlee andErnest Bevin.

Beatrice did not live to see thewelfare state set up by thepost-war Labour government. It was an enduring monument to her research and campaigning, before and after she married Sidney Webb. First outlined in theMinority report (Poor Law) of 1909, it would remain substantially intact until the 1980s. It is not certain that Beatrice Webb would have approved of the manner of its implementation and future management. As her niece Kitty commented:[41]

... although it was Beatrice herself who put the 20th-centuryzeitgeist into its most concrete form, in the Welfare State, something in her remained sturdily Victorian to the very end. "What has to be aimed at is not this or that improvement in material circumstances or physical comfort but an improvement in personal character," she wrote. She believed that citizens who were given benefits by the community ought to make an effort to improve themselves, or at least submit themselves to those who would improve them.

Archives

[edit]

Beatrice Webb's papers, including her diaries, form part of the Passfield archive at the London School of Economics. The Webb Diaries are now digitised and available online at theLSE's Digital Library. Posts about Beatrice Webb regularly appear in the LSE Archives blog, Out of the box.[42]

Writings

[edit]

For a comprehensive bibliography, see Webbs on the Web, hosted by theLondon School of Economics.

Works by Beatrice Webb

[edit]
  • The Co-operative Movement in Great Britain (1891)[43]
  • Women and the Factory Acts (1896)
  • The Abolition of the Poor Law (1918)[44]
  • Wages of Men and Women: Should they be Equal? (1919)
  • My Apprenticeship (1926)[45]
  • A new Reform Bill (1931)[46]
  • Our Partnership (1948), London: Longmans, Green & Co., edited byBarbara Drake & Margaret Cole at the request of Sidney Webb. Covers the period from 1892 up to 1911.
  • "The Diary of Beatrice Webb, 1873–1943", complete typescript and manuscript on microfiche, andIndex to the Diary of Beatrice Webb 1873–1943 with a preface by Matthew Anderson, "The text of the Diary" by Geoffrey Allen, "Historical Introduction" by Dame Margaret Cole DBE, "The Diary as Literature" by Norman Mackenzie, Chronology. (1978), Chadwyck-Healey Ltd. Bishops StortfordISBN 0-85964-052-3
  • The Diaries of Beatrice Webb (2000), selected entries edited by Norman and Jeanne Mackenzie and abridged by Lynn Knight. Published by Virago in conjunction with the LSE: London. Covers period from 1873 to 1943; the diaries are also available in typescript and manuscript facsimile at LSE digital library, Beatrice Webb's diaries.

Works by Beatrice and Sidney Webb

[edit]
  • History of Trade Unionism (1894)
  • Industrial Democracy (1897); translated into Russian by Lenin asThe Theory and Practice of British Trade Unionism, St Petersburg, 1900.
  • The Webbs' Australian Diary (1898)
  • Bibliography of road making and maintenance in Great Britain (1906), a sixpenny pamphlet for theRoads Improvement Association.[47]
  • English Local Government Vol. I-X (1906 through 1929)
  • The Manor and the Borough (1908)
  • The Break-Up of the Poor Law (1909)
  • English Poor-Law Policy (1910)
  • The Co-operative Movement (1914)
  • Works Manager Today (1917)
  • The Consumers' Co-operative Movement (1921)
  • Decay of Capitalist Civilization (1923)
  • Methods of Social Study (1932)
  • Soviet Communism: A New Civilization? (1935, Vol. I, Vol. II, 1st edn. The 2nd and 3rd editions of 1938 and 1941, respectively, dropped the "?" from the title)
  • The Truth About Soviet Russia (1942). The introduction toSoviet Communism (1941), reprinted as a brochure with a preface about the Webbs byGeorge Bernard Shaw, and the text of the 1936 Soviet Constitution, translated byAnna Louise Strong.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"A Timeline of Events in Modern American Labor Relations".Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (United States). Archived fromthe original on 2 August 2010. Retrieved31 January 2013.1891: The term 'collective bargaining' is first used by Mrs. Sidney Webb, a British labor historian.
  2. ^Hameed, Syed M. A.""A Theory of Collective Bargaining". Relations Industrielles / Industrial Relations, vol. 25, no. 3, 1970, pp. 531–51".JSTOR.Archived from the original on 29 February 2024. Retrieved29 February 2024.
  3. ^Caine, Barbara (1982)."Beatrice Webb and the 'Woman Question'".History Workshop.14:23–43.Archived from the original on 2 March 2024. Retrieved29 June 2024.
  4. ^Davis, John. "Webb [née Potter], (Martha) Beatrice".Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press.doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/36799. (Subscription,Wikipedia Library access orUK public library membership required.)
  5. ^Caine, Barbara (1986)."Family History as Women's History: The Sisters of Beatrice Webb"(PDF).Feminist Studies.12 (2):295–319.doi:10.2307/3177970.JSTOR 3177970.
  6. ^Lewis, Jane (1983)."Re-Reading Beatrice Webb's Diary".History Workshop (16):143–146.JSTOR 4288509.Archived from the original on 31 October 2023. Retrieved29 June 2024.
  7. ^"Sidney and Beatrice Webb | British economists".Encyclopædia Britannica.Archived from the original on 1 August 2017. Retrieved25 August 2017.
  8. ^abDiaries of Beatrice Webb (2000), New Year's Day, 1901, p. 244.
  9. ^Russell, Bertrand (2001). Perkins, Ray (ed.).Yours Faithfully, Bertrand Russell: Letters to the Editor 1904–1969. Chicago: Open Court Publishing. p. 16.ISBN 0-8126-9449-X. Retrieved16 November 2007.
  10. ^Webb, Beatrice,Our Partnership, 1948, London: Longmans, Green & Co, p. vi.
  11. ^Webb,Our Partnership, 1948, p. vii.
  12. ^The Diaries of Beatrice Webb (2000), p. 53.
  13. ^The Diaries of Beatrice Webb (2000), 21 September 1894, p. 186.
  14. ^Kitty Muggeridge andRuth Adam,Beatrice Webb: A Life, 1858–1943, 1967, London: Secker & Warburg, pp. 151–156.
  15. ^Caine, Barbara. "Beatrice Webb and the 'Woman Question.'” History Workshop, no. 14, 1982, pp. 36.JSTOR 4288429. Retrieved 28 February 2024.
  16. ^Potter, Beatrice,The Co-operative Movement in Great Britain, London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1891.
  17. ^American Federation of Labor. "Collective Bargaining." America's Unions | AFL-CIO, aflcio.org/what-unions-do/empower-workers/collective-bargaining. Accessed 28 February 2024.
  18. ^Susan Hayter (30 May 2011)."The Role of Collective Bargaining in the Global Economy: Negotiating for Social Justice"(PDF).International Labour Organization.Archived(PDF) from the original on 13 March 2024. Retrieved28 February 2024.
  19. ^Woman's Hour discussion on 1909 Minority Report , BBC Radio 4, 2008.
  20. ^Wallis, Ed (editor).From the Workhouse to Welfare Fabian Society and Webb Memorial Trust, 2009.
  21. ^Platt, Lucinda. "Beatrice Webb's Minority Report." LSE History, 4 Oct. 2023, blogs.lse.ac.uk/lsehistory/2018/02/23/beatrice-webb-william-beveridge-poverty-and-the-minority-report-on-the-poor-law/. Accessed 28 February 2024.
  22. ^Harris, Jose, "The Webbs and Beveridge", inFrom Workhouse to Welfare (Fabian Society, 2009).
  23. ^Quoted in Muggeridge and Adam, p. 168.
  24. ^Webb, Beatrice (1984).MacKenzie, Jeanne (ed.).The Diary of Beatrice Webb: "The power to alter things," 1905-1924. p. 120.
  25. ^Muggeridge and Adam,Beatrice Webb: A Life, 1967, p. 225.
  26. ^"Current Topics".The Economic Journal.43 (169):174–175. 1933.JSTOR 2224094.
  27. ^See, e.g.,Conquest, Robert,The Great Terror (1968 and subsequent editions).
  28. ^Al Richardson, "Introduction" toC. L. R. James,World Revolution 1917–1936: The Rise and Fall of the Communist International. Humanities Press, 1937ISBN 0391037900.
  29. ^Archie Brown,The Rise and Fall of Communism (2009), p. 122.
  30. ^See diary entry – 28 August 1936, pp. 330–336 of archived typescripts.
  31. ^Diary entry – 8 March 1938, pp. 36–37 of archived typescripts.
  32. ^laity, Paul,Left Book Club Anthology Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2001ISBN 0575072210 (p. xvii).
  33. ^Schellenberg, Walter.Invasion, 1940: The Nazi Invasion Plan for Britain. Little Brown Book Group. p. 259.
  34. ^Maisky, Ivan (2016).Gorodetsky, Gabriel (ed.).The Maisky diaries : The Wartime Revelations of Stalin's Ambassador in London (Paperback ed.). New Haven and London: Yale university Press. p. 234.ISBN 978-0-300-22170-1.
  35. ^"Beatrice Webb's typescript diary, 1 January 1935-27 December 1937".digital.library.lse.ac.uk.
  36. ^Hochschild, Adam,To end all wars: a story of loyalty and rebellion, 1914–1918, Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011, p. 277,ISBN 0618758283.
  37. ^See Malcolm Muggeridge,Chronicles of Wasted Time: Pt 1, The Green Stick, London: Fontana (pbk), 1981. Chapter 5, 'Who Whom?', pp. 285–299. Also hisWinter in Moscow (1934).
  38. ^The Diaries of Beatrice Web (abridged, 2000), p. 514.
  39. ^The Diaries of Beatrice Webb (abridged, 2000), p. 514.
  40. ^Malcolm Muggeridge,Chronicles of Wasted Time: Pt 1, The Green Stick, London: Fontana (pbk), 1981. Chapter 4, 'The Pursuit of Righteousness', p. 165.
  41. ^Kitty Muggeridge & Ruth Adams,Beatrice Webb: A life, 1858–1943, London: Secker & Warburg, 1967, p. 177.
  42. ^"Posts Tagged 'Webbs'".Out of the box. London School of Economics. Archived fromthe original on 19 April 2010. Retrieved18 August 2024.
  43. ^"The Co-operative Movement in Great Britain"Archived 1 March 2024 at theWayback Machine,Britannica.
  44. ^"The abolition of the poor law", LSE Digital Library.
  45. ^"My Apprenticeship", via Google Books.
  46. ^"A new Reform Bill", LSE Digital Library.
  47. ^"Full text of 'Bibliography of road making and maintenance in Great Britain'". Retrieved21 March 2022 – via Internet Archive.

Further reading

[edit]
  • Cole, Margaret, et al.The Webbs and their work (1949)
  • Davanzati, Guglielmo Forges, and Andrea Pacella. "Sidney and Beatrice Webb: Towards an Ethical Foundation of the Operation of the Labour Market."History of Economic Ideas (2004): 25–49
  • Farnham, David. "Beatrice and Sidney Webb and the Intellectual Origins of British Industrial Relations".Employee Relations (2008). 30: 534–552.
  • Gahan, Peter.Bernard Shaw and Beatrice Webb on Poverty and Equality in the Modern World, 1905–1914 (2017)
  • Hamilton, Mary Agnes.Sidney and Beatrice Webb: a study in contemporary biography (1933).online
  • Harrison, Royden.The Life and Times of Sydney and Beatrice Webb, 1858-1905 (2001)online
  • Kaufman, Bruce E. "Sidney and Beatrice Webb's Institutional Theory of Labor Markets and Wage Determination".Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society 52.3 (2013): 765–791.online
  • Kidd, Alan J. "Historians or polemicists? How the Webbs wrote their history of the English poor laws",Economic History Review (1987) .40#3 pp. 400–417.
  • MacKenzie, Norman Ian, and Jeanne MacKenzie.The First Fabians (Quartet Books, 1979)
  • Radice, Lisanne.Beatrice and Sidney Webb: Fabian Socialists (Springer, 1984)online
  • Wrigley, Chris. "The Webbs Working on Trade Union History",History Today (May 1987), Vol. 37 Issue 5, pp. 51–56; focuses mostly on Beatrice.

Primary sources

[edit]
  • Mackenzie, Norman, ed.The Letters of Sidney and Beatrice Webb (3 volumes. Cambridge University Press, 1978, pp. xvii, 453; xi, 405; ix, 482)
    • Volume 1. Apprenticeships 1873–1892 (1978)
    • Volume 2. Partnership 1892–1912 (1978)
    • Volume 3. Pilgrimage, 1912–1947 (1978)

External links

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