🔥 Red Clydeside: Glasgow’s Century of Resistance

Date: July 31st
Category: Radical History | Urban Resistance | Labour Movements


Steel, smoke, and socialism.

For much of the 20th century, Glasgow was a crucible of working-class resistance, nicknamed “Red Clydeside” for its defiant strikes, powerful speeches, and the bright red glow of its radicalism.
It wasn’t just a place. It was a movement — one built in tenements and shipyards, where ideas clanged louder than hammers.

Today, The Time Traveller’s Guild revisits the real Red Clydeside: not just the myths, but the marches, the women, the pickets, and the politics that made the Clyde more than a river — it made it a rallying cry.


📍 Where Is Red Clydeside?

Red Clydeside refers to the stretch of the River Clyde in Glasgow, particularly the industrial heartlands:

  • Govan
  • Partick
  • Clydebank
  • And the working-class communities that powered Scotland’s shipbuilding, engineering, and socialist politics

From the 1910s to the 1940s, it became a hotbed of political organisation, trade unionism, and direct action.


🪧 The Big Moments

🛠️ 1911–12: The Clydebank Singer Strike

Thousands of women walked out of the Singer sewing machine factory. Their demand? A fair wage and an end to arbitrary fines.
🔧 Outcome: Hundreds were sacked — but a generation of female unionists was born.


🧱 1915: The Rent Strikes

Led by Mary Barbour, Helen Crawfurd, and the Glasgow Women’s Housing Association, thousands of tenants — mostly women — refused to pay rent increases during WWI.
🏠 Result: The Rent Restrictions Act was passed in 1915. Barbour would later become one of Glasgow’s first female councillors.


🏭 1919: The 40-Hour Strike & Battle of George Square

On 31 January 1919, 90,000 engineers and workers struck for a shorter working week.
🚓 Riot police charged the crowd. Tanks were deployed.
But Glasgow didn’t back down. The event became legendary — a rare moment when the British government feared a working-class uprising.


🧵 Who Made It Happen?

Red Clydeside was not led by one person, but by a collective of orators, organisers, and everyday Glaswegians. Among them:

  • John Maclean – Marxist schoolteacher, imprisoned for sedition
  • Mary Barbour – organiser, councillor, and icon of housing rights
  • Jimmy Maxton – radical MP and hero of the interwar left
  • Agnes Dollan – suffragette and anti-war campaigner

“The working class are learning that unity is strength — and that resistance is not rebellion, but survival.” – John Maclean, 1919


🧭 Visit Red Clydeside Today

You can still walk in the footsteps of the Clydesiders:

  • 🏛️ People’s Palace, Glasgow Green – artefacts, banners, and working-class history
  • 🧱 Mary Barbour Statue, Govan Cross – unveiled in 2018 after a community campaign
  • 🏗️ Clydebank’s Titan Crane – a symbol of shipbuilding’s industrial might
  • 📚 Mitchell Library – archive of trade union records and Red Clydeside materials

🎒 Guild Tip: Look out for old tenement signage and faded union posters in Govan lanes — time has a habit of leaving clues.


📚 Want to Know More?


💬 Do You Have a Clydeside Connection?

Grandparent in the yards? A family rent strike story? Local union memory from Govan or Clydebank? Tag @TimeTravellersGuild and use #RedClydesideRising — we’ll include your stories in our autumn zine: The People Make the Line.

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