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I'm Backing Britain

I'm Backing Britain was a brief patriotic campaign, which flourished in early 1968 and was aimed at boosting the British economy. The campaign started spontaneously when five Surbiton secretaries volunteered to work an extra half-hour each day without pay to boost productivity and urged others to do the same. The invitation received an enormous response and a campaign took off spectacularly; it became a nationwide movement within a week. Trade unions were suspicious of, or even opposed to, the campaign, considering it as an attempt to extend working hours surreptitiously and to hide inefficiency by management.

I'm Backing Britain campaign badge

The campaign received official endorsement by the Prime Minister, Harold Wilson, but it found that being perceived as government-endorsed was a mixed blessing. The Union Flag logo encouraged by the campaign became highly visible on the high streets, and attempts were made to take over the campaign by Robert Maxwell, who wanted to change its focus into an appeal to 'Buy British', but the campaign's own T-shirts were made in Portugal. After a few months without any noticeable effect on individual companies or the economy generally, interest flagged amid much embarrassment about some of the ways in which the campaign had been pursued and supported.

It has come to be regarded as an iconic example of a failed attempt to transform British economic prospects.

Economic background

In 1967, the British economy suffered from several difficulties. Despite tax increases announced in July 1966, the 1967 budget had set the greatest deficit in post-war history of £1,000,000,000.[1] Each month, the Board of Trade published figures of the 'balance of trade' between exports and imports which seemed to show an ever-increasing deficit.[2] The closure of the Suez Canal after the Six-Day War hit exporters, as did an unofficial dock strike, which broke out at the end of September.[3] Having put up the bank rate to 6 percent on 19 October,[4] on 18 November, the government abandoned three years of attempting to maintain the exchange rate and devalued the pound sterling from $2.80 to $2.40. Although it was an economic defeat, devaluation was perceived as an export opportunity that British industry needed to seize.

Arising out of devaluation, John Boyd-Carpenter (Conservative Member of Parliament for Kingston-upon-Thames) wrote to The Times in a letter published on 13 December 1967 suggesting, "If a number of people, particularly in responsible positions, would set by an example by sacrificing say the first Saturday of every month and working on that morning without extra pay, profits or overtime, it would give an example to others at home, and show the world that we were in earnest". He complained that capital equipment stood idle from Friday afternoon to Monday morning.[5]

Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd

On 27 December 1967, Fred Price[6] (Marketing Director of Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd) sent out a memo headed "General progress report", which assessed the company's economic prospects. Inspired by Boyd-Carpenter,[7] he wrote that the balance of payments deficit would disappear overnight if the working population of the United Kingdom worked a five-and-a-half-day week without demanding higher incomes for the extra half-day. Price said that Britain would become once more the wealthiest country in the world.

The memo was received by five secretaries working in the company's head office in Surbiton, Valerie White, Joan Southwell, Carol Ann Fry, Christine French and Brenda Mumford.[8] The next morning, they discussed it and Southwell said that she was willing to work an extra half-day a week. The others agreed, and White took the initiative of writing a reply, which she gave reference VW/OD GEN.[6] The reply said, "What about starting this scheme of a five-and-a-half-day week? Let us be the first company to start the ball rolling". After discussing the suggestion with the other members of staff, on 29 December the 240 employees at the head office voted to report for work at 8.30 a.m. instead of 9 a.m. They also made contact with the workers employed at the company's factory in Havant, Hampshire, to encourage them to do the same.[8]

Campaign snowballs

Before the workers had a chance to work their first extra half-hour, their campaign had already begun "snowballing fast". Over the weekend of 30–31 December 1967, five other companies had already decided to follow their example, based in Portsmouth, Southend, Bicester and Manchester; others were telephoning to show their interest. The Duke of Edinburgh sent a telegram describing the campaign as "the most heartening news I heard in 1967" and wishing it success.[9] There was a full turnout at 8:30 a.m. on 1 January at the Surbiton offices, and Havant worked their extra half-hour at the end of the day.[10] Working with the company's managing director, Alan O'Hea, the five secretaries began to think up a slogan. After rejecting "I'm Behind Britain" for having the wrong message, they settled on "I'm Backing Britain".[6] O'Hea then ordered (from Norprint of Boston, who supplied them free[10]) 100,000 badges featuring a Union Flag with their slogan written across the centre and began writing to 30,000 employers to encourage them. The workers contacted leading political and industrial figures to ask for suggestions as to how others could help.[9]

Advertising agency DPBT bought a full-page advert in The Times of 3 January 1968 offering their spare time, free, to make commercials backing the campaign.[11] All three major political party leaders sent their support, and an all-party press conference promoted the campaign on 5 January.[12] Not all companies joining the campaign did so by working extra unpaid hours, as some cancelled projected price increases and waived fees. The campaign extended to Wales, where the Welsh language slogan was not a direct translation but instead "Rwy'n Bacio Cymru" ("I'm Backing Wales").[13]

Concerns

While telegrams of congratulation continued to flood into Colt, the British Productivity Council was sceptical of its effectiveness. The Council pointed to the difference between productivity and output and stated that each individual firm must consider what would be appropriate in its circumstances depending on its "agreements between management and working people".

Trades Union Congress general secretary George Woodcock, while welcoming the "very good spirit" of the campaign, said that the trade unions would not foster it and that some unions would strongly oppose it. The Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU) shop stewards at Colt's factory in Havant carefully said that workers could work the extra half-hour without pay but that it would not prejudice any decision taken by the AEU national executive.[14] Confederation of British Industry President John Davies thought the campaign could be a kind of window-dressing such as he had recently criticised but thought it should be encouraged because of the effect it might have on people's minds.[15]

Contrasting with the generally positive reaction from politicians, Conservative MP Enoch Powell described the campaign as silly and dangerous. He observed, "I am not accusing the Government of having suborned those Surrey typists, but the Government could not have wished for a better reinforcement for their campaign to instil into the people of Britain the conviction that it is all their own fault".[16]

Trade union reaction

On 3 January, the AEU's Portsmouth branch ordered its members not to participate in the campaign, with its district secretary Rory McCarthy explaining that "there are many reasons why the union is against giving buckshee half hours to employers" and that employers might use it to hide inefficiencies. The workers at the factory immediately rebelled, with works convener Harry Tyler saying "no one likes being told what to do with their free time by the union" and said that some who were opposed had changed their view because of the union's attitude.[17] Tyler was removed from his post as union branch chairman by a vote of no confidence on 5 January after members of the branch from companies not taking part in the campaign went to the regular branch meeting.[18] Some of the secretaries who started the campaign appeared on television discussing the trade union reaction with union leaders; the trade union leaders came across as talking down to the secretaries, an attitude that was felt to have helped the campaign.[19]

The AEU national executive instructed its members to have nothing to do with unpaid overtime, setting up a direct confrontation with the factory where more than half of the union members signed a petition backing the campaign and supporting Tyler.[16] The union's Portsmouth district committee then convened a secret court in early February, which convicted four shop stewards at Colt of discrediting the union and imposed punishments suspending the men from holding office in the union for between one and five years.[20] On hearing the news, forty Conservative backbench MPs put down a motion in the House of Commons demanding government action to "stop this type of petty trade union tyranny, which is so completely contrary to the best traditions of the freedom-loving British trade union movement".[21]

Other trade unionists were generally sceptical. Clive Jenkins, general secretary of the Association of Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs, thought it was a "confidence trick" and observed that "when the British ruling class is in trouble it wraps itself in the Union Jack".[22] Twenty years later, the managing director of Colt admitted that he had received hate mail about the campaign and had arranged for the women to be chaperoned.[6]

Press comment

Popular newspapers backed the campaign enthusiastically and praised the workers behind it. As early as 30 December 1967, the Daily Express ran the headline "Five Girls Britain Can be Proud of" over a picture of the five originators with Fred Price.[23] The Daily Mirror welcomed the spread of the campaign as its lead story on 3 January.[24] Despite its traditional Labour and trade union sympathies, it supported the Colt shop stewards against the union leadership.[25] A Mirror editorial on 5 January declared that "the patriotic truth about these rule-book dominated trade union sourpusses is that they are incapable of recognising true patriotism when they see it".[26]

The Economist wrote on 6 January that on hearing of the campaign, "the fashionable response in many sophisticated circles was a giggle", but it had transformed into "something louder than a grunt of admiration". The newspaper concluded that the campaign "may very well have accomplished, in the past week, the extraordinary feat of edging a national mood just an odd half-degree in the right direction".[19] Likewise, the Financial Times regarded it as "a beacon of light in an otherwise dismal economic and industrial prospect" but encouraged the diversion of the campaign into opposing absenteeism and restrictive practices as well as encouraging individuals "to identify their efforts with the success or failure of the country as a whole".[27]

A week later, the Economist leader was slightly more wary about the campaign and saw it as a symptom of widespread disenchantment with politics and thinking Britain lucky that "there is no demagogue of sufficient ability around to exploit it".[28] The New Statesman admitted that "in strictly economic terms", the campaign to work extra hours made sense, but pointed to some of the oddities of the campaign, including the Birmingham betting shop, which had opened early as a contribution to the production drive, and the Portsmouth workers, who demanded to leave early so they could see a television programme about the scheme.[29]

Popular campaign

Theme song

On Monday 8 January, Pye Records issued a 45 rpm single of the song "I'm Backing Britain" supporting the campaign. Written by Tony Hatch and Jackie Trent, and sung by Bruce Forsyth, the chorus included "The feeling is growing, so let's keep it going, the good times are blowing our way". All involved in making the single took cuts in their fees or royalties so that the single sold for 5 shillings instead of the going rate of 7s 4+12d. Forsyth happily endorsed the campaign: "The country has always done its best when it is up against the wall. If everyone realises what we are up against we can get out of trouble easily."[30] However, the song did not make the charts;[31] it sold only 7319 copies.[32] Reviewing the single, Derek Johnson of the New Musical Express commented "If you fancy five bob's worth of propaganda, good luck to you."[33]

Flags

The most visible manifestation of the campaign was in the Union Flags, which begin to be put on shopping bags. Even the Prime Minister noted that everyone seemed to be carrying them.[34] Postmaster General Edward Short encouraged the Royal Mail to introduce an "I'm Backing Britain" franking mark,[35] which was used on 84 million letters passing through 125 Post Offices between 9 and 29 February.[36] Increased visibility of the Union Flag distressed some commentators. Philip French, writing in the New Statesman, described being "constantly confronted" by the flag as "one of the more painful aspects" of the campaign.[37]

Donations

The campaign found expression in the giving of conscience money to the Exchequer, as noted by The Guardian's Financial Editor William Davis;[38] in the middle of January, it was observed that every postal delivery to the Treasury contained letters offering gifts. If the letter specified that the money was to pay off the Government debt, the funds were paid into the Debt Redemption Fund; otherwise the Consolidated Fund was the beneficiary.[39] Disc jockey Jimmy Savile found his own way to support the campaign by volunteering to work nine days as a hospital porter at Leeds General Infirmary over two months, stating that at his rate of pay, nine days' work would have earned him £1,600 (equivalent to £30,000 in 2021).[40][41]

Portuguese T-shirts

The campaign took a knock when the London wholesaler Scott Lester ordered thousands of white T-shirts on which it screen-printed the "I'm Backing Britain" slogan; the shirts had been made in Portugal. Scott Lester's marketing director explained that "we just cannot find a British T-shirt which will give us the same quality at a price which will compare" and that the shirts would have to retail at £1 if British sources were used.[42] Labour MP Charles Mapp urged the Government to ban the shirts.[43]

Poet Laureate

The newly appointed Poet Laureate, Cecil Day-Lewis, inaugurated his appointment with a poem entitled "Now and Then" supporting the campaign. It was commissioned by the Daily Mail and appeared on the newspaper's front page on 5 January;[44] The poem compared Britain's economic plight in 1968 with the Blitz and ended:

To work then, islanders, as men and women
Members one of another, looking beyond
Mean rules and rivalries towards the dream you could
Make real, of glory, common wealth, and home.

— Cecil Day-Lewis, "Now and Then", [45]

Day-Lewis's choice of subject and the content of his poem were criticised. Bernard Levin later wrote that the poem "made many regret their impulsive rejoicing at the death of his predecessor".[46]

Takeover

Such was the response coming into Colt that they found themselves overwhelmed and needed someone else to take it over. It asked the Industrial Society, a nonpartisan body to promote the best use of human resources in commerce and industry, which agreed and began to set up an organisation to run it.[47] The society recruited 11 extra full-time staff in January 1968 for the campaign,[48] and appointed Admiral of the Fleet Sir Caspar John as its figurehead.[49] The campaign was handled on a day-to-day basis by Mark Wolfson, the Head of Youth Services for the Society.

The Guardian's Financial Editor William Davis had already noted in his column of 10 January that attention was moving away from the idea of providing free labour.[38] The Industrial Society also stressed that working extra half-hours was "a tiny part" of the national campaign and criticised people who tried to make anti-union propaganda out of the reaction to the case. Industrial Society director John Garnett pointed to tanker drivers who had switched from 56 hours driving slowly per week to 42 hours of faster driving.[48] The Society convened a group of industrialists and leading trade unionists to reshape the official aims of the campaign.[50] The Society found it difficult to make progress in getting the campaign adopted in more workplaces because of suspicion about their motives. A campaign adviser told the Daily Mirror that many assumed they were connected to the Labour Party and "without its political flavour, I am sure the campaign would have been taken a lot more seriously".[51]

Robert Maxwell's 'Buy British' campaign

According to his biographer Joe Haines, the Labour Member of Parliament Robert Maxwell had the idea for a popular 'Buy British' campaign around the same time as the 'I'm Backing Britain' campaign emerged. Through an intermediary, Maxwell approached broadcaster David Frost, who gave a personal donation of £1,000 and invited Maxwell to appear on his television show on 5 January.[52] On television Maxwell told viewers to "think before buying. Buy the home product or service first whenever you can, even if it means buying less for a time". Maxwell tried to amalgamate his campaign with that of the Industrial Society, but the Society refused him.[53] He therefore set up a rival "Help Britain Group".

Maxwell obtained letters of support from well-known personalities and launched his campaign with full-page press adverts on 7 February. The adverts, topped with pictures of the three main party leaders, urged readers to "Act on just six of the uncranky suggestions on this page" and listed those who had supported him.[54]

One of those named, Bernard Delfont, was upset when his support was revealed, feeling that Maxwell should have asked him before doing so.[55] Critics pointed to the fact that Maxwell's Pergamon Press printed a large number of its textbooks and scientific journals in Eastern European countries.[53]

According to Maxwell's widow, Elizabeth, his campaign won "the hearts and minds of countless ordinary workers around Britain".[56] However Maxwell dropped the 'Buy British' part of his campaign by the end of February (retitling it 'Sell British, Help Britain, Help Yourself'),[57] and he wound up the whole thing in March. Maxwell's unofficial biographer, Tom Bower, noted that Maxwell succeeded in becoming the nationally recognised personality of the whole 'Backing Britain' campaign,[58] but former Maxwell editor Roy Greenslade noted that Maxwell was "a rogue politician" whose protectionist campaign was a "fruitless [cause]".[59]

Political influence

At an after-dinner speech in Burnley on 8 January, Prime Minister Harold Wilson criticised those who were "complaining that the other fellow is not pulling his weight" including trade unionists who pointed to the failures of individual employers. Wilson declared "What we want is 'back Britain', not back-biting".[60] Wilson, who later wrote that the campaign "was a helpful and robust response to the gloom and near-defeatism" after devaluation,[34] put Edmund Dell, Under-Secretary at the Department of Economic Affairs, in charge of government assistance. Dell visited Colt on 8 January 1968[47] but kept his assistance largely concealed.[61]

Cabinet minister Richard Crossman wrote in his diary on 7 January that the expanding campaign was a "political windfall" but that it was "something we should have nothing to do with".[62] The Labour Party found itself in difficulty when it ordered 2,000 posters with the slogan "Back Britain with Labour" for local Labour Parties to display. After a complaint from a member of the Industrial Society, the posters were withdrawn.[49] The Industrial Society also reported resisting an attempt by the Conservative Party to "borrow" the slogan for political purposes.[63]

Campaign winds down

After the AEU banned the four Colt shop stewards from office, the shop stewards recommended to the workers at the Havant factory on 10 February that they stop working unpaid overtime because of the strife it had brought to the union, but the works director thought that the workers would in fact continue and pointed to the fact that the AEU was not the only union present. Joan Southwell, one of the original five secretaries at the head office, said that they would definitely continue as "we are all very solid about this in spite of the union disagreement".[64] However, on 12 February the workers decided by a narrow majority to return to normal working hours.[65]

In early February, The Times went round to ask supermarket chains what the campaign was achieving and found that it varied between "very little" and "none at all".[66] By the middle of March, the Industrial Society was hinting that it needed a grant from the government to keep going. It had encouraged local civic leaders across the country to set up local committees of industrialists and trade unionists.[63] The television series "Dad's Army", the opening episode of which was recorded on 15 April 1968, began with a contemporary scene in which Alderman Mainwaring was the chairman of the Walmington-on-Sea "I'm Backing Britain" campaign.

Another reference to the campaign appeared in the title of a newspaper comic strip collection. From a distance, its title appeared to read The Perishers Back Britain. Only on closer inspection could the full title be read: The Perishers: Back Again to Pester Britain.

The Sunday Times ran a large article by Nicholas Tomalin on 3 March about "the serious and comic history of a patriotic idea". Tomalin quoted one of the original Surbiton typists as saying that "we got mixed-up when asked horrid questions about trade unions. Thanks to all the interviews and things, we just didn't get any typing done".[67] Also in March, the campaign moved from the Industrial Society's headquarters at Bryanston Square to rent-free offices donated by National Cash Register. It was immediately noted that National Cash Register was a wholly owned subsidiary of an American corporation.[68] The Industrial Society's staff working on the campaign were down to four in May 1968.[69]

Maxwell declared his campaign was officially over on 5 August. The Industrial Society was still receiving about 15 letters a day, but its campaign was limited to sending out badges and promotional material to people who had requested them, and it declared that the campaign office would close at the end of September.[70]

Retrospectively, Bernard Levin saw that the enthusiasm had subsided "after a month or two" and that the badges and slogans were seen no more.[71]

Reaction

There was a widespread feeling, even while the campaign was going on, that it was fundamentally risible. New Statesman columnist Philip French thought its "jingoism and intellectual dishonesty" was offensive and felt that the excessive press coverage defied comment "other than the gesture of laughing at" it.[37] The magazine itself ran a one-off column, to go with its long-established "This England" column, featuring press cuttings highlighting absurd aspects of the campaign.[72] The Communist Morning Star newspaper published a parody of the Maxwell advert, which claimed to be "non-political, non-partisan and nonsensical" and proclaimed the support of nonsense poets Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll.[73] Paul McCartney wrote a parody song called "I'm Backing the UK", which eventually became "Back in the U.S.S.R." on the Beatles' "White Album" (1968).[74][75]

The first episode of what was to be the long-running Dad's Army sitcom, shown on 31 July 1968, begins with a pre-title sequence flashforward showing the lead characters at a dinner to launch the Walmington-on-Sea "I'm Backing Britain" campaign event. At the conclusion of the film Carry On... Up the Khyber, made during the summer and opening in November 1968, the raising of a Union Flag with the "I'm Backing Britain" slogan is greeted by Peter Butterworth turning to camera and saying: "Of course, they're all raving mad, you know!"

See also

BBC Radio 4 broadcast in September 2018 a 45-minute radio play We're Backing Britain by David Morley, dramatising the events.[76]

References

  1. ^ "New Thinking at the Treasury" (leader column), The Times, 13 April 1967, p. 23.
  2. ^ A monthly average of a £9m deficit in 1966 and in the first quarter of 1967 increased to £40m in the second quarter, £27m in August, and £52m in September. See Peter Jay, "Trade deficit increases to £52m", The Times, 13 October 1967, p. 17.
  3. ^ "Dock strikes stop one third of exports", The Times, 13 October 1967, p. 17.
  4. ^ Keith Payne, "6% Bank rate to defend pound", The Times, 20 October 1967, p. 19.
  5. ^ John Boyd-Carpenter, "Why the pound is weak" (letter), The Times, 13 December 1967, p. 11.
  6. ^ a b c d Andrew Lycett, "The famous five: any make as long as it's British" (Monday Page), The Times, 4 January 1988, p.15.
  7. ^ The Guardian, 2 January 1968, p. 14.
  8. ^ a b "Staff vote for unpaid work", The Times, 30 December 1967, p. 3.
  9. ^ a b "'Half-hour extra' plan snowballs", The Times, 1 January 1968, p. 1.
  10. ^ a b Eric Silver, "'Back Britain' drive said to be a gimmick", The Guardian, 2 January 1968, p. 1.
  11. ^ "Valerie, Brenda, Joan, Carol and Christine, we love you." (advertisement), The Times, 3 January 1968, p. 3.
  12. ^ "'Back Britain': pace grows", The Times, 6 January 1968, p. 3.
  13. ^ "Car stickers now proclaim 'Backing Wales'", The Guardian, 22 January 1968, p. 4.
  14. ^ "Support for 'back Britain' move", The Times, 2 January 1968, p. 2.
  15. ^ Eric Silver, "'Back Britain' drive said to be a gimmick", The Guardian, 2 January 1968, p. 14.
  16. ^ a b Philip Howard, "Colt workers defy union ruling", The Times, 11 January 1968, p. 1.
  17. ^ "'Work without pay' men defy union", The Times, 4 January 1968, p. 1.
  18. ^ "'Back Britain' Man Ousted", The Times, 6 January 1968, p. 1.
  19. ^ a b "The Surbiton Revolution", The Economist, 6 January 1968, p. 12.
  20. ^ "Back Britain men tried in secret", The Times, 7 February 1968, p. 1.
  21. ^ "MPs' call to stop 'union tyranny'", The Times, 8 February 1968, p. 2.
  22. ^ "Back Britain drive called a trick", The Times, 2 February 1968, p. 4.
  23. ^ Daily Express, Saturday 30 December 1967, p. 1. Seen in the background of this picture 20 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, taken on 4 January 1968.
  24. ^ "Rush to Join 'No Pay' Workers", Daily Mirror, 3 January 1968, p. 1.
  25. ^ "'Work for Britain' Men Defy AEU Ban", Daily Mirror, 4 January 1968, p. 1; "AEU Sack Back-Britain Union Boss", Daily Mirror, 6 January 1968, p. 1.
  26. ^ "The patriots and the sourpusses" (Leader), Daily Mirror, 5 January 1968, p. 2.
  27. ^ Leader, 5 January 1968. Quoted in David Kynaston, The Financial Times: A Centenary History (Penguin Books, 1988), p. 367.
  28. ^ "Who's Really Backing Britain?", The Economist, 13 January 1968, p. 14.
  29. ^ "From Surbiton to Whitehall", New Statesman, 12 January 1968, p. 29.
  30. ^ "Song for the typists" (Business Diary), The Times, 8 January 1968, p. 19.
  31. ^ Craig Brown, "Way of the world: A mutual case of wow", The Daily Telegraph, 4 June 2005, p. 23.
  32. ^ "Who's still Backing Britain?", Daily Mirror, 3 May 1968, p. 17
  33. ^ Johnson, Derek (20 January 1968). "Top singles reviewed" (PDF). New Musical Express: 4. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  34. ^ a b Harold Wilson, "The Labour Government 1964–1970: A Personal Record" (Weidenfeld & Nicolson and Michael Joseph, 1971), p. 481.
  35. ^ Hansard, House of Commons 5th Series, vol. 760, col. 622.
  36. ^ Hansard, House of Commons 5th series, vol. 762, col. 1570.
  37. ^ a b Philip French, "Put Out Less Flags", New Statesman, 19 January 1968, p. 85.
  38. ^ a b William Davis, "Taking stock of THAT campaign", The Guardian, 10 January 1968, p. 10.
  39. ^ George Hawthorne, "Almost every post boosts Exchequer", The Guardian, 12 January 1968, p. 4.
  40. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  41. ^ Michael Parkin, "A DJ sets the hospital spinning", The Guardian, 10 January 1968, p. 3.
  42. ^ George Hawthorne, "Portugal's shirts on Britain's backs", The Guardian, 13 January 1968, p. 1. See also "Branded in Britain", BBC News online, 26 February 2002.
  43. ^ Hansard, House of Commons 5th series, vol. 758 col. 124.
  44. ^ Ian Hamilton, "Snoop Doggy Dogg for Laureate", London Review of Books, 7 January 1999.
  45. ^ "", Time, 12 January 1968.
  46. ^ Bernard Levin, "The Pendulum Years: Britain and the Sixties" (Jonathan Cape, 1970), p. 426.
  47. ^ a b "Sponsor to Run 'Back Britain'", The Times, 9 January 1968, p. 2.
  48. ^ a b Henry Stanhope, "'Back Britain' leaders not upset by factory decision", The Times, 12 February 1968, p. 2. Joe Haines, "Maxwell", Macdonald, 1988, p. 277, gives the number of full time staff engaged by the Industrial Society as 25.
  49. ^ a b Jonas Smith, "Labour drops 'back Britain' posters", The Times, 25 January 1968, p. 1.
  50. ^ John Fairhall, "Reshaping the aims of Backing Britain movement", The Guardian, 13 January 1968, p. 2.
  51. ^ Daily Mirror, 1 February 1968.
  52. ^ Joe Haines, "Maxwell", Macdonald, 1988, p. 271.
  53. ^ a b Tom Bower, "Maxwell: The Outsider", Aurum Press, 1988, p. 109.
  54. ^ How to Help Britain and Yourself Campaign advert, The Times, 7 February 1968, p. 3.
  55. ^ Joe Haines, "Maxwell", Macdonald, 1988, p. 273.
  56. ^ Elizabeth Maxwell, "A Mind of My Own", Sidgwick and Jackson, 1994, p. 372.
  57. ^ Joe Haines, "Maxwell", Macdonald, 1988, p. 274.
  58. ^ Tom Bower, "Maxwell: The Outsider", Aurum Press, 1988, p. 110.
  59. ^ Roy Greenslade, "Maxwell", Birch Lane, 1992, p. 38.
  60. ^ John Chartres, "Wilson Joins 'I Back Britain'", The Times, 9 January 1968, p. 1.
  61. ^ Robert Sheldon, "Dell, Edmund Emanuel" in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 2 March 2008.
  62. ^ Richard Crossman, "The Crossman Diaries" (Condensed version), Magnum Books, 1979, p. 439.
  63. ^ a b "Back Britain group may seek aid", The Times, 22 March 1968, p. 5.
  64. ^ Henry Stanhope, "'Back Britain' leaders not upset by factory decision", The Times, 12 February 1968, p. 2.
  65. ^ "AEF men end free working", The Times, 13 February 1968, p. 3.
  66. ^ "Business Diary", The Times, 6 February 1968, p. 21.
  67. ^ Tomalin did not identify which of the five had made this remark. See Sunday Times, 3 March 1968; Tomalin's article is also reprinted in "Nicholas Tomalin reporting" (Andre Deutsch, 1975), p. 254-69.
  68. ^ "Business Diary", The Times, 22 March 1968, p. 25.
  69. ^ Joe Haines, "Maxwell", Macdonald, 1988, p. 277.
  70. ^ Christine Eade, "'Backing Britain' campaign over", The Guardian, 6 August 1968, p. 2.
  71. ^ Bernard Levin, "The Pendulum Years: Britain and the Sixties" (Jonathan Cape, 1970), p. 427.
  72. ^ "Backing Britain", New Statesman, 19 January 1968, p. 69.
  73. ^ Morning Star, 8 February 1968.
  74. ^ MacDonald 2005, pp. 309–10.
  75. ^ Schaffner 1978, p. 113.
  76. ^ Writer: David Morley; Director: Sean Grundy; Producer: Richard Clemmow (25 September 2018). "We're Backing Britain". Afternoon Drama. BBC. BBC Radio 4. Retrieved 25 September 2018.

External links

  • Our history by the Colt Group (formerly Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd)
  • London Line news video on the campaign including interviews with Colt Group staff
  • Buy British Independent British site supporting British Manufacturing
  • Bruce Forsyth - "I'm Backing Britain" at youtube.com

backing, britain, brief, patriotic, campaign, which, flourished, early, 1968, aimed, boosting, british, economy, campaign, started, spontaneously, when, five, surbiton, secretaries, volunteered, work, extra, half, hour, each, without, boost, productivity, urge. I m Backing Britain was a brief patriotic campaign which flourished in early 1968 and was aimed at boosting the British economy The campaign started spontaneously when five Surbiton secretaries volunteered to work an extra half hour each day without pay to boost productivity and urged others to do the same The invitation received an enormous response and a campaign took off spectacularly it became a nationwide movement within a week Trade unions were suspicious of or even opposed to the campaign considering it as an attempt to extend working hours surreptitiously and to hide inefficiency by management I m Backing Britain campaign badge The campaign received official endorsement by the Prime Minister Harold Wilson but it found that being perceived as government endorsed was a mixed blessing The Union Flag logo encouraged by the campaign became highly visible on the high streets and attempts were made to take over the campaign by Robert Maxwell who wanted to change its focus into an appeal to Buy British but the campaign s own T shirts were made in Portugal After a few months without any noticeable effect on individual companies or the economy generally interest flagged amid much embarrassment about some of the ways in which the campaign had been pursued and supported It has come to be regarded as an iconic example of a failed attempt to transform British economic prospects Contents 1 Economic background 2 Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd 3 Campaign snowballs 4 Concerns 4 1 Trade union reaction 5 Press comment 6 Popular campaign 6 1 Theme song 6 2 Flags 6 3 Donations 6 4 Portuguese T shirts 6 5 Poet Laureate 7 Takeover 7 1 Robert Maxwell s Buy British campaign 8 Political influence 9 Campaign winds down 10 Reaction 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEconomic background EditIn 1967 the British economy suffered from several difficulties Despite tax increases announced in July 1966 the 1967 budget had set the greatest deficit in post war history of 1 000 000 000 1 Each month the Board of Trade published figures of the balance of trade between exports and imports which seemed to show an ever increasing deficit 2 The closure of the Suez Canal after the Six Day War hit exporters as did an unofficial dock strike which broke out at the end of September 3 Having put up the bank rate to 6 percent on 19 October 4 on 18 November the government abandoned three years of attempting to maintain the exchange rate and devalued the pound sterling from 2 80 to 2 40 Although it was an economic defeat devaluation was perceived as an export opportunity that British industry needed to seize Arising out of devaluation John Boyd Carpenter Conservative Member of Parliament for Kingston upon Thames wrote to The Times in a letter published on 13 December 1967 suggesting If a number of people particularly in responsible positions would set by an example by sacrificing say the first Saturday of every month and working on that morning without extra pay profits or overtime it would give an example to others at home and show the world that we were in earnest He complained that capital equipment stood idle from Friday afternoon to Monday morning 5 Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd EditOn 27 December 1967 Fred Price 6 Marketing Director of Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd sent out a memo headed General progress report which assessed the company s economic prospects Inspired by Boyd Carpenter 7 he wrote that the balance of payments deficit would disappear overnight if the working population of the United Kingdom worked a five and a half day week without demanding higher incomes for the extra half day Price said that Britain would become once more the wealthiest country in the world The memo was received by five secretaries working in the company s head office in Surbiton Valerie White Joan Southwell Carol Ann Fry Christine French and Brenda Mumford 8 The next morning they discussed it and Southwell said that she was willing to work an extra half day a week The others agreed and White took the initiative of writing a reply which she gave reference VW OD GEN 6 The reply said What about starting this scheme of a five and a half day week Let us be the first company to start the ball rolling After discussing the suggestion with the other members of staff on 29 December the 240 employees at the head office voted to report for work at 8 30 a m instead of 9 a m They also made contact with the workers employed at the company s factory in Havant Hampshire to encourage them to do the same 8 Campaign snowballs EditBefore the workers had a chance to work their first extra half hour their campaign had already begun snowballing fast Over the weekend of 30 31 December 1967 five other companies had already decided to follow their example based in Portsmouth Southend Bicester and Manchester others were telephoning to show their interest The Duke of Edinburgh sent a telegram describing the campaign as the most heartening news I heard in 1967 and wishing it success 9 There was a full turnout at 8 30 a m on 1 January at the Surbiton offices and Havant worked their extra half hour at the end of the day 10 Working with the company s managing director Alan O Hea the five secretaries began to think up a slogan After rejecting I m Behind Britain for having the wrong message they settled on I m Backing Britain 6 O Hea then ordered from Norprint of Boston who supplied them free 10 100 000 badges featuring a Union Flag with their slogan written across the centre and began writing to 30 000 employers to encourage them The workers contacted leading political and industrial figures to ask for suggestions as to how others could help 9 Advertising agency DPBT bought a full page advert in The Times of 3 January 1968 offering their spare time free to make commercials backing the campaign 11 All three major political party leaders sent their support and an all party press conference promoted the campaign on 5 January 12 Not all companies joining the campaign did so by working extra unpaid hours as some cancelled projected price increases and waived fees The campaign extended to Wales where the Welsh language slogan was not a direct translation but instead Rwy n Bacio Cymru I m Backing Wales 13 Concerns EditWhile telegrams of congratulation continued to flood into Colt the British Productivity Council was sceptical of its effectiveness The Council pointed to the difference between productivity and output and stated that each individual firm must consider what would be appropriate in its circumstances depending on its agreements between management and working people Trades Union Congress general secretary George Woodcock while welcoming the very good spirit of the campaign said that the trade unions would not foster it and that some unions would strongly oppose it The Amalgamated Engineering Union AEU shop stewards at Colt s factory in Havant carefully said that workers could work the extra half hour without pay but that it would not prejudice any decision taken by the AEU national executive 14 Confederation of British Industry President John Davies thought the campaign could be a kind of window dressing such as he had recently criticised but thought it should be encouraged because of the effect it might have on people s minds 15 Contrasting with the generally positive reaction from politicians Conservative MP Enoch Powell described the campaign as silly and dangerous He observed I am not accusing the Government of having suborned those Surrey typists but the Government could not have wished for a better reinforcement for their campaign to instil into the people of Britain the conviction that it is all their own fault 16 Trade union reaction Edit On 3 January the AEU s Portsmouth branch ordered its members not to participate in the campaign with its district secretary Rory McCarthy explaining that there are many reasons why the union is against giving buckshee half hours to employers and that employers might use it to hide inefficiencies The workers at the factory immediately rebelled with works convener Harry Tyler saying no one likes being told what to do with their free time by the union and said that some who were opposed had changed their view because of the union s attitude 17 Tyler was removed from his post as union branch chairman by a vote of no confidence on 5 January after members of the branch from companies not taking part in the campaign went to the regular branch meeting 18 Some of the secretaries who started the campaign appeared on television discussing the trade union reaction with union leaders the trade union leaders came across as talking down to the secretaries an attitude that was felt to have helped the campaign 19 The AEU national executive instructed its members to have nothing to do with unpaid overtime setting up a direct confrontation with the factory where more than half of the union members signed a petition backing the campaign and supporting Tyler 16 The union s Portsmouth district committee then convened a secret court in early February which convicted four shop stewards at Colt of discrediting the union and imposed punishments suspending the men from holding office in the union for between one and five years 20 On hearing the news forty Conservative backbench MPs put down a motion in the House of Commons demanding government action to stop this type of petty trade union tyranny which is so completely contrary to the best traditions of the freedom loving British trade union movement 21 Other trade unionists were generally sceptical Clive Jenkins general secretary of the Association of Scientific Technical and Managerial Staffs thought it was a confidence trick and observed that when the British ruling class is in trouble it wraps itself in the Union Jack 22 Twenty years later the managing director of Colt admitted that he had received hate mail about the campaign and had arranged for the women to be chaperoned 6 Press comment EditPopular newspapers backed the campaign enthusiastically and praised the workers behind it As early as 30 December 1967 the Daily Express ran the headline Five Girls Britain Can be Proud of over a picture of the five originators with Fred Price 23 The Daily Mirror welcomed the spread of the campaign as its lead story on 3 January 24 Despite its traditional Labour and trade union sympathies it supported the Colt shop stewards against the union leadership 25 A Mirror editorial on 5 January declared that the patriotic truth about these rule book dominated trade union sourpusses is that they are incapable of recognising true patriotism when they see it 26 The Economist wrote on 6 January that on hearing of the campaign the fashionable response in many sophisticated circles was a giggle but it had transformed into something louder than a grunt of admiration The newspaper concluded that the campaign may very well have accomplished in the past week the extraordinary feat of edging a national mood just an odd half degree in the right direction 19 Likewise the Financial Times regarded it as a beacon of light in an otherwise dismal economic and industrial prospect but encouraged the diversion of the campaign into opposing absenteeism and restrictive practices as well as encouraging individuals to identify their efforts with the success or failure of the country as a whole 27 A week later the Economist leader was slightly more wary about the campaign and saw it as a symptom of widespread disenchantment with politics and thinking Britain lucky that there is no demagogue of sufficient ability around to exploit it 28 The New Statesman admitted that in strictly economic terms the campaign to work extra hours made sense but pointed to some of the oddities of the campaign including the Birmingham betting shop which had opened early as a contribution to the production drive and the Portsmouth workers who demanded to leave early so they could see a television programme about the scheme 29 Popular campaign EditTheme song Edit On Monday 8 January Pye Records issued a 45 rpm single of the song I m Backing Britain supporting the campaign Written by Tony Hatch and Jackie Trent and sung by Bruce Forsyth the chorus included The feeling is growing so let s keep it going the good times are blowing our way All involved in making the single took cuts in their fees or royalties so that the single sold for 5 shillings instead of the going rate of 7s 4 1 2 d Forsyth happily endorsed the campaign The country has always done its best when it is up against the wall If everyone realises what we are up against we can get out of trouble easily 30 However the song did not make the charts 31 it sold only 7319 copies 32 Reviewing the single Derek Johnson of the New Musical Express commented If you fancy five bob s worth of propaganda good luck to you 33 Flags Edit The most visible manifestation of the campaign was in the Union Flags which begin to be put on shopping bags Even the Prime Minister noted that everyone seemed to be carrying them 34 Postmaster General Edward Short encouraged the Royal Mail to introduce an I m Backing Britain franking mark 35 which was used on 84 million letters passing through 125 Post Offices between 9 and 29 February 36 Increased visibility of the Union Flag distressed some commentators Philip French writing in the New Statesman described being constantly confronted by the flag as one of the more painful aspects of the campaign 37 Donations Edit The campaign found expression in the giving of conscience money to the Exchequer as noted by The Guardian s Financial Editor William Davis 38 in the middle of January it was observed that every postal delivery to the Treasury contained letters offering gifts If the letter specified that the money was to pay off the Government debt the funds were paid into the Debt Redemption Fund otherwise the Consolidated Fund was the beneficiary 39 Disc jockey Jimmy Savile found his own way to support the campaign by volunteering to work nine days as a hospital porter at Leeds General Infirmary over two months stating that at his rate of pay nine days work would have earned him 1 600 equivalent to 30 000 in 2021 40 41 Portuguese T shirts Edit The campaign took a knock when the London wholesaler Scott Lester ordered thousands of white T shirts on which it screen printed the I m Backing Britain slogan the shirts had been made in Portugal Scott Lester s marketing director explained that we just cannot find a British T shirt which will give us the same quality at a price which will compare and that the shirts would have to retail at 1 if British sources were used 42 Labour MP Charles Mapp urged the Government to ban the shirts 43 Poet Laureate Edit The newly appointed Poet Laureate Cecil Day Lewis inaugurated his appointment with a poem entitled Now and Then supporting the campaign It was commissioned by the Daily Mail and appeared on the newspaper s front page on 5 January 44 The poem compared Britain s economic plight in 1968 with the Blitz and ended To work then islanders as men and women Members one of another looking beyond Mean rules and rivalries towards the dream you could Make real of glory common wealth and home Cecil Day Lewis Now and Then 45 Day Lewis s choice of subject and the content of his poem were criticised Bernard Levin later wrote that the poem made many regret their impulsive rejoicing at the death of his predecessor 46 Takeover EditSuch was the response coming into Colt that they found themselves overwhelmed and needed someone else to take it over It asked the Industrial Society a nonpartisan body to promote the best use of human resources in commerce and industry which agreed and began to set up an organisation to run it 47 The society recruited 11 extra full time staff in January 1968 for the campaign 48 and appointed Admiral of the Fleet Sir Caspar John as its figurehead 49 The campaign was handled on a day to day basis by Mark Wolfson the Head of Youth Services for the Society The Guardian s Financial Editor William Davis had already noted in his column of 10 January that attention was moving away from the idea of providing free labour 38 The Industrial Society also stressed that working extra half hours was a tiny part of the national campaign and criticised people who tried to make anti union propaganda out of the reaction to the case Industrial Society director John Garnett pointed to tanker drivers who had switched from 56 hours driving slowly per week to 42 hours of faster driving 48 The Society convened a group of industrialists and leading trade unionists to reshape the official aims of the campaign 50 The Society found it difficult to make progress in getting the campaign adopted in more workplaces because of suspicion about their motives A campaign adviser told the Daily Mirror that many assumed they were connected to the Labour Party and without its political flavour I am sure the campaign would have been taken a lot more seriously 51 Robert Maxwell s Buy British campaign Edit According to his biographer Joe Haines the Labour Member of Parliament Robert Maxwell had the idea for a popular Buy British campaign around the same time as the I m Backing Britain campaign emerged Through an intermediary Maxwell approached broadcaster David Frost who gave a personal donation of 1 000 and invited Maxwell to appear on his television show on 5 January 52 On television Maxwell told viewers to think before buying Buy the home product or service first whenever you can even if it means buying less for a time Maxwell tried to amalgamate his campaign with that of the Industrial Society but the Society refused him 53 He therefore set up a rival Help Britain Group Maxwell obtained letters of support from well known personalities and launched his campaign with full page press adverts on 7 February The adverts topped with pictures of the three main party leaders urged readers to Act on just six of the uncranky suggestions on this page and listed those who had supported him 54 One of those named Bernard Delfont was upset when his support was revealed feeling that Maxwell should have asked him before doing so 55 Critics pointed to the fact that Maxwell s Pergamon Press printed a large number of its textbooks and scientific journals in Eastern European countries 53 According to Maxwell s widow Elizabeth his campaign won the hearts and minds of countless ordinary workers around Britain 56 However Maxwell dropped the Buy British part of his campaign by the end of February retitling it Sell British Help Britain Help Yourself 57 and he wound up the whole thing in March Maxwell s unofficial biographer Tom Bower noted that Maxwell succeeded in becoming the nationally recognised personality of the whole Backing Britain campaign 58 but former Maxwell editor Roy Greenslade noted that Maxwell was a rogue politician whose protectionist campaign was a fruitless cause 59 Political influence EditAt an after dinner speech in Burnley on 8 January Prime Minister Harold Wilson criticised those who were complaining that the other fellow is not pulling his weight including trade unionists who pointed to the failures of individual employers Wilson declared What we want is back Britain not back biting 60 Wilson who later wrote that the campaign was a helpful and robust response to the gloom and near defeatism after devaluation 34 put Edmund Dell Under Secretary at the Department of Economic Affairs in charge of government assistance Dell visited Colt on 8 January 1968 47 but kept his assistance largely concealed 61 Cabinet minister Richard Crossman wrote in his diary on 7 January that the expanding campaign was a political windfall but that it was something we should have nothing to do with 62 The Labour Party found itself in difficulty when it ordered 2 000 posters with the slogan Back Britain with Labour for local Labour Parties to display After a complaint from a member of the Industrial Society the posters were withdrawn 49 The Industrial Society also reported resisting an attempt by the Conservative Party to borrow the slogan for political purposes 63 Campaign winds down EditAfter the AEU banned the four Colt shop stewards from office the shop stewards recommended to the workers at the Havant factory on 10 February that they stop working unpaid overtime because of the strife it had brought to the union but the works director thought that the workers would in fact continue and pointed to the fact that the AEU was not the only union present Joan Southwell one of the original five secretaries at the head office said that they would definitely continue as we are all very solid about this in spite of the union disagreement 64 However on 12 February the workers decided by a narrow majority to return to normal working hours 65 In early February The Times went round to ask supermarket chains what the campaign was achieving and found that it varied between very little and none at all 66 By the middle of March the Industrial Society was hinting that it needed a grant from the government to keep going It had encouraged local civic leaders across the country to set up local committees of industrialists and trade unionists 63 The television series Dad s Army the opening episode of which was recorded on 15 April 1968 began with a contemporary scene in which Alderman Mainwaring was the chairman of the Walmington on Sea I m Backing Britain campaign Another reference to the campaign appeared in the title of a newspaper comic strip collection From a distance its title appeared to read The Perishers Back Britain Only on closer inspection could the full title be read The Perishers Back Again to Pester Britain The Sunday Times ran a large article by Nicholas Tomalin on 3 March about the serious and comic history of a patriotic idea Tomalin quoted one of the original Surbiton typists as saying that we got mixed up when asked horrid questions about trade unions Thanks to all the interviews and things we just didn t get any typing done 67 Also in March the campaign moved from the Industrial Society s headquarters at Bryanston Square to rent free offices donated by National Cash Register It was immediately noted that National Cash Register was a wholly owned subsidiary of an American corporation 68 The Industrial Society s staff working on the campaign were down to four in May 1968 69 Maxwell declared his campaign was officially over on 5 August The Industrial Society was still receiving about 15 letters a day but its campaign was limited to sending out badges and promotional material to people who had requested them and it declared that the campaign office would close at the end of September 70 Retrospectively Bernard Levin saw that the enthusiasm had subsided after a month or two and that the badges and slogans were seen no more 71 Reaction EditThere was a widespread feeling even while the campaign was going on that it was fundamentally risible New Statesman columnist Philip French thought its jingoism and intellectual dishonesty was offensive and felt that the excessive press coverage defied comment other than the gesture of laughing at it 37 The magazine itself ran a one off column to go with its long established This England column featuring press cuttings highlighting absurd aspects of the campaign 72 The Communist Morning Star newspaper published a parody of the Maxwell advert which claimed to be non political non partisan and nonsensical and proclaimed the support of nonsense poets Edward Lear and Lewis Carroll 73 Paul McCartney wrote a parody song called I m Backing the UK which eventually became Back in the U S S R on the Beatles White Album 1968 74 75 The first episode of what was to be the long running Dad s Army sitcom shown on 31 July 1968 begins with a pre title sequence flashforward showing the lead characters at a dinner to launch the Walmington on Sea I m Backing Britain campaign event At the conclusion of the film Carry On Up the Khyber made during the summer and opening in November 1968 the raising of a Union Flag with the I m Backing Britain slogan is greeted by Peter Butterworth turning to camera and saying Of course they re all raving mad you know See also EditWhip Inflation Now Domestic sourcingBBC Radio 4 broadcast in September 2018 a 45 minute radio play We re Backing Britain by David Morley dramatising the events 76 References Edit New Thinking at the Treasury leader column The Times 13 April 1967 p 23 A monthly average of a 9m deficit in 1966 and in the first quarter of 1967 increased to 40m in the second quarter 27m in August and 52m in September See Peter Jay Trade deficit increases to 52m The Times 13 October 1967 p 17 Dock strikes stop one third of exports The Times 13 October 1967 p 17 Keith Payne 6 Bank rate to defend pound The Times 20 October 1967 p 19 John Boyd Carpenter Why the pound is weak letter The Times 13 December 1967 p 11 a b c d Andrew Lycett The famous five any make as long as it s British Monday Page The Times 4 January 1988 p 15 The Guardian 2 January 1968 p 14 a b Staff vote for unpaid work The Times 30 December 1967 p 3 a b Half hour extra plan snowballs The Times 1 January 1968 p 1 a b Eric Silver Back Britain drive said to be a gimmick The Guardian 2 January 1968 p 1 Valerie Brenda Joan Carol and Christine we love you advertisement The Times 3 January 1968 p 3 Back Britain pace grows The Times 6 January 1968 p 3 Car stickers now proclaim Backing Wales The Guardian 22 January 1968 p 4 Support for back Britain move The Times 2 January 1968 p 2 Eric Silver Back Britain drive said to be a gimmick The Guardian 2 January 1968 p 14 a b Philip Howard Colt workers defy union ruling The Times 11 January 1968 p 1 Work without pay men defy union The Times 4 January 1968 p 1 Back Britain Man Ousted The Times 6 January 1968 p 1 a b The Surbiton Revolution The Economist 6 January 1968 p 12 Back Britain men tried in secret The Times 7 February 1968 p 1 MPs call to stop union tyranny The Times 8 February 1968 p 2 Back Britain drive called a trick The Times 2 February 1968 p 4 Daily Express Saturday 30 December 1967 p 1 Seen in the background of this picture Archived 20 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine taken on 4 January 1968 Rush to Join No Pay Workers Daily Mirror 3 January 1968 p 1 Work for Britain Men Defy AEU Ban Daily Mirror 4 January 1968 p 1 AEU Sack Back Britain Union Boss Daily Mirror 6 January 1968 p 1 The patriots and the sourpusses Leader Daily Mirror 5 January 1968 p 2 Leader 5 January 1968 Quoted in David Kynaston The Financial Times A Centenary History Penguin Books 1988 p 367 Who s Really Backing Britain The Economist 13 January 1968 p 14 From Surbiton to Whitehall New Statesman 12 January 1968 p 29 Song for the typists Business Diary The Times 8 January 1968 p 19 Craig Brown Way of the world A mutual case of wow The Daily Telegraph 4 June 2005 p 23 Who s still Backing Britain Daily Mirror 3 May 1968 p 17 Johnson Derek 20 January 1968 Top singles reviewed PDF New Musical Express 4 Retrieved 12 January 2022 a b Harold Wilson The Labour Government 1964 1970 A Personal Record Weidenfeld amp Nicolson and Michael Joseph 1971 p 481 Hansard House of Commons 5th Series vol 760 col 622 Hansard House of Commons 5th series vol 762 col 1570 a b Philip French Put Out Less Flags New Statesman 19 January 1968 p 85 a b William Davis Taking stock of THAT campaign The Guardian 10 January 1968 p 10 George Hawthorne Almost every post boosts Exchequer The Guardian 12 January 1968 p 4 UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Michael Parkin A DJ sets the hospital spinning The Guardian 10 January 1968 p 3 George Hawthorne Portugal s shirts on Britain s backs The Guardian 13 January 1968 p 1 See also Branded in Britain BBC News online 26 February 2002 Hansard House of Commons 5th series vol 758 col 124 Ian Hamilton Snoop Doggy Dogg for Laureate London Review of Books 7 January 1999 Poetic Breadwinner Time 12 January 1968 Bernard Levin The Pendulum Years Britain and the Sixties Jonathan Cape 1970 p 426 a b Sponsor to Run Back Britain The Times 9 January 1968 p 2 a b Henry Stanhope Back Britain leaders not upset by factory decision The Times 12 February 1968 p 2 Joe Haines Maxwell Macdonald 1988 p 277 gives the number of full time staff engaged by the Industrial Society as 25 a b Jonas Smith Labour drops back Britain posters The Times 25 January 1968 p 1 John Fairhall Reshaping the aims of Backing Britain movement The Guardian 13 January 1968 p 2 Daily Mirror 1 February 1968 Joe Haines Maxwell Macdonald 1988 p 271 a b Tom Bower Maxwell The Outsider Aurum Press 1988 p 109 How to Help Britain and Yourself Campaign advert The Times 7 February 1968 p 3 Joe Haines Maxwell Macdonald 1988 p 273 Elizabeth Maxwell A Mind of My Own Sidgwick and Jackson 1994 p 372 Joe Haines Maxwell Macdonald 1988 p 274 Tom Bower Maxwell The Outsider Aurum Press 1988 p 110 Roy Greenslade Maxwell Birch Lane 1992 p 38 John Chartres Wilson Joins I Back Britain The Times 9 January 1968 p 1 Robert Sheldon Dell Edmund Emanuel in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 accessed 2 March 2008 Richard Crossman The Crossman Diaries Condensed version Magnum Books 1979 p 439 a b Back Britain group may seek aid The Times 22 March 1968 p 5 Henry Stanhope Back Britain leaders not upset by factory decision The Times 12 February 1968 p 2 AEF men end free working The Times 13 February 1968 p 3 Business Diary The Times 6 February 1968 p 21 Tomalin did not identify which of the five had made this remark See Sunday Times 3 March 1968 Tomalin s article is also reprinted in Nicholas Tomalin reporting Andre Deutsch 1975 p 254 69 Business Diary The Times 22 March 1968 p 25 Joe Haines Maxwell Macdonald 1988 p 277 Christine Eade Backing Britain campaign over The Guardian 6 August 1968 p 2 Bernard Levin The Pendulum Years Britain and the Sixties Jonathan Cape 1970 p 427 Backing Britain New Statesman 19 January 1968 p 69 Morning Star 8 February 1968 MacDonald 2005 pp 309 10 sfn error no target CITEREFMacDonald2005 help Schaffner 1978 p 113 sfn error no target CITEREFSchaffner1978 help Writer David Morley Director Sean Grundy Producer Richard Clemmow 25 September 2018 We re Backing Britain Afternoon Drama BBC BBC Radio 4 Retrieved 25 September 2018 External links EditOur history by the Colt Group formerly Colt Ventilation and Heating Ltd London Line news video on the campaign including interviews with Colt Group staff Buy British Independent British site supporting British Manufacturing Bruce Forsyth I m Backing Britain at youtube com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title I 27m Backing Britain amp oldid 1127389400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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