October 2021
Newsletter Thomas Smith and the Paris Commune On the 150th anniversary of the Paris Commune it is appropriate to revisit the research by Peter Wyncoll on Thomas Smith (Marxism Today , December 1968 pp.372-379). Smith’s letters were subsequently reproduced in Royden Harrison’s ‘The English Defence of the Commune (1871)’, London 1971. From March to June of 1871 Thomas Smith of Houndsgate, Nottingham wrote a series of letters to the Nottingham Daily Express about the Paris Commune. For Smith the Commune had great historical significance. For him it represented ‘… plainly a struggle between the two great forces of society, progress and repression, all are compelled to see what are the principles at stake.’ “The third Republic yet lives, but the reactionary Assembly are evidently prepared to destroy it by the same means – the disarmament of the people, the suppression of liberty of the press and speech, the maintenance of extreme centralisation and the power of the army. Now all the demands of the present movement, warned by experience, are directed to the creation of local bodies who shall act as a check on the central power” (the letter of March 25th 1871). Smith saw the struggle of the Commune as a fundamental one between the ‘decentralisation’ of the artisans and workmen against the ‘centralisation’ of the ‘privileged and priestly caste’. When the Commune was suppressed at the end of May by overwhelming military odds, with the dreadful slaughter of between 20,000 and 30,000 men women and children, Smith wrote; ‘Once more the enemies of liberty and justice, the foes of human progress, are showing the world that, like the Bourbons, they have learned nothing and forgotten nothing – that their only arguments are blood and murder, the rifle and the bayonet – and that they still believe in the power of force to stay the progress of thought’ (Letter of 7 th June 1871). Smith was active in collecting money for the Paris Commune Refugee Committee. When an appeal was launched in the International Herald Smith by Karl Marx, Smith sent a letter with a postal order for two pounds. ‘All my friends like myself are working men but I shall try to raise a little more.’ In August he sent a ‘further seven shillings’. This led to a correspondence between Smith and the the two men between July and November 1871. When Marx read Smith’s letters on the Commune he praised ‘a remarkable production. With other working men, like Samuel Parker and Samuel Tyler, Smith set up a Nottingham branch of the International Working Men’s Association (I.W.M.A.) , claiming ‘four hundred affiliated members’ by the