The National Front was formed at a meeting
in Caxton Hall, Westminster on 7th
February
1967; the first Chairman was Arthur
K. Chesterton,
cousin of G. K. Chesterton. The new
party
was in fact a merger of three groups:
the
Racial Preservation Society, the British
National Party and the League of Empire
Loyalists.
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Foundations of the NF
The membership and ideas of these three
groups
were different in some respects but
they
were bound together by agreement in
some
very fundamental principles: that Britain
and the British people have a right
to determine
their own future; that multi-racialism
and
mass immigration was a tragic mistake;
that
patriotism is laudable and that Capitalism,
Communism and Internationalism take
power
away from the individual.
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It was a belief in these basic principles
which held together the members of
these
different groups who, fed up of seeing
white
patriots disunited, were determined
to see
the NF as a vehicle of both unity and
victory.
Two hundred and fifty founder members
of
the new united Movement fought their
way
through a Communist mob outside the
hall
to attend that inaugural meeting on
the 7th
February 1967.
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Violent opposition
Between 1967 and 1969 progress was
slow,
although a number of small regional
groups
of concerned Britons joined the steadily
growing young NF. The National Front
slowly
increased in size but also encountered
growing
opposition from Communist and Zionist
groups:
meetings were attacked, a lorry was
crashed
into the Nationalist Centre in South
London,
and the 1969 Annual General Meeting
had to
be moved after the power room of the
hall
was broken into and the mains cables
severed
with axes.
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The first elections
By 1970 the movement had begun to settle
down and was able to field ten parliamentary
candidates in the General Election
of that
year. They received between 1.8% and
5.6%
of the votes.
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Party literature
In early 1971 A. K. Chesterton resigned
as
Chairman and was replaced by John O'Brien
who had joined the National Front from
the
National Democratic Party which had
just
folded. At the same time, the movement
became
more organised with the establishment
of
functioning Directorate departments:
Activities,
Administration, Branch Development,
Finance,
Policy and Publicity. Until early 1971,
the
only regular publications supporting
the
NF were Spearhead, the monthly magazine privately owned by
John Tyndall, then Chairman of the
Policy
Department, and A. K. Chesterton's
Candour. Now a broadsheet Britain First was produced selling at just 2p. Also for
the first time, a range of recruitment
leaflets
and stickers were produced.
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Pawsons Road
In July 1972, John O'Brien was replaced
by
John Tyndall as the new Chairman of
the Party.
This took place shortly after it moved
its
Head Office to 50, Pawsons Road, Croydon,
Surrey. This was a more functional
office
for an active political movement and
it was
from here that the growth of the Party
was
led.
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Mass immigration
The level of activities dramatically
increased
in 1972, almost all with the theme
of stopping
immigration. This was at a time when
mass
immigration was causing deep dismay
among
the British public and it resulted
in the
recruitment of many new members. By
mid-1973
the movement was growing at an unprecedented
rate and votes in local elections were
rising
all across the country. For example
the NF
candidate in the West Bromwich Parliamentary
by-election, Martin Webster, gained
almost
5,000 votes, 16% of the poll.
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Remembrance Day Parades.
The huge influx of Ugandan Asians into
Britain
brought another surge of members into
the
NF and this was reflected in the attendance
at the annual Remembrance Day Parades
to
the Cenotaph in London. These had grown
from
just a couple of hundred to over 1,500
in
November 1972. It was also at this
time that
the NF became involved in the struggle
of
the people of Ulster to remain British.
The
NF fully supported the Ulster Workers
Strike
of May 1974 against the attempt to
sell out
to Eire.
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The elections of 1974.
In 1974 there were two General Elections:
at the first one in February, the NF
fielded
54 candidates who received a total
of 75,000
votes. By October, the party was able
to
increase this to 90 candidates and
they attracted
113,000 votes.
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Extension of the campaign base.
In between, the movement had been extending
its campaign base. The NF gave active
support
to a strike by White workers at the
Imperial
Typewriters factory in Leicester. It
also
held a series of activities in opposition
to British membership of the Common
Market.
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Anti-immigration march.
This further rapid growth of the NF
resulted
in yet increased opposition, primarily
from
Communist and Zionist groups. On 15th
June
1974 the National Front held an anti-immigration
march from West London to Conway Hall,
Holborn.
The march was entirely peaceful but
as the
column approached Red Lion Square a
large
mob of Red thugs attempted to block
our route.
Police horses were used to clear a
way through
and a large number of arrests were
made -
all of them Reds, none of them NF.
The event
made the front pages of every single
national
newspaper. By the time the NF entered
the
October election campaign there can
have
been few people in the country who
did not
know the name National Front and the initials NF.
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Labour shows its hand.
In 1975, John Kingsley Read replaced John
Tyndall as National Chairman for a
short
time. In that year over 120 Labour-controlled
councils decided to ban the NF from
using
public halls for meetings. Labour showed
itself prepared to use any means, democratic
or otherwise, to halt the NF's progress.
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The National Front polls nearly 20%
During 1976 the movement's fortunes
rapidly
improved. A major campaign was launched
in
support of Robert Relf, who had been
jailed
for refusing to remove a sign from
outside
his home declaring that it was for
sale to
English buyers. The May local election
results
were impressive with the jewel in the
crown
being Leicester, where 48 candidates
won
43,733 votes, nearly 20% of the total
vote.
By June the Party's growth rate was
its highest
ever. This was emphasised in May 1977
when
some outstanding local election results
were
achieved: in particular 119,000 votes
were
cast in favour of the NF in London
and the
Liberals were beaten in 33 out of 92
constituencies.
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NF march on
Lewisham.
On 13th August 1977 a major NF march
through
Lewisham in South London was organised
by
the National Activities Organiser,
Mr. Martin
Webster. It was violently attacked
by a large
mob, possibly 10,000 strong, of Red
rabble.
Bricks, bottles, iron railings and
other
missiles were hurled at the patriots
marching
through Lewisham but the attempt to
halt
the Front failed - as it always does.
Over
300 Marxists were arrested but not one NF member. Again the NF smashed its way into the national
headlines!
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Preparations for the General Election.
A new broadsheet newspaper, National Front News, appeared - the official paper of the National
Front, coming out monthly from December
1977.
At about this time it was announced
that
the Party would contest 300-plus seats
in
the forthcoming General Election.
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Organised opposition.
Again the opposition mobilised its forces,
lavishly funded and supported by the
media,
the powerful Zionist lobby and International
Capitalism. One response was the forming
of the 'Anti-Nazi League,' a front
organisation
for the Trotskyite Socialist Workers'
Party
with a gloss of respectability being
provided
by show business dupes and extreme-left
Labour
MP's. In December 1977 the Labour Party
devoted
of an entire party political broadcast
to
an attack on the National Front
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The General Election of 1979.
1978 was almost entirely devoted to
preparations
for the imminent General Election.
During
the preceding four years membership
of the
movement had increased dramatically.
Quite
a number of these recruits were ex-Conservative
supporters who had become disillusioned
with
cheap Tory tricks and lies about stopping
immigration, its pro-Common Market
stance
and its attempt to sell out loyalist
Ulster.
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Excalibur House.
In September 1978 the Party moved to a larger
headquarters, Excalibur House, just
north
of the City of London. The premises
were
very big with meeting hall, sleeping
quarters,
offices and a bookshop.
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The Tories show their hand.
The first half of 1979 was taken up
with
the huge effort needed to field 300-plus
candidates. When the election arrived,
the
NF actually fielded 303 - nearly half
the
seats in the country. During the campaign,
the old-gang parties and especially
the Tories
became very worried by the rapid rise
of
the movement and Thatcher came out
with her
now infamous speech in which she claimed
that she "understood the fears
of the
British people of being swamped by
coloured
immigrants."
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Disappointing election results.
This lie by Thatcher, plus huge Anti-Nazi
League rallies and media hyping of
the ‘Holocaust’
series on television in the week running
up to the election, with the media
ever eager
to employ the "nazi" smear,
led
to disappointing results in the General
Election.
Our results would have been much better
had
it not been for Tory lies, Labour and
media
smears, censorship of news about the
NF and
a campaign of voter intimidation by
Marxist
thugs.
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The years of attrition.
The years following that election were
a
time of great struggle for the National
Front.
Its ability to survive and to start
growing
again is a tribute to its stamina and
the
hundreds of loyal members who have
stood
by the NF through thick and thin.
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The resurgence.
The 1980's and early 90's were sluggish,
but in the mid-90's the National Front
started
recovering ground, and with a vengeance.
A new paper Flame was published along with new units springing
up almost weekly. The winning strategy,
that
one that had made the NF so successful
in
the beginning, is again being implemented.
The last few years have seen marches
being
held again and the Drum Corps is in
the process
of being reformed. The Young National
Front
has been revived with its "notorious"
hard-hitting paper Bulldog.
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The millennium and the present.
The NF website is being constantly
updated
and expanded bringing in many new members, supporters
and enquirers.
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The Flame is doing well with increased subscriptions
and a much wider distribution
and ever increasing
print runs.
Some issues are now online and are being
downloaded and read worldwide,
bringing us much needed morale
support from
people who can trace their ancestry
to Britain.
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A recent issue of Bulldog sold out within
3 weeks.
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Current Elections.
Since 2000 the number of candidates we have
fielded each year in local election
has increased,
in May 2003 we fielded 11, this is
still
too few as to make any real impact
we need
more British Patriots to stand up and
be
counted.
What is most significant is the increase
in our percentage of the vote from
an average
of 3% in 2000 to 13% in 2003, with
some wards
returning 15% of the vote even beating
the
Lid Dems and Conservatives in several
wards.
The 2554 votes we received in the North Tyneside
Mayoral Election was a major milestone in the fact we retained our deposit in an election
that covered two and a half
parliamentary
seats!
This is a clear indication that the
British
electorate are dissatisfied with the
3 main
party's and are ready
to elect
a Nationalist party as immigrants continue
to flood into Britain while our jobs
are
being exported abroad.
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Current activities.
The campaign against bogus asylum seekers
and immigrants flooding into Britain continues
to gain momentum. Since the recent marches
in Dover and Deal and the various current
anti-asylum demonstrations and our other
campaigns have all resulted in huge national
publicity. Membership of the Front has grown
dramatically within the last year.
The NF’s opposition to the surrender
of British
sovereignty is stronger than ever today.
The Party is totally opposed to the
subjugation
of Britain to the bureaucrats of Brussels.
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The immediate future.
The National Front, Britain's longest-lived
White Nationalist movement, is poised
in
the new millennium ready to mushroom
once
again. Elsewhere on this site you will
find
a list of addresses of our units, and
this
list is constantly being added to!
The NF
has survived some tough periods but
its sheer
resilience and the loyalty of its long-time
members have kept it together.
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A message.
This short history is but a beginning
- visit
this site regularly and check on the
rapid
growth of the movement. Better still,
join
the NF's fight for a Britain worth
living
in again! To all our supporters - and
also
to the enemies of our Race and Nation
- we
have this message:
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