Protestant Action Society

The Protestant Action Society was a political party in Edinburgh active in the 1930s. It was founded by John Cormack in 1933 and had elected nine members to the Edinburgh Council in 1936 with 31 percent of the vote.[1][2]

Protestant Action Society
General SecretaryJohn Cormack
Founded1933
IdeologyReligious conservatism
Anti-Catholicism
Anti-Irish immigration
ReligionProtestantism

In June 1935 the party organised protests which involved disturbances in Waverley Market[3]:2325 and then what has been called "the Morningside Riot" in Canaan Lane when a crowd of around 20,000 Protestant Action supporters stoned and jeered 10,000 attendees at a Eucharistic Congress.[4][3]:2931[2]

Although often compared to the fascist movements active at the time, the society physically attacked Blackshirt meetings in Edinburgh due to the British Union of Fascists support for a United Ireland.[5] The party emerged at a time when other similar movements were arising in other parts of Scotland, such as the similar Glasgow based Scottish Protestant League, and the Scottish Democratic Fascist Party.

One of the councilors was the Jewish antique dealer Esta Henry who was elected to one of the Canongate wards in 1936.[5][6]

Cormack tried to encourage the Orange Order in Scotland to join in his movement, but with so little success that he left the movement in 1939 and was not readmitted until the late 1950s.[5][6]

At its peak the party had 8,000 members.[5]

See also

References

  1. Page 51, Protestant Political Parties: A Global Survey
  2. Bell, Ian (14 September 2013). "Tom Gallagher: Divided Scotland - Ethnic Friction And Christian Crisis". Glasgow Herald. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  3. "A Very Edinburgh Riot: The John Cormack Phenomenon". Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  4. "The other side of Morningside". The Scotsman. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  5. Gallagher, T. (1987). Glasgow: The Uneasy Peace : Religious Tension in Modern Scotland, 1819–1914. Manchester University Press. pp. 165. ISBN 9780719023965. esther henry edinburgh.
  6. Cooke, Anthony & Donnachie, Ian (1998). Readings 1850 to the Present Volume 4 of Modern Scottish History 1707 to the Present. Tuckwell Press, in association with the Open University in Scotland and the University of Dundee. p. 186. ISBN 9781862320833.


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