- Raymond Postgate
Raymond William Postgate (
6 November 1896 -29 March 1971 ) was a Britishsocialist journalist and editor, socialhistorian , mysterynovelist and gourmet.Born in
Cambridge , the eldest son ofJohn Percival Postgate and Edith Allen, Postgate was educated atSt John's College, Oxford . DuringWorld War I he sought exemption frommilitary service as a socialistconscientious objector but was offered only non-combatant service in the army; forcibly conscripted, he was held at Cowley Barracks, Oxford, but found medically unfit for service and discharged. While he was in custody, his sister Margaret campaigned on his behalf, in the process meeting the socialist writer andeconomist G. D. H. Cole , whom she subsequently married. In 1918 Postgate married Daisy Lansbury, daughter of the Labour Party journalist and politicianGeorge Lansbury , and was barred from the family home by hisTory father.From 1918, Postgate worked as a journalist on the "
Daily Herald ", then edited by his father-in-law, Lansbury. A founding member of the British Communist Party in 1920, Postgate left the "Herald" to join his colleagueFrancis Meynell on the staff of the CP's first weekly, "The Communist". Postgate soon became its editor and was briefly a major propagandist for the communist cause, but he left the party after falling out with its leadership in 1922. when theCommunist International insisted that British communists follow theMoscow line. As such, he was one of Britain's firstleft-wing former-communists, and the party came to treat him as an archetypalbourgeois intellectual renegade. He remained a key player in left journalism, however, returning to the "Herald", then joining Lansbury on "Lansbury's Labour Weekly" in 1925-1927.In the late 1920s and early 1930s he published biographies of
John Wilkes andRobert Emmet and his first novel, "No Epitaph " (1932), and worked as an editor for the "Encyclopædia Britannica ". In 1932 he visited the Soviet Union with a Fabian delegation and contributed to the collection "Twelve Studies in Soviet Russia". Later in the 1930s he co-authored with G. D. H. Cole "The Common People", a social history of Britain from the mid-18th century. Postgate was editor of the left-wing monthly "Fact" from 1937 to 1939 and editor of the socialist weekly "Tribune" from early 1940 until the end of 1941.Always interested in
food andwine , afterWorld War II , Postgate assembled a band of volunteers to visit and report on UK restaurants. He edited the results into the "Good Food Guide ", first published in 1951. He continued to work as a journalist, mainly on the Co-operative movement's Sunday paper "Reynolds' News ", and during the 1950s and 1960s published several historical works and a biography of his father-in-law, "The Life of George Lansbury".Postgate wrote several mystery novels that drew on his socialist beliefs to set
crime , detection and punishment in a broader social and economic context. His most famous novel is "Verdict of Twelve " (1940), his other novels include "Somebody at the Door" (1943) and "The Ledger Is Kept" (1953). (His sister and brother-in-law, the Coles, also became a successful mystery-writing duo.) After the death ofH. G. Wells , Postgate edited some revisions of the two-volume "Outline of History" that Wells had first published in 1920.Postgate's son, Oliver, also a conscientious objector, became a leading creator of children's television programmes in the UK.
References
*"Oxford Chronicle", 10 March 1916
*"The Friend", 5 May & 12 May 1916
*John & Mary Postgate, "A Stomach For Dissent: The Life Of Raymond Postgate", (Keele University Press, 1994).External links
* [http://www.awm.gov.au/stella/detail.asp?period=4&offset=5 Portrait by Stella Bowen] Australian War Memorial Collection (Retrieved 23-July-2007)
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/postgate/index.htm R. W. Postgate Archive] Marxists Internet Archive
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