Table Of ContentHistory through the Newsreel: the 1930s 
Series Editor: Nicholas Pronay 
The Unemployed 
Arthur Marwick 
Professor of History, The Open University 
Peter Wenham 
General Adviser, History and Social Studies, Leeds Council 
Department of Education 
Macmillan Education 
for The Historical Association
Editorial Board of The Historical Association for History Through the 
Newsreel 
Professor J. A. S. Grenville (Chairman) 
Professor of Modern History, University of Birmingham 
Professor H  Hearder 
Professor of Modern History, University of Wales at Cardiff 
Brian Haworth 
Principal Lecturer, Padg ate College of Education 
Professor A. Marwick 
Professor of History, The Open University 
John Standen 
Principal Lecturer in History, Gypsy Hill College of Education 
Peter Wenham 
General Adviser, History and Social Studies, 
Leeds Council Department of Education 
Series Editor: 
Nicholas Pronay 
Lecturer in Modern History, University of Leeds 
© Macmillan Education Ltd 1976 
First published 1976 
Macmillan Education Ltd 
Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire RG21 2XS 
and London 
Associated companies in New York, Dublin, Melbourne 
Johannesburg and Delhi 
Notes for Teachers SBN 333 19363 6 
Film SBN 333 18553 6 
ISBN 978-1-349-02866-5  ISBN 978-1-349-02864-1 (eBook) 
DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-02864-1
Contents 
Introduction  1 
Nicholas Pronay 
The unemployed  4 
Arthur Marwick 
The newsreels in the classroom  13 
Peter Wenham 
Transcript of the newsreel commentary  22 
Select bibliography  27
History through the Newsreel: 
an introduction 
The fllms comprising this series contain extracts from newsreels which 
were seen by the British public during the 1930s. They provide original 
source material for use in a wide range of courses and are suitable for 
use with pupils of mixed abilities. The Hlms are suitable for examination 
and non-examination courses at thirteen-plus, sixteen-plus, and 
eighteen-plus, studying the interwar period in History. They can be used 
in General Studies and in Humanities, for broadly-based courses in 
Contemporary Studies, Politics and Government, where there is reference 
to the role of mass-communications in the modern world. The Hlms 
and the booklets which form the series have been designed with the 
needs of the classroom specifically in mind. They were produced by 
teams consisting of an academic historian who is a specialist in the 
subject and an experienced teacher, working closely with the series 
editor, a specialist in the history of political communications. The series 
was initiated by The Historical Association in response to the need for 
teacher-orientated and academically sound audio-visual source materials 
for the study of the twentieth century and it is produced jointly with 
Macmillan Education. 
Newsreels were the predecessors of today's television news. In the 
1930s they already reached about half the total population of Britain 
and were regularly seen by most working-class people under 30. Their 
impact was revolutionary. For the first time in history, the majority of 
the ordinary people could see faraway events and hear the famous men 
of their day 'with their own eyes and own ears'. The newsreels 
contributed to the increasing involvement of ordinary people in politics. 
They initiated the age of the mass media and began a process of change 
in the relationship between the public and government (continued 
today by television). 
As historical records the newsreels preserved in the archives are very 
important. They help us to put ourselves into the shoes of the people 
who lived at the time and to see problems, personalities and events as 
they saw them-just as television news today provides a view of the 
problems which we have to try to solve. Newsreels are especially 
important records for British history because here the government was 
elected by universal adult suffrage and policies depended to an 
exceptional degree on the ability of the government to carry the 
country with it. The newsreels are also useful records from the teaching  1
point of view, because they were designed in the first place to be 
intelligible to ordinary people and to appeal to a basically young 
audience. Their language is simple and direct and therefore they can be 
used readily with a very wide range (in terms of age/ability) of pupils. 
For younger or less able pupils the Hlms may be used to stimulate 
interest in the period and the people who lived in it. Those people saw 
these Hlms as their window on the world; the window survives and it 
allows us to see the world as they saw it. In history courses leading to 
examinations at sixteen-plus or eighteen-plus, the series can be used to 
stimulate a more empathetic and realistic understanding of the problems 
of the 1930s. The Hlms themselves should lead the class to consider 
how these problems appeared to contemporaries and the booklets 
should help in considering how far people and governments in the 
1930s were in a position to recognise and understand them. The news 
reel records are presented substantially unaltered. They may be readily 
used also as historical sources for project work in connection with 
newspapers and other contemporary material. 
The series can be further used to stimulate inquiry into the nature 
and problems of historical understanding and method. The pupils 
should be able to compare what we now know from historical 
documents to have been happening at the time, with what contemp 
oraries were shown and told. This could be used to lead to discussion 
of the different kinds of information and understanding which 
contemporaries and historians can have. Pupils will also be able to 
compare and contrast what written records can tell about the past with 
what films and other audio-visual records such as television reveal. 
Finally with abler or older pupils these Hlms can be used to raise some 
fundamental questions about the nature of contemporary information 
and historical evidence in the age of the Communications Revolution. 
The creation and impact of popular myths by wishful reporting and 
deliberate propaganda are two such problems. The respective places of 
television, radio and ftlms on the one hand and written records, news 
papers and historical books on the other, are central problems today. 
What ways do we have, or not have, of 'finding out for ourselves'? 
At all levels of teaching the combination of readily understandable 
language and visual techniques, already familiar to children brought up 
on television, with the provision of original record material, should 
help considerably with a 'skills and records' approach to the study of 
history. 
The cinema newsreel in the 1930s had already developed many of 
the techniques used today for presenting the news. The pupils should 
be able to recognise most of the techniques in the simpler terms used 
in the 1930s and identify the more sophisticated forms in use today in 
2  television news. Thus, apart from an empathetic understanding of the
1930s the series provides important source material and a historical 
perspective for understanding the modern techniques of news selection 
and presentation and also of propaganda. It can be used to develop 
critical awareness of the use of archival ftlm in modern historical 
'documentaries' as much as the use of actuality ftlms in contemporary 
documentary and news programmes. An analytical understanding of 
newsreels in addition helps us to understand the main source of 
information which we have about the world around us (for more than 
three-quarters of the British people today, according to the latest 
audience research figures, regard television as their primary source of 
information). 
These ftlms should help pupils to examine the differences between 
information and interpretation, and to distinguish fact from opinion. 
The four films making up History Through the Newsreel have been 
conceived as cumulative rather than interconnected. The first ftlm in 
particular has been designed to provide a basic introduction and it 
should materially help in making the fullest use of the others. Its aim is 
to demonstrate how news and political information were communicated, 
how the fully-developed newsreel operated, and in what general context 
the news stories collected in the other ftlms originally appeared. The 
other ftlms cover three central problems of the 1930s: the unemployed, 
Nazi Germany, and the threat of total war. Each ftlm is self-contained 
and may be used singly to illuminate its particular subject, though 
maximum benefit would be derived from using them successively in the 
following order: 
News and the Newsreel 
The Unemployed 
Nazi Germany 
If War Should Come. 
3
The unemployed 
The biggest single social problem of the 1930s, and one which has 
continued to haunt politics and industrial relations ever since, was that 
of the unemployed. Following the economic and political crisis of 1931, 
unemployment rose rapidly to a peak of 2 355 000 in January 1933; it 
stood at just under two-and-a-half-million in August 1933, and did not 
fall below two million till July 1935-. A year later, the total number of 
unemployed was sti111.6 million, twelve per cent of the insured working 
population, and it remained at this figure until after the outbreak of the 
Second World War. Unemployment has always been a feature of 
industrial society, and indeed of most pre-industrial societies. The 
number out of work had not fallen below a million throughout the 
1920s, but it was in the thirties that the problem of the long-term 
unemployed became really serious. At the end of the twenties only five 
or six out of every hundred unemployed men had been out of work for 
a year or more, and these were mainly concentrated in the coal industry 
which had been in a disastrous condition since the General Strike of 
1926. In 1932 one-fifth of all the unemployed had had no work for a 
year or more and early in 1933 the long-term unemployed totalled 
450000. Though statistically relatively insignificant, unemployment 
in the thirties touched the middle-classes as well as manual workers. 
It used to be customary to blame the politicians and industrial 
leaders for their part in creating the tragedy of the depression. More 
recently some economic historians have argued that the economic 
strategies of the 1930s were less unsuccessful than used to be main 
tained, and that there was a very real industrial recovery from the 
middle of the decade. It should also be noted that the depression was a 
world-wide phenomenon, triggered off by the American stock market 
crash of 1929 and spread by the Central European banking collapse of 
1931, which directly affected Great Britain. The whole delicate 
mechanism of international trade, which had depended so heavily upon 
mutual trust between countries, and, above all, upon a faith in the 
solvency of British financial institutions, had been undermined by the 
First World War. On a more fundamental level, world-wide economic 
and technological developments were running against the old heavy 
industries which had formed the British industrial base for so long-coal 
mining, large sections of the iron and steel industry, heavy engineering, 
4  and shipbuilding. International competition, too, had deprived the
long-established Lancashire cotton industry of a large proportion of its 
markets. 
Businessmen, of course, argued that the fault lay not with them, but 
with the loss of markets. The media tended to follow this line (even in 
programmes broadly sympathetic to the workers such as Geoffrey 
Bridson and Joan Littlewood's radio documentary of 1936, Cotton 
People), arguing rather simplistically for import restrictions and a 
nationwide effort to 'Buy British'. But the less pleasant face of large 
scale private enterprise was to be seen in such combinations as The 
British Iron and Steel Federation and the National Shipbuilders Security, 
both of which were founded with government encouragement. When 
the steel mills at Mossend in Scotland and Dowlais in Wales were 
completely shut down, it seemed, understandably, to local people that 
they were being thrown on the scrap heap at the behest of some face 
less men in London. The shipyards, upon which the bulk of the male 
population of J arrow depended for a livelihood, were shut down by the 
National Shipbuilders Security; when local efforts wert made to launch 
an alternative light steel industry, they were stifled by the British Iron 
and Steel Federation. }arrow's Labour MP, Ellen Wilkinson, was scarcely 
exaggerating when she wrote of The Town that Was Murdered. 
J. M. Keynes, generally regarded as the greatest economist of the 
twentieth century, did not publish his major work on the General 
Theory of Employment, Interest and Money til11936. Perhaps it would 
be unfair to blame politicians before that for not being aware of his 
theory that the government itself must ensure that overall spending and 
investment is kept at a sufficient level to ensure full employment of all 
the resources of the community. On the other hand, the Independent 
Labour Party (a small group within the Labour Party, which broke away 
from it in 1932) had in the 1920s argued the case for a living wage which 
would provide enough purchasing power to maintain full employment. 
Also, in 1928 Lloyd George and the Liberals had published their Yellow 
Book advocating government expenditure on public works (though 
many Liberal MPs were in fact vehemently opposed to any such policies). 
Recently it has been argued, particularly by Robert Skidelsky, that Sir 
Oswald Mosley, a member of the minority Labour Government in 1929 
and 1930, was the one potential political leader who would have carried 
through the necessary policies of stimulating spending and investment. 
Given Mosley's erratic political behaviour, this is in my view a highly 
contentious statement, though it would certainly be unfair to judge 
Mosley on the evidence of a single newsreel story, taken one week after 
Mosley's resignation from the Labour Government. 
This minority Labour Government had to meet the full force of what 
was described by the Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald, as an 'economic 
blizzard'. The immediate short-term problem was to stop the run on the  5
pound and try to raise an American loan, thereby restoring confidence 
in Britain's economic stability. One reason for the loss of confidence 
was that the Unemployment Insurance Fund, out of which unemploy 
ment benefits were paid, was running into the red. Established govern 
ment and civil service attitudes to unemployment benefits were based 
on the principles of sound insurance, in other words that a man should 
only receive benefits for as long as he had an 'entitlement' on the basis 
of contributions already made. The Unemployment Insurance Fund, 
financed out of contributions from employees, employers and govern 
ment, was intended to be self-supporting; but very high unemployment 
put too great a strain on it. 
The private American bank of J. Pierpont Morgan would grant a loan 
only if the government tried to stem the drain on the Fund by a ten per 
cent reduction in unemployment benefits. On this issue the Labour 
Government split, and the cuts were carried through by the new National 
Government, headed by Ramsay MacDonald, but in which the 
Conservatives formed a majority. This National Government, later 
headed by Stanley Baldwin, and fmally by Neville Chamberlain, was in 
office throughout the decade. It is probably true to say that, with a few 
minor exceptions, its deliberate policies did little to reduce unemploy 
ment. Whether, given the state of economic knowledge at the time, it 
should have done more, is less easy to determine. 
However, government economic policies in the face of the depression 
are only one part of the problem. The other part concerns provision 
made by the government, through unemployment benefits and other 
means, for the unemployed. Most of the dramas in the history of the 
unemployed in the 1930s centred on this aspect of government policy. 
The first thing the new Ramsay MacDonald National Government 
did was to make reductions in the weekly benefit rates. An adult man 
was now to get 15s 3d (about 76p) instead of 17s, while his wife's 
allowance was reduced from 9s to 8s (40p); the child's allowance 
remained at 2s (lOp). At the same time insurance stamp contributions 
for men in work were increased from 7d to lOd (about 4p); the 
employer's contribution was also raised slightly from 8d to lOd, and 
the contribution from the government was increased by 2%d to lOd. 
There had always been a great deal of fuss in the extreme right-wing 
press over the so-called 'anomalies', by which, it was argued, the 
unemployed were receiving more from the taxpayer than they were 
entitled to. One of the particular tragedies of the whole period of heavy 
unemployment was the way in which solid Labour men, themselves still 
lucky enough to be in employment, often tended to become suspicious 
of the unemployed. The government's second step was to introduce 
new Anomalies Regulations, whose main effect was to stop about 
6  134 000 married women from collecting full benefit (as distinct from