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Henry Hyde Champion (22 January 1859 – 30 April 1928) was a socialist journalist and activist, regarded as a leading figure in the early political organisations of the labour movement in the United Kingdom.

Champion was born in India, the son of an army officer. He was educated in England and commissioned as an officer in the Royal Artillery. He served briefly in the Anglo-Afghan War but, after returning to England to recover from illness, was introduced to socialist ideas and philosophy and joined the British socialist movement. In 1882 Champion invested as a partner in a publishing enterprise, The Modern Press, which published early works by writers such as George Bernard Shaw. He was one of the founders of the Fellowship of the New Life and was involved in the formation of the Fabian Society, a breakaway group. From 1883 to 1887 Champion was a key member of the Social Democratic Federation (SDF), Britain's first socialist political organisation. In 1885 he provided funds for two SDF candidates to unsuccessfully run for parliamentary office in London, leading to a suspicion he had accepted money from the Conservative Party in order to split the progressive vote by taking votes away from the Liberal Party. The suspicion that Champion was the recipient of 'Tory gold' led to the questioning of his class allegiances by many of his working-class colleagues in the labour movement. Champion was one of four SDF speakers at a mass meeting at Trafalgar Square in February 1886 which led to riots and property damage. The four were charged with sedition but were acquitted by a jury.

In 1888 Champion became secretary of the Labour Electoral Association and established the Labour Elector journal. He was a member of the strike committee of the London dock strike of August and September 1889. Champion visited Australia from August 1890 to February 1891.

one of the leading spirits behind the formation of the Independent Labour Party. Up to 1893, he lived and worked in Great Britain, moving after that date to Australia.

Early life
Henry Hyde Champion was born on 22 January 1859 in Poona, in the Maharashtra state in western India, the eldest son of James Hyde Champion, an officer in the Bombay Army, and his wife Henrietta (née Urquhart). Henry's mother was from a family of aristocratic Scottish descent and there was a military tradition on both sides of his family. When he turned four years of age Henry was brought to England by his mother to begin his schooling. From 1873, aged thirteen, he was educated at Marlborough College, a public school at Marlborough in the county of Wiltshire. In 1877 Henry's father retired from service in India having attained the rank of major-general.

After completing his secondary education Champion attended the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich in south-east London. After graduation, in 1878 he was commissioned as a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery and was posted to the Bombay Presidency of British India. During his service in India Champion participated in the Anglo-Afghan War of 1878-1880. After becoming ill with typhoid Champion was invalided back to England in 1881, by that stage disillusioned with British imperialism and the treatment of its subject population in India.

During his convalescence Champion was taken to the slums of London's East End by Percy Frost, a friend from his school days at Marlborough College and the son of a wealthy clergyman, where they witnessed the poverty that existed there. Later in 1881, while Champion was still on sick leave from the Army, the two friends visited the United States. In America Champion read Progress and Poverty by Henry George. George argued for a tax on land as the answer to ending poverty and for a time Champion was a "devoted adherent" of the American reformer's economic philosophy. After returning to England, on 17 September 1882 Champion resigned from the British Army in protest at the British conquest of Egypt and joined the British socialist movement. Champion's commitment to socialism as a young man was described by the historian John Barnes as being a process "akin to discovering a sense of mission".

The Socialist movement


After he resigned his commission from the Army in late 1882, Champion received sufficient capital from his father to invest in a publishing house. After three months he declined the offer of a directorship in the firm, withdrew his money and purchased a half-share in a printing press owned by John C. Foulger, a radical who was publishing a monthly journal called Modern Thought. Their printing establishment in Paternoster Row operated under the imprint of 'The Modern Press'.

Champion's earliest political associates were men with whom he shared a public-school background. By June 1883 he and James L. Joynes (who had been schooled at Eton College) were editing The Christian Socialist: A Journal for Thoughtful Men, a publication of the newly-formed Land Reform League. The journal identified with the Christian socialism of F. D. Maurice and Charles Kingsley and had an editorial policy of excluding "class hatreds and class prejudices".

On 9 August 1883 Champion married twenty-eight year-old Juliet Bennett. Champion makes no mention of his wife in his later writings and little is known of Juliet except that she died after less than three years of marriage, one of the causes of her death being ascribed to alcoholism.

Champion "played a central role" in the formation of the Fellowship of the New Life, an organisation based on the ideas of Scottish philosopher Thomas Davidson. The objective of the society was "cultivation of a perfect character in each and all" by setting an example of clean simplified living, with many of the Fellowship's members advocating pacifism, vegetarianism and simple living. Champion was one of sixteen present at the inaugural meeting on 24 October 1883 in the London suburb of Regent's Park. Others present at the first meeting were Henry Havelock Ellis and Champion's Christian Socialist co-editor James Joynes. Soon after its formation some of the Fellowship members, including Champion, expressed a desire for a degree of political involvement, leading to the formation of a separate organisation named the Fabian Society. Although involved in its formation, Champion took no further part in the Fabian movement after becoming actively involved with the Social Democratic Federation.

In 1884 The Modern Press acquired and financed a periodical called To-day: The Monthly Magazine of Scientific Socialism which had been published since April 1883, edited by Ernest Belfort Bax and James L. Joynes. After the acquisition Champion became a joint editor. In 1884 an early novel by George Bernard Shaw, An Unsocial Socialist, was serialised in To-day magazine. An earlier novel by Shaw called Cashel Byron's Profession was serialised in To-day from April 1885 to March 1886 and published in book form by The Modern Press later in 1886 (the first of Shaw's works to be published as a book).

The Social Democratic Federation
By 1883 Champion was the secretary of the Democratic Federation, a political organisation whose chairman was Henry M. Hyndman, a journalist from a wealthy middle-class background who had been converted to socialism after reading Karl Marx's The Communist Manifesto. The Democratic Federation had been formed in 1881 as a union of radical and republican organisations with an agenda based on the collectivisation of property in Great Britain (as proposed in Hyndman's England for All). In 1883 the Democratic Federation issued a socialistic manifesto demanding adult suffrage, a republican government and nationalisation of land and "other means of producing and distributing wealth". Champion, as secretary, was one of ten signatories to the document. In January 1884 the Democratic Federation began producing a weekly newspaper called Justice, initially edited by Charles L. Fitzgerald but soon afterwards replaced in that role by Hyndman. Champion contributed to the Justice newspaper, including a series of articles on "wage slaves" focussing on the "intellectual proletariat" working in shops and offices. At the fourth annual conference of the Democratic Federation, held on 9 August 1884, the party's name was changed to the Social Democratic Federation (SDF).

The SDF decided to run a parliamentary candidate in the November 1885 general election in a seat in Nottingham (where three branches of the SDF had been established). John Burns, a strong public speaker with a working-class and unionist background (and member of the SDF executive), was chosen to contest the Nottingham West constituency, supported by a local committee and a local newspaper. At the last minute SDF candidates were also nominated for two seats in London (in Hampstead and Kennington), using funds offered to Champion from an unidentified source. Burns and the two London candidates (Jack Williams in Hampstead and John Fielding at Kennington) were the first socialist parliamentary candidates in British history. Although each of the SDF candidates were unsuccessful at the general election, the "pathetically small vote" for the two London candidates (a combined total of fifty-nine votes) damaged the public reputation of the SDF. The "fiasco of the London candidatures" prompted George Bernard Shaw to observe that "all England is satisfied we are a paltry handful of blackguards". The prevailing suspicion was that the funds had come from the Conservative Party with the intention of taking votes from the Liberal Party by splitting the progressive vote. Champion had received the offer of funds through his friend, the journalist Maltman Barry, a former Marxist variously described as a "maverick Tory Radical" and a "Conservative agent". The offer was accepted and an amount of £340 was transferred to the SDF. After the election it was found that Hyndman and Champion had acted without consultation and that the SDF treasurer, J. Hunter Watts, was unaware of the transaction. Watts publicised details of the affair in an "angry letter" to The Pall Mall Gazette. In The Democrat journal of 12 December 1885 the journalist and member of the SDF executive council, Charles L. Fitzgerald, denounced Hyndman and Champion for their irresponsibility and for "trying to run the Federation in military style". Champion was subject to recurring accusations of having received 'Tory gold' and the controversy was to dog him for the remainder of his political life. After the details of the 'Tory gold' episode became known Champion resigned as secretary of the SDF (possibly a decision forced upon him).



The mid-1880s were years of high unemployment in Britain, a condition that liberal and leftist groups ascribed to cheaper foreign imports taking British jobs under free trade conditions. Agitation for tariff reform came from two distinct movements, the socialists (represented by groups such as the SDF) and protectionists such as the Fair Trade League, existing side-by-side but with distinct differences in ideology. The underlying idea common to both was Protectionism, but where the Fair Traders "postulated that the workers needed to be protected from enemies abroad", socialists by contrast maintained "their enemies were in their midst" with foreign competitors often being "financed by British capital unpatriotically invested in foreign lands".



The Trafalgar Square Riots of 8 February 1886 were disorders in the West End of London following a counter-demonstration by the Social Democratic Federation in Trafalgar Square against a meeting of the Fair Trade League. The meeting in Trafalgar Square ended in a riot and a destructive attack on the clubs in Pall Mall and St. James Street and on shops in Picadilly and Audley Street, after which another open-air meeting was held near the Achilles statue in Hyde Park. The four SDF speakers, Jack Williams, Henry Hyndman, Henry Hyde Champion and John Burns, were "charged with maliciously and seditiously contriving to disturb the peace, and to incite people to riot and tumult, by inflammatory words moving to hatred of the law and government of the realm". On 17 February they were brought before the chief magistrate at the Bow Street Police Court. After evidence was given by journalists regarding what was said by the defendants at the Trafalgar Square and Hyde Park meetings, the case was adjourned for a week, with the defendants admitted to bail. Belford Bax posted bail for Champion.

The four defendants were eventually brought to trial at the Old Bailey on 6 April 1886, charged with "uttering seditious words and with conspiring together to utter seditious words". Burns and Williams were defended by Mr. W. Thompson and Champion and Hyndman conducted their own defence. The prosecution was led by the Attorney-General Sir Charles Russell. On 10 April the jury returned a verdict of not guilty for each of the four defendants. In announcing the verdicts the foreman singled out Burns and Champion for a special comment, saying that the jury "are of opinion that the language of Messrs. Burns and Champion was highly inflammatory and greatly to be condemned, but on the whole of the facts brought before us we acquit those two defendants of any seditious intent".

In certain ways Champion was not suited to formal organisational structures. The respected trade unionist Tom Mann described him as "a man of vigorous individuality" who would sometimes "act upon his own initiative" and "commit the organisation to plans and projects without consultation". Mann concluded that Champion "was profoundly convinced that his judgment was right" and when situations arose necessitating decisive action "he could not endure to wait several days before the committee met".

Dod Street meetings.

Labour Elector
During 1887 Champion resigned his membership of the SDF. His views had become increasingly divergent from the SDF under Hyndman's direction; by then he was convinced "that the future of socialism in Britain depended upon gaining parliamentary power". In May 1887 he began a monthly journal called Common Sense. In June and July 1887 Champion delivered a series of four lectures "at a fashionable venue in Piccadilly", proposing a moderate socialist agenda. His final lecture, 'Constructive Socialism', proposed reforms such as "a more democratic parliament, free elementary education, an eight-hour day, graduated income-tax, nationisation of railways, and taxing of mining royalties". Champion's article in the September 1887 issue of Common Sense, titled 'The Future of Socialism in England', set forth his criticisms of the SDF, renounced the use of force, and advocated the putting up of socialist candidates for parliament.

In 1888 Champion joined the Labour Electoral Association and became secretary of that organisation. The Association, set up by the Trades Union Congress in 1886 to support the election to parliament of trade union candidates, provided a framework for Champion's campaign to intervene in the mainstream contest between the Conservative and Liberal parties by running labour movement candidates. His most significant effort was in Scotland, supporting the candidature of Keir Hardie for the Mid Lanarkshire by-election held in April 1888. Champion ran the by-election campaign from London, acquiring funds, arranging for a local organiser, writing articles and trying (without success) to persuade the Liberal party organisation not to run a candidate. In the end, however, the by-election was won by the Liberal John Philipps. Hardie, running as an Independent Labour candidate received just 8.4 percent of the votes.



In June 1888 Champion established the monthly journal Labour Elector (with Maltman Barry as a sub-editor), declaring that it was being published so that "all interested in the formation of a Labour Party may be provided with information about its progress and achievement". By August 1888 Hardie, realising that the labour movement could not rely on the Liberals for electoral success, collaborated with the former Liberal Cunninghame Graham and others to form the Scottish Parliamentary Labour Party. By the second issue of Labour Elector Champion had started a campaign against the British chemical industrialist and Liberal Party politician John Brunner, exposing the harsh conditions for workers at the Brunner-Mond chemical plant. From January 1889 the Labour Elector, by now subtitled "The Organ of Practical Socialism", was published weekly. In July 1889, after Brunner had initiated a libel suit against the journal and with growing financial concerns, the Labour Elector was placed under the control of a committee of management (with members including Tom Mann and John Burns), though Champion retained editorial control.

Champion was one of the speakers at a rally in Hyde Park on 28 July 1889 after the newly-formed National Union of Gas Stokers and General Labourers, headed by Will Thorne, gained an eight-hour day for its members.

When the London dock strike began in August 1889, the trade union organiser Ben Tillett asked both John Burns and Tom Mann to join the strike committee. It was also suggested that Champion's services would be useful. With his "Fleet Street contacts and his journalistic ability" Champion took on the role of press officer for the striking dockers. Though he was the only non-working-class member of the strike committee, he was nevertheless "trusted and respected" by the other strike leaders. In a report of a meeting of striking dock-workers in September 1889, a journalist for The Times observed that Champion's "influence is not great among the men, to whom cool reason and a cultivated accent do not appeal". The Labour Elector became the published mouthpiece of the strike, selling up to twenty thousand copies and occasionally being issued in several editions. The month-long strike, resulting in the successful granting of a pay claim of sixpence per hour, was boosted by substantial funds contributed by the Australian labour movement.

An episode in early 1890 undermined whatever goodwill Champion may have acquired in progressive circles from his activities during the dock-workers' strike. In July 1889 a homosexual male brothel was discovered by the police in central London leading to a series of incidents that became known as the Cleveland Street scandal. The brothel keeper managed to leave the country to avoid prosecution, but several of the young male prostitutes were tried and received lenient sentences. During the investigation certain members of the British nobility were named as patrons of the brothel. By early January 1890 as many as sixty suspected patrons had been identified, many of whom had fled the country. In November 1889 Ernest Parke, the editor of a radical weekly journal The North London Press, named Henry FitzRoy, the Earl of Euston, as one who had fled abroad to escape being charged in the scandal. FitzRoy had been named as a brothel patron, but had not gone abroad, and sued Parke for criminal libel. On 16 January 1890 Parke was found guilty and sentenced to twelve months in prison, an outcome that outraged progressive opinion. On the front page of the 25 January 1890 issue of the Labour Elector a short article described Parke's sentence as "a salutary lesson", adding that if FitzRoy had gone to Parke's workplace "and there and then physically twisted the little wretch's neck nobody would have blamed him". It was later revealed that the article, "siding with a suspect aristocrat... against a hard-working, well-meaning editor, who favoured trade unionism", had been written by Maltman Barry, but Champion stood by his sub-editor and accepted editorial responsibility. Burns resigned from the journal's management committee over the matter and Mann and another committee member, George Bateman, both disavowed Barry's article in the pages of Labour Elector.

The Labour Elector ceased publication in April 1890. The decision to suspend the journal was probably forced upon Champion "by a lack of capital and declining readership", the support and good-will from its role in the dock strike having fully dissipated. In April 1890 an article by Champion was published in the monthly journal The Nineteenth Century; titled 'The Labour Movement: A Multitude of Counsellors', it was written under the pseudonym 'Blake the socialist'. On 17 May 1890 Champion was the main speaker at a labour rally of twenty thousand people at Aberdeen in north-east Scotland.

Champion decided to visit Australia, where the labour movement was active and had made significant gains (such as the eight-hour day in the colony of Victoria); in the words of an article about him in The Pall Mall Gazette (7 February 1891), Champion "went off to study the Labour Question in the Workman’s Paradise". He had also been commissioned to write reports for The Times and The Nineteenth Century during his visit to Australia. In early June Champion vacated his office in Paternoster Row and went to Germany for three weeks, possibly staying there with Margaret Harkness. On 5 July 1890 Champion, accompanied by his friend Percy Frost, departed for Australia aboard the Orient Company's steamer RMS Oruba. Champion's biographer, John Barnes, suggests that the socialist crusader's visit to Australia was made in order to "recover lost prestige and authority as a labour leader".

Visit to Australia
Champion disembarked from the RMS Oruba at Melbourne on 12 August 1890. On the same day he attended the Victorian Legislative Assembly and presented a letter of introduction to Alfred Deakin, the leading liberal politician in Victoria, who showed him over the houses of parliament. Champion's arrival in Australia had been preceded by a series of articles written by him, titled 'The Labor Movement in England', published in Melbourne's The Age newspaper from late June to mid-July 1890. Champion arrived bearing letters of introduction "to the leading labour organisers in Australia" from his colleague John Burns, the respected British unionist and hero of the 1889 London dock strike.



Three days after Champion arrived in Melbourne a major industrial dispute commenced when the Mercantile Marine Officers' Association directed its members to give twenty-four hours notice after pay and conditions negotiations with the Steamship Owners' Association of Victoria broke down. Champion, described in The Age as "the well known English advocate of the rights of labor", was invited to address the Trades Hall Council on 20 August 1890. It was reported that the attending union members "warmed towards Mr. Champion as reference was made to his connection with the London Dock strike, and when he resumed his seat the building resounded with hearty applause". On 31 August he was one of the speakers at a "mass meeting of working men", estimated to number thirty to forty thousand, at Melbourne's Flinders Park. Champion followed the speech by William Trenwith, at that stage the only member of parliament representing the labour movement in the Victorian Legislative Assembly. Champion's address to the crowd was described as "a good speech, clever, forcible, just the right length, but the speaker lacks the quality which all the others possess, of personal interest in the movement".

After first claiming he had not come to offer advice, on 6 September 1890 The Age published a long article by Champion titled 'The Labor Crisis' in which he offered advice to both sides of the dispute. Describing himself in the article as "the most advanced and resolute trade unionist in Australia", Champion set out the principles he believed should be followed by the opposing parties. In general, however, Champion's analysis received an unfavourable reaction from trade unionists who interpreted his words as an endorsement of the employers' position. Champion's next contribution in The Age caused even more disquiet amongst unionists. In the article 'British Labor Congress: What Would Burns and Mann Say?' he implied that the heroes of the British trade-union movement, John Burns and Tom Mann (who Champion described as "my personal friends"), would fully endorse his views on the Australian dispute. Even though he had not directly communicated with them about the issues, Champion wrote: "My position is therefore the peculiar one of being the only person whom they know and trust who can, in this crisis, convey to them a trustworthy account of affairs here". Champion's comments led to a suspicion from labour leaders that he was responsible for adversely affecting the flow of funds from Britain to support striking workers.

The strike had began with a walk-out of a few hundred ships' officers, but after a month of dramatic escalation it was joined by officers and seamen, wharf labourers, gas stokers and coal miners across Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia and New Zealand. The employers in the eastern colonies presented a united front in response to the striking workers. Conditions of high unemployment enabled them to hire non-union labour, so they opted to resist direct negotiations with the unions. As the strike progressed it became increasingly unpopular and divisions within the union leadership grew. Champion travelled to Sydney in mid-September in the belief he could act as mediator in the dispute, but suspicions about his motives ensured that "he was not in a position to take the leadership role that so attracted him". In Sydney he met with the Lord Mayor and Edmund Barton, but was either ignored or experienced hostility from local union leaders. After he returned to Melbourne Champion's article 'A Way Out', published in The Age on 2 October, sought to clarify the issues between the opposing sides. However, with the employers resisting a conference with the unions and the absence of a cohesive strategy from the strike leadership, the widespread industrial dispute remained unresolved.

An intervention by Champion in mid-October 1890 led to him being openly described as a 'traitor' to the unionist cause. After a Sydney unionist had cabled John Burns in London asking for a loan of twenty thousand pounds to sustain the strike, Champion reacted by sending a telegram to Burns advising him that the Australian strike was being "grossly mismanaged" and that the requested funds would be wasted and "could not prevent its absolute failure". Champion followed this action by advising the editor of The Age of the contents of the telegram. Other disparaging rumours and accusations began to circulate about Champion within the labour movement (such as him being an accredited correspondent of the London Times and having enrolled as a special constable to assist the police in the case of disturbances by striking workers).

The strike finally ended in November 1890 after the marine officers had agreed to disaffiliate from the Trades Hall Council and the New South Wales unions capitulated. At a mass meeting in Melbourne on 13 November 1890 of wharf labourers, seamen, cooks and stewards and gas stokers at the Hiberian Hall, the strike was declared to be over. The committee chairman John Hancock explained that "they found it useless to maintain the fight any longer", especially with unemployed unionists from Sydney "coming to Melbourne and taking the positions of the men on strike". William Trenwith also addressed the meeting and spoke of Champion, describing him as "a champion of renegades" and remarking that "the unionists of Melbourne had received him with open arms only to find that they had taken a serpent into their bosom". Stimulated by comments from Trenwith and Hancock, Champion was denounced "as a traitor and capitalist stooge" at the meeting. At a meeting of the Trades Hall Council the next evening a letter from Champion was read, requesting permission to address the council members "at an early date". After discussing the matter a resolution was passed declining to hear him, but to ask him "to put any statement he wished to make in writing", citing as a reason "the injury Mr. Champion had done to the labor cause in this colony". Champion refused to take a backward step. In The Age of 17 November 1890 his article 'Experience Teaches' described the recent strike as a "fiasco" and denounced the labour leaders Trenwith, Hancock and William Murphy for their "shortsightedness" and their adoption of a "suicidal course". He accused them of "having to divert attention from their own blunders" by attacking him.

Even though there was growing disquiet and dissension within the Melbourne Trades Hall Council regarding the handling of the strike, in the end an appeal "to working-class solidarity always carried the day". The historian John Barnes observed that Champion was deaf to such an appeal and "in every way, he was tailor-made to be a union scapegoat". He looked and acted like the capitalist employers they opposed, he consorted with them and helped their cause "by exposing the weaknesses of the unions".

Champion contributed an article to the February edition of The Nineteenth Century on the subject of the Australian labour strike. He strongly condemned the actions of the union leaders, describing the striking labourers to an "army of lions led by asses". He claimed the results of the struggle was "a crushing defeat" for the labour movement and resulted in the "welding of the employers into a solid and irresistible force". A reply to Champion's criticisms was published in the same journal the following month written by John Fitzgerald, a unionist from Sydney who had travelled to London during the maritime strike to raise support for the striking Australian workers.

A secret affair with a married woman and children'’s author, Adelaide Hogg (daughter of wealthy pioneer Alexander Lang Elder).

Champion left Melbourne aboard the P. and O. steamer Valetta on 28 February 1891 and arrived in London on 7 April.

The Independent Labour Party
On 19 June 1891 in Aberdeen Champion gave a talk on 'The Future of Democracy' at a meeting organised by the Aberdeen Trades Council. In the July 1891 issue of The Nineteenth Century Champion's article 'A Labour Inquiry' (in the form of a dialogue) spoke of the need for "the educated class" to accept their "political duties" and "take their share in the guidance and education of the working class", otherwise the option for "the workman... is too often confined to the unscrupulous and the self seekers". Soon after Champion's return to London the editor of The Nineteenth Century James Knowles had offered him the job of sub-editor of the monthly journal. In December 1891 Knowles was stricken with typhoid and Champion took over as editor for two months. Champion remained in the role of sub-editor, working part-time, until 1893. During this period Champion divided his time between London and Aberdeen, his part-time position as sub-editor allowing him to continue his political activities.

Champion stood for the seat of South Aberdeen in the general election of July 1892 as an independent labour candidate. His opponents were the sitting member from the Liberal Party and a candidate from the break-away Liberal Unionist Party. He campaigned strongly but failed to win the seat, although he managed to secure the highest vote of any labour-aligned candidate in Scotland. At the declaration of the poll Champion made an assertive speech, telling his supporters that "so long as he had money, health, and leisure, he was quite ready to fight the battle of labour here or elsewhere". Elsewhere in the United Kingdom independent labour candidates met with success. Keir Hardie in South West Ham and John Burns in Battersea won their seats against Conservative opponents and J. Havelock Wilson in Middlesbrough was successful against a Gladstonian Liberal and a Liberal Unionist. Champion was actively involved in a movement that sought to consolidate and build upon the electoral gains by forming a national independent labour organisation. In September 1892 the Trades Union Congress appointed a committee to organise a conference in January 1893 of all the local independent labour parties. Champion began to contact groups in various parts of the country and rally supporters in an effort to gather a majority of delegates to support his views. However disquiet about his activities in Australia and his continued association with Maltman Barry, viewed by many as a Tory agent, served to undermine his efforts.

On 7 January 1893 the Labour Elector was resurrected, published for the first time since April 1890. The editorial in the new issue stated that "although Mr. Champion is not now nominally Editor of the Journal, his spirit will continue to animate and direct it". By this time Champion was ill to the extent that he was forced to miss the conference at Bradford, held a week later from 14 to 16 January, at which the Independent Labour Party (ILP) was formed. Politically Champion found himself isolated. He was the honorary president of the Aberdeen branch of the ILP, but elsewhere his support base was diminished. His determination to take a leadership role in the ILP organisation was alienating prominent labour leaders like Burns, Hardie and Cunninghame Graham. The Bradford conference was notable for "the presence of a new type of delegate", respectable, articulate working-class men able to speak for themselves and willing to take on positions of authority. As the historian John Barnes summarised it: "Champion had chosen to turn away from the educated elite to which he belonged by birth and education, but his conception of leadership remained elitist, out of tune with democratic and collectivist values".

The Labour Elector in its new incarnation was largely written by Maltman Barry, at first published weekly but in May it became a monthly due to "the continued and serious illness of Mr. Champion, and his resultant inability to contribute to these columns". Barry wrote in the plural in the Labour Elector, "as if he and Champion were of one mind". In the issue of 1 April 1893 he wrote: "We have created the Independent Labour Party and set it on its legs, and we are going to take care that no one (inside of it or outside of it) injures it". On 22 April Barry wrote "we have openly declared our intention to do the work of the Independent Labour Party wherever and whenever the Independent Labour Party is unable or unwilling to do it". These comments were indicative of the attitude that prompted Joseph Burgess in the Workman's Times to make editorial attacks on "The Barry-Champion 'We'" during April and May 1893. The ILP executive began to increasingly view the behaviour of Champion and Barry as irresponsible. The Bradford conference had passed a resolution that "there should be a central electoral fund, with no funds accepted that imposed conditions, including the targeting of funds for particular candidates". Champion's funding of selected candidates and suspicions about the funding sources had caused tensions in the past, and his readiness to continue the practice outside of the central fund set him at odds with the new organisation.

Early in April 1893 Champion spent several weeks in Europe with the writer Morley Roberts, with whom he had developed a close friendship. After their return they shared a house at Kilburn in London and later in the year Champion also took rooms in Aberdeen. In June 1893 the Labour Elector began to use the sub-title "The Organ of the Independent Labour Party", a decision aggressively explained as being "in consequence of the pretensions put forward by ignorant and unprincipled individuals to speak in the name of the Independent Labour Party", followed by comments about "the follies and treasons of these individuals, whether acting singly or under the guise of 'councils' or 'committees'".

In September 1893, under Champion's guidance, the monthly Aberdeen Labour Elector became the weekly Aberdeen Standard, a local newspaper presenting a Labour view. The Labour Elector under Barry's editorship continued to appear, but it was increasingly marginal to the mainstream of Labour politics and "absorbed in self-justification". The Labour Elector finally ceased publication in January 1894.

In the lead-up to the second ILP conference at Manchester in early February 1894 Champion recognised that his political ambitions on the national stage had been thwarted. He was being increasingly seen as "an upper-class adventurer, bent on taking over the ILP", and had become steadily more isolated from both the established and emerging labour leaders. At the conference on 2 February an administrative council minute was read to the assembled delegates repudiating both Champion and Barry. In a report in the Workman's Times Joseph Burgess wrote that "the arch-plotters" had been ignored at the conference and that the ILP was now "absolutely pure of Championate taint".

Champion decided to return to Australia, a decision he had made prior to the Manchester conference.

Adelaide Hogg had been in London nursing a sister who was ill, but returned to Melbourne by the end of 1893.

Back to Australia


Champion left England aboard the R.M.S. Orient which departed from Plymouth on 24 February 1894 and arrived at Melbourne on 5 April. Morley Roberts' lover, Mrs. Alice Hamlyn, was also a passenger on the vessel. Champion arrived in Australia with "considerable debts and no expectations". He later wrote that in his political endeavours in Britain he had spent "his last farthing and over £5000 entrusted to him by private friends" and likened his arrival in Melbourne in 1894 to that of "a near-penniless migrant".

In Melbourne Champion was employed as a leader writer for The Age newspaper. There remained residual hostility towards Champion in Australia. A columnist in Melbourne Punch commented that "there is much indignation in the Trades Hall camp that Mr. H. H. Champion has presumed to come back to Melbourne", adding that "the old hatred of him survives strongly".

In late-May 1894 Morley Roberts arrived in Melbourne by train from Sydney. Roberts had left Britain in March and travelled to Australia via the United States and across the Pacific by steamer, planning to secretly join his married lover. By this time Champion and Mrs. Hamlyn (and possibly also Champion's lover Adelaide Hogg) were living at Beaconsfield, south-east of Melbourne. Whatever plans the two couples had in mind were disrupted when Roberts received a telegram shortly after his arrival demanding his "instant return to England". After Champion pawned his gold watch and chain to help pay the fares, Roberts and Mrs. Hamlyn departed on 9 June aboard the R.M.S. Oruba, bound for Naples. In August 1894 Adelaide returned to her husband, though Champion later claimed Henry Roughton Hogg was party to an agreement that Adelaide "should see me openly when and where she liked so long as no scandal was created".

He only found favour as a speaker for middle-class clubs and societies, including the left-wing but far from anti-capitalist Fabians, the Women's Franchise League (Champion was a fervent campaigner for women's suffrage) and the Anti-Sweating League, which investigated working conditions in the clothing, boot-making and other sweatshop industries.

Champion briefly rediscovered his socialist flame in the Victorian Socialist Party, before its two thousand members dispersed over disputes around whether the party was a left ginger group of the Australian Labor Party or an independent and revolutionary socialist organisation. Sentimentally still thinking of himself as a socialist, Champion retired to the middle-class world of the educated book lover.

He was an anti-vivisectionist and vegetarian.

In 1895 Champion established a weekly paper the Champion which lasted until 1897, and he also published in Melbourne in 1895 The Root of the Matter, a series of dialogues on social questions, which gave moderate statement of the socialist position, but attracted little attention. Champion could not, however, find his place in politics in Australia. He could not see eye to eye with the Australian Labor Party, and a statement, possibly made in haste, that this party consisted of lions led by asses did not help the position. He was a candidate for South Melbourne for the Victorian Legislative Assembly supported now by many at the Trades Hall; the campaign revolved round his personal reputation and he had the satisfaction of prosecuting Max Hirsch and extracting an apology and costs, however he lost the election.

He mounted a number of unsuccessful campaigns for a seat in Parliament, he helped found the Fabian Society, and joined the Women’s Suffrage League, and published The root of the matter; being a series of dialogues on social questions (1895). He founded the Social Democratic Association of Victoria in 1895, and also the National Anti-Sweating League.

From 1895 to 1897 he published The Champion.

From 1897 to 1899 he published the society paper, The Sun, and from 1899 to 1921 The Book-lover, the monthly magazine of the Book Lovers' Library, which had been conducted from 1896 by Champion’s wide, Elsie Goldstein. He suffered a stroke in 1901.

He joined the Victorian Socialist League in 1898. He was active in the Victorian Socialist Party, occupying a number of official positions and was involved in its various co-operative ventures. He briefly edited the VSP's organ the Socialist, and contributed, usually under the pseudonym 'Tenex'.

On 8 December 1898 Champion married Elsie Belle Goldstein, the daughter of the suffragist and social reformer Isabella Goldstein and sister of Vida Goldstein.

Champion then settled down as a leader writer for The Age. His wife successfully conducted the Book Lovers' Library and Bookshop, and in connection with this Champion published a monthly literary paper, the Book Lover, which ran 1899–1921. He also wrote occasionally for the The Socialist and The Bulletin. He had a long period of ill-health before his death at Melbourne on 30 April 1928.

A clandestine affair with novelist, Katharine Susannah Prichard.

Champion interested himself in social movements, was a foundation member of the Anti-Sweating League, and he organized the first appeal which resulted in the foundation of the Queen Victoria Hospital for Women and Children. He also founded the Australasian authors' agency and published a few books with literary merit.

Henry Hyde Champion died on 30 April 1928 at his home at 462 Punt Road in South Yarra, aged 69. He was cremated at the Fawkner Crematorium.

Champion's commitment to the ideal of socialism was constant, says Barnes, trying to rescue Champion from the disdain he was held in by most of the Australian left. It is, however, an attempt that can only be pulled off by soft-pedalling Champion's undermining of the 1890 maritime strike and by underplaying the perpetual political crisis posed by Champion's elitist condescension towards working people.

Class origins need not be a barrier to socialist politics. Marx was an intellectual, Engels a cotton manufacturer. What matters are political values. Champion's dislike for autonomous working-class democracy and collectivism, and his permanent truce with capitalism, were the real problem, not his frock coat, monocle and posh manners.

Barnes' conclusion that "the most memorable thing about [Champion's] life was that, with all his contradictions and confusions, he bore witness to the power of an ideal" is the best light that can be thrown on Champion. Equally illuminating is the sad and sorry history of the political reformism of Champion compared to the genuine revolutionary champions of the working class.

Publications

 * The Great Dock Strike in London, August, 1889 (1890), London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co. ; Melbourne: E. A. Petherick & Co.


 * The Root of the Matter: Being a Series of Dialogues on Social Questions (1895), Melbourne: E.W. Cole.