The Diggers’ Song

The Diggers had several songs, but their most renowned one was never published in their time.

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The English Diggers (1649-1650)

The English Diggers (1649-1650)

“Digger’s Song “ calls upon the poor to rise up against tyranny and reclaim the land. (Original lyrics Gerard Winstanley (1649)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGUgSbRICJI&list=RDpGUgSbRICJI&start_radio=1

#Commons #Commoners #Diggers

Blackbeard's Tea Party - Stand Up Now [Official Video]

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Today in Labor History April 26, 1649: The English authorities sentenced Robert Lockier to be shot for leading a mutiny. Cromwell’s New Model Army had just defeated Charles I in the English Civil War. However, the Army failed to negotiate a settlement with the King. And when Charles I double-crossed them, they executed him. A conflict arose between the monarchists, who wanted another king, and Cromwell, who wanted a plutocratic Parliament. Then there were the Levellers, who wanted a democracy in which every male head of household had a vote, regardless of whether he owned property. And the Diggers (AKA the True Levellers), who wanted universal suffrage AND common ownership of the land. Lockier was a Leveller and a member the New Model Army. On April 24, he and some other soldiers barricaded themselves in a Leveller meeting place in London. They demanded to paid their overdue wages. Cromwell ended the mutiny after a few days and arrested Lockier as the ringleader.

The Diggers originally called themselves the True Levellers, to distinguish themselves from the more moderate Levellers. However, in April, 1649, they began pulling down enclosures (common lands usurped by the landlords) on St. George’s Hill. And when they started planting the land in common, for the benefit of all peasants, people started calling them Diggers. Needless to say, the local landlords were peeved. They asked the New Model Army to come in and remove the Diggers. However, their commander told the landlords to use the courts. So, the landlords organized gangs to beat and burn out the Diggers. Ultimately, the court ruled that the Army could evict the Diggers if they did not leave. So, they left. But they started new commons in neighboring regions.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn31l2idKTA

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Billy Bragg - The World Turned Upside Down | Live at the Empire, Belfast 2011

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Today in Labor History April 1, 1649: Diggers occupied St. George's Hill, in Surrey, England, seizing land to hold in common and to grow food. Other Digger communities followed in Little Heath, Wellingborough, Buckinghamshire and other regions. The Diggers are sometimes seen as forerunners of modern anarchism. In 1966, members of the San Francisco Mime Troupe formed a Diggers group, handing out free food to hippies in Golden Gate Park. The original Diggers influenced the anti-roads and squatting movements in England and elsewhere. They inspired the Leon Rosselsen song, “The World Turned Upside Down,” seen in the Youtube video, above, performed by Billy Bragg.

https://youtu.be/LK2ldle1kAk

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Billy Bragg - World Turned Upside Down

YouTube
#GerrardWinstanley and 30+ other #Diggers occupied #StGeorgesHill on #ThisDayInHistory in 1649 and began working the land collectively in an early form of agrarian #anarchocommunism. Their #DirectAction inspired others to join them and the movement grew until forcibly suppressed.
New home for Waverley RSL

WAVERLEY, VIC. — The Waverley RSL Sub-Branch last week announced the purchase of the ibis Melbourne Glen Waverley hotel as its new home.

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The Diggers' Song by Gerrard Winstanley, 17th century, England, performed by Chumbawamba

Context: The Diggers were a small but radical group of agrarian socialists and Protestant dissidents in 17th-century England who, after the execution of Charles I, occupied common land in 1649 to cultivate it collectively and challenge private property and enclosure. Their communities were harassed and dispersed by landowners and authorities by 1650, but their ideas about communal land use and economic equality left a lasting legacy in later social movements.

Chumbawamba - The Diggers' Song

YouTube