#OnThisDay: 6 May 1926 first issue of Nottingham's twice-daily Strike Bulletin urged workers to ignore "any Government or anti-strike propaganda publications, obviously inspired to mislead the public and to attempt to break the General Strike."

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#OnThisDay: Morning 5 May 1926 Printers at the Nottingham Guardian walk off the job, despite the paper's editorial the previous evening which stated: "we imagine there is very little enthusiasm for a General Strike amongst the vast majority of workers."

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#OnThisDay: At 9pm, May 4 1926 some 400 demonstrators supposedly led by local boxer 'Seaman' Carrington besieged the Palais-de-dance but were forced to disperse by police with truncheons

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#OnThisDay: 4 May 1926 Around 2,000 strikers toured Queens Drive area demanding work stopped at several local factories. After they rushed the Nottingham Brewery Company, the police were called and scuffles and fights broke out. Later they visited the Midland Timber Company and the works of Messrs Jardine but as they were accompanied by a strong force of police they were unable to call out workers of these firms.

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#OnThisDay: 4 May 1926 During one demonstration private car belonging to a Nottingham bus proprietor Mr A Burton was turned over. This proprietor made a determined effort to run his bus fleet with non-union labour, but after a great deal of trouble with pickets who in some cases removed the carburettors of buses, he discontinued the effort about noon.

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#OnThisDay: 4 May 1926 Huge meetings of transport workers & railwaymen held in various parts of Nottingham. Mood summed up at joint meeting of rail unions where NUR District Organiser Mr W Hall after appealing for order and discipline said: "we knew this day was bound to come sooner or later and we ought to be glad. It is a day we have hoped for and prayed for and looked forward to... we ought to be delighted."

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#OnThisDay: 4 May 1926 the first day of the General Strike. The Nottingham Guardian managed to produce an edition which carried a story detailing "great activity" outside the offices of the T&GWU and the NUGMW where workers not yet called out were anxiously inquiring if they could cease work.

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#OnThisDay according to trade unionist Jack Charleswroth when many Nottingham pubs closed at 10am on 3 May 1926 - the day before the General Strike  - the Red Flag was the last song sung.

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#OnThisDay: 3 May 1926 Nottingam & District Joint Advisory Dispute Committee formed at meeting convened by telegram. Resolved that Strike Committee should be formed of 2 representatives of each union in dispute plus whole Trades Council Exec and delegates from Long Eaton & Netherfield. Committee sat every day of strike as did sub-committees it appointed to deal with
permits, publicity, meetings & outside pickets

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#OTD: 2 May 1926 Nottingham Communist Party's pre-strike meeting held in the evening. Cyril Goddard recalled: "the Party was fully alive to the fact that the Government was organising and the TUC was doing nothing... at our meeting I remember the speaker Harry Webb, the 'Mighty Atom' we called him, making
the point-watch your leaders... and by God they took some watching."

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