The archive is a comprehensive collection of the author’s professional correspondence,
manuscripts and speeches. It was acquired by the university in the mid- 1960s from
Allen’s widow, Lady Allen, through the intercession of the British historian Martin
Gilbert, who held a visiting position at the University of South Carolina after the
completion of his book on Allen, Plough My Own Furrow: The Story of Lord Allen of
Hurtwood as Told Through His Writings and Correspondence (1965).
Clifford Allen was part of a group of left-leaning conscientious objectors and pacifists
who chose prison rather than conscription during World War I. His prison experience
left him with the tuberculosis that cost him a political career and periodically immobilized
him. It killed him in 1939.
Allen was an organizer, publisher, executive secretary, fund-raiser, treasurer, speechifier,
newspaper op-ed and letter writer and later broadcast debater. His greatest political
influence came in the early 1920s when the first Labour Prime Minister, Ramsay MacDonald,
assumed government. MacDonald later engineered the peerage that placed Allen, an avowed
Socialist, in the House of Lords. These papers document the immense amount of time
and energy Allen spent trying to further the causes of peace and progressivism in
inter-war England. Additional notes and descriptions occur at the beginning of each
series in the finding aid.
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- Clifford Allen (Lord Allen of Hurtwood) Papers, 1911-1962
Clifford Allen (Lord Allen of Hurtwood) Papers, 1911-1962
This collection documents the political life and works of the British pacifist, propagandist, and leftist organizer Reginald Clifford Allen, Lord Allen of Hurtwood, (1889-1939).