Black Friday
From Glasgow
The Battle of George Square aka Black Friday. Occurred Friday the 13th January 1919.
Somewhere between 30,000 and 60,000 demonstrators gathered in George Square in support of the 40-hours strike and to hear the Lord Provost's reply to the workers request for a 40-hour week.
It is alledged the demonstrators were attacked by the police (some citing that protestors where blocking a tram).
After fights broke out, strike leaders David Kirkwood and William Gallacher left their meeting with the Lord Provost in an attempt to restore order. Kirkwood was felled to the ground by a police baton and Gallacher was arrested by the police.
After the initial confrontation between the demonstrators and the police in George Square, further fighting continued in and around the city centre streets for many hours afterwards.
The Townhead area of the city and Glasgow Green, where many of the demonstrators had regrouped after the initial police charge, were the scenes of running battles between police and demonstrators.
In the immediate aftermath of 'Bloody Friday', as it became known, other leaders of the Clyde Workers Committee were also arrested (and in some cases, spent months in Duke Street Prison), including Emanuel Shinwell, Harry Hopkins and George Edbury.
Fears within government of a workers revolution in Glasgow led to the deployment of troops and tanks in the city.
An estimated 10,000 English troops in total were sent to Glasgow in the immediate aftermath of the Battle of George Square. This was in spite of a full battalion of Scottish soldiers being stationed at Maryhill barracks in Glasgow at the time. No Scottish troops were deployed, with the government fearing that fellow Scots, soldiers or otherwise, would go over to the workers side if a revolutionary situation developed in Glasgow.
On 10 February 1919 the 40-hours strike was called off by the Joint Strike Committee. Whilst not achieving their stated aim of a 40-hour working week, the striking workers from the engineering and shipbuilding industries did return to work having at least negotiated an agreement that guaranteed them a 47-hour working week; 10 hours less than they were working prior to the strike.

