Rotha Lintorn-Orman
{{Short description|British fascist activist (1895–1935)}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{use British English|date=June 2024}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Rotha Lintorn-Orman
| image = Rotha Beryl Lintorn-Orman.png
| caption = Lintorn-Orman, pictured on 22 August 1916{{cite web | title=Rotha Beryl Lintorn Lintorn-Orman | website=National Portrait Gallery | date=22 August 1916 | url=https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp54845/rotha-beryl-lintorn-lintorn-orman | access-date=13 June 2024}}
| office =
| birth_date = 7 February 1895
| birth_place = London, United Kingdom
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=y|1935|3|10|1895|2|7}}
| death_place = Santa Brígida, Canary Islands, Spain
| resting_place =
| organisation = British Fascisti
| movement = British Fascism
| module = {{Infobox military person
|embed = yes
|embed_title = Military Service
|allegiance = United Kingdom
|branch =
|unit = Women's Emergency Corps
Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service
|battles = First World War
}}
}}
Rotha Beryl Lintorn Lintorn-Orman (born Rotha Beryl Lintorn Orman, 7 February 1895 – 10 March 1935) was a British political activist and World War I veteran who founded the British Fascisti, the first avowedly fascist movement to appear in British politics.
Early life
Lintorn-Orman was born at 36 Cornwall Gardens in Kensington, London, to Charles Edward Orman, a major from the Essex Regiment, and his wife, Blanche ({{née|Simmons}}). Her maternal grandfather was Field Marshal Sir Lintorn Simmons.{{multiref|{{harvnb|Gottlieb|2008}}|{{harvnb|Thurlow|1987|p=51}}|{{cite web | title=Blanche Simmons Diary, 1879–1880 | website=David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library |publisher=Duke University | date=9 May 2024 | url=https://archives.lib.duke.edu/catalog/simmonsblanche | access-date=12 June 2024}}|{{cite news |author= |date=18 April 1933 |page=6 |via=Newspapers.com |title=British Fascist |url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-post-start-rotha-lintorn-orman/136745729/ |work=The Post-Star |location=Glens Falls, New York |access-date=14 June 2024}} {{free access}}}} Upon her grandfather's death in February 1903, Lintorn-Orman's mother inherited the family's immense wealth, since she was likely the only surviving child at the time.{{sfn|Liphook Guides|2013}} Raised in Bournemouth,{{sfn|Gottlieb|2008}} before moving to Liphook at the age of nine, Lintorn-Orman was among the few girls seeking entry into scouting organizations; along with her friend Nesta Maude, in 1908, Lintorn-Orman had registered as a Scout troop, using initials rather than forenames.{{cite book|last1=Proctor|first1=Tammy M.|author-link=Tammy M. Proctor|title=Scouting for Girls: A Century of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts|date=2009|publisher=ABC-CLIO|page=5}} By 1909, she had led both the first and second Bournemouth Girl Guides{{sfn|Gottlieb|2008}} and she was awarded one of the first of the Girl Guides' Silver Fish Awards.{{sfn|Liphook Guides|2013}} The Orman family adopted the surname of Lintorn-Orman by deed poll in 1912.{{cite news |url=https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/viewer/bl/0000749/19121227/011/0001 |access-date=1 October 2023 |title=Lintorn-Orman |work=Bedfordshire Times and Independent |date=27 December 1912 |page=1 |url-access=registration}}
When World War I broke out, Lintorn-Orman joined the war effort as an ambulance driver.{{multiref|{{harvnb|Gottlieb|2008}}|{{harvnb|Liphook Guides|2013}}|}} Initially serving with the Women's Volunteer Reserve, she was assigned to the Scottish Women's Hospital Corps{{sfn|Durham|2003|p=216}}{{sfn|Durham|2003|pp=215–216}} and sent to the Serbian front in 1916.{{sfn|Gottlieb|2008}}{{sfn|Griffiths|1983|p=55}} During her time in the war, she was, according to a later report in the fascist press, twice decorated with the {{ill|Croix de Charité|fr}}, awarded for gallantry in action, for "heroic rescues in Salonica".{{multiref|{{harvnb|Gottlieb|2021|p=15}}|{{harvnb|Thurlow|1987|p=51}}|The quote is derived from Thurlow.}}{{efn|{{harvnb|Gottlieb|2008}} casts doubt as to the legitimacy of her awards, but {{harvnb|Thurlow|1987}} does not.}} In 1917, she contracted malaria and returned to London, joining the Red Cross. In 1918, she became Commandant of the British Red Cross Motor School at Devonshire House, which put her in charge of training all ambulance drivers for the Red Cross.{{multiref|{{harvnb|Griffiths|1983|p=55}}|{{harvnb|Thurlow|1987|p=51}}|{{harvnb|Liphook Guides|2013}}}}
Fascism
File:Emblem of the British Fascists.svg
Following Lintorn-Orman's war service, she placed an advertisement in the right-wing journal The Patriot seeking anti-communists.{{sfn|Durham|2003|p=215}} This led to the foundation of the British Fascisti (later the British Fascists) in 1923 as a response to the growing strength of the Labour Party, a source of great anxiety for the virulently anti-Communist Lintorn-Orman.{{sfn|Thurlow|1987|p=51}} She felt Labour was too prone to advocating class conflict and internationalism, these being two political positions she strongly opposed.{{sfn|Cole|1964|p=29}}
Financed by her mother Blanche, Lintorn-Orman's party nonetheless struggled due to her preference for remaining within the law and her continuing ties to the fringes of the Conservative Party.{{sfn|Thurlow|1987|p=34}} Lintorn-Orman was essentially a Tory by inclination but was driven by a strong anti-communism and attached herself to fascism largely because of her admiration for Benito Mussolini and what she saw as his action-based style of politics.{{sfn|Thurlow|1987|p=52}} The party was subject to a number of schisms, such as when the moderates led by R. B. D. Blakeney defected to the Organisation for the Maintenance of Supplies during the 1926 General Strike or when the more radical members resigned to form the National Fascisti, and ultimately lost members to the Imperial Fascist League and the British Union of Fascists when these groups emerged. Lintorn-Orman wanted nothing to do with the BUF as she considered its leader, Oswald Mosley, to be a near-communist{{sfn|Dorril|2006|p=204}} and was particularly appalled by his former membership in the Labour Party.{{sfn|Cole|1964|pp=39–40}} The feelings were reciprocated; Mosley referred to the British Fascists as "three old ladies and a couple of office boys", despite the fact that Lintorn-Orman was only 37 years old,{{sfn|Griffiths|1983|p=58}} and Mosley's son claimed that she got the idea to save Britain from communism one day while she was weeding her kitchen garden.{{sfn|Mosley|1982|p=229}} Nonetheless, the BF lost much of its membership to Mosley's party after Neil Francis Hawkins left in favour of the BUF in 1932 after a formal merger was narrowly rejected.{{sfn|Benewick|1969|p=36}}{{sfn|Thurlow|1987|p=57}}
Final years
Lintorn-Orman was dependent on alcohol and drugs, which the Home Office used to disparage the British Fascists as a fringe movement supported by a mere drug addict,{{sfn|Dorril|2006|p=198}} and rumours about her sexual orientation began to damage her reputation.{{Cite book |last=Gottlieb |first=Julie V. |title=Feminine fascism: women in Britain's fascist movement 1923-1945 |date=2021 |publisher=I.B. Tauris |isbn=978-0-7556-2732-5 |edition=2nd |location=London |pages=18-19}} In 1933, her mother stopped funding her after hearing lurid tales of drink, drugs and orgies.{{Cite book |last=Loughlin |first=James |title=Fascism and constitutional conflict: the British Extreme-Right and Ulster in the twentieth century |date=2019 |publisher=Liverpool University Press |isbn=978-1-78694-992-9 |location=Liverpool |page=56}}{{sfn|Thurlow|1987|p=56}} The same year, Lintorn-Orman was taken ill and was sidelined from the British Fascists, as effective control passed to Mrs D. G. Harnett, who sought to breathe new life into the group by seeking to ally it with Ulster loyalism.{{sfn|Griffiths|1983|p=58}}
Lintorn-Orman died of an alcohol-related illness at the age of 40 on 10 March 1935 at Santa Brígida, Las Palmas, in the Canary Islands. By then her organisation was all but defunct.
References
=Notes=
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=Citations=
{{Reflist}}
=Sources=
- {{cite web | title=Liphook District Guides |author= | website=Liphook Guides| date=7 July 2013 | url=http://www.liphookguides.org.uk/about/history/pre_1950.shtml | archive-url=https://archive.today/20130707074233/http://www.liphookguides.org.uk/about/history/pre_1950.shtml | archive-date=7 July 2013 | url-status=dead | ref={{sfnref | Liphook Guides | 2013}} | access-date=14 June 2024}}
- {{cite book |last=Benewick |first=Robert |date=1969 |title=Political Violence & Public Order: A Study Of British Fascism |url=https://archive.org/details/robert-benewick-political-violence-public-order-a-study-of-british-fascism |location=London |publisher=Penguin Press}} {{free access}}
- {{cite book |last=Cole |first=J. A. |publication-date=1987 |date=1964 |title=Lord Haw-Haw: The Fully Story of William Joyce |url=https://archive.org/details/lordhawhawwillia0000cole |location=Bungay, United Kingdom |publisher=Richard Clay Ltd. |isbn=978-0-571-14860-8 |url-access=registration}}
- {{cite book | last=Dorril | first=Stephen |author-link=Stephen Dorril| title=Blackshirt: Sir Oswald Mosley and British Fascism |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/blackshirtsirosw0000dorr | publisher=Viking Adult | publication-place=London | date=2006 | isbn=0-670-86999-6}}
- {{cite book | last=Durham | first=Martin | chapter=13. Britain | editor-last=Passmore | editor-first=Kevin | editor-link=Kevin Passmore | title=Women, Gender, and Fascism in Europe, 1919–45 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_0719060834/page/n8/mode/1up| publisher=Manchester University Press | publication-place=Manchester | date=2003 | isbn=0-7190-6083-4}}
- {{cite book | last=Gottlieb | first=Julie V. | title=Feminine Fascism: Women in Britain's Fascist Movement | publisher=I. B. Tauris | publication-place=London | date=2000 | isbn=1-86064-544-5}}
- {{Cite ODNB | last=Gottlieb | first=Julie V. | doi=10.1093/ref:odnb/93720|title=Orman, Rotha Beryl Lintorn Lintorn|year=2008|orig-year=2005}}
- {{cite book |last=Griffiths |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Griffiths (historian) |date=17 April 1983 |title=Fellow Travellers of the Right: British Enthusiasts for Nazi Germany 1933–1939 |url=https://archive.org/details/Richard_Griffiths_Fellow_Travellers_Of_The_Right/page/n7/mode/2up |location=London |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=9780192851161}} {{free access}}
- {{cite book | last=Mosley | first=Nicholas |author-link=Nicholas Mosley | title=Rules of the Game | publisher=Fontana Press | publication-place=London | date=1982 | isbn=0-00-636644-9}}
- {{cite book | last=Pugh | first=Martin | author-link=Martin Pugh (historian) | title="Hurrah for the Blackshirts!": Fascists and Fascism in Britain Between the Wars | publisher=Vintage | publication-place=London | date=2005 | isbn=0-224-06439-8 | oclc=ocm60319338}}
- {{cite book | last=Thurlow | first=Richard |author-link=Richard Thurlow | title=Fascism in Britain | publisher=Blackwell | publication-place=Oxford | date=1987 | isbn=0-631-13618-5}}
External links
- [https://www.npg.org.uk/collections/search/person/mp54845/rotha-beryl-lintorn-lintorn-orman National Portrait Gallery pictures]
{{UK far right}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Lintorn-Orman, Rotha}}
Category:Alcohol-related deaths in Spain
Category:People from Kensington
Category:English women in politics
Category:Recipients of the Silver Fish Award
Category:Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service volunteers