Conrad Noel

Conrad Noel

Conrad le Despenser Roden Noel (12 July 1869 - 2 July 1942) was an English priest of the Church of England. Known as the "Red Vicar" of Thaxted, he was a prominent British Christian Socialist. His father was the poet Roden Noël.

Born in Kew, Noel was ordained in the Church of England and officiated in various parishes until 1910, when he became the vicar of Thaxted in Essex until his death in 1942. He joined the Independent Labour Party, but in 1911 became a founding member of the British Socialist Party.

Within the church at Thaxted, Noel hung the red flag and the flag of Sinn Féin alongside the flag of St George. This led to the "Battle of the Flags" with students from Cambridge leading attacks on the church to remove the flags; eventually a consistory court ruled against his displaying the flags and Noel obeyed the ruling. He founded the Catholic Crusade to propagate his views, which had some impact in the origins of Trotskyism in Britain.

He was a friend of Gustav Holst the composer who lived for some years in the village.

Publications

  • Ought Christians to be Socialists?, 1909. Transcript of a debate with the Christadelphian Frank Jannaway.

Sources

  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
  • Conrad Noel, an Autobiography, London, J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd., 1945

External links