Douglas Hyde (author)

For the author and Irish President of the same name, see Douglas Hyde.

Douglas Arnold Hyde (8 April 1911, Worthing, Sussex — 19 September 1996, Kingston upon Thames) was an English political journalist and writer. A Communist, he was the news editor of the Daily Worker until 1948, when he converted to Catholicism and resigned.

Hyde grew up in Bristol and was brought up as a Methodist. In his youth he was active in a number of political organisations which brought him into contact with Communists. He became a Methodist lay preacher and continued this work for some time in parallel with membership of the Communist party.[1] He was an early convert to Communism, at age 17 in 1928. He was once jailed for two years in south-east Asia while trying to agitate for Communist reforms. After a period working in North Wales he moved to London in 1938 and became the news editor of the Daily Worker.[2] After his resignation, he published an autobiography, I Believed. The Autobiography of a Former British Communist.[3] He also wrote a book, Dedication and Leadership, about his experiences and the specific tactics of the Communists especially in the way that they recruited their members and built them into leaders.[4] On his death he had allegedly become an agnostic, having had difficulties pursuing social justice and economic equality issues within the Catholic Church.[3]

Works

Footnotes

  1. Hyde I Believed; chapters 1-4
  2. Hyde I Believed; chapters 5-7
  3. 1 2 Kevin Morgan. "Obituary: Douglas Hyde", The Independent, London, 29 September 1996
  4. Gary North. "Mother Teresa: The Efficiency of Self-Sacrifice", LewRockwell.com
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