Born in
Woolley Colliery, a pit village near
Barnsley in
Yorkshire, Richardson studied
theology at the
University of Hull before becoming a lecturer at the
University of Exeter. He joined the
Communist Party of Great Britain, but left after reading
Isaac Deutscher's biography of
Leon Trotsky. Convinced of
Trotskyism, Richardson joined the
Socialist Labour League (SLL), and resigned from the faculty at Exeter to become a history teacher at
Forest Hill School,
South London. He soon quit the SLL to join the rival
International Marxist Group (IMG), and became prominent in the
Vietnam Solidarity Campaign. Despite having hitchhiked to
Paris to join the events of
May 1968, Richardson was part of a small group that rejected the IMG's turn away from
trade unions and the
labour movement to work in the
student movement. He became a founding member of the breakaway
Revolutionary Communist League and was elected to its leadership, but in 1973 he left the League. Around this time he co-founded the
Chartist magazine, and remained one of its influential figures. From the mid-1970s, Richardson focused his attention on recording the history of Trotskyism in Britain. He began interviewing veterans of the movement and, with
Sam Bornstein, published three books on the topic through their Socialist Platform publishing house. In 1988, they founded the journal
Revolutionary History, dedicated to the history of the
anti-Stalinist left. The editor of
Socialist Appeal described Richardson as "the first to publish a serious account of the History of British Trotskyism". Richardson also published under the pen name of Richard Stephenson. Richardson worked with various Trotskyist groups, in particular
Workers Liberty,
Workers Action and the
Militant tendency, whose approaches he felt were closest to his own. However, in contrast to these groups, he opposed campaigns on the basis of race, gender or sexuality, believing that they were
popular frontist. He never abandoned work inside the Labour Party, because he believed that any future revolutionary party can emerge only from within a mass working-class party.
Death Richardson continued teaching and writing until his unexpected death on 22 November 2003. His funeral at
Mortlake Crematorium was attended by 150 friends and former pupils, who draped his coffin in the flag of the
Fourth International. == Personal life ==