Irishman
Jim Connell wrote the song's lyrics in 1889 in Nicholas Donovan's house. There are six stanzas, each followed by the chorus. It is normally sung to the tune of "Lauriger Horatius", better known as the German
carol "
O Tannenbaum" ("O Christmas Tree"), though Connell had wanted it sung to the tune of a pro-
Jacobite Robert Burns anthem, "The White Cockade". The use of the tune of "O Tannenbaum" was popularised by British socialist writer
Adolphe Smith Headingley in the 1890s; Connell disapproved of the tune which he regarded as "church music" and conservative by nature. When
Billy Bragg recorded the song in 1990 with Scottish folk singer
Dick Gaughan, he sang it to this original "White Cockade" melody. The lyrics of the first verse and the chorus, which are the most well-known parts of the song, are as follows: "The Red Flag" resonated with the early radical workers' movement in the United States, and it appeared as the first song in the first edition of the
Little Red Songbook of the
Industrial Workers of the World in 1909. Only five of the six stanzas were printed, omitting the fourth stanza that begins, "It well recalls the triumphs past." In a 1913 article for the
Industrial Worker, the celebrated IWW bard
Joe Hill rejected the category of "the people" as middle class, and suggested a further change to the song. Referring to his experiences in the
Magonista rebellion of 1911, he wrote:When the Red Flag was flying in Lower California there were not any of "the people" in the ranks of the rebels. Common working stiffs and cow-punchers were in the majority, with a little sprinkling of "outlaws," whatever that is. [...] Well, it is about time that every rebel wakes up to the fact that "the people" and the workingclass [
sic] have nothing in common. Let us sing after this "''The Workers' flag is deepest red''" and to hell with "the people." The song spread throughout the globe spurred on by the Workers Movement and their quest for a better life, reaching many a remote country. For example, "The Red Flag” was played by the Runanga Band at the conclusion of a burial service for Henry John Morris (AKA Harry, born Henry John Vaughan, 1880-1920) in Greymouth, New Zealand on 11 January 1920. Henry had left Wales for New Zealand in 1908, in part to work in Government Mines far removed from the rugged employment conditions of family-owned mines in Wales. Henry became locally prominent in the Socialist and Labour Movement, as he had been at home in Wales, which is reflected in his last wish for "The Red Flag” to be played at his burial. In 1982 two very different versions of the song were issued,
Shakin Stevens recorded a
rock & roll cover of the song known as "Red Flag Rock", while ex-
Soft Machine singer and drummer
Robert Wyatt included a version on his collection of socialist and resistance songs "Nothing Can Stop Us".
Use by the British Labour Party "The Red Flag" has been the
British Labour Party's official anthem from its founding; its annual party conference closes with the song. "The Red Flag" was first sung in the
House of Commons on 1 August 1945, when
Parliament convened after the defeat of
Winston Churchill's
Conservatives by the Labour Party led by
Clement Attlee.
Dockers in London were regarded as militant socialists ever since their strike in 1889 for the "dockers' tanner." In the 1950s, at the end of public meetings with management, dockers filling the main floor of the hall sang "The Red Flag" while superintendents and managers (usually segregated in the gallery) simultaneously sang "God Save the Queen". "The Red Flag" was sung by
Welsh Labour MPs on 27 May 1976, allegedly prompting
Michael Heseltine to swing the
parliamentary mace above his head. It was also sung on the evening of 28 March 1979 when a
motion of no confidence brought down the
Labour government. It was sung again in Parliament in February 2006 to mark the centenary of the Labour Party's founding. It was sung in the House of Commons once more in September 2019 in protest at the
prorogation of parliament. During the
Tony Blair government it was claimed the leadership sought to downplay the use of the song, but it is often sung at the end of party conferences, along with
Jerusalem. Following
the 2015 election of veteran socialist
Jeremy Corbyn as Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition, "The Red Flag" was sung as he and his supporters celebrated in The Sanctuary, a
public house in London. Following the Labour Party's more centrist approach under
Keir Starmer, the use of the song was downplayed and the
national anthem replaced it as the song which ended their party conference. ==Lyrics==