On 2 December 2006, a memorial bust of Hardie was unveiled by
Cynon Valley MP
Ann Clwyd outside council offices in Aberdare (in his former constituency). The ceremony marked a centenary since the party's birth. Hardie is still held in high esteem in his old home town of
Holytown, where his childhood home is preserved for people to view, while the local sports centre was named in his own honour as "The Keir Hardie Sports Centre". Keir Hardie Memorial Primary School opened in 1956, named for him. There are now 40 streets throughout Britain named after Hardie.
Alan Morrison has, in turn, used the title
Keir Hardie Street for his 2010 narrative long poem in which a fictitious, turn-of-the-century, working-class poet discovers a socialist
utopia off the dreamt-up Sea-Green Line of the
London Underground. One of the buildings at
Swansea University is also named after him, while a main distributor road in
Sunderland is named the Keir Hardie Way. The
Ellen Wilkinson Estate in Wardley, East Gateshead (once in the Urban District of Felling, subsumed by Gateshead Metropolitan Borough in 1974) has Keir Hardie Avenue as its main street. Every other street is named after a pre-1960 Labour MP. The England footballer, Chris Waddle, lived in Number 1 Keir Hardie Avenue, Gateshead, between 1971 and 1983. The Keir Hardie Estate in
Canning Town (
Newham, East London) is named after him as a legacy to his tenure as MP for West Ham South, Newham. Keir Hardie Avenue in the town of Cleator Moor, Cumbria, has been named after him since 1934 Furthermore, an estate in the London Borough of Brent was also named after Hardie. Keir Hardie Crescent in
Kilwinning in Scotland is named after him, as is a block of apartments in the
Blackshots estate of
Little Thurrock. There is also a Keir Hardie Street in Greenock and a Keir Hardie Street in Methil, Fife, a predominantly Labour stronghold. There is also a Hardie Street in West Dunbartonshire, amongst a range of streets named after famous socialist leaders or thinkers and Labour figures. Ty Keir Hardie, in his constituency town of
Merthyr Tydfil, housed offices for
Merthyr Tydfil County Borough Council and adjoins the Civic Centre on Castle Street. In Merthyr Tydfil, there is also the Keir Hardie Health Park and the Keir Hardie Estate with streets named after prominent early Independent Labour leaders such as Wallhead and Glasier. In recognition of his work as a lay preacher, the Keir Hardie Methodist Church in
Newham, London bears his name. There is a Keir Hardie Terrace in
Dunfermline,
Fife named after him as he helped the mining campaign for local mining families. Labour founder Hardie has been voted the party's "greatest hero" in a straw poll of delegates at the 2008
Labour conference in Manchester. Labour peer
Lord Morgan,
Ed Balls,
David Blunkett and
Fiona Mactaggart argued the case for four Labour figures at a
Guardian fringe meeting at the Labour conference 2008 in Manchester, 23 September 2008. Hardie's younger half-brothers
David Hardie,
George Hardie and sister-in-law
Agnes Hardie all became Labour Party Members of Parliament after his death. His daughter
Nan Hardie and her husband
Emrys Hughes both became Provost of
Cumnock; Hughes also became Labour Member of Parliament for
South Ayrshire in 1946. Biographer
Kenneth O. Morgan has sketched Hardie's personality:
Keir Starmer, the current
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Leader of the Labour Party, who serves as MP in the House of Commons for
Holborn and St Pancras, was reportedly named after Hardie, though Starmer said in 2015 that he did not know whether this is true.
Keir Mather, Labour MP for
Selby and Ainsty, is also named after Hardie.
Keir Hardie Society On 15 August 2010 (the 154th anniversary of Hardie's birth) the Keir Hardie Society was founded at
Summerlee, Museum of Scottish Industrial Life. The society aims to "keep alive the ideas and promote the life and work of Keir Hardie". Among the co-founders was
Cathy Jamieson, who at the time was the MSP for
the constituency of Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley, which covers the area where Hardie lived most of his life.
Scottish Labour leader
Richard Leonard was the main founder of the society, along with
Hugh Gaffney MP.
In other media In August 2016,
Jim Kenworth's play
A Splotch of Red: Keir Hardie in West Ham was premiered at various venues in
Newham, including Neighbours Hall in
Canning Town at which Hardie spoke. The play deals with Hardie's battle to win the constituency of West Ham South. It was directed by
James Martin Charlton; Samuel Caseley played Keir Hardie. Hardie appears as a character in Howard Spring's 1940 novel,
Fame Is the Spur, in which he gives advice and support to the main protagonists in the early days of the labour movement. ==Works==