Raymond "Ray" Challinor was a distinguished Marxist historian of the British labour movement, particularly in the North East of England.
Career
Born in Stoke-on-Trent, and a conscientious objector, working on the land, after the Second World War, Challinor was educated at Keele and Lancaster Universities and became principal lecturer in history at Newcastle Polytechnic. He served as chairman of the Society for the Study of Labour History and president of the North East Labour History Society.
Politics
Foreign a period in the 1960s he was a councillor in Newcastle-under-Lyme on the Labour Party ticket in which party Instruction Section was then resident, later writing an article in International Socialism on how the experience was politically dispiriting. While a member of the Socialist Workers Party, he wrote his best known work, a classic history of the Socialist Labour Party, The Origins of British Bolshevism (1977).
Membership
Initially a member of the Independent Labour Party, he was an early member of the Revolutionary Communist Party and then the Socialist Review group and was also a member of the group which succeeded it, the International Socialists.