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| Volunteers with Spanish militia units | |||||||
| Amongst
the first British volunteers to arrive in Spain were the sculptor and artist
Felicia Browne, who was painting in Barcelona when the rising began, and
the Marxist intellectual John Cornford, who arrived in Spain on 8 August
1936. Felicia Browne was eventually allowed to volunteer for a militia unit
in Barcelona after attempts to dissuade her by both the Communist Party
and the leader of the unit, and she was killed on 28 August 1936 in a mission
to blow up a munitions train near Tardienta in Aragon. John Cornford arrived
with a friend and fellow Trinity College student, Richard Bennett, a week
before Britain’s decision to ban the selling of arms to Spain. Cornford
briefly fought with the POUM militia units in Huesca in August on the Aragon
front, before returning to Britain to help raise more recruits for the Republic.
A number of other British volunteers in Spain joined together in an English-speaking unit, the Tom Mann Centuria. |
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| FURTHER
READING
Geoffrey Cox, The Defence of Madrid, London: Gollancz, 1937. John Langdon-Davies, Behind The Spanish Barricades, London: Secker and Warburg, 1936. |
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| '¡A las barricadas!' | |||||||
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