![]() Stuart remained an editor for the first five years, but so far as the press or the know-all academic twits are concerned, he remains so to this day. Apart from a few of these issues I remained one of the editors throughout. The former Cuddon’s group constituted itself into a Black Flag collective.Īfter the Bulletin became Black Flag we had many editors for the next twenty odd years, at one time rotating the editorship per issue. ![]() When at a demonstration a policeman was alleged to have been injured falling off the horse on which he was dispersing the crowd, and the suggestion was made in Freedom that anarchists should get up a collection for him, the limit was reached. There was a demand for an anarchist newspaper, as Freedom had become increasingly bourgeois pacifist, partly because nobody else would work under the direction of Richards and his little group of self-styled intellectuals. The Bulletin was originally intended to note the activities and existence of the Black Cross, but the spread of anarchist activism in the sixties made us the focus. The Bulletin was renamed Black Flag at volume 2 issue 1 in January 1971. Chronologyīlack Flag began life as the Bulletin of the Anarchist Black Cross in 1968. Libcom also hosts a gallery of Black Flag cover art here.
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