University of South Florida Digital Commons @ University of South Florida USF St. Petersburg campus Faculty Publications USF Faculty Publications 2007 From the Slums of Red Clydeside to the Campaigning World of American Communism: a quest to reconstruct the life of Ellen Dawson (1900-67) David Lee McMullen Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/fac_publications Recommended Citation Northern Scotland, 27, (2007) 169-85 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the USF Faculty Publications at Digital Commons @ University of South Florida. It has been accepted for inclusion in USF St. Petersburg campus Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ University of South Florida. For more information, please contact
[email protected]. From the Slums of Red Clydeside to the Campaigning World of American Communism: a Quest to Reconstruct the Life of Ellen Dawson (1900-67) DAVID LEE McMULLEN For centuries Scots have felt the need to leave their native land in search of economic opportunity. Scattered across the globe, many have distinguished themselves in other countries. While this is a well-rehearsed theme, the stories of many expatriates remain absent from Scotland’s historical memory. And where there are accounts of the activities of such individuals, too often they merely note their Scottish birth and make no effort to connect their later story with the forces within Scotland that helped shaped their character and aspirations. Ellen Dawson’s story is a good example.1 She was born into working-class poverty in Barrhead, an industrial village on the south-western outskirts of Glasgow, in 1900.