Appendix 1. Fascist/far-right organisations operating between the wars [see also a description of ‘Pro-Nazi and Anti-Semitic Groups, up to 1939’ in Griffiths, 2010 pp 34-65]

BUF League for Clean Government British Empire Union Independent Political Association New Witness League British Brothers’ League Eugenics Society Loyalty League Navy League Vigilantes Society British Fascisti Fascist League National Socialist League National Socialist Workers Party Anti-Socialist Union January Club National League of Airmen Militant Christian Patriots United Christian Front British People’s Party The Link Anglo-German Fellowship British Vigil British Council for a Christian Settlement in Europe British Council against European Commitments

2. International political shirts [from wikipedia]

In the 1920s and 1930s, fascists wore different coloured shirts:

 Black shirts were used by the Italian fascists, and in Britain, Finland and Germany and Croatia.  Brownshirts were worn by German Nazis of the SA.  The Blueshirts was a fascist movement in Ireland and Canada, and the colour of the Portuguese Nacional Sindicalistas, the Spanish Falange Española, the French Solidarité Française, and the Chinese Blue Shirts Society.  Green shirts were used in Hungary, Ireland, Romania, Brazil and Portugal.  Camisas Doradas (golden shirts) were used in Mexico.  Red shirts were worn by the racist and antisemitic Bulgarian Ratniks.  Silver Shirts were worn in the United States of America.  Grey shirts were worn by members of the Fatherland League in Norway.

Roderick Spode, P.G.Wodehouse’s parody of Mosley, adopted black shorts as a uniform because, as Gussie Fink-Nottle says, "by the time Spode formed his association, there were no shirts left." [Wodehouse, 1938, The Code of the Woosters, chapter 3, p. 67.]