More about the life of John MacLean Scottish Republican Revolutionary
The above titled article is now available to be read at the link below from the SRSM website.
This article was first published in 1967 in the Scottish Vanguard before the author brought out his book on John MacLean.
http://scottishrepublicansocialistmovement.org/SRSMArticlesJohnMacLeanbioraphicalnotesjohnbroom.asx
Enjoy reading

'Hugh MacDiarmid', in a series of three articles in "The Scots Socialist" in 1940 & 41wrote of the difficulty confronting anyone attempting to write a biography of John MacLean. "To do so is to handle lightning... to write such a book would lead one to commit in the name of reality many a sin against left utopianism, for one must report the ridiculous, the inefficient and the reactionary in the Communist movement, as well as its noble, delightful, intelligent and moving aspects'. James Maxton and MacLean's younger daughter both attempted the task, but gave up because they came to the conclusion that they were too personally involved in the turbulent story, MacDiarmid himself had a go, but pressure of work forced him too to abandon the considerable undertaking. Now, after many vicissitudes, and set-backs, the present writer has succeeded in completing a full scale biography which, it is hoped, may soon be published. The following article is intended as a short appetiser."Is labouring according to true principles for our country we are labouring for humanity; Our country is the fulcram of the lever which we have to wield for the common good". (Mazzini)
James Maxton described MacLean as, "A Scot of the Scots, a synthesis of all that is healthiest and best in our stormy history; the honesty, the forthrightness, the perseverance, the deep humanity, the shrewd practically, the undiluted materialism". MacLean, as MacDiarmid has pointed out, united the diverse elements in Scottish life in a unique way - He was of Highland stock, his work lay in the great industrial belt in the lowlands and he married a Borders woman. The unification of Scotland, Highland and Lowland, rural and urban, was complete in himself. MacDiarmid has often claimed that MacLean was the greatest Scotsman of this century. Some of us might prefer to reserve that high honour for the bard himself, but there can be no doubt that MacLean was a towering figure in Scottish Working Class history. Many of the evils that he fought against are still with us and it behoves those of us who desire and believe in the brotherhood of man, equality of opportunity, a planned economy, the freedom of Scotland and the abolition and the threat of war, to try to ensure that one of the greatest champions of these ideals did not live and die for them in vain.
"MacLean had ever been the mortal enemy of bourgeois respectability and constitutional formality".
(Tom Bell)
This article originally appeared in Scottish Vanguard, Vol.1 No.1, 1967.
