Eleonora Tennant

Australian political activist
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAustralian political activist
PlacesAustralia
wasPolitical activist Activist
Work fieldActivism Politics
Gender
Female
Birth19 December 1893
Death11 September 1963 (aged 69 years)
The details

Biography

Eleonora Elisa Fiaschi Tennant (19 December 1893 – 11 September 1963) was an Australian political activist, best known for her campaigns in the United Kingdom. A society figure, she was mainly associated with groups on the right-wing fringes of the Conservative Party.

Early life

Born in Sydney as Eleonora Fiaschi, the daughter of Brigadier-General Thomas Fiaschi, she was sent to school in England. In 1911, while in Australia, she met Ernest Tennant, a British merchant banker who did a lot of business with Germany. They married soon afterwards, while Tennant was still seventeen, and settled in the UK, living at the Tennant family home of Orford House. They had four children together The two came to know Joachim von Ribbentrop and were supportive of Nazism. Ernest Tennant was a leading figure in the Anglo-German Fellowship, an organisation he helped to establish in 1935 which advocated closer relations between the UK and Nazi Germany.

Right-wing politics

At the 1931 UK general election, Tennant stood as the Conservative Party candidate for Silvertown, a safe Labour Party seat in the East End of London. Her candidacy was sponsored by Lucy Houston, and came despite the opposition of Ernest. In a year which generally saw a landslide victory for the Conservatives, Tennant took 22.2% of the vote. Undeterred, she set up an office in the constituency with the aim of encouraging local employers to take on more staff, and forcing the local council to deal with some housing issues. She stood again at the 1935 UK general election, her vote share falling to 19.0%.

During the Spanish Civil War, Tennant visited areas under Nationalist control, near the Portuguese border. She was driven around by a Falangist activist, and came to the conclusion that what she described as the "Glorious Uprising" was an unqualified success, the war being entirely the fault of communists, and that a dictatorship was necessary to save the country. Although she was only in the country for ten days, on her return to the UK, she published Spanish Journey: Personal Experiences of the Civil War. At home she was a leading figure in Friends of National Spain, a group formed by Lord Phillimore in 1937 to win the support of leading members of the political elite and nobility for Francisco Franco, and in this group was close to the far-right academic Charles Saroléa who, like Tennant, was based in Scotland at the time.

Tennant maintained contact with many far-right activists during World War II, and met regularly with Jeffrey Hamm, during which they discussed their support for anti-Semitism. Near the end of the war, Tennant came to lead two groups, the "Never Again Association" and the "Face the Facts Association", both extreme nationalist groups. Though neither attracted a significant membership, she used them to promote various views, mostly notably her opposition to bread rationing. She stood in Putney at the 1945 UK general election as an independent Conservative. Opposing an official Conservative and three other candidates, she took only 144 votes and came bottom of the poll.

By this point Tennant had become outspoken in her anti-Semitism, stating that she was prepared to "go all out against the Jew". To this end she sought to work with Sylvia Gosse and Margaret Crabtree, two residents of Belsize Park who in October 1945 organised an "anti-alien" petition against plans to house Jewish refugees in the Metropolitan Borough of Hampstead. The petition gained some press support and had the backing of Conservative MPs Charles Challen and Waldron Smithers as well as Ernest Benn and the Society for Individual Freedom. Tennant attempted to link Hamm in with this burgeoning movement and the pair held a meeting in Belsize Park on 21 November 1945 in an attempt to link Hamm with them. Before the meeting Hamm removed a portrait of Oswald Mosley for fear of scaring off the Conservative-linked Tennant although in the end he was impressed by the strength of her commitment to anti-Semitism. The initiative was largely unsuccessful however as Hamm's methods of provocative street politics and the heckling of leftist meetings were far removed from the high society circles in which the likes of Gosse and Crabtree moved.

Later years

Tennant divorced her husband sometime before 1950, when he remarried. In 1952 she moved to Winkley in Tasmania, where she ran a farm. She sold this on after a few years and bought a series of farms in this manner, the last being one she newly established on the Diddleum Plains. She again became politically active, and stood as a Democratic Labor Party candidate for the Senate in the Australian federal election, 1961, but took only 476 votes. She began suffering from heart problems, and returned to live with family in England, dying in Kettering in 1963.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.