A focus of the campaign was the Military Service Act which introduced conscription in 1916.[3] Branches were established across the country, leaflets were produced and deputations sent to lobby Parliament. They were successful in getting provision for conscientious objectors in the bill,[3] but opposed the establishment of the army's Non-Combatant Corps.
The Scottish organisation was led by Marjory Newbold, whose husband Walton became a Communist MP.[5]
Branches were established across the country and the first national convention was held on 27 November 1915 at the Congregational Memorial Hall. The second convention was held the following year on 8 April at Devonshire House — a Quaker meeting place in Bishopsgate. Beatrice Webb, who was pro-war, recorded the occasion in her diary,[6]
The Friends' Meeting House ... was packed with some 2,000 young men — the National Convention of the No-Conscription Fellowship. ... Among the 2,000 were many diverse types. The intellectual pietist, slender in figure, delicate in feature and complexion, benevolent in expression was the dominant type. These youths were saliently conscious of their own righteousness. ... On the platform were the sympathisers with the movement — exactly the sort of persons you would expect to find at such a meeting — older pacifists and older rebels — Bertrand Russell, Robert Trevelyan, George Lansbury, Olive Schreiner, Lupton, Stephen and Rosa Hobhouse, Dr Clifford, C.H. Norman, Miss Llewelyn Davies and the Snowdens: the pacifist predominating over the rebel element.
From March 1916 the NCF published The Tribunal. In an effort to suppress this publication, the police raided the National Labour Press and dismantled the printing press. However the NCF had a secret press and were able to continue publishing.[7]
Historian Thomas Kennedy says that during the last two years of the war, the NCF remained a:[8]
minor but troublesome irritant to the authorities, using its surprisingly resilient propaganda machinery to expose brutal or illegal treatment of conscientious objectors as well as to agitate, especially among the industrial working classes, an end to the conflict.
^ abCyril Pearce (2004), "'Typical' Conscientious Objectors — A Better Class of Conscience? No-Conscription Fellowship image management and the Manchester contribution 1916–1918", Manchester Region History Review
^ abcd"No-Conscription Fellowship", World War I: A Student Encyclopedia, vol. I, ABC-CLIO, 2005, pp. 1339–1340, ISBN9781851098798
^"No-Conscription Fellowship (NCF)", Encyclopedia of British and Irish Political Organizations: Parties, Groups and Movements of the 20th Century, A&C Black, 2000, p. 341, ISBN9780826458148
^Beatrice Webb (2000), "The No-Conscription fellowship", Women's Writing of the First World War: An Anthology, Manchester University Press, pp. 117–119, ISBN9780719050725