Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

The march reaches Blackfriars. A tremendous array of beautifully designed banners can be seen including Preston Campaign for Homosexual Equality, Jewish Socialists, the Fire Brigades Union, Chorley Anti Nazi League and Wimbledon Area Gay Society. This image helps to illustrate the diversity of the communities from all over the country that marched in solidarity against racism and fascism.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

Great shot of one of the orange Salford Van Hire flatbed trucks with protesters clambering all over it as the Star Quality Steel Band plays on.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

Another shot of the crowd. with banners from Liverpool, Bootle, Clwyd, Stockport and Ashton. Police can be seen lining the sides of the march.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

A group a homemade Teachers Against Nazis placard driving with the march. You can spot a Piccadilly 261 radio sticker in the windscreen.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

A mother and child watch the march pass through Moss Side as it nears Alexandra Park. This image reminds us that huge as the march was (approx. 15,000), there were, of course, many people that didn't or couldn't take part. This shot gives us an outsider's perspective.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

Marchers make their way down Bonsall Street, Hulme, past the deck access flats. Banners include the Joint Shop Stewards’ Committee for L. Gardners, a firm with a 2,500-strong workforce based in Patricroft, which made a world famous diesel engine.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

The front of the march reaches Bonsall Street with Colin Barnett, secretary of the North West TUC, striding purposefully ahead.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

Great shot illustrating the sheer size of the march (approx. 15,000 people). The high rise in the background is Hornchurch Court.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

The truck carrying the steel band arrives in Hulme. Many marchers are carrying the instantly recognisable Anti Nazi League ‘lollipops’ that had been put together using plywood sticks and cardboard by Manchester Polytechnic students in the days leading up to the Carnival.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Richard Bundy

Here we see the front of the march snaking past the Playhouse Theatre (now NIAMOS) in Hulme. From 1956 to 1987 the Playhouse was used by the BBC as a production venue for radio and TV. Police officers are seen clutching their macs on what turned out to be a very sunny day.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Phil Ramsell

The crowd early on at the Carnival before the marchers arrive.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Reno Club, Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photographer unknown.

A great shot of the Reno Club crew at the Northern Carnival Against the Nazis, 1978.

This photo was sent in by Linda Brogan, the artist and writer behind the Excavating the Reno project. This important and pioneering heritage project can be explored here:
thereno.live/blog

Linda writes on her website:

Beneath the grass on the corner of Moss Lane East and Princess Rd lies a legendary, 1970s, Moss Side cellar club: The Reno. A civilisation, with its own black market, social structure, king and queen, all frustrated artists. Wall-to-wall half-caste the first born on mass in the 1950s no blacks, no Irish, no dogs. Stigmatised by the 1930s Fletcher Report: ‘‘Offspring of interracial alliances suffer from inherent physical and mental defects.’ Demolished 1986.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Harry Rothman

A shot taken at the Northern Carnival by political activist Benny Rothman.

Wikipedia states:

Bernard Rothman better known as Benny Rothman (1 June 1911 – 23 January 2002) was a UK political activist, most famous for his leading role in the Mass trespass of Kinder Scout in 1932.

Born in Cheetham Hill, Manchester, into a Jewish family from Romania, Rothman's poor family circumstances dictated that he start work at the earliest opportunity rather than take full advantage of a scholarship that he had won.

Working as an errand boy in the motor trade, he studied geography and economics in his spare time while his Aunt Ettie introduced him to The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists and the works of Upton Sinclair.

Increasingly committed to the causes of socialism and communism, Rothman lost his job after getting into some trouble with the law while selling copies of the Daily Worker. During a period of unemployment, with the help of a bicycle salvaged from spare parts, he discovered the nearby wilderness regions of the Peak District and North Wales. The combination of his political activism and interest in the outdoors led to his participation in the mass trespass of 1932, an enterprise that resulted in a spell in prison and further employment difficulties.

In 1934, Rothman went to work at Avro in Newton Heath and instantly became an officer of the Amalgamated Engineering Union (AEU). At Avro, he met and married fellow communist Lily Crabtree but his political views became increasingly visible to his employer and he was dismissed. Rothman was active in working with Jewish groups in Manchester to oppose the campaigns of Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists. In 1936, he started work at Metropolitan-Vickers at Trafford Park and was again soon an AEU official.

Until his death from a stroke, he was active in a wide range of political and conservation movement campaigns and organisations.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

A shot from the heart of the crowd.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

ANL activists manning a stall.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Audio File, 2018
Project volunteer Toni-Dee Paul talks to former rugby player Bill Gulam about the impact the Carnival had on his rugby team.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Phil Ramsell

Ashton-Under-Lyne Labour proudly display their flag in Alexandra Park.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

ANL activist Marie enjoying the sun. In the background a SKAN (School Kids Against the Nazis) banner is visible.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

Punks on the fringes.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © Geoff Brown

Some cracking pairs of flares visible on this photo.
Buzzcocks, X-O-Dus (Exodus)
Alexandra Park
Photograph, 1978
Photo © John Sturrock, 1978

Amazing crowd shot from the stage by John Sturrock, probably during Buzzcocks.