Trouble At Mill

Exploring the radical world of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth

On 8 November 2025 Pendle Radicals were honoured to be the co-hosts of this unique event, at Burnley’s Queen Street Mill Textile Museum, celebrating the radical world of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth.

This immersive spoken-word and song spectacular was the national launch event for the Rickard Sisters’ new graphic novel adaptation of Ethel’s radical story This Slavery, the event was created and produced by them and included contributions from the Commoners Choir (with a new song commissioned from Boff Whalley); the East Lancashire Clarion Choir; performers from Burnley Youth Theatre; Jennifer Reid and Jules Gibb. The Rickard Sisters also created the Ethelibition, a brand new exhibition about the life and work of Ethel Carnie Holdsworth, made in collaboration with Pendle Radicals PhD candidate Jenny Harper and Dr Nicola Wilson from Reading University. It included a life-size recreation of the Martin’s family kitchen from This Slavery, so people could sit inside the book and feel what it was like to live and work in a 1910s mill town.

The Rickard Sisters discovered the novel from the Pendle Radicals podcast, commissioned in 2021 in partnership with the Lancashire Library Service and created by Jules Gibb and Liz & Scott Robertson. You read about, and listen to, all the episodes HERE.

Like us, the sisters fell in love with Ethel and her work. You can read more about this event on their website HERE. You can also buy a copy of the book from their website HERE.

You can get a flavour of the event from the two Rickard Sisters’ videos below.

This Slavery Podcast

We’re delighted to introduce you to our first Pendle Radicals podcast, created in partnership with Lancashire Libraries and Libraries Connected.  Put together by three of our Radicals contributors, the 4-part series is entitled This Slavery.  The first episode was released on 10 February 2021, and is called Pies, Chips & Politics. (The remaining episodes are called: Dainty Cakes & Heartaches; Blacklegs, Beers & the Truth Appears and Struggle, Dare & a Breath of Fresh Air.)

Working class writer Ethel Carnie Holdsworth has been a favourite of the Radicals research group right from the start of the project. Her story is fascinating and multi-layered and our latest creative adventure is a podcast by broadcaster Elizabeth Robertson (aka Liz Catlow), writer/director Jules Gibb and sound engineer Scott Robertson.

The series looks at the novel This Slavery, published in 1925, a radical feminist and socialist tale of love, loss, poverty and politics.  The story concerns two sisters, mill-girls, whose lives are thrown into turmoil when a fire at the mill leaves them unemployed.

Through their story, ECH shows the reader the effects of poverty and unemployment, and suggests why there was a vibrant labour movement during this period.  It is a story of real  people, women and men, who took militant action against the factory system.

Find out more about this fascinating writer and her work by listening to all the episodes. This LINK will take you to it on Spotify, and this LINK will take you to our YouTube Pendle Radicals playlist, which features the podcasts. You can also find links to other platforms on the Mid Pennine Arts website HERE