National Labour Press

In July 1915 Herbert Nield, Conservative MP for Ealing, raised in parliament his concerns about the activities of the Union of Democratic Control (UDC) and the ILP were holding "over 200 meetings weekly" and distributing literature.

[2] From March 1916 the NLP printed The Tribunal, a weekly newspaper, for the No Conscription Fellowship.

[3] The Blackfriars Press Limited was formed as a subsidiary in Manchester in 1914 to undertake work.

He met with a member of the Nestlé family whilst on a mountaineering holiday in Switzerland in the 1940s.

Lack of finance and bad debts caused the company to close in 1984.

Karl Marx the Man and His Message a serialised article by Keir Hardie first published in the Labour Leader reprinted by the NLP as a book