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FRED HILL
AN INDICTMENT OF
BRITISH JUSTICE
Many people will recall the extraordinary example set by Fred
Hill in defying the compulsory helmet law throughout the nineteen seventies and
eighties. Nowhere in the world has anyone made such exceptional sacrifices in
the name of biker's freedoms.
A former army dispatch rider during WW2, Fred worked for many years as a
mathematics teacher before leaving to enjoy what he doubtless expected would be
a quiet retirement. Incensed by the compulsory helmet law, Fred rode everywhere
in an old beret, collecting literally hundreds of tickets which he stored in a
large suitcase. Fred's refusal to pay the fines for helmet-less riding
constituted Contempt of Court for which he was given custodial sentences thirty
one times.
Some of the sentences were very short, as little as 24 hours on one occasion,
when he was held in an unlocked police station cell and told by the desk
sergeant to - ''bugger off when no-one's looking.' Other sentences were much
longer however and the company which Fred found himself amongst in Her Majesty's
hostels was not always the finest. Fred loathed prison life and once wrote a
disturbing account of his experiences for Magnews. 'What is a man deprived of
his name, his freedom of movement taken away, his every privacy invaded, every
move spied upon, locked away in a filthy cell for 23 hours out of the 24 hours -
and half of these miserable hours spent in darkness.'
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A member of MAG, Fred's face was a familiar sight at MAG demonstrations all over
the country. Fred always made speeches at the demonstrations, dressed in his
arrow - patterned prison suit he would treat the crowd to theatrical helpings of
his Yorkshire wit, always maintaining a characteristic good humour even when
being booked. Though in every other way, a law-abiding citizen, Fred would
encourage the crowds he addressed to follow his example, as the law would have
to be repealed if enough people simply ignored it. In so doing he risked the
more serious charge of incitement to break the law, though such a charge was
never brought against him. Once in the dock of a magistrates court where a lady
magistrate berated his lawlessness, Fred took the opportunity to remind her that
if it hadn't been for members of her sex breaking the law some years ago, she
wouldn't be sitting where she was.
With the passage of time, police in Fred's neighbourhood frequently turned a
blind eye to his indiscretions, though when he went further a field he would
invariably be stopped. In order to cover the necessary distances Fred replaced
his Honda 50 with a faired 250, aboard which, on one occasion, he battled all
the way to the Gower Peninsula in Wales and back, a distance of about 500 miles
in one day despite appalling weather.
Demonstrations of support by MAG members were frequently staged outside prisons
in which Fred was held; a commemoration of his efforts being made annually at
the gates of Pentonville Prison on the anniversary of his death. Fred Hill was
seventy four years old when in 1984 he died from a heart attack, suffered whilst
in custody in London's Pentonville Prison . Despite the tremendous news angle of
one man against the state, the national media, with the exception of two
columnists, Mathew Paris and Auberaugn Waugh, suspiciousIy blanked the tragedy.
Fred was imprisoned 31 times, his final sentence of 60 days, proving too much to
take, was half completed. The prison governor had warned Fred that the harsh
prison environment could be the death of him, to which Fred replied that, 'it
didn't matter 'where a man died but how.' An enquiry into Fred's death resulted
in a coroner's report which concluded that Fred's prison experience had not
contributed toward his death !
Whether the helmet issue is important to you or not, we all owe it, not only to
Fred but to ourselves, to sustain a ceaseless call for the reform of this
outrageous legislation for, as Fred wrote - 'what is a man deprived of his
freedom ? ' Motorcycling is about freedom. Fred understood that. We must never
forget Fred's example lest we forget why we ride motorcycles.
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