Chartism Flashcards
Thomas Carlyle on Parliament’s ineffectiveness of dealing with Chartists
“you abolish the symptoms to no purpose if the disease is left untouched” and parliament should “inquire into popular discontents before they get the length of pikes and torches”
Thomas Carlyle on who the Chartists were
“radcial members above all; friends of the people, chosen with effort, by the people, to interpret and articulate the dumb deep want of the people”
Thomas Carlyle on the ‘madness’ of the Chartists
“when the thoughts of the people, in the great mass of it, have grown mad, the combined issue of the people’s workings will be a madness”
the ‘Plug Plots’
strikes in Lancashire, Yorkshire, the Midlands and areas of Scotland in summer 1842. Workers removed plugs from boilers to bring factory machinery to a halt. Largely to do with wage cuts but linked to strong Chartist support which was higher in times of poverty
Chartism as a moral crusade
“golden rules of Christian duty are based on the principles of brotherly love, equality and justice” and Chartism waimed to “place our institutions on the basis of justice”- Lovett and Collins
Chartism on never ending according to Lovett and Collins
“our rulers may exasperate corruption, but they will find it powerless and conquering the minds and hearts of the millions…. the spark once struck is inextinguishable”
1838 people’s charter
6 points:
- A vote for every man over 21
- secret ballot
- salaried MPs
- remove property qualification to be an MP
- equal voting constituencies
- election every year for parliament
2 main leaders of Chartism
Lovett- peaceful
O’Connor- violent tactics and made speeches on how individuals should be willing to die for the cause
Northern Star
by Sep 1838 circulated to 10k and by summer 1839 this was 50k and by the end of the year it had the 2nd largest circulation in the UK. O’Connor made a personal profit of £13k by the end of the year
violent riots in Chartism
November 4th 1839
5k men marched to Newport and gathered outside the Westgate hotel where troublemakers were being held. soldiers killed 22 and brought the riot to an abrupt end
Procession of the grand Petition
1842
accompanied to the commons ‘by half a dozen bands of music, banners and flags’ and the times said it gathered a crowd of 50k including some MPs
Whig Government in power 1835-41
Melbourne who had opposed 1832 reform act and opposed the repeal of the corn laws. replaced by Tory government under Peel
1948 petition
claimed to have 6 million signatures but many were found to be illegitimate and was expected to gather a large crowd on its march to parliament from Kensington- 8k soldiers were there but only 20k chartists showed up so seen as a failure and an end to the campaign
How many women signed the 1839 petition?
200k
Chartist petitions on public display
in Sheffield, a petition for the repeal of the poor law was placed in every church and place of worship in town
network of radical booksellers, newsagents, publishers and association rooms and public houses were used as locations or the signing of national petitions and in some areas petitions were dropped at houses for signature and collected the following night