View Article  Chartist newspapers go online

Many of the most significant Chartist newspapers have now become available online to the public thanks to a British Library initiative to digitise and publish more than 2 million pages of material from 19th century newspapers.

Among the papers that can now be viewed are the Charter, Chartist, Chartist Circular, ...   more »

View Article  Tracing your Chartist and trade union ancestors - the book

I have a book coming out in the autumn. Tracing Your Labour Movement Ancestors: A Guide for Family Historians is aimed at anyone wanting to look into the trade union and labour aspects of their family history, and also has a big chunk on Chartism.

The book will be out ...   more »

View Article  Labour History Review focus on Chartism

The latest issue of the Labour History Review is given over entirely to a series of articles on Chartism, and is well worth getting hold of if you can.

Some of the best known academics in the field of Chartist studies (some of whom appear elsewhere on Chartist Ancestors) have ...   more »

View Article  Edward Truelove's Chartist bookshop

Edward Truelove's bookshop in John Street must have been a familiar haunt for many London Chartists.

If ever there were Chartist fundraising or social events in the capital, Truelove's shop was sure to be listed in the Northern Star as one of the principal outlets for ticket sales. In addition, ...   more »

View Article  Who framed Samuel Holberry?
Untitled Document

Samuel Holberry died in gaol, a Chartist martyr, his health broken by two years of imprisonment after he was found guilty of seditious conspiracy. But was he really planning an armed uprising that would seize control of Sheffield and spark insurrection across the north of England?

Up to ...   more »

View Article  The poetry of Chartism analysed

More than 1,000 poems appeared in the pages of the Northern Star, the principal Chartist newspaper, from its launch in 1838 to closure in 1852. This body of work, possibly constituting the most widely read collection of poetry in the Victorian era, is now examined in a new book, titled ...   more »

View Article  170th anniversary of the Newport Chartist rising

A series of events to mark the 170th anniversary of the Chartist rising at Newport in South Wales begins on Saturday 18 April with events in Merthyr Tudfel market square.

Events continue through the year and on into January 2010 - the 170th anniversary of the day on which the ...   more »

View Article  Chartism: A New History - some views

If ever I am asked to recommend a single book about Chartism and the Chartists, I suggest Malcolm Chase's Chartism: A New History.

Published in 2007, it is the first significant overview of the Chartist movement to be published in many years, and is in addition both eminently helpful ...   more »

View Article  Chartist Circular: the voice of Scottish Chartism

The Chartist Circular was among the most important and certainly one of the longest-lived of the many newspapers that sprang out of Chartism in Scotland.

Launched in September 1839 by the former handloom weaver and co-operator William Thomson, the paper was published weekly “from the steam press of W & ...   more »

View Article  Chartist commemorative events in Newport
A month of activities to mark the anniversary of the Chartist uprising in Newport, South Wales, begins this week with a lecture at Merthyr Tydfil library followed by a guided walk and coach tour, plays and other events.

Thousands of men from across south Wales marched on Newport on 4 ...   more »
View Article  Chartist Ancestors calendar for 2009
If you would like a Chartist Ancestors calendar for 2009, you can now get one simply by clicking this link. This year's calendar, which shows all 12 months on a single side of A4, includes a picture of a medallion issued to mark Feargus O'Connor's release from prison, and ...   more »
View Article  Mark Hovell and The Chartist Movement
It has been claimed that between 1854 and 1916, “not a single book of permanent value on the history of Chartism had been published in England”.

This is certainly going too far: the autobiographies and memoirs published by Thomas Cooper (1872), George Jacob Holyoake (1892) and W E Adams (1903) ...   more »
View Article  Feargus O'Connor: died 30 August 1855
Feargus O’Connor was never happier in life than when at the centre of a controversy. In death, the Chartist movement’s greatest leader remained also its most disputed figure, blamed by earlier generations of historians for his bluster but now at least partially rehabilitated and admired once more.

Today marks the 153rd ...   more »
View Article  Chartism and an Ashton under Lyne print business

The culture of Chartism was inextricably tied up with the development of popular print. Many  leading Chartists were long-time opponents of stamp duty taxes on newspapers, and the movement spawned some remarkably successful publishing businesses.

The Manchester Chartist Abel Heywood graduated from running a penny library to printing Chartist tracts ...   more »

View Article  A house on the Chartist estate: £2.5 million

The Chartist land settlement at Heronsgate has come a long way since the 1840s. Then it was a refuge for industrial workers seeking a cottage of their own and two or three acres to farm. Now it is one of the most sought-after of areas for London commuters.

I came ...   more »

View Article  William Lovett: autobiography of a Chartist

William Lovett occupies a pivotal place in the history of Chartism. He drafted the People’s Charter, was secretary to the London Working Men’s Association, and subsequently served as secretary to the first Chartist Convention of 1839.

Importantly, William Lovett also wrote and published an autobiography. The Life and Struggles of ...   more »

View Article  Chartist Ancestors visitors top 40,000 in a year

Nearly 40,000 people have visited Chartist Ancestors over the past 12 months. Each visitor looked on average at just over two pages and spent around 2 minutes 20 seconds on the site before moving on elsewhere.

I know this because last July  I signed up to Google’s Analytics service. ...   more »

View Article  A British Museum perspective on Chartism

"We had to shut the main gates on Great Russell Street to prevent more people from coming in. It was the first time we did that since the Chartist riots of 1848 - although on that occasion the staff were actually on the roof, armed with stones."

Neil MacGregor, director ...   more »

View Article  The Northern Star: a Chartist newspaper in numbers
Throughout 1841 and 1842, anyone reading the Northern Star would have come across the name of its proprietor, Feargus O’Connor, an average of 40 times in each weekly issue.

Over the course of the 15 years from 1838 to 1852 during which O’Connor owned and ran the paper, his name ...   more »
View Article  Cooper and O'Neill: the Chartist prisoners
Stephen Roberts’ new book on Thomas Cooper and Arthur O’Neill is being launched at the Birmingham & Midland Institute in Birmingham city centre on Saturday 13 September.

The book, titled The Chartist Prisoners, focuses on the lifelong friendship between Cooper and O’Neill formed when they shared a cell in Stafford ...   more »
View Article  Isaac Ickeringill: 'Notorious' Bingley Chartist

The name of Isaac Ickersgill appears briefly in R G Gammage’s History of the Chartist Movement. Along with a number of other Bingley men, Isaac was charged with having rescued two local Chartists from police custody in the summer of 1848.

Not for the first time, however, Gammage made a ...   more »

View Article  James Watson - Chartist and campaigner for free speech

James Watson was one of the six working men whose names appear (alongside those of six radical MPs) on the People’s Charter, and played a prominent role in establishing free speech in this country.

A veteran of the struggle of the unstamped press in the 1820s and 1830s, he became ...   more »

View Article  Chartism Day 2008: rhetoric, song and the Chartist Gothic
Historians from around the UK and some distance beyond were in Newport, South Wales, at the weekend for the annual Chartism Day conference.

The conference was organised by the Society of Labour History, the Chartist Study Group and – as hosts this year – the South Wales Centre ...   more »

View Article  The Charter: the voice of London Chartists

The Charter had all the necessary elements to become one of the great success stories of the radical press.

A short history of The Charter and those involved with it, including a list of the members of its management committee, now appears on Chartist Ancestors.

The paper’s editor was a ...   more »

View Article  Profile: John Skevington - Leicestershire Chartist

Our current series of Chartist portraits finishes with John Skevington, the working class radical leader from Leicestershire who represented both Derby and his home town of Loughborough in the First Chartist Convention of 1839.

The series ends here because this is the point at which The Charter newspaper drew to ...   more »

View Article  Profile: Henry Hetherington – radical publisher

Henry Hetherington was the hero of the campaign for an unstamped press – the radical protest movement which defied the law to publish news and political opinion while refusing to pay a newspaper tax which put most publications out of the reach of working people.

He would later go on ...   more »

View Article  Some history reading for the summer...

Amazon is currently having a sale, so if you're looking for something to read now – or to put aside for your summer holidays, it's worth checking out their cut-price history books.

When I last looked, they had
•  A History of Modern Britain for £3.60;
•  Jerry White's London ...   more »

View Article  How to search the Northern Star for Chartist ancestors

Having had a little time to play around with the new online version of the Northern Star, I’m delighted to report that most of my early fears were either unfounded or are already being addressed.

The Northern Star was the most important Chartist newspaper of the period, and remains ...   more »

View Article  The Northern Star is now online

A free and fully searchable edition of the Northern Star is now available online. Although still officially in a beta (test) version, you can find this important Chartist newspaper on the Nineteenth Century Serials Edition website along with a number of other papers from the period.

Go straight to the ...   more »

View Article  Profile: Peter Bussey - exiled revolutionary

Peter Bussey was everything the originators of the People’s Charter disliked and feared about the mass of disgruntled and distressed working people who flooded into Chartism.

While the careful and politically astute artisans of the London Working Men’s Association were natural behind-the-scenes influencers of politicians and government, Bussey, a Bradford ...   more »

View Article  William Lovett, born 8 May 1800
Chartist anniversaries fall thick and fast in May. On 7 May 1839, the first Chartist petition was presented to Parliament, and today is the birthday of William Lovett, the man who wrote the text of the People’s Charter and served as secretary to the First Chartist Convention of 1839.

Lovett ...   more »

View Article  Profile: Robert Lowery - Newcastle Chartist

Robert Lowery lived an extraordinarily full political life for a man who died at just 54 years of age.

Born in 1809, he first became active in radical politics as secretary to the Newcastle Political Union during the Great Reform Act agitation of 1831 and 1832. By the time of ...   more »

View Article  Chartism's high tide: 2 May 1842

On 2 May 1842, the second of the three great national Chartist petitions demanding the Six Points was presented to Parliament.

As I have pointed out before, there were in fact six petitions in all, but those of 1839, 1842 and 1848 were the three that Chartism is remembered ...   more »

View Article  Profile: Thomas Rayner Smart - veteran Chartist patriot

Thomas Rayner Smart was a largely self-taught working man whose scruffy greatcoat and battered hat marked him out from the generality of middle-class delegates to the First Chartist Convention of 1839.

While representing Loughborough and Leicester at the convention, Smart was profiled by The Charter newspaper. Both the profile and ...   more »

MEET THE EDITOR
Hello and welcome to chartists.net news. My name is Mark Crail, and I set up Chartist Ancestors back in 2003. I have been building it up ever since with the help of many very kind individuals who have provided both information and advice. This blog aims to highlight new additions to the site and developments in the wider world of Chartist studies. I hope you find it and the main site both informative and enjoyable.

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