More and more resources are becoming available online for those who want to study Chartism or find out more about their family’s history in the Chartist movement.

Google Books and other services are increasingly providing free access to the full text of important but now out-of-copyright books written by and about Chartists from the 1840s onwards, and some earlier histories from the 1910s and 1920s are also being published online.

I have now overhauled the Further Research page on Chartist Ancestors to take account of more recent updates.

These include:
* an account published in 1843 of the trial of Feargus O’Connor and 58 other Chartist leaders at Lancaster;
* George Jacob Holyoake’s two volume Life and Letters; and
* three important early histories of Chartism by Frank Rosenblatt (1916), Preston W Slosson (1916) and Julius West (1918).

Further Research also includes links to autobiographical works by John James Bezer, Thomas Cooper, W J Linton, Samuel Bamford and W E Adams, plus links to some great websites, including Richard Brown’s History Zone and John Leech’s Chartist sketches for Punch.