A new biography of Feargus O'Connor, written by Dr Paul Pickering (left), is due for publication later this spring. O'Connor was probably the single most significant figure in Chartism for more than a decade, and was the only person ever elected to Parliament specifically on a Chartist ticket.
Great
Dodford was the fifth and final land colony to be settled by Chartist members
of the National Land Company.
But it was
also the settlement with the longest record of success. Despite a difficult
start, descendants of the original tenants were still making a good living as
late as ... more»
The disappearance of Chartism as a mass movement and bitter
internal battles over the future of the movement dispersed Chartists in all
sorts of directions. But the continuing interest of some in international
politics provided several opportunities for ad hoc radical activities.
It is strange to think that what must have been a very basic
spit-and-sawdust beerhouse when it opened to serve settlers on the Chartist
land colony at O’Connorville back in the 1840s is now considered one of Britain’s
best public houses.
The wonderfully named Land of Liberty, Peace and ... more»
A database of 45 women who were active in the Chartist
movement in Scotland
has now been added to Chartist Ancestors. Here is the page.
Women played a big part in Chartism. Although none of the
Chartist petitions called for women to be given the vote, up to 20% of those
adding their names in some parts of the country were women.
They also organised themselves in Female Chartist
Associations – some 23 of which are known to have existed in Scotland alone,
as well as taking part in an enormously wide range of other activities, from
the domestic to the public political sphere.
Yet this is an enormously hard subject to research. There
has been no major new work on Scottish Chartism since the start of the 1970s,
and academic study of women's part in Chartist agitation is still less well
served.
I am therefore indebted and grateful to Sue John, who
researched and compiled the database of Women Chartists in Scotland and kindly permitted its
publication on Chartist Ancestors.
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.