St Peter’s Field, Manchester, England.
Map of the Peterloo Massacre |
Hunt's arrest by the Constables |
In August 1819 on a cloudless, hot summer’s day, a
peaceable crowd of some 60,000 to 80,000 people gathered in St Peter’s Field
(an open piece of cleared land alongside Mount Street) to hear orator, Henry
Hunt speak and to demand reform of parliamentary representation. What happened
next was as unnecessary as it was shocking. Cavalry charged into the crowd with
sabres drawn, and in the ensuring confusion, 15 people were killed and between
400 and 700 injured.
Notice to the Inhabitants of the Hundred of Salford |
In March 1819, Joseph
Johnson, John Knight and James Wroe formed the Manchester Patriotic Union
Society. All the leading radicals in Manchester joined the organisation.
Johnson was appointed secretary and Wroe became treasurer.
The local magistrates were concerned that such a substantial gathering of reformers might end in a riot. The magistrates therefore decided to arrange for a large number of soldiers to be in Manchester on the day of the meeting. This included four squadrons of cavalry of the 15th Hussars (600 men), several hundred infantrymen, the Cheshire Yeomanry Cavalry (400 men), a detachment of the Royal Horse Artillery and two six-pounder guns and the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry (120 men) and all Manchester's special constables (400 men).
At about 11.00 a.m. William Hulton, the chairman, and nine other magistrates met at Mr. Buxton's house in Mount Street that overlooked St. Peter's Field. Although there was no trouble, the magistrates became concerned by the growing size of the crowd. Estimations concerning the size of the crowd vary but Hulton came to the conclusion that there were at least 50,000 people in St. Peter's Field at midday. Hulton, therefore, took the decision to send Edward Clayton, the Boroughreeve and the special constables to clear a path through the crowd. The 400 special constables were therefore ordered to form two continuous lines between the hustings where the speeches were to take place, and Mr. Buxton's house where the magistrates were staying.
The local magistrates were concerned that such a substantial gathering of reformers might end in a riot. The magistrates therefore decided to arrange for a large number of soldiers to be in Manchester on the day of the meeting. This included four squadrons of cavalry of the 15th Hussars (600 men), several hundred infantrymen, the Cheshire Yeomanry Cavalry (400 men), a detachment of the Royal Horse Artillery and two six-pounder guns and the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry (120 men) and all Manchester's special constables (400 men).
At about 11.00 a.m. William Hulton, the chairman, and nine other magistrates met at Mr. Buxton's house in Mount Street that overlooked St. Peter's Field. Although there was no trouble, the magistrates became concerned by the growing size of the crowd. Estimations concerning the size of the crowd vary but Hulton came to the conclusion that there were at least 50,000 people in St. Peter's Field at midday. Hulton, therefore, took the decision to send Edward Clayton, the Boroughreeve and the special constables to clear a path through the crowd. The 400 special constables were therefore ordered to form two continuous lines between the hustings where the speeches were to take place, and Mr. Buxton's house where the magistrates were staying.
Shortly after the meeting began, local magistrates called on
the military to arrest well-known radical orator, Henry Hunt who was asked to
chair the meeting, and several others on the hustings with him, and to disperse
the crowd. Arrested along with Hunt for inciting a riot and imprisoned was
Samuel Bamford, who led a group from his native Middleton to St. Peter’s Field.
Bamford emerged as a prominent voice for radical reform.
Hunt became MP for Preston 1830-33.
To understand what happened in Manchester one must
look at the period of economic upheaval between 1783 to 1846, when Britain
shifted from being a predominantly agricultural and commercial society to being
the world’s first industrial nation. Many of the most contentious political
issues of the day, corn and currency laws for example, were really questions of
whether government policy should be directed towards encouraging this shift, or
trying to reverse it.
Original blue plaque replaced in 2007 |
Accompanying
the economic changes was the most sustained and dangerous cycle of revolutionary
discontent and working-class protest in British history. This prompted a few
political concessions on the part of the governing aristocracy, but more
significant was the emergence of governmental machinery designed to maintain
law and order, which in turn led unintentionally to the foundation of the
modern centralized and bureaucratic state.
The power of the Crown declined significantly.
Although George III (until he became incurably mad in 1810) George IV, William
IV, Victoria, and her consort Albert, could all influence the course of
political intrigue, the monarch’s power to control the policies of the state
was severely reduced.
As the scope and scale of government business
increased during the long French wars, less and less passed through the
monarch’s hands. Except possibly where foreign policy was concerned, the Crown
was being reduced to little more than a figurehead of state. Effective power
remained in the hands of a territorial aristocracy, whose representatives still
dominated both Houses of Parliament. They faced an active and vociferous
radical movement, particularly strong in 1792 and in the economically depressed
years after the end of the war in 1815, when a period of famine and chronic
unemployment came into being, exacerbated by the introduction of the first of
the Corn Laws.
Postwar adjustment brought depression, with agrarian
disturbances, machine-breaking and revival of popular reform agitation. Two
meets at Spa Fields 1816 and an attack on the Prince Regent led to suspension of
Habeas Corpus and restrictions on public meetings.
After the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in
the 18th Century, Manchester began expanding at an astonishing rate
in the 19th Century as part of a process of unplanned
urbanization.
Samuel Bamford |
Bamford, an author of poetry, led a group from Middleton to St Peter's Fields, to attend a meeting pressing for parliamentary reform and the repeal of the Corn Laws. He was arrested and charged with treason and jailed for a year. He became a voice for radical reform, but was opposed to any activism that involved physical force.
Historian, Robert Poole has called the
Peterloo Massacre in Manchester one of the defining moments of its age. It left
an enormous psychological scar on a polity which prided itself on its ability
to contain discontents. Yet the aristocracy survived, largely because the
middling ranks, terrified by the violence of the French Revolution, rejected
any sort of revolutionary radicalism.
The Peterloo Massacre called on the Government in
1819 to pass what is known as the Six Acts which forbade training in arms and
drilling, authorized seizure of arms, simplified prosecutions, forbade
seditious assemblies, punished blasphemous libels and restricted the press.
Resource: The Cambridge Historical Encyclopedia of
Great Britain and Ireland.
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