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London Corresponding Society

The London Corresponding Society (LCS) was a federation of local reading and debating clubs that in the decade following the French Revolution agitated for the democratic reform of the British Parliament. In contrast to other reform associations of the period, it drew largely upon working men (artisans, tradesmen, and shopkeepers) and was itself organised on a formal democratic basis.

London Corresponding Society
Formation25 January 1792
PurposeRadical parliamentary reform
HeadquartersLondon
Key people
Thomas Hardy, Joseph Gerrald, Maurice Margarot, Edward Despard
London: London Corresponding Society: Handbill advertising a petition to the House of Commons for Parliamentary Reform

Characterising it as an instrument of French revolutionary subversion, and citing links to the insurrectionist United Irishmen, the government of William Pitt the Younger sought to break the Society, twice charging leading members with complicity in plots to assassinate the King. Measures against the society intensified in the wake of the naval mutinies of 1797, the 1798 Irish Rebellion and growing protest against the continuation of the war with France. In 1799, new legislation suppressed the Society by name, along with the remnants of the United Irishmen and their franchise organisations, United Scotsmen and the United Englishmen, with which the diminishing membership of the LCS had associated.

Early influences and foundation

In the last decades of the eighteenth century the percolation of Enlightenment thinking and the dramas of American independence and the French Revolution stimulated in Britain, as elsewhere in Europe, new clubs and societies committed to principles of popular sovereignty and constitutional government. In the north of England the Non-Conformist, principally Unitarian, currents in the new un-enfranchised mill towns and manufacturing centres, supported the Society for Constitutional Information (SCI). This had been founded by, among others, Major John Cartwright, author of Take Your Choice (1776) which called for manhood suffrage, the secret ballot, annual elections and equal electoral districts.[1][2]

In 1788, prominent Unitarian member of the CIS, Richard Price and Joseph Priestley among them, formed the Revolution Society. Ostensibly convened to commemorate the centennial of the Glorious Revolution of 1688, the society called for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts on the grounds that "the right of private judgement, liberty of consience, trial by jury, freedom of the press and freedom of election ought ever be held sacred and inviolable".[3] After 1792 the radical momentum shifted from the Revolution Society back to the SCI and, more decidedly, to a new London society.[4]

During the American Revolutionary War, Thomas Hardy, a Scottish shoemaker in London, was convinced of the American cause by the pamphlets of Dr. Richard Price, a Unitarian minister and prominent reformer. A gift of the pamphlet library of the SCI, including a reprint of a proposal from a "Correspondence Committee" of the Irish Volunteer movement to restore "the purity and vigour" of the Irish constitution through parliamentary reform,[5] persuaded him of the need for a workingman's reform club.[6][7]

At the first meeting of his "Correspondence Society" on January 25, 1792, Hardy led seven friends in a discussion that determined that "gross ignorance and prejudice in the bulk of the nation was the greatest obstacle to obtaining redress" from the "defects and abuses that have crept into the administration of our Government"; and that to remove that obstacle it should be the aim of those subscribing:

to instil into [the public] in a legal and constitutional way by means of the press, a sense of their rights as freemen, and of their duty to themselves and their posterity, as good citizens, and hereditary guardians of the liberties transmitted to them by their forefathers.[8]

Hardy is said to have been distinguished in radical company by never speaking "but to the purpose at hand" and by his "high organising ability".[9]

In promoting the new society, Hardy and his friends rode a wave of popular political engagement lifted by the two-part publication (March 1791, February 1792) of Thomas Paine's Rights of Man. Selling as many as a million copies, Paine's reply to Edmund Burke in defence of the French Revolution (and of Dr. Richard Price) was "eagerly read by reformers, Protestant dissenters, democrats, London craftsman, and the skilled factory-hands of the new industrial north".[10]

Organisation and membership

Democratic structure

From the beginning, the LCS was viewed with suspicion by the British government, and was infiltrated by spies on the government payroll. In addition to domestic subversion, the state authorities feared collaboration with French agents, against whose entry and circulation within the country they had introduced the Aliens Act of 1793.[11] Partly in response to the surveillance, but also in deference to democratic principle, the society adopted a decentralised structure. The LCS organised in "divisions"[12] each comprising neighbourhood "tithings" of not more than ten members. Each division met twice a week to conduct business and discuss historical and political texts.[13]

In contrast to some of Whig-establishment reform clubs, the organisation allowed all subscribers to participate in open debate, and to elect members to leadership positions such as tithing-man, divisional secretary, sub-delegate, or delegate.[12] Rules also ensured that discussion was not monopolised. Francis Place recalled that "no one could speak a second time [on a subject] until every one who chose had spoken once".[14]

By 1793 sister societies had emerged in Ireland, Scotland, and the English provinces: in Manchester, Norwich, Sheffield, and Stockport.[15]

Social composition

By May 1792 the LCS comprised nine separate divisions, each with a minimum of thirty members. The height of its popularity in late 1795 it may have had between 3,500 and 5000 member organised in 79 divisions[16][17] In contrast to the SCI with its annual 4 guinea subscription, in levying just a penny a week the LCS opened its proceedings to workers of almost every condition. Those, however, with craft skills that gave them sufficient independence to protect them from the political disapproval of employers or of customers—shoemakers, weavers, watch and instrument makers and the like—took the leading role.[18]

While the LCS remained primarily a forum for "a politically conscious and articulate artisan population",[17] men of a more prominent social and professional standing did join, drawn in many cases from existing debating societies.[19] They brought with them important political connections and skills. Barristers such as Felix Vaughan and attorneys like Joseph Gerrald (who had practiced law in Philadelphia, and there associated with Paine) were especially useful given near continuous entanglement of members in court proceedings. Among the physicians were of SCI member James Parkinson, a prolific propagandist, John Gale Jones, an accomplished orator. But the Society's egalitarian constitution accorded them no definitive preference. Hardy in particular was wary of placing them in positions of authority lest ordinary members be discouraged from "exerting themselves in their own cause".[17]

Male fraternity

Women participated in some of popular debating societies from which the LCS recruited. For short periods they created their own, bringing to public notice demands for equal education, equal rights and protection of female occupations.[20] While it counted among its members men like Thomas Spence and Dr William Hodgson (The Female Citizen)[21] who did advocate political rights and equality for women, the LCS appears to have been a male fraternity. The venues in which its divisions met – taverns and coffee houses – were predominantly male spaces, and reference to women in records of their proceedings are few.[22]

In August 1793, the Society's General Committee approved a motion calling for the formation of a female Society of Patriots. By September, a government spy reported that there was a Society of Women meeting in Southwark. The LCS arranged to send two of its delegates to instruct them. But it does not appear that female patriots were ever admitted as members to the LCS itself. Women did turn out for major LCS demonstrations.[23]

Noted Members

The Society had an early celebrity recruit, the ex-slave, free West-Indian black and abolitionist, Olaudah Equiano. In 1791–92, Equiano was touring the British Isles with his autobiography, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa the African. Drawing on abolitionist networks he brokered connections for the LCS, including what may have been the Society's first contacts with the United Irishmen.[24] In Belfast (where civic outrage had defeated plans to commission vessels for the Middle Passage) Equiano was hosted by the leading United Irishman, publisher of their Painite newspaper the Northern Star, Samuel Neilson.[25]

Paine subscribed to the Society; as did the radical poet William Blake; Joseph Ritson the noted antiquarian and founder of modern vegetarianism; and Basil William Douglas, Lord Daer, who held concurrent membership of the Society for Constitutional Information and the Scottish Association of the Friends of the People.

London's sans-culottes

Despite such notables, the Government were assured by their most trusted informer, "'Citizen' Groves", that the real body of the club was made of "the very lowest order of society".[26] They took little persuading that within the LCS English Jacobins were leading on the equivalent to the sans-culottes of the revolutionary Paris sections. Some of the working class membership did take the republican doctrines of Paine to their extreme, posing the claims of an absolute political democracy against those of monarchy and aristocracy.[27]

Of these radical democrats, the most renowned was Thomas Spence.[28] Originally from Newcastle, where he had protested the enclosure of commons, Spence re-issued as The Real Rights of Man a penny pamphlet he had produced in 1775, Property in Land Every One's Right.[29] His vision was of a society based on common ownership of land administered democratically, by men and women alike, at the parish level. In 1797, in response to Thomas Paine's Agrarian Justice, he wrote The Rights of Infants which, in the course of vindicating the right of children to freedom from want and abuse, proposed an unconditional and universal basic income.[30]

Political equality not social "levelling"

From the outset, the LCS contended with the charge that a "full and equal representation of the people" in parliament represented a "levelling" of all distinctions of rank and property.[31] This was delivered, and (with considerable Church and aristocratic patronage) circulated widely, in a short three-penny pamphlet Village Politics: Addressed to All the Mechanics, Journeymen, and Day Labourers in Great Britain (1793). Written by Hannah More as "Burke for Beginners", it is an imagined conversation in which a mason learns from a blacksmith that to declare for "Liberty and Equality" is to associate with "levellers" and "republicans", rogues who hide from him the simple truth that if everyone is digging potatoes on their half acre no one would be available to mend his broken spade.[32]

Against this onslaught, the LCS produced "An Explicit Declaration of the Principles and View of the L.C.S". But for having to address the "frantic" notions of "alarmists", it claimed that those who would "restore the House of Commons to a state of independence" would never even conceive "so wild and detestable a sentiment" as "the equalization of property".

We know and are sensible that the Wages of every an are his Right; that Difference of Strength, of Talents, and of Industry, do and ought to afford proportional Distinction of Property, which, when acquired and confirmed by the Laws, is sacred and inviolable.[33]

The LCS did not pronounce on social questions, confident that key to addressing inequities lay in reform of the constitution. It was sufficient to observe that it was from the "partial, unequal, and therefore inadequate Representation, together with the corrupt method in which Representatives are elected;" that "oppressive Taxes, unjust Laws, restrictions of Liberty, and wasting of the Public Money, have ensued.”[34][35]

The Conventions and Pitt's "Reign of Terror"

The first Edinburgh Convention

At the end of November 1792 the LCS published an Address of the London Corresponding Society to the other Societies of Great Britain, united for obtaining a Reform in Parliament expressing confidence in the prospects for obtaining a reformed, democratic franchise through "moral force."[33][36] A national convention was called for Edinburgh in December.

The LCS delegates' host in the Scottish capital, and perhaps the most radical delegate present, Thomas Muir of the Society of the Friends of the People, himself said nothing that was not strictly constitutional. An address which he presented from the United Irishmen (largely drawn up by William Drennan) was made acceptable to the Convention only by redacting any suggestion of "Treason or Misprison of Treason against the Union [of Scotland] with England".[37] Beginning with the title "Convention", and including an oath to "live free or die", the "imitation of French forms" did cause the authorities some alarm. Minor prosecutions were instituted.[9]

The Edinburgh treason trials

By the time LCS delegates attended their second reform convention in Edinburgh in October 1793, the political climate had changed dramatically. From February 1, 1793 the Crown was at war with the new French Republic. Any association with Paris or defence of its policies, foreign or domestic, was now regarded as treasonable. In May 1793 the House of Commons refused by 282 votes to 41 even to consider petitions asking for reform.[9]

At a time when reformers were beginning to mobilise a broad swath of opinion in Britain in favour of a reformed Parliament and a strictly constitutional monarchy, they were being forced, by their early embrace of the French revolution, to defend policies in France they did not advocate at home: the execution of the king and of regime opponents, the confiscation of the property of the Church and nobility. Against the institution of the Terror, the French Republic paid no heed to the entreaties in Paris of Thomas Muir or, from his place in the French National Convention, of Thomas Paine.

After Muir returned to Scotland, he was charged with treason. Although the prosecutorial evidence amounted to little more than a presentation of his political views, in August 1793 a jury of landlords upheld the charge and Muir was sentenced to 14 years transportation. Convicted of sedition, the same fate befell the secretary of a second Edinburgh convention in October, 1793, William Skirving, and the two LCS delegates.[38]

Joseph Gerrald and LCS chairman Maurice Margarot had been elected as delegates to the convention by the LCS's first open-air meeting, attended by some 4,000 persons in a field off the Hackney Road. Gerrald had published earlier in the year A Convention the Only Means of Saving Us from Ruin. With ancient precedents sought in the Anglo-Saxon mycelgemot (popular assemblies) and wittengamot (delegated representatives), the pamphlet's laid out a three-stage sequence, from local gatherings to regional delegations to national convention. There was the scarcely disguised suggestion that such a convention would have a representative legitimacy greater than the corrupted, unreformed Parliament.

As the son of a wine importer, Margarot (who alone survived to return to England in 1810) had continental connections, including residence in Paris during the first year of the revolution. These allowed the authorities to draw upon him the suspicion of being a French spy.[39]

The London treason trials

 
Frontispiece for LeMaitre's 1795 book

The weight of repression substantially reduced popular societies in the provinces. In London, Hardy and Margarot's successor as chairman, John Baxter, undaunted, had drawn up addresses to "the friends of peace and parliamentary reform" and to "His Majesty" calling for an end to the war against France.[40] Prime Minister, William Pitt, responded by having the papers of the London societies seized and examined by a secret committee of the House of Commons.[41]

In May 1794, hard on the committee's "Report on Radical and Reform Societies",[42] charges of treason were laid against thirty leading radicals including Hardy, Thomas Spence, the dramatist Thomas Holcroft, the poet, public lecturer and journalist John Thelwall, and sometime parliamentary candidate John Horne Tooke.[43] Their trials in November misfired. The juries in London were not as ready as those in Edinburgh to accept the mere expression of political opinion as evidence of plots against King and Parliament. When the evidence running to four printed volumes failed to impress in the case of Hardy, the courts were unable to take seriously the charges against his associates: Horne Tooke jeered at the Attorney-General and clowned in the dock, and the Lord Chief Justice slept through the prosecution's summary against Thelwall.[9]

The process did deliver Hardy a blow: during his trial his wife was attacked in their home by a loyalist "Church and King mob" and subsequently died in childbirth.[44] On his release, Hardy did not return to his position in the Society.

During the course of these trials a further three members of LCS, Paul Thomas LeMaitre, John Smith, and George Higgins, were arrested as accomplices in the so-called "Popgun Plot", an alleged conspiracy to assassinate King George III by means of a poison dart fired from an airgun.[45][46] In May 1796, their cases similarly collapsed.[47]

The reformers were not allowed to celebrate their victory. The LCS bookseller John Smith provocatively renamed his shop The Pop Gun, and sold a pamphlet that explained that the government required three instruments: 1) soldiers ("by profession slaughterers"), 2) clergymen (who "hallow with the sanction of Divinity state robbery"), and 3) lawyers (who "thrive on misery" and are the "tyrants of property"). He was given two years hard labour on bread and water for seditious libel.[31]

The "Gagging Acts"

The government's considered response to their humiliation in the courts was to introduce the so-called "Gagging Acts": the 1795 Seditious Meetings Act and the Treason Act. These made writing and speaking as much treason as overt acts, and made inciting hatred of the Government a "high misdemeanour". They also required licences for public meetings, lectures and reading rooms.[48] These restrictions, with the encouragement given to magistrates to use public order powers to close taverns and bookshops regarded as centres of radical activity, wound down the Society's extensive publishing programme—some eighty separate pamphlets and broadsides and two periodicals [6]—and, in general, "hamstrung" its propaganda activity.[9]

In advance of the treason trials, habeas Corpus had been suspended and six members of the Society detained, including Thomas Spence. Invoking the presence of "a traitorous and detestable conspiracy ... formed for subverting the existing laws and constitution, and for introducing the system of anarchy and confusion which has so fatally prevailed in France", in May 1794 Parliament had allowed the Privy Council to direct detentions "any law or statute to the contrary notwithstanding"[49]

Radicalisation and Dissolution

The final rally

 
LCS speakers address the crowds at Copenhagen Fields, 1795. John Gale Jones on hustings to the left.

In the summer of 1795, weariness with the war combined with failed harvests to trigger renewed protest—including an attack on the Prime Minister's residence in Downing Street.[9] The Society was growing again: from 17 divisions in March to 79 in October. General Meetings were attended by tens of thousands.[50]

The LCS called a "monster meeting" for 26 October 1795 at Copenhagen Fields, Islington. Veteran reformers Joseph Priestley, John Thelwall and Charles James Fox, joined Hardy's successor as LCS secretary John Ashley (another shoemaker); chairman John Binns (a plumber's labourer), John Gale Jones (surgeon), and William Duane (Irish-American editor of The Telegraph) in addressing crowds estimated at upwards of 200,000.[51]

For the Society, Binns and Ashley declared that should the British nation, in the face of "the continuation of the present detestable War, the horrors of an approaching Famine, and above all, the increased Corruption, and Inquisitorial measures, demand strong and decisive measures", the London Corresponding Society would be "the powerful organ" ushering in "joyful tidings of peace ... universal suffrage and annual parliaments".[52] Three days later, George III, in procession to the state Opening of Parliament, had the windows of his carriage smashed by crowd shouting "No King, No Pitt, No war",[53] and, revealing the Popgun Plot, a dart was fired.[46] It was the occasion seized by the government to introduce the Gagging Acts.[54][55]

The rally in LCS membership and activity was brief. The problem was not alone Pitt's "reign of terror".

The fall of Paine

As an immediate leader of popular opinion there had been no rival to Paine. But following the purge and mass execution of the Girondins in June 1793, in France Paine found himself a prisoner of the revolution he had defended. In prison, and prior to an obscure American exile, he had produced his second great work, published in 1796 and 1797. The Age of Reason submitted the Christian bible and churches to the same type of deconstructive logical analysis that The Rights of Man had applied to the monarchy and aristocracy. The social historian G.D.H.Cole noted that only "the broadest-minded Unitarian could tolerate it, and the dissenters [the Non-Conformists] who till then had been consistent if timid recruits to the reform movement, were henceforth as horrified as the bishops themselves".[9]

Already in 1795 disgruntled Methodists had withdrawn from the LCS to form the Friends of Religious and Civil Liberty.[17] Prominent among them was Richard Lee, a bookseller reputedly expelled from the LCS for refusing to stock Paine's newest work and yet subsequently prosecuted for publishing the regicidal handbill King Killing, and Edward Iliff's A summary of the duties of citizenship, written expressly for the members of the London Corresponding Society.[56]

United Britons

The government's closure of peaceful avenues for reform agitation, and the prospect of French assistance, encouraged a radical rump to consider the threat implicit in the Copenhagen Fields address: to achieve universal male suffrage and annual parliaments by physical force. In this, they were supported by the United Irishmen.[57] In the summer of 1797, following the Spithead and Nore mutinies, in which the government had been quick to see the hand of radical societies, the Irish priest James Coigly arrived from Manchester. In Manchester Goigly and a cotton spinner from Belfast, James Dixon, had helped convert the town's Corresponding Society into the republican, United Englishmen. Bound by a test that promised to "Remove the diadem and take off the crown ... [and to] exalt him that is low and abuse him that is high".[58] the United men went on to organise in Stockport, Bolton, Warrington and Birmingham.[59]

Presenting himself as an emissary of the United Irish executive in Dublin, Coigly met with leading members of the LCS, among them the Irishmen Edward Despard, the brothers Benjamin and John Binns, William Henry Hamilton,[60] and the Society's chairman Alexander Galloway (in protest against the violent turn in rhetoric, his predecessor Francis Place had resigned). Meetings were held at Furnival's Inn, Holborn, where United delegates from London, Scotland and the regions were reported to have committed themselves "to overthrow the present Government, and to join the French as soon as they made a landing in England"[59] (in December 1796 only weather had prevented a major French landing in Ireland).

In March 1798 Coigly was arrested in a party with O'Connor, Benjamin Binns, and John Allen at Margate just as they were to embark for France. Found on his person was an address to the French Directory from the "United Britons". While its suggestion of a mass movement primed for insurrection had been scarcely credible, it was sufficient proof of the intent to invite and encourage a French invasion. Coigly was hanged in June.[59]

Turn against United conspiracy, and final suppression

On 30 January 1798, the LCS had issued an Address to the United Irishmen, declaring that "If to Unite in the Cause of Reform upon the Broadest Basis be Treason .... We, with you, are Traitors".[61] Yet the disillusionment with France was widespread and by the time of Coigly's arrest the majority view was that the entire business of coordinating with the Directory and the United Irish was a destructive diversion. The Central Committee of Delegates suspected that the government exaggerated the threat of a French invasion, but agreed that in the event members would join their local, government-approved, militias.[62]

On 19 April 1798, just as this was being resolved in a pub in Drury Lane, the committee was raided by the police. Together with parallel raids on corresponding societies in Birmingham and Manchester, a total of 28 persons were arrested, among them Thomas Evans, Edward Despard, John Bone, Benjamin Binns, Paul Le Maitre, Richard Hodgson and Alexander Galloway. The next day, Pitt renewed the suspension of habeas corpus absolving the Government of the need to present evidence of complicity in Coigly's mission. The prisoners were held without charge until hostilities with France were (temporarily) halted with the Treaty of Amiens in 1801.

According to Francis Place (who, for the good name of the LCS and the reform movement as a whole, had threatened to inform on United conspirators)[63] this stroke extinguished the Society. Members made no attempt to meet again, not even in any division and abandoned their delegates.[14] A final Parliamentary Act of 1799 "for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable Purposes; and for better preventing treasonable and seditious practices", referenced and banned the LCS by name, along with the United Englishmen, the United Scotsmen, the United Britons, and the United Irishmen.[64]

Despard, who had protested a betrayal of the United Britons as "dishonourable",[65] was executed for treasonable association with their remnants—the so-called Despard Plot—in 1803.

Legacy

In The Making of the English Working Class (1963), in which he proposes to "rescue the poor stockinger, the Luddite cropper, the 'obsolete' hand-loom weaver, [and] the 'utopian' artisan ... from the enormous condescension of posterity", E. P. Thompson identified the London Corresponding Society as a key incident in the emergence of a "working-class consciousness" in England. It was a waypoint in the developing sense among English working people that they have "an identity of interests as between themselves, and as against other men whose interests are different from (and usually opposed to) theirs".[66] At the same time, it is suggested that the LCS demonstrated, as Hardy had wished, that the working class was "capable of civility, rational thought, informed debate, and peaceable assembly".[67]

These were achievements that prefigured and contributed to the popular agitation that secured passage of the 19th century Reform Parliamentary Bills.[68] Francis Place survived to be active in the agitation for the first of these, the Reform Act of 1832. In 1839, Place was invited by the London Working Men's Association to become one of the London delegates to the National Convention of what might be considered as the industrial working-class continuity of the Correspondence movement of the 1790s, the Chartists.[69]

Selected members

References

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  40. ^ The London Corresponding Society addresses the friends of peace and parliamentary reform. London. 1793. p. 1.
  41. ^ Iain Hampsher-Monk. "Civic Humanism and Parliamentary Reform: The Case of the Society of the Friends of the People." (Vol. 18, No. 2, pp. 70–89). Journal of British Studies, 1979. JSTOR 175513
  42. ^ National Archives (UK), [1], "Report on Radical and Reform Societies, 1794", Accessed 5 December 2020.
  43. ^ Wallace, Miriam (2007). "Constructing Treason, Narrating Truth: The 1794 Treason Trial of Thomas Holcroft and the Fate of English Jacobinism". Romanticism on the Net (45). doi:10.7202/015823ar. ISSN 1467-1255. S2CID 153759473.
  44. ^ Emsley, Clive (2004). "Hardy, Thomas (1752–1832)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/12291. Retrieved 5 May 2011. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  45. ^ Gregory Claeys (2010). Politics of English Jacobinism: Writings of John Thelwall. Penn State Press. pp. 501–. ISBN 978-0-271-04446-0.
  46. ^ a b Emsley, Clive (2000). The Pop-Gun Plot, 1794. In: Davis, Michael T. ed. Radicalism and Revolution in Britain, 1775-1848: Essays in Honour of Malcolm I. Thomis. London: Macmillan, pp. 56–68.
  47. ^ Mary Thale (1983). Selections from the Papers of the London Corresponding Society 1792–1799. Cambridge University Press. pp. 220–. ISBN 978-0-521-24363-6.
  48. ^ Emsley, Clive (1985). "Repression, 'terror', and the rule of law in England during the decade of the French Revolution". English Historical Review. 100 (31): 801–825. doi:10.1093/ehr/C.CCCXCVII.801.
  49. ^ E. N. Williams, The Eighteenth-Century Constitution. 1688–1815 (Cambridge University Press, 1960), pp. 424–425.
  50. ^ Thale, Selections, xxiv; 298. Report from spy Powell: LCS General Committee, 3 September 1795, in Selections, 301; Proceedings of a General Meeting of the London Corresponding Society, Held on Monday October the 26th, 1795, in Selections, 314.
  51. ^ Little, Nigel (2016). Transoceanic Radical: William Duane. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781317314585. Retrieved 23 May 2021.
  52. ^ Thale, Selections, "Proceedings of a General Meeting of the London Corresponding Society, Held on Monday October the 26th, 1795, in a field adjacent to Copenhagen-House, in the County of Middlesex"
  53. ^ British Library. "Truth and treason! or a narrative of the royal procession to the House of Peers, October the 29th, 1795". www.bl.uk. Retrieved 30 December 2022.
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  55. ^ Cole, G. D. H.; Postgate, Raymond (1945). The Common People, 1746–1938 (Second ed.). London: Methuen & Co. Ltd. pp. 157–158.
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  57. ^ Smith, A.W (1995). "Irish Rebels and English Radicals 1798–1820. Past & Present". JSTOR 650175. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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  61. ^ Hansard, T.C. (1818). The Parliamentary History of England. Vol. XXXI. London: Longmans. pp. 642–645.
  62. ^ Vandehey, Reed Joseph (1975). Parliament and the London Corresponding Society (PDF). Portland OR: Portland State University, Dissertations and Theses. Paper 2542. pp. 100–101. Retrieved 27 February 2021.
  63. ^ Wallas, Graham (1918). The Life of Francis Place. London: Allen and Unwin. p. 27.
  64. ^ An act for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes, and for better preventing treasonable and seditious practices: 12th July 1799. G.E. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode. 1847.
  65. ^ Jay, Mike (2004). The Unfortunate Colonel Despard. London: Bantam Press. pp. 152–153. ISBN 0593051955.
  66. ^ Thompson, E. P. (1964). The Making of the English Working Class. New York: Pantheon. pp. 11–12. ISBN 9780394703220.
  67. ^ Petersmark, Frank L. (2015). "London Calling: The London Corresponding Society And The Ascension Of Popular Politics". Waynes State Dissertations. Paper 1161: 381.
  68. ^ Weinstein, Benjamin (1 April 2002). "Popular Constitutionalism and the London Corresponding Society". Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies. 34 (1): 37–57. doi:10.2307/4053440. JSTOR 4053440.
  69. ^ 'Introduction', in London Radicalism 1830–1843: A Selection of the Papers of Francis Place, ed. D J Rowe. London, 1970), pp. vi–xxviii. British History Online http://www.british-history.ac.uk/london-record-soc/vol5/vi-xxviii [accessed 8 December 2020]

External links

  • Introduction | British history online
  • Sheffield Constitutional Society

london, corresponding, society, federation, local, reading, debating, clubs, that, decade, following, french, revolution, agitated, democratic, reform, british, parliament, contrast, other, reform, associations, period, drew, largely, upon, working, artisans, . The London Corresponding Society LCS was a federation of local reading and debating clubs that in the decade following the French Revolution agitated for the democratic reform of the British Parliament In contrast to other reform associations of the period it drew largely upon working men artisans tradesmen and shopkeepers and was itself organised on a formal democratic basis London Corresponding SocietyFormation25 January 1792PurposeRadical parliamentary reformHeadquartersLondonKey peopleThomas Hardy Joseph Gerrald Maurice Margarot Edward DespardLondon London Corresponding Society Handbill advertising a petition to the House of Commons for Parliamentary Reform Characterising it as an instrument of French revolutionary subversion and citing links to the insurrectionist United Irishmen the government of William Pitt the Younger sought to break the Society twice charging leading members with complicity in plots to assassinate the King Measures against the society intensified in the wake of the naval mutinies of 1797 the 1798 Irish Rebellion and growing protest against the continuation of the war with France In 1799 new legislation suppressed the Society by name along with the remnants of the United Irishmen and their franchise organisations United Scotsmen and the United Englishmen with which the diminishing membership of the LCS had associated Contents 1 Early influences and foundation 2 Organisation and membership 2 1 Democratic structure 2 2 Social composition 2 3 Male fraternity 2 4 Noted Members 2 5 London s sans culottes 3 Political equality not social levelling 4 The Conventions and Pitt s Reign of Terror 4 1 The first Edinburgh Convention 4 2 The Edinburgh treason trials 4 3 The London treason trials 4 4 The Gagging Acts 5 Radicalisation and Dissolution 5 1 The final rally 5 2 The fall of Paine 5 3 United Britons 5 4 Turn against United conspiracy and final suppression 6 Legacy 7 Selected members 8 References 9 External linksEarly influences and foundation EditIn the last decades of the eighteenth century the percolation of Enlightenment thinking and the dramas of American independence and the French Revolution stimulated in Britain as elsewhere in Europe new clubs and societies committed to principles of popular sovereignty and constitutional government In the north of England the Non Conformist principally Unitarian currents in the new un enfranchised mill towns and manufacturing centres supported the Society for Constitutional Information SCI This had been founded by among others Major John Cartwright author of Take Your Choice 1776 which called for manhood suffrage the secret ballot annual elections and equal electoral districts 1 2 In 1788 prominent Unitarian member of the CIS Richard Price and Joseph Priestley among them formed the Revolution Society Ostensibly convened to commemorate the centennial of the Glorious Revolution of 1688 the society called for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts on the grounds that the right of private judgement liberty of consience trial by jury freedom of the press and freedom of election ought ever be held sacred and inviolable 3 After 1792 the radical momentum shifted from the Revolution Society back to the SCI and more decidedly to a new London society 4 During the American Revolutionary War Thomas Hardy a Scottish shoemaker in London was convinced of the American cause by the pamphlets of Dr Richard Price a Unitarian minister and prominent reformer A gift of the pamphlet library of the SCI including a reprint of a proposal from a Correspondence Committee of the Irish Volunteer movement to restore the purity and vigour of the Irish constitution through parliamentary reform 5 persuaded him of the need for a workingman s reform club 6 7 At the first meeting of his Correspondence Society on January 25 1792 Hardy led seven friends in a discussion that determined that gross ignorance and prejudice in the bulk of the nation was the greatest obstacle to obtaining redress from the defects and abuses that have crept into the administration of our Government and that to remove that obstacle it should be the aim of those subscribing to instil into the public in a legal and constitutional way by means of the press a sense of their rights as freemen and of their duty to themselves and their posterity as good citizens and hereditary guardians of the liberties transmitted to them by their forefathers 8 Hardy is said to have been distinguished in radical company by never speaking but to the purpose at hand and by his high organising ability 9 In promoting the new society Hardy and his friends rode a wave of popular political engagement lifted by the two part publication March 1791 February 1792 of Thomas Paine s Rights of Man Selling as many as a million copies Paine s reply to Edmund Burke in defence of the French Revolution and of Dr Richard Price was eagerly read by reformers Protestant dissenters democrats London craftsman and the skilled factory hands of the new industrial north 10 Organisation and membership EditDemocratic structure Edit From the beginning the LCS was viewed with suspicion by the British government and was infiltrated by spies on the government payroll In addition to domestic subversion the state authorities feared collaboration with French agents against whose entry and circulation within the country they had introduced the Aliens Act of 1793 11 Partly in response to the surveillance but also in deference to democratic principle the society adopted a decentralised structure The LCS organised in divisions 12 each comprising neighbourhood tithings of not more than ten members Each division met twice a week to conduct business and discuss historical and political texts 13 In contrast to some of Whig establishment reform clubs the organisation allowed all subscribers to participate in open debate and to elect members to leadership positions such as tithing man divisional secretary sub delegate or delegate 12 Rules also ensured that discussion was not monopolised Francis Place recalled that no one could speak a second time on a subject until every one who chose had spoken once 14 By 1793 sister societies had emerged in Ireland Scotland and the English provinces in Manchester Norwich Sheffield and Stockport 15 Social composition Edit By May 1792 the LCS comprised nine separate divisions each with a minimum of thirty members The height of its popularity in late 1795 it may have had between 3 500 and 5000 member organised in 79 divisions 16 17 In contrast to the SCI with its annual 4 guinea subscription in levying just a penny a week the LCS opened its proceedings to workers of almost every condition Those however with craft skills that gave them sufficient independence to protect them from the political disapproval of employers or of customers shoemakers weavers watch and instrument makers and the like took the leading role 18 While the LCS remained primarily a forum for a politically conscious and articulate artisan population 17 men of a more prominent social and professional standing did join drawn in many cases from existing debating societies 19 They brought with them important political connections and skills Barristers such as Felix Vaughan and attorneys like Joseph Gerrald who had practiced law in Philadelphia and there associated with Paine were especially useful given near continuous entanglement of members in court proceedings Among the physicians were of SCI member James Parkinson a prolific propagandist John Gale Jones an accomplished orator But the Society s egalitarian constitution accorded them no definitive preference Hardy in particular was wary of placing them in positions of authority lest ordinary members be discouraged from exerting themselves in their own cause 17 Male fraternity Edit Women participated in some of popular debating societies from which the LCS recruited For short periods they created their own bringing to public notice demands for equal education equal rights and protection of female occupations 20 While it counted among its members men like Thomas Spence and Dr William Hodgson The Female Citizen 21 who did advocate political rights and equality for women the LCS appears to have been a male fraternity The venues in which its divisions met taverns and coffee houses were predominantly male spaces and reference to women in records of their proceedings are few 22 In August 1793 the Society s General Committee approved a motion calling for the formation of a female Society of Patriots By September a government spy reported that there was a Society of Women meeting in Southwark The LCS arranged to send two of its delegates to instruct them But it does not appear that female patriots were ever admitted as members to the LCS itself Women did turn out for major LCS demonstrations 23 Noted Members Edit The Society had an early celebrity recruit the ex slave free West Indian black and abolitionist Olaudah Equiano In 1791 92 Equiano was touring the British Isles with his autobiography The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African Drawing on abolitionist networks he brokered connections for the LCS including what may have been the Society s first contacts with the United Irishmen 24 In Belfast where civic outrage had defeated plans to commission vessels for the Middle Passage Equiano was hosted by the leading United Irishman publisher of their Painite newspaper the Northern Star Samuel Neilson 25 Paine subscribed to the Society as did the radical poet William Blake Joseph Ritson the noted antiquarian and founder of modern vegetarianism and Basil William Douglas Lord Daer who held concurrent membership of the Society for Constitutional Information and the Scottish Association of the Friends of the People London s sans culottes Edit Despite such notables the Government were assured by their most trusted informer Citizen Groves that the real body of the club was made of the very lowest order of society 26 They took little persuading that within the LCS English Jacobins were leading on the equivalent to the sans culottes of the revolutionary Paris sections Some of the working class membership did take the republican doctrines of Paine to their extreme posing the claims of an absolute political democracy against those of monarchy and aristocracy 27 Of these radical democrats the most renowned was Thomas Spence 28 Originally from Newcastle where he had protested the enclosure of commons Spence re issued as The Real Rights of Man a penny pamphlet he had produced in 1775 Property in Land Every One s Right 29 His vision was of a society based on common ownership of land administered democratically by men and women alike at the parish level In 1797 in response to Thomas Paine s Agrarian Justice he wrote The Rights of Infants which in the course of vindicating the right of children to freedom from want and abuse proposed an unconditional and universal basic income 30 Political equality not social levelling EditFrom the outset the LCS contended with the charge that a full and equal representation of the people in parliament represented a levelling of all distinctions of rank and property 31 This was delivered and with considerable Church and aristocratic patronage circulated widely in a short three penny pamphlet Village Politics Addressed to All the Mechanics Journeymen and Day Labourers in Great Britain 1793 Written by Hannah More as Burke for Beginners it is an imagined conversation in which a mason learns from a blacksmith that to declare for Liberty and Equality is to associate with levellers and republicans rogues who hide from him the simple truth that if everyone is digging potatoes on their half acre no one would be available to mend his broken spade 32 Against this onslaught the LCS produced An Explicit Declaration of the Principles and View of the L C S But for having to address the frantic notions of alarmists it claimed that those who would restore the House of Commons to a state of independence would never even conceive so wild and detestable a sentiment as the equalization of property We know and are sensible that the Wages of every an are his Right that Difference of Strength of Talents and of Industry do and ought to afford proportional Distinction of Property which when acquired and confirmed by the Laws is sacred and inviolable 33 The LCS did not pronounce on social questions confident that key to addressing inequities lay in reform of the constitution It was sufficient to observe that it was from the partial unequal and therefore inadequate Representation together with the corrupt method in which Representatives are elected that oppressive Taxes unjust Laws restrictions of Liberty and wasting of the Public Money have ensued 34 35 The Conventions and Pitt s Reign of Terror EditSee also 1794 Treason Trials The first Edinburgh Convention Edit At the end of November 1792 the LCS published an Address of the London Corresponding Society to the other Societies of Great Britain united for obtaining a Reform in Parliament expressing confidence in the prospects for obtaining a reformed democratic franchise through moral force 33 36 A national convention was called for Edinburgh in December The LCS delegates host in the Scottish capital and perhaps the most radical delegate present Thomas Muir of the Society of the Friends of the People himself said nothing that was not strictly constitutional An address which he presented from the United Irishmen largely drawn up by William Drennan was made acceptable to the Convention only by redacting any suggestion of Treason or Misprison of Treason against the Union of Scotland with England 37 Beginning with the title Convention and including an oath to live free or die the imitation of French forms did cause the authorities some alarm Minor prosecutions were instituted 9 The Edinburgh treason trials Edit By the time LCS delegates attended their second reform convention in Edinburgh in October 1793 the political climate had changed dramatically From February 1 1793 the Crown was at war with the new French Republic Any association with Paris or defence of its policies foreign or domestic was now regarded as treasonable In May 1793 the House of Commons refused by 282 votes to 41 even to consider petitions asking for reform 9 At a time when reformers were beginning to mobilise a broad swath of opinion in Britain in favour of a reformed Parliament and a strictly constitutional monarchy they were being forced by their early embrace of the French revolution to defend policies in France they did not advocate at home the execution of the king and of regime opponents the confiscation of the property of the Church and nobility Against the institution of the Terror the French Republic paid no heed to the entreaties in Paris of Thomas Muir or from his place in the French National Convention of Thomas Paine After Muir returned to Scotland he was charged with treason Although the prosecutorial evidence amounted to little more than a presentation of his political views in August 1793 a jury of landlords upheld the charge and Muir was sentenced to 14 years transportation Convicted of sedition the same fate befell the secretary of a second Edinburgh convention in October 1793 William Skirving and the two LCS delegates 38 Joseph Gerrald and LCS chairman Maurice Margarot had been elected as delegates to the convention by the LCS s first open air meeting attended by some 4 000 persons in a field off the Hackney Road Gerrald had published earlier in the year A Convention the Only Means of Saving Us from Ruin With ancient precedents sought in the Anglo Saxon mycelgemot popular assemblies and wittengamot delegated representatives the pamphlet s laid out a three stage sequence from local gatherings to regional delegations to national convention There was the scarcely disguised suggestion that such a convention would have a representative legitimacy greater than the corrupted unreformed Parliament As the son of a wine importer Margarot who alone survived to return to England in 1810 had continental connections including residence in Paris during the first year of the revolution These allowed the authorities to draw upon him the suspicion of being a French spy 39 The London treason trials Edit Frontispiece for LeMaitre s 1795 book The weight of repression substantially reduced popular societies in the provinces In London Hardy and Margarot s successor as chairman John Baxter undaunted had drawn up addresses to the friends of peace and parliamentary reform and to His Majesty calling for an end to the war against France 40 Prime Minister William Pitt responded by having the papers of the London societies seized and examined by a secret committee of the House of Commons 41 In May 1794 hard on the committee s Report on Radical and Reform Societies 42 charges of treason were laid against thirty leading radicals including Hardy Thomas Spence the dramatist Thomas Holcroft the poet public lecturer and journalist John Thelwall and sometime parliamentary candidate John Horne Tooke 43 Their trials in November misfired The juries in London were not as ready as those in Edinburgh to accept the mere expression of political opinion as evidence of plots against King and Parliament When the evidence running to four printed volumes failed to impress in the case of Hardy the courts were unable to take seriously the charges against his associates Horne Tooke jeered at the Attorney General and clowned in the dock and the Lord Chief Justice slept through the prosecution s summary against Thelwall 9 The process did deliver Hardy a blow during his trial his wife was attacked in their home by a loyalist Church and King mob and subsequently died in childbirth 44 On his release Hardy did not return to his position in the Society During the course of these trials a further three members of LCS Paul Thomas LeMaitre John Smith and George Higgins were arrested as accomplices in the so called Popgun Plot an alleged conspiracy to assassinate King George III by means of a poison dart fired from an airgun 45 46 In May 1796 their cases similarly collapsed 47 The reformers were not allowed to celebrate their victory The LCS bookseller John Smith provocatively renamed his shop The Pop Gun and sold a pamphlet that explained that the government required three instruments 1 soldiers by profession slaughterers 2 clergymen who hallow with the sanction of Divinity state robbery and 3 lawyers who thrive on misery and are the tyrants of property He was given two years hard labour on bread and water for seditious libel 31 The Gagging Acts Edit The government s considered response to their humiliation in the courts was to introduce the so called Gagging Acts the 1795 Seditious Meetings Act and the Treason Act These made writing and speaking as much treason as overt acts and made inciting hatred of the Government a high misdemeanour They also required licences for public meetings lectures and reading rooms 48 These restrictions with the encouragement given to magistrates to use public order powers to close taverns and bookshops regarded as centres of radical activity wound down the Society s extensive publishing programme some eighty separate pamphlets and broadsides and two periodicals 6 and in general hamstrung its propaganda activity 9 In advance of the treason trials habeas Corpus had been suspended and six members of the Society detained including Thomas Spence Invoking the presence of a traitorous and detestable conspiracy formed for subverting the existing laws and constitution and for introducing the system of anarchy and confusion which has so fatally prevailed in France in May 1794 Parliament had allowed the Privy Council to direct detentions any law or statute to the contrary notwithstanding 49 Radicalisation and Dissolution EditThe final rally Edit LCS speakers address the crowds at Copenhagen Fields 1795 John Gale Jones on hustings to the left In the summer of 1795 weariness with the war combined with failed harvests to trigger renewed protest including an attack on the Prime Minister s residence in Downing Street 9 The Society was growing again from 17 divisions in March to 79 in October General Meetings were attended by tens of thousands 50 The LCS called a monster meeting for 26 October 1795 at Copenhagen Fields Islington Veteran reformers Joseph Priestley John Thelwall and Charles James Fox joined Hardy s successor as LCS secretary John Ashley another shoemaker chairman John Binns a plumber s labourer John Gale Jones surgeon and William Duane Irish American editor of The Telegraph in addressing crowds estimated at upwards of 200 000 51 For the Society Binns and Ashley declared that should the British nation in the face of the continuation of the present detestable War the horrors of an approaching Famine and above all the increased Corruption and Inquisitorial measures demand strong and decisive measures the London Corresponding Society would be the powerful organ ushering in joyful tidings of peace universal suffrage and annual parliaments 52 Three days later George III in procession to the state Opening of Parliament had the windows of his carriage smashed by crowd shouting No King No Pitt No war 53 and revealing the Popgun Plot a dart was fired 46 It was the occasion seized by the government to introduce the Gagging Acts 54 55 The rally in LCS membership and activity was brief The problem was not alone Pitt s reign of terror The fall of Paine Edit As an immediate leader of popular opinion there had been no rival to Paine But following the purge and mass execution of the Girondins in June 1793 in France Paine found himself a prisoner of the revolution he had defended In prison and prior to an obscure American exile he had produced his second great work published in 1796 and 1797 The Age of Reason submitted the Christian bible and churches to the same type of deconstructive logical analysis that The Rights of Man had applied to the monarchy and aristocracy The social historian G D H Cole noted that only the broadest minded Unitarian could tolerate it and the dissenters the Non Conformists who till then had been consistent if timid recruits to the reform movement were henceforth as horrified as the bishops themselves 9 Already in 1795 disgruntled Methodists had withdrawn from the LCS to form the Friends of Religious and Civil Liberty 17 Prominent among them was Richard Lee a bookseller reputedly expelled from the LCS for refusing to stock Paine s newest work and yet subsequently prosecuted for publishing the regicidal handbill King Killing and Edward Iliff s A summary of the duties of citizenship written expressly for the members of the London Corresponding Society 56 United Britons Edit The government s closure of peaceful avenues for reform agitation and the prospect of French assistance encouraged a radical rump to consider the threat implicit in the Copenhagen Fields address to achieve universal male suffrage and annual parliaments by physical force In this they were supported by the United Irishmen 57 In the summer of 1797 following the Spithead and Nore mutinies in which the government had been quick to see the hand of radical societies the Irish priest James Coigly arrived from Manchester In Manchester Goigly and a cotton spinner from Belfast James Dixon had helped convert the town s Corresponding Society into the republican United Englishmen Bound by a test that promised to Remove the diadem and take off the crown and to exalt him that is low and abuse him that is high 58 the United men went on to organise in Stockport Bolton Warrington and Birmingham 59 Presenting himself as an emissary of the United Irish executive in Dublin Coigly met with leading members of the LCS among them the Irishmen Edward Despard the brothers Benjamin and John Binns William Henry Hamilton 60 and the Society s chairman Alexander Galloway in protest against the violent turn in rhetoric his predecessor Francis Place had resigned Meetings were held at Furnival s Inn Holborn where United delegates from London Scotland and the regions were reported to have committed themselves to overthrow the present Government and to join the French as soon as they made a landing in England 59 in December 1796 only weather had prevented a major French landing in Ireland In March 1798 Coigly was arrested in a party with O Connor Benjamin Binns and John Allen at Margate just as they were to embark for France Found on his person was an address to the French Directory from the United Britons While its suggestion of a mass movement primed for insurrection had been scarcely credible it was sufficient proof of the intent to invite and encourage a French invasion Coigly was hanged in June 59 Turn against United conspiracy and final suppression Edit On 30 January 1798 the LCS had issued an Address to the United Irishmen declaring that If to Unite in the Cause of Reform upon the Broadest Basis be Treason We with you are Traitors 61 Yet the disillusionment with France was widespread and by the time of Coigly s arrest the majority view was that the entire business of coordinating with the Directory and the United Irish was a destructive diversion The Central Committee of Delegates suspected that the government exaggerated the threat of a French invasion but agreed that in the event members would join their local government approved militias 62 On 19 April 1798 just as this was being resolved in a pub in Drury Lane the committee was raided by the police Together with parallel raids on corresponding societies in Birmingham and Manchester a total of 28 persons were arrested among them Thomas Evans Edward Despard John Bone Benjamin Binns Paul Le Maitre Richard Hodgson and Alexander Galloway The next day Pitt renewed the suspension of habeas corpus absolving the Government of the need to present evidence of complicity in Coigly s mission The prisoners were held without charge until hostilities with France were temporarily halted with the Treaty of Amiens in 1801 According to Francis Place who for the good name of the LCS and the reform movement as a whole had threatened to inform on United conspirators 63 this stroke extinguished the Society Members made no attempt to meet again not even in any division and abandoned their delegates 14 A final Parliamentary Act of 1799 for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable Purposes and for better preventing treasonable and seditious practices referenced and banned the LCS by name along with the United Englishmen the United Scotsmen the United Britons and the United Irishmen 64 Despard who had protested a betrayal of the United Britons as dishonourable 65 was executed for treasonable association with their remnants the so called Despard Plot in 1803 Legacy EditIn The Making of the English Working Class 1963 in which he proposes to rescue the poor stockinger the Luddite cropper the obsolete hand loom weaver and the utopian artisan from the enormous condescension of posterity E P Thompson identified the London Corresponding Society as a key incident in the emergence of a working class consciousness in England It was a waypoint in the developing sense among English working people that they have an identity of interests as between themselves and as against other men whose interests are different from and usually opposed to theirs 66 At the same time it is suggested that the LCS demonstrated as Hardy had wished that the working class was capable of civility rational thought informed debate and peaceable assembly 67 These were achievements that prefigured and contributed to the popular agitation that secured passage of the 19th century Reform Parliamentary Bills 68 Francis Place survived to be active in the agitation for the first of these the Reform Act of 1832 In 1839 Place was invited by the London Working Men s Association to become one of the London delegates to the National Convention of what might be considered as the industrial working class continuity of the Correspondence movement of the 1790s the Chartists 69 Selected members EditJohn Baxter John Binns William Blake Edward Despard Basil William Douglas William Duane Olaudah Equiano Joseph Gerrald William Hamilton Thomas Hardy William Hodgson John Gale Jones Maurice Margarot Thomas Paine James Parkinson Francis Place Joseph Ritson Thomas Spence John ThelwallReferences Edit Cartwright Major John 1776 Take Your Choice Representation and Respect Imposition and Contempt Annual Parliaments and Liberty Long Parliaments and Slavery London Cornish Rory T Cartwright John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4817 Subscription or UK public library membership required O Broin Seoirse 1986 United Irishmen the London Connection PDF Irish in Britain History Group p 1 White Daniel E 2006 Early Romanticism and Religious Dissent Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 29393 1 A Letter from His Grace the Duke of Richmond to Lieutenant Colonel Sharman Chairman of the Committee of Correspondence appointed by the Delegates of 45 Corps of Volunteers assembled at Lisburn in Ireland with Notes froma Member of the Society for Constitutional Information London J Johnson 1792 p 3 Retrieved 30 November 2020 a b Davis Michael T 2002 London Corresponding Society 1792 1799 Vol 2 London Pickering and Chatto pp 11 28 ISBN 9781851967346 Vandehey Reed Joseph 28 February 1975 Parliament and the London Corresponding Society PDF doctoral Portland State University p 8 Thomas Hardy An Introductory Letter to a Friend written in 1799 and read to the company present at the Crown and Anchor Tavern 5 November 1824 on the anniversary of Hardy s acquittal in the Treason Trials of 1794 Cited in Robert Birley 1924 The English Jacobins from 1789 to 1802 London Oxford University Press Appendix a b c d e f g Cole G D H Postgate Raymond 1945 The Common People 1746 1938 Second ed London Methuen amp Co Ltd pp 149 150 156 160 George Rude Revolutionary Europe 1783 1815 1964 p 183 The 1905 Aliens Act History Today www historytoday com Retrieved 18 December 2015 a b Hunt Jocelyn B Understanding the London Corresponding Society a Balancing Act between Adversaries Thomas Paine and Edmund Burke Thesis University of Waterloo 2013 pp 1 13 Barrell John 5 June 2003 Divided We Grow London Review of Books pp 8 11 ISSN 0260 9592 Retrieved 12 December 2015 a b Place Francis 1972 The Autobiography of Francis Place 1771 1854 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 131 180 181 ISBN 9780521083997 Smith A W 1995 Irish Rebels and English Radicals 1798 1820 Past amp Present JSTOR 650175 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Iain Hampsher Monk The Impact of the French Revolution Texts from Britain in the 1790s Cambridge University Press 2005 p 263 a b c d Davis Michael 2004 London Corresponding Society Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 42297 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 6 December 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required Selections From The Papers Of The London Corresponding Society Cambridge University Press 1983 p xix ISBN 9780521089876 Thale Mary 1989 London Debating Societies in the 1790s The Historical Journal 32 1 57 86 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00015302 JSTOR 2639817 S2CID 162874936 Retrieved 8 December 2020 Thale Mary 1995 Women in London Debating Societies in 1780 Gender amp History 7 1 5 24 doi 10 1111 j 1468 0424 1995 tb00011 x Cooper Thompson Dictionary of National Biography 1885 1900 Hodgson William 1745 1851 Wikisource the free online library en wikisource org Retrieved 4 February 2022 Boyce Lucienne 2019 A Reformer s Wife ought to be a heroine Women in the London Corresponding Society Thale Mary 1983 Selections from the Papers of the London Corresponding Society 1792 1799 Cambridge University Press pp 80 83 ISBN 9780521243636 Featherstone David 2013 We will have equality and liberty in Ireland The Contested Geographies of Irish Democratic Political Cultures in the 1790s Historical Geography 41 124 126 Rodgers Nini 1997 Equiano in Belfast A study of the Anti Slavery Ethos in a Northern Town Slavery and Abolition 18 2 73 89 doi 10 1080 01440399708575211 Birley Sir Robert 1924 The English Jacobins 1789 1802 London Oxford University Press p 9 Thompson E P 1964 The Making of the English Working Class New York Pantheon pp 156 157 ISBN 9780394703220 Worrall David 1992 Radical CultureDiscourse Resistance and Surveillance 1790 1820 Wayne State University Press ISBN 0814324525 Spence Thomas 1775 Property in Land Every One s Right Thomas Spence retrieved 27 February 2021 Thomas Spence www marxists org Retrieved 27 February 2021 a b Linebaugh Peter Rediker Marcus 2000 The Many Headed Hydra Sailors Slaves Commoners and the Hidden History of the Revolutionary Atlantic Boston Beacon Press pp 270 272 361 ISBN 9780807050071 More Hannah 1793 Village Politics Addressed to All the Mechanics Journeymen and Day Labourers in Great Britain London pp 4 6 a b Thale Mary Society London Corresponding 1983 Selections from the Papers of the London Corresponding Society 1792 1799 Cambridge University Press pp 4 8 ISBN 9780521243636 LCS The London Corresponding Society s addresses and resolutions reprinted and distributed gratis July 1794 London LCS 1794 2 Hunt 2013 p 6 Address of the London Corresponding Society for obtaining a Reform in Parliament The British Library Retrieved 12 December 2015 McBride Ian 1998 Scripture Politics Ulster Presbyterianism and Irish Radicalism in the late Eighteenth Century Oxford Oxford University Press p 123 ISBN 9780198206422 The Trial of William Skirving secretary to the British convention before the high court of justice on 6th 7th of January 1794 for sedition containing a full and circumstantial account of all the proceedings and speeches as taken down in shorthand by Mr Ramsey short hand writer from London Edinburgh printed and sold for Mr Skirving by James Robertson Edinburgh Johnston Kenneth R 2007 The First and Last British Convention Romanticism 13 2 99 132 doi 10 3366 rom 2007 13 2 99 ISSN 1354 991X The London Corresponding Society addresses the friends of peace and parliamentary reform London 1793 p 1 Iain Hampsher Monk Civic Humanism and Parliamentary Reform The Case of the Society of the Friends of the People Vol 18 No 2 pp 70 89 Journal of British Studies 1979 JSTOR 175513 National Archives UK 1 Report on Radical and Reform Societies 1794 Accessed 5 December 2020 Wallace Miriam 2007 Constructing Treason Narrating Truth The 1794 Treason Trial of Thomas Holcroft and the Fate of English Jacobinism Romanticism on the Net 45 doi 10 7202 015823ar ISSN 1467 1255 S2CID 153759473 Emsley Clive 2004 Hardy Thomas 1752 1832 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 12291 Retrieved 5 May 2011 Subscription or UK public library membership required Gregory Claeys 2010 Politics of English Jacobinism Writings of John Thelwall Penn State Press pp 501 ISBN 978 0 271 04446 0 a b Emsley Clive 2000 The Pop Gun Plot 1794 In Davis Michael T ed Radicalism and Revolution in Britain 1775 1848 Essays in Honour of Malcolm I Thomis London Macmillan pp 56 68 Mary Thale 1983 Selections from the Papers of the London Corresponding Society 1792 1799 Cambridge University Press pp 220 ISBN 978 0 521 24363 6 Emsley Clive 1985 Repression terror and the rule of law in England during the decade of the French Revolution English Historical Review 100 31 801 825 doi 10 1093 ehr C CCCXCVII 801 E N Williams The Eighteenth Century Constitution 1688 1815 Cambridge University Press 1960 pp 424 425 Thale Selections xxiv 298 Report from spy Powell LCS General Committee 3 September 1795 in Selections 301 Proceedings of a General Meeting of the London Corresponding Society Held on Monday October the 26th 1795 in Selections 314 Little Nigel 2016 Transoceanic Radical William Duane New York Routledge ISBN 9781317314585 Retrieved 23 May 2021 Thale Selections Proceedings of a General Meeting of the London Corresponding Society Held on Monday October the 26th 1795 in a field adjacent to Copenhagen House in the County of Middlesex British Library Truth and treason or a narrative of the royal procession to the House of Peers October the 29th 1795 www bl uk Retrieved 30 December 2022 Emsley Clive 1985 Repression terror and the rule of law in England during the decade of the French Revolution English Historical Review 100 31 801 825 doi 10 1093 ehr C CCCXCVII 801 Cole G D H Postgate Raymond 1945 The Common People 1746 1938 Second ed London Methuen amp Co Ltd pp 157 158 Davis Michael 2004 London Corresponding Society Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 42297 Retrieved 26 February 2021 Subscription or UK public library membership required Smith A W 1995 Irish Rebels and English Radicals 1798 1820 Past amp Present JSTOR 650175 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Davis Michael 2008 United Englishmen Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 95956 ISBN 978 0 19 861412 8 Retrieved 10 November 2020 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Keogh Daire Summer 1998 An Unfortunate Man 18th 19th Century History 5 2 Retrieved 21 November 2020 Quinn James 2009 Hamilton William Henry Dictionary of Irish Biography www dib ie Retrieved 12 February 2022 Hansard T C 1818 The Parliamentary History of England Vol XXXI London Longmans pp 642 645 Vandehey Reed Joseph 1975 Parliament and the London Corresponding Society PDF Portland OR Portland State University Dissertations and Theses Paper 2542 pp 100 101 Retrieved 27 February 2021 Wallas Graham 1918 The Life of Francis Place London Allen and Unwin p 27 An act for the more effectual suppression of societies established for seditious and treasonable purposes and for better preventing treasonable and seditious practices 12th July 1799 G E Eyre and W Spottiswoode 1847 Jay Mike 2004 The Unfortunate Colonel Despard London Bantam Press pp 152 153 ISBN 0593051955 Thompson E P 1964 The Making of the English Working Class New York Pantheon pp 11 12 ISBN 9780394703220 Petersmark Frank L 2015 London Calling The London Corresponding Society And The Ascension Of Popular Politics Waynes State Dissertations Paper 1161 381 Weinstein Benjamin 1 April 2002 Popular Constitutionalism and the London Corresponding Society Albion A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 34 1 37 57 doi 10 2307 4053440 JSTOR 4053440 Introduction in London Radicalism 1830 1843 A Selection of the Papers of Francis Place ed D J Rowe London 1970 pp vi xxviii British History Online http www british history ac uk london record soc vol5 vi xxviii accessed 8 December 2020 External links EditIntroduction British history online Sheffield Constitutional Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title London Corresponding Society amp oldid 1135518354, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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