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Luddite

The Luddites were members of a 19th-century movement of English textile workers which opposed the use of certain types of cost-saving machinery, often by destroying the machines in clandestine raids. They protested against manufacturers who used machines in "a fraudulent and deceitful manner" to replace the skilled labour of workers and drive down wages by producing inferior goods.[1][2] Members of the group referred to themselves as Luddites, self-described followers of "Ned Ludd", a legendary weaver whose name was used as a pseudonym in threatening letters to mill owners and government officials.[3]

The Leader of the Luddites, 1812. Hand-coloured etching.

The Luddite movement began in Nottingham, England and spread to the North West and Yorkshire between 1811 and 1816.[4] Mill and factory owners took to shooting protesters and eventually the movement was suppressed with legal and military force, which included execution and penal transportation of accused and convicted Luddites.[5]

Over time, the term has been used to refer to those opposed to industrialisation, automation, computerisation, or new technologies in general.[6]

Etymology

The name Luddite (/ˈlʌdt/) occurs in the movement's writings as early as 1811.[3] The movement utilised the eponym of Ned Ludd, an apocryphal apprentice who allegedly smashed two stocking frames in 1779 after being criticized and instructed to change his method. The name often appears as Captain, General, or King Ludd. Different versions of the legends place his residence in Anstey, near Leicester, or Sherwood Forest like Robin Hood.[7]

'Lud' or 'Ludd' (Welsh: Lludd map Beli Mawr), according to Geoffrey of Monmouth's legendary History of the Kings of Britain and other medieval Welsh texts, was a Celtic King of ' The Islands of Britain' in pre-Roman times, who supposedly founded London and was buried at Ludgate.[8] In the Welsh versions of Geoffrey's Historia, usually called Brut y Brenhinedd, he is called Lludd fab Beli, establishing the connection to the early mythological Lludd Llaw Eraint.[9]

Historical precedents

The machine-breaking of the Luddites followed from previous outbreaks of sabotage in the English textile industry, especially in the hosiery and woolen trades. Organized action by stockingers had occurred at various times since 1675.[10][11][12] In Lancashire, new cotton spinning technologies were met with violent resistance in 1768 and 1779. These new inventions produced textiles faster and cheaper because they could be operated by less-skilled, low-wage labourers.[13] These struggles sometimes resulted in government suppression, via Parliamentary acts such as the Protection of Stocking Frames, etc. Act 1788.

Periodic uprisings relating to asset prices also occurred in other contexts in the century before Luddism. Irregular rises in food prices provoked the Keelmen to riot in the port of Tyne in 1710[14] and tin miners to steal from granaries at Falmouth in 1727. [a] There was a rebellion in Northumberland and Durham in 1740, and an assault on Quaker corn dealers in 1756.

Malcolm L. Thomas argued in his 1970 history The Luddites that machine-breaking was one of the very few tactics that workers could use to increase pressure on employers, undermine lower-paid competing workers, and create solidarity among workers. "These attacks on machines did not imply any necessary hostility to machinery as such; machinery was just a conveniently exposed target against which an attack could be made."[12] Historian Eric Hobsbawm has called their machine wrecking "collective bargaining by riot", which had been a tactic used in Britain since the Restoration because manufactories were scattered throughout the country, and that made it impractical to hold large-scale strikes.[15][16] An agricultural variant of Luddism occurred during the widespread Swing Riots of 1830 in southern and eastern England, centring on breaking threshing machines.[17]

Peak activity: 1811–1817

See also Barthélemy Thimonnier, whose sewing machines were destroyed by tailors

The Luddite movement emerged during the harsh economic climate of the Napoleonic Wars, which saw a rise in difficult working conditions in the new textile factories. Luddites objected primarily to the rising popularity of automated textile equipment, threatening the jobs and livelihoods of skilled workers as this technology allowed them to be replaced by cheaper and less skilled workers.[1][failed verification] The movement began in Arnold, Nottingham, on 11 March 1811 and spread rapidly throughout England over the following two years.[18][1] The British economy suffered greatly in 1810 to 1812, especially in terms of high unemployment and inflation. The causes included the high cost of the wars with Napoleon, Napoleon's Continental System of economic warfare, and escalating conflict with the United States. The crisis led to widespread protest and violence, but the middle classes and upper classes strongly supported the government, which used the army to suppress all working-class unrest, especially the Luddite movement.[19][20]

The Luddites met at night on the moors surrounding industrial towns to practice military-like drills and manoeuvres. Their main areas of operation began in Nottinghamshire in November 1811, followed by the West Riding of Yorkshire in early 1812, and then Lancashire by March 1813. They wrecked specific types of machinery that posed a threat to the particular industrial interests in each region. In the Midlands, these were the "wide" knitting frames used to make cheap and inferior lace articles. In the North West, weavers sought to eliminate the steam-powered looms threatening wages in the cotton trade. In Yorkshire, workers opposed the use of shearing frames and gig mills to finish woolen cloth.

Many Luddite groups were highly organized and pursued machine-breaking as one of several tools for achieving specific political ends. In addition to the raids, Luddites coordinated public demonstrations and the mailing of letters to local industrialists and government officials.[21] These letters explained their reasons for destroying the machinery and threatened further action if the use of "obnoxious" machines continued.[22] The writings of Midlands Luddites often justified their demands through the legitimacy of the Company of Framework Knitters, a recognized public body that already openly negotiated with masters through named representatives. In North West England, textile workers lacked these long-standing trade institutions and their letters composed an attempt to achieve recognition as a united body of tradespeople. As such, they were more likely to include petitions for governmental reforms, such as increased minimum wages and the cessation of child labor. Northwestern Luddites were also more likely to use radical language linking their movement to that of American and French revolutionaries. In Yorkshire, the letter-writing campaign shifted to more violent threats against local authorities viewed as complicit in the use of offensive machinery to exert greater commercial control over the labor market. Differences in the occupational composition (e.g., frameworkers, weavers, spinners) of each region manifested as variation in the Luddites' rhetoric, tactics, and degree of organization.[23]

Luddites clashed with government troops at Burton's Mill in Middleton and at Westhoughton Mill, both in Lancashire.[24] The Luddites and their supporters anonymously sent death threats to, and possibly attacked, magistrates and food merchants. Activists smashed Heathcote's lacemaking machine in Loughborough in 1816.[25] He and other industrialists had secret chambers constructed in their buildings that could be used as hiding places during an attack.[26]

In 1817, an unemployed Nottingham stockinger and probably ex-Luddite, named Jeremiah Brandreth led the Pentrich Rising. While this was a general uprising unrelated to machinery, it can be viewed as the last major Luddite act.[27]

Government response

The British government ultimately dispatched 12,000 troops to suppress Luddite activity, which as historian Eric Hobsbawm noted was a larger number than the army which the Duke of Wellington led during the Peninsular War.[28][b] Four Luddites, led by a man named George Mellor, ambushed and assassinated mill owner William Horsfall of Ottiwells Mill in Marsden, West Yorkshire, at Crosland Moor in Huddersfield. Horsfall had remarked that he would "Ride up to his saddle in Luddite blood".[29] Mellor fired the fatal shot to Horsfall's groin, and all four men were arrested. One of the men, Benjamin Walker, turned informant, and the other three were hanged.[30][31][32] Lord Byron denounced what he considered to be the plight of the working class, the government's inane policies and ruthless repression in the House of Lords on 27 February 1812: "I have been in some of the most oppressed provinces of Turkey; but never, under the most despotic of infidel governments, did I behold such squalid wretchedness as I have seen since my return, in the very heart of a Christian country".[33]

Government officials sought to suppress the Luddite movement with a mass trial at York in January 1813, following the attack on Cartwrights Mill at Rawfolds near Cleckheaton. The government charged over 60 men, including Mellor and his companions, with various crimes in connection with Luddite activities. While some of those charged were actual Luddites, many had no connection to the movement. Although the proceedings were legitimate jury trials, many were abandoned due to lack of evidence and 30 men were acquitted. These trials were certainly intended to act as show trials to deter other Luddites from continuing their activities. The harsh sentences of those found guilty, which included execution and penal transportation, quickly ended the movement.[5][34] Parliament made "machine breaking" (i.e. industrial sabotage) a capital crime with the Frame Breaking Act of 1812.[35] Lord Byron opposed this legislation, becoming one of the few prominent defenders of the Luddites after the treatment of the defendants at the York trials.[36]

Legacy

In the 19th century, occupations that arose from the growth of trade and shipping in ports, also as "domestic" manufacturers, were notorious for precarious employment prospects. Underemployment was chronic during this period,[37] and it was common practice to retain a larger workforce than was typically necessary for insurance against labour shortages in boom times.[37]

Moreover, the organization of manufacture by merchant capitalists in the textile industry was inherently unstable. While the financiers' capital was still largely invested in raw materials, it was easy to increase commitment when trade was good and almost as easy to cut back when times were bad. Merchant capitalists lacked the incentive of later factory owners, whose capital was invested in buildings and plants, to maintain a steady rate of production and return on fixed capital. The combination of seasonal variations in wage rates and violent short-term fluctuations springing from harvests and war produced periodic outbreaks of violence.[37]

Modern usage

Nowadays, the term "Luddite" often is used to describe someone who is opposed or resistant to new technologies.[38]

In 1956, during a British Parliamentary debate, a Labour spokesman said that "organised workers were by no means wedded to a 'Luddite Philosophy'."[39] By 2006, the term neo-Luddism had emerged to describe opposition to many forms of technology.[40] According to a manifesto drawn up by the Second Luddite Congress (April 1996; Barnesville, Ohio), neo-Luddism is "a leaderless movement of passive resistance to consumerism and the increasingly bizarre and frightening technologies of the Computer Age".[41]

The term "Luddite fallacy" is used by economists about the fear that technological unemployment inevitably generates structural unemployment and is consequently macroeconomically injurious. If a technological innovation reduces necessary labour inputs in a given sector, then the industry-wide cost of production falls, which lowers the competitive price and increases the equilibrium supply point that, theoretically, will require an increase in aggregate labour inputs.[42] During the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century, the dominant view among economists has been that belief in long-term technological unemployment was indeed a fallacy. More recently, there has been increased support for the view that the benefits of automation are not equally distributed.[43][44][45]

See also

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The Falmouth magistrates reported to the Duke of Newcastle (16 November 1727) that "the unruly tinners" had "broke open and plundered several cellars and granaries of corn." Their report concludes with a comment which suggests that they were not able to understand the rationale of the direct action of the tinners: "The occasion of these outrages was pretended by the rioters to be a scarcity of corn in the county, but this suggestion is probably false, as most of those who carried off the corn gave it away or sold it at a quarter price." PRO, SP 36/4/22.
  2. ^ Hobsbawm has popularized this comparison and refers to the original statement in Frank Ongley Darvall (1934) Popular Disturbances and Public Order in Regency England, London, Oxford University Press, p. 260.

References

  1. ^ a b c Conniff, Richard (March 2011). "What the Luddites Fought Against". Smithsonian. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  2. ^ "Who were the Luddites?". History.com. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  3. ^ a b Binfield, Kevin (2004). "Foreword". Writings of the Luddites. Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. xiv. ISBN 1421416964.
  4. ^ Linton, David (Fall 1992). "THE LUDDITES: How Did They Get That Bad Reputation?". Labor History. 33 (4): 529–537. doi:10.1080/00236569200890281. ISSN 0023-656X.
  5. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 26 March 2012. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  6. ^ "Luddite"[dead link]. Compact Oxford English Dictionary at AskOxford.com. Accessed 22 February 2010.
  7. ^ "Power, Politics and Protest | the Luddites". Learning Curve. The National Archives. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
  8. ^ Geoffrey of Monmouth, Historia Regum Britanniae 3.20
  9. ^ Rachel Bromwich (ed.), Trioedd Ynys Prydein (Cardiff, 1991; 1991), s.v. 'Lludd fab Beli'.
  10. ^ Binfield, Kevin (2004). Luddites and Luddism. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
  11. ^ Rude, George (2001). The Crowd in History: A Study of Popular Disturbances in France and England, 1730–1848. Serif.
  12. ^ a b Thomis, Malcolm (1970). The Luddites: Machine Breaking in Regency England. Shocken.
  13. ^ Merchant, Brian (2 September 2014). "You've Got Luddites All Wrong". Vice. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
  14. ^ "Historical events – 1685–1782 | Historical Account of Newcastle-upon-Tyne (pp. 47–65)". British History Online. 22 June 2003. Retrieved 4 October 2013.
  15. ^ Hobsbawm 1952, p. 59.
  16. ^ Autor, D. H.; Levy, F.; Murnane, R. J. (1 November 2003). . The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 118 (4): 1279–1333. doi:10.1162/003355303322552801. hdl:1721.1/64306. Archived from the original on 15 March 2010.
  17. ^ Harrison, J. F. C. (1984). The Common People: A History from the Norman Conquest to the Present. London, Totowa, N.J: Croom Helm. pp. 249–53. ISBN 0709901259. OL 16568504M.
  18. ^ Beckett, John. "Luddites". The Nottinghamshire Heritage Gateway. Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire. Retrieved 2 March 2015.
  19. ^ Roger Knight, Britain Against Napoleon (2013), pp. 410–412
  20. ^ Francois Crouzet, Britain Ascendant (1990) pp. 277–279
  21. ^ Sale, Kirkpatrick (1996). "The Luddites: November-December 1811". Rebels against the future: the Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution: lessons for the computer age. Reading: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company. pp. 74–77. ISBN 0201407183.
  22. ^ Mueller, Gavin (2021). "The Nights of King Ludd". Breaking Things at Work: The Luddites Are Right About Why You Hate Your Job. Verso. p. 20. ISBN 1786636778.
  23. ^ Binfield, Kevin (2004). "Northwestern Luddism". Writings of the Luddites. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 34. ISBN 1421416964.
  24. ^ Dinwiddy, J.R. (1992). "Luddism and Politics in the Northern Counties". Radicalism and Reform in Britain, 1780–1850. London: Hambledon Press. pp. 371–401. ISBN 9781852850623.
  25. ^ Sale 1995, p. 188.
  26. ^ "Workmen discover secret chambers". BBC News. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  27. ^ Summer D. Leibensperger, "Brandreth, Jeremiah (1790–1817) and the Pentrich Rising." The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest (2009): 1–2.
  28. ^ Hobsbawm 1952, p. 58: "The 12,000 troops deployed against the Luddites greatly exceeded in size the army which Wellington took into the Peninsula in 1808."
  29. ^ Sharp, Alan (4 May 2015). Grim Almanac of York. The History Press. ISBN 9780750964562.
  30. ^ "Murder of William Horsfall by Luddites, 1812". Freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  31. ^ "William Horsfall (1770-1812) - Huddersfield Exposed: Exploring the History of the Huddersfield Area". Huddersfield.exposed. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  32. ^ "8th January 1813: The execution of George Mellor, William Thorpe & Thomas Smith". The Luddite Bicentenary – 1811–1817. 8 January 2013. Retrieved 10 October 2020.
  33. ^ "FRAME WORK BILL. (Hansard, 27 February 1812)". Hansard.millbanksystems.com. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
  34. ^ Elizabeth Gaskell: The Life of Charlotte Bronte, Vol. 1, Ch. 6, for a contemporaneous description of the attack on Cartwright.
  35. ^ "Destruction of Stocking Frames, etc. Act 1812" at books.google.com
  36. ^ . worldsocialism.org. Archived from the original on 24 June 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  37. ^ a b c Charles Wilson, England's Apprenticeship, 1603–1763 (1965), pp. 344–45. PRO, SP 36/4/22.
  38. ^ "Luddite Definition & Meaning". Dictionary.com.
  39. ^ Sale 1995, p. 205.
  40. ^ Jones 2006, p. 20.
  41. ^ Sale, Kirkpatrick (1 February 1997). . Le Monde diplomatique. Archived from the original on 30 June 2002.
  42. ^ Jerome, Harry (1934). Mechanization in Industry, National Bureau of Economic Research. pp. 32–35.
  43. ^ Krugman, Paul (12 June 2013). "Sympathy for the Luddites". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  44. ^ Ford 2009, Chpt 3, 'The Luddite Fallacy'
  45. ^ Lord Skidelsky (12 June 2013). "Death to Machines?". Project Syndicate. Retrieved 14 July 2015.

Sources

  • Ford, Martin R. (2009), The Lights in the Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future, Acculant Publishing, ISBN 978-1448659814. (e-book available free online.)

Further reading

  • Anderson, Gary M., and Robert D. Tollison. "Luddism as cartel enforcement." Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics (JITE)/Zeitschrift für die gesamte Staatswissenschaft 142.4 (1986): 727–738. JSTOR 40750927.
  • Archer, John E. (2000). "Chapter 4: Industrial Protest". Social unrest and popular protest in England, 1780–1840. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-57656-7.
  • Bailey, Brian J (1998). The Luddite Rebellion. NYU Press. ISBN 0-8147-1335-1.
  • Darvall, F. Popular Disturbances and Public Order in Regency England (Oxford University Press, 1934)
  • Dinwiddy, John. "Luddism and politics in the northern counties." Social History 4.1 (1979): 33–63.
  • Fox, Nicols (2003). Against the Machine: The Hidden Luddite History in Literature, Art, and Individual Lives. Island Press. ISBN 1-55963-860-5.
  • Grint, Keith & Woolgar, Steve (1997). "The Luddites: Diablo ex Machina". The machine at work: technology, work, and organization. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-7456-0924-9.
  • Haywood, Ian. "Unruly People: The Spectacular Riot." in Bloody Romanticism (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2006) pp. 181–222.
  • Hobsbawm, E. J. (1952). "The Machine Breakers". Past & Present. 1 (1): 57–70. doi:10.1093/past/1.1.57.
  • Horn, Jeff. "Machine-Breaking and the 'Threat from Below' in Great Britain and France during the Early Industrial Revolution." in Crowd actions in Britain and France from the middle ages to the modern world (Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2015) pp. 165–178.
  • Jones, Steven E. (2006). Against technology: from the Luddites to Neo-Luddism. CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-415-97868-2.
  • Linebaugh, Peter. Ned Ludd & Queen Mab: machine-breaking, romanticism, and the several commons of 1811-12 (PM Press, 2012).
  • Linton, David. "The Luddites: How did they get that bad reputation?" Labor History 33.4 (1992): 529–537. doi:10.1080/00236569200890281.
  • McGaughey, Ewan (2018). "Will Robots Automate Your Job Away? Full Employment, Basic Income, and Economic Democracy". ssrn.com. SSRN 3044448.
  • Munger, Frank. "Suppression of Popular Gatherings in England, 1800–1830". American Journal of Legal History 25 (1981): 111+.
  • Navickas, Katrina. "The search for 'general Ludd': The mythology of Luddism." Social History 30.3 (2005): 281–295.
  • O’Rourke, Kevin Hjortshøj, Ahmed S. Rahman, and Alan M. Taylor. "Luddites, the industrial revolution, and the demographic transition." Journal of Economic Growth 18.4 (2013): 373–409. JSTOR 42635331.
  • Pallas, Stephen J. "'The Hell that Bigots Frame': Queen Mab, Luddism, and the Rhetoric of Working-Class Revolution". Journal for the Study of Radicalism 12.2 (2018): 55–80. doi:10.14321/jstudradi.12.2.0055. JSTOR 10.14321/jstudradi.12.2.0055.
  • Patterson, A. Temple. "Luddism, Hampden Clubs, and Trade Unions in Leicestershire, 1816–17." English Historical Review 63.247 (1948): 170–188. online
  • Poitras, Geoffrey. "The Luddite trials: Radical suppression and the administration of criminal justice". Journal for the Study of Radicalism 14.1 (2020): 121–166.
  • Pynchon, Thomas (28 October 1984). "Is It O.k. to Be a Luddite?". The New York Times.
  • Randall, Adrian (2002). Before the Luddites: Custom, Community and Machinery in the English Woollen Industry, 1776–1809. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89334-3.
  • Rude, George (2005). "Chapter 5, Luddism". The crowd in History, 1730–1848. Serif. ISBN 978-1-897959-47-3.
  • Sale, Kirkpatrick (1995). Rebels against the future: the Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution: lessons for the computer age. Basic Books. ISBN 0-201-40718-3.
  • Stöllinger, Roman. "The Luddite rebellion: Past and present". wiiw Monthly Report 11 (2018): 6–11.
  • Thomis, Malcolm I. The Luddites: Machine-Breaking in Regency England (Archon Books. 1970).
  • Thompson, E. P. (1968). The Making of the English Working Class.
  • Wasserstrom, Jeffrey. "'Civilization' and Its Discontents: The Boxers and Luddites as Heroes and Villains." Theory and Society (1987): 675–707. JSTOR 657679.

Primary sources

External links

  • Luddite Bicentenary – Comprehensive chronicle of the Luddite uprisings
  • – Comprehensive historical resources for the original West Yorkshire Luddites, University of Huddersfield
  • The Luddites and the Combination Acts from the Marxists Internet Archive
  • The Luddites (1988)—Thames Television drama-documentary about the West Riding Luddites.

luddite, musical, recording, confused, with, ludites, were, members, 19th, century, movement, english, textile, workers, which, opposed, certain, types, cost, saving, machinery, often, destroying, machines, clandestine, raids, they, protested, against, manufac. For the musical recording see Luddite EP Not to be confused with Ludites The Luddites were members of a 19th century movement of English textile workers which opposed the use of certain types of cost saving machinery often by destroying the machines in clandestine raids They protested against manufacturers who used machines in a fraudulent and deceitful manner to replace the skilled labour of workers and drive down wages by producing inferior goods 1 2 Members of the group referred to themselves as Luddites self described followers of Ned Ludd a legendary weaver whose name was used as a pseudonym in threatening letters to mill owners and government officials 3 The Leader of the Luddites 1812 Hand coloured etching The Luddite movement began in Nottingham England and spread to the North West and Yorkshire between 1811 and 1816 4 Mill and factory owners took to shooting protesters and eventually the movement was suppressed with legal and military force which included execution and penal transportation of accused and convicted Luddites 5 Over time the term has been used to refer to those opposed to industrialisation automation computerisation or new technologies in general 6 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Historical precedents 3 Peak activity 1811 1817 4 Government response 5 Legacy 6 Modern usage 7 See also 8 Explanatory notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 11 1 Primary sources 12 External linksEtymology EditThe name Luddite ˈ l ʌ d aɪ t occurs in the movement s writings as early as 1811 3 The movement utilised the eponym of Ned Ludd an apocryphal apprentice who allegedly smashed two stocking frames in 1779 after being criticized and instructed to change his method The name often appears as Captain General or King Ludd Different versions of the legends place his residence in Anstey near Leicester or Sherwood Forest like Robin Hood 7 Lud or Ludd Welsh Lludd map Beli Mawr according to Geoffrey of Monmouth s legendary History of the Kings of Britain and other medieval Welsh texts was a Celtic King of The Islands of Britain in pre Roman times who supposedly founded London and was buried at Ludgate 8 In the Welsh versions of Geoffrey s Historia usually called Brut y Brenhinedd he is called Lludd fab Beli establishing the connection to the early mythological Lludd Llaw Eraint 9 Historical precedents EditThe machine breaking of the Luddites followed from previous outbreaks of sabotage in the English textile industry especially in the hosiery and woolen trades Organized action by stockingers had occurred at various times since 1675 10 11 12 In Lancashire new cotton spinning technologies were met with violent resistance in 1768 and 1779 These new inventions produced textiles faster and cheaper because they could be operated by less skilled low wage labourers 13 These struggles sometimes resulted in government suppression via Parliamentary acts such as the Protection of Stocking Frames etc Act 1788 Periodic uprisings relating to asset prices also occurred in other contexts in the century before Luddism Irregular rises in food prices provoked the Keelmen to riot in the port of Tyne in 1710 14 and tin miners to steal from granaries at Falmouth in 1727 a There was a rebellion in Northumberland and Durham in 1740 and an assault on Quaker corn dealers in 1756 Malcolm L Thomas argued in his 1970 history The Luddites that machine breaking was one of the very few tactics that workers could use to increase pressure on employers undermine lower paid competing workers and create solidarity among workers These attacks on machines did not imply any necessary hostility to machinery as such machinery was just a conveniently exposed target against which an attack could be made 12 Historian Eric Hobsbawm has called their machine wrecking collective bargaining by riot which had been a tactic used in Britain since the Restoration because manufactories were scattered throughout the country and that made it impractical to hold large scale strikes 15 16 An agricultural variant of Luddism occurred during the widespread Swing Riots of 1830 in southern and eastern England centring on breaking threshing machines 17 Peak activity 1811 1817 EditSee also Barthelemy Thimonnier whose sewing machines were destroyed by tailorsThe Luddite movement emerged during the harsh economic climate of the Napoleonic Wars which saw a rise in difficult working conditions in the new textile factories Luddites objected primarily to the rising popularity of automated textile equipment threatening the jobs and livelihoods of skilled workers as this technology allowed them to be replaced by cheaper and less skilled workers 1 failed verification The movement began in Arnold Nottingham on 11 March 1811 and spread rapidly throughout England over the following two years 18 1 The British economy suffered greatly in 1810 to 1812 especially in terms of high unemployment and inflation The causes included the high cost of the wars with Napoleon Napoleon s Continental System of economic warfare and escalating conflict with the United States The crisis led to widespread protest and violence but the middle classes and upper classes strongly supported the government which used the army to suppress all working class unrest especially the Luddite movement 19 20 The Luddites met at night on the moors surrounding industrial towns to practice military like drills and manoeuvres Their main areas of operation began in Nottinghamshire in November 1811 followed by the West Riding of Yorkshire in early 1812 and then Lancashire by March 1813 They wrecked specific types of machinery that posed a threat to the particular industrial interests in each region In the Midlands these were the wide knitting frames used to make cheap and inferior lace articles In the North West weavers sought to eliminate the steam powered looms threatening wages in the cotton trade In Yorkshire workers opposed the use of shearing frames and gig mills to finish woolen cloth Many Luddite groups were highly organized and pursued machine breaking as one of several tools for achieving specific political ends In addition to the raids Luddites coordinated public demonstrations and the mailing of letters to local industrialists and government officials 21 These letters explained their reasons for destroying the machinery and threatened further action if the use of obnoxious machines continued 22 The writings of Midlands Luddites often justified their demands through the legitimacy of the Company of Framework Knitters a recognized public body that already openly negotiated with masters through named representatives In North West England textile workers lacked these long standing trade institutions and their letters composed an attempt to achieve recognition as a united body of tradespeople As such they were more likely to include petitions for governmental reforms such as increased minimum wages and the cessation of child labor Northwestern Luddites were also more likely to use radical language linking their movement to that of American and French revolutionaries In Yorkshire the letter writing campaign shifted to more violent threats against local authorities viewed as complicit in the use of offensive machinery to exert greater commercial control over the labor market Differences in the occupational composition e g frameworkers weavers spinners of each region manifested as variation in the Luddites rhetoric tactics and degree of organization 23 Luddites clashed with government troops at Burton s Mill in Middleton and at Westhoughton Mill both in Lancashire 24 The Luddites and their supporters anonymously sent death threats to and possibly attacked magistrates and food merchants Activists smashed Heathcote s lacemaking machine in Loughborough in 1816 25 He and other industrialists had secret chambers constructed in their buildings that could be used as hiding places during an attack 26 In 1817 an unemployed Nottingham stockinger and probably ex Luddite named Jeremiah Brandreth led the Pentrich Rising While this was a general uprising unrelated to machinery it can be viewed as the last major Luddite act 27 Government response EditThe British government ultimately dispatched 12 000 troops to suppress Luddite activity which as historian Eric Hobsbawm noted was a larger number than the army which the Duke of Wellington led during the Peninsular War 28 b Four Luddites led by a man named George Mellor ambushed and assassinated mill owner William Horsfall of Ottiwells Mill in Marsden West Yorkshire at Crosland Moor in Huddersfield Horsfall had remarked that he would Ride up to his saddle in Luddite blood 29 Mellor fired the fatal shot to Horsfall s groin and all four men were arrested One of the men Benjamin Walker turned informant and the other three were hanged 30 31 32 Lord Byron denounced what he considered to be the plight of the working class the government s inane policies and ruthless repression in the House of Lords on 27 February 1812 I have been in some of the most oppressed provinces of Turkey but never under the most despotic of infidel governments did I behold such squalid wretchedness as I have seen since my return in the very heart of a Christian country 33 Government officials sought to suppress the Luddite movement with a mass trial at York in January 1813 following the attack on Cartwrights Mill at Rawfolds near Cleckheaton The government charged over 60 men including Mellor and his companions with various crimes in connection with Luddite activities While some of those charged were actual Luddites many had no connection to the movement Although the proceedings were legitimate jury trials many were abandoned due to lack of evidence and 30 men were acquitted These trials were certainly intended to act as show trials to deter other Luddites from continuing their activities The harsh sentences of those found guilty which included execution and penal transportation quickly ended the movement 5 34 Parliament made machine breaking i e industrial sabotage a capital crime with the Frame Breaking Act of 1812 35 Lord Byron opposed this legislation becoming one of the few prominent defenders of the Luddites after the treatment of the defendants at the York trials 36 Legacy EditIn the 19th century occupations that arose from the growth of trade and shipping in ports also as domestic manufacturers were notorious for precarious employment prospects Underemployment was chronic during this period 37 and it was common practice to retain a larger workforce than was typically necessary for insurance against labour shortages in boom times 37 Moreover the organization of manufacture by merchant capitalists in the textile industry was inherently unstable While the financiers capital was still largely invested in raw materials it was easy to increase commitment when trade was good and almost as easy to cut back when times were bad Merchant capitalists lacked the incentive of later factory owners whose capital was invested in buildings and plants to maintain a steady rate of production and return on fixed capital The combination of seasonal variations in wage rates and violent short term fluctuations springing from harvests and war produced periodic outbreaks of violence 37 Modern usage EditNowadays the term Luddite often is used to describe someone who is opposed or resistant to new technologies 38 In 1956 during a British Parliamentary debate a Labour spokesman said that organised workers were by no means wedded to a Luddite Philosophy 39 By 2006 the term neo Luddism had emerged to describe opposition to many forms of technology 40 According to a manifesto drawn up by the Second Luddite Congress April 1996 Barnesville Ohio neo Luddism is a leaderless movement of passive resistance to consumerism and the increasingly bizarre and frightening technologies of the Computer Age 41 The term Luddite fallacy is used by economists about the fear that technological unemployment inevitably generates structural unemployment and is consequently macroeconomically injurious If a technological innovation reduces necessary labour inputs in a given sector then the industry wide cost of production falls which lowers the competitive price and increases the equilibrium supply point that theoretically will require an increase in aggregate labour inputs 42 During the 20th century and the first decade of the 21st century the dominant view among economists has been that belief in long term technological unemployment was indeed a fallacy More recently there has been increased support for the view that the benefits of automation are not equally distributed 43 44 45 See also EditPostdevelopment theory Ted Kaczynski Ruddington Framework Knitters Museum features a Luddite gallery Simple living Technophobia Turner Controversy return to pre industrial methods of productionExplanatory notes Edit The Falmouth magistrates reported to the Duke of Newcastle 16 November 1727 that the unruly tinners had broke open and plundered several cellars and granaries of corn Their report concludes with a comment which suggests that they were not able to understand the rationale of the direct action of the tinners The occasion of these outrages was pretended by the rioters to be a scarcity of corn in the county but this suggestion is probably false as most of those who carried off the corn gave it away or sold it at a quarter price PRO SP 36 4 22 Hobsbawm has popularized this comparison and refers to the original statement in Frank Ongley Darvall 1934 Popular Disturbances and Public Order in Regency England London Oxford University Press p 260 References Edit a b c Conniff Richard March 2011 What the Luddites Fought Against Smithsonian Retrieved 19 October 2016 Who were the Luddites History com Retrieved 12 December 2016 a b Binfield Kevin 2004 Foreword Writings of the Luddites Johns Hopkins University Press pp xiv ISBN 1421416964 Linton David Fall 1992 THE LUDDITES How Did They Get That Bad Reputation Labor History 33 4 529 537 doi 10 1080 00236569200890281 ISSN 0023 656X a b Luddites in Marsden Trials at York Archived from the original on 26 March 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Luddite dead link Compact Oxford English Dictionary at AskOxford com Accessed 22 February 2010 Power Politics and Protest the Luddites Learning Curve The National Archives Retrieved 19 August 2011 Geoffrey of Monmouth Historia Regum Britanniae 3 20 Rachel Bromwich ed Trioedd Ynys Prydein Cardiff 1991 1991 s v Lludd fab Beli Binfield Kevin 2004 Luddites and Luddism Baltimore and London The Johns Hopkins University Press Rude George 2001 The Crowd in History A Study of Popular Disturbances in France and England 1730 1848 Serif a b Thomis Malcolm 1970 The Luddites Machine Breaking in Regency England Shocken Merchant Brian 2 September 2014 You ve Got Luddites All Wrong Vice Retrieved 13 October 2014 Historical events 1685 1782 Historical Account of Newcastle upon Tyne pp 47 65 British History Online 22 June 2003 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Hobsbawm 1952 p 59 Autor D H Levy F Murnane R J 1 November 2003 The Skill Content of Recent Technological Change An Empirical Exploration The Quarterly Journal of Economics 118 4 1279 1333 doi 10 1162 003355303322552801 hdl 1721 1 64306 Archived from the original on 15 March 2010 Harrison J F C 1984 The Common People A History from the Norman Conquest to the Present London Totowa N J Croom Helm pp 249 53 ISBN 0709901259 OL 16568504M Beckett John Luddites The Nottinghamshire Heritage Gateway Thoroton Society of Nottinghamshire Retrieved 2 March 2015 Roger Knight Britain Against Napoleon 2013 pp 410 412 Francois Crouzet Britain Ascendant 1990 pp 277 279 Sale Kirkpatrick 1996 The Luddites November December 1811 Rebels against the future the Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution lessons for the computer age Reading Addison Wesley Publishing Company pp 74 77 ISBN 0201407183 Mueller Gavin 2021 The Nights of King Ludd Breaking Things at Work The Luddites Are Right About Why You Hate Your Job Verso p 20 ISBN 1786636778 Binfield Kevin 2004 Northwestern Luddism Writings of the Luddites Johns Hopkins University Press p 34 ISBN 1421416964 Dinwiddy J R 1992 Luddism and Politics in the Northern Counties Radicalism and Reform in Britain 1780 1850 London Hambledon Press pp 371 401 ISBN 9781852850623 Sale 1995 p 188 Workmen discover secret chambers BBC News Retrieved 31 December 2012 Summer D Leibensperger Brandreth Jeremiah 1790 1817 and the Pentrich Rising The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest 2009 1 2 Hobsbawm 1952 p 58 The 12 000 troops deployed against the Luddites greatly exceeded in size the army which Wellington took into the Peninsula in 1808 Sharp Alan 4 May 2015 Grim Almanac of York The History Press ISBN 9780750964562 Murder of William Horsfall by Luddites 1812 Freepages genealogy rootsweb ancestry com Retrieved 23 June 2023 William Horsfall 1770 1812 Huddersfield Exposed Exploring the History of the Huddersfield Area Huddersfield exposed Retrieved 23 June 2023 8th January 1813 The execution of George Mellor William Thorpe amp Thomas Smith The Luddite Bicentenary 1811 1817 8 January 2013 Retrieved 10 October 2020 FRAME WORK BILL Hansard 27 February 1812 Hansard millbanksystems com Retrieved 23 June 2023 Elizabeth Gaskell The Life of Charlotte Bronte Vol 1 Ch 6 for a contemporaneous description of the attack on Cartwright Destruction of Stocking Frames etc Act 1812 at books google com Lord Byron and the Luddites The Socialist Party of Great Britain worldsocialism org Archived from the original on 24 June 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2016 a b c Charles Wilson England s Apprenticeship 1603 1763 1965 pp 344 45 PRO SP 36 4 22 Luddite Definition amp Meaning Dictionary com Sale 1995 p 205 Jones 2006 p 20 Sale Kirkpatrick 1 February 1997 America s New Luddites Le Monde diplomatique Archived from the original on 30 June 2002 Jerome Harry 1934 Mechanization in Industry National Bureau of Economic Research pp 32 35 Krugman Paul 12 June 2013 Sympathy for the Luddites The New York Times Retrieved 14 July 2015 Ford 2009 Chpt 3 The Luddite Fallacy Lord Skidelsky 12 June 2013 Death to Machines Project Syndicate Retrieved 14 July 2015 Sources EditFord Martin R 2009 The Lights in the Tunnel Automation Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future Acculant Publishing ISBN 978 1448659814 e book available free online Further reading EditAnderson Gary M and Robert D Tollison Luddism as cartel enforcement Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics JITE Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft 142 4 1986 727 738 JSTOR 40750927 Archer John E 2000 Chapter 4 Industrial Protest Social unrest and popular protest in England 1780 1840 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 57656 7 Bailey Brian J 1998 The Luddite Rebellion NYU Press ISBN 0 8147 1335 1 Darvall F Popular Disturbances and Public Order in Regency England Oxford University Press 1934 Dinwiddy John Luddism and politics in the northern counties Social History 4 1 1979 33 63 Fox Nicols 2003 Against the Machine The Hidden Luddite History in Literature Art and Individual Lives Island Press ISBN 1 55963 860 5 Grint Keith amp Woolgar Steve 1997 The Luddites Diablo ex Machina The machine at work technology work and organization Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 0 7456 0924 9 Haywood Ian Unruly People The Spectacular Riot in Bloody Romanticism Palgrave Macmillan London 2006 pp 181 222 Hobsbawm E J 1952 The Machine Breakers Past amp Present 1 1 57 70 doi 10 1093 past 1 1 57 Horn Jeff Machine Breaking and the Threat from Below in Great Britain and France during the Early Industrial Revolution in Crowd actions in Britain and France from the middle ages to the modern world Palgrave Macmillan London 2015 pp 165 178 Jones Steven E 2006 Against technology from the Luddites to Neo Luddism CRC Press ISBN 978 0 415 97868 2 Linebaugh Peter Ned Ludd amp Queen Mab machine breaking romanticism and the several commons of 1811 12 PM Press 2012 Linton David The Luddites How did they get that bad reputation Labor History 33 4 1992 529 537 doi 10 1080 00236569200890281 McGaughey Ewan 2018 Will Robots Automate Your Job Away Full Employment Basic Income and Economic Democracy ssrn com SSRN 3044448 Munger Frank Suppression of Popular Gatherings in England 1800 1830 American Journal of Legal History 25 1981 111 Navickas Katrina The search for general Ludd The mythology of Luddism Social History 30 3 2005 281 295 O Rourke Kevin Hjortshoj Ahmed S Rahman and Alan M Taylor Luddites the industrial revolution and the demographic transition Journal of Economic Growth 18 4 2013 373 409 JSTOR 42635331 Pallas Stephen J The Hell that Bigots Frame Queen Mab Luddism and the Rhetoric of Working Class Revolution Journal for the Study of Radicalism 12 2 2018 55 80 doi 10 14321 jstudradi 12 2 0055 JSTOR 10 14321 jstudradi 12 2 0055 Patterson A Temple Luddism Hampden Clubs and Trade Unions in Leicestershire 1816 17 English Historical Review63 247 1948 170 188 online Poitras Geoffrey The Luddite trials Radical suppression and the administration of criminal justice Journal for the Study of Radicalism 14 1 2020 121 166 Pynchon Thomas 28 October 1984 Is It O k to Be a Luddite The New York Times Randall Adrian 2002 Before the Luddites Custom Community and Machinery in the English Woollen Industry 1776 1809 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89334 3 Rude George 2005 Chapter 5 Luddism The crowd in History 1730 1848 Serif ISBN 978 1 897959 47 3 Sale Kirkpatrick 1995 Rebels against the future the Luddites and their war on the Industrial Revolution lessons for the computer age Basic Books ISBN 0 201 40718 3 Stollinger Roman The Luddite rebellion Past and present wiiw Monthly Report 11 2018 6 11 Thomis Malcolm I The Luddites Machine Breaking in Regency England Archon Books 1970 Thompson E P 1968 The Making of the English Working Class Wasserstrom Jeffrey Civilization and Its Discontents The Boxers and Luddites as Heroes and Villains Theory and Society 1987 675 707 JSTOR 657679 Primary sources Edit Binfield Kevin 2004 Writings of the Luddites JHU Press ISBN 0 8018 7612 5 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Luddite Wikimedia Commons has media related to Luddism Look up Luddite in Wiktionary the free dictionary Luddite Bicentenary Comprehensive chronicle of the Luddite uprisings The Luddite Link Comprehensive historical resources for the original West Yorkshire Luddites University of Huddersfield Luddism and the Neo Luddite Reaction by Martin Ryder University of Colorado at Denver School of Education The Luddites and the Combination Acts from the Marxists Internet Archive The Luddites 1988 Thames Television drama documentary about the West Riding Luddites Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Luddite amp oldid 1164537528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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