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Priestley Riots

The Priestley Riots (also known as the Birmingham Riots of 1791) took place from 14 July to 17 July 1791 in Birmingham, England; the rioters' main targets were religious dissenters, most notably the politically and theologically controversial Joseph Priestley. Both local and national issues stirred the passions of the rioters, from disagreements over public library book purchases, to controversies over Dissenters' attempts to gain full civil rights and their support of the French Revolution.

The attack on Joseph Priestley's home, Fairhill, at Sparkbrook, Birmingham on 14 July 1791

The riots started with an attack on the Royal Hotel, Birmingham—the site of a banquet organised in sympathy with the French Revolution. Then, beginning with Priestley's church and home, the rioters attacked or burned four Dissenting chapels, twenty-seven houses, and several businesses. Many of them became intoxicated by liquor that they found while looting, or with which they were bribed to stop burning homes. A small core could not be bribed, however, and remained sober. The rioters burned not only the homes and chapels of Dissenters, but also the homes of people they associated with Dissenters, such as members of the scientific Lunar Society.

While the riots were not initiated by Prime Minister William Pitt's administration, the national government was slow to respond to the Dissenters' pleas for help. Local officials seem to have been involved in the planning of the riots, and were later reluctant to prosecute ringleaders. Industrialist James Watt wrote that the riots "divided [Birmingham] into two parties who hate one another mortally".[1] Those who had been attacked gradually left, leaving Birmingham a more conservative city than previously.

Historical context

Birmingham

Over the course of the eighteenth century, Birmingham became notorious for its riots, which were sparked by a number of causes. In 1714 and 1715, the townspeople, as part of a "Church-and-King" mob, attacked Dissenters (Protestants who did not adhere to the Church of England or follow its practices) in the Sacheverell riots during the London trial of Henry Sacheverell, and in 1751 and 1759 Quakers and Methodists were assaulted. During the anti-Catholic Gordon Riots in 1780, large crowds assembled in Birmingham. In 1766, 1782, 1795, and 1800 mobs protested about high food prices.[2] One contemporary described Birmingham rioters as the "bunting, beggarly, brass-making, brazen-faced, brazen-hearted, blackguard, bustling, booby Birmingham mob".[3]

 
Caricaturist James Sayers's "Repeal of the Test Act: A Vision" shows Priestley spewing the smoke of heresy from the pulpit.

Up until the late 1780s, religious divisions did not affect Birmingham's elite. Dissenter and Anglican lived side by side harmoniously: they were on the same town promotional committees; they pursued joint scientific interests in the Lunar Society; and they worked together in local government. They stood united against what they viewed as the threat posed by unruly plebeians.[4] After the riots, however, scientist and clergyman Joseph Priestley argued in his An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Birmingham Riots (1791) that this cooperation had not in fact been as amicable as generally believed. Priestley revealed that disputes over the local library, Sunday Schools, and church attendance had divided Dissenters from Anglicans.[5] In his Narrative of the Riots in Birmingham (1816), stationer and Birmingham historian William Hutton agreed, arguing that five events stoked the fires of religious friction: disagreements over inclusion of Priestley's books in the local public library; concerns over Dissenters' attempts to repeal the Test and Corporation Acts; religious controversy (particularly involving Priestley); an "inflammatory hand-bill"; and a dinner celebrating the outbreak of the French Revolution.[6]

Once Birmingham Dissenters started to agitate for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts, which restricted Dissenters' civil rights (preventing them, for instance, from attending the Universities of Oxford or Cambridge, or from holding public office), the semblance of unity among the town's elite disappeared. Unitarians such as Priestley were at the forefront of the repeal campaign, and orthodox Anglicans grew nervous and angry. After 1787, the emergence of Dissenting groups formed for the sole purpose of overturning these laws began to divide the community; however, the repeal efforts failed in 1787, 1789 and 1790.[7] Priestley's support of the repeal and his heterodox religious views, which were widely published, inflamed the populace.[8] In February 1790, a group of activists came together not only to oppose the interests of the Dissenters but also to counteract what they saw as the undesirable importation of French Revolutionary ideals. Dissenters by and large supported the French Revolution and its efforts to question the role monarchy should play in government.[9] One month before the riots, Priestley attempted to found a reform society, the Warwickshire Constitutional Society, which would have supported universal suffrage and short Parliaments. Although this effort failed, the efforts to establish such a society increased tensions in Birmingham.[10]

In addition to these religious and political differences, both the lower-class rioters and their upper-class Anglican leaders had economic complaints against the middle-class Dissenters. They envied the ever-increasing prosperity of these industrialists as well as the power that came with that economic success.[11] Historian R. B. Rose refers to these industrialists as belonging to "an inner elite of magnates".[12] Priestley himself had written a pamphlet, An Account of a Society for Encouraging the Industrious Poor (1787), on how best to extract the most work for the smallest amount of money from the poor. Its emphasis on debt collection did not endear him to the poverty-stricken.[13]

British reaction to the French Revolution

 
"The Treacherous Rebel and Birmingham Rioter" (c.1791), with Joseph Priestley as the rebel being chased by Satan (at right)

The British public debate over the French Revolution, or the Revolution Controversy, lasted from 1789 through 1795.[14] Initially many on both sides of the Channel thought the French would follow the pattern of the English Glorious Revolution of a century before, and the Revolution was viewed positively by a large portion of the British public. Most Britons celebrated the storming of the Bastille in 1789, believing that France's absolute monarchy should be replaced by a more democratic form of government. In these heady early days, supporters of the Revolution also believed that Britain's own system would be reformed as well: voting rights would be broadened and redistribution of Parliamentary constituency boundaries would eliminate so-called "rotten boroughs".[15]

After the publication of statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790), in which he surprisingly broke ranks with his liberal Whig colleagues to support the French aristocracy, a pamphlet war discussing the Revolution began in earnest. Because Burke had supported the American colonists in their rebellion against Great Britain, his views sent a shockwave through the country.[14] While Burke supported aristocracy, monarchy, and the Established Church, liberals such as Charles James Fox supported the Revolution, and a programme of individual liberties, civic virtue and religious toleration, while radicals such as Priestley, William Godwin, Thomas Paine, and Mary Wollstonecraft, argued for a further programme of republicanism, agrarian socialism, and abolition of the "landed interest".[16] Alfred Cobban calls the debate that erupted "perhaps the last real discussion of the fundamentals of politics in [Britain]".[17]

Hints of trouble

 
Ticket for the dinner celebrating the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1791

On 11 July 1791, a Birmingham newspaper announced that on 14 July, the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille, there would be a dinner at the local Royal Hotel to commemorate the outbreak of the French Revolution; the invitation encouraged "any Friend to Freedom" to attend:

A number of gentlemen intend dining together on the 14th instant, to commemorate the auspicious day which witnessed the emancipation of twenty-six millions of people from the yoke of despotism, and restored the blessings of equal government to a truly great and enlightened nation; with whom it is our interest, as a commercial people, and our duty, as friends to the general rights of mankind, to promote a free intercourse, as subservient to a permanent friendship.

Any Friend to Freedom, disposed to join the intended temperate festivity, is desired to leave his name at the bar of the Hotel, where tickets may be had at Five Shillings each, including a bottle of wine; but no person will be admitted without one.

Dinner will be on table at three o'clock precisely.[18]

Alongside this notice was a threat: "an authentic list" of the participants would be published after the dinner.[19] On the same day, "an ultra-revolutionary" handbill, written by James Hobson (although his authorship was not known at the time), entered circulation. Town officials offered 100 guineas for information regarding the publication of the handbill and its author, to no avail. The Dissenters found themselves forced to plead ignorance and decry the "radical" ideas promoted by the handbill.[20] It was becoming clear by 12 July that there would be trouble at the dinner. On the morning of 14 July graffiti such as "destruction to the Presbyterians" and "Church and King for ever" were scrawled across the town.[21] At this point, Priestley's friends, fearing for his safety, dissuaded him from attending the dinner.[22]

14 July

 
Destruction of Old Meeting chapel (from an 1879 engraving by Robert Dent)

About 90 hardy sympathisers of the French Revolution came to celebrate on 14 July; the banquet was led by James Keir, an Anglican industrialist who was a member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham. When the guests arrived at the hotel at 2 or 3 p.m., they were greeted by 60 or 70 protesters who temporarily dispersed while yelling, rather bizarrely and confusingly, "no popery".[23] By the time the celebrants ended their dinner, around 7 or 8 p.m., a crowd of hundreds had gathered. The rioters, who "were recruited predominantly from the industrial artisans and labourers of Birmingham",[24] threw stones at the departing guests and sacked the hotel.[21] The crowd then moved on to the Quaker meeting-house, until someone yelled that the Quakers "never trouble themselves with anything, neither on one side nor the other" and convinced them instead to attack the New Meeting chapel, where Priestley presided as minister.[25] The New and Old Meeting Houses, two Dissenting chapels, were set alight.[26]

The rioters proceeded to Priestley's home, Fairhill at Sparkbrook. Priestley barely had time to evacuate and he and his wife fled from Dissenting friend to friend during the riots. Writing shortly after the event, Priestley described the first part of the attack, which he witnessed from a distance:

 
Joseph Priestley's home, Fairhill at Sparkbrook, Birmingham, after its destruction (etching by William Ellis after a drawing by P. H. Witton)

It being remarkably calm, and clear moon-light, we could see to a considerable distance, and being upon a rising ground, we distinctly heard all that passed at the house, every shout of the mob, and almost every stroke of the instruments they had provided for breaking the doors and the furniture. For they could not get any fire, though one of them was heard to offer two guineas for a lighted candle; my son, whom we left behind us, having taken the precaution to put out all the fires in the house, and others of my friends got all the neighbours to do the same. I afterwards heard that much pains was taken, but without effect, to get fire from my large electrical machine, which stood in the library.[27]

His son, William, stayed behind with others to protect the family home, but they were overcome and the property was eventually looted and razed to the ground. Priestley's valuable library, scientific laboratory, and manuscripts were largely lost in the flames.[28]

15, 16 and 17 July

 
William Russell's home, Showell Green, Sparkhill after its destruction. (Etching by William Ellis, after a drawing by P. H. Witton)

The Earl of Aylesford attempted to stem the mounting violence on the night of 14 July, but despite having the help of other magistrates, he was unable to control the crowd. On 15 July, the mob liberated prisoners from the local gaol.[21] Thomas Woodbridge, the Keeper of the Prison, deputised several hundred people to help him quell the mob, but many of these joined in with the rioters themselves.[29] The crowd destroyed John Ryland's home, Baskerville House, and drank the supplies of liquor which they found in the cellar. When the newly appointed constables arrived on the scene, the mob attacked and disarmed them. One man was killed.[30] The local magistrates and law enforcement, such as it was, did nothing further to restrain the mob and did not read the Riot Act until the military arrived on 17 July.[31] Other rioters burned down banker John Taylor's home at Bordesley Park.

On 16 July, the homes of Joseph Jukes, John Coates, John Hobson, Thomas Hawkes, and John Harwood (the latter a blind Baptist minister) were all ransacked or burned.[30] The Baptist Meeting at Kings Heath, another Dissenting chapel, was also destroyed. William Russell and William Hutton, tried to defend their homes, but to no avail—the men they hired refused to fight the mob.[30] Hutton later wrote a narrative of the events:

I was avoided as a pestilence; the waves of sorrow rolled over me, and beat me down with multiplied force; every one came heavier than the last. My children were distressed. My wife, through long affliction, ready to quit my own arms for those of death; and I myself reduced to the sad necessity of humbly begging a draught of water at a cottage!...In the morning of the 15th I was a rich man; in the evening I was ruined.[32]

When the rioters arrived at John Taylor's other house at Moseley, Moseley Hall, they carefully moved all of the furniture and belongings of its current occupant, the frail Dowager Lady Carhampton, a relative of George III, out of the house before they burned it: they were specifically targeting those who disagreed with the king's policies and who, in not conforming to the Church of England, resisted state control.[33] The homes of George Russell, a Justice of the Peace, Samuel Blyth, one of the ministers of New Meeting, Thomas Lee, and a Mr. Westley all came under attack on the 15th and 16th. The manufacturer, Quaker, and member of the Lunar Society Samuel Galton only saved his own home by bribing the rioters with ale and money.[34]

 
New Meeting, after its destruction (Etching by William Ellis after a drawing by P. H. Witton)

By 2 p.m. on 16 July, the rioters had left Birmingham and were heading towards Kings Norton and the Kingswood Chapel; it was estimated that one group of the rioters totalled 250 to 300 people. They burned Cox's farm at Warstock and looted and attacked the home of a Mr. Taverner. When they reached Kingswood, Warwickshire, they burned the Dissenting chapel and its manse. By this time, Birmingham had shut down—no business was being conducted.[34]

Contemporary accounts record that the mob's last sustained assault was around 8 p.m. on 17 July. About 30 "hard core" rioters attacked the home of William Withering, an Anglican who attended the Lunar Society with Priestley and Keir. But Withering, aided by a group of hired men, managed to fend them off.[35] When the military finally arrived to restore order on 17 and 18 July, most of the rioters had disbanded, although there were rumours that mobs were destroying property in Alcester and Bromsgrove.[36]

All in all, four Dissenting churches had been severely damaged or burned down and twenty-seven homes had been attacked, many looted and burned. Having begun by attacking those who attended the Bastille celebration, the "Church-and-King" mob had finished up by extending their targets to include Dissenters of all kinds as well as members of the Lunar Society.[37]

Aftermath and trials

 
James Gillray's cartoon mocking the 14 July dinner

Priestley and other Dissenters blamed the government for the riots, believing that William Pitt and his supporters had instigated them; however, it seems from the evidence that the riots were actually organised by local Birmingham officials. Some of the rioters acted in a co-ordinated fashion and seemed to be led by local officials during the attacks, prompting accusations of premeditation. Some Dissenters discovered that their homes were to be attacked several days before the rioters arrived, leading them to believe that there was a prepared list of victims.[38] The "disciplined nucleus of rioters", which numbered only thirty or so, directed the mob and stayed sober throughout the three to four days of rioting. Unlike the hundreds of others who joined in, they could not be bribed to stop their destructions.[39] Essayist William Hazlitt's first published work was a letter to the Shrewsbury Chronicle, printed later in July 1791, condemning the Priestley riots; Priestley had been one of (then 13-year-old) Hazlitt's teachers.[40]

 
Title page from Priestley's Appeal (1791), which also contains reprints of contemporary news reports and letters concerning the riots

If a concerted effort had been made by Birmingham's Anglican elite to attack the Dissenters, it was more than likely the work of Benjamin Spencer, a local minister, Joseph Carles, a Justice of the Peace and landowner, and John Brooke (1755-1802), an attorney, coroner, and under-sheriff.[41] Although present at the riot's outbreak, Carles and Spencer made no attempt to stop the rioters, and Brooke seems to have led them to the New Meeting chapel. Witnesses agreed "that the magistrates promised the rioters protection so long as they restricted their attacks to the meeting-houses and left persons and property alone".[42] The magistrates also refused to arrest any of the rioters and released those that had been arrested.[43] Instructed by the national government to prosecute the riot's instigators, these local officials dragged their heels. When finally forced to try the ringleaders, they intimidated witnesses and made a mockery of the trial proceedings.[44] Only seventeen of the fifty rioters who had been charged were ever brought to trial; four were convicted, of whom one was pardoned, two were hanged, and the fourth was transported to Botany Bay. But Priestley and others believed that these men were found guilty not because they were rioters but because "they were infamous characters in other respects".[45]

Although he had been forced to send troops to Birmingham to quell the disturbances, King George III commented, "I cannot but feel better pleased that Priestley is the sufferer for the doctrines he and his party have instilled, and that the people see them in their true light."[46] The national government forced the local residents to pay restitution to those whose property had been damaged: the total eventually amounted to £23,000. However, the process took many years, and most residents received much less than the value of their property.[47]

After the riots, Birmingham was, according to industrialist James Watt, "divided into two parties who hate one another mortally".[1] Initially Priestley wanted to return and deliver a sermon on the Bible verse "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do," but he was dissuaded by friends convinced that it was too dangerous.[48] Instead, he wrote his Appeal:

I was born an Englishman as well [as] any of you. Though labouring under civil disabilities, as a Dissenter, I have long contributed my share to the support of government, and supposed I had the protection of its constitution and laws for my inheritance. But I have found myself greatly deceived; and so may any of you, if, like me, you should, with or without cause, be so unfortunate as to incur popular odium. For then, as you have seen in my case, without any form of trial whatever, without any intimation of your crime, or of your danger, your houses and all your property may be destroyed, and you may not have the good fortune to escape with life, as I have done....What are the old French Lettres de Cachet, or the horrors of the late demolished Bastile, compared to this?[49]

The riots revealed that the Anglican gentry of Birmingham were not averse to using violence against Dissenters whom they viewed as potential revolutionaries. They had no qualms, either, about raising a potentially uncontrollable mob.[50] Many of those attacked left Birmingham; as a result, the town became noticeably more conservative after the riots.[50] The remaining supporters of the French Revolution decided not to hold a dinner celebrating the storming of the Bastille the next year.[50]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Qtd. in Rose, 83.
  2. ^ Rose, 70–71; Schofield, 263–64.
  3. ^ Qtd. in Rose, 70.
  4. ^ Rose, 70–71.
  5. ^ Sheps, 50; Priestley, 6–12.
  6. ^ Hutton, 158–62.
  7. ^ Rose, 71; Sheps, 51–52; Schofield, 269–77.
  8. ^ Schofield, 268–69.
  9. ^ Rose, 72; Schofield, 277–83.
  10. ^ Rose, 72; Schofield, 283.
  11. ^ Sheps, 47–50; Thompson, E.P. The Making of the English Working Class. New York: Vintage (1966), 73–75.
  12. ^ Rose, 70.
  13. ^ Schofield, 266.
  14. ^ a b Butler, "Introduction", 1.
  15. ^ Butler, "Introduction", 3.
  16. ^ Butler, "Introduction", 1-4.
  17. ^ Qtd. in Butler, "Introduction", 1.
  18. ^ An authentic account of the riots in Birmingham, 1.
  19. ^ Rose, 72; Schofield, 283–84.
  20. ^ Rose, 72–73; Sheps, 55–57; Schofield, 283–84.
  21. ^ a b c Rose, 73.
  22. ^ Rose, 73; Schofield, 284–85; Maddison and Maddison, 99–100.
  23. ^ Rose, 73; Schofield, 284–85.
  24. ^ Rose, 83.
  25. ^ Qtd. in Rose, 73; see also Schofield, 284–85; Maddison and Maddison, 100.
  26. ^ "The Priestley Riots". British Library. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  27. ^ Priestley, 30.
  28. ^ Rose, 73; Schofield, 284–85; Maddison and Maddison, 101–02.
  29. ^ Rose, 73–74.
  30. ^ a b c Rose, 74.
  31. ^ Rose, 74; Schofield, 287.
  32. ^ Hutton, 200.
  33. ^ Rose, 74–75.
  34. ^ a b Rose, 75.
  35. ^ Rose, 75–76.
  36. ^ Rose, 76.
  37. ^ Rose, 76; Sheps, 46.
  38. ^ Rose, 78–79; Schofield, 287.
  39. ^ Rose, 79.
  40. ^ Through Nine Reigns, 200 Years of The Shrewsbury Chronicle. 1972. p. 51.Bicentenary souvenir produced by the newspaper.
  41. ^ Rose, 80; Schofield, 285.
  42. ^ Rose, 81; see also Schofield, 285.
  43. ^ Rose 81; Schofield, 285–86.
  44. ^ Rose, 82; Schofield, 288–89.
  45. ^ Qtd. in Rose, 82.
  46. ^ Qtd. in Gibbs, F. W. Joseph Priestley: Adventurer in Science and Champion of Truth. London: Thomas Nelson and Sons (1965), 204.
  47. ^ Rose, 77–78.
  48. ^ Schofield, 289.
  49. ^ Priestley, viii-ix.
  50. ^ a b c Rose, 84.

Bibliography

  • —. An Authentic Account of the Riots in Birmingham, also . . . the trials of the Rioters. Birmingham: n.p., 1791.
  • —. Views of the Ruins of the Principal Houses Destroyed during the Riots at Birmingham. London: J. Johnson, 1791.
  • Butler, Marilyn, ed. Burke, Paine, Godwin, and the Revolution Controversy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-521-28656-5.
  • Hutton, William. "A Narrative of the Riots in Birmingham, July 1791". The Life of William Hutton. London: Printed for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, Paternoster Row; and Beilby and Knotts, Birmingham, 1816. Google Books. Retrieved on 28 February 2008.
  • Maddison, R. E. S. and Francis R. Maddison. "Joseph Priestley and the Birmingham Riots." Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 12.1 (August, 1956): 98–113.
  • Martineau, Dennis. "Playing Detective: The Priestley Riots of 1791." Birmingham Historian 12–13 (1997): 11–18.
  • Priestley, Joseph. An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Riots in Birmingham. Birmingham: Printed by J. Thompson, 1791. On line, Internet Archive.
  • Rose, R. B. "The Priestley Riots of 1791." Past and Present 18 (1960): 68–88.
  • Schofield, Robert E. The Enlightened Joseph Priestley: A Study of His Life and Work from 1773 to 1804. University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-271-02459-3.
  • Sheps, Arthur. "Public Perception of Joseph Priestley, the Birmingham Dissenters, and the Church-and-King Riots of 1791." Eighteenth-Century Life 13.2 (1989): 46–64.

priestley, riots, also, known, birmingham, riots, 1791, took, place, from, july, july, 1791, birmingham, england, rioters, main, targets, were, religious, dissenters, most, notably, politically, theologically, controversial, joseph, priestley, both, local, nat. The Priestley Riots also known as the Birmingham Riots of 1791 took place from 14 July to 17 July 1791 in Birmingham England the rioters main targets were religious dissenters most notably the politically and theologically controversial Joseph Priestley Both local and national issues stirred the passions of the rioters from disagreements over public library book purchases to controversies over Dissenters attempts to gain full civil rights and their support of the French Revolution The attack on Joseph Priestley s home Fairhill at Sparkbrook Birmingham on 14 July 1791 The riots started with an attack on the Royal Hotel Birmingham the site of a banquet organised in sympathy with the French Revolution Then beginning with Priestley s church and home the rioters attacked or burned four Dissenting chapels twenty seven houses and several businesses Many of them became intoxicated by liquor that they found while looting or with which they were bribed to stop burning homes A small core could not be bribed however and remained sober The rioters burned not only the homes and chapels of Dissenters but also the homes of people they associated with Dissenters such as members of the scientific Lunar Society While the riots were not initiated by Prime Minister William Pitt s administration the national government was slow to respond to the Dissenters pleas for help Local officials seem to have been involved in the planning of the riots and were later reluctant to prosecute ringleaders Industrialist James Watt wrote that the riots divided Birmingham into two parties who hate one another mortally 1 Those who had been attacked gradually left leaving Birmingham a more conservative city than previously Contents 1 Historical context 1 1 Birmingham 1 2 British reaction to the French Revolution 2 Hints of trouble 3 14 July 4 15 16 and 17 July 5 Aftermath and trials 6 See also 7 Notes 8 BibliographyHistorical context EditBirmingham Edit Over the course of the eighteenth century Birmingham became notorious for its riots which were sparked by a number of causes In 1714 and 1715 the townspeople as part of a Church and King mob attacked Dissenters Protestants who did not adhere to the Church of England or follow its practices in the Sacheverell riots during the London trial of Henry Sacheverell and in 1751 and 1759 Quakers and Methodists were assaulted During the anti Catholic Gordon Riots in 1780 large crowds assembled in Birmingham In 1766 1782 1795 and 1800 mobs protested about high food prices 2 One contemporary described Birmingham rioters as the bunting beggarly brass making brazen faced brazen hearted blackguard bustling booby Birmingham mob 3 Caricaturist James Sayers s Repeal of the Test Act A Vision shows Priestley spewing the smoke of heresy from the pulpit Up until the late 1780s religious divisions did not affect Birmingham s elite Dissenter and Anglican lived side by side harmoniously they were on the same town promotional committees they pursued joint scientific interests in the Lunar Society and they worked together in local government They stood united against what they viewed as the threat posed by unruly plebeians 4 After the riots however scientist and clergyman Joseph Priestley argued in his An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Birmingham Riots 1791 that this cooperation had not in fact been as amicable as generally believed Priestley revealed that disputes over the local library Sunday Schools and church attendance had divided Dissenters from Anglicans 5 In his Narrative of the Riots in Birmingham 1816 stationer and Birmingham historian William Hutton agreed arguing that five events stoked the fires of religious friction disagreements over inclusion of Priestley s books in the local public library concerns over Dissenters attempts to repeal the Test and Corporation Acts religious controversy particularly involving Priestley an inflammatory hand bill and a dinner celebrating the outbreak of the French Revolution 6 Once Birmingham Dissenters started to agitate for the repeal of the Test and Corporation Acts which restricted Dissenters civil rights preventing them for instance from attending the Universities of Oxford or Cambridge or from holding public office the semblance of unity among the town s elite disappeared Unitarians such as Priestley were at the forefront of the repeal campaign and orthodox Anglicans grew nervous and angry After 1787 the emergence of Dissenting groups formed for the sole purpose of overturning these laws began to divide the community however the repeal efforts failed in 1787 1789 and 1790 7 Priestley s support of the repeal and his heterodox religious views which were widely published inflamed the populace 8 In February 1790 a group of activists came together not only to oppose the interests of the Dissenters but also to counteract what they saw as the undesirable importation of French Revolutionary ideals Dissenters by and large supported the French Revolution and its efforts to question the role monarchy should play in government 9 One month before the riots Priestley attempted to found a reform society the Warwickshire Constitutional Society which would have supported universal suffrage and short Parliaments Although this effort failed the efforts to establish such a society increased tensions in Birmingham 10 In addition to these religious and political differences both the lower class rioters and their upper class Anglican leaders had economic complaints against the middle class Dissenters They envied the ever increasing prosperity of these industrialists as well as the power that came with that economic success 11 Historian R B Rose refers to these industrialists as belonging to an inner elite of magnates 12 Priestley himself had written a pamphlet An Account of a Society for Encouraging the Industrious Poor 1787 on how best to extract the most work for the smallest amount of money from the poor Its emphasis on debt collection did not endear him to the poverty stricken 13 British reaction to the French Revolution Edit The Treacherous Rebel and Birmingham Rioter c 1791 with Joseph Priestley as the rebel being chased by Satan at right The British public debate over the French Revolution or the Revolution Controversy lasted from 1789 through 1795 14 Initially many on both sides of the Channel thought the French would follow the pattern of the English Glorious Revolution of a century before and the Revolution was viewed positively by a large portion of the British public Most Britons celebrated the storming of the Bastille in 1789 believing that France s absolute monarchy should be replaced by a more democratic form of government In these heady early days supporters of the Revolution also believed that Britain s own system would be reformed as well voting rights would be broadened and redistribution of Parliamentary constituency boundaries would eliminate so called rotten boroughs 15 After the publication of statesman and philosopher Edmund Burke s Reflections on the Revolution in France 1790 in which he surprisingly broke ranks with his liberal Whig colleagues to support the French aristocracy a pamphlet war discussing the Revolution began in earnest Because Burke had supported the American colonists in their rebellion against Great Britain his views sent a shockwave through the country 14 While Burke supported aristocracy monarchy and the Established Church liberals such as Charles James Fox supported the Revolution and a programme of individual liberties civic virtue and religious toleration while radicals such as Priestley William Godwin Thomas Paine and Mary Wollstonecraft argued for a further programme of republicanism agrarian socialism and abolition of the landed interest 16 Alfred Cobban calls the debate that erupted perhaps the last real discussion of the fundamentals of politics in Britain 17 Hints of trouble Edit Ticket for the dinner celebrating the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille on 14 July 1791 On 11 July 1791 a Birmingham newspaper announced that on 14 July the second anniversary of the storming of the Bastille there would be a dinner at the local Royal Hotel to commemorate the outbreak of the French Revolution the invitation encouraged any Friend to Freedom to attend A number of gentlemen intend dining together on the 14th instant to commemorate the auspicious day which witnessed the emancipation of twenty six millions of people from the yoke of despotism and restored the blessings of equal government to a truly great and enlightened nation with whom it is our interest as a commercial people and our duty as friends to the general rights of mankind to promote a free intercourse as subservient to a permanent friendship Any Friend to Freedom disposed to join the intended temperate festivity is desired to leave his name at the bar of the Hotel where tickets may be had at Five Shillings each including a bottle of wine but no person will be admitted without one Dinner will be on table at three o clock precisely 18 Alongside this notice was a threat an authentic list of the participants would be published after the dinner 19 On the same day an ultra revolutionary handbill written by James Hobson although his authorship was not known at the time entered circulation Town officials offered 100 guineas for information regarding the publication of the handbill and its author to no avail The Dissenters found themselves forced to plead ignorance and decry the radical ideas promoted by the handbill 20 It was becoming clear by 12 July that there would be trouble at the dinner On the morning of 14 July graffiti such as destruction to the Presbyterians and Church and King for ever were scrawled across the town 21 At this point Priestley s friends fearing for his safety dissuaded him from attending the dinner 22 14 July Edit Destruction of Old Meeting chapel from an 1879 engraving by Robert Dent About 90 hardy sympathisers of the French Revolution came to celebrate on 14 July the banquet was led by James Keir an Anglican industrialist who was a member of the Lunar Society of Birmingham When the guests arrived at the hotel at 2 or 3 p m they were greeted by 60 or 70 protesters who temporarily dispersed while yelling rather bizarrely and confusingly no popery 23 By the time the celebrants ended their dinner around 7 or 8 p m a crowd of hundreds had gathered The rioters who were recruited predominantly from the industrial artisans and labourers of Birmingham 24 threw stones at the departing guests and sacked the hotel 21 The crowd then moved on to the Quaker meeting house until someone yelled that the Quakers never trouble themselves with anything neither on one side nor the other and convinced them instead to attack the New Meeting chapel where Priestley presided as minister 25 The New and Old Meeting Houses two Dissenting chapels were set alight 26 The rioters proceeded to Priestley s home Fairhill at Sparkbrook Priestley barely had time to evacuate and he and his wife fled from Dissenting friend to friend during the riots Writing shortly after the event Priestley described the first part of the attack which he witnessed from a distance Joseph Priestley s home Fairhill at Sparkbrook Birmingham after its destruction etching by William Ellis after a drawing by P H Witton It being remarkably calm and clear moon light we could see to a considerable distance and being upon a rising ground we distinctly heard all that passed at the house every shout of the mob and almost every stroke of the instruments they had provided for breaking the doors and the furniture For they could not get any fire though one of them was heard to offer two guineas for a lighted candle my son whom we left behind us having taken the precaution to put out all the fires in the house and others of my friends got all the neighbours to do the same I afterwards heard that much pains was taken but without effect to get fire from my large electrical machine which stood in the library 27 His son William stayed behind with others to protect the family home but they were overcome and the property was eventually looted and razed to the ground Priestley s valuable library scientific laboratory and manuscripts were largely lost in the flames 28 15 16 and 17 July Edit William Russell s home Showell Green Sparkhill after its destruction Etching by William Ellis after a drawing by P H Witton The Earl of Aylesford attempted to stem the mounting violence on the night of 14 July but despite having the help of other magistrates he was unable to control the crowd On 15 July the mob liberated prisoners from the local gaol 21 Thomas Woodbridge the Keeper of the Prison deputised several hundred people to help him quell the mob but many of these joined in with the rioters themselves 29 The crowd destroyed John Ryland s home Baskerville House and drank the supplies of liquor which they found in the cellar When the newly appointed constables arrived on the scene the mob attacked and disarmed them One man was killed 30 The local magistrates and law enforcement such as it was did nothing further to restrain the mob and did not read the Riot Act until the military arrived on 17 July 31 Other rioters burned down banker John Taylor s home at Bordesley Park On 16 July the homes of Joseph Jukes John Coates John Hobson Thomas Hawkes and John Harwood the latter a blind Baptist minister were all ransacked or burned 30 The Baptist Meeting at Kings Heath another Dissenting chapel was also destroyed William Russell and William Hutton tried to defend their homes but to no avail the men they hired refused to fight the mob 30 Hutton later wrote a narrative of the events I was avoided as a pestilence the waves of sorrow rolled over me and beat me down with multiplied force every one came heavier than the last My children were distressed My wife through long affliction ready to quit my own arms for those of death and I myself reduced to the sad necessity of humbly begging a draught of water at a cottage In the morning of the 15th I was a rich man in the evening I was ruined 32 When the rioters arrived at John Taylor s other house at Moseley Moseley Hall they carefully moved all of the furniture and belongings of its current occupant the frail Dowager Lady Carhampton a relative of George III out of the house before they burned it they were specifically targeting those who disagreed with the king s policies and who in not conforming to the Church of England resisted state control 33 The homes of George Russell a Justice of the Peace Samuel Blyth one of the ministers of New Meeting Thomas Lee and a Mr Westley all came under attack on the 15th and 16th The manufacturer Quaker and member of the Lunar Society Samuel Galton only saved his own home by bribing the rioters with ale and money 34 New Meeting after its destruction Etching by William Ellis after a drawing by P H Witton By 2 p m on 16 July the rioters had left Birmingham and were heading towards Kings Norton and the Kingswood Chapel it was estimated that one group of the rioters totalled 250 to 300 people They burned Cox s farm at Warstock and looted and attacked the home of a Mr Taverner When they reached Kingswood Warwickshire they burned the Dissenting chapel and its manse By this time Birmingham had shut down no business was being conducted 34 Contemporary accounts record that the mob s last sustained assault was around 8 p m on 17 July About 30 hard core rioters attacked the home of William Withering an Anglican who attended the Lunar Society with Priestley and Keir But Withering aided by a group of hired men managed to fend them off 35 When the military finally arrived to restore order on 17 and 18 July most of the rioters had disbanded although there were rumours that mobs were destroying property in Alcester and Bromsgrove 36 All in all four Dissenting churches had been severely damaged or burned down and twenty seven homes had been attacked many looted and burned Having begun by attacking those who attended the Bastille celebration the Church and King mob had finished up by extending their targets to include Dissenters of all kinds as well as members of the Lunar Society 37 Aftermath and trials Edit James Gillray s cartoon mocking the 14 July dinner Priestley and other Dissenters blamed the government for the riots believing that William Pitt and his supporters had instigated them however it seems from the evidence that the riots were actually organised by local Birmingham officials Some of the rioters acted in a co ordinated fashion and seemed to be led by local officials during the attacks prompting accusations of premeditation Some Dissenters discovered that their homes were to be attacked several days before the rioters arrived leading them to believe that there was a prepared list of victims 38 The disciplined nucleus of rioters which numbered only thirty or so directed the mob and stayed sober throughout the three to four days of rioting Unlike the hundreds of others who joined in they could not be bribed to stop their destructions 39 Essayist William Hazlitt s first published work was a letter to the Shrewsbury Chronicle printed later in July 1791 condemning the Priestley riots Priestley had been one of then 13 year old Hazlitt s teachers 40 Title page from Priestley s Appeal 1791 which also contains reprints of contemporary news reports and letters concerning the riots If a concerted effort had been made by Birmingham s Anglican elite to attack the Dissenters it was more than likely the work of Benjamin Spencer a local minister Joseph Carles a Justice of the Peace and landowner and John Brooke 1755 1802 an attorney coroner and under sheriff 41 Although present at the riot s outbreak Carles and Spencer made no attempt to stop the rioters and Brooke seems to have led them to the New Meeting chapel Witnesses agreed that the magistrates promised the rioters protection so long as they restricted their attacks to the meeting houses and left persons and property alone 42 The magistrates also refused to arrest any of the rioters and released those that had been arrested 43 Instructed by the national government to prosecute the riot s instigators these local officials dragged their heels When finally forced to try the ringleaders they intimidated witnesses and made a mockery of the trial proceedings 44 Only seventeen of the fifty rioters who had been charged were ever brought to trial four were convicted of whom one was pardoned two were hanged and the fourth was transported to Botany Bay But Priestley and others believed that these men were found guilty not because they were rioters but because they were infamous characters in other respects 45 Although he had been forced to send troops to Birmingham to quell the disturbances King George III commented I cannot but feel better pleased that Priestley is the sufferer for the doctrines he and his party have instilled and that the people see them in their true light 46 The national government forced the local residents to pay restitution to those whose property had been damaged the total eventually amounted to 23 000 However the process took many years and most residents received much less than the value of their property 47 After the riots Birmingham was according to industrialist James Watt divided into two parties who hate one another mortally 1 Initially Priestley wanted to return and deliver a sermon on the Bible verse Father forgive them for they know not what they do but he was dissuaded by friends convinced that it was too dangerous 48 Instead he wrote his Appeal I was born an Englishman as well as any of you Though labouring under civil disabilities as a Dissenter I have long contributed my share to the support of government and supposed I had the protection of its constitution and laws for my inheritance But I have found myself greatly deceived and so may any of you if like me you should with or without cause be so unfortunate as to incur popular odium For then as you have seen in my case without any form of trial whatever without any intimation of your crime or of your danger your houses and all your property may be destroyed and you may not have the good fortune to escape with life as I have done What are the old French Lettres de Cachet or the horrors of the late demolished Bastile compared to this 49 The riots revealed that the Anglican gentry of Birmingham were not averse to using violence against Dissenters whom they viewed as potential revolutionaries They had no qualms either about raising a potentially uncontrollable mob 50 Many of those attacked left Birmingham as a result the town became noticeably more conservative after the riots 50 The remaining supporters of the French Revolution decided not to hold a dinner celebrating the storming of the Bastille the next year 50 See also Edit Christianity portalDerby Museum and Art GalleryNotes Edit a b Qtd in Rose 83 Rose 70 71 Schofield 263 64 Qtd in Rose 70 Rose 70 71 Sheps 50 Priestley 6 12 Hutton 158 62 Rose 71 Sheps 51 52 Schofield 269 77 Schofield 268 69 Rose 72 Schofield 277 83 Rose 72 Schofield 283 Sheps 47 50 Thompson E P The Making of the English Working Class New York Vintage 1966 73 75 Rose 70 Schofield 266 a b Butler Introduction 1 Butler Introduction 3 Butler Introduction 1 4 Qtd in Butler Introduction 1 An authentic account of the riots in Birmingham 1 Rose 72 Schofield 283 84 Rose 72 73 Sheps 55 57 Schofield 283 84 a b c Rose 73 Rose 73 Schofield 284 85 Maddison and Maddison 99 100 Rose 73 Schofield 284 85 Rose 83 Qtd in Rose 73 see also Schofield 284 85 Maddison and Maddison 100 The Priestley Riots British Library Retrieved 16 July 2019 Priestley 30 Rose 73 Schofield 284 85 Maddison and Maddison 101 02 Rose 73 74 a b c Rose 74 Rose 74 Schofield 287 Hutton 200 Rose 74 75 a b Rose 75 Rose 75 76 Rose 76 Rose 76 Sheps 46 Rose 78 79 Schofield 287 Rose 79 Through Nine Reigns 200 Years of The Shrewsbury Chronicle 1972 p 51 Bicentenary souvenir produced by the newspaper Rose 80 Schofield 285 Rose 81 see also Schofield 285 Rose 81 Schofield 285 86 Rose 82 Schofield 288 89 Qtd in Rose 82 Qtd in Gibbs F W Joseph Priestley Adventurer in Science and Champion of Truth London Thomas Nelson and Sons 1965 204 Rose 77 78 Schofield 289 Priestley viii ix a b c Rose 84 Bibliography Edit An Authentic Account of the Riots in Birmingham also the trials of the Rioters Birmingham n p 1791 Views of the Ruins of the Principal Houses Destroyed during the Riots at Birmingham London J Johnson 1791 Butler Marilyn ed Burke Paine Godwin and the Revolution Controversy Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 ISBN 0 521 28656 5 Hutton William A Narrative of the Riots in Birmingham July 1791 The Life of William Hutton London Printed for Baldwin Cradock and Joy Paternoster Row and Beilby and Knotts Birmingham 1816 Google Books Retrieved on 28 February 2008 Maddison R E S and Francis R Maddison Joseph Priestley and the Birmingham Riots Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 12 1 August 1956 98 113 Martineau Dennis Playing Detective The Priestley Riots of 1791 Birmingham Historian 12 13 1997 11 18 Priestley Joseph An Appeal to the Public on the Subject of the Riots in Birmingham Birmingham Printed by J Thompson 1791 On line Internet Archive Rose R B The Priestley Riots of 1791 Past and Present 18 1960 68 88 Schofield Robert E The Enlightened Joseph Priestley A Study of His Life and Work from 1773 to 1804 University Park Pennsylvania State University Press 2004 ISBN 0 271 02459 3 Sheps Arthur Public Perception of Joseph Priestley the Birmingham Dissenters and the Church and King Riots of 1791 Eighteenth Century Life 13 2 1989 46 64 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priestley Riots amp oldid 1113905650, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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