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Rye House Plot

The Rye House Plot of 1683 was a plan to assassinate King Charles II of England and his brother (and heir to the throne) James, Duke of York. The royal party went from Westminster to Newmarket to see horse races and were expected to make the return journey on 1 April 1683, but because there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March (which destroyed half the town), the races were cancelled, and the King and the Duke returned to London early. As a result, the planned attack never took place.

Rye House, Hertfordshire in a 1793 watercolour by J. M. W. Turner

Historians vary in their assessment of the degree to which details of the conspiracy were finalised. Whatever the state of the assassination plot, plans to mount a rebellion against the Stuart monarchy were being entertained by some opposition leaders in England. The government cracked down hard on those in a series of state trials, accompanied with repressive measures and widespread searches for arms. The Plot presaged, and may have hastened, the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion and Argyll's Rising.

Background edit

After the Restoration of the monarchy under Charles II in 1660 there was concern among some members of Parliament, former republicans and sections of the Protestant population of England that the King's relationship with France under Louis XIV and the other Catholic rulers of Europe was too close. Anti-Catholic sentiment, which associated Roman Catholicism with absolutism, was widespread, and focused particular attention on the succession to the English throne. While Charles was publicly Anglican, he and his brother were known to have Catholic sympathies. These suspicions were confirmed in 1673 when James was discovered to have converted to Roman Catholicism.

In 1681, triggered by the opposition-invented Popish Plot, the Exclusion Bill was introduced in the House of Commons, which would have excluded James from the succession. Charles outmanoeuvred his opponents and dissolved the Oxford Parliament. This left his opponents with no lawful method of preventing James's succession, and rumours of plots and conspiracies abounded. With the "country party" in disarray, Lord Melville, Lord Leven, and Lord Shaftesbury, leader of the opposition to Charles's rule, fled to Holland where Shaftesbury soon died. Many well-known members of Parliament and noblemen of the "country party" would soon be known as Whigs, a faction name that stuck.

The plot edit

 
Route from Newmarket to London in 1683, past Rye House.

Rye House, located north-east of Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, was a fortified mediaeval mansion surrounded by a moat.[1] The house was leased by a republican and Civil War veteran, Richard Rumbold. The plan was to conceal a force of men in the grounds of the house and ambush the King and the Duke as they passed by on their way back to London from the horse races at Newmarket. The "Rye House plotters", an extremist Whig group who are now named after this plot, allegedly adopted the plan out of a number of possibilities, having decided that it gave tactical advantages and could be carried out with a relatively small force operating with guns from good cover.[2]

The royal party were expected to make the journey on 1 April 1683, but there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March, which destroyed half of the town. The races were cancelled, and the King and the Duke returned to London early. As a result, the planned attack never took place.

 
Rye House in an engraving from 1777. The gate across the road signifies the toll payable for use of the route. There were miscellaneous buildings on the large site, to the right of the road. The crenellated brick gatehouse dates from the 15th century.

The Rye House and other plotters edit

The conspirators of this period were numerous, and the resort to some sort of armed resistance was widely debated from the early 1680s, on what was becoming the Whig side of the factional division of British politics. The form it should take was uncertain, and discussions of the seizing of control of cities other than London, such as Bristol, and a Scottish uprising, were in the air. The subsequent historiography of the Plot was largely partisan, and scholars are still clarifying who was closely involved in the planning of violent and revolutionary measures.

The West cabal edit

The assassination plot centred on a group that was convened in 1682–1683 by Robert West of the Middle Temple, a Green Ribbon Club member:[3] it is now often called the Rye House cabal. West had participated in one of the cases that wound up the Popish Plot allegations, that of the false witness Stephen College. Through that association he made contact with Aaron Smith and William Hone, both to be plotters though aside from the main group.[4] John Locke had arranged accommodation for West in Oxford at that time and had other associations in the group of revolutionary activists (Smith, John Ayloffe, Christopher Battiscombe and Israel Hayes),[5] of whom Ayloffe was certainly implicated in the Rye House Plot, leaving Locke vulnerable.

 
Account of Rye House, from the official history of the Plot by Thomas Sprat (2nd edition, 1685).

Rumbold was introduced to West's group by John Wildman, but when the plot was discovered, both had distanced themselves, Wildman by refusing to finance Rumbold in the purchase of arms and Rumbold by losing his earlier enthusiasm.[6]

The uprising plans edit

Cabal members such as Richard Nelthorpe favoured a rebellion rather than an assassination, aligning much of the West group's discussion with the plans of Algernon Sidney, in particular, and the more aristocratic country party members making up the so-called Monmouth cabal.[7] There were discussions in the group around Monmouth in September 1682 of an uprising, having participants in common with the group around West.[8] The "cabal" was later named as the "council of six", which took form after the Tory successes in summer 1682 in the struggle to control the City of London. A significant aspect was the intention to employ Archibald Campbell, 9th Earl of Argyll for a military rebellion in Scotland.[9] Smith in January 1683 was sent to contact supporters in Scotland, for the "six", with a view to summoning them to London; but apparently botched the mission by indiscretions.[10]

In fact West's contacts with the Monmouth cabal, and knowledge of their intentions, were in part quite indirect. Thomas Walcot and Robert Ferguson had accompanied Shaftesbury to the Netherlands in his self-imposed exile of November 1682. They then both returned to London and associated with West, who learned from Walcott of Shaftesbury's own plan for a general rebellion. Walcott went on to say that he would lead the attack on the royal guards, but he was another of the plotters who drew the line at assassination.[11] During the spring of 1683 there were further contacts between the Monmouth cabal and West's group about drafting a manifesto, through Sir Thomas Armstrong in particular, there being disagreements about whether a republican or monarchical constitution should result from revolutionary measures.[8] In May 1683 West and Walcott discussed with a larger group[12] the prospects for raising a force of several thousand men around London.[13]

Scottish and American connections edit

The interpretation of actual Whig intentions at this time is complicated by colonial schemes in America. West had a stake in East Jersey.[3] Shaftesbury was heavily involved in the Province of Carolina. In April 1683, some Scottish contacts of the Whigs arrived in London, as briefed by Smith, meeting Essex and Russell of the Monmouth cabal. They were under the impression that the matter concerned Carolina,[14] or they gave that out as a pretext for their presence.[15] They included Sir George Campbell of Cessnock, John Cochrane, and William Carstares.[16] The Earl of Argyll had left London for the Netherlands in August 1682 but kept in touch with Whig notables through couriers and ciphered correspondence. Two of them, William Spence (alias Butler) and Abraham Holmes, were arrested in June 1683.[17]

Informers and arrests edit

 
Late 17th-century composite engraving by John Savage, and comprising seven portraits of figures of the Plot all of whom were dead by 1685 (Sir Thomas Armstrong, the Earl of Argyll, the Earl of Essex, Henry Cornish, William Russell, Lord Russell, the Duke of Monmouth, and Algernon Sidney), with one of Edmund Berry Godfrey, whose unexplained death triggered the Popish Plot allegations against Catholics.
 
Title page of Thomas Sprat's official account of the Plot.

News of the plot leaked when Josiah Keeling gave information on it to Sir Leoline Jenkins,[18] and the plot was publicly discovered 12 June 1683. Keeling had contacted a courtier, who put him in touch with George Legge, 1st Baron Dartmouth, and Dartmouth had brought him to Jenkins, Secretary of State.[19] Keeling's testimony was used at the trials of Walcott, Hone, Sidney, and Charles Bateman; and it earned him a pardon.[18] It also started a lengthy process of incriminated persons confessing, in the hope of clemency. Using his brother, Keeling was able to get further direct evidence of conspiracy, and Jenkins brought in Rumsey and West, who told him what they knew, from 23 June;[20] West had volunteered information via Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester, on the 22nd. Over several days West explained the Rye House plot and his part in purchasing arms, supposed to be for America. He did little to incriminate the Monmouth group; his testimony was later used against Walcott and Sidney. West received a pardon in December 1684.[3]

Thomas Walcott was arrested on 8 July, and was the first conspirator to go to trial. A meeting of the plotters had been held at his house on 18 June; but rather than escape, he chose to write to Jenkins, with the offer of a full confession in return for a pardon.[7] Among the plotters, John Row from Bristol was considered particularly unreliable, and he had a direct connection to the Monmouth household to offer as information; a number of steps were taken to silence him, and his life was under threat more than once.[21] After the meeting Nelthorpe and Edward Norton called on William Russell, Lord Russell, with an appeal to take up arms immediately; when Russell was unwilling, Nelthorpe left the country.[22]

Walcott named Henry Care, publisher of the Weekly Pacquet which was a leading anti-Catholic and Whig paper of the time; Care ceased publishing the Pacquet on 13 July, and began co-operating with the court.[23] Among those later informing against Walcott was Zachary Bourne.[7] Bourne was a conspirator, arrested trying to leave the country with the nonconformist ministers Matthew Meade, for whom an arrest warrant was issued on 27 June, and Walter Cross;[24] he informed against another minister, Stephen Lobb, who was prepared to help recruiting for an uprising. On 6 July the arrest of Lobb was ordered, and he was picked up in August.[25]

A royal declaration of the heinous nature of the plot was issued on 27 July.[26] Many more were arrested. Although the principal conspirators were minor figures, and not directly concerned in the Monmouth cabal, the court party made no distinction between the groups. The ministers involved may have known Ferguson but not West; Meade had sheltered the Covenanter John Nisbet, and may well have known of the plans for a rebellion.[24] William Carstares, a Church of Scotland minister and intermediary with the Whig grandees, was found in Kent on 23 July.[27]

Trials edit

Executed edit

 
Sir Thomas Armstrong was among those hanged, drawn and quartered for high treason in connection with the plot
 
The Trial of William Lord Russell at the Old Bailey. George Hayter, 1825.

Sentenced to death but later pardoned edit

Imprisoned edit

Exiled/fled edit

Committed suicide edit

Tortured edit

Implicated edit

The final trial on the Rye House charges was that of Charles Bateman, in 1685. Witnesses against him were the conspirators Keeling, who had nothing specific to say, Thomas Lee, and Richard Goodenough. He was hanged, drawn and quartered.[30]

Having fled abroad the previous year, Sir William Waller moved to Bremen in 1683. While he was there he became a central figure in a group of the erstwhile conspirators who were in political exile. Lord Preston, the English ambassador at Paris, called him "the governor" and wrote that "They style Waller, by way of commendation, a second Cromwell". Waller would accompany William of Orange to England in 1688 but William chose to overlook him when his government was formed.[31]

Evaluations edit

Historians have suggested the story of the plot may have been largely manufactured by Charles or his supporters to allow the removal of most of his strongest political opponents. Richard Greaves cites as proof that there was a plot in 1683, the 1685 armed rebellions of the fugitive Earl of Argyll and Charles' Protestant illegitimate son, James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth.[32] Doreen Milne asserts that its importance lies less in what was actually plotted than in the public perception of it and the uses made of it by the government.[33]

Popular reaction to the Tories' reactive excesses, sometimes known as the "Stuart Revenge" though that term is contested, led to the discontent expressed decisively in the Glorious Revolution of 1688.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Thompson 1987, p. 87.
  2. ^ Marshall 2003, p. 291.
  3. ^ a b c Zook 2004a.
  4. ^ Krey 2004a.
  5. ^ Ashcraft 1986, p. 376.
  6. ^ Greaves 2004a; Clifton 2004
  7. ^ a b c Greaves 2004b.
  8. ^ a b Greaves 2004c.
  9. ^ The "council of six" comprised Monmouth, Sidney, Lord Russell, the Earl of Essex, Howard of Escrick, and John Hampden (Ward, Prothero & Leathes 1908).
  10. ^ Hopkins 2004.
  11. ^ Greaves 2004a.
  12. ^ Including Francis Goodenough, Richard Goodenough, James Holloway, Edward Norton, John Rumsey, and Nathaniel Wade.
  13. ^ Greaves 2004d.
  14. ^ Cooke 1836, p. 260.
  15. ^ Greaves 2004e.
  16. ^ Ashcraft 1986, p. 354.
  17. ^ Harris 2004; Zook 2004b
  18. ^ a b Krey 2004b.
  19. ^ Goodwin 1892, p. 300
  20. ^ Ward 1897, p. 483.
  21. ^ Greaves 2004f.
  22. ^ Greaves 2004g.
  23. ^ Schwoerer 2001, p. 226.
  24. ^ a b Greaves 2004h.
  25. ^ Greaves 2004i.
  26. ^ Milne 1951, p. 95.
  27. ^ Clarke 2004.
  28. ^ Schwoerer 1985, pp. 41–71.
  29. ^ Lord Macaulay's The History of England from the Accession of James the Second (1848). "1685: Elizabeth Gaunt, for refuge". Retrieved 30 March 2021. Burton ... delivered himself up to the government; and he gave information against Fernley and Elizabeth Gaunt. They were brought to trial. The villain whose life they had preserved had the heart and the forehead to appear as the principal witness against them. They were convicted. Fernley was sentenced to the gallows, Elizabeth Gaunt to the stake.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ Parry & Wright 2000, pp. 211–212.
  31. ^ Firth 1899, p. 135 cites: Hist. MSS. Comm. 7th Rep. pp. 296, 311, 347, 386.
  32. ^ Greaves 1992, p. [page needed].
  33. ^ Milne 1951, pp. 91–108.

References edit

  • Ashcraft, Richard (1986). Revolutionary Politics and Locke's Two Treatises of Government. Princeton University Press. pp. 376. ISBN 0-691-10205-8.
  • Clarke, Tristram (2004). "Carstares, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4777. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Clifton, Robin (2004). "Rumbold, Richard". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/24269. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Cooke, George Wingrove (1836). The History of Party: From the Rise of the Whig and Tory Factions, in the Reign of Charles II, to the Passing of the Reform Bill. Vol. 1. John Macrone. p. 260.
  • Firth, Charles Harding (1899). "Waller, William (d.1699)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 135.
  • Goodwin, Gordon (1892). "Keeling, Josiah" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 30. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 300.
  • Greaves, Richard L. (1992). Secrets of the Kingdom: British Radicals from the Popish Plot to the Revolution of 1688–89. Stanford University Press.
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004a). "Wildman, Sir John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/29405. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004b). "Walcott, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/67375. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004c). "Armstrong, Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/665. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004d). "Holloway, James". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13574. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004e). "Campbell, Sir George, of Cessnock". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/67392. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004f). "Row, John". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/67384. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004g). "Nelthorpe, Richard". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/19891. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004h). "Meade, Matthew". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/18466. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Greaves, Richard L. (2004i). "Lobb, Stephen". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/16878. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Harris, Tim (2004). "Spence, William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/67376. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Hopkins, Paul (2004). "Smith, Aaron". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25765. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Krey, Gary S. de (2004a). "College, Stephen". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/5906. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Krey, Gary S. de (2004b). "Keeling, Josiah". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15242. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Marshall, Alan (2003). Intelligence and Espionage in the Reign of Charles II, 1660–1685. Cambridge University Press. p. 291. ISBN 978-0-521-52127-7.
  • Milne, Doreen J. (1951). "The Results of the Rye House Plot and Their Influence upon the Revolution of 1688: The Alexander Prize Essay". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 5. 1: 91–108. doi:10.2307/3678564. JSTOR 3678564. S2CID 163191719.
  • Parry, <Leonard A.; Wright, Willard H. (2000). Some Famous Medical Trials. Beard Books. pp. 211–212. ISBN 978-1-58798-031-2.;
  • Schwoerer, Lois G. (1985). "William, Lord Russell: The Making of a Martyr, 1683–1983". Journal of British Studies. 24 (1): 41–71. doi:10.1086/385824. S2CID 154753214.
  • Schwoerer, Lois G. (2001). The Ingenious Mr. Henry Care, Restoration Publicist. p. 226.
  • Thompson, Michael Welman (1987). The Decline of the Castle. Cambridge University Press.
  • Ward, Sir Adolphus William (1897). "Russell, William (1639–1683)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 49. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 480–485.
  • Ward, Sir Adolphus William; Prothero, G.W.; Leathes, Stanley, eds. (1908). The Cambridge Modern History. Vol. V: The age of Louis XIV. Cambridge University Press Archive. p. 229. GGKEY:4G4XE5DASWR.
  • Zook, Melinda (2004a). "West, Robert". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/39674. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Zook, Melinda (2004b). "Holmes, Abraham". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/13588. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

Further reading edit

  • Milton, Philip (2000). "John Locke and the Rye House Plot". The Historical Journal. 43 (3): 647–668. doi:10.1017/S0018246X99001144. S2CID 159890243.
  • Ogg, David. (1936). England in the Reign of Charles II. Vol. 22. pp. 646–50/.
  • Salmon, J.H.M. (1954). "Algernon Sidney and the Rye House Plot". History Today. 4: 698–705.

house, plot, 1683, plan, assassinate, king, charles, england, brother, heir, throne, james, duke, york, royal, party, went, from, westminster, newmarket, horse, races, were, expected, make, return, journey, april, 1683, because, there, major, fire, newmarket, . The Rye House Plot of 1683 was a plan to assassinate King Charles II of England and his brother and heir to the throne James Duke of York The royal party went from Westminster to Newmarket to see horse races and were expected to make the return journey on 1 April 1683 but because there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March which destroyed half the town the races were cancelled and the King and the Duke returned to London early As a result the planned attack never took place Rye House Hertfordshire in a 1793 watercolour by J M W TurnerHistorians vary in their assessment of the degree to which details of the conspiracy were finalised Whatever the state of the assassination plot plans to mount a rebellion against the Stuart monarchy were being entertained by some opposition leaders in England The government cracked down hard on those in a series of state trials accompanied with repressive measures and widespread searches for arms The Plot presaged and may have hastened the 1685 Monmouth Rebellion and Argyll s Rising Contents 1 Background 2 The plot 3 The Rye House and other plotters 3 1 The West cabal 3 2 The uprising plans 3 3 Scottish and American connections 4 Informers and arrests 5 Trials 5 1 Executed 5 2 Sentenced to death but later pardoned 5 3 Imprisoned 5 4 Exiled fled 5 5 Committed suicide 5 6 Tortured 5 7 Implicated 6 Evaluations 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further readingBackground editAfter the Restoration of the monarchy under Charles II in 1660 there was concern among some members of Parliament former republicans and sections of the Protestant population of England that the King s relationship with France under Louis XIV and the other Catholic rulers of Europe was too close Anti Catholic sentiment which associated Roman Catholicism with absolutism was widespread and focused particular attention on the succession to the English throne While Charles was publicly Anglican he and his brother were known to have Catholic sympathies These suspicions were confirmed in 1673 when James was discovered to have converted to Roman Catholicism In 1681 triggered by the opposition invented Popish Plot the Exclusion Bill was introduced in the House of Commons which would have excluded James from the succession Charles outmanoeuvred his opponents and dissolved the Oxford Parliament This left his opponents with no lawful method of preventing James s succession and rumours of plots and conspiracies abounded With the country party in disarray Lord Melville Lord Leven and Lord Shaftesbury leader of the opposition to Charles s rule fled to Holland where Shaftesbury soon died Many well known members of Parliament and noblemen of the country party would soon be known as Whigs a faction name that stuck The plot edit nbsp Route from Newmarket to London in 1683 past Rye House Rye House located north east of Hoddesdon Hertfordshire was a fortified mediaeval mansion surrounded by a moat 1 The house was leased by a republican and Civil War veteran Richard Rumbold The plan was to conceal a force of men in the grounds of the house and ambush the King and the Duke as they passed by on their way back to London from the horse races at Newmarket The Rye House plotters an extremist Whig group who are now named after this plot allegedly adopted the plan out of a number of possibilities having decided that it gave tactical advantages and could be carried out with a relatively small force operating with guns from good cover 2 The royal party were expected to make the journey on 1 April 1683 but there was a major fire in Newmarket on 22 March which destroyed half of the town The races were cancelled and the King and the Duke returned to London early As a result the planned attack never took place nbsp Rye House in an engraving from 1777 The gate across the road signifies the toll payable for use of the route There were miscellaneous buildings on the large site to the right of the road The crenellated brick gatehouse dates from the 15th century The Rye House and other plotters editThe conspirators of this period were numerous and the resort to some sort of armed resistance was widely debated from the early 1680s on what was becoming the Whig side of the factional division of British politics The form it should take was uncertain and discussions of the seizing of control of cities other than London such as Bristol and a Scottish uprising were in the air The subsequent historiography of the Plot was largely partisan and scholars are still clarifying who was closely involved in the planning of violent and revolutionary measures The West cabal edit The assassination plot centred on a group that was convened in 1682 1683 by Robert West of the Middle Temple a Green Ribbon Club member 3 it is now often called the Rye House cabal West had participated in one of the cases that wound up the Popish Plot allegations that of the false witness Stephen College Through that association he made contact with Aaron Smith and William Hone both to be plotters though aside from the main group 4 John Locke had arranged accommodation for West in Oxford at that time and had other associations in the group of revolutionary activists Smith John Ayloffe Christopher Battiscombe and Israel Hayes 5 of whom Ayloffe was certainly implicated in the Rye House Plot leaving Locke vulnerable nbsp Account of Rye House from the official history of the Plot by Thomas Sprat 2nd edition 1685 Rumbold was introduced to West s group by John Wildman but when the plot was discovered both had distanced themselves Wildman by refusing to finance Rumbold in the purchase of arms and Rumbold by losing his earlier enthusiasm 6 The uprising plans edit Cabal members such as Richard Nelthorpe favoured a rebellion rather than an assassination aligning much of the West group s discussion with the plans of Algernon Sidney in particular and the more aristocratic country party members making up the so called Monmouth cabal 7 There were discussions in the group around Monmouth in September 1682 of an uprising having participants in common with the group around West 8 The cabal was later named as the council of six which took form after the Tory successes in summer 1682 in the struggle to control the City of London A significant aspect was the intention to employ Archibald Campbell 9th Earl of Argyll for a military rebellion in Scotland 9 Smith in January 1683 was sent to contact supporters in Scotland for the six with a view to summoning them to London but apparently botched the mission by indiscretions 10 In fact West s contacts with the Monmouth cabal and knowledge of their intentions were in part quite indirect Thomas Walcot and Robert Ferguson had accompanied Shaftesbury to the Netherlands in his self imposed exile of November 1682 They then both returned to London and associated with West who learned from Walcott of Shaftesbury s own plan for a general rebellion Walcott went on to say that he would lead the attack on the royal guards but he was another of the plotters who drew the line at assassination 11 During the spring of 1683 there were further contacts between the Monmouth cabal and West s group about drafting a manifesto through Sir Thomas Armstrong in particular there being disagreements about whether a republican or monarchical constitution should result from revolutionary measures 8 In May 1683 West and Walcott discussed with a larger group 12 the prospects for raising a force of several thousand men around London 13 Scottish and American connections edit The interpretation of actual Whig intentions at this time is complicated by colonial schemes in America West had a stake in East Jersey 3 Shaftesbury was heavily involved in the Province of Carolina In April 1683 some Scottish contacts of the Whigs arrived in London as briefed by Smith meeting Essex and Russell of the Monmouth cabal They were under the impression that the matter concerned Carolina 14 or they gave that out as a pretext for their presence 15 They included Sir George Campbell of Cessnock John Cochrane and William Carstares 16 The Earl of Argyll had left London for the Netherlands in August 1682 but kept in touch with Whig notables through couriers and ciphered correspondence Two of them William Spence alias Butler and Abraham Holmes were arrested in June 1683 17 Informers and arrests edit nbsp Late 17th century composite engraving by John Savage and comprising seven portraits of figures of the Plot all of whom were dead by 1685 Sir Thomas Armstrong the Earl of Argyll the Earl of Essex Henry Cornish William Russell Lord Russell the Duke of Monmouth and Algernon Sidney with one of Edmund Berry Godfrey whose unexplained death triggered the Popish Plot allegations against Catholics nbsp Title page of Thomas Sprat s official account of the Plot News of the plot leaked when Josiah Keeling gave information on it to Sir Leoline Jenkins 18 and the plot was publicly discovered 12 June 1683 Keeling had contacted a courtier who put him in touch with George Legge 1st Baron Dartmouth and Dartmouth had brought him to Jenkins Secretary of State 19 Keeling s testimony was used at the trials of Walcott Hone Sidney and Charles Bateman and it earned him a pardon 18 It also started a lengthy process of incriminated persons confessing in the hope of clemency Using his brother Keeling was able to get further direct evidence of conspiracy and Jenkins brought in Rumsey and West who told him what they knew from 23 June 20 West had volunteered information via Laurence Hyde 1st Earl of Rochester on the 22nd Over several days West explained the Rye House plot and his part in purchasing arms supposed to be for America He did little to incriminate the Monmouth group his testimony was later used against Walcott and Sidney West received a pardon in December 1684 3 Thomas Walcott was arrested on 8 July and was the first conspirator to go to trial A meeting of the plotters had been held at his house on 18 June but rather than escape he chose to write to Jenkins with the offer of a full confession in return for a pardon 7 Among the plotters John Row from Bristol was considered particularly unreliable and he had a direct connection to the Monmouth household to offer as information a number of steps were taken to silence him and his life was under threat more than once 21 After the meeting Nelthorpe and Edward Norton called on William Russell Lord Russell with an appeal to take up arms immediately when Russell was unwilling Nelthorpe left the country 22 Walcott named Henry Care publisher of the Weekly Pacquet which was a leading anti Catholic and Whig paper of the time Care ceased publishing the Pacquet on 13 July and began co operating with the court 23 Among those later informing against Walcott was Zachary Bourne 7 Bourne was a conspirator arrested trying to leave the country with the nonconformist ministers Matthew Meade for whom an arrest warrant was issued on 27 June and Walter Cross 24 he informed against another minister Stephen Lobb who was prepared to help recruiting for an uprising On 6 July the arrest of Lobb was ordered and he was picked up in August 25 A royal declaration of the heinous nature of the plot was issued on 27 July 26 Many more were arrested Although the principal conspirators were minor figures and not directly concerned in the Monmouth cabal the court party made no distinction between the groups The ministers involved may have known Ferguson but not West Meade had sheltered the Covenanter John Nisbet and may well have known of the plans for a rebellion 24 William Carstares a Church of Scotland minister and intermediary with the Whig grandees was found in Kent on 23 July 27 Trials editExecuted edit nbsp Sir Thomas Armstrong was among those hanged drawn and quartered for high treason in connection with the plot nbsp The Trial of William Lord Russell at the Old Bailey George Hayter 1825 Sir Thomas Armstrong Member of Parliament for Stafford Hanged drawn and quartered John Ayloffe Hanged drawn and quartered for subsequent participation in Argyll s Rising Henry Cornish Sheriff of the City of London Hanged drawn and quartered Elizabeth Gaunt Burned at the stake James Holloway Hanged drawn and quartered Baillie of Jerviswood Hanged Richard Nelthorpe Hanged John Rouse Hanged drawn and quartered Richard Rumbold Hanged drawn and quartered for subsequent participation in Argyll s Rising William Russell Lord Russell Member of Parliament for Bedfordshire Beheaded remembered as a Whig martyr 28 Algernon Sidney former Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports Beheaded Thomas Walcott Hanged drawn and quarteredSentenced to death but later pardoned edit Charles Gerard 1st Earl of Macclesfield Charles Gerard Viscount BrandonImprisoned edit Sir Samuel Barnardiston 1st Baronet Also fined 6 000 Henry Booth 1st Earl of Warrington Paul Foley Member of Parliament for Hereford Thomas Grey 2nd Earl of Stamford John Hampden Member of Parliament for Wendover Also fined 40 000 William Howard 3rd Baron Howard of Escrick was arrested and turned informer at the trial of William Russell Lord Russell July 1683 He gave accounts of meetings at John Hampden s and Russell s houses which mainly led to Russell s conviction His evidence similarly ruined Sidney Matthew Mead Aaron Smith Sir John Trenchard Member of Parliament for Taunton Sir John WildmanExiled fled edit Sir John Cochrane Fled to the Dutch Republic Robert Ferguson Fled to the Dutch Republic Ford Grey 3rd Baron Grey of Werke Escaped from the Tower to France Patrick Hume 1st Earl of Marchmont Fled to the Dutch Republic John Locke Fled to the Dutch Republic John Lovelace 3rd Baron Lovelace Fled to the Dutch Republic David Melville 3rd Earl of Leven Fled to the Dutch Republic George Melville 1st Earl of Melville Fled to the Dutch Republic Edward Norton Fled to the Dutch Republic Nathaniel Wade Fled to Dutch RepublicCommitted suicide edit Arthur Capell 1st Earl of Essex Cut his own throat in the Tower of London while awaiting trialTortured edit William CarstaresImplicated edit Archibald Campbell 9th Earl of Argyll Beheaded after Argyll s Rising in 1685 although on an earlier 1681 treason charge James Dalrymple 1st Viscount of Stair Edward Hungerford Member of Parliament for Chippenham James Scott 1st Duke of Monmouth Charles illegitimate son Obliged to retire to the Dutch Republic later beheaded for leading the Monmouth Rebellion in 1685 John Owen James Burton present when the assassination was discussed by his accomplices he escaped punishment by accusing Elizabeth Gaunt a charitable Baptist matron and John Fernley a poor barber in Whitechapel whose only crimes were helping his escape 29 John Rumsey arrested on suspicion of complicity saved himself by accusing alderman Henry CornishThe final trial on the Rye House charges was that of Charles Bateman in 1685 Witnesses against him were the conspirators Keeling who had nothing specific to say Thomas Lee and Richard Goodenough He was hanged drawn and quartered 30 Having fled abroad the previous year Sir William Waller moved to Bremen in 1683 While he was there he became a central figure in a group of the erstwhile conspirators who were in political exile Lord Preston the English ambassador at Paris called him the governor and wrote that They style Waller by way of commendation a second Cromwell Waller would accompany William of Orange to England in 1688 but William chose to overlook him when his government was formed 31 Evaluations editHistorians have suggested the story of the plot may have been largely manufactured by Charles or his supporters to allow the removal of most of his strongest political opponents Richard Greaves cites as proof that there was a plot in 1683 the 1685 armed rebellions of the fugitive Earl of Argyll and Charles Protestant illegitimate son James Scott 1st Duke of Monmouth 32 Doreen Milne asserts that its importance lies less in what was actually plotted than in the public perception of it and the uses made of it by the government 33 Popular reaction to the Tories reactive excesses sometimes known as the Stuart Revenge though that term is contested led to the discontent expressed decisively in the Glorious Revolution of 1688 Notes edit Thompson 1987 p 87 Marshall 2003 p 291 a b c Zook 2004a Krey 2004a Ashcraft 1986 p 376 Greaves 2004a Clifton 2004 a b c Greaves 2004b a b Greaves 2004c The council of six comprised Monmouth Sidney Lord Russell the Earl of Essex Howard of Escrick and John Hampden Ward Prothero amp Leathes 1908 Hopkins 2004 Greaves 2004a Including Francis Goodenough Richard Goodenough James Holloway Edward Norton John Rumsey and Nathaniel Wade Greaves 2004d Cooke 1836 p 260 Greaves 2004e Ashcraft 1986 p 354 Harris 2004 Zook 2004b a b Krey 2004b Goodwin 1892 p 300 Ward 1897 p 483 Greaves 2004f Greaves 2004g Schwoerer 2001 p 226 a b Greaves 2004h Greaves 2004i Milne 1951 p 95 Clarke 2004 Schwoerer 1985 pp 41 71 Lord Macaulay s The History of England from the Accession of James the Second 1848 1685 Elizabeth Gaunt for refuge Retrieved 30 March 2021 Burton delivered himself up to the government and he gave information against Fernley and Elizabeth Gaunt They were brought to trial The villain whose life they had preserved had the heart and the forehead to appear as the principal witness against them They were convicted Fernley was sentenced to the gallows Elizabeth Gaunt to the stake a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Parry amp Wright 2000 pp 211 212 Firth 1899 p 135 cites Hist MSS Comm 7th Rep pp 296 311 347 386 Greaves 1992 p page needed Milne 1951 pp 91 108 References editAshcraft Richard 1986 Revolutionary Politics and Locke s Two Treatises of Government Princeton University Press pp 376 ISBN 0 691 10205 8 Clarke Tristram 2004 Carstares William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 4777 Subscription or UK public library membership required Clifton Robin 2004 Rumbold Richard Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 24269 Subscription or UK public library membership required Cooke George Wingrove 1836 The History of Party From the Rise of the Whig and Tory Factions in the Reign of Charles II to the Passing of the Reform Bill Vol 1 John Macrone p 260 Firth Charles Harding 1899 Waller William d 1699 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 59 London Smith Elder amp Co p 135 Goodwin Gordon 1892 Keeling Josiah In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 30 London Smith Elder amp Co p 300 Greaves Richard L 1992 Secrets of the Kingdom British Radicals from the Popish Plot to the Revolution of 1688 89 Stanford University Press Greaves Richard L 2004a Wildman Sir John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 29405 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004b Walcott Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 67375 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004c Armstrong Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 665 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004d Holloway James Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13574 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004e Campbell Sir George of Cessnock Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 67392 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004f Row John Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 67384 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004g Nelthorpe Richard Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 19891 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004h Meade Matthew Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 18466 Subscription or UK public library membership required Greaves Richard L 2004i Lobb Stephen Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 16878 Subscription or UK public library membership required Harris Tim 2004 Spence William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 67376 Subscription or UK public library membership required Hopkins Paul 2004 Smith Aaron Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25765 Subscription or UK public library membership required Krey Gary S de 2004a College Stephen Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 5906 Subscription or UK public library membership required Krey Gary S de 2004b Keeling Josiah Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 15242 Subscription or UK public library membership required Marshall Alan 2003 Intelligence and Espionage in the Reign of Charles II 1660 1685 Cambridge University Press p 291 ISBN 978 0 521 52127 7 Milne Doreen J 1951 The Results of the Rye House Plot and Their Influence upon the Revolution of 1688 The Alexander Prize Essay Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 5 1 91 108 doi 10 2307 3678564 JSTOR 3678564 S2CID 163191719 Parry lt Leonard A Wright Willard H 2000 Some Famous Medical Trials Beard Books pp 211 212 ISBN 978 1 58798 031 2 Schwoerer Lois G 1985 William Lord Russell The Making of a Martyr 1683 1983 Journal of British Studies 24 1 41 71 doi 10 1086 385824 S2CID 154753214 Schwoerer Lois G 2001 The Ingenious Mr Henry Care Restoration Publicist p 226 Thompson Michael Welman 1987 The Decline of the Castle Cambridge University Press Ward Sir Adolphus William 1897 Russell William 1639 1683 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 49 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 480 485 Ward Sir Adolphus William Prothero G W Leathes Stanley eds 1908 The Cambridge Modern History Vol V The age of Louis XIV Cambridge University Press Archive p 229 GGKEY 4G4XE5DASWR Zook Melinda 2004a West Robert Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 39674 Subscription or UK public library membership required Zook Melinda 2004b Holmes Abraham Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 13588 Subscription or UK public library membership required Further reading edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rye House Plot Milton Philip 2000 John Locke and the Rye House Plot The Historical Journal 43 3 647 668 doi 10 1017 S0018246X99001144 S2CID 159890243 Ogg David 1936 England in the Reign of Charles II Vol 22 pp 646 50 Salmon J H M 1954 Algernon Sidney and the Rye House Plot History Today 4 698 705 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rye House Plot amp oldid 1210041375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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