Romantic Tensions Timeline

This is where we'll post our timeline entries. 

Timeline

Chronological table

Displaying 1 - 27 of 27
Date Event Created by Associated Places
1745 to The end of the month Spring 1797

Olaudah Equiano

Olaudah Equiano

Olaudah Equiano (1745-March 31, 1797)  known better as, Gustavus Vassa was a talented writer and abolitionist who won his freedom from slavery in 1766. In his freedom he was a strong activist for the anti-slave trading movement in the 1780's. Olaudah is known for writing his memoir, The interesting Narrative  of the life of Olaudah Equiano. In his memoir, Olaudah recounts the horrors that him and others endured through the acts of slavery and also regarded his stances on the Abolition movement. His memoir was so popular in his lifetime that the book became published in multiple languages across the globe.

On his account, Olaudah was born in what is now modern day Nigeria. He came from a influencial family within the community, his father being regarded as a political leader. However, that did not stop Olauah and his sisters kidnapping at 11 years old.  From there he was sold from various traders until he made the voyage on a European slave ship across the Atlantic. It was here that the young boy of 11 was introduced the horrors of human inlsavement. In his memoir he said he felt as if he were, "in another world." From there he was sold to the Colony of Virginia to a man known as Michael Henry Pascal, a lietenant to the Royal Navy. It was by him that Olaudah coined the name, "Gustavus Vassa".  Once arriving in London, Equiano traveled with Pascal, learning the craft of the mariner's trade and than later went to school in London.  With an education and a mind for trade, Equiano gained a great asset. However, it did not stop Pascal from selling him. After being traded to one person to another, Olaudah lastly ended with a man named Robert King who saw Equiano's skill and who later let him purchase his own freedom. 

From there, Olaudah used his knowledge to build a new life for himself. In London, he became aqainted with members that were apart of the Abolitionist movement that was beginning to take form. Wanting to take part, and with good political connections, Olaudah began to campaign for the end of the slave trade. in 1786 he became a prominent member of the 'Son's of Africa" a group compossed of 12 African Americans to help put an end to slavery. It was here that he began to write the beginning of his memoir. The books popularity spread wide and also earned him some profit.  

Equiano died in 1797, leaving behind his English wife and two daughters. He died before Britain took any allegation against human enlavement. However, Literary Scholars have praised Olaudah's memoir and have regarded it as an influencial piece that sparked Britian to begin conversation on human rights and to rethink the relationship of human trafficking. In 2007 the fist adition of The Interesting Narrative of the Life of  Olaudah Equinao  was inlcuded in The Westminister Abbey with a special service to commemorate Britian's Abolition to the Slave Trade Act. 

Works Cited

British Library. https;//www.bl.uk./collection-items/the-life-of-olaudah-equiano

"Olaudah Equiano" Slavery and Rememberance. https://slaveryandrememberance.org/people/person/?id=PP003

Equiano Olaudah. The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano. W. Durell. (1789). 

Jesse Dean
The end of the month Nov 1757 to The middle of the month Aug 1827

William Blake's Lifetime

For this build, I will be focusing on William Blake’s life, and the writing of Songs of Innocence and Experience. Blake was born on November 28, 1757, and lived a life of moderate means. He was an artistic child, and at the age of 10 he was enrolled in a drawing school. He then, at age 14, became apprentice to an engraver, James Basire. Once Blake was 21 years old, he left his apprenticeship and enrolled in the Royal Academy, making a living as an engraver. Blake soon met Catherine Boucher, and they were married on August 18, 1782. Catherine could not read or write, and was actually unable to sign her own name. Blake taught Catherine the skills of a reader and writer, and she actually became a very skilled draftsman, and she helped William with his designs. Their marriage was successful, but they did not have any children.

Thereafter, John Flaxman, a friend of Blake’s, introduced him to Harriet Mathew, (who was the wife of the Reverend Henry Mathew). Henry Mathew’s drawing room was often used as a place for artists and musicians to meet. This is where Blake first began writing and singing his poems. Through the help of John Flaxman and Harriet Mathew, in 1783 few of Blake’s poems were published, titled Poetical Sketches. Only about 50 of these copies were printed.

In 1784, Blake’s father died, and he used his inheritance to set up a shop and become a print seller, but the shop was unfortunately unsuccessful. In addition to this poor luck, Blake’s brother, Robert, was becoming increasingly ill. Blake cared for him, unfortunately watching his health deteriorate. After Robert passed away, Blake explained that he felt his brother’s sprit was always with him. Robert was actually the person who taught Blake how to illustrate his poems using copper plates and liquid that could be then transferred onto paper. He illustrated the plates for Songs of Innocence in 1789.

Songs of Innocence was originally published in 1789, then in 1794 a combined version of Songs of Innocence and Experience was published. In Alexander Gilchrist’s Life of William Blake (1863) told his readers that “neither wrote nor drew for the many, hardly for work’y-day men at all, rather for children and angels; himself ‘a divine child,’ whose playthings were sun, moon, and stars, the heavens and the earth.” However, Blake believed his writings able to be understood by the majority. Although, this is hard to gauge now because of his old English writing, but I would generally agree with that. While most children probably would not have understood the deep meanings behind his writing, they would understand the essential narrative. I think of this in the same light as rewatching a favorite childhood movie. The narrative of the movie was understood in childhood, but all of the underlying themes come to light as a matured adult. Especially in “The Lamb” and “The Tyger,” I can imagine “The Lamb” to be a bedtime story read to children, though they don’t really know the meaning behind Songs of Innocence and Experience.

Works Cited

Poetry Foundation. (n.d.). William Blake. Poetry Foundation. Retrieved March 28, 2022, from https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/william-blake

“Divine Images: The Life and Work of William Blake.” Publishers Weekly, vol. 267, no. 39, Sept. 2020, p. 55. EBSCOhost, https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=edsglr&AN=edsglr.A638637499&site=eds-live.

Wright, Thomas. The Life of William Blake. B. Franklin, 1969. EBSCOhost, https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=cat07712a&AN=flc.140348&site=eds-live.

 

Maddie Heaps
9 Jul 1764 to 7 Feb 1823

Ann Radcliffe

Little is known about Ann Radcliffe's life. This fact surprises me as she was instrumental in pioneering the gothic genre and influenced countless authors after her, yet it is suggested by history that records and papers and journals that may have helped biographers to decipher her life were lost very soon after she passed away. The information that we do have about her and her books is laid out beautifully in Deborah D. Rogers's book, Ann Radcliffe: A Bio-Bibliography. Ann was born in London, England in the middle of the year 1764 and was the only child of a haberdasher and tradesman, William Ward, and a pious and loving woman, Ann Oates Ward. The family was connected, familialy and otherwise, to several influential people and it is suggested (though remains ambiguous as to its certainty) that one of these influential people (her uncle) could have contributed to her education when her family moved to Bath. Ann was married to William Radcliffe on 15 January 1787 and the couple moved to England. Their marriage was by all accounts happy. They had no children, and in Rogers's book she suggests that this may have been according to Ann and William's own will when she writes, "Although childbirth dominated women's culture, the biological dangers of pregnancy in an era before the introduction of antiseptic procedures and the medicalization of childbirth may have persuaded many women who were serious about writing to remain childless, if not single" (Rogers, 4). Details such as this are not entirely relevant to Ann's accomplishments as writer, but it highlights the fact that little is known about her and the reasons behind much of what happened in her life.

Even in the midst of Radcliffe's fame as an authoress, she lived a retired, reclusive life, and after the death of her parents in 1799 and 1781, she did not publish any more books. Some accounts attribute this fact to the criticism that she and her books received, but as we will see in a moment, there was plenty of praise for her writing and she was widely celebrated as were her novels. Others (especially during and shortly after Radcliffe's time) spread rumors that she was mad. Due to insufficient biographical sources, we cannot know for sure, but we know that she remained fairly recluse until she succumbed to both stomach and respiratory problems and passed away 7 February, 1823.

As for her literary works, they were received in various ways. It appears that the her first novel, The Castles of Athlin and Dunbayne, was widely thought to have been written by a man and was received with quite mixed reactions ranging from "imaginative and commendable" to "inaccurate, insipid, and disgustful". This, however, did not deter Ann. In fact she often took criticism to heart and incorporated changed to her novels. By the time she wrote and published The Italian (possibly her most famous novel), the reviews were much more widespread and much more generally positive. Her works have inspired many of the great writers of her generation as well as those that followed.

Catherine Hunt
1 Jan 1767 to 22 May 1849

Maria Edgeworth

Maria Edgeworth (January 1, 1767 – May 22, 1849) was a writer and education during the Romantic Period. Born in England to an upper-class family, she spent most of her life living in Irleand which certainly contributed to much of her fiction as she was a witness to the oppression and lack of rights to education that so many Irish citizens were subject to. An author of nonfiction and fiction, she interested herself in education and wrote extensively on the subject. Some of those works included Letters for Literary Ladies (1794), The Parent’s Assistant (1796), and Practical Education (1798).

Her writings were somewhat controversial and were often criticized by her contemporaries for various reasons. Some thought she was too radical to suggest equitable education of women and members of the lower classes while others claimed that she was not radical enough, advocating for the equality in education despite gender and class but not advocating equal place in society for either. She did not seem to advocate against such things, but she did write according to the social and political limitations of the era rather than embracing an ideal that had not yet been reached.

One of her works about education entitled, Practical Education, was among her more contested writings. Anne Chandler writes on this topic in an article entitled, “Maria Edgeworth on Citizenship: Rousseau, Darwin, and Feminist Pessimism in Practical Education”. In it, Chandler states, “Practical Education…works in two directions. In volume one, which mainly addresses methods of early childhood education, Edgeworth's interleaving of Rousseau with Darwin is crucial to what her treatise offers parents: the opportunity to raise children of either sex who are immune to class rivalry, unafraid to speak their minds in public, and capable of ethical deliberation. In volume two, however, which more actively compares the curricular needs of young children and teenagers, that civic ideal is harder to proclaim without qualification” (Chandler 96).

It appears that Maria Edgeworth advocated these reforms while still understanding and speaking to the constraints of the time. She collects the thoughts of the Enlightenment thinkers before her (namely, Darwin and Rousseau) and combines them, elaborates upon them, and tweaks them into something new. Her steps toward progress were, perhaps, smaller than women such as Mary Woolstencroft would have approved of. However, her works played a major role in forming the understanding of educational systems and early childhood development and education that we have today.

In spite of the criticism her ideas received, Maria Edgeworth was an incredibly prolific writer and contributed greatly to both education and literature. Some sources claim that Jane Austen was a fan of her writing and this can certainly be seen in Jane Austen’s novels. Edgeworth’s ideas connect very cleanly with themes of class, gender, and education that we read of in Mansfield Park as well as other Austen Novels.

Work Cited

Chandler, Anne. “Maria Edgeworth on Citizenship: Rousseau, Darwin, and Feminist Pessimism in Practical Education.” Tulsa Studies in Women’s Literature, vol. 35, no. 1, 2016, pp. 93–122. EBSCOhost, search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=mzh&AN=2016872976&site=eds-live.

 

Catherine Hunt
circa. The start of the month Summer 1772

William Blake Becomes an Apprentice as an Engraver

Most of William Blake’s poetry was printed by the man himself. William Blake apprenticed under Jame Basire, “...one of the most successful engravers of all time.” (Bently 1) During this time Blake had mastered the traditional form of engraved printing. He became extremely proficient in printing and gained a reputation in the community for it. However, after his apprenticeship Blake began to experiment with different types of reproduction techniques. After taking advice and working with techniques of his colleagues he created a revised version of engraving that was later known as “Illuminated Printing”. Blakes new method of printing was a reversal of the traditional way of printing. In a method known as “Mirror Printing”, which is when the words would be written backwards so that way when they were pressed upon a page, it would come out in the right direction. Mirror Printing was a method taught to almost all apprentices at the time. However, Blake’s reinvention of it was masterful and allowed for faster printing that costs less. Blake also found work in color printing. He would be able to use other colors aside from black. Colors like blue, green, brown, and red. It is also said that Blake was able to create a multi-color printing method that, to this day, is still being studied by historians as to how he did it. The amazing part about William Blake’s mastery of printing was that he used it to print his own work. This was often an issue of concern for writers in the time. Although someone could be literate enough to write poetry and articles, they would be in need of a way to get that information printed. William Blake wrote knowing that his writing would be printed in his own shop. He would immediately be able to publish his own works after they had been written. The significance of Blake being able to have such easy access to printing was that he was able to write in confidence of when the text would be available. Even to this day, when a text is written to be printed on paper, authors are not always aware of when their text will be available to the public. There is no saying if Blake’s understanding of printing led to his desire for writing, however it can be assumed that it made a major impact on ability to publish and print once he decided to write. As previously stated, Blake was able to use his new techniques to attract readers with his form of engraving. His words would stand out in sharper lines and with the use of color, he could add details that would not be common in most books. In the modern day we remember William Blake for his powerful poetry and his endless discourses on nature's relationship with the human soul. But Blake’s contributions to engraving and printing could be argued to have a similar impact to his image as a writer. His mastery of the printing press led to the publication of texts that would influence readers to this day. Bentley, G. E. “William Blake’s Techniques of Engraving and Printing.” Studies in Bibliography, vol. 34, Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, 1981, pp. 241–53, http://www.jstor.org/stable/40371744.

Anthony Stephens
The middle of the month Autumn 1775

On August 23, 1775, the British government issued the Proclamation of Rebellion

The Proclamation of Rebellion was issued by King George the III in response to news about the battle of bunker hill at the start of the American Revolution. The Americans lost the battle but they caused enourmous casualties to the British Army and proved that they were ready to fight if needed. Durring this time and after the battle the Continental Congress tried to send a peace agreement to the King saying they didn't want war but the Act of Rebellion was already given by the time it arrived and was later refused by the King. The Act was a proclomation brought before the Parlement by the king stating he wanted to use any force needed to end the rebellion using the army and if needed call on other allied countries to help in the efforts. This also included the use of a blockade around New York and a cese of trade with the colonies.This ended up being a cucial point in the war as it showed that King George would not try to resolve the conflict peacefuly pushing the colonists to stop trying to repair relations and to instead seek their own independence. Any British citicins found to be in corespondence or in favor of the colonies rebellion would be punished. This Act was a extremely critical peice of legestlature in the history not just of Britain but of the world because it helped to start the American Revolution.

Emily Reeder
circa. The end of the month Autumn 1781 to circa. 1807

The Zong

The jettison of diseased slaves from the Zong

In August of 1781, captain Luke Collingwood left Africa with more than four hundred slaves with the intent to sell them in Jamaca. Accustomed as we are to massive cruise ships that can carry, on average, three thousand people, this number does not seem particularly high. However, for the time, it was customary for the average slave ship to cary a capacity of 1.75 slaves per ton. The Zong carried a ratio of 4.0 persons per ton (2). This practice caused multiple problems, not the least of which could potentially include a shortage of water or food. 

With this in mind, a scarcity of water was claimed to be the primary reason for which, upon approaching the island of Jamaica, more than 130 african slaves were jettisoned over board. A rough fifty of these included women and children (2). “Overcrowding, malnutrition, accidents, and disease had already killed several mariners and approximately 62 Africans” (2). 

As explains Anita Rupprecht in her essay, “A Very Uncommon Case” she summarizes simply that, “it is the narrative fact that Luke Collingwood ordered the jettison of 132 living Africans, and that he did so in order to make an insurance claim” (1). The reality of the matter is, whatever claims the slave traders may have made in regards to limited water supplies, it was primarily the “sickness and mortality” (1) that came from the manor of transporting the slaves that caused the massacre of the Africans. In an attempt to recuperate potential losses in profit if the disease was allowed to persist and spread aboard the ship, the Gregson slave-trading sydicate that owned the ship filed for insurance based on the claims the crew members gave. 

Though the lower courts upheld the case given in favor of the ship owners, in a later appeal, it was revealed that the Zong was not, in fact, short of water at the time of the jettison of the slaves. In said appeal, the claims of the insurers were upheld, thereby ruling against the claims of the syndicates (2). 

The abolitionists of the time viewed the Zong case as a rallying point and Granville Sharp, a prominent abolitionist, had “no patience with formal arguments about insurance law. The ‘transaction’ in question was about life, not property” (1), and could not “ignore the case of Zong. It almost too perfectly, and gruesomely, dramatised the horrific consequences of legal perversion in the name of profit: maritime insurance, that perfectly prudent commercial ‘safety net’, also sanctioned calculated mass murder” (1). He, in effect, advocates for the humanization of the slaves and tries to put his readers in a place to sympathize with them, exploring in his writings the dehumanization and disempowering of the African during the middle passage (the voyage between Africa and the Americas) (1). For Sharp, “the line of argument was uncomplicated. The legal definition of slave humanity legitimised murder” (1).

The tragedies of the Zong did not end with Sharp. His work was built upon by other abolitionists - more notibally by William Wilberforce who referenced the Zong in speeches to the House. The case of the Zong, though sad in it’s reality, marks a huge stepping stone in the process in the abolition of slavery. In 1788, seven years after the diseased slaves were jettisoned into the ocean, the Slave Trade Act was passed, which amongst other things as the first law passed regulating slave trade, limited the number of slaves that could be carried per ship. Further laws were added in 1791 that “prohibited insurance companies from reimbursing ship owners when enslaved people were murdered by being thrown overboard” (2). All culminating in the eventual abolition of slavery in 1807.

Works Cited

(1) Anita Rupprecht (2007) ‘A Very Uncommon Case’: Representations of the Zong and the British Campaign to Abolish the Slave Trade, The Journal of Legal History, 28:3, 329-346, DOI: 10.1080/01440360701698494

(2)“The Zong Massacre Begins.” African American Registry, 29 Nov. 2021, https://aaregistry.org/story/the-zong-massacre-episode-begins/.

Rachael Jack
14 Jul 1789

Storming the Bastille

The storming of the Bastille in Paris is symbolically marked as the start to the French Revolution and it provided motivation and power to the revolutionaries. Despite the Bastille housing hundreds of prisoners they weren’t the reason that rebellious Parisians attacked it. The Bastille was known as the prison that housed political inmates so anyone that would be in there would be sympathetic to the revolution and against the Crown. The storming of the Bastille took place because the French rebels wanted to get their hands on the 250 barrels of gunpowder that had been transferred there a couple days previously. The rebels wanted to arm themselves and this was the way that they did it. 

The attack on the Bastille took place on July 14, 1789. At this point in time things were looking bad for the people of France, food was scarce and the people felt the government was only looking out for those in higher classes. Many of the Parisons focused their anger on the Crown and the government over the Bastille. The Bastille was viewed as a symbol of King Louis XVI’s absolute authority over the people. Because of this symbol a mob of Parisians gathered together on the afternoon of July 14, 1789 and stormed the Bastille. There were 82 soldiers who had been injured in battle and could no longer fight on the field, along with 32 grenadiers (soldiers armed with grenades) guarding the Bastille. They were led by Bernard-Rene de Launay. The mob of Parisians numbered closer to one thousand and they easily overthrew the soldiers and demanded the exchange of guns and ammunition. There were two drawbridges that protected the Bastille from the angry mob of people. Commander de Launay tried to reason with them but the people were angry and scared and didn’t want to do anything that helped the government. Launay offered to surrender and lower the second drawbridge as long as the crowd would let him and his soldiers leave the Bastille. The Parisians refused and demanded that he lower the drawbridge. De Launay realized that his soldiers wouldn’t be able to defend the Bastille against the angry mob and so he lowered the drawbridge. The mob was then able to swarm the courtyard and free seven inmates from their cells. The crowd also took De Launay and dragged him through the streets of Paris. They then beat and beheaded him. His head was stuck on a pike and paraded through the streets. Many of De Launay’s guards were killed along with him but with a few of them managing to escape the revolutionaries. 

To many of the lower class Parisians the Bastille was seen as the tyranny of the absolute monarchy in France. It was seen as King Louis XVI looking down upon the people’s suffering and smiling at what he saw. The Fall of the Bastille was the ‘spark’ that ignited the revolution fire in the Parisians. It also symbolized the role that the citizens would have to play in the revolution and freeing the people of a terrible monarchy. This was such a historic day for the commoners of France yet in King Louis XVI’s journal on July 14, 1789 he only wrote one word, “nothing” in which he was referencing his day of hunting. He either had no clue about the uprising or he didn’t care about what his people were going through. The storming of the Bastille was a representation of a victory for a nation that was fighting for its freedom from a careless and selfish monarch. After the storming of the Bastille the French Revolution began because the people of France realized they could take matters into their own hands instead of waiting for their ruler to come to their aid and provide for them.

The Bastille is no longer standing today. It was destroyed after the revolution and scattered throughout Paris. It was demolished into individual stones that were taken away as souvenirs by those who survived the revolution or they were used in constructing the new roads of Paris. There is a memorial on the site of the Bastille that helps the people of Paris the events that led to their freedom.

Lüsebrink, Hans-Jürgen, et al. The Bastille: A History of a Symbol of Despotism and Freedom. Duke University Press, 1997, https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1220k1w.
Tessa Christensen
5 Oct 1789

Women's March on Versailles

Following the storming of the Bastille in July of 1789, rural unrest, poor harvests, food shortages, and rising prices of grain contributed to rising tensions all throughout France. There was the constant fear of “famine pacts” (Doyle, 21), where many people believed there were others possibly manipulating the grain supply in order to kill off numbers of the population. Violent riots were instigated with mere rumors of food shortage, and France sat on edge, waiting to see how their monarch would react. These riots, ideas for protests, and marches led to the events of October 5, 1789, otherwise known as the Women’s March on Versailles. 

After the mutiny of members of the French Guards after the events at the Bastille, the royal family was left with relatively less protection. The Garde du Corps (Body Guard) had taken over the protective duties in their absence, but this did not bode well with King Louis XVII in regard to the looming reality of the Revolution. He summoned the Flanders Regiment to Versailles, and in honor of their arrival, a banquet was thrown. On October 1, 1789, the event commenced, producing the exact provocation needed for uproarious protests. The guests and militia at the banquet enjoyed drinks, food, and “rowdy demonstrations of loyalty to the throne” (Hibbert, 96). News of the event made its way to the people in the capitol who were struggling to afford food at all, and an idea for a march was contrived.

On the morning of the 5th of October, women attending the central markets, and also in what was known as Faubourg Saint-Antoine, were met with more of the same trying circumstances. Bread, a main staple in people’s diet, had become virtually impossible to obtain, where “the bread queues had been growing ever longer” and the people demanded, “a reduction in the price” (Hibbert, 96). Thousands of Parisian women took to the streets in protest, led by “poissardes, fishwives, working women, prostitutes, and market stall-holders.” The march began with “shouting for bread, forcing the bell-ringer of the Sainte-Marguerite church to ring the tocsin and calling upon the citizens to take up arms to force the Government to help them” (Hibbert, 97). The crowd of women then, “dragging cannon and brandishing whatever makeshift weapons they could lay hands-on,” (Doyle, 121) set out to bring their grievances to King Louis XVII’s doorstep.

The significance of this event has echoed throughout history as one of the first examples of uprisings led primarily by women, and a relatively successful one. These women were in demand of more than just a day's worth of grain, but the assurance that fair prices and abundance of food would once again be a possibility in France. They marched for the purpose of bringing back these necessities, but also to bring King Louis back to Paris; making sure that the monarchy was on more common ground with their subjects. The women of Paris accomplished this. The Women's March on Versailles had an impact that resembled that of Bastille, “the people, by solidarity and by their action, had paralysed the plots of the Court and dealt a heavy blow at the old régime” (Kropotkin, 157). These market women were “treated as heroines” (Stephens, 358) and government after government of Paris treasured them as history makers and fighters, not just for the Revolution, but for early women’s rights.

Sources:

Doyle, William. “The Principles of 1789 and the Reform of France.” The Oxford History of the French Revolution, 2nd ed., Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1989, pp. 112–135. 

Hibbert, Christopher. “The Day of the Market-Women.” The Days of the French Revolution, Morrow Quill Paperbacks, New York, 1981, pp. 85–106. 

Stephens, H. Morse. “Women During the Terror.” A History of the French Revolution, C. Scribner's Sons, New York, 1911, pp. 357–358. 

Kropotkin, Petr Alekseevich, and N. F. Dryhurst. “October 5 and 6, 1789.” The Great French Revolution 1789 to 1793, Kessinger, Whitefish, M.T., 2005, pp. 146–157.

Photo source: Bibliothèque nationale de France

Gentry White
18 Dec 1792 to The end of the month Nov 1794

Thomas Paine's Libel Case and Its Effects

Afraid the revolutionist ideas from France would pour into England, the English government of William Pitt sought for ways to fight against the radical groups in England that began to gain more of an audience and voice. These radical movements in the 1790s found exceptional popularity through authors that wrote and printed anti-government books that encouraged men to seek liberty. These anti-government works of literature were able to reach a larger number of people having sold well across the country. 

Notably, one of these radical authors was Thomas Paine. Most known for his successful work of his anti-government literature titled Common Sense that he wrote while living in America, Thomas Paine, on his return back to England, began publishing more works, specifically Rights of Men. Rights of Men was in response to Edmund Burke's Reflections from 1790 which was a political pamphlet that advised Englishmen to be cautious of the French Revolution and the radical ideals that started the revolution. Paine's Rights of Men was especially targeted by English government officials as it was seen as a pamphlet that was "a foundation stone upon which .. the monumental collection of pamphlets and speeches were in favour [while Burks's pamphlets were in opposition] to the French revolution and political reform of Britain" (Macleod 693). Eventually, Thomas Paine was put on trial December 18, 1792 by William Pitt for seditious libel against the English government. At the time Seditious Libel was condemnable under common English law, seen under law as a criminal act. The reason for this trail was because of Paine's 'negative' reponse in Rights of Men to Burke's Reflections pamphlet which had praised the British government. In a journal article titled "British Attitudes Toward The French Revolution," Macleod reiterates another historians argument that "Bruke had written his tract for an elite readership and had never intended [Reflections] to be a blueprint for a popular movement" (693), but it did exactly that. Soon, many english men and women were particiapating in conversations of the French revolution and seeking for a change in the British government. 

When it came to Thomas Paine’s tiral, Paine's lawyer, Thomas Erskine, was recorded to have said that radical theories had the right to the freedom of speech and print because it could improve government if it was published in “good faith.” On page 21 of the Eighteenth century collections website that contains the full court synopsis, Erskine stated in behalf of Paine that "The Freedom of the Press of England, Gentlemen, consists in this, that a man must not address to individuals, upon the spur of some occasion, opinions that shall provoke them to sedi∣tion, to insurrection, and tumult; but he may freely address to the universal reason of a whole nation, prin∣ciples of Government, congenial with, or hostile to, the form of Government under which he lives." Members of the radical movement thrived off of the words that Thoms Erskine had said in court and treated him like a hero, printing his words onto fliers and using them as a way to push their liberties and radical ideas further. 

Thomas Paine however, was still found guilty. In the end, the government felt that Thomas Paine’s case justified them in being able to further suppress other published works from people supporting, or leading, the radical movement. Thus, orchestrated by William Pitt, the 1794 Trials of Treason were organized and other radical members were brought to the stand. Among the 1794 Trials of Treason, Thomas Hardy, John Horne Tooke and Thomas Holcraft, were the highest charged cases with several crimes, but the most serious charges they had were seditious libel and treason. 

Thomas Erskine, Thomas Paine’s lawyer in his libel trial two years prior, played a major part within these trials; oftentimes also being the spokesperson for these men from October  to November 1794 when the trials took place. On these three separate accounts, the men were trialed in front of a jury and a judge and were acquitted each time. Had they been found guilty, they would have been hanged and quartered by the law that was in place at the time. Loyalists to the government believed that these men were let free because the law of death for treason was outdated, but the trials served their purpose - the men stepped down out of the limelight and the movement came to a halt until a new reform several years later would occur. 

These libel court cases demonstrate the liberties and powers of the people at that time, and the liberty of free speech to which they were willing to fight for. While the movement fluctuated after these court cases, there were still radicals that fought for these freedoms until they were able to receive them without oppression.

Works Cited:

MACLEOD, EMMA VINCENT. “BRITISH ATTITUDES TO THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.” The Historical Journal, vol. 50, no. 3, 2007, pp. 689–709. Crossref, https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x07006310.

“The Trial of Thomas Paine: For a Libel, Contained in The Second Part of Rights of Man, before Lord Kenyon, and a Special Jury, at Guildhall, December 18. With the Speeches of the Attorney General and Mr. Erskine, at Large.” ECCO TCP, quod.lib.umich.edu/e/ecco/004809446.0001.000/1:2?rgn=div1;view=fulltext. Accessed 27 Apr. 2022.

Jaycee Ehlers
1793 to 1793

The Charter Act of 1793

The East India Company was incorporated by royal charter on December 31, 1600. A royal charter is issued by the Monarch of the time and creates an independent legal identity for something. It also details the entity’s goals and rights. The East India Company was created to help expand British trade in the spice trade in East India. The company later expanded to trade in silk, tea, and opium. The company continued to expand over time with the government sharing a portion of their profits. By 1793, it was a hugely important entity that had a monopoly on most of the imports and exports of India for Britain and also played a huge part in ruling over India for the British government.

The Charter Act of 1793 renewed the charter of the East India Company for another twenty years with a few but important tweeks to the rules. Most importantly it modified who could import and export from India. Previously, the East India Company had a complete monopoly on all trade with India (the occasional expectation was made for high ranking officials). The Charter Act of 1793 changed this in two ways. First, it stated that any subject of Britain could export to India. Second, it stated that any of the East India Company’s civil servants could import on the company’s ships. The Act also helped to further establish the East India Company's political rule over India by expanding the role of the Governor-General (the head of the British government in India). 

The East India Company already had a huge foothold in trade with India making up one third of Britain's trade with India. The Charter Act of 1793 had an immediate impact on trade with imports to India increasing dramatically. It continued to increase steadily until trade was disrupted by the Napoleonic Wars. This act also increased the political power of the British government through the East India Trading company in India.

Orientalism had a huge impact on British Romantic literature. Britain's foothold in India through the East India Company allowed for products and people to more easily move to and from India and influence perceptions of the East. The Charter Act of 1793 increased the presence of the British in India as well as commerce with India. This helped expand the influence of perceptions of India throughout the rest of the Romantic era. The Act also passed very easily highlighting how important the East India Company was to the British government.

 

Citations: 

Datta, K. K. “India’s Trade with Europe and America in the Eighteenth Century.” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient, vol. 2, no. 3, Brill, 1959, pp. 313–23, https://doi.org/10.2307/3596192.

“East India Company.” Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., https://www.britannica.com/topic/East-India-Company.

“Royal Charters.” Privy Council, 15 Feb. 2022, https://privycouncil.independent.gov.uk/royal-charters/.

Mallik, S. N. “Local Self-Government in India.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, vol. 145, [Sage Publications, Inc., American Academy of Political and Social Science], 1929, pp. 36–44, http://www.jstor.org/stable/1016884.

Lucy Savage
The end of the month Spring 1793 to The start of the month Summer 1784

The Reign of Terror

The Terror

            The French revolution started in the year seventeen eighty-nine. From the start it quickly be came radical and violent with the overthrowing of King Louis the XVI and his execution by guotie. Later on the reign of Terror began with war between France and the rest of the European powers along with strong divisions in the National Convention that caused the already radicalized France to become even more violent in its ideas towards anyone and everyone that was opposed to the revolution, or showed any sympathy to the old king and his family. In June of seventeen ninety-three a group of radicals called the Jacobins took control of the National Convention and instituted many new and radical measures into the government including the creation of a new calendar and the eradication of the Christian church. Driven by fears of war, uprisings, rebellions, and a need to keep people in line the Jacobins began the ten-month long Reign of Terror. Anyone who was found or thought to be against the Jacobins ideals, or their practices would be arrested tried for treason and executed using a guotiene a form of execution made popular during the time by making everyone, whether they be noble or pheasant, die the same way. These measures along with parts of the ever-growing military given orders to hunt down any groups trying to stage rebellions or nobles who escaped the revolution it quickly became one of the bloodiest eras in history up to that point with an official number of over seventeen thousand people tried and executed with an unknown number having died in prison or without a trial being given to them. These practices continued into the beginning of the reign of Napoleon after he proclaimed himself Emperor of France.

            This form of governing by using fear to stay in control of a people was first proposed by the theorist Niccio Machiavelli in the fifteen hundred stating that in order for a ruler to remain in control he has to “Always act in his best interest.” Napolean and the rest of the Jacobins adopted this theory of ruling deciding that it would be best to be feared by the people so that no one would ever dare to try and start a rebellion against them like they had done against the king. The Reign of Terror eventually ended when one of the main perpetrators, Robespierre, the head of the Committee of Public Safety until he too was executed in July of 1794. His execution brought a change to the ideas of the French people where they revolted against the terrible bloodshed that the Reign of Terror had created in the country. This point of history was a dangerous example of how an idea that had started out with good intentions of giving people equal rights free of a monarchy became corrupted by power hungry rulers, and fear, which led to tragic consequences for a people and country.

Emily Reeder
The start of the month Summer 1793 to The end of the month Summer 1794

The Reign of Terror

The Reign of Terror was an extremely violent period during the French Revolution. It began shortly after the French Revolution began. The Reign of Terror started on 5 September 1793 and ended on 28 July 1794. Some historians believe that the Reign of Terror started in March or June when the Revolutionary Tribunal was created. Some historians believe the beginning of the Reign of Terror was even earlier when the September Massacres occurred in 1792. Others believe the beginning of the Reign of Terror to be on July 1789, when the first killing of the revolution happened. 

The Reign of Terror began when the National Convention (the government) put into effect terror measures to subdue the opposition and punish insufficient support for the new regime and the French Revolution efforts. During the Reign of Terror, thousands of people were imprisoned and executed under the leadership of Maximilien Robespierre. Maximilien Robespierre had also executed the Queen during the Reign of Terror. The guillotine was the bloody emblem of the fear tactics used during the Reign of Terror, as it was the object used when executing the opposition of the revolution. "The guillotine, particularly the one in Paris's Place de la Révolution, served as the bloody emblem of the fear tactics that began to manifest themselves first in the formation of the Committee of Public Safety (6 April 1793) and subsequently in the implementation of the Law of Suspects (17 September 1793)." (Piccitto) The end of the Reign of Terror was marked by the overthrowing of Maximilien Robespierre. He was executed with the guillotine, the symbol of his bloody leadership. 

The term "terror" was used to describe the period before the fall of Maximilien Robespierre. It was a term that was first introduced by the Thermidorian Reaction, which took over and received power after the death of Maximilien Robespierre. They used the word to discredit and justify the execution of Robespierre. Some historians believe that the bold and ruthless actions that took place during the Reign of Terror continued after the death of Robespierre and have coined the period as the White Terror. "By then, 16,594 official death sentences had been dispensed throughout France since June 1793, of which 2,639 were in Paris alone; and an additional 10,000 died in prison, without trial, or under both of these circumstances." (Linton)

The French Revolution was viewed with optimism and horror by the British. Many political figures and romanticists supported the revolution, like Edmund Burke. However, "Burke's rejection of the bloodshed in France was later published in his Reflections on the Revolution in France, which sparked a fierce debate during the 1790s regarding the outcome of the Reign of Terror across the channel. Though many political groups continued to take inspiration from the actions of the sans-culottes, others like Burke predicted chaos and turmoil should Britain follow a similar revolutionary route. Such responses resulted in strict measures imposed by Prime Minister William Pitt in the 1790s, designed to stem any criticism of the government and to curb the activities of political radicals." (Paris by Express on Saturday Morning)

The Reign of Terror was an important period for the Romantics, as it inspired many literary and artistic artworks that were created during the Romantic Period. As the Reign of Terror was influenced by the Enlightenment Period, the Romantic, in turn, rejected much of the Enlightenment ideals. 

Work Cited

“Paris. (By Express on Saturday Evening.)'.” British Library, https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/newspaper-account-of-the-outbreak-of-....

“Reign of Terror.” BRANCH, https://www.branchcollective.org/?ps_event=reign-of-terror.

Gabriella White
1801

The Enclosure Act of 1801

The Enclosure Act of 1801 was one of many Enclosure Acts. According to the UK Parliament, “between 1604 and 1914 over 5,200 Enclosure Bills were enacted by Parliament which related to just over a fifth of the total area of England, amounting to some 6.8 million acres.” To understand why the Enclosure Act of 1801 was different than the others, the term “enclosing land” must be understood. Back before the 12th century, there were open fields where anyone can farm. However, after the 12th century, holdings were consolidated into individually owned or rented fields. This means that people were essentially setting up yards, or boundaries, to increase farming or renting for their own gain as a landowner. The issue with this is that it displaces all those people using the common land. Many of these people were the lower class with no other options, leading to more and more citizens without jobs.

Before the Enclosure Act of 1801, landowners were essentially meeting up together to draw these boundaries. The issue with that is that many landowners were thinking about their own gain with the land they were enclosing and not of the rural workers who survived of the common lands. In consequence, poor farm workers were forced to leave and find a new way of income. In 1801, Parliament passed the act so that 3/4ths of the town had to agree on the land they were enclosing. While this may have helped some towns where there were more farmers on common land than not or citizens who did not want to displace the poor farmers, enclosing was still very popular and many more Enclosure Acts were passed after 1801. This is due to the fact that even though the Enclosure Acts were removing workers from their income, it was growing agricultural production and inventing new practices in agricultural production. Efficiency increased as well as the availability which made the upper class believe that this consequence was a sacrifice that had to be made for the rest of the country.

The Enclosure Acts and their displacement of poor farmers is important to note because of what it did to society in the Industrial Revolution. It is widely understood that the Industrial Revolution caused poor laborers out of the countryside and into urban factories to work for extremely small wages with poor working conditions. The Enclosure Acts were part of this drive out of the country into the urban city. After losing income and food to feed themselves, laborers were left with little options. One option, they could work as tenant farmers as a servant for large landowners. Another option, to move to the crowded cities where the wages were being lowered as more desperate workers came in and where jobs were becoming limited fast. Many chose the second option. This does not mean that the Enclosure Acts directly caused all the negatives aspects of the Industrial Revolution; however, it was a major contributing factor as more and more peasants became displaced while landowners continued the competitive race to gain land for farming and renting.

Works Cited

McElroy, Wendy. “The Enclosure Acts and the Industrial Revolution.” The Future of Freedom Foundation. 2012. https://www.fff.org/explore-freedom/article/enclosure-acts-industrial-re...

Sharman, Frank. “An introduction to the enclosure acts.” The Journal of Legal History. 1989. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/01440368908530953

“Enclosing the Land” UK Parliament, https://www.parliament.uk/about/living-heritage/transformingsociety/town...

 

Katherine Woffinden
The middle of the month Jun 1812 to The middle of the month Feb 1815

The War of 1812

The War of 1812 was a particularly interesting war. For the United States, it has always been represented as “part of a glorious ‘second war for independence’” and a  “story about the ‘birth of American freedom’ and the founding of the Union” (Foreman). The US has traditionally viewed it as an important moment in its quest for establishing itself as a nation. But the question remains of how Britain views the war.

General British history of the war has typically “consisted of short chapters squeezed between the grand sweeping narratives of the Napoleonic Wars. The justification for this begins with the numbers: Roughly 20,000 on all sides died fighting the War of 1812 compared with over 3.5 million in the Napoleonic” (Foreman). This is a very important comparison to make. Britain was in the middle of dealing with major events on a lot of sides and can thus be forgiven for seeming to think that the war was inconsequential to them. But this isn’t, in actuality, the case. Reports show that the feelings of Britain “ranged from disbelief and betrayal at the beginning of the war to outright fury and resentment at the end” (Foreman). They viewed the events of the beginning of the war, such as the fears that Britain was impressing American citizens into their navy as weak pretenses for the opening of aggressions in Canada in order to secure control of that area. It also convinced many British citizens that Americans only spoke in empty terms of things like freedom and civil rights but were really “blackguards and hypocrites” (Foreman).

Opinions soured when it appeared like Americans were more ready to accept promises from Napoleon, but not accept promises of the release of their wrongly impressed sailors. Speaking about America, an English captain of the time stated “I am really ashamed of the narrow, selfish light in which [the Americans] have regarded the last struggle for liberty and morality in Europe” (Foreman). The British reacted to the United States’ declaration of war by sending ships over to support Canadian fighting. They also instituted a rather successful blockade of New York, Philadelphia, the Chesapeake and the Delaware. They regarded these moves as “payback for America’s unfair behavior” (Foreman). The blockade proved to reduce American trade by large amounts, and eventual war-weariness permeated both sides, so they reached for a treaty in Ghent, Belgium.

The treaty was not a gain nor a loss for either side. The Americans did not cede any territory, nor did Britain. The victory of the treaty was in simply ending the conflict. Both sides had gained pride and glory in various battles of the time, with Britain gaining them against Napoleon, and the U.S. gaining them in the small victories they had in New Orleans and other areas. The main effects of the war are remembered differently in both nations: “For America, 1812 became the war in which it had finally gained its independence. For Britain, 1812 became the skirmish it had contained, while winning the real war against its greatest nemesis, Napoleon” (Foreman).

Works Cited

Foreman, Amanda. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/british-view-war-1812-quite-diffe...

Spencer Lauder
28 Jan 1813 to The end of the month Jan 1813

Pride and Prejudice Published

Pride and Prejudice Book Cover

Katrina Sorensen
For my final COVE build, I thought it would be interesting to look more into Pride and Prejudice and Austens effect on the romantic period and the regency period. Pride and Prejudice was written in 1796 and published in 1813 and to this day it is considered to be Austen’s most popular novel. When it was initially published in 1796, it was originally called First Impressions but was changed when it was officially published. Pride and Prejudice sits right at the beginning of the regency period which is mostly identifiable by the development of arts and sciences that were prominent in that time period. This period and the growth of industrialism and other historical changes that were happening made an impact on Austen's writings and shows in Pride and Prejudice with the military presence and the examination of gender roles. Literature and the printing of literature was also expanding in this time which made Austen even more successful.

One of the more prominent ideas in Pride and Prejudice is the continued discussion of social rank throughout the novel. Mr. Darcy specifically shows the regency period idea of a “perfect gentleman.” Not only does he have good social standing and good social rank, but he has some of the other qualities looked for in the romantic/ regency era. Throughout the story, Mr. Darcy chooses to pursue Elizabeth even though Miss Bingley is trying to attract Darcy’s interest. Mr. Darcy recognizes this and chooses Elizabeth anyway because he finds her intelligence more attractive than the ability to be socially “accomplished” which until this time was very important for women.

While Pride and Prejudice is an amazing story that had a great impact on the regency period and culture, it is also important to discuss Austen as a person and her relationships with other writers at the time. A lot of Austen's characters, specifically her male heroes are often considered to be very similar to the byronic heros of Lord Byron. In an article discussing the byronic in Austen’s writings, it says “Although Austen and Byron are often considered to be irreconcilable opposites, in this article I argue that Austen engaged closely with Byron's poetry and drew inspiration from some of his most popular poems” (Wootton 1). The article continues later talking about the many ways that Byron and Austen differ especially in their writing styles and personal lives. However, the author does want to point out that, “Austen was responding to the same cultural stimuli as Byron; more specifically, that Austen was responding to the same cultural stimuli as Byron; more specifically, Austen’s familiarity with a number of the Byronic hero’s literary predecessors, from Milton’s Satan and Shakespeare’s Hamlet to Richardson’s Lovelace, suggests an indirect connection through shared sources” (Wootton 2). Both Byron and Austen would have been influenced by the same literary culture that would have influenced them to write their own literature. While it is very possible that Austen would have been influenced by some of Byron’s poems, this time period was full of a lot of change that was happening because of the culture created from the “shared sources.”

Jane Austen and the writing of Pride and Prejudice mark a very important part of the romantic period and the regency era. Her writings have been and will continue to be a section of literature loved by all who love romance and feminist ideas that are presented in her novels.

 

Works Cited:
Wootton, Sarah. “The Byronic in Jane Austen’s ‘Persuasion’ and ‘Pride and Prejudice.’” The Modern Language Review, vol. 102, no. 1, 2007, pp. 26–39, https://doi.org/10.2307/20467150. Accessed 25 Apr. 2022.

Katrina Furr
5 Apr 1815 to 23 Apr 1815

The 1815 Eruption of Mount Tambora

Mount Tambora is a stratovolcano in Indonesia, and although it is still active today this post will focus on its infamous eruption in 1815. When Mount Tambora blew up in 1815 it "blasted 12 cubic miles of gases, dust and rock into the atmosphere and onto the island of Sumbawa and the surrounding area" (Evans) and became one of the largest eruptions in the previous 10,000 years. Approximately 10,000 civilians died immediately following the eruption and 90,000 in total. This eruption resulted in the following year being coined "The Year Without Summer", although it lasted for a 3 year period. The climate more thatn 7,000 miles away from the eruption was heavily affected. The debris from the eruption changed the weather to be much colder than it normally was, diseases started surfacing, and people generally felt off mentally, simply from everything changing so drastically. People during this time period relied heavily on the success of their crops, most were living from harvest to harvest. When crops would fail many people would become desparate for any kind of food. The 3-6 degree Farenheit change in weather and changes in precipitation effected many individuals mentally making this time period a popular time for Gothic stories to emerge.

Mary Shelley is one of the authors during this time period that reflected real life events into her writing, specifically in her novel Frankenstein. She started writing the novel in 1816, the "Year Without Summer" and the first edition was eventually published in 1818 when the weather went back to normal. The connection between the weather she was experiencing and the setting of her novel is no coincidence. When she was abroad in Europe, Shelley wrote many letters to her half-sister, Fanny Imlay, about the peculiar weather they were experiencing. She recorded in one of her letters that "'One night we enjoyed a finer storm than I had ever before beheld. The lake was lit up—the pines on Jura made visible, and all the scene illuminated for an instant, when a pitchy blackness succeeded, and the thunder came in frightful bursts over our heads amid the blackness'" (Wood). Scenes of gloomy and dark weather in Frankenstein echo the weather she was experiencing herself. 

Since people at this time were experiencing hunger at a level many will never understand, there was a slew of beggars and those experiencing poverty. When Shelley describes the creature in Frankenstein to appear almost zombie-like. Shelley forms the creature in her novel to "[bear] the mark of the famished and diseased European population by which she was surrounded in 1816-18" (Wood). She most likely saw so many people who were shuffling around different towns in search for food, or warmth. These people were also perceived as a disruption to the civilized part of society. Just as these suffering people were seen as wanderers and potential threats to those who were civilized, so was the creature. Shelley's ability to take her experiences of the aftermath of the eruption and turn it into such a creative novel is incredible to me. She was recording evidence of history without even realizing it. 

Works Cited

Evans, Robert. “Blast from the Past.” Smithsonian.com, Smithsonian Institution, 1 July 2002, https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/blast-from-the-past-65102374/.

Wood, Gillen D’Arcy. “1816, The Year without a Summer.” BRANCH: Britain, Representation and Nineteenth-Century History. Ed. Dino Franco Felluga. Extension of Romanticism and Victorianism on the Net. Web. 30 March 2022. 

 

Olivia Leavitt
14 Apr 1816 to 16 Apr 1816

Bussa's Rebellion

By the 18th century, Britain was actively participating in the transatlantic slave trade, which was the leading cause of economic success among the colonies. “The introduction of a massive slave society into the English world required philosophical and legal justifications. Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, plantation owners, merchants, scholars, and politicians alike cobbled together a regime built on control and exploitation that was bolstered by philosophical notions of difference and protected by a legal superstructure. The English borrowed from a set of preexisting discourses to defend their engagement with the slave trade and forced labor. These included arguments from natural philosophy, which emphasized cultural, physiological, and even moral differences, and the Christian scriptures, from which contemporaries extrapolated that black Africans were descended from Ham and thus condemned to be slaves. “ (Kelly) 

Bussa's Rebellion was the first of three massive slave rebellions in the British West Indies, and it was the largest of the three. It took place in Barbados in April of 1816. The rebellion was carefully planned and organized by the senior enslaved who worked on several plantations, but it was led by an African-born slave named Bussa. The rebellion started in the evening in the southeast at St Philip, eventually spreading to the southern and central parishes of Christ Church, St John, St Thomas, St George and St Michael. Three days later it was put down by the local militia and the imperial troops after martial law was established on April 15th, lasting until July 12th.  

Not much is known about the man that this rebellion was led by and named after. We do know that he was a ranger at the Bailey plantation in St. Phillips, which meant he was the head officer among the enslaved workers on the estate. This role allowed him to travel around to different estates, thus allowing him to plan this rebellion with people across multiple estates. 

“Bussa commanded about 400 men and women against the troops. These included the West India Regiment, an all-black branch of the British Army. He was killed in battle and his troops continued to fight until they were defeated by superior firepower. One white civilian and one black soldier were killed during the fighting. Compared to this, 50 enslaved people died in battle and 70 were executed in the field. Another 300 were taken to Bridgetown for trial, of which 144 were executed and 132 sent away to another island.” (National Archives)

This rebellion was significant because it was the first event that really shook the public faith in slavery leading up to the abolition of it within the British Empire. Prior to this event, slaves resisted in more discreet ways, like practicing their own faith in secret, speaking their native tongue in private, performing rituals like drumming or even just running away. There had been rebellions in this area prior to this one, the most successful being the one in Haiti in 1791. However, this rebellion is noted as being the one that kickstarted the abolition movement. It helped push the anti-slavery agenda in Britain and, with the help of the rebellions that followed, drove parliament to pass the Slavery Abolition Act in 1833. 

Works Cited:

Kelly, Jason M. "Anti-slavery movement, Britain." The International Encyclopedia of Revolution and Protest. Ness, Immanuel (ed). Blackwell Publishing, 2009. Blackwell Reference Online. 

“Bussa's Rebellion.” The National Archives, The National Archives, 23 Sept. 2021, https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/resources/bussas-rebellion/.

 
Kayla Holbrook
circa. Summer 1816 to circa. Summer 1816

Mary Shelley spends summer in Switzerland with Byron

The summer of 1816 was a key, pivotal, instrumental event that occurred in Mary Shelley's life. Due to the sudden, catastrophic eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia, Mary Shelley, Percy Shelley and their infant daughter traveled to Switzerland to escape the terrible weather they were experiencing in England. They arrived on May 14, 1816. (“Mary Shelley”) Byron arrived in Switzerland on May 25 where he happened upon the infamous Percy Shelley. Shelley and Byron became extremely fast friends and bought two houses on Lake Geneva in order to orchestrate their establishment as close neighbors. They highly regarded and respected one another, additionally enjoying one another's work. They spent the majority of the summer on the water, having in-depth, intellectually stimulating conversations and writing stories–ghost stories in particular. (“Mary Shelley”) It was a peaceful and enjoyable time for the residents. The weather was often rainy so a lot of time was spent indoors. One dark and stormy night Byron proposed that the group of writers come up with and write an original ghost story. At first Mary struggled to come up with an idea until she overheard Percy and Byron talking about corpses and the idea of galvanization or reanimation of dead bodies. (Blakemore) Thus the idea of Frankenstein was born and Mary was only 19 at the time. Tensions grew as the guests were stuck more and more inside. (Blakemore) This gave Mary more time to steal away and write her novel. She took inspiration from the scenes around her and even based the stories setting on her current location. I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world.” (“Mary Shelley”) In particular the Château de Chillon, an old fortress, is a great example of the Gothic art form. The Gothic art form was a major aspect of the romantic period and was very distinct. Rumor has it Mary had a nightmare and this also inspired the story of Frankenstein. (Perrottet) Unfortunately life was not pleasant for the guests after the summer full of merriment. Mary was the only successful writer to emerge from this group of intellectuals and gothics. Her husband Percy tragically drowned later on. Byron’s doctor, who was also a guest over the summer, committed suicide. Then Lord Byron’s daughter died at age 5, and Byron himself died in 1824 after catching a fever. (Blakemore) While Mary was content for these short few months, it did not last forever and her luck seemed to run out. However her popularity grew and her novel Frankenstein was extremely successful. The trip to Switzerland created the necessary setting for Mary and her creation of the monster and the lessons it taught. 

Sources:

Blakemore, Erin. “'Frankenstein' Was Born during a Ghastly Vacation 200 Years Ago.” History.com, A&E Television Networks, 9 Mar. 2018, https://www.history.com/news/frankenstein-true-story-mary-shelley. 

Perrottet, Tony. “Lake Geneva as Shelley and Byron Knew It.” The New York Times, The New York Times, 27 May 2011, https://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/29/travel/lake-geneva-as-byron-and-shell...

“Mary Shelley.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 9 Mar. 2022, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Shelley.

Elli Batt
circa. 1819

The Six Acts 1819

Six Acts Cartoon Depicting Effects

The Six Acts created in 1819 was a set of legislation created as one of the ways the government responded to The Peterloo Massacre. The passing of the Six Acts was with hopes of monitoring and legally restricting the freedoms of the public and press. This submission created many barriers for public meetings regarding the church of state, and such meetings needed specific permission, essentially banning all public meetings. There was also a huge crackdown on what was being published by authors, especially if containing “blasphemous or seditious material” (Mather, 2014). The Six Acts were composed of the following; “The Training Prevention Act, The Seizure of Arms Act, The Seditious Meetings Act, The Blasphemous and Seditious Libels Act, The Misdemeanours Act, and The Newspaper Stamp Duties Act” (Bloy). These acts all essentially were passed to limit public meetings, increase search for weapons, and limit publications by placing regulations and taxes, giving an overarching theme of control. To kick start these acts, The Seditious Meetings Act limited public gathering and required the approval of permission from a sheriff or official. The Training Prevention Act essentially made it illegal for citizens to be trained to use firearms, while The Seizure of Arms Act allowed for increase in search for weapons in private property and the confiscation of weapons. The Newspaper and Stamp Duties Act increased taxes on publications of print and “restricted the freedom of the legitimate press”, while The Blasphemous and Seditious Libels Act doubled down on existing laws for punitive writings from authors (Bloy). The Misdemeanours Act essentially increased the court processing system by reducing chances for bail. This attempt at suppressing the push and opportunity for radical reform created a notion that there was a lack of freedom and threat towards freedom being applied. These acts were created in hopes on employing control on the population but instead it was counterproductive and create much resistance. It is important to note that there is development of the impact that politics had during the romantic era. What was considered to be radical reform was a push against the current tendencies of the state, and often spreading of messages of the opposing view of the state, views in which were rapidly spread as they would call for more freedoms. The government at this time had to do what was necessary to limit the outreach of jeopardizing opinions in order to contain and maintain control to benefit themselves. This type of control is what we continuously see many writers during this time try to speak out against through their works. All of this calls towards themes that were expressed throughout this era, themes such as individualism, freedom, and even revolution that follows certain political reform/ideology.

 

Works Cited: 

Mather , Ruth. “The Peterloo Massacre.” British Library, 15 May 2014, https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-peterloo-massacre.

Sammysturgess. “The Six Acts and Censorship of the Press.” The History of Parliament, 21 Aug. 2019, https://thehistoryofparliament.wordpress.com/2019/08/20/the-six-acts-and....

 “The Age of George III.” The Six Acts 1819, http://www.historyhome.co.uk/c-eight/distress/sixacts.htm.

Jamie Maass
16 Aug 1819

Battle of Peterloo

August 16, 1819, began as a peaceful day of assembly as 60,000 (it is important to note that this is an approximate number of attendance due to the limited documentation of the event) people gathered to protest and demand reforms. This time in England's history was quite drab, most were unemployed and food prices were unattainable to most. Henry Hunt was a radical leader who wanted the gathering to show the discontent and resentment the people had towards the current holders in parliament. Out of the 60,000 a high number of those people were women and children who felt as though they were not getting the life that they deserved, no representation, and no food on the table. None of these people were armed or even considered dangerous, that being said the magistrates were intimidated and alarmed by the sheer size of the gathering and ordered the yeomanry (men in the British reserve) to arrest and detain the protesters. Many of these volunteer soldiers were untrained and did not hold back on seizing the leaders, wielding their sabres, and making a general attack on the crowd. This led to more soldiers being asked to join the few yeomanry by the Magistrates, causing the crowd to disperse within minutes, all were cleared from the fields, all except for the bodies left behind. Due to multiple accounts of the event, the exact number of deaths is not 100% accurate, the estimated deaths range from 9-11 killed and probably 500 injured. Hunt was one of the leaders captured, sentenced to prison for 2 years after being arrested, tried, and convicted. His conviction, however, was not in vain. These people gathered to emphasize how extending the vote to working men can and would have many positive outcomes. Some of which consist of fairer taxes, an end to restrictions on trade ( which was causing unemployment), and more efficient use of public money). It is important to note that there were very few who were there to argue the right women have to vote. Although many of these female reformers attended dressed in white as a symbol of their virtue, a symbol also worn by none other than Henry Hunt himself. Although uninjured, the white hat that he bore during this time became the symbol of reform. Peterloo became ground zero for popular radicalism and later on, popular Liberal politics. 1 day in British history had a lake effect that rippled into the people, one outcome was the creation of the Manchester Guardian, a newspaper that voiced the concerns for the liberal reformists. Two years after the Peterloo Massacre, on May 5, 1821, it published its first issue. It brought foreign affairs to the eyes of those not yet laid upon, liberal stances that rallied the reformers to inspire change, all of these events unraveled due to a single day. One that changed lives forever. The effects of that day have rolled into history as the day political reform was deemed necessary by the people, which later would cause the Reform acts of 1832, 1967, and 1884. These bills allowed the electorate for the House of Commons to expand past the inequalities of representation it previously knew and welcomed more representation throughout parliament, providing a more democratic solution. 

British Library, https://www.bl.uk/romantics-and-victorians/articles/the-peterloo-massacre.

 
Maci Ferre
21 Feb 1821 to 12 Sep 1829

The Greek War of Independence

The Greek War of Independence was a conflict that took place from (1821-1829). The ethnic Greek population, tired of their subjugation under Ottoman rule, decided to band together to reclaim the lands of their ancestors out from foreign rule.

The revolution was organized by a secret society known as the Filiki Eteria, which roughly translates tot he Society of Friends, who's main goal was to overthrow the Ottoman rule and establish a Greek state. Greeks of the time were considered a lower class to their Islamic leadership, and were subject to heavy taxes many bans on ownership for things like Guns and Mounts. Greek-born citizens had to defer in all legal cases to Muslim jurisdiction. Worst of all, Greek citizens were subject to the recruitment of Janissary, where young Greek christian children were conscripted from a young age into the Ottoman army. The Filiki Eteria's goal then, was to reclaim an autonomous state for the Greek people, one where they could live without being second class citizens in their own homes.

The Filiki Eteria were able to gain many allies from people both within and outside the Ottoman Empire, and because of this were able to bolster small scale revolutions in parts around the country. Two of the most notable groups in this process were the Klephts and Armatoloi. These were made up of groups of bandits living in the Ottoman empire who had little ties to either the Greek or Ottoman people, and were made up of free spirits, societal outcasts, and escaped convicts. Those who sided with the Greeks were known as the Klephts, and those who sided with the Ottomans were the Armatoloi. However, alliances within these people were constantly shifting, and it was difficult to know who sided with who. Due to Greece's widespread reputation as the birthplace of Western Civilization, many wealthy American and European aristocrats assisted the Greeks in their revolution. Most notable among them was the famous poet Lord Byron, who assisted in organizing funds and supplies for the Greek revolutionaries, ultimately contracting a fever in 1824 and passing away shortly thereafter. Ultimately however, his death spurred on many more allies in the west until eventually Western powers intervened directly.

Alexander Ypsilantis acted as the leader of the Filiki Eteria in 1821 and began the first rebellions around the Danubian Principalities, gaining support from local Romanian Christians. Ypsilantis would later, however, make some poor judgements in his leadership, leading to him being exiled and eventually dying in poverty. Without him, many small scale revolutions were carried out semi independently all over the Ottoman territories in Greece, where the Sultan was able to get the upper hand. Muhammad Ali Pasha the Great of Egypt was sent by the Ottomans to quell the revolution, and he was very effective at fighting back the Greeks over sea. However, in 1827, the combined fleets of Britain, France, and Russian were able to beat back the power of the Ottoman Empire's naval fleet, thus ensuring Greece would be able to gain it's independence.

The revolution ultimately culminated in the end of the Ottoman empire, as this had marked the first time that a Christian minority had successfully rebelled against the Ottoman empire. The success of the revolution had emboldened other minority groups under the Ottoman flag, such as the Serbs, Bulgars, Romanians, and Arabs. The newly established Greek state, although impoverished from the conflict, was supported by many wealthy allies in Europe, who used their wealth and influence to assist in keeping the country afloat during its early days.

Sources:

https://www.greece.org/march-25th-the-greek-war-of-independence-1821/

https://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Greek_War_of_Independence

Miles Clark
29 Apr 1824 to 29 Apr 1824

Lord Byron's Death

Lord Byron Stares At Death

Lord Byron, or George Gordon Byron, died of what is speculated to be a malaria relapse in Messolonghi, Greece during the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire. From being known as one of the members of the “Satanic School” of poets to his commitment to anarchy through revolution, as well as his idea of the anti-hero paving the way for the Byronic Hero, it is clear that he is one of the leading figures of the Romantic Movement. Lord Byron was “notorious” and “scandalous celebrity” (Tuite), and much of his fame came from the Byronic persona he portrayed and carried in public. Because of Lord Byron’s persona as a celebrity as well as his position in politics and within the literary world, his death left a poignant impression on those who surrounded him. 

Several poets who lived at the same time and even alongside Byron responded to his death through poetry. David Hopkins discusses several of these poems written in response to Lord Byron’s death in The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets. James Hogg’s poem touches on Byron’s passion for “Greek Independence from the Turks” (Hopkins 235), while Percy Shelley and John Keats both were lamenting at his passing. Samuel Rogers even glorifies the power of his death by writing “Dying in Greece, and in a cause so glorious! They in thy train—ah, little did they think, As round we went, that they so soon should sit Mourning beside thee, while a nation mourned. . .” (234). Even Rogers at the time comments on how his death caused a nation to mourn. 

However, Byron’s influence was not limited to the writers in the Romantic Era. Aside from the Byronic Hero continuing to be a popular trope in current pop culture, Maria Schoina draws connections between Byron’s inspirational legacy and several prominent writers of the Victorian Era. She specifically mentions Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage Canto 3, where Byron discusses “female posterity,” (Schoina 265) being a means by which “[u]pcoming female writers responded with hero-worship” (Schoina). She names Elizabeth Gaskell, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Harriet Beecher Stowe, and even the Brontë sisters as being influenced by Byron’s work in their younger days of writing. Anne Brontë’s The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was directly inspired by “the mystery of the Byron marriage” between Lady Byron and Lord Byron himself. 

Schoina also discusses how because of Byron’s early death, his “star had declined by the mid-century, and his libertinism made him a difficult role model for aspiring women writers” at the time (268), but it did fuel the fire for a future conversation about feminism in relation to Byron after his death. Topics of “[b]yronism” are touched on a few decades later in the 1850s and 60s, taking Byron’s work or even ideology and asserting new ideas along with them. For example, Gaskell’s Wives and Daughters “depicts Byron’s verse misjudged by philistines and prudes,” (269) while Stowe writes a character in her anti-slavery novel who has more radical and rather negative ideas while interpreting Byron’s Don Juan. But whether the reviews for Byron are negative or positive, it is clear he is still being talked about and is relevant to the social and political discussions writers are taking part in 20 years after his death. 

 

 

 

Sources: 

David Hopkins. The Routledge Anthology of Poets on Poets : Poetic Responses to English Poetry From Chaucer to Yeats. Routledge, 1994. EBSCOhost, https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=e....

Schoina, Maria, and Nic Panagopoulos. The Place of Lord Byron in World History : Studies in His Life, Writings, and Influence: Selected Papers From the 35th International Byron Conference. Edwin Mellen Press, 2012. EBSCOhost, https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=e....

Tuite, Clara. Lord Byron and Scandalous Celebrity. Cambridge University Press, 2015. EBSCOhost, https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.uvu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=e....

 

Mattie Morrison
circa. 1832 to circa. 1918

The Chartist Movement

During the British Romantic era, civil liberties were granted to a very limited group of people. For example, the right to vote was only given to male property holders, solidifying the classism that had been deeply rooted in British culture for past millennia. The Chartist movement was formed as a protest against this striking lack of representation and frank dehumanization that these limitations begot. It began – or at least gained traction – around 1832 when the Reform Act failed to extend the right to vote to those who did not own land.

The Chartist movement headed up a charter with that focused on the following demands according to the website parliament.uk: “all men to have the vote (universal manhood suffrage), voting should take place by secret ballot, Parliamentary elections every year, not once every five years, constituencies should be of equal size, members of Parliament should be paid, the property qualification for becoming a member of Parliament should be abolished”. Further rejection of these demands throughout the decades prompted further unrest and protests that came to a head in the Peterloo Massacre. That being said, the persistence of the movement did breed some success and most of their demands had been met by 1918.

In their book surrounding this subject, Bouthaina Shaaban exclaims, “literature, especially poetry, became the chief medium not just to convey political issues but also to enhance their value and magnify their effect, so much so that the Chartist Movement came to be known as 'the Minor Poets' Movement'” (Shaaban viii). Shaaban then spends much of their writings highlighting the influence that the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley had on this movement. One of those influences that Shelley had over this political and literary era is that his focus was “centered chiefly on the task of educating the people, revealing for them the nature of their circumstance and the necessity of its reform” (Shaaban 8). Though part of the upper class (though, certainly on the lower end of it), Percy Shelley was deeply invested in revealing the class divides and the tyranny of the ruling classes.

To lay out exactly what it is about Shelley that appealed to members of the Chartist movement, Shaaban explains,

“First, the Chartists believed that Shelley was more fundamentally radical than any of his compeers and than those who were known to have molded his views. Second, Shelley's stance on the inheritance of his father's seat in Parliament and of the family estate and his views on Ireland, religion and various other social and political issues were greatly appreciated and admired by the Chartists. Third, Shelley was a poet whose theories on reform, on the one hand, and the fusion he managed between poetry and politics, on the other, corresponded to the relation they envisaged between poetry and politics” (Bouthania, 1-2).

Thus we see that, Shelley was not only a defender of the people of lower classes but also a rejector of the power and prestige that could have been and legally was his. Additionally, he was very open and even loud in these radical ideas that led him to support the lower classes most affected by tyranny of the ruling classes.

Shelley’s poetry was a shining example of his strong vocal support of the ideals that fueled the Chartist movement. For example, in the poem “England 1819” he describes the monarchy as “An old, mad, blind, despised, and dying king, - /Princes, the dregs of their dull race, who flow” as “mud from a muddy spring” (Shelley 1-3). He openly mocked their claim to religious favor, calling them “Christless” and “Godless” (11). He then blamed them (as he should) for the blood shed during the Peterloo Massacre, painting a picture of “A people starved and stabbed in the untilled field” (7), accusing the army, the great emblem of Empirical force, of liberticide. Percy Shelley’s eloquent opposition to the tyrannical hold that the upper class had on the people was suppressed even by friends and fellow activists that were deeply involved in the movement such as Leigh Hunt and could not be published until after his death.

Catherine Hunt
circa. 1833

Factory Act of 1833

The Factory Act of 1833 was a long overdue reaction to dangerous factory conditions that arose during the industrial revolution. Though this act was a step in the right direction, it is still shocking what was allowed under this act, especially compared to today's standards. The regulation of child labor laws was nonexistent prior to this law. Children worked long hours in dangerous conditions, the most famous of which are the chimney sweeps.  

Several changes came as a result of the act. First, the act made it illegal to work children under the age of nine. This is a slight improvement from before when children as young as four years old were working in factories and other dangerous jobs. To make sure that employers were not being dishonest about the age of their workers, the act required that they have an age certificate for their workers. Children over the age of nine could still legally be employed, however, the Factory Act made it so they could not work more than nine hours a day. Children between the ages of 13 and 18 could work no more than 12 hours a day. Another limitation on the hours that children can work is that they cannot work at night. Under the Factory Act, children who are working are required to attend at least two hours of school each day. The work limitations did not apply to silk textile mills, which had less strict regulations. 

Obviously, the mistreatment of children in the workforce did not stop immediately, so as a part of the act, there were four inspectors assigned to each factory to make sure that these new laws were being followed. In a report taken from an inspector in 1836, we learn that even several years after the act passed factories did not always follow these laws: 

 “My Lord, in the case of Taylor, Ibbotson & Co. I took the evidence from the mouths of the boys themselves. They stated to me that they commenced working on Friday morning, the 27th of May last, at six A.M., and that, with the exception of meal hours and one hour at midnight extra, they did not cease working till four o’clock on Saturday evening, having been two days and a night thus engaged. Believing the case scarcely possible, I asked every boy the same questions, and from each received the same answers. I then went into the house to look at the time book, and in the presence of one of the masters, referred to the cruelty of the case, and stated that I should certainly punish it with all the severity in my power.”  

This progress reflects the sentiments of Romantic poets such as WIlliam Blake. The romantics were notorious critics of industrialization and child labor. Women and children were a large focus of romantic writing since they were mostly marginalized before and during this period. This act is a result of the spreading romantic movement that was a result of romantic writers. 

Works Cited

Nardinelli, Clark. “Child Labor and the Factory Acts.” The Journal of Economic History, vol. 40, no. 4, Dec. 1980. JSTOR, https://www-jstor-org.ezproxy.uvu.edu/stable/pdf/2119999.pdf?refreqid=ex.... Accessed 9 Feb. 2022.

factory-actdoc.pdf (nationalarchives.gov.uk)

 

 

Austin Andruski
Summer 1833 to The start of the month Aug 1834

Slavery Abolition Act

Slavery Abolition Act 1834

From the 16th century to the Slavery Abolition Act in 1834, Great Britain enslaved an estimated 3.1 million Africans and shipped them to areas in Britain and to British colonies in the Americas; especially to Britain's island of Barbados where large sugar plantations were grown and worked by African Salves, commonly under the direction of strict owners. Britain financially relied on the sugar and cotton plantations in Barbados which gave Britain a strong hold on the global trade market and increased economics. As sugar became more popular among the wealthy in Britain and in higher demand across the globe as they knew it, Britain continued to ship slaves to the island so more sugar could be harvested and produced and traded.

The road to freedom for African slaves was a long one. Beginning in the 1770s, more people became aware of the mistreatment of slaves that opposed their Christian views and spoke out against the slave trade and the use of slaves. Namely, "the campaign of [anti-slavery] in Britain was led by signifigant Quaker anti-slavery groups who made public their concerns and brought it to the attention of politicians who were in a position to enact real change" (Brain). One politician that made an initial change for abolition was a judge named Lord Mansfield. Dmla uring a court case in 1772 between a slave, James Somerset, and Charles Stewart, a customs officer, ruled that slaves could no longer be transported to England against their will. Although the verdict of the court case did not abolish slavery in that moment, the verdict grabbed the attention of many in the public which ultimatley initiated an anti-slavery movement being formed in 1783. 

Of these abolitionists was philanthropist and Parliament member, William Wilberforce. His standing in society made him a great influential figure in this movement and an advantage in reaching high political figures that others could not talk to. Several times, Wilberforce gave many speeches to the House of Commons where he condemned the slave trade, but at that point, did not advocate for the total abolition of the slave trade. The push for abolition of slavery continued to gain followers, and throughout the years gained the following of slaves themselves. Slaves pushed for abolition through resistence - resistence to work, to be transported, but the greatest resistence to slavery from the slaves was to run away. There are documents and newspapers that demonstrate the frequency of these revolts from the slaves, with "Missing Slave" fliers and even violent revolts such as the one that happened in Haiti. 

Another push for abolition was ignited through William Fox's pamphlet An Address to the People of Great Britian printed in 1791, which condemed the sugar plantations in West Indies. This pamphlet was printed during a time when British citizens showed more of an interest in the boycott of "slave grown sugar" (Holcomb 612). Using graphic imagery to sway more citizens to join the boycott, Fox "claimed that each pound of West Indian sugar contained two ounces of African flesh.. Laborers... murdered so that 'fine ladies and protstitues might be outfitted as they gathered around the British tea table' " (Holcomb 612). The imagery of women using goods from murdered laborers and the metaphorical use of the "British tea table" that represented gender, consumerism, and class, had a distinct impact on consumerism of sugar with the upper class and resulted a successful percentage of boycotters of the upper class in Britain. Abolition of slavery was a topic talked about at every table and throughout the streets, and the impact of boycotts and a call for reformation was powerful. 

Parliment felt the pressure from all sides, and passed the Slave Trade Act in 1807. This outlawed the trading of slaves, but not slavery itself. Soon, the Slave Trade Felony Act in 1811 made slavery a felony. Eventually, all of Europe was experiencing major society and moral change through the Enlightenment movement, the French revolution and more reported uprisings and violent revolts led by slaves in Barbados, Demerara and Jamaica. The legislation to abolish slavery was presented to Parliment July 26, 1833, but it wouldn't be until August 1st 1834 when the legislation was fully accepted, enforced, and slavery was abolished. This was because the first bill did not mention the East Indaia Company, Ceylon or Saint Helena, and Great Britain would pay slave owners (20 million pounds collectively) for the loss of slaves as a compensation for them.

Works Cited:

Brain, Jessica. “The Abolition of Slavery In Britain.” Historic UK, Historic UK, 29 Oct. 2021, www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofBritain/Abolition-Of-Slavery.

Holcomb, Julie L. “Blood-Stained Sugar: Gender, Commerce and the British Slave-Trade Debates.” Slavery & Abolition, vol. 35, no. 4, 2014, pp. 611–28. Crossref, https://doi.org/10.1080/0144039x.2014.927988.

The National Archives. “Slavery and the British Transatlantic Slave Trade.” The National Archives, 27 Apr. 2021, www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/brit....

Jaycee Ehlers
14 Aug 1834

Poor Law Reform Act

Poor people coming to a workhouse for food, c. 1840

Before 1834, the cost of looking after the poor was growing more expensive each year. After many complaints, a new law was introduced in 1834 imposing a system that would be the same all over the country. This was a law which replaced earlier legislation, attempting to change the poverty relief system in England and Wales. It intended to curb the cost of poor relief and address abuses of the system by enabling a new one. Most people welcomed it since they believed it would reduce the cost of looking after the poor, take beggars off the street and enable poor people to work to support themselves. Under this new law, all who wished to receive aid had to live in workhouses.

During this period, those who were dependent poor were classified in three groups:

-Those who couldn’t look after themselves or go to work, such as the ill, the elderly and children who had no one to properly take care of them. It was generally regarded that they should be looked after.

-The able-bodied poor, referring to those who were unable to find work. There were several attempts to assist these people and get them out of this category, usually consisting in relief in the form of either work or money.

-Those called ‘vagrants’ or ‘beggars’, which were those who could work but had refused to. They were also called the idle poor.

This New Poor Law, as it was also named that way, ensured that the poor were housed in workhouses, clothed and fed. The children who entered the workhouse would also receive some schooling. In return, people would have to work for several hours each day. But some were against this use of the workhouses in this new Poor Law and called them “Prisons for the Poor” (National Archives, 1). This is what Richard Oastler did in a political campaign as an industrial reformer, calling them “cruel and un-Christian” aside from prisons due to the conditions people lived in. (2)

While the Law was good in theory, in execution it lacked a lot. After this law was introduced, many scandals started to appear: reports where inmates were starving, with the most famous one in this case being Andover Workhouse, where it was “reported that inmates were found eating the rotting flesh from bones” (3). As a response, stricter rules were set for those who ran the workhouses as well as setting up regular inspections.

Conditions in the workhouses tended to be deliberately harsh and degrading in order to discourage the poor from relying on too much relief. While there were some amendments to their treatment, people were still at the mercy of masters and matrons who treated them with contempt or abused the rules. It ended becoming a threat: while most people didn’t have to go to the workhouse, it was where they would end if they ended up unemployed, sick or old. As time passed, workhouses stopped being for relief and ended up keeping orphans, the old, the sick and the insane. It seemed to punish people who were poor instead of what was originally planned.

These conditions improved later in the century, and social welfare services supplanted workhouses altogether by the 19th century.

 

Works Cited: 

The National Archives. “1834 Poor Law.” The National Archives, The National Archives, 3 Mar. 2022, https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/education/resources/1834-poor-law/.

 
Viviana Moreno