Showing posts with label Chartism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chartism. Show all posts

29 April 2014

Robert G. Hall and Stephen Roberts (eds): William Aitken: The Writings of a Nineteenth Century working Man (1996)

Hall and Roberts's William Aitken: The Writings of a Nineteenth Century Working Man is dedicated to an unfairly forgotten man of Greater Manchester. Aitken (1812– or 1814–69) was born in Dunbar, Scotland, although his family moved to Ashton-under-Lyne when he was a child. He began work in a cotton mill at the age of twelve and was largely self-taught. He opened a school in Ashton in 1833, where he and his wife Mary taught mainly working-class children. He had a strong sense of justice and spent much effort on the Chartist cause and fighting for the ten-hour working day.

After the Chartist defeat of 1842 Aitken left with two friends for America for a year, and wrote the short book A Journey up the Mississippi River from its Mouth to Nauvoo, the City of the Latter Day Saints (1845).

Depressed, he died by slitting his throat at his home.

This book briefly details Aitken's life in the Introduction, and then moves to Aitken's unfinished autobiography, which was called 'Remembrances and Struggles of a Working Man for Bread and Liberty', and the first paragraph is concerned with a kind of revisionism:

'It has not been by timidity or fear that the battles of liberty have been won, but by a moral courage equalling, if not surpassing, the hero who marches to victory over his slaughtered enemies and vindictive foes.'

History now remembers some of those fighting for freedom against an oppressive state – such as the Chartists and the suffragettes – as heroes. (Let's hope that at some time in the future it will see in the same light the often highly dangerous efforts of asylum seekers to escape from tyranny.)

Slavery is also tyranny of course, but Aitken – very wrongly, in my view – supported the American South because the blockade on Southern ports exporting cotton was causing hardship to English workers such as those in the cotton town of Ashton.

Aitken's autobiography unfortunately ends at 1840, the point he had reached before he killed himself, thus leaving out twenty-nine years of his life. Unsurprisingly, it is full of the injustices meted out by the more fortunate on the less fortunate, and of Aitken's and others' concerns to eleviate the conditions of working people. As might be expected, Aitken speaks of the roles played by such Chartist activists as Feargus O'Connor and Joseph Rayner Stephens, but two lesser known activists were Aitken's friends Dr Peter Murray McDouall, and John Bradley from Hyde. They were both imprisoned for 'seditious' activities in 1840, as was Aitken, who in a note before his utopian prison poem 'The Captive's Dream' – printed here along with several of his other poems – wryly states that the meaning of 'seditious conspiracy' means 'haters of poverty and oppression'.

I was surprised that this book is still on sale eighteen years after publication. And this is the first publication of the autobiography since the original instalments in the Ashton News. Very interesting it is as well.

I find the front cover a little surprising too: it shows a cropped, reverse image of a portrait reproduced in greater detail on the title page, where Aitken's buttons can clearly be seen in the correct position!

17 July 2013

Kersal Moor and Chartism

 
'Kersal Moor
 
This Moor was the site of
the first Manchester Racecourse
(c 1687–1846) and the great
Chartist rallies of 1838 and 1839,
when over 30,000 workers met to
demand the right to vote and
the reform of Parliament.'

 
The wooden sculptures are attractive too.

10 June 2013

East Sheen and Richmond Cemeteries #3: George Julian Harney

George Julian Harney (1817–79) was a journalist and Chartist leader radicalised in his youth as a result of being imprisoned on three occasions for selling the unstamped Poor Mans' Guardian.

He became a Chartist leader and the editor of Feargus O'Connor's Northern Star and persuaded both Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to write articles for the paper.

He emigrated to the USA in 1863, working as a clerk in Massachusetts for fourteen years. He returned to England after his retirement.
 
Harney died in Richmond and his wife Mary (née Cameron) erected this (vandalised?) monument, which calls him 'The last of the Chartist leaders' and remembers 'many years of happy wedded life'.

My other posts on graves in East Sheen and Richmond cemeteries are linked below:

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Montague Summers
Mary Elizabeth Braddon

24 July 2011

Chartists Ernest Jones and Thomas Cooper

I took this shot very recently in Bow Lane, Manchester, England:

'ERNEST JONES
1819-1869
CHARTIST LEADER AND
BARRISTER AT LAW
PRACTISED FROM
CHAMBERS HERE
1863-69'

A link to information on Ernest Jones is here.


This reminded me that I'd taken a blue plaque shot of another Chartist a few years before, at 11 Church Gate, Leicester:

'Leicester City Council
THOMAS COOPER
Chartist
1805-1892
Had a coffee shop at this address
in which he organised the
movement in Leicester'

And a link to information on Thomas Cooper is here.