
FRIENDS OF
THE PEOPLE:
The 'Uneasy' Radicals in the Age of the Chartists
by Owen R. Ashton and Paul A. Pickering
This is study of six Chartist Leaders. It portrays movements for democracy and social progress, and explores the role of the uneasy middle classes, in movements for working class rights. The comparative analysis provides insights in to the development of dissent, the nature of class and of radicalism in the nineteenth century. An introduction sketches the historical context.
Dr. Peter M McDouall,
fiery orator and Scottish surgeon, who built his practise and his political
reputation at Ramsbottom, near Bury in Lancashire, and a leading figure in
the National Chartist Association.
Rev. Henry Solly, Chartist pamphleteer and Unitarian Minister who lived
and worked in Yeovil and Cheltenham Spa and became a nationally-known campaigner
for co-operatives, anti-slavery, the vote, and rational recreation,
Rev. James Scholefield, a chaplain from Manchester who campaigned for
the ten hour week: a teacher, apothecary, surgeon and vegetarian,
Richard Bagnall Reed,
a blacksmith, who became the manager of the Newcastle Chronicle, he also ran
guns to Garibaldi for Italian unification, his family had a street named after
them in Cairns, Australia.
William Villiers Sankey,
an aristocrat, son of an Irish Volunteer and Member of Parliament, who resided
among the political élite of London, he represented Edinburgh at the
Chartist Convention,
Rev. Benjamin Parsons. a radical and political preacher who used the Bible to justify campaigns for social justice, from the Gloucestershire.
220x157mm, illustrations, index, xii, 244pp
ISBN. 0850365198
Paperback
£14.95
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