Global Information Lookup Global Information

Peterloo Massacre information


Peterloo Massacre
A coloured print of the Peterloo Massacre
LocationSt Peter's Field, Manchester, Lancashire, England
Coordinates53°28′36″N 02°14′45″W / 53.47667°N 2.24583°W / 53.47667; -2.24583
Date16 August 1819
Deaths18
Injured400–700
Assailants
  • Manchester and Salford Yeomanry
  • Cheshire Yeomanry
  • Manchester Special Constabulary
  • British Army Regulars

The Peterloo Massacre took place at St Peter's Field, Manchester, Lancashire, England, on Monday 16 August 1819. It was the largest ever political gathering of working class people. Eighteen people died and 400–700 were injured when cavalry charged into a crowd of around 60,000 people who had gathered to demand the reform of parliamentary representation.

After the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, there was an acute economic slump, accompanied by chronic unemployment and harvest failure due to the Year Without a Summer, and worsened by the Corn Laws, which kept the price of bread high. At that time, only around 11 percent of adult males had the vote, very few of them in the industrial north of England, which was worst hit. Radicals identified parliamentary reform as the solution, and a mass campaign to petition parliament for manhood suffrage gained three-quarters of a million signatures in 1817 but was flatly rejected by the House of Commons. When a second slump occurred in early 1819, Radicals sought to mobilise huge crowds to force the government to back down. The movement was particularly strong in the north-west, where the Manchester Patriotic Union organised a mass rally in August 1819, addressed by well-known Radical orator Henry Hunt.

Shortly after the meeting began, local magistrates called on the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry to arrest Hunt and several others on the platform with him. The Yeomanry charged into the crowd, knocking down a woman and killing a child, and finally apprehended Hunt. Cheshire Magistrates' chairman William Hulton then summoned the 15th Hussars to disperse the crowd. They charged with sabres drawn, and contemporary accounts estimated that between nine and seventeen people were killed and 400 to 700 injured in the ensuing confusion. The event was first labelled the "Peterloo massacre" by the radical Manchester Observer newspaper in a bitterly ironic reference to the bloody Battle of Waterloo which had taken place four years earlier.

Historian Robert Poole has called the Peterloo Massacre "the bloodiest political event of the 19th century in English soil", and "a political earthquake in the northern powerhouse of the industrial revolution".[1] The London and national papers shared the horror felt in the Manchester region, but Peterloo's immediate effect was to cause the government to pass the Six Acts, which were aimed at suppressing any meetings for the purpose of radical reform. It also led indirectly to the foundation of The Manchester Guardian newspaper.[2] In a survey conducted by The Guardian (the modern iteration of The Manchester Guardian) in 2006, Peterloo came second to the Putney Debates as the event from radical British history that most deserved a proper monument or a memorial.

For some time, Peterloo was commemorated only by a blue plaque, criticised as being inadequate and referring only to the "dispersal by the military" of an assembly. In 2007, the city council replaced the blue plaque with a red plaque referring to "a peaceful rally" being "attacked by armed cavalry" and mentioning "15 deaths and over 600 injuries". In 2019, on the 200th anniversary of the massacre, Manchester City Council inaugurated a new Peterloo Memorial by the artist Jeremy Deller, featuring eleven concentric circles of local stone engraved with the names of the dead and the places from which the victims came.

  1. ^ Poole (2019), pp. 1–2.
  2. ^ Poole, Robert (2019). "The Manchester Observer: Biography of a Radical Newspaper, part 7: 'Enter the Guardian'". Bulletin of the John Rylands Library. 95, 1: 96–102. Archived from the original on 28 November 2020. Retrieved 21 March 2020 – via Open access at publisher's site.

and 24 Related for: Peterloo Massacre information

Request time (Page generated in 0.795 seconds.)

Peterloo Massacre

Last Update:

The Peterloo Massacre took place at St Peter's Field, Manchester, Lancashire, England, on Monday 16 August 1819. It was the largest ever political gathering...

Word Count : 9716

United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland

Last Update:

better wages, and demonstrated. The most important event was the Peterloo Massacre in Manchester, on 16 August 1819, when a local militia unit composed...

Word Count : 15393

Peterloo Memorial

Last Update:

The Peterloo Memorial is a memorial in Manchester, England, commemorating the Peterloo Massacre. It is sited close to the site of the massacre and was...

Word Count : 602

Manchester Observer

Last Update:

at a public meeting in Manchester, which subsequently led to the Peterloo Massacre and the shutdown of the newspaper. By 1819, the allocation of Parliamentary...

Word Count : 1338

Riot Act

Last Update:

political means. A particularly notorious use of the act was the Peterloo Massacre of 1819 in Manchester. The act also made it a felony punishable by...

Word Count : 3356

Manchester and Salford Yeomanry

Last Update:

volunteer regiment became notorious for its involvement in the 1819 Peterloo Massacre, in which as many as 15 people were killed and 400–700 were injured...

Word Count : 1497

William Gadsby

Last Update:

Elizabethan Church. After the massacre of protesting workers by the British Army on August 16, 1819, known as the Peterloo Massacre, Gadsby joined with many...

Word Count : 1240

Charles Ethelston

Last Update:

played in his role as magistrate on 16 August 1819, ahead of the Peterloo massacre. He was the son of the Rev. Charles Ethelstone (1731–1795), an Oxford...

Word Count : 3350

Thomas de Trafford

Last Update:

commander of the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry at the time of the Peterloo Massacre. He was born at Croston Hall near Chorley, Lancashire, on 22 March...

Word Count : 2001

Free Trade Hall

Last Update:

was constructed in 1853–56 on St Peter's Fields, the site of the Peterloo Massacre. It is now a Radisson hotel. The hall was built to commemorate the...

Word Count : 1649

Cato Street Conspiracy

Last Update:

police spy. Most of the members were angered by the Six Acts and the Peterloo Massacre, as well as with the economic depression and political conditions...

Word Count : 1842

List of protests in the United Kingdom

Last Update:

table. Chartists Suffragettes Women's suffrage in the United Kingdom Peterloo Massacre Reform League 1920 blind march Merthyr Rising 1831 Hunger marches...

Word Count : 2171

Regency era

Last Update:

boom. Political response to the crisis included the Corn Laws, the Peterloo Massacre, and the Representation of the People Act 1832. Led by William Wilberforce...

Word Count : 6305

Georgian era

Last Update:

and damaged machinery in the industrial north-west of England. The Peterloo Massacre in 1819 began as a protest rally which saw 60,000 people gathering...

Word Count : 5718

To Autumn

Last Update:

death; as an allegory of artistic creation; as Keats's response to the Peterloo Massacre, which took place in the same year; and as an expression of nationalist...

Word Count : 5448

Ode to the West Wind

Last Update:

At the time of composing this poem, Shelley without doubt had the Peterloo Massacre of August 1819 in mind. His other poems written at the same time—"The...

Word Count : 3554

Mary Fildes

Last Update:

role at the mass rally at Manchester in that year which ended in the Peterloo massacre. She was also the grandmother of the artist Luke Fildes through her...

Word Count : 1004

Peelian principles

Last Update:

which three men were hanged and beheaded at Derby Gaol. The 1819 Peterloo Massacre in St Peter's Field, Manchester occurred when at least eighteen died...

Word Count : 4150

Manchester city centre

Last Update:

township of Manchester during the Middle Ages, and was the site of the Peterloo Massacre of 1819. Manchester was granted city status in 1853, after the Industrial...

Word Count : 5222

The Masque of Anarchy

Last Update:

in 1819 (see 1819 in poetry) by Percy Bysshe Shelley following the Peterloo Massacre of that year. In his call for freedom, it is perhaps the first modern...

Word Count : 2036

Gagging Acts

Last Update:

demands by campaigners and corresponding societies, culminating in the Six Acts of 1819, after the Peterloo Massacre. University of Warwick website v t e...

Word Count : 93

Suffrage

Last Update:

Historian Robert Poole has called the Peterloo Massacre one of the defining moments of its age. (The eponymous Peterloo film featured a scene of women suffragists...

Word Count : 12837

Richard Carlile

Last Update:

the crowd was attacked by the yeomanry in what became known as the Peterloo massacre. Carlile escaped and was hidden by radical friends before he caught...

Word Count : 2082

Maxine Peake

Last Update:

starred as Nellie in Mike Leigh's 2018 film, Peterloo, based on the events of the 1819 Peterloo Massacre in Manchester. Peake starred as the eponymous...

Word Count : 3685

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net