Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Bristol: Prospects and Profiles
- 2 Voices in the Crowd
- 3 Authority, Class and Clientage in Bristol Politics
- 4 Wreckers from Without: Weavers, Colliers, Arsonists and Sodomites, 1729–34
- 5 Popular Jacobitism and the Politics of Provocation
- 6 Anger and Reprisals: The Struggle against Turnpikes and their Projectors, 1727–53
- 7 ‘It is better to stand like men than to starve in the land of plenty’: Food Riots and Market Regulation in Bristol
- 8 Naval Impressment in Bristol, 1738–1815
- 9 Bristol and the War of American Independence
- 10 A Loyal City? The Diversity of Dissent in Bristol in the 1790s
- 11 Hunt and Liberty: Popular Politics in Bristol, 1800–20
- 12 ‘This is the blaze of Liberty!’ The burning of Bristol in 1831
- Postscript
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 May 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- List of Abbreviations
- Miscellaneous Frontmatter
- Introduction
- 1 Bristol: Prospects and Profiles
- 2 Voices in the Crowd
- 3 Authority, Class and Clientage in Bristol Politics
- 4 Wreckers from Without: Weavers, Colliers, Arsonists and Sodomites, 1729–34
- 5 Popular Jacobitism and the Politics of Provocation
- 6 Anger and Reprisals: The Struggle against Turnpikes and their Projectors, 1727–53
- 7 ‘It is better to stand like men than to starve in the land of plenty’: Food Riots and Market Regulation in Bristol
- 8 Naval Impressment in Bristol, 1738–1815
- 9 Bristol and the War of American Independence
- 10 A Loyal City? The Diversity of Dissent in Bristol in the 1790s
- 11 Hunt and Liberty: Popular Politics in Bristol, 1800–20
- 12 ‘This is the blaze of Liberty!’ The burning of Bristol in 1831
- Postscript
- Bibliography
- Index
- Studies in Early Modern Cultural, Political and Social History
Summary
At the beginning of our period, Bristol was the major Atlantic port, poised to lead the slave trade and become England's ‘second city’. At the end of our period, the city was in flames. When the ultra-Tory Sir Charles Wetherell came to open the assizes in October 1831, having contemptuously dismissed Bristol's enthusiasm for political reform, he was met by protests and an escalating momentum of unrest that resulted in the burning and pillage of large sections of Queen Square and the opening of the gaols. Bristol's burgeoning middle class, thoroughly alienated from the corporation and its allies in the Merchant Venturers, stood by and watched. The more broadly based Bristol Political Union, the political arm of Reform, offered its help, but on condition that its institutional status be recognised. That offer was rejected by the closed corporation, and this rejection paved the way for dragoon repression more savage than that at Peterloo in 1819.
To a considerable extent this narrative frames our book. The broader context charts how a prosperous port with a civic identity strong enough to survive the politico-religious purges of the Restoration degenerated into a narrow, introspective oligarchy that failed the city politically and economically. This means that the book is in part about the power and limits of paternalism, or patron–client networks. Bristol's hierarchical structures worked as long as the economy was buoyant and certain rules about civic responsibility were respected. But Bristol's economy began to lose momentum after the American war and revealed significant structural weaknesses after the Napoleonic, when it proved difficult to tap into the new enterprises of industrial change. And Bristol's politics was a chequered story of new possibilities and arrested development, of the stifling effects of caucus agreements and compromised elections that debased civic freedoms and prompted oscillating bouts of cynicism and hope among the excluded. We found elements of radicalism in Bristol politics: during the American war, the French, and under the banner of Henry Hunt as the Napoleonic wars came to a close. But it proved impossible to fashion a coherent cross-class alliance for radical political reform. The hallmark of Bristol radicalism in this era was ultimately one of impotence.
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- Information
- Bristol from BelowLaw, Authority and Protest in a Georgian City, pp. 1 - 6Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2017