Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2009
A recent note by lan Inkster observed that a Parliamentary Act of 1817 to suppress seditious meetings also posed a threat to scientific lecturers and societies between 1817 and 1820. Further evidence is presented here as to the intentions of the 1817 Act and its effects on science. It is particularly important to add to the observations of Inkster, first, that chartered societies were exempt, and second, that the Act expired on 14 July 1818, although further measures were introduced in December 1819. To explain the provisions of these Acts, especially the distinctions made between lectures held by chartered societies as opposed to independent associations, it is relevant to consider how legislation to prevent seditious meetings and societies in the wake of the French Revolution demarcated between seditious blasphemy and legitimate scientific inquiry. The Acts provide an opportunity of locating science in contreversies over the freedom of speech and association. The questions arise of the relation of the 1817 Act to legislation of 1795, 1799, 1801, and 1819 which imposed licensing on lectures, and of the extent to which repressive legislation inhibited the activities of lecturers and societies. The intellectual repercussions were of such magnitude that the mathematician de Morgan observed in retrospect, ‘From 1815 to 1830 the question of revolution or no revolution lurked in all our English discussions’.
I am particularly indebted to Margaret Pelling and Pietro Corsi for helpful comments regarding both this note and an earlier draft circulated in 1977.
1 Inkster, I., ‘London science and the Seditious Meetings Act of 1817’, The British journal for the history of science, 1979, 12, 192–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 57 G.3.c. 18, sections, 20, 22. 60.G.3.C.6.
3 37 G.3.c. 123 (18 December 1795), 39 G.3.C.79 (12 July 1799), 41 G.3. sess. 2.c.30 (30 April 1801), 57 G.3.c. 19 (31 March 1817), 60 G.3.C.6 (24 December 1819).
4 de Morgan, A., A budget of paradoxes, 2nd edn., Chicago & London, 1915, i, 187.Google Scholar
5 , J. L. and Hammond, B., The skilled labourer, 1760–1832, London, 1919, pp. 341–76Google Scholar. Davies, H. W. C., Lancashire reformers, 1816–17, Manchester, 1926, p. 4Google Scholar. Thompson, E. P., The making of the English working class, Harmondsworth, 1968, pp. 916–44, ‘Postscript’.Google Scholar
6 Thompson, , op. cit. (5), p. 161Google Scholar. Radzinowicz, L., A history of English criminal law and its administration from 1750, 4 vols., 1948–1968, iv, 245.Google Scholar
7 37 G.3.c. 123, sections 1, 12.
8 Thelwall, J., Prospectus of a course of lectures to be delivered every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, during the ensuing Lent. In strict conformity with the restrictions of Mr Pitt's Convention Act, London, 1796Google Scholar. Rockey, D., ‘John Thelwall and the origins of British speech therapy’, Medical history, 1979, 23, 156–75 (160–2).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
9 Parliamentary history (Hansard), 1795, 32, 291, 294Google Scholar. Parliamentary debates (Hansard), 1817, 35, 852Google Scholar. Coupland, R., Wilberforce, 2nd edn., London, 1945, pp. 342–3.Google Scholar
10 39 G.3.C.79, sections 15, 22.
11 39 G.3.C.79, section 17.41 G.3.sess.2.c.30.
12 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), 194Google Scholar. Parliamentary debates, 1809, 14, 615, 987.Google Scholar
13 Pitt, W., The speeches of the Right honourable William Pitt in the House of Commons, 3 vols., London, 1817, iii, 78Google Scholar. For licensed printers in London, see Todd, W. B., A directory of printers and others engaged in allied trades: London and vicinity, 1800–1840, London, 1972.Google Scholar
14 Parliamentary debates, 1817, 35, pp. 855–6Google Scholar. 57 G.3.c. 19 sections 17, 20, 25, 27.
15 Aspinall, A., Politics and the press, c. 1780–1850, London, 1949, p. 45Google Scholar. White, R. J., Waterloo to Peterloo, London, 1957, pp. 60–62.Google Scholar
16 On the lack of prosecutions for libel, see Radzinowicz, , op. cit. (6), iv, 246.Google Scholar
17 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), 193Google Scholar. Parliamentary debutes, 1817, 35, 1109, 1217–8, 1223.Google Scholar
18 Inkster, ibid.Parliamentary debates, 1817, 35, 994, 1217–8, 1223.Google Scholar
19 60 G.3.C.6, sections 26, 31, 40. Parliamentary debates, 1819, 41, 869–70.Google Scholar
20 De Morgan, , op. cit. (4), i, 379Google Scholar. Dreyer, J. L. E. and Turner, H. H. (eds.), A history ofthe Royal Astronomical Society, London, 1923, p. 100Google Scholar. Cawthorne, H. H., ‘The Spitalfields Mathematical Society’, Journal of adult education, 1919, 3, 155–66Google Scholar. Cassels, J. W. S., ‘The Spitalfields Mathematical Society’, Bulletin of the London Mathematical Society, 1979, 11, 241–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
21 Handbill for lectures by Wilkinson, C. H. in the Mathematical Society's ReceptacleGoogle Scholar, University College London. Dreyer and Turner (eds.), ibid.
22 Greater London Record Office, Middlesex Records, MR/SL 8.
23 De Morgan, , op. cit. (4), i, 377Google Scholar. I am preparing an analysis of the occupations of nineteenth-century members.
24 McCulloch, J. R., A discourse detivered at the opening of the City of London Literary and Scientific Institution, 30th May 1825, London, 1825, p. 12.Google Scholar
25 Claxton, T., Hints to mechanics, on self-education and mutual instruction, London, 1839, p. 24.Google Scholar
26 Hammond, and Hammond, , op. cit. (5), p. 375.Google Scholar
27 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), p. 194Google Scholar. The Times, 5 May 1817.
28 Loc. cit. (22) MR/SL 5.
29 Ibid., MR/SL 4.
30 Ibid., MR/SL 10.
31 Ibid., MR/SL 7, 9.
32 Ibid., MR/SL 12.
33 Ibid., MR/SL 14.
34 Ibid., MR/SL 17.
35 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), p. 195.Google Scholar
36 Loc. cit. (22), MR/SL 3.
37 ‘On the Philomathic Institution, and other scientific and literary establishments’, The philomathic journal, 1824, 1, 1–11 (4)Google Scholar. Hudson, J. W., The history of adult education, London, 1851, p. 166.Google Scholar
38 Jennings, J., A lecture on the history and utility of literary institutions, London, 1823, p. 52.Google Scholar
39 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), p. 194Google Scholar. City Philosophical Society, Laws of the Society instituted January 1808, London, 1812.Google Scholar
40 Rankin, G. N., Reply to a pamphlet purporting to be a ‘report of the council and committee of the Philoiophical Society of London’, London, 1818, p. 2Google Scholar. Statutes and regulations of the Philosophical Society of London, London, 1820.Google Scholar
41 In a survey of record offices in England and Wales, searches at thirty-seven offices have so far revealed no more licences. In contrast, many regulations of societies were deposited under the provisions of 2 and 3 Victoria c. 12.
42 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), pp. 193–4Google Scholar. Parliamentary debates, 1817, 36, 17–18, 20–1.Google Scholar
43 Wickwar, W. H., The struggle for freedom of the press, 1819–1932, London, 1928, pp. 189–90, 198–9.Google Scholar
44 Todhunter, I., William Whewell, D. D., Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, 2 vols., London, 1876, i, 8Google Scholar. Parliamentary debates, 1817, 36, 21. Information from P. Corsi.
45 , A. and Clow, N. L., The chemical revolution. A contribution to social technology, London, 1952, pp. 596–7.Google Scholar
46 Spurzheim, to the Vice-Chancellor, 17 11 1830Google Scholar, Bodleian Library MS Top. Oxf. b. 23, f.301. Information from P. Corsi.
47 For conspiracy theories see: Roberts, J. M., The mythology of the secret societies, London, 1972Google Scholar; von Bieberstein, J. Rogalla, Die These von der Verschwörung, Bern, 1976.Google Scholar
48 Barruel, A., Memoirs illustrating the antichristian conspiracy, trans. by Clifford, R. E., Dublin, 1798Google Scholar. Clifford, R. E., Application of Barruel's memoirs of Jacobinism to the secret societies of Great Britain and Ireland, London, 1798.Google Scholar
49 Morrell, J. B., ‘Professors Robison and Playfair, and the Theophobia Gallica: natural philosophy, religion and politics in Edinburgh, 1789–1815’, Notes and records of the Royal Society of London, 1971, 26, 43–63 (49).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
50 ‘Memoirs of the life of John Robison, LLD’, Philosophical magazine, 1801, 10, 348–53 (353)Google Scholar. Townson, R., Travels in Hungary, London, 1797, pp. 414–6.Google Scholar
51 Reid, W. H., The rise and dissolution of the infidel societies in this metropolis, London, 1800, pp. 14, 21, 91.Google Scholar
52 Loc. cit. (22), MR/SL 2.
53 An address delivered on Thursday April 3, 1806 at the Great Room in Poland Street, on the opening of the British Forum; and an anniversary address, delivered on the 3rd of April 1807 …, 2 edn., London, 1808, pp. 11–13Google Scholar. Gray, D., Spencer Percival, the evangelical Prime Minister, Manchester, 1963, pp. 289–90.Google Scholar
54 Smith, E., The life of Sir Joseph Banks, London, 1911, pp. 255–6.Google Scholar
55 Todd, A. C., Beyond the blaze: a biography of Davies Gilbert, Truro, 1967, pp. 208–15.Google Scholar
56 Dawson, W. R., The Banks letters. A calendar of the manuscript conespondence of Sir Joseph Banks, London, 1958, pp. 36, 37, 391, 454, 816, 909Google Scholar. Coupland, , op. cit. (9), p. 334.Google Scholar
57 Lysaght, A. M., Joseph Banks in Newfoundland and Labrador, 1766: his diary, manuscripts and collections, London, 1971, pp. 45, 58Google Scholar. Strauss, W. P., ‘Paradoxical co-operation: Sir Joseph Banks and the London Missionary Society’, Historical studies. Australia and New Zealand, 1965, 11, 246–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar (250). British Library Add. MSS. 33979, f. 187.
58 Todd, , op. cit. (55), p. 33.Google Scholar
59 Ibid., pp. 38–46.
60 Ibid., pp. 197–80.
61 Ibid., p. 165.
62 Smith, , op. cit. (54), pp. 85–9, 189–91Google Scholar. Dawson, , op. cit. (56), p. 816.Google Scholar
63 ‘A memoir of Alexander Tilloch’, Mechanic's oracle, 1825, 1, 220.Google Scholar
64 Cooper, B. B., The life of Sir Astley Cooper, 2 vols., London, 1843, ii, 296–7.Google Scholar
65 Thorpe, T. E., Essays in historical chemistry, 3rd edn., London, 1911, p. 565Google Scholar. Weindling, P. J., ‘Geological controversy and its historiography: the prehistory of the Geological Society of London’, in Jordanova, L. J. and Porter, R. S. (eds), Images of the tarth: essays in the history of the environmental sciences, Chalfont St Giles, 1979, pp. 248–71Google Scholar (257, 263). Coley, N. G., ‘The Animal Chemistry Club, assistant society to the Royal Society’, Notes and records of the Royal Society of London, 1967, 22, 173–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
66 Communications to the Board of Agriculture, 7 vols., London, 1797–1813, ii, 457.Google Scholar
67 Knox, T. R., ‘Thomas Spence: the trumpet of jubilee’, Past and present, 1977, 76, 75–98 (87).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
68 Thale, M., The autobiography of Francis Place, (1771–1854), Cambridge, 1972, p. 187.Google ScholarMonthly magazine, 1801, 15, 178.Google Scholar
69 Wickwar, , op. cit. (43), p. 90.Google Scholar
70 ‘History ofthe Rotunda’, The prompter, 1830–1831, 1, 7–8Google Scholar. Thompson, , op. cit. (5), pp. 693–6, 798, 843–6.Google Scholar
71 Aspinall, A., Lord Brougham and the Whig Party, Manchester, 1927, p. 145.Google Scholar
72 Royle, E., Victorian infidels: the origins of the British secularist movement, 1791–1866, Manchester, 1974, p. 85.Google Scholar
73 2 and 3 Victoria c. 12.
74 Inkster, , op. cit. (1), 195.Google Scholar
75 Gisborne, T., ‘On the benefits and duties resulting from the institution of societies for the advancement of literature and philosophy’, Memoirs of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Manchester, 1798, 5, 70–88 (86).Google Scholar