Selsley Hill
August 2nd 2013 and May 21st 1839
Walking from the
Ram to Selsley Hill,
Stroud’s Lord
John Russell’s 1839
Electoral
Message in my mind –
Lofty
admonishment of the poor:
You ‘know not
the general laws by which profit and wages are regulated.”
Then Henry Cartwright’s letter to Russell,
The Ham, near
Stroud, March 11th, 1839:
“My Lord…On
Saturday Evening last
a meeting of the
Chartists was held in Stroud …
out of doors … dimly
illuminated by two lamps …
the language of
the two principal speakers …
was of a most
violent and inflammatory description,
very, very
little short of seditious and treasonable.
I need hardly
express to your Lordship their usual practice …
a long tirade of abuse the most gross and
false against your Lordship.”
Henry Vincent,
the Chartist leader, who spoke
At that
nocturnal meeting on the bowling green
At the Golden
Heart Inn, Stroud, said:
“ When I asked
the people how it was they sent
such a little
pettifogger as Russell to parliament, they exclaimed,
“we did not send
him – we had no votes.”
The people are
very poor – wages being low, and work not over plentiful.
The women
complain bitterly of their sufferings,
and express
their determination
of aiding the
men in any measures.”
But Henry Burgh
wrote to Russell later that month:
“ Today about
quarter past two
about 500
marched up Rodborough Hill by my house
with 9 Flags and
a strange Band of Musick …
I have stopped
the Beer Shops and Publick Houses …
There are
several policemen placed…”
Imagine that
crowd of 3,000 people
Gathered around
a wagon up there on the common,
Listening to Vincent
and John Frost of Newport Rising fame,
Then wait a
month before Russell receives another epistle:
‘ill feeling
amongst the People is greatly increasing,
specially at
Wotton, and they are buying up all the guns they can get
and that a
sample of a Bomb, sufficient to blow up any House,
has been sent
from the North to Dursley’;
‘Your most
obedient servant’ Henry Burgh adds:
“ heard they
were making hand grenades at Wotton …
they are making
Pikes and also at Stroud, Cainscross and King’s Stanley.”
No wonder, then,
that a few days later:
“May 14th,
1839”, “ROYAL COAT OF ARMS
WHEREAS a Royal
Proclamation has been issued against certain illegal meetings, we the
undersigned magistrates…do hereby warn all persons from taking part in or being
present at such Meetings. And we call on all well-disposed persons to be aiding
and assisting us in our object, as well as by giving us information…And for the
discouraging and preventing such unlawful practices, and for the protection of
the public peace, we do hereby make known our determination to use our utmost
endeavours to prevent, put down, and suppress such Meetings…”
The response?
GRAND
DEMONSTRATION
To the Men and
Women of Gloucestershire Take Notice! That a county MEETING of the Inhabitants
of Gloucestershire, will be holden on SELSLEY HILL In the Borough of Stroud, on
Whit Tuesday, May 21st to take into consideration the best means to
be adopted in order to secure the passing of the PEOPLE’S CHARTER And to give
Effect to the present Agitation A Deputation from the “General Convention”
consisting of Messrs. Carpenter, Mealing and Neesom, will attend, also
Deputations from various Associations in the County. The Chair will be taken at
12 o’clock. We particularly urge the attendance of all those who value their
Political Freedom, and who have at heart the welfare, prosperity and happiness
of the Nation, and let them remember “For a Nation to be free, it is sufficient
that she wills it.”
In order to
remove any misapprehension respecting the legality of the Meeting, we beg to
state that we shall be entirely regulated by the Motto
PEACE, LAW and
ORDER and sincerely hope that all those who attend will be guided by the same
principles.
Unsympathetic
newspaper reports tell us:
“The first party
which reached the ground was a procession of the Working Men’s Association of
Wotton-under-Edge and the Radical Women’s Association of the same place in some
numbers and with music, and with Banners bearing inscriptions of “Liberty”,
“Equal Rights and equal Laws”,
“For a Nation to
be free it is sufficient that she wills it” …
Mr. Beecham,
secretary of the Working Men’s Association of Cirencester…spoke…in favour of
what he called the People’s Charter…prophesying that a Firebrand would be
raised …
A delegate from
Bath, a Mr. Meacham spoke thus:
“You have made
up your minds that universal suffrage shall be the law of this land – you will have
ballot and no surrender, peaceably if you can, but forcibly if you must.” ”
The Gloucester
Journal belittled this mass-meeting
(‘The greatest
number of people …was from three to four thousand’),
yet expressed
admiration for the magistrates,
who ‘procured
the aid of a troop of Lancers and some troops
of the
Gloucestershire Yeomanry Cavalry…In addition…a great number of special
constables were sworn in…on the ground on horseback…’
But let us leave
the last word on 1839 to JP Peter Leversage,
In his letter to
Lord John Russell about another meeting held at Selsley:
“ A Sermon
supposed to be one of the notorious Stephens”
(the nationally
famous Chartist preacher)
“was there read
by a person named Evans,
a foremen in a
pin manufactory at Lightpill near Stroud:
“An infidel
Church and an infidel Government –
compared the
Bishop of London to Judas Iscariot…
an oppressor…the
Poor Law …wives were separated from their husbands …Church must very shortly be
put down.” ”
So the next time
you go for a walk on Selsley Common,
Give a thought
to those brave women and men
Who gathered
there in May 1839;
Their baton is
up there by the long barrow,
Pick it up if
you wish and remember them in stone.
Brilliant, I will go up there and remember them! the valleys here are shaped by the sweat and blood of the weavers, long may they be not forgotten
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