summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-24 23:09:55 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-24 23:09:55 -0800
commit8bf42a750bf2fe8a34f368fbbe48f12028bfe13f (patch)
tree740fbb63594e860f8df8707980edd0f6f901575c
parent9b90f3ca372988a4a29bb8a8ee9dac9249ea5518 (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/69002-0.txt21353
-rw-r--r--old/69002-0.zipbin406123 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69002-h.zipbin579492 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69002-h/69002-h.htm27136
-rw-r--r--old/69002-h/images/cover.jpgbin144706 -> 0 bytes
8 files changed, 17 insertions, 48489 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..e8b99f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69002 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69002)
diff --git a/old/69002-0.txt b/old/69002-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 87d855a..0000000
--- a/old/69002-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,21353 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The village labourer 1760-1832, by J.
-L. Hammond
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The village labourer 1760-1832
- A study in the government of England before the Reform Bill
-
-Authors: J. L. Hammond
- Barbara Hammond
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2022 [eBook #69002]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Henry Flower and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
- at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian
- Libraries)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VILLAGE LABOURER
-1760-1832 ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE VILLAGE LABOURER
- 1760-1832
-
-
-
-
- THE VILLAGE LABOURER
-
- 1760-1832
-
- A Study in the Government of England
- before the Reform Bill
-
- BY
- J. L. HAMMOND AND BARBARA HAMMOND
-
- ... The men who pay wages ought not to be the political masters of
- those who earn them (because laws should be adapted to those who have
- the heaviest stake in the country, for whom misgovernment means not
- mortified pride or stinted luxury, but want and pain, and degradation
- and risk to their own lives and to their children’s souls)....
-
- LORD ACTON.
-
- SECOND IMPRESSION
-
-
- LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
- 39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON
- NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA
- 1912
-
-
-
-
- TO
- GILBERT AND MARY MURRAY
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-Many histories have been written of the governing class that ruled
-England with such absolute power during the last century of the old
-régime. Those histories have shown how that class conducted war, how
-it governed its colonies, how it behaved to the continental Powers,
-how it managed the first critical chapters of our relations with
-India, how it treated Ireland, how it developed the Parliamentary
-system, how it saved Europe from Napoleon. One history has only been
-sketched in outline: it is the history of the way in which this class
-governed England. The writers of this book have here attempted to
-describe the life of the poor during this period. It is their object
-to show what was in fact happening to the working classes under a
-government in which they had no share. They found, on searching through
-the material for such a study, that the subject was too large for a
-single book; they have accordingly confined themselves in this volume
-to the treatment of the village poor, leaving the town worker for
-separate treatment. It is necessary to mention this, for it helps to
-explain certain omissions that may strike the reader. The growth and
-direction of economic opinion, for example, are an important part of
-any examination of this question, but the writers have been obliged
-to reserve the consideration of that subject for their later volume,
-to which it seems more appropriate. The writers have also found it
-necessary to leave entirely on one side for the present the movement
-for Parliamentary Reform which was alive throughout this period, and
-very active, of course, during its later stages.
-
-Two subjects are discussed fully in this volume, they believe, for the
-first time. One is the actual method and procedure of Parliamentary
-Enclosure; the other the labourers’ rising of 1830. More than one
-important book has been written on enclosures during the last few
-years, but nowhere can the student find a full analysis of the
-procedure and stages by which the old village was destroyed. The rising
-of 1830 has only been mentioned incidentally in general histories: it
-has nowhere been treated as a definite demand for better conditions,
-and its course, scope, significance, and punishment have received
-little attention. The writers of this book have treated it fully, using
-for that purpose the Home Office Papers lately made accessible to
-students in the Record Office. They wish to express their gratitude to
-Mr. Hubert Hall for his help and guidance in this part of their work.
-
-The obligations of the writers to the important books published in
-recent years on eighteenth-century local government are manifest, and
-they are acknowledged in the text, but the writers desire to mention
-specially their great debt to Mr. Hobson’s _Industrial System_, a work
-that seems to them to throw a new and most illuminating light on the
-economic significance of the history of the early years of the last
-century.
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ponsonby and Miss M. K. Bradby have done the
-writers the great service of reading the entire book and suggesting
-many important improvements. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Buxton, Mr. A. Clutton
-Brock, Professor L. T. Hobhouse, and Mr. H. W. Massingham have given
-them valuable help and advice on various parts of the work.
-
- HAMPSTEAD, _August 1911_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAP. PAGE
-
- I. THE CONCENTRATION OF POWER, 1
-
- Comparison between English and French Aristocracy--Control
- of English Aristocracy over (1) Parliament; (2) Local
- Government--The Justices--Family Settlements--Feudal Dues.
-
- II. THE VILLAGE BEFORE ENCLOSURE, 26
-
- The Common-field System--Classes in the Village--Motives
- for Enclosure--Agricultural Considerations--Moral
- Considerations--Extent of Parliamentary Enclosure.
-
- III. ENCLOSURE (I), 43
-
- Procedure in Parliament--Composition of Private Bill
- Committees--Proportion of Consents required--Helplessness
- of Small Men--Indifference of Parliament to Local
- Opinion--Appointment and Powers of Enclosure
- Commissioners--Story of Sedgmoor.
-
- IV. ENCLOSURE (II), 71
-
- Standing Orders--General Enclosure Bills--Consolidating Act of
- 1801--Popular Feeling against Enclosure--Proposals for Amending
- Procedure--Arthur Young’s Protest--Story of Otmoor.
-
- V. THE VILLAGE AFTER ENCLOSURE, 97
-
- Effects of Enclosure on (1) Small Farmers; (2) Cottagers;
- (3) Squatters--Expenses--Loss of Common Rights--Village
- Officials--Changed Outlook of Labourer.
-
- VI. THE LABOURER IN 1795, 106
-
- Loss of Auxiliary Resources--Fuel--Gleaning--Rise in
- Prices--Effect of Settlement Laws--Food Riots of 1795.
-
- VII. THE REMEDIES OF 1795, 123
-
- The Remedies proposed but not adopted: (1) _Change of
- Diet_--Cheap Cereals--Soup; (2) _Minimum Wage_--Demand from
- Norfolk Labourers--Whitbread’s Bills, 1795 and 1800; (3) _Poor
- Law Reform_--Pitt’s Poor Law Bill---Amendments of Settlement
- Laws; (4) _Allotments_--Success of Experiments--Hostility
- of Farmers--The Remedy adopted: Speenhamland System of
- supplementing Wages from Rates--Account of Speenhamland
- Meeting--Scale of Relief drawn up.
-
- VIII. AFTER SPEENHAMLAND, 166
-
- Prosperity of Agriculture during French War--Labourers
- not benefited--Heavy Taxation--Agricultural Depression at
- Peace--Labourers’ Rising in 1816--Poor Law Legislation of
- 1818, 1819 to relieve Ratepayers, compared with Whitbread’s
- Scheme in 1807--Salaried Overseers--Parish Carts--Drop in
- Scale of Relief for Labourers after Waterloo--New Auxiliary
- Resources--Poaching--Game Laws--Distress and Crime--Criminal
- Justice--Transportation.
-
- IX. THE ISOLATION OF THE POOR, 207
-
- Attitude of Governing Class towards the Poor--An Ideal Poor
- Woman--Gulf between Farmers and Labourers due to Large
- Farms--Bailiffs--Lawyers and the Poor--The Church and the
- Poor--Gloom of the Village.
-
- X. THE VILLAGE IN 1830, 225
-
- Poor Law Commission Report of 1834--Effects of Speenhamland
- System: Degradation of Labourer; Demoralisation of Middle
- Classes--Possible Success of Alternative Policies--Minimum
- Wage--Cobbett’s Position.
-
- XI. THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT (I), 240
-
- Rising in Kent--Threshing Machines--Sussex Rising: Brede--Spread
- of Rising Westwards--Description of Outbreak in Hampshire,
- Wiltshire, Berkshire--Alarm of Upper Classes--Melbourne’s
- Circular--Repressive Measures--Archbishop’s Prayer.
-
- XII. THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT (II), 272
-
- Special Commissions--Temper of Judges--Treatment of
- Prisoners--Trials at Winchester, Salisbury, Dorchester,
- Reading, Abingdon, Aylesbury--Cases of Arson--Position of Whig
- Government--Trials of Carlile and Cobbett--Proposals for helping
- Labourers--Lord King--Lord Suffield--Collapse of Proposals.
-
- XIII. CONCLUSION, 325
-
- INDEX, 405
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE CONCENTRATION OF POWER
-
-
-‘Là l’aristocratie a pris pour elle les charges publiques les plus
-lourdes afin qu’on lui permît de gouverner; ici elle a retenu
-jusqu’à la fin l’immunité d’impôt pour se consoler d’avoir perdu le
-gouvernement.’
-
-De Tocqueville has set out in this antithesis the main argument that
-runs through his analysis of the institutions of ancient France. In
-England the aristocracy had power and no privileges: in France the
-aristocracy had privileges and no power. The one condition produced,
-as he read history, the blending of classes, a strong and vigorous
-public spirit, the calm of liberty and order: the other a society
-lacking vitality and leadership, classes estranged and isolated, a
-concentration of power and responsibility that impoverished private
-effort and initiative without creating public energy or public wealth.
-
-De Tocqueville’s description of the actual state of France during
-the eighteenth century has, of course, been disputed by later French
-writers, and notably by Babeau. Their differences are important, but
-for the moment we are concerned to note that in one particular they
-are in complete agreement. Neither Babeau, nor any other historian,
-has questioned the accuracy of De Tocqueville’s description of the
-position of the French nobles, from the day when the great cardinals
-crushed their conspiracies to the day when the Revolution destroyed
-the monarchy, whose heart and pulse had almost ceased to beat. The
-great scheme of unity and discipline in which Richelieu had stitched
-together the discords of France left no place for aristocracy. From
-that danger, at any rate, the French monarchy was safe. Other dangers
-were to overwhelm it, for Richelieu, in giving to it its final form,
-had secured it from the aggressions of nobles but not from the follies
-of kings. _Tout marche, et le hasard corrige le hasard._ The soliloquy
-of Don Carlos in _Hernani_ contains an element of truth and hope for
-democracy which is wanting in all systems of personal government, where
-the chances of recovery all depend on a single caprice. It was the
-single caprice that Versailles represented. It was the single caprice
-that destroyed Richelieu’s great creation. When Louis XIV. took to
-piety and to Madame de Maintenon, he rescinded in one hour of fatal
-zeal the religious settlement that had given her prosperity to France.
-Her finance and her resources foundered in his hurricanes of temper and
-of arrogance. Louis XV. was known in boyhood as ‘the beloved.’ When
-he fell ill in the campaign of 1744 in Flanders, all France wept and
-prayed for him. It would have been not less happy for him than it would
-have been for Pompey if the intercessions of the world had died on
-the breeze and never ascended to the ear of Heaven. When thirty years
-later his scarred body passed to the royal peace of St. Denis, amid the
-brutal jeers and jests of Paris, the history of the French monarchy
-was the richer for a career as sensual and selfish and gross as that
-of a Commodus, and the throne which Richelieu had placed absolute and
-omnipotent above the tempests of faction and civil war had begun to
-rock in the tempests of two sovereigns’ passions.
-
-One half-hearted attempt had indeed been made to change the form and
-character of the monarchy. When he became regent in 1715, Orleans
-played with the ideas of St. Simon and substituted for the government
-of secretaries a series of councils, on which the great nobles sat,
-with a supreme Council of Regency. As a departure from the Versailles
-system, the experiment at first excited enthusiasm, but it soon
-perished of indifference. The bureaucrats, whom Orleans could not
-afford to put on one side, quarrelled with the nobles: the nobles
-found the business tedious and uninteresting: the public soon tired of
-a scheme that left all the abuses untouched: and the regent, at the
-best a lukewarm friend to his own innovation, had his mind poisoned
-against it by the artful imagination of Dubois. One by one the councils
-flickered out; the Council of the Regency itself disappeared in 1728,
-and the monarchy fell back into its old ways and habits.
-
-As at Versailles, so in France. If the noble had been reduced to a
-trifling but expensive cypher at the Court, the position of seigneur
-in the village was not very different. In the sixteenth century he
-had been a little king. His relations with the peasants, with whom
-his boyhood was often spent in the village school, were close and
-not seldom affectionate. But though he was in many cases a gentle
-ruler, a ruler he undoubtedly was, and royal ordinances had been found
-necessary to curb his power. By the eighteenth century his situation
-had been changed. There were survivals of feudal justice and feudal
-administration that had escaped the searching eye of Richelieu, but
-the seigneur had been pushed from the helm, and the government of the
-village had passed into other hands. It was the middle-class intendant
-and not the seigneur who was the master. The seigneur who still
-resided was become a mere rent receiver, and the people called him the
-‘_Hobereau_.’ But the seigneur rarely lived in the village, for the
-Court, which had destroyed his local power, had drawn him to Paris to
-keep him out of mischief, and when later the Court wished to change its
-policy, the seigneur refused to change his habits. The new character of
-the French nobility found its expression in its new homes. Just as the
-tedious splendour of Versailles, built out of the lives and substance
-of an exhausted nation, recorded the decadence and the isolation of the
-French monarchy, so in the countryside the new palaces of the nobles
-revealed the tastes and the life of a class that was allowed no duties
-and forbidden no pleasures. The class that had once found its warlike
-energy reflected in the castles of Chinon and Loches was now only at
-home in the agreeable indolence of Azay le Rideau or the delicious
-extravagance of Chenonceaux. The nobles, unable to feed their pride on
-an authority no longer theirs, refused no stimulant to their vanity
-and no sop to their avarice. Their powers had passed to the intendant;
-their land was passing to the bourgeois or the peasant; but their
-privileges increased. Distinctions of rank were sharper edged. It was
-harder for a plebeian to become an officer under Louis XVI. than it
-had been under Louis XIV., and the exemptions from taxation became a
-more considerable and invidious privilege as the general burdens grew
-steadily more oppressive. Nature had made the French nobleman less, but
-circumstances made him more haughty than the English. Arthur Young,
-accustomed to the bearing of English landlords, was struck by the
-very distant condescension with which the French seigneur treated the
-farmer. The seigneur was thus on the eve of the Revolution a privileged
-member of the community, very jealous of his precedence, quarrelsome
-about trifles, with none of the responsibilities of a ruler, and with
-few of the obligations of a citizen. It was an unenviable and an
-uninspiring position. It is not surprising that Fénelon, living in
-the frivolous prison of Versailles, should have inspired the young
-Duke of Burgundy with his dream of a governing aristocracy, or that
-Mademoiselle de Lespinasse should have described the public-spirited
-members of this class as caged lions, or that a nobleman of the fierce
-energy of the Marquis de Mirabeau should have been driven to divide
-his time between the public prosecution of his noisy and interminable
-quarrels with his wife and his sons, and the composition of his feeling
-treatise on _L’Ami des Hommes_.
-
-For in the France whose king had no thought save for hunting, women
-and morbid disease, there was endless energy and intellectual life.
-France sparkled with ideas. The enthusiasms of the economists and
-philosophers filled the minds of nobles who in England would have been
-immersed in the practical duties of administration. The atmosphere of
-social sensibility melted the dry language of official reports, and
-the intendants themselves dropped a graceful tear over the miseries of
-the peasants. Amid the decadence of the monarchy and the uncivilised
-and untamed license of Louis XV., there flourished the emancipating
-minds of Voltaire, Montesquieu, Diderot and Quesnai, as well as
-Rousseau, the passion and the spirit of the Revolution. On the one
-side is Versailles, abandoned to gross and shameless pleasures, on
-the other a society pursuing here a warm light of reason and science
-with a noble rage for progress and improvement, bewitched there by the
-Nouvelle Héloïse and Clarissa, delighting in those storms of the senses
-that were sweeping over France. The memoirs, the art, the literature
-of the time are full of these worlds, ruled, one by philosophy and
-illumination, the other by the gospel of sensibility and tender
-feeling, the two mingling in a single atmosphere in such a salon as
-that of Julie de Lespinasse, or in such a mind as that of Diderot.
-A kind of public life tries, too, to break out of its prison in the
-zealous, if somewhat mistaken exertions of agricultural societies and
-benevolent landowners. But amid all this vitality and inspiration and
-energy of mind and taste, the government and the fortunes of the race
-depend ultimately on Versailles, who lives apart, her voluptuous sleep
-undisturbed by the play of thought and hope and eager curiosity, wrapt
-and isolated in her scarlet sins.
-
-When Louis XVI. called to office Turgot, fresh from his reforms at
-Limoges, it looked as if the intellect of France might be harnessed to
-the monarchy. The philosophers believed that their radiant dreams were
-about to come gloriously true. Richelieu had planned his system for an
-energetic minister and a docile king; Turgot had not less energy than
-Richelieu, and Turgot’s master was not more ambitious than Louis XIII.
-But the new régime lasted less than two years, for Louis XVI., cowed by
-courtiers and ruled by a queen who could not sacrifice her pleasures to
-the peace of France, dismissed his minister, the hopes of the reformers
-were destroyed, and France settled down to the unrolling of events.
-The monarchy was almost dead. It went out in a splendid catastrophe,
-but it was already spent and exhausted before the States-General were
-summoned. This vast, centralised scheme was run down, exhausted by the
-extravagance of the Court, unable to discharge its functions, causing
-widespread misery by its portentous failure. The monarchy that the
-Revolution destroyed was anarchy. Spenser talks in the _Faerie Queene_
-of a little sucking-fish called the remora, which collects on the
-bottom of a ship and slowly and invisibly, but surely, arrests its
-progress. The last kings were like the remora, fastening themselves on
-Richelieu’s creation and steadily and gradually depriving it of power
-and life.
-
-It was natural that De Tocqueville, surveying these two centuries of
-national life, so full of mischief, misdirection and waste, seeing,
-too, in the new régime the survival of many features that he condemned
-in the old, should have traced all the calamities of France to the
-absence of a ruling aristocracy. It was natural that in such a temper
-and with such preoccupations he should have turned wistfully and not
-critically to England, for if France was the State in which the nobles
-had least power, England was the State in which they had most. The
-Revolution of 1688 established Parliamentary Government. The manners
-and the blunders of James II. had stripped the Crown of the power that
-his predecessor had gained by his seductive and unscrupulous politics,
-and when the great families settled with the sovereign of their
-choice, their memories of James were too recent and vivid to allow
-them to concede more than they could help to William. The Revolution
-put the law of the land over the will of the sovereign: it abolished
-his suspending and dispensing powers, and it obliged him to summon
-Parliament every year. It set up a limited monarchy with Parliament
-controlling the Crown. But though the Revolution gave England a
-constitutional Parliamentary government, that government had no
-homogeneous leadership, and it looked as if its effective force might
-be dissipated in the chaos and confusion of ministries. In such a
-situation one observer at least turned his eyes to France. There exists
-in the British Museum a paper by Daniel Defoe, written apparently for
-the guidance of Harley, who was Secretary of State in 1704. In this
-paper Defoe dwelt on the evils of divided and dilatory government, and
-sketched a scheme by which his patron might contrive to build up for
-himself a position like that once enjoyed by Richelieu and Mazarin.
-Defoe saw that the experiment meant a breach with English tradition,
-but he does not seem to have seen, what was equally true, that success
-was forbidden by the conditions of Parliamentary government and the
-strength of the aristocracy. The scheme demanded among other things the
-destruction of the new Cabinet system. As it happened, this mischievous
-condition of heterogeneous administration, in which one minister
-counterworked and counteracted another, came to an end in Defoe’s
-lifetime, and it came to an end by the consolidation of the system
-which he wished to see destroyed.
-
-This was the work of Walpole, whose career, so uninviting to those who
-ask for the sublime or the heroic in politics, for it is as unromantic
-a story as can be desired of perseverance, and coarse method, and art
-without grace, and fruits without flowers, is one of the capital facts
-of English history. Walpole took advantage of the fortunate accident
-that had placed on the throne a foreigner, who took no interest in
-England and did not speak her language, and laid the foundations of
-Cabinet government. Walpole saw that if Parliamentary supremacy was to
-be a reality, it was essential that ministers should be collectively
-responsible, and that they should severally recognise a common aim and
-interest; otherwise, by choosing incompatible ministers, the king could
-make himself stronger than the Cabinet and stronger than Parliament. It
-is true that George III., disdaining the docility of his predecessors,
-disputed later the Parliamentary supremacy which Walpole had thus
-established, and disputed it by Walpole’s own methods of corruption
-and intrigue. But George III., though he assailed the liberal ideas of
-his time, and assailed them with an unhappy success, did not threaten
-the power of the aristocracy. He wanted ministers to be eclectic and
-incoherent, because he wanted them to obey him rather than Parliament,
-but his impulse was mere love of authority and not any sense or feeling
-for a State released from this monopoly of class. Self-willed without
-originality, ambitious without imagination, he wanted to cut the knot
-that tethered the Crown to the Cabinet, but he had neither the will
-nor the power to put a knife in the system of aristocracy itself. He
-wished to set back the clock, but only by half a century, to the days
-when kings could play minister against minister, and party against
-party, and not to the days of the more resolute and daring dreams of
-the Stuart fancy. The large ideas of a sovereign like Henry of Navarre
-were still further from his petty and dusty vision. He was so far
-successful in his intrigues as to check and defeat the better mind of
-his generation, but if he had won outright, England would have been
-ruled less wisely indeed, but not less deliberately in the interests of
-the governing families. Thus it comes that though his interventions are
-an important and demoralising chapter in the history of the century,
-they do not disturb or qualify the general progress of aristocratic
-power.
-
-In France there was no institution, central or local, in which the
-aristocracy held power: in England there was no institution, central
-or local, which the aristocracy did not control. This is clear from a
-slight survey of Parliament and of local administration.
-
-The extent to which this is true had probably not been generally
-grasped before the publication of the studies of Messrs. Redlich and
-Hirst, and Mr. and Mrs. Webb, on the history of local government or
-the recent works of Dr. Slater and Professor Hasbach on the great
-enclosures. Most persons were aware of the enormous power of the
-aristocracy, but many did not know that that power was greater at the
-end than at the beginning of the century. England was, in fact, less
-like a democracy, and more remote from the promise of democracy when
-the French Revolution broke out, than it had been when the governing
-families and the governing Church, whose cautions and compromises and
-restraint Burke solemnly commended to the impatient idealists of 1789,
-settled their account with the Crown in the Revolution of 1688.
-
-The corruptions that turned Parliamentary representation into the
-web of picturesque paradoxes that fascinated Burke, were not new in
-the eighteenth century. As soon as a seat in the House of Commons
-came to be considered a prize, which was at least as early as the
-beginning of the sixteenth century, the avarice and ambition of
-powerful interests began to eat away the democratic simplicity of the
-old English franchise. Thus, by the time of James I., England had
-travelled far from the days when there was a uniform franchise, when
-every householder who did watch and ward could vote at a Parliamentary
-election, and when the practice of throwing the provision of the
-Members’ wages upon the electorate discouraged the attempt to restrict
-the franchise, and thereby increase the burden of the voters. Indeed,
-when the Whig families took over the government of England, the case
-for Parliamentary Reform was already pressing. It had been admitted by
-sovereigns like Elizabeth and James I., and it had been temporarily
-and partially achieved by Cromwell. But the monopolies which had been
-created and the abuses which had been introduced had nothing to fear
-from the great governing families, and the first acts of the Revolution
-Parliament, so far from threatening them, tended to give them sanction
-and permanence. Down to this time there had been a constant conflict
-within the boroughs between those who had been excluded from the
-franchise and the minorities, consisting of burgage-holders or corrupt
-corporations or freemen, who had appropriated it. These conflicts,
-which were carried to Parliament, were extinguished by two Acts, one
-of 1696, the other of 1729, which declared that the last determination
-in each case was final and irrevocable. No borough whose fate had been
-so decided by a Parliamentary committee could ever hope to recover its
-stolen franchise, and all these local reform movements settled down to
-their undisturbed euthanasia. These Acts were modified by a later Act
-of 1784, which allowed a determination to be disputed within twelve
-months, but by that time 127 boroughs had already received their final
-verdict: in the others, where the franchise was determined after 1784,
-there was some revival of local agitation.
-
-The boroughs that were represented in Parliament in the eighteenth
-century have been classified by Mr. Porritt, in his learned work, in
-four categories. They were (1) Scot and lot and potwalloper boroughs,
-(2) Burgage boroughs, (3) Corporation boroughs, and (4) Freemen
-boroughs.
-
-The Scot and lot boroughs, of which there were 59, ranged from Gatton,
-with 135 inhabitants, to Westminster and Northampton. On paper they
-approached most nearly to the old conditions as to the franchise. A
-uniform qualification of six months residence was established in 1786.
-In other respects the qualifications in these boroughs varied. In some
-the franchise depended on the payment of poor rate or church rate: in
-others the only condition was that the voter had not been a charge on
-the poor rate. The boroughs of the second of these classes were called
-potwalloper, because the voter had to prove that he was an inhabitant
-in the borough, had a family, and boiled a pot there. This potwalloper
-franchise was a survival from the days when freemen took their meals
-in public to prove that they did not depend on the table of a lord.
-In the eighteenth century the potwalloper sometimes put his table in
-the street to show that he had a vote. But these boroughs, in spite of
-their wide franchise, fell under the control of the aristocracy almost
-as completely as the others, for the reason that when the borough
-itself developed, the Parliamentary borough stood still, and in many
-cases the inhabitant householders who had the right to vote were the
-inhabitants of a small and ancient area of the town. All that was
-necessary in such circumstances in order to acquire the representation
-of the borough, was to buy the larger part of the property within this
-area. This was done, for example, at Aldborough and at Steyning.
-
-The Burgage boroughs were 39. They were Parliamentary boroughs in which
-the right to vote attached exclusively to the possession of burgage
-properties. The burgage tenants were the owners of land, houses, shops
-or gardens in certain ancient boroughs. The holders of these sites
-were originally tenants who discharged their feudal obligations by a
-money payment, corresponding to the freeholder in the country, who held
-by soccage. They thus became the men of the township who met in the
-churchyard or town hall. In many cases residence was unnecessary to the
-enjoyment of the franchise. The only qualification was the possession
-of title-deeds to particular parcels of land, or registration in the
-records of a manor. These title-deeds were called ‘snatch papers,’ from
-the celerity with which they were transferred at times of election.
-The burgage property that enfranchised the elector of Old Sarum was
-a ploughed field. Lord Radnor explained that at Downton he held 99
-out of the 100 burgage tenures, and that one of the properties was in
-the middle of a watercourse. At Richmond, pigeon-lofts and pig-styes
-conferred the franchise. In some cases, on the other hand, residence
-was required; at Haslemere, for example, Lord Lonsdale settled a colony
-of Cumberland miners in order to satisfy this condition. Sometimes the
-owner of a burgage property had to show that the house was occupied,
-and one proof of this was the existence of a chimney. In all of these
-boroughs the aristocracy and other controllers of boroughs worked
-hard, through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to restrict
-the number of properties that carried the right to vote. The holder
-of burgage property and the borough patron had a common interest in
-these restrictions. The burgage boroughs provided a great many cases
-for the decision of Parliamentary committees, and the borough owners
-mortgaged their estates under the strain of litigation of this kind.
-Parliamentary committees had to determine for example whether the
-Widows’ Row at Petersfield really stood on the foundation of the house
-which conferred the franchise in the reign of William III. The most
-successful borough-monger was the patron who had contrived to exclude
-first the non-burgage owners, and then the majority of the burgage
-owners, thus reducing his expenses within the narrowest compass.
-
-The Corporation boroughs, or boroughs in which the corporation had
-acquired by custom the right to elect, independently of the burgesses,
-were 43. In days when Parliamentary elections were frequent, the
-inhabitants of many boroughs waived their right of election and
-delegated it to the corporations. When seats in the House of Commons
-became more valuable, the corporations were tenacious of this customary
-monopoly, and frequently sought to have it established by charter.
-These claims were contested in the seventeenth century, but without
-much success, and the charters bestowed at this time restricted the
-franchise to the corporations in order to prevent ‘popular tumult,
-and to render the elections and other things and the public business
-of the said borough into certainty and constant order.’ It is easy to
-trace in these transactions, besides the rapacity of the corporations
-themselves, the influence of the landed aristocracy who were already
-beginning to finger these boroughs. There was, indeed, an interval
-during which the popular attacks met with some success. When Eliot and
-Hampden were on the Committee of Privileges, some towns, including
-Warwick, Colchester, and Boston, regained their rights. But the
-Restoration was fatal to the movement for open boroughs, and though it
-was hoped that the Revolution, which had been in part provoked by the
-tricks the Stuarts had played with the boroughs, would bring a more
-favourable atmosphere, this expectation was defeated. All of these
-boroughs fell under the rule of a patron, who bribed the members of
-the corporation with money, with livings or clerkships in the state
-departments, cadetships in the navy and in India. Croker complained
-that he had further to dance with the wives and daughters of the
-corporation at ‘tiresome and foolish’ balls. There was no disguise or
-mistake about the position. The patron spoke not of ‘my constituents’
-but of ‘my corporation.’ The inhabitants outside this little group
-had no share at all in Parliamentary representation, and neither the
-patron nor his nominee gave them a single thought. The members of the
-corporation themselves were often non-resident, and the mayor sometimes
-never went near the borough from the first day of his magistracy to the
-last. His office was important, not because it made him responsible for
-municipal government, but because it made him returning officer. He had
-to manage the formalities of an election for his patron.
-
-The Freemen boroughs, of which there were 62, represent in Mr.
-Porritt’s opinion the extreme divergence from the old franchise.
-In these boroughs restrictions of different kinds had crept in, a
-common restriction being that in force at Carlisle, which limited
-the franchise to the inhabitants who belonged to the trade guild.
-For some time these restrictions, though they destroyed the ancient
-significance of ‘freeman’ as a person to be distinguished from the
-‘villein,’ did not really destroy the representative character of the
-electorate. But these boroughs suffered like the others, and even more
-than the others, from the demoralising effects of the appreciation
-of the value of seats in Parliament, and as soon as votes commanded
-money, the corporations had every inducement to keep down the number of
-voters. In many boroughs there set in a further development that was
-fatal to the elementary principles of representation: the practice of
-selling the freedom of the borough to non-residents. There were three
-classes of buyers: men who wanted to become patrons, men who wanted
-to become members, and men who wanted to become voters. The making of
-honorary freemen became a favourite process for securing the control
-of a borough to the corporation or to a patron. Dunwich, which was a
-wealthy and famous seaport in the time of Henry II., gradually crumbled
-into the German Ocean, and in 1816 it was described by Oldfield
-as consisting of forty-two houses and half a church. This little
-borough contained in 1670 forty resident freemen, and in that year it
-largessed its freedom on four hundred non-residents. The same methods
-were applied at Carlisle, King’s Lynn, East Grinstead, Nottingham,
-Liverpool, and in many other places. A particularly flagrant case
-at Durham in 1762, when 215 freemen were made in order to turn an
-election, after the issue of the writ, led to a petition which resulted
-in the unseating of the member and the passing of an Act of Parliament
-in the following year. This Act excluded from the franchise honorary
-freemen who had been admitted within twelve months of the first day
-of an election, but it did not touch the rights of ordinary freemen
-admitted by the corporation. Consequently, when a Parliamentary
-election was impending or proceeding, new freemen used to swarm into
-the electorate whenever the corporation or the patron had need of
-them. At Bristol in 1812 seventeen hundred and twenty freemen, and at
-Maldon in 1826 a thousand freemen, were so admitted and enfranchised.
-Generally speaking, corporations seem to have preferred the method of
-exclusion to that of flooding the electorate with outside creations.
-On the eve of the Reform Bill, there were six electors at Rye and
-fourteen at Dunwich. At Launceston, early in the eighteenth century,
-the members of the corporation systematically refused freedom to all
-but members of their own party, and the same practices were adopted
-at East Retford, Ludlow, Plympton, Hastings, and other places. Legal
-remedies were generally out of reach of the excluded freemen. There
-were some exceptions to the abuses which prevailed in most of these
-boroughs, notably the case of the City of London. A special Act of
-Parliament (1774) made it a condition of the enjoyment of the freemen’s
-franchise there, that the freeman had not received alms, and that he
-had been a freeman for twelve calendar months. But in most of these
-boroughs, by the end of the eighteenth century, the electorate was
-entirely under the influence of the corporations. Nor was the device of
-withholding freedom from those qualified by custom, and of bestowing
-it on those who were only qualified by subservience, the only resource
-at the command of the borough-mongers. Charities were administered
-in an electioneering spirit, and recalcitrant voters were sometimes
-threatened with impressment.
-
-Of the 513 members representing England and Wales in 1832, 415 sat for
-cities and boroughs. Fifty members were returned by 24 cities, 332 by
-166 English boroughs, 5 by single-member boroughs, 16 by the Cinque
-Ports, and 12 by as many Welsh boroughs. The twelve Welsh counties
-returned 12 members, and the forty English counties 82, the remaining 4
-members being representatives of the Universities.
-
-The county franchise had a much less chequered history than the
-various franchises in boroughs. Before the reign of Henry VI., every
-free inhabitant householder, freeholder or non-freeholder, could vote
-at elections of Knights of the Shire. The Act of 1430 limited the
-franchise to forty-shilling freeholders. Many controversies raged
-round this definition, and by the eighteenth century, men were voting
-in respect of annuities, rent-charges, the dowries of their wives and
-pews in church. Mr. Porritt traces the faggot voter to the early days
-of Charles I. Two changes were made in the county franchise between
-1430 and 1832. The residential qualification disappears by 1620: in
-1702 a tax-paying qualification was introduced under which a property
-did not carry a vote unless it had been taxed for a year. In 1781 the
-year was cut down to six months. Great difficulties and irregularities
-occurred with regard to registration, and a Bill was passed into law in
-1784 to establish a public system of registration. The Act, however,
-was repealed in the next year, in consequence of the agitation against
-the expense. The county franchise had a democratic appearance but
-the county constituencies were very largely under territorial sway,
-and by the middle of the fifteenth century Jack Cade had complained
-of the pressure of the great families on their tenants. Fox declared
-that down to 1780 one of the members for Yorkshire had always been
-elected in Lord Rockingham’s dining-room, and from that time onwards
-the representation of that county seems to have been a battle of bribes
-between the Rockinghams, the Fitzwilliams and the Harewoods.
-
-It is easy to see from this sketch of the manner in which the
-Parliamentary franchise had been drawn into the hands of patrons and
-corporations, that the aristocracy had supreme command of Parliament.
-Control by patrons was growing steadily throughout the eighteenth
-century. The Society of Friends of the People presented a petition to
-the House of Commons in 1793, in which it was stated that 157 members
-were sent to Parliament by 84 individuals, and 150 other members
-were returned by the recommendation of 70 powerful individuals. The
-relations of such members to their patrons were described by Fox in
-1797, ‘When Gentlemen represent populous towns and cities, then it is
-a disputed point whether they ought to obey their voice or follow the
-dictates of their own conscience. But if they represent a noble lord or
-a noble duke then it becomes no longer a question of doubt, and he is
-not considered a man of honour who does not implicitly obey the orders
-of a single constituent.’[1] The petition of the Society of Friends
-of the People contained some interesting information as to the number
-of electors in certain constituencies: 90 members were returned by 46
-places, in none of which the number of voters exceeded 50, 37 ‘by 19
-places in none of which the number of voters exceeds 100, and 52 by
-26 in none of which the number of voters exceeded 200. Seventy-five
-members were returned for 35 places in which it would be to trifle with
-the patience of your Honourable House to mention any number of voters
-at all,’ the elections at the places alluded to being notoriously a
-matter of form.
-
-If the qualifications of voters had changed, so had the qualifications
-of members. A power that reposed on this basis would have seemed
-reasonably complete, but the aristocracy took further measures to
-consolidate its monopoly. In 1710 Parliament passed an Act, to which
-it gave the prepossessing title ‘An Act for securing the freedom of
-Parliament, by further qualifying the Members to sit in the House of
-Commons,’ to exclude all persons who had not a certain estate of land,
-worth in the case of knights of the shire, £500, and in the case of
-burgesses, £300. This Act was often evaded by various devices, and
-the most famous of the statesmen of the eighteenth century sat in
-Parliament by means of fictitious qualifications, among others Pitt,
-Burke, Fox and Sheridan. But the Act gave a tone to Parliament, and
-it was not a dead letter.[2] It had, too, the effect of throwing the
-ambitious merchant into the landlord class, and of enveloping him in
-the landlord atmosphere. Selection and assimilation, as De Tocqueville
-saw, and not exclusion, are the true means of preserving a class
-monopoly of power. We might, indeed, sum up the contrast between the
-English and French aristocracy by saying that the English aristocracy
-understood the advantages of a scientific social frontier, whereas
-the French were tenacious of a traditional frontier. More effectual
-in practice than this imposition of a property qualification was the
-growing practice of throwing on candidates the official expenses of
-elections. During the eighteenth century these expenses grew rapidly,
-and various Acts of Parliament, in particular that of 1745, fixed these
-charges on candidates.
-
-It followed naturally, from a system which made all municipal
-government merely one aspect of Parliamentary electioneering, that the
-English towns fell absolutely into the hands of corrupt oligarchies
-and the patrons on whom they lived. The Tudor kings had conceived
-the policy of extinguishing their independent life and energies by
-committing their government to select bodies with power to perpetuate
-themselves by co-opting new members. The English aristocracy found
-in the boroughs--with the mass of inhabitants disinherited and all
-government and power vested in a small body--a state of things not
-less convenient and accommodating to the new masters of the machine
-than it had been to the old. The English towns, which three centuries
-earlier had enjoyed a brisk and vigorous public life, were now in a
-state of stagnant misgovernment: as the century advanced, they only
-sank deeper into the slough, and the Report of the Commission of 1835
-showed that the number of inhabitants who were allowed any share in
-public life or government was infinitesimal. In Plymouth, for example,
-with a population of 75,000, the number of resident freemen was under
-300: in Ipswich, with more than 20,000 inhabitants, there were 350
-freemen of whom more than 100 were not rated, and some forty were
-paupers. Municipal government throughout the century was a system not
-of government but of property. It did not matter to the patron whether
-Winchester or Colchester had any drains or constables: the patron
-had to humour the corporation or the freemen, the corporation or the
-freemen had to keep their bargain with the patron. The patron gave
-the corporation money and other considerations: the corporation gave
-the patron control over a seat in Parliament. Neither had to consider
-the interests or the property of the mass of burgesses. Pitt so far
-recognised the ownership of Parliamentary boroughs as property, that he
-proposed in 1785 to compensate the patrons of the boroughs he wished to
-disenfranchise. Every municipal office was regarded in the same spirit.
-The endowments and the charities that belonged to the town belonged to
-a small oligarchy which acknowledged no responsibility to the citizens
-for its proceedings, and conducted its business in secret. The whole
-system depended on the patron, who for his part represented the
-absolute supremacy of the territorial aristocracy to which he belonged.
-Civic life there was none.
-
-If we turn to local government outside the towns there is the same
-decay of self-government.
-
-One way of describing the changes that came over English society after
-the break-up of feudalism would be to say that as in France everything
-drifted into the hands of the intendant, in England everything drifted
-into the hands of the Justice of the Peace. This office, created in
-the first year of Edward III., had grown during his reign to very
-great importance and power. Originally the Justices of the Peace were
-appointed by the state to carry out certain of its precepts, and
-generally to keep the peace in the counties in which they served.
-In their quarterly sittings they had the assistance of a jury, and
-exercised a criminal jurisdiction concurrent with that which the king’s
-judges exercised when on circuit. But from early days they developed
-an administrative power which gradually drew to itself almost all the
-functions and properties of government. Its quasi-judicial origin is
-seen in the judicial form under which it conducted such business as
-the supervision of roads and bridges. Delinquencies and deficiencies
-were ‘presented’ to the magistrates in court. It became the habit,
-very early in the history of the Justices of the Peace, to entrust to
-them duties that were new, or duties to which existing authorities
-were conspicuously inadequate. In the social convulsions that followed
-the Black Death, it was the Justice of the Peace who was called in to
-administer the elaborate legislation by which the capitalist classes
-sought to cage the new ambitions of the labourer. Under the Elizabethan
-Poor Law, it was the Justice of the Peace who appointed the parish
-overseers and approved their poor rate, and it was the Justice of the
-Peace who held in his hand the meshes of the law of Settlement. In
-other words, the social order that emerged from mediæval feudalism
-centred round the Justice of the Peace in England as conspicuously
-as it centred round the bureaucracy in France. During the eighteenth
-century, the power of the Justice of the Peace reached its zenith,
-whilst his government acquired certain attributes that gave it a
-special significance.
-
-At the beginning of the eighteenth century there were still many
-small men taking some part in the affairs of the village. The old
-manorial civilisation was disappearing, but Mr. and Mrs. Webb have
-shown that manor courts of one kind or another were far more numerous
-and had far more to do at the beginning of the eighteenth century
-than has been commonly supposed. Such records as survive, those,
-_e.g._ of Godmanchester and Great Tew, prove that the conduct and
-arrangement of the business of the common fields--and England was
-still, at the beginning of this period, very largely a country of
-common fields--required and received very full and careful attention.
-Those courts crumble away as the common fields vanish, and with them
-there disappears an institution in which, as Professor Vinogradoff has
-shown, the small man counted and had recognised rights. By the time of
-the Reform Bill, a manor court was more or less of a local curiosity.
-The village vestries again, which represented another successor to the
-manorial organisation, democratic in form, were losing their vitality
-and functions, and coming more and more under the shadow of the
-Justices of the Peace. Parochial government was declining throughout
-the century, and though Professor Lowell in his recent book speaks of
-village government as still democratic in 1832, few of those who have
-examined the history of the vestry believe that much was left of its
-democratic character. By the end of the eighteenth century, the entire
-administration of county affairs, as well as the ultimate authority in
-parish business, was in the hands of the Justice of the Peace, the High
-Sheriff, and the Lord-Lieutenant.
-
-The significance of this development was increased by the manner
-in which the administration of the justices was conducted. The
-transactions of business fell, as the century advanced, into fewer and
-fewer hands, and became less and less public in form and method. The
-great administrative court, Quarter Sessions, remained open as a court
-of justice, but it ceased to conduct its county business in public.
-Its procedure, too, was gradually transformed. Originally the court
-received ‘presentments’ or complaints from many different sources--the
-grand juries, the juries from the Hundreds, the liberties and the
-boroughs, and from constable juries. The grand juries presented county
-bridges, highways or gaols that needed repair: the Hundred juries
-presented delinquencies in their divisions: constable juries presented
-such minor anti-social practices as the keeping of pigs. Each of these
-juries represented some area of public opinion. The Grand Jury, besides
-giving its verdict on all these presentments, was in other ways a very
-formidable body, and acted as a kind of consultative committee, and
-perhaps as a finance committee. Now all this elaborate machinery was
-simplified in the eighteenth century, and it was simplified by the
-abandonment of all the quasi-democratic characteristics and methods.
-Presentments by individual justices gradually superseded presentments
-by juries. By 1835 the Hundred Jury and Jury of Constables had
-disappeared: the Grand Jury had almost ceased to concern itself with
-local government, and the administrative business of Quarter Sessions
-was no longer discussed in open court.
-
-Even more significant in some respects was the delegation of a great
-part of county business, including the protection of footpaths, from
-Quarter Sessions to Petty Sessions or to single justices out of
-sessions. Magistrates could administer in this uncontrolled capacity a
-drastic code for the punishment of vagrants and poachers without jury
-or publicity. The single justice himself determined all questions of
-law and of fact, and could please himself as to the evidence he chose
-to hear. In 1822 the Duke of Buckingham tried and convicted a man of
-coursing on his estate. The trial took place in the duke’s kitchen: the
-witnesses were the duke’s keepers. The defendant was in this case not
-a poacher, who was _fera naturæ_, but a farmer, who was in comparison
-a person of substance and standing. The office of magistrate possessed
-a special importance for the class that preserved game, and readers of
-_Rob Roy_ will remember that Mr. Justice Inglewood had to swallow his
-prejudices against the Hanoverian succession and take the oaths as a
-Justice of the Peace, because the refusal of most of the Northumberland
-magistrates, being Jacobites, to serve on the bench, had endangered
-the strict administration of the Game Laws. We know from the novels of
-Richardson and Fielding and Smollett how this power enveloped village
-life. Richardson has no venom against the justices. In _Pamela_ he
-merely records the fact that Mr. B. was a magistrate for two counties,
-and that therefore it was hopeless for Pamela, whom he wished to
-seduce, to elude his pursuit, even if she escaped from her duress in
-his country house.
-
-Fielding, who saw the servitude of the poor with less patience and
-composure, wrote of country life with knowledge and experience.
-In _Joseph Andrews_ he describes the young squire who forbids the
-villagers to keep dogs, and kills any dog that he finds, and the lawyer
-who assures Lady Booby that ‘the laws of the land are not so vulgar to
-permit a mean fellow to contend with one of your ladyship’s fortune. We
-have one sure card, which is to carry him before Justice Frolic, who
-upon hearing your ladyship’s name, will commit him without any further
-question.’ Mr. Justice Frolic was as good as his reputation, and at
-the moment of their rescue Joseph and Fanny were on the point of being
-sent to Bridewell on the charge of taking a twig from a hedge. Fielding
-and Richardson wrote in the middle of the eighteenth century. In 1831
-Denman, the Attorney-General in Grey’s Government, commented on the
-difference between the punishments administered by judges at Assize and
-those administered by justices at Quarter Sessions, in the defence of
-their game preserves, observing that the contrast ‘had a very material
-effect in confusing in the minds of the people the notions of right
-and wrong.’ This territorial power was in fact absolute. In France the
-peasant was in some cases shielded from the caprice of the seigneur by
-the Crown, the Parlements and the intendants. Both Henry IV. and Louis
-XIII. intervened to protect the communities in the possession of their
-goods from the encroachments of seigneurs, while Louis XIV. published
-an edict in 1667 restoring to the communities all the property they had
-alienated since 1620. In England he was at the landlord’s mercy: he
-stood unprotected beneath the canopy of this universal power.
-
-Nor was the actual authority, administrative or judicial, of the
-magistrates and their surveillance of the village the full measure of
-their influence. They became, as Mr. and Mrs. Webb have shown, the
-domestic legislature. The most striking example of their legislation
-was the Berkshire Bread Act. In 1795 the Berkshire Court of Quarter
-Sessions summoned justices and ‘several discreet persons’ to meet at
-Speenhamland for the purpose of rating husbandry wages. This meeting
-passed the famous resolution providing for the supplementing of wages
-out of the rates, on a certain fixed scale, according to the price
-of flour. The example of these seven clergymen and eleven squires
-was quickly followed in other counties, and Quarter Sessions used to
-have tables drawn up and printed, giving the justices’ scale, to be
-issued by the Clerk of the Peace to every acting magistrate and to
-the churchwardens and overseers of every parish. It was a handful of
-magistrates in the different counties, acting on their own initiative,
-without any direction from Parliament, that set loose this social
-avalanche in England. Parliament, indeed, had developed the habit of
-taking the opinion of the magistrates as conclusive on all social
-questions, and whereas a modern elected local authority has to submit
-to the control of a department subject to Parliament, in the eighteenth
-century a non-elected local authority, not content with its own
-unchecked authority, virtually controlled the decisions of Parliament
-as well. The opposition of the magistrates to Whitbread’s Bill in 1807,
-for example, was accepted as fatal and final.
-
-Now if the Crown had been more powerful or had followed a different
-policy, the Justices of the Peace, instead of developing into
-autonomous local oligarchies, might have become its representatives.
-When feudal rights disappeared with the Wars of the Roses, the
-authority of the Justice of the Peace, an officer of the Crown,
-superseded that of the local lord. Mr. Jenks[3] is therefore justified
-in saying that ‘the governing caste in English country life since the
-Reformation has not been a feudal but an official caste.’ But this
-official caste is, so to speak, only another aspect of the feudal
-caste, for though on paper the representatives of the central power,
-the county magistrates were in practice, by the end of the eighteenth
-century, simply the local squires putting into force their own ideas
-and policy. Down to the Rebellion, the Privy Council expected judges
-of assize to choose suitable persons for appointment as magistrates.
-Magistrates were made and unmade until the reign of George I.,
-according to the political prepossessions of governments. But by the
-end of the eighteenth century the Lord Lieutenant’s recommendations
-were virtually decisive for appointment, and dismissal from the bench
-became unknown. Thus though the system of the magistracy, as Redlich
-and Hirst pointed out, enabled the English constitution to rid itself
-of feudalism a century earlier than the continent, it ultimately gave
-back to the landlords in another form the power that they lost when
-feudalism disappeared.
-
-Another distinctive feature of the English magistracy contributed to
-this result. The Justice of the Peace was unpaid. The statutes of
-Edward III. and Richard II. prescribed wages at the handsome rate of
-four shillings a day, but it seems to be clear, though the actual
-practice of benches is not very easy to ascertain, that the wages in
-the rare instances when they were claimed were spent on hospitality,
-and did not go into the pockets of the individual justices. Lord Eldon
-gave this as a reason for refusing to strike magistrates off the list
-in cases of private misconduct. ‘As the magistrates gave their services
-gratis they ought to be protected.’ When it was first proposed in 1785
-to establish salaried police commissioners for Middlesex, many Whigs
-drew a contrast between the magistrates who were under no particular
-obligation to the executive power and the officials proposed to be
-appointed who would receive salaries, and might be expected to take
-their orders from the Government.
-
-The aristocracy was thus paramount both in local government and in
-Parliament. But to understand the full significance of its absolutism
-we must notice two important social events--the introduction of family
-settlements and the abolition of military tenures.
-
-A class that wishes to preserve its special powers and privileges has
-to discover some way of protecting its corporate interests from the
-misdemeanours and follies of individual members. The great landlords
-found such a device in the system of entail which gave to each
-successive generation merely a life interest in the estates, and kept
-the estates themselves as the permanent possession of the family. But
-the lawyers managed to elude this device of the landowners by the
-invention of sham law-suits, an arrangement by which a stranger brought
-a claim for the estate against the limited owner in possession, and got
-a judgment by his connivance. The stranger was in truth the agent of
-the limited owner, who was converted by this procedure into an absolute
-owner. The famous case known as Taltarums case in 1472, established
-the validity of these lawsuits, and for the next two hundred years
-‘Family Law’ no longer controlled the actions of the landowners and the
-market for their estates. During this time Courts of Law and Parliament
-set their faces against all attempts to reintroduce the system of
-entails. As a consequence estates were sometimes melted down, and the
-inheritances of ancient families passed into the possession of yeomen
-and merchants. The landowners had never accepted their defeat. In
-the reign of Elizabeth they tried to devise family settlements that
-would answer their purpose as effectually as the old law of entail,
-but they were foiled by the great judges, Popham and Coke. After the
-Restoration, unhappily, conditions were more propitious. In the first
-place, the risks of the Civil War had made it specially important
-for rich men to save their estates from forfeiture by means of such
-settlements, and in the second place the landowning class was now
-all-powerful. Consequently the attempt which Coke had crushed now
-succeeded, and rich families were enabled to tie up their wealth.[4]
-Family settlements have ever since been a very important part of our
-social system. The merchants who became landowners bought up the
-estates of yeomen, whereas in eighteenth-century France it was the land
-of noblemen that passed to the _nouveaux riches_.
-
-The second point to be noticed in the history of this landlord class
-is the abolition of the military tenures in 1660. The form and the
-method of this abolition are both significant. The military dues were
-the last remaining feudal liability of the landlords to the Crown. They
-were money payments that had taken the place of old feudal services.
-The landlords, who found them vexatious and capricious, had been trying
-to get rid of them ever since the reign of James I. In 1660 they
-succeeded, and the Restoration Parliament revived the Act of Cromwell’s
-Parliament four years earlier which abolished military tenures. The
-bargain which the landlords made with the Crown on this occasion was
-ingenious and characteristic; it was something like the Concordat
-between Francis I. and Leo X., which abolished the Pragmatic sanction
-at the expense of the Gallican Church; for the landowners simply
-transferred their liability to the general taxpayer. The Crown forgave
-the landlords their dues in consideration of receiving a grant from the
-taxation of the food of the nation. An Excise tax was the substitute.
-
-Now the logical corollary of the abolition of the feudal dues that
-vexed the large landowners would have been the abolition of the feudal
-dues that vexed the small landowners. If the great landlords were no
-longer to be subject to their dues in their relation to the Crown, why
-should the small copyholder continue to owe feudal dues to the lord?
-The injustice of abolishing the one set of liabilities and retaining
-the other struck one observer very forcibly, and he was an observer
-who knew something, unlike most of the governing class, from intimate
-experience of the grievances of the small landowner under this feudal
-survival. This was Francis North (1637-1685), the first Lord Guildford,
-the famous lawyer and Lord Chancellor. North had begun his career by
-acting as the steward of various manors, thinking that he would gain
-an insight into human nature which would be of great value to him in
-his practice at the bar. His experience in this capacity, as we know
-from Roger North’s book _The Lives of the Norths_, disclosed to him an
-aspect of feudalism which escaped the large landowners--the hardships
-of their dependants. He used to describe the copyhold exactions, and
-to say that in many cases that came under his notice small tenements
-and pieces of land which had been in a poor family for generations were
-swallowed up in the monstrous fines imposed on copyholders. He said he
-had often found himself the executioner of the cruelty of the lords
-and ladies of manors upon poor men, and he remarked the inconsistency
-that left all these oppressions untouched in emancipating the large
-landowners. Maine, in discussing this system, pointed out that these
-signorial dues were of the kind that provoked the French Revolution.
-There were two reasons why a state of things which produced a
-revolution in France remained disregarded in England. One was that the
-English copyholders were a much smaller class: the other that, as small
-proprietors were disappearing in England, the English copyholder was
-apt to contrast his position with the status of the landless labourer,
-and to congratulate himself on the possession of a property, whereas
-in France the copyholder contrasted his position with the status of
-the freeholder and complained of his services. The copyholders were
-thus not in a condition to raise a violent or dangerous discontent,
-and their grievances were left unredressed. It is sometimes said that
-England got rid of feudalism a century earlier than the continent. That
-is true of the English State, but to understand the agrarian history of
-the eighteenth century we must remember that, as it has been well said,
-‘whereas the English State is less feudal, the English land law is more
-feudal than that of any other country in Europe.’[5]
-
-Lastly, the class that is armed with all these social and political
-powers dominates the universities and the public schools. The story of
-how the colleges changed from communities of poor men into societies of
-rich men, and then gradually swallowed up the university, has been told
-in the Reports of University Commissions. By the eighteenth century the
-transformation was complete, and both the ancient universities were the
-universities of the rich. There is a passage in Macaulay describing the
-state and pomp of Oxford at the end of the seventeenth century, ‘when
-her Chancellor, the venerable Duke of Ormonde, sat in his embroidered
-mantle on his throne under the painted ceiling of the Sheldonian
-theatre, surrounded by hundreds of graduates robed according to their
-rank, while the noblest youths of England were solemnly presented to
-him as candidates for academical honours.’ The university was a power,
-not in the sense in which that could be said of a university like the
-old university of Paris, whose learning could make popes tremble, but
-in the sense that the university was part of the recognised machinery
-of aristocracy. What was true of the universities was true of the
-public schools. Education was the nursery not of a society, but of an
-order; not of a state, but of a race of rulers.
-
-Thus on every side this class is omnipotent. In Parliament with its
-ludicrous representation, in the towns with their decayed government,
-in the country, sleeping under the absolute rule of the Justice of
-the Peace, there is no rival power. The Crown is for all purposes its
-accomplice rather than its competitor. It controls the universities,
-the Church, the law, and all the springs of life and discussion. Its
-own influence is consolidated by the strong social discipline embodied
-in the family settlements. Its supremacy is complete and unquestioned.
-Whereas in France the fermentation of ideas was an intellectual revolt
-against the governing system and all literature spoke treason, in
-England the existing régime was accepted, we might say assumed, by
-the world of letters and art, by the England that admired Reynolds
-and Gibbon, or listened to Johnson and Goldsmith, or laughed with
-Sheridan and Sterne. To the reason of France, the government under
-which France lived was an expensive paradox: to the reason of England,
-any other government than the government under which England lived was
-unthinkable. Hence De Tocqueville saw only a homogeneous society, a
-society revering its institutions in the spirit of Burke in contrast
-with a society that mocked at its institutions in the spirit of
-Voltaire.
-
-‘You people of great families and hereditary trusts and fortunes,’
-wrote Burke to the Duke of Richmond in 1772, ‘are not like such as I
-am, who, whatever we may be by the rapidity of our growth and even
-by the fruit we bear, flatter ourselves that, while we creep on the
-ground, we belly into melons that are exquisite for size and flavour,
-yet still we are but annual plants that perish with our season, and
-leave no sort of traces behind us. You, if you are what you ought to
-be, are in my eye the great oaks that shade a country, and perpetuate
-your benefits from generation to generation.’ We propose in this book
-to examine the social history of England in the days when the great
-oaks were in the fulness of their vigour and strength, and to see what
-happened to some of the classes that found shelter in their shade.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] House of Commons, May 26, 1797, on Grey’s motion for Parliamentary
-Reform.
-
-[2] The only person who is known to have declined to sit on this
-account is Southey.
-
-[3] _Outline of English Local Government_, p. 152.
-
-[4] A clear and concise account of these developments is given by Lord
-Hobhouse, _Contemporary Review_, February and March 1886.
-
-[5] Holdsworth’s _History of English Law_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE VILLAGE BEFORE ENCLOSURE
-
- To elucidate these chapters, and to supply further information for
- those who are interested in the subject, we publish an Appendix
- containing the history, and tolerably full particulars, of twelve
- separate enclosures. These instances have not been chosen on any
- plan. They are taken from different parts of the country, and are of
- various dates; some are enclosures of common fields, some enclosures
- of commons and waste, and some include enclosures of both kinds.
-
-
-At the time of the great Whig Revolution, England was in the main a
-country of commons and of common fields[6]; at the time of the Reform
-Bill, England was in the main a country of individualist agriculture
-and of large enclosed farms. There has probably been no change in
-Europe in the last two centuries comparable to this in importance of
-which so little is known to-day, or of which so little is to be learnt
-from the general histories of the time. The accepted view is that this
-change marks a great national advance, and that the hardships which
-incidentally followed could not have been avoided: that it meant a
-vast increase in the food resources of England in comparison with
-which the sufferings of individuals counted for little: and that the
-great estates which then came into existence were rather the gift of
-economic forces than the deliberate acquisitions of powerful men. We
-are not concerned to corroborate or to dispute the contention that
-enclosure made England more productive,[7] or to discuss the merits of
-enclosure itself as a public policy or a means to agricultural progress
-in the eighteenth century. Our business is with the changes that the
-enclosures caused in the social structure of England, from the manner
-in which they were in practice carried out. We propose, therefore, to
-describe the actual operations by which society passed through this
-revolution, the old village vanished, and rural life assumed its modern
-form and character.
-
-It is difficult for us, who think of a common as a wild sweep of
-heather and beauty and freedom, saved for the enjoyment of the world
-in the midst of guarded parks and forbidden meadows, to realise that
-the commons that disappeared from so many an English village in the
-eighteenth century belonged to a very elaborate, complex, and ancient
-economy. The antiquity of that elaborate economy has been the subject
-of fierce contention, and the controversies that rage round the
-nursery of the English village recall the controversies that raged
-round the nursery of Homer. The main subject of contention has been
-this. Was the manor or the township, or whatever name we like to give
-to the primitive unit of agricultural life, an organisation imposed
-by a despotic landowner on his dependents, or was it created by the
-co-operation of a group of free tribesmen, afterwards dominated by a
-military overlord? Did it owe more to Roman tradition or to Teutonic
-tendencies? Professor Vinogradoff, the latest historian, inclines to
-a compromise between these conflicting theories. He thinks that it
-is impossible to trace the open-field system of cultivation to any
-exclusive right of ownership or to the power of coercion, and that
-the communal organisation of the peasantry, a village community of
-shareholders who cultivated the land on the open-field system and
-treated the other requisites of rural life as appendant to it, is
-more ancient than the manorial order. It derives, in his view, from
-the old English society. The manor itself, an institution which
-partakes at once of the character of an estate and of a unit of local
-government, was produced by the needs of government and the development
-of individualist husbandry, side by side with this communal village.
-These conditions lead to the creation of lordships, and after the
-Conquest they take form in the manor. The manorial element, in fact,
-is superimposed on the communal, and is not the foundation of it: the
-mediæval village is a free village gradually feudalised. Fortunately it
-is not incumbent on us to do more than touch on this fascinating study,
-as it is enough for our purposes to note that the greater part of
-England in cultivation at the beginning of the eighteenth century was
-cultivated on a system which, with certain local variations, belonged
-to a common type, representing this common ancestry.
-
-The term ‘common’ was used of three kinds of land in the
-eighteenth-century village, and the three were intimately connected
-with each other. There were (1) the arable fields, (2) the common
-meadowland, and (3) the common or waste. The arable fields were divided
-into strips, with different owners, some of whom owned few strips,
-and some many. The various strips that belonged to a particular owner
-were scattered among the fields. Strips were divided from each other,
-sometimes by a grass band called a balk, sometimes by a furrow. They
-were cultivated on a uniform system by agreement, and after harvest
-they were thrown open to pasturage. The common meadow land was divided
-up by lot, pegged out, and distributed among the owners of the strips;
-after the hay was carried, these meadows, like the arable fields, were
-used for pasture. The common or waste, which was used as a common
-pasture at all times of the year, consisted sometimes of woodland,
-sometimes of roadside strips, and sometimes of commons in the modern
-sense.[8]
-
-Such, roughly, was the map of the old English village. What were the
-classes that lived in it, and what were their several rights? In a
-normal village there would be (1) a Lord of the Manor, (2) Freeholders,
-some of whom might be large proprietors, and many small, both classes
-going by the general name of Yeomanry, (3) Copyholders, (4) Tenant
-Farmers, holding by various sorts of tenure, from tenants at will to
-farmers with leases for three lives, (5) Cottagers, (6) Squatters, and
-(7) Farm Servants, living in their employers’ houses. The proportions
-of these classes varied greatly, no doubt, in different villages,
-but we have an estimate of the total agricultural population in the
-table prepared by Gregory King in 1688, from which it appears that in
-addition to the Esquires and Gentlemen, there were 40,000 families of
-freeholders of the better sort, 120,000 families of freeholders of the
-lesser sort, and 150,000 farmers. Adam Smith, it will be remembered,
-writing nearly a century later, said that the large number of yeomen
-was at once the strength and the distinction of English agriculture.
-
-Let us now describe rather more fully the different people represented
-in these different categories, and the different rights that they
-enjoyed. We have seen in the first chapter that the manorial courts
-had lost many of their powers by this time, and that part of the
-jurisdiction that the Lord of the Manor had originally exercised had
-passed to the Justice of the Peace. No such change had taken place
-in his relation to the economic life of the village. He might or he
-might not still own a demesne land. So far as the common arable or
-common meadow was concerned, he was in the same position as any other
-proprietor: he might own many strips or few strips or no strips at all.
-His position with regard to the waste was different, the difference
-being expressed by Blackstone ‘in those waste grounds, which are
-usually called commons, the property of the soil is generally in the
-Lord of the Manor, as in the common fields it is in the particular
-tenant.’ The feudal lawyers had developed a doctrine that the soil of
-the waste was vested in the Lord of the Manor, and that originally it
-had all belonged to him. But feudal law acknowledged certain definite
-limitations to his rights over the waste. The Statute of Merton, 1235,
-allowed him to make enclosures on the waste, but only on certain terms;
-he was obliged to leave enough of the waste for the needs of his
-tenants. Moreover, his powers were limited, not only by the concurrent
-rights of freeholders and copyholders thus recognised by this ancient
-law, but also by certain common rights of pasture and turbary enjoyed
-by persons who were neither freeholders nor copyholders, namely
-cottagers. These rights were explained by the lawyers of the time as
-being concessions made by the Lord of the Manor in remote antiquity.
-The Lord of the Manor was regarded as the owner of the waste, subject
-to these common rights: that is, he was regarded as owning the minerals
-and the surface rights (sand and gravel) as well as sporting rights.
-
-Every grade of property and status was represented in the ranks of the
-freeholders, the copyholders and the tenant farmers, from the man who
-employed others to work for him to the man who was sometimes employed
-in working for others. No distinct line, in fact, can be drawn between
-the small farmer, whether freeholder, copyholder or tenant, and the
-cottager, for the cottager might either own or rent a few strips; the
-best dividing-line can be drawn between those who made their living
-mainly as farmers, and those who made their living mainly as labourers.
-
-It is important to remember that no farmer, however large his holdings
-or property, or however important his social position, was at liberty
-to cultivate his strips as he pleased. The system of cultivation would
-be settled for him by the Jury of the Manor Court, a court that had
-different names in different places. By the eighteenth century the
-various courts of the manorial jurisdiction had been merged in a single
-court, called indifferently the View of Frankpledge, the Court Leet,
-the Court Baron, the Great Court or the Little Court, which transacted
-so much of the business hitherto confided to various courts as had
-not been assigned to the Justices of the Peace.[9] Most of the men of
-the village, freeholders, copyholders, leaseholders, or cottagers,
-attended the court, but the constitution of the Jury or Homage seems
-to have varied in different manors. Sometimes the tenants of the manor
-were taken haphazard in rotation: sometimes the steward controlled
-the choice, sometimes a nominee of the steward or a nominee of the
-tenants selected the Jury: sometimes the steward took no part in the
-selection at all. The chief part of the business of these courts in the
-eighteenth century was the management of the common fields and common
-pastures, and the appointment of the village officers. These courts
-decided which seed should be sown in the different fields, and the
-dates at which they were to be opened and closed to common pasture.
-Under the most primitive system of rotation the arable land was divided
-into three fields, of which one was sown with wheat, another with
-spring corn, and the third lay fallow: but by the end of the eighteenth
-century there was a great variety of cultivation, and we find a
-nine years’ course at Great Tew in Oxfordshire, a six years’ course
-in Berkshire, while the Battersea common fields were sown with one
-uniform round of grain without intermission, and consequently without
-fallowing.[10]
-
-By Sir Richard Sutton’s Act[11] for the cultivation of common fields,
-passed in 1773, a majority of three-fourths in number and value of the
-occupiers, with the consent of the owner and titheholder, was empowered
-to decide on the course of husbandry, to regulate stinted commons, and,
-with the consent of the Lord of the Manor, to let off a twelfth of the
-common, applying the rent to draining or improving the rest of it.[12]
-Before this Act, a universal consent to any change of system was
-necessary.[13] The cultivation of strips in the arable fields carried
-with it rights of common over the waste and also over the common
-fields when they were thrown open. These rights were known as ‘common
-appendant’ and they are thus defined by Blackstone: ‘Common appendant
-is a right belonging to the owners or occupiers of arable land to put
-commonable beasts upon the Lord’s waste and upon the lands of other
-persons within the same manor.’
-
-The classes making their living mainly as labourers were the cottagers,
-farm servants, and squatters. The cottagers either owned or occupied
-cottages and had rights of common on the waste, and in some cases
-over the common fields. These rights were of various kinds: they
-generally included the right to pasture certain animals, to cut turf
-and to get fuel. The cottagers, as we have already said, often owned
-or rented land. This is spoken of as a common practice by Addington,
-who knew the Midland counties well; Arthur Young gives instances from
-Lincolnshire and Oxfordshire, and Eden from Leicestershire and Surrey.
-The squatters or borderers were, by origin, a separate class, though
-in time they merged into the cottagers. They were settlers who built
-themselves huts and cleared a piece of land in the commons or woods,
-at some distance from the village. These encroachments were generally
-sanctioned. A common rule in one part of the country was that the right
-was established if the settler could build his cottage in the night
-and send out smoke from his chimney in the morning.[14] The squatters
-also often went out as day labourers. The farm servants were usually
-the children of the small farmers or cottagers; they lived in their
-masters’ houses until they had saved enough money to marry and take a
-cottage of their own.
-
-Were there any day labourers without either land or common rights in
-the old village? It is difficult to suppose that there were many.[15]
-Blackstone said of common appurtenant that it was not a general right
-‘but can only be claimed by special grant or by prescription, which the
-law esteems sufficient proof of a special grant or agreement for this
-purpose.’ Prescription covers a multitude of encroachments. Indeed, it
-was only by the ingenuity of the feudal lawyers that these rights did
-not attach to the inhabitants of the village at large. These lawyers
-had decided in Gateward’s case, 1603, that ‘inhabitants’ were too
-vague a body to enjoy a right, and on this ground they had deprived
-the inhabitants of the village of Stixswold in Lincolnshire of their
-customary right of turning out cattle on the waste.[16] From that time
-a charter of incorporation was necessary to enable the inhabitants at
-large to prove a legal claim to common rights. But rights that were
-enjoyed by the occupiers of small holdings or of cottages by long
-prescription, or by encroachments tacitly sanctioned, must have been
-very widely scattered.
-
-Such were the classes inhabiting the eighteenth-century village. As
-the holdings in the common fields could be sold, the property might
-change hands, though it remained subject to common rights and to the
-general regulations of the manor court. Consequently the villages
-exhibited great varieties of character. In one village it might happen
-that strip after strip had been bought up by the Lord of the Manor or
-some proprietor, until the greater part of the arable fields had come
-into the possession of a single owner. In such cases, however, the land
-so purchased was still let out as a rule to a number of small men,
-for the engrossing of farms as a practice comes into fashion after
-enclosure. Sometimes such purchase was a preliminary to enclosure. The
-Bedfordshire reporter gives an example in the village of Bolnhurst, in
-that county. Three land speculators bought up as much of the land as
-they could with a view to enclosing the common fields and then selling
-at a large profit. But the land turned out to be much less valuable
-than they had supposed, and they could not get it off their hands: all
-improvements were at a standstill, for the speculators only let from
-year to year, hoping still to find a market.[17] In other villages,
-land might have changed hands in just the opposite direction. The Lord
-of the Manor might sell his property in the common fields, and sell it
-not to some capitalist or merchant, but to a number of small farmers.
-We learn from the evidence of the Committee of 1844 on enclosures that
-sometimes the Lord of the Manor sold his property in the waste to the
-commoners. Thus there were villages with few owners, as there were
-villages with many owners. The writer of the _Report on Middlesex_,
-which was published in 1798 says, ‘I have known thirty landlords in
-a field of 200 acres, and the property of each so divided as to lie
-in ten or twenty places, containing from an acre or two downwards to
-fifteen perches; and in a field of 300 acres I have met with patches
-of arable land, containing eight perches each. In this instance the
-average size of all the pieces in the field was under an acre. In all
-cases they lie in long, narrow, winding or worm-like slips.’[18]
-
-The same writer states that at the time his book was written (1798)
-20,000 out of the 23,000 arable acres in Middlesex were cultivated on
-the common-field system.[19] Perhaps the parish of Stanwell, of which
-we describe the enclosure in detail elsewhere, may be taken as a fair
-example of an eighteenth-century village. In this parish there were,
-according to the enclosure award, four large proprietors, twenty-four
-moderate proprietors, twenty-four small proprietors, and sixty-six
-cottagers with common rights.
-
-The most important social fact about this system is that it provided
-opportunities for the humblest and poorest labourer to rise in the
-village. Population seems to have moved slowly, and thus there was no
-feverish competition for land. The farm servant could save up his wages
-and begin his married life by hiring a cottage which carried rights of
-common, and gradually buy or hire strips of land. Every village, as
-Hasbach has put it, had its ladder, and nobody was doomed to stay on
-the lowest rung. This is the distinguishing mark of the old village. It
-would be easy, looking only at this feature, to idealise the society
-that we have described, and to paint this age as an age of gold. But
-no reader of Fielding or of Richardson would fall into this mistake,
-or persuade himself that this community was a society of free and
-equal men, in which tyranny was impossible. The old village was under
-the shadow of the squire and the parson, and there were many ways in
-which these powers controlled and hampered its pleasures and habits:
-there were quarrels, too, between farmers and cottagers, and there are
-many complaints that the farmers tried to take the lion’s share of the
-commons: but, whatever the pressure outside and whatever the bickerings
-within, it remains true that the common-field system formed a world in
-which the villagers lived their own lives and cultivated the soil on a
-basis of independence.
-
-It was this community that now passed under the unqualified rule of
-the oligarchy. Under that rule it was to disappear. Enclosure was
-no new menace to the poor. English literature before the eighteenth
-century echoes the dismay and lamentations of preachers and prophets
-who witnessed the havoc that it spread. Stubbes had written in 1553 his
-bitter protest against the enclosures which enabled rich men to eat up
-poor men, and twenty years later a writer had given a sombre landscape
-of the new farming: ‘We may see many of their houses built alone like
-ravens’ nests, no birds building near them.’ The Midlands had been
-the chief scene of these changes, and there the conversion of arable
-land into pasture had swallowed up great tracts of common agriculture,
-provoking in some cases an armed resistance. The enclosures of this
-century were the second and the greater of two waves.[20] In one
-respect enclosure was in form more difficult now than in earlier
-periods, for it was generally understood at this time that an Act
-of Parliament was necessary. In reality there was less check on the
-process. For hitherto the enclosing class had had to reckon with the
-occasional panic or ill-temper of the Crown. No English king, it is
-true, had intervened in the interests of the poor so dramatically as
-did the earlier and unspoilt Louis XIV., who restored to the French
-village assemblies the public lands they had alienated within a certain
-period. But the Crown had not altogether overlooked the interests of
-the classes who were ruined by enclosure, and in different ways it
-had tried to modify the worst consequences of this policy. From 1490
-to 1601 there were various Acts and proclamations designed for this
-purpose. Charles I. had actually annulled the enclosures of two years
-in certain midland counties, several Commissions had been issued, and
-the Star Chamber had instituted proceedings against enclosures on the
-ground that depopulation was an offence against the Common Law. Mr.
-Firth holds that Cromwell’s influence in the eastern counties was due
-to his championship of the commoners in the fens. Throughout this time,
-however ineffectual the intervention of the Crown, the interests of the
-classes to whom enclosures brought wealth and power were not allowed to
-obliterate all other considerations.
-
-From the beginning of the eighteenth century the reins are thrown to
-the enclosure movement, and the policy of enclosure is emancipated from
-all these checks and afterthoughts. One interest is supreme throughout
-England, supreme in Parliament, supreme in the country; the Crown
-follows, the nation obeys.
-
-The agricultural community which was taken to pieces in the eighteenth
-century and reconstructed in the manner in which a dictator
-reconstructs a free government, was threatened from many points. It was
-not killed by avarice alone. Cobbett used to attribute the enclosure
-movement entirely to the greed of the landowners, but, if greed was a
-sufficient motive, greed was in this case clothed and almost enveloped
-in public spirit. Let us remember what this community looked like to
-men with the mind of the landlord class. The English landowners have
-always believed that order would be resolved into its original chaos,
-if they ceased to control the lives and destinies of their neighbours.
-‘A great responsibility rests on us landlords; if we go, the whole
-thing goes.’ So says the landlord in Mr. Galsworthy’s novel, and so
-said the landlords in the eighteenth century. The English aristocracy
-always thinking of this class as the pillars of society, as the
-Atlas that bears the burden of the world, very naturally concluded
-that this old peasant community, with its troublesome rights, was a
-public encumbrance. This view received a special impetus from all the
-circumstances of the age. The landlord class was constantly being
-recruited from the ranks of the manufacturers, and the new landlords,
-bringing into this charmed circle an energy of their own, caught at
-once its taste for power, for direction, for authority, for imposing
-its will. Readers of _Shirley_ will remember that when Robert Moore
-pictures to himself a future of usefulness and success, he says that
-he will obtain an Act for enclosing Nunnely Common, that his brother
-will be put on the bench, and that between them they will dominate the
-parish. The book ends in this dream of triumph. Signorial position
-owes its special lustre for English minds to the association of social
-distinction with power over the life and ways of groups of men and
-women. When Bagehot sneered at the sudden millionaires of his day, who
-hoped to disguise their social defects by buying old places and hiding
-among aristocratic furniture, he was remarking on a feature of English
-life that was very far from being peculiar to his time. Did not Adam
-Smith observe that merchants were very commonly ambitious of becoming
-country gentlemen? This kind of ambition was the form that public
-spirit often took in successful Englishmen, and it was a very powerful
-menace to the old village and its traditions of collective life.
-
-Now this passion received at this time a special momentum from the
-condition of agriculture. A dictatorship lends itself more readily
-than any other form of government to the quick introduction of
-revolutionary ideas, and new ideas were in the air. Thus, in addition
-to the desire for social power, there was behind the enclosure
-movement a zeal for economic progress seconding and almost concealing
-the direct inspiration of self-interest. Many an enclosing landlord
-thought only of the satisfaction of doubling or trebling his rent:
-that is unquestionable. If we are to trust so warm a champion of
-enclosure as William Marshall, this was the state of mind of the great
-majority. But there were many whose eyes glistened as they thought of
-the prosperity they were to bring to English agriculture, applying
-to a wider and wider domain the lessons that were to be learnt from
-the processes of scientific farming. A man who had caught the large
-ideas of a Coke, or mastered the discoveries of a Bakewell, chafed
-under the restraints that the system of common agriculture placed on
-improvement and experiment. It was maddening to have to set your pace
-by the slow bucolic temperament of small farmers, nursed in a simple
-and old-fashioned routine, who looked with suspicion on any proposal
-that was strange to them. In this tiresome partnership the swift were
-put between the shafts with the slow, and the temptation to think that
-what was wanted was to get rid of the partnership altogether, was
-almost irresistible. From such a state the mind passed rapidly and
-naturally to the conclusion that the wider the sphere brought into the
-absolute possession of the enlightened class, the greater would be the
-public gain. The spirit in which the Board of Agriculture approached
-the subject found appropriate expression in Sir John Sinclair’s
-high-sounding language. ‘The idea of having lands in common, it has
-been justly remarked, is to be derived from that barbarous state of
-society, when men were strangers to any higher occupation than those
-of hunters or shepherds, or had only just tasted the advantages to
-be reaped from the cultivation of the earth.’[21] Arthur Young[22]
-compared the open-field system, with its inconveniences ‘which the
-barbarity of their ancestors had neither knowledge to discover nor
-government to remedy’ to the Tartar policy of the shepherd state.
-
-It is not surprising that men under the influence of these set ideas
-could find no virtue at all in the old system, and that they soon
-began to persuade themselves that that system was at the bottom of
-all the evils of society. It was harmful to the morals and useless to
-the pockets of the poor. ‘The benefit,’ wrote Arbuthnot,[23] ‘which
-they are supposed to reap from commons, in their present state, I
-know to be merely nominal; nay, indeed, what is worse, I know, that,
-in many instances, it is an essential injury to them, by being made
-a plea for their idleness; for, some few excepted, if you offer them
-work, they will tell you, that they must go to look up their sheep,
-cut furzes, get their cow out of the pound, or, perhaps, say they must
-take their horse to be shod, that he may carry them to a horse-race or
-cricket-match.’ Lord Sheffield, in the course of one of the debates in
-Parliament, described the commoners as a ‘nuisance,’ and most people of
-his class thought of them as something worse. Mr. John Billingsley, who
-wrote the _Report on Somerset_ for the Board of Agriculture in 1795,
-describes in some detail the enervating atmosphere of the commoners’
-life. ‘Besides, moral effects of an injurious tendency accrue to the
-cottager, from a reliance on the imaginary benefits of stocking a
-common. The possession of a cow or two, with a hog, and a few geese,
-naturally exalts the peasant, in his own conception, above his brethren
-in the same rank of society. It inspires some degree of confidence in
-a property, inadequate to his support. In sauntering after his cattle,
-he acquires a habit of indolence. Quarter, half, and occasionally
-whole days are imperceptibly lost. Day labour becomes disgusting;
-the aversion increases by indulgence; and at length the sale of a
-half-fed calf, or hog, furnishes the means of adding intemperance to
-idleness.’[24] Mr. Bishton, who wrote the _Report on Shropshire_ in
-1794, gives a still more interesting glimpse into the mind of the
-enclosing class: ‘The use of common land by labourers operates upon the
-mind as a sort of independence.’ When the commons are enclosed ‘the
-labourers will work every day in the year, their children will be put
-out to labour early,’ and ‘that subordination of the lower ranks of
-society which in the present times is so much wanted, would be thereby
-considerably secured.’
-
-A similar view was taken of the moral effects of commons by Middleton,
-the writer of the _Report on Middlesex_.[25] ‘On the other hand, they
-are, in many instances, of real injury to the public; by holding out
-a lure to the poor man--I mean of materials wherewith to build his
-cottage, and ground to erect it upon: together with firing and the
-run of his poultry and pigs for nothing. This is of course temptation
-sufficient to induce a great number of poor persons to settle upon the
-borders of such commons. But the mischief does not end here: for having
-gained these trifling advantages, through the neglect or connivance of
-the lord of the manor, it unfortunately gives their minds an improper
-bias, and inculcates a desire to live, from that time forward, without
-labour, or at least with as little as possible.’
-
-One of the witnesses before the Select Committee on Commons Inclosure
-in 1844 was Mr. Carus Wilson, who is interesting as the original of
-the character of Mr. Brocklehurst in _Jane Eyre_. We know how that
-zealous Christian would regard the commoners from the speech in which
-he reproved Miss Temple for giving the pupils at Lowood a lunch of
-bread and cheese on one occasion when their meagre breakfast had been
-uneatable. ‘Oh, madam, when you put bread and cheese, instead of burnt
-porridge, into these children’s mouths, you may indeed feed their vile
-bodies, but you little think how you starve their immortal souls!’ We
-are not surprised to learn that Mr. Carus Wilson found the commoners
-‘hardened and unpromising,’ and that he was obliged to inform the
-committee that the misconduct which the system encouraged ‘hardens the
-heart, and causes a good deal of mischief, and at the same time puts
-the person in an unfavourable position for the approach of what might
-be serviceable to him in a moral and religious point of view.’[26]
-
-It is interesting, after reading all these confident generalisations
-about the influence of this kind of life upon the character of the
-poor, to learn what the commoners themselves thought of its moral
-atmosphere. This we can do from such a petition as that sent by the
-small proprietors and persons entitled to rights of common at Raunds,
-in Northamptonshire. These unfortunate people lost their rights by
-an Enclosure Act in 1797, and during the progress of the Bill they
-petitioned Parliament against it, in these terms: ‘That the Petitioners
-beg Leave to represent to the House that, under Pretence of improving
-Lands in the said Parish, the Cottagers and other Persons entitled to
-Right of Common on the Lands intended to be inclosed, will be deprived
-of an inestimable Privilege, which they now enjoy, of turning a certain
-Number of their Cows, Calves, and Sheep, on and over the said Lands; a
-Privilege that enables them not only to maintain themselves and their
-Families in the Depth of Winter, when they cannot, even for their
-Money, obtain from the Occupiers of other Lands the smallest Portion of
-Milk or Whey for such necessary Purpose, but, in addition to this, they
-can now supply the Grazier with young or lean Stock at a reasonable
-Price, to fatten and bring to Market at a more moderate Rate for
-general Consumption, which they conceive to be the most rational and
-effectual Way of establishing Public Plenty and Cheapness of Provision;
-and they further conceive, that a more ruinous Effect of this Inclosure
-will be the almost total Depopulation of their Town, now filled with
-bold and hardy Husbandmen, from among whom, and the Inhabitants of
-other open Parishes, the Nation has hitherto derived its greatest
-Strength and Glory, in the Supply of its Fleets and Armies, and
-driving them, from Necessity and Want of Employ, in vast Crowds, into
-manufacturing Towns, where the very Nature of their Employment, over
-the Loom or the Forge, soon may waste their Strength, and consequently
-debilitate their Posterity, and by imperceptible Degrees obliterate
-that great Principle of Obedience to the Laws of God and their Country,
-which forms the Character of the simple and artless Villagers, more
-equally distributed through the Open Countries, and on which so much
-depends the good Order and Government of the State: These are some of
-the Injuries to themselves as Individuals, and of the ill Consequences
-to the Public, which the Petitioners conceive will follow from this,
-as they have already done from many Inclosures, but which they did not
-think they were entitled to lay before the House (the Constitutional
-Patron and Protector of the Poor) until it unhappily came to their own
-Lot to be exposed to them through the Bill now pending.’[27]
-
-When we remember that the enterprise of the age was under the spell
-of the most seductive economic teaching of the time, and that the old
-peasant society, wearing as it did the look of confusion and weakness,
-had to fear not only the simplifying appetites of the landlords, but
-the simplifying philosophy, in England of an Adam Smith, in France of
-the Physiocrats, we can realise that a ruling class has seldom found so
-plausible an atmosphere for the free play of its interests and ideas.
-_Des crimes sont flattés d’être présidés d’une vertu._ Bentham himself
-thought the spectacle of an enclosure one of the most reassuring of all
-the evidences of improvement and happiness. Indeed, all the elements
-seemed to have conspired against the peasant, for æsthetic taste,
-which might at other times have restrained, in the eighteenth century
-encouraged the destruction of the commons and their rough beauty. The
-rage for order and symmetry and neat cultivation was universal. It
-found expression in Burnet, who said of the Alps and Appenines that
-they had neither form nor beauty, neither shape nor order, any more
-than the clouds of the air: in Johnson, who said of the Highlands that
-‘the uniformity of barrenness can afford very little amusement to the
-traveller’: and in Cobbett, who said of the Cotswolds, ‘this is a sort
-of country having less to please the eye than any other that I have
-ever seen, always save and except the heaths like those of Bagshot
-and Hindhead.’ The enjoyment of wild nature was a lost sense, to be
-rediscovered one day by the Romanticists and the Revolution, but too
-late to help the English village. In France, owing to various causes,
-part economic, part political, on which we shall touch later, the
-peasant persisted in his ancient and ridiculous tenure, and survived to
-become the envy of English observers: it was only in England that he
-lost his footing, and that his ancient patrimony slipped away from him.
-
-We are not concerned at this juncture to inquire into the truth of the
-view that the sweeping policy of enclosure increased the productivity
-and resources of the State: we are concerned only to inquire into
-the way in which the aristocracy gave shape and effect to it. This
-movement, assumed by the enlightened opinion of the day to be
-beneficent and progressive, was none the less a gigantic disturbance;
-it broke up the old village life; it transferred a great body of
-property; it touched a vast mass of interests at a hundred points. A
-governing class that cared for its reputation for justice would clearly
-regard it as of sovereign importance that this delicate network of
-rights and claims should not be roughly disentangled by the sheer power
-of the stronger: a governing class that recognised its responsibility
-for the happiness and order of the State would clearly regard it as
-of sovereign importance that this ancient community should not be
-dissolved in such a manner as to plunge great numbers of contented men
-into permanent poverty and despair. To decide how far the aristocracy
-that presided over these changes displayed insight or foresight,
-sympathy or imagination, and how far it acted with a controlling
-sense of integrity and public spirit, we must analyse the methods and
-procedure of Parliamentary enclosure.
-
-Before entering on a discussion of the methods by which Parliamentary
-enclosure was effected, it is necessary to realise the extent of its
-operations. Precise statistics, of course, are not to be had, but
-there are various estimates based on careful study of such evidence as
-we possess. Mr. Levy says that between 1702 and 1760 there were only
-246 Acts, affecting about 400,000 acres, and that in the next fifty
-years the Acts had reached a total of 2438, affecting almost five
-million acres.[28] Mr. Johnson gives the following table for the years
-1700-1844, founded on Dr. Slater’s detailed estimate[29]--
-
- +-----------+-----------------------+-----------------------+
- | | Common Field and | Waste only. |
- | | some Waste. | |
- | Years. +---------+-------------+---------+-------------+
- | | Acts. | Acreage. | Acts. | Acreage. |
- +-----------+---------+-------------+---------+-------------+
- | 1700-1760 | 152 | 237,845 | 56 | 74,518 |
- | | | | | |
- | 1761-1801 | 1,479 | 2,428,721 | 521 | 752,150 |
- | | | | | |
- | 1802-1844 | 1,075 | 1,610,302 | 808 | 939,043 |
- +-----------+---------+-------------+---------+-------------+
- | Total, | 2,706 | 4,276,868 | 1,385 | 1,765,711 |
- +-----------+---------+-------------+---------+-------------+
-
-This roughly corresponds with the estimate given before the Select
-Committee on Enclosures in 1844, that there were some one thousand
-seven hundred private Acts before 1800, and some two thousand between
-1800 and 1844. The General Report of the Board of Agriculture on
-Enclosures gives the acreage enclosed from the time of Queen Anne
-down to 1805 as 4,187,056. Mr. Johnson’s conclusion is that nearly 20
-per cent. of the total acreage of England has been enclosed during
-the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, though Mr. Prothero puts the
-percentage still higher. But we should miss the significance of these
-proportions if we were to look at England at the beginning of the
-eighteenth century as a map of which a large block was already shaded,
-and of which another block, say a fifth or a sixth part, was to be
-shaded by the enclosure of this period. The truth is that the life of
-the common-field system was still the normal village life of England,
-and that the land which was already enclosed consisted largely of old
-enclosures or the lord’s demesne land lying side by side with the
-open fields. This was put quite clearly by the Bishop of St. Davids
-in the House of Lords in 1781. ‘Parishes of any considerable extent
-consisted partly of old inclosures and partly of common fields.’[30] If
-a village living on the common-field system contained old enclosures,
-effected some time or other without Act of Parliament, it suffered
-just as violent a catastrophe when the common fields or the waste were
-enclosed, as if there had been no previous enclosure in the parish.
-The number of Acts passed in this period varies of course with the
-different counties,[31] but speaking generally, we may say that the
-events described in the next two chapters are not confined to any
-one part of the country, and that they mark a national revolution,
-making sweeping and profound changes in the form and the character of
-agricultural society throughout England.[32]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[6] Gregory King and Davenant estimated that the whole of the
-cultivated land in England in 1685 did not amount to much more than
-half the total area, and of this cultivated portion three-fifths was
-still farmed on the old common-field system.
-
-[7] For a full discussion, in which the ordinary view is vigorously
-combated in an interesting analysis, see Hasbach, _History of the
-Agricultural Labourer_: on the other side, Levy, _Large and Small
-Holdings_.
-
-[8] This was the general structure of the village that was dissolved
-in the eighteenth century. It is distinguished from the Keltic type
-of communal agriculture, known as run-rig, in two important respects.
-In the run-rig village the soil is periodically redivided, and the
-tenant’s holding is compact. Dr. Slater (_Geographical Journal_, Jan.
-1907) has shown that in those parts of England where the Keltic type
-predominated, _e.g._ in Devon and Cornwall, enclosure took place
-early, and he argues with good reason that it was easier to enclose by
-voluntary agreement where the holdings were compact than it was where
-they were scattered in strips. But gradual enclosure by voluntary
-agreement had a different effect from the cataclysm-like enclosure of
-the eighteenth century, as is evident from the large number of small
-farmers in Devonshire.
-
-[9] See Webb, _Manor and Borough_, vol. i. p. 66 _seq._
-
-[10] Slater, _The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common
-Fields_, p. 77.
-
-[11] 13 George III. c. 81.
-
-[12] This was done at Barnes Common; see for whole subject, _Annals of
-Agriculture_, vol. xvii. p. 516.
-
-[13] For cases where changes in the system of cultivation of common
-fields had been made, see _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xvi. p. 606:
-‘To Peterborough, crossing an open field, but sown by agreement with
-turnips.’ Cf. _Report on Bedfordshire_: ‘Clover is sown in some of
-the open clay-fields by common consent’ (p. 339), and ‘Turnips are
-sometimes cultivated, both on the sands and gravels, by mutual consent’
-(p. 340).
-
-[14] Slater, p. 119.
-
-[15] Dr. Slater’s conclusion is that ‘in the open field village the
-entirely landless labourer was scarcely to be found,’ p. 130.
-
-[16] See _Commons, Forests, and Footpaths_, by Lord Eversley, p. 11.
-
-[17] _Bedfordshire Report_, 1808, p. 223, quoting from Arthur Young.
-
-[18] P. 114.
-
-[19] P. 138.
-
-[20] See on this point, Levy, _Large and Small Holdings_, p. 1.
-
-[21] _Report of Select Committee on Waste Lands_, 1795, p. 15, Appendix
-B.
-
-[22] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. i. p. 72.
-
-[23] _An Inquiry into the Connection between the present Price of
-Provisions and the Size of Farms_, 1773, p. 81.
-
-[24] _Report on Somerset_, reprinted 1797, p. 52; compare Report on
-Commons in Brecknock, _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxii. p. 632,
-where commons are denounced as ‘hurtful to society by holding forth a
-temptation to idleness, that fell parent to vice and immorality’; also
-compare _Ibid._, vol. xx. p. 145, where they are said to encourage the
-commoners to be ‘hedge breakers, pilferers, nightly trespassers ...
-poultry and rabbit stealers, or such like.’
-
-[25] P. 103.
-
-[26] _Committee on Inclosures_, 1844, p. 135.
-
-[27] _House of Commons Journal_, June 19, 1797.
-
-[28] _Large and Small Holdings_, p. 24.
-
-[29] _Disappearance of Small Landowner_, p. 90; Slater’s _English
-Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common Fields_, Appendix B.
-
-[30] _Parliamentary Register_, March 30, 1781.
-
-[31] See Dr. Slater’s detailed estimate.
-
-[32] There were probably many enclosures that had not the authority
-either of a special Act or of the Act of 1756, particularly in the more
-distant counties. The evidence of Mr. Carus Wilson upon the committee
-of 1844 shows that the stronger classes interpreted their rights and
-powers in a liberal spirit. Mr. Carus Wilson had arranged with the
-other large proprietors to let out the only common which remained
-open in the thirteen parishes in which his father was interested as a
-large landowner, and to pay the rent into the poor rates. Some members
-of the committee asked whether the minority who dissented from this
-arrangement could be excluded, and Mr. Wilson explained that he and his
-confederates believed that the minority were bound by their action,
-and that by this simple plan they could shut out all cattle from the
-common, except the cattle of their joint tenants.--_Committee on
-Inclosures_, 1844, p. 127.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-ENCLOSURE (1)
-
-
-An enclosure, like most Parliamentary operations, began with a petition
-from a local person or persons, setting forth the inconveniencies of
-the present system and the advantages of such a measure. Parliament,
-having received the petition, would give leave for a Bill to be
-introduced. The Bill would be read a first and a second time, and
-would then be referred to a Committee, which, after considering such
-petitions against the enclosure as the House of Commons referred to it,
-would present its report. The Bill would then be passed, sent to the
-Lords, and receive the Royal Assent. Finally, the Commissioners named
-in the Bill would descend on the district and distribute the land. That
-is, in brief, the history of a successful enclosure agitation. We will
-now proceed to explore its different stages in detail.
-
-The original petition was often the act of a big landowner, whose
-solitary signature was enough to set an enclosure process in train.[33]
-Before 1774 it was not even incumbent on this single individual to
-let his neighbours know that he was asking Parliament for leave to
-redistribute their property. In that year the House of Commons made
-a Standing Order providing that notice of any such petition should
-be affixed to the church door in each of the parishes affected, for
-three Sundays in the month of August or the month of September. This
-provision was laid down, as we learn from the Report of the Committee
-that considered the Standing Orders in 1775, because it had often
-happened that those whose land was to be enclosed knew nothing whatever
-of transactions in which they were rather intimately concerned, until
-they were virtually completed.[34]
-
-But the publicity that was secured by this Standing Order, though it
-prevented the process of enclosure from being completed in the dark,
-did not in practice give the village any kind of voice in its own
-destiny. The promoters laid all their plans before they took their
-neighbours into the secret. When their arrangements were mature, they
-gave notice to the parish in accordance with the requirements of the
-Standing Order, or they first took their petition to the various
-proprietors for signature, or in some cases they called a public
-meeting. The facts set out in the petition against the Enclosure Bill
-for Haute Huntre, show that the promoters did not think that they were
-bound to accept the opinion of a meeting. In that case ‘the great
-majority’ were hostile, but the promoters proceeded with their petition
-notwithstanding.[35] Whatever the precise method, unless some large
-proprietor stood out against the scheme, the promoters were masters of
-the situation. This we know from the evidence of witnesses favourable
-to enclosure. ‘The proprietors of large estates,’ said Arthur Young,
-‘generally agree upon the measure, adjust the principal points among
-themselves, and fix upon their attorney before they appoint any general
-meeting of the proprietors.’[36] Addington, in his _Inquiry into the
-Reasons for and against Inclosing_, quoting another writer, says, ‘the
-whole plan is generally settled between the solicitor and two or three
-principal proprietors without ever letting the rest of them into the
-secret till they are called upon to sign the petition.’[37] What stand
-could the small proprietor hope to make against such forces? The matter
-was a _chose jugée_, and his assent a mere formality. If he tried to
-resist, he could be warned that the success of the enclosure petition
-was certain, and that those who obstructed it would suffer, as those
-who assisted it would gain, in the final award. His only prospect of
-successful opposition to the lord of the manor, the magistrate, the
-impropriator of the tithes, the powers that enveloped his life, the
-powers that appointed the commissioner who was to make the ultimate
-award, lay in his ability to move a dim and distant Parliament of
-great landlords to come to his rescue. It needs no very penetrating
-imagination to picture what would have happened in a village in which a
-landowner of the type of Richardson’s hero in _Pamela_ was bent on an
-enclosure, and the inhabitants, being men like Goodman Andrews, knew
-that enclosure meant their ruin. What, in point of fact, could the poor
-do to declare their opposition? They could tear down the notices from
-the church doors:[38] they could break up a public meeting, if one
-were held: but the only way in which they could protest was by violent
-and disorderly proceedings, which made no impression at all upon
-Parliament, and which the forces of law and order could, if necessary,
-be summoned to quell.
-
-The scene now shifts to Parliament, the High Court of Justice, the
-stronghold of the liberties of Englishmen. Parliament hears the
-petition, and, almost as a matter of course, grants it, giving leave
-for the introduction of a Bill, and instructing the member who
-presents the petition to prepare it. This is not a very long business,
-for the promoters have generally taken the trouble to prepare their
-Bill in advance. The Bill is submitted, read a first and second
-time, and then referred to a Committee. Now a modern Parliamentary
-Private Bill Committee is regarded as a tribunal whose integrity and
-impartiality are beyond question, and justly, for the most elaborate
-precautions are taken to secure that it shall deserve this character.
-The eighteenth-century Parliament treated its Committee with just as
-much respect, but took no precautions at all to obtain a disinterested
-court. Indeed, the committee that considered an enclosure was chosen
-on the very contrary principle. This we know, not from the evidence of
-unkind and prejudiced outsiders, but from the Report of the Committee
-of the House of Commons, which inquired in 1825 into the constitution
-of Committees on Private Bills. ‘Under the present system each Bill
-is committed to the Member who is charged with its management and
-such other Members as he may choose to name in the House, and the
-Members serving for a particular County (usually the County immediately
-connected with the object of the Bill) _and the adjoining Counties_,
-and consequently it has been practically found that the Members to whom
-Bills have been committed have been generally those who have been most
-interested in the result.’
-
-During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there developed the
-practice of opening the committees. This was the system of applying to
-Private Bills the procedure followed in the case of Public Bills, and
-proposing a resolution in the House of Commons that ‘all who attend
-shall have voices,’ _i.e._ that any member of the House who cared
-to attend the committee should be able to vote. We can see how this
-arrangement acted. It might happen that some of the county members were
-hostile to a particular enclosure scheme; in that case the promoters
-could call for an open committee and mass their friends upon it. It
-might happen, on the other hand, that the committee was solid in
-supporting an enclosure, and that some powerful person in the House
-considered that his interests, or the interests of his friend, had
-not been duly consulted in the division of the spoil. In such a case
-he would call for all to ‘have voices’ and so compel the promoters to
-satisfy his claims. This system then secured some sort of rough justice
-as between the powerful interests represented in Parliament, but it
-left the small proprietors and the cottagers, who were unrepresented in
-this mêlée, absolutely at the mercy of these conflicting forces.
-
-It is difficult, for example, to imagine that a committee in which
-the small men were represented would have sanctioned the amazing
-clause in the Ashelworth Act[39] which provided ‘that all fields or
-inclosures containing the Property of Two or more Persons within one
-fence, and also all inclosures containing the property of one Person
-only, if the same be held by or under different Tenures or Interests,
-shall be considered as commonable land and be divided and allotted
-accordingly.’ This clause, taken with the clause that follows, simply
-meant that some big landowner had his eye on some particular piece of
-enclosed property, which in the ordinary way would not have gone into
-the melting-pot at all. The arrangements of the Wakefield Act would
-hardly have survived the scrutiny of a committee on which the Duke of
-Leeds’ class was not paramount. Under that Act[40] the duke was to have
-full power to work mines and get minerals, and those proprietors whose
-premises suffered in consequence were to have reasonable satisfaction,
-not from the duke who was enriched by the disturbing cause, but
-from all the allottees, including presumably those whose property
-was damaged. Further, to save himself inconvenience, the duke could
-forbid allottees on Westgate Moor to build a house for sixty years. A
-different kind of House of Commons would have looked closely at the Act
-at Moreton Corbet which gave the lord of the manor all enclosures and
-encroachments more than twenty years old, and also at the not uncommon
-provision which exempted the tithe-owner from paying for his own
-fencing.
-
-The Report of the 1825 Committee describes the system as ‘inviting all
-the interested parties in the House to take part in the business of
-the committee, which necessarily terminates in the prevalence of the
-strongest part, for they who have no interest of their own to serve
-will not be prevailed upon to take part in a struggle in which their
-unbiassed judgment can have no effect.’ The chairman of the committee
-was generally the member who had moved to introduce the Bill. The
-unreformed Parliament of landowners that passed the excellent Act
-of 1782, forbidding Members of Parliament to have an interest in
-Government contracts, never thought until the eve of the Reform Bill
-that there was anything remarkable in this habit of referring Enclosure
-Bills to the judgment of the very landowners who were to profit by
-them. And in 1825 it was not the Enclosure Bills, in which the rich
-took and the poor suffered, but the Railway Bills, in which rich men
-were pitted against rich men, that drew the attention of the House of
-Commons to the disadvantages and risks of this procedure.
-
-The committee so composed sets to work on the Bill, and meanwhile,
-perhaps, some of the persons affected by the enclosure send petitions
-against it to the House of Commons. Difficulties of time and space
-would as a rule deter all but the rich dissentients, unless the
-enclosure was near London. These petitions are differently treated
-according to their origin. If they emanate from a lord of the manor,
-or from a tithe-owner, who for some reason or other is dissatisfied
-with the contemplated arrangements, they receive some attention. In
-such a case the petitioner probably has some friend in Parliament, and
-his point of view is understood. He can, if necessary, get this friend
-to attend the committee and introduce amendments. He is therefore a
-force to be reckoned with; the Bill is perhaps altered to suit him; the
-petition is at any rate referred to the committee. On the other hand,
-if the petition comes from cottagers or small proprietors, it is safe,
-as a rule, to neglect it.
-
-The enclosure histories set out in the Appendix supply some good
-examples of this differential treatment. Lord Strafford sends a
-petition against the Bill for enclosing Wakefield with the result that
-he is allowed to appoint a commissioner, and also that his dispute with
-the Duke of Leeds is exempted from the jurisdiction of the Enclosure
-Commissioners. On the other hand, the unfortunate persons who petition
-against the monstrous provision that forbade them to erect any building
-for twenty, forty or sixty years, get no kind of redress. In the case
-of Croydon, James Trecothick, Esq., who is dissatisfied with the
-Bill, is strong enough to demand special consideration. Accordingly a
-special provision is made that the commissioners are obliged to sell
-Mr. Trecothick, by private contract, part of Addington Hills, if he so
-wishes. But when the various freeholders, copyholders, leaseholders and
-inhabitant householders of Croydon, who complain that the promoters
-of the Bill have named commissioners without consulting the persons
-interested, ask leave to nominate a third commissioner, only four
-members of the House of Commons support Lord William Russell’s proposal
-to consider this petition, and fifty-one vote the other way. Another
-example of the spirit in which Parliament received petitions from
-unimportant persons is furnished by the case of the enclosure of Holy
-Island. In 1791 (Feb. 23)[41] a petition was presented to Parliament
-for the enclosure of Holy Island, asking for the division of a stinted
-pasture, and the extinction of the rights of common or ‘eatage’ over
-certain infield lands. Leave was given, and the Bill was prepared and
-read a first time on 28th February. The same day Parliament received
-a petition from freeholders and stallingers, who ask to be heard by
-themselves or by counsel against the Bill. From Eden[42] we learn that
-there were 26 freeholders and 31 stallingers, and that the latter were
-in the strict sense of the term as much freeholders as the former.
-Whilst, however, a freeholder had the right to put 30 sheep, 4 black
-cattle and 3 horses on the stinted common, a stallinger had a right
-of common for one horse and one cow only. The House ordered that this
-petition should lie on the table till the second reading, and that
-the petitioners should then be heard. The second reading, which had
-been fixed for 2nd April, was deferred till 20th April, a change which
-probably put the petitioners to considerable expense. On 20th April the
-Bill was read a second time, and the House was informed that Counsel
-attended, and a motion was made that Counsel be now called in. But the
-motion was opposed, and on a division was defeated by 47 votes to 12.
-The Bill passed the House of Commons on 10th May, and received the
-Royal Assent on 9th June.[43] In this case the House of Commons broke
-faith with the petitioners, and refused the hearing it had promised.
-Such experience was not likely to encourage dissentients to waste their
-money on an appeal to Parliament against a Bill that was promoted by
-powerful politicians. It will be observed that at Armley and Ashelworth
-the petitioners did not think that it was worth the trouble and expense
-to be heard on Second Reading.
-
-The Report of the Committee followed a stereotyped formula: ‘That the
-Standing Orders had been complied with: and that the Committee had
-examined the Allegations of the Bill and found the same to be true; and
-that the Parties concerned had given their Consent to the Bill, to the
-Satisfaction of the Committee, except....’
-
-Now what did this mean? What consents were necessary to satisfy the
-committee? The Parliamentary Committee that reported on the cost of
-enclosures in 1800[44] said that there was no fixed rule, that in
-some cases the consent of three-fourths was required, in others the
-consent of four-fifths. This proportion has a look of fairness until we
-discover that we are dealing in terms, not of persons, but of property,
-and that the suffrages were not counted but weighed. The method by
-which the proportions were reckoned varied, as a glance at the cases
-described in the Appendix will show. Value is calculated sometimes
-in acres, sometimes in annual value, sometimes in assessment to the
-land tax, sometimes in assessment to the poor rate. It is important to
-remember that it was the property interested that counted, and that in
-a case where there was common or waste to be divided as well as open
-fields, one large proprietor, who owned a considerable property in old
-enclosures, could swamp the entire community of smaller proprietors
-and cottagers. If Squire Western owned an enclosed estate with parks,
-gardens and farms of 800 acres, and the rest of the parish consisted of
-a common or waste of 1000 acres and open fields of 200 acres, and the
-village population consisted of 100 cottagers and small farmers, each
-with a strip of land in the common fields, and a right of common on the
-waste, Squire Western would have a four-fifths majority in determining
-whether the open fields and the waste should be enclosed or not, and
-the whole matter would be in his hands. This is an extreme example of
-the way in which the system worked. The case of Ashelworth shows that
-a common might be cut up, on the votes of persons holding enclosed
-property, against the wishes of the great majority of the commoners.
-At Laleham the petitioners against the Bill claimed that they were
-‘a great majority of the real Owners and Proprietors of or Persons
-interested in, the Lands and Grounds intended to be enclosed.’ At
-Simpson, where common fields were to be enclosed, the Major Part of the
-Owners and Proprietors petitioned against the Bill, stating that they
-were ‘very well satisfied with the Situation and Convenience of their
-respective Lands and Properties in their present uninclosed State.’[45]
-
-Even a majority of three-fourths in value was not always required; for
-example, the Report of the Committee on the enclosure of Cartmel in
-Lancashire in 1796 gave particulars showing that the whole property
-belonging to persons interested in the enclosure was assessed at £150,
-and that the property of those actually consenting to the enclosure was
-just under £110.[46] Yet the enclosure was recommended and carried.
-Another illustration is supplied by the Report of the Committee on
-the enclosure of Histon and Impington in 1801, where the parties
-concerned are reported to have consented except the proprietors of 1020
-acres, out of a total acreage of 3680.[47] In this case the Bill was
-recommitted, and on its next appearance the committee gave the consents
-in terms of assessment to the Land Tax instead, putting the total
-figure at £304, and the assessment of the consenting parties at £188.
-This seems to have satisfied the House of Commons.[48] Further, the
-particulars given in the case of the enclosure of Bishopstone in Wilts
-(enclosed in 1809) show that the votes of copyholders were heavily
-discounted. In this case the copyholders who dissented held 1079 acres,
-the copyholders who were neuter 81 acres, and the total area to be
-divided was 2602 acres. But by some ingenious actuarial calculation of
-the reversionary interest of the lord of the manor and the interest
-of the tithe-owner, the 1079 acres held by copyholders are written
-down to 474 acres.[49] In the cases of Simpson and Louth, as readers
-who consult the Appendix will see, the committees were satisfied with
-majorities just above three-fifths in value. At Raunds (see p. 39),
-where 4963 acres were ‘interested,’ the owners of 570 are stated to be
-against, and of 721 neuter.[50] An interesting illustration of the lax
-practice of the committees is provided in the history of an attempted
-enclosure at Quainton (1801).[51] In any case the signatures were a
-doubtful evidence of consent. ‘It is easy,’ wrote an acute observer,
-‘for the large proprietors to overcome opposition. Coaxing, bribing,
-threatening, together with many other acts which superiors will make
-use of, often induce the inferiors to consent to things which they
-think will be to their future disadvantage.’[52] We hear echoes of such
-proceedings in the petition from various owners and proprietors at
-Armley, who ‘at the instance of several other owners of land,’ signed
-a petition for enclosure and wish to be heard against it, and also in
-the unavailing petition of some of the proprietors and freeholders of
-Winfrith Newburgh in Dorsetshire, in 1768,[53] who declared that if the
-Bill passed into law, their ‘Estates must be totally ruined thereby,
-and that some of the Petitioners by Threats and Menaces were prevailed
-upon to sign the Petition for the said Bill: but upon Recollection,
-and considering the impending Ruin,’ they prayed to ‘have Liberty to
-retract from their seeming Acquiescence.’ From the same case we learn
-that it was the practice sometimes to grant copyholds on the condition
-that the tenant would undertake not to oppose enclosure. Sometimes, as
-in the case of the Sedgmoor Enclosure, which we shall discuss later,
-actual fraud was employed. But even if the promoters employed no unfair
-methods they had one argument powerful enough to be a deterrent in many
-minds. For an opposed Enclosure Bill was much more expensive than an
-unopposed Bill, and as the small men felt the burden of the costs much
-more than the large proprietors, they would naturally be shy of adding
-to the very heavy expenses unless they stood a very good chance of
-defeating the scheme.
-
-It is of capital importance to remember in this connection that the
-enumeration of ‘consents’ took account only of proprietors. It ignored
-entirely two large classes to whom enclosure meant, not a greater or
-less degree of wealth, but actual ruin. These were such cottagers as
-enjoyed their rights of common in virtue of renting cottages to which
-such rights were attached, and those cottagers and squatters who either
-had no strict legal right, or whose rights were difficult of proof.
-Neither of these classes was treated even outwardly and formally as
-having any claim to be consulted before an enclosure was sanctioned.
-
-It is clear, then, that it was only the pressure of the powerful
-interests that decided whether a committee should approve or disapprove
-of an Enclosure Bill. It was the same pressure that determined the
-form in which a Bill became law. For a procedure that enabled rich men
-to fight out their rival claims at Westminster left the classes that
-could not send counsel to Parliament without a weapon or a voice. And
-if there was no lawyer there to put his case, what prospect was there
-that the obscure cottager, who was to be turned adrift with his family
-by an Enclosure Bill promoted by a Member or group of Members, would
-ever trouble the conscience of a committee of landowners? We have seen
-already how this class was regarded by the landowners and the champions
-of enclosure. No cottagers had votes or the means of influencing a
-single vote at a single election. To Parliament, if they had any
-existence at all, they were merely dim shadows in the very background
-of the enclosure scheme. It would require a considerable effort of the
-imagination to suppose that the Parliamentary Committee spent very much
-time or energy on the attempt to give body and form to this hazy and
-remote society, and to treat these shadows as living men and women,
-about to be tossed by this revolution from their ancestral homes. As it
-happens, we need not put ourselves to the trouble of such speculation,
-for we have the evidence of a witness who will not be suspected
-of injustice to his class. ‘This I know,’ said Lord Lincoln[54]
-introducing the General Enclosure Bill of 1845, ‘that in nineteen
-cases out of twenty, Committees of this House sitting on private Bills
-neglected the rights of the poor. I do not say that they wilfully
-neglected those rights--far from it: but this I affirm, that they were
-neglected in consequence of the Committees being permitted to remain
-in ignorance of the claims of the poor man, because by reason of his
-very poverty he is unable to come up to London for counsel, to produce
-witnesses, and to urge his claims before a Committee of this House.’
-Another Member[55] had described a year earlier the character of this
-private Bill procedure. ‘Inclosure Bills had been introduced heretofore
-and passed without discussion, and no one could tell how many persons
-had suffered in their interests and rights by the interference of these
-Bills. Certainly these Bills had been referred to Committees upstairs,
-but everyone knew how these Committees were generally conducted. They
-were attended only by honourable Members who were interested in them,
-being Lords of Manor, and the rights of the poor, though they might be
-talked about, had frequently been taken away under that system.’
-
-These statements were made by politicians who remembered well the
-system they were describing. There is another witness whose authority
-is even greater. In 1781 Lord Thurlow, then at the beginning of his
-long life of office as Lord Chancellor,[56] spoke for an hour and three
-quarters in favour of recommitting the Bill for enclosing Ilmington
-in Warwickshire. If the speech had been fully reported it would be
-a contribution of infinite value to students of the social history
-of eighteenth-century England, for we are told that ‘he proceeded
-to examine, paragraph by paragraph, every provision of the Bill,
-animadverting and pointing out some acts of injustice, partiality,
-obscurity or cause of confusion in each.’[57] Unfortunately this part
-of his speech was omitted in the report as being ‘irrelative to the
-debate,’ which was concerned with the question of the propriety of
-commuting tithes. But the report, incomplete as it is, contains an
-illuminating passage on the conduct of Private Bill Committees. ‘His
-Lordship ... next turned his attention to the mode in which private
-bills were permitted to make their way through both Houses, and that in
-matters in which property was concerned, to the great injury of many,
-if not the total ruin of some private families: many proofs of this
-evil had come to his knowledge as a member of the other House, not a
-few in his professional character, before he had the honour of a seat
-in that House, nor had he been a total stranger to such evils since he
-was called upon to preside in another place.’ Going on to speak of the
-committees of the House of Commons and ‘the rapidity with which private
-Bills were hurried through,’ he declared that ‘it was not unfrequent
-to decide upon the merits of a Bill which would affect the property
-and interests of persons inhabiting a district of several miles in
-extent, in less time than it took him to determine upon the propriety
-of issuing an order for a few pounds, by which no man’s property
-could be injured.’ He concluded by telling the House of Lords a story
-of how Sir George Savile once noticed a man ‘rather meanly habited’
-watching the proceedings of a committee with anxious interest. When the
-committee had agreed on its report, the agitated spectator was seen to
-be in great distress. Sir George Savile asked him what was the matter,
-and he found that the man would be ruined by a clause that had been
-passed by the committee, and that, having heard that the Bill was to be
-introduced, he had made his way to London on foot, too poor to come in
-any other way or to fee counsel. Savile then made inquiries and learnt
-that these statements were correct, whereupon he secured the amendment
-of the Bill, ‘by which means an innocent, indigent man and his family
-were rescued from destruction.’ It would not have been very easy for a
-‘meanly habited man’ to make the journey to London from Wakefield or
-Knaresborough or Haute Huntre, even if he knew when a Bill was coming
-on, and to stay in London until it went into committee; and if he did,
-he would not always be so lucky as to find a Sir George Savile on the
-committee--the public man who was regarded by his contemporaries, to
-whatever party they belonged, as the Bayard of politics.[58]
-
-We get very few glimpses into the underworld of the common and obscure
-people, whose homes and fortunes trembled on the chance that a quarrel
-over tithes and the conflicting claims of squire and parson might
-disturb the unanimity of a score of gentlemen sitting round a table.
-London was far away, and the Olympian peace of Parliament was rarely
-broken by the protests of its victims. But we get one such glimpse in a
-passage in the _Annual Register_ for 1767.
-
-‘On Tuesday evening a great number of farmers were observed going along
-Pall Mall with cockades in their hats. On enquiring the reason, it
-appeared they all lived in or near the parish of Stanwell in the county
-of Middlesex, and they were returning to their wives and families to
-carry them the agreeable news of a Bill being rejected for inclosing
-the said common, which if carried into execution, might have been the
-ruin of a great number of families.’[59]
-
-When the Committee on the Enclosure Bill had reported to the House of
-Commons, the rest of the proceedings were generally formal. The Bill
-was read a third time, engrossed, sent up to the Lords, where petitions
-might be presented as in the Commons, and received the Royal Assent.
-
-A study of the pages of Hansard and Debrett tells us little about
-transactions that fill the _Journals_ of the Houses of Parliament.
-Three debates in the House of Lords are fully reported,[60] and they
-illustrate the play of forces at Westminster. The Bishop of St.
-Davids[61] moved to recommit an Enclosure Bill in 1781 on the ground
-that, like many other Enclosure Bills, it provided for the commutation
-of tithes--an arrangement which he thought open to many objections.
-Here was an issue that was vital, for it concerned the interests of
-the classes represented in Parliament. Did the Church stand to gain or
-to lose by taking land instead of tithe? Was it a bad thing or a good
-thing that the parson should be put into the position of a farmer, that
-he should be under the temptation to enter into an arrangement with
-the landlord which might prejudice his successor, that he should be
-relieved from a system which often caused bad blood between him and his
-parishioners? Would it ‘make him neglect the sacred functions of his
-ministry’ as the Bishop of St. Davids feared, or would it improve his
-usefulness by rescuing him from a situation in which ‘the pastor was
-totally sunk in the tithe-collector’ as the Bishop of Peterborough[62]
-hoped, and was a man a better parson on the Sunday for being a farmer
-the rest of the week as Lord Coventry believed? The bishops and the
-peers had in this discussion a subject that touched very nearly the
-lives and interests of themselves and their friends, and there was a
-considerable and animated debate,[63] at the end of which the House of
-Lords approved the principle of commuting tithes in Enclosure Bills.
-This debate was followed by another on 6th April, when Lord Bathurst
-(President of the Council) as a counterblast to his colleague on the
-Woolsack, moved, but afterwards withdrew, a series of resolutions on
-the same subject. In the course of this debate Thurlow, who thought
-perhaps that his zeal for the Church had surprised and irritated
-his fellow-peers, among whom he was not conspicuous in life as a
-practising Christian, explained that though he was zealous for the
-Church, ‘his zeal was not partial or confined to the Church, further
-than it was connected with the other great national establishments,
-of which it formed a part, and no inconsiderable one.’ The Bishop
-of St. Davids returned to the subject on the 14th June, moving to
-recommit the Bill for enclosing Kington in Worcestershire. He read a
-string of resolutions which he wished to see applied to all future
-Enclosure Bills, in order to defend the interests of the clergy from
-‘the oppressions of the Lord of the Manor, landowners, etc.’ Thurlow
-spoke for him, but he was defeated by 24 votes to 4, his only other
-supporters being Lord Galloway and the Bishop of Lincoln.
-
-Thurlow’s story of Sir George Savile’s ‘meanly habited man’ did not
-disturb the confidence of the House of Lords in the justice of the
-existing procedure towards the poor: the enclosure debates revolve
-solely round the question of the relative claims of the lord of the
-manor and the tithe-owner. The House of Commons was equally free
-from scruple or misgiving. One petitioner in 1800 commented on the
-extraordinary haste with which a New Forest Bill was pushed through
-Parliament, and suggested that if it were passed into law in this rapid
-manner at the end of a session, some injustice might unconsciously be
-done. The Speaker replied with a grave and dignified rebuke: ‘The House
-was always competent to give every subject the consideration due to its
-importance, and could not therefore be truly said to be incapable at
-any time of discussing any question gravely, dispassionately, and with
-strict regard to justice.’[64] He recommended that the petition should
-be passed over as if it had never been presented. The member who had
-presented the petition pleaded that he had not read it. Such were the
-plausibilities and decorum in which the House of Commons wrapped up
-its abuses. We can imagine that some of the members must have smiled
-to each other like the Roman augurs, when they exchanged these solemn
-hypocrisies.
-
-We have a sidelight on the vigilance of the House of Commons, when an
-Enclosure Bill came down from a committee, in a speech of Windham’s
-in defence of bull-baiting. Windham attacked the politicians who
-had introduced the Bill to abolish bull-baiting, for raising such a
-question at a time of national crisis when Parliament ought to be
-thinking of other things. He then went on to compare the subject to
-local subjects that ‘contained nothing of public or general interest.
-To procure the discussion of such subjects it was necessary to resort
-to canvass and intrigue. Members whose attendance was induced by
-local considerations in most cases of this description, were present:
-the discussion, if any took place, was managed by the friends of
-the measure: and the decision of the House was ultimately, perhaps,
-a matter of mere chance.’ From Sheridan’s speech in answer, we
-learn that this is a description of the passing of Enclosure Bills.
-‘Another honourable gentleman who had opposed this Bill with peculiar
-vehemence, considered it as one of those light and trivial subjects,
-which was not worthy to occupy the deliberations of Parliament: and
-he compared it to certain other subjects of Bills: that is to say,
-bills of a local nature, respecting inclosures and other disposal of
-property, which merely passed by chance, as Members could not be got
-to attend their progress by dint of canvassing.’[65] Doubtless most
-Members of the House of Commons shared the sentiments of Lord Sandwich,
-who told the House of Lords that he was so satisfied ‘that the more
-inclosures the better, that as far as his poor abilities would enable
-him, he would support every inclosure bill that should be brought into
-the House.’[66]
-
-For the last act of an enclosure drama the scene shifts back to the
-parish. The commissioners arrive, receive and determine claims,
-and publish an award, mapping out the new village. The life and
-business of the village are now in suspense, and the commissioners
-are often authorised to prescribe the course of husbandry during the
-transition.[67] The Act which they administer provides that a certain
-proportion of the land is to be assigned to the lord of the manor, in
-virtue of his rights, and a certain proportion to the owner of the
-tithes. An occasional Act provides that some small allotment shall be
-made to the poor: otherwise the commissioners have a free hand: their
-powers are virtually absolute. This is the impression left by all
-contemporary writers. Arthur Young, for example, writes emphatically
-in this sense. ‘Thus is the property of proprietors, and especially of
-the poor ones, entirely at their mercy: every passion of resentment
-and prejudice may be gratified without control, for they are vested
-with a despotic power known in no other branch of business in this
-free country.’[68] Similar testimony is found in the Report of the
-Select Committee (1800) on the Expense and Mode of Obtaining Bills of
-Enclosure: ‘the expediency of despatch, without the additional expense
-of multiplied litigation, has suggested the necessity of investing them
-with a summary, and in most cases uncontrollable jurisdiction.’[69] In
-the General Report of the Board of Agriculture on Enclosures, published
-in 1808, though any more careful procedure is deprecated as likely to
-cause delay, it is stated that the adjusting of property worth £50,000
-was left to the arbitration of a majority of five, ‘often persons
-of mean education.’ The author of _An Inquiry into the Advantages
-and Disadvantages resulting from Bills of Inclosure_, published in
-1781, writes as if it was the practice to allow an appeal to Quarter
-Sessions; such an appeal he characterised as useless to a poor man,
-and we can well believe that most of the squires who sat on such a
-tribunal to punish vagrants or poachers had had a hand in an enclosure
-in the past or had their eyes on an enclosure in the future. Thurlow
-considered such an appeal quite inadequate, giving the more polite
-reason that Quarter Sessions had not the necessary time.[70] The Act
-of 1801 is silent on the subject, but Sinclair’s draft of a General
-Inclosure Bill, published in the _Annals of Agriculture_ in 1796,[71]
-provided for an appeal to Quarter Sessions. It will be seen that in
-five of the cases analysed in the Appendix (Haute Huntre, Simpson,
-Stanwell, Wakefield and Winfrith Newburgh), the decision of the
-commissioners on claims was final, except that at Wakefield an objector
-might oblige the commissioners to take the opinion of a counsel chosen
-by themselves. In five cases (Ashelworth, Croydon, Cheshunt, Laleham
-and Louth), a disappointed claimant might bring a suit on a feigned
-issue against a proprietor. At Armley and Knaresborough the final
-decision was left to arbitrators, but whereas at Armley the arbitrator
-was to be chosen by a neutral authority, the Recorder of Leeds, the
-arbitrators at Knaresborough were named in the Act, and were presumably
-as much the nominees of the promoters as the commissioners themselves.
-
-The statements of contemporaries already quoted go to show that none
-of these arrangements were regarded as seriously fettering the power
-of the commissioners, and it is easy to understand that a lawsuit,
-which might of course overwhelm him, was not a remedy for the use of a
-small proprietor or a cottager, though it might be of some advantage
-to a large proprietor who had not been fortunate enough to secure
-adequate representation of his interests on the Board of Commissioners.
-But the decision as to claims was only part of the business. A man’s
-claim might be allowed, and yet gross injustice might be done him in
-the redistribution. He might be given inferior land, or land in an
-inconvenient position. In ten of the cases in the Appendix the award
-of the commissioners is stated to be final, and there is no appeal from
-it. The two exceptions are Knaresborough and Armley. The Knaresborough
-Act is silent on the point, and the Armley Act allows an appeal to the
-Recorder of Leeds. So far therefore as the claims and allotments of
-the poor were concerned, the commissioners were in no danger of being
-overruled. Their freedom in other ways was restricted by the Standing
-Orders of 1774, which obliged them to give an account of their expenses.
-
-It would seem to be obvious that any society which had an elementary
-notion of the meaning and importance of justice would have taken the
-utmost pains to see that the men appointed to this extraordinary office
-had no motive for showing partiality. This might not unreasonably
-have been expected of the society about which Pitt declared in the
-House of Commons, that it was the boast of the law of England that
-it afforded equal security and protection to the high and low, the
-rich and poor.[72] How were these commissioners appointed at the time
-that Pitt was Prime Minister? They were appointed in each case before
-the Bill was presented to Parliament, and generally, as Young tells
-us, they were appointed by the promoters of the enclosure before the
-petition was submitted for local signatures, so that in fact they
-were nominated by the persons of influence who agreed on the measure.
-In one case (Moreton Corbet in Shropshire; 1950 acres enclosed in
-1797) the Act appointed one commissioner only, and he was to name
-his successor. Sometimes, as in the case of Otmoor,[73] it might
-happen that the commissioners were changed while the Bill was passing
-through Committee, if some powerful persons were able to secure better
-representation of their own interests. In the case of Wakefield again,
-the House of Commons Committee placated Lord Strafford by giving him a
-commissioner.
-
-Now, who was supposed to have a voice in the appointment of the
-commissioners? There is to be found in the _Annals of Agriculture_[74]
-an extremely interesting paper by Sir John Sinclair, preliminary
-to a memorandum of the General Enclosure Bill which he promoted in
-1796. Sinclair explains that he had had eighteen hundred Enclosure
-Acts (taken indiscriminately) examined in order to ascertain what
-was the usual procedure and what stipulations were made with regard
-to particular interests; this with the intention of incorporating
-the recognised practice in his General Bill. In the course of these
-remarks he says, ‘the probable result will be the appointment of one
-Commissioner by the Lord of the Manor, of another by the tithe-owner,
-and of a third by the major part in value of the proprietors.’[75] It
-will be observed that the third commissioner is not appointed by a
-majority of the commoners, nor even by the majority of the proprietors,
-but by the votes of those who own the greater part of the village. This
-enables us to assess the value of what might have seemed a safeguard
-to the poor--the provision that the names of the commissioners should
-appear in the Bill presented to Parliament. The lord of the manor, the
-impropriator of tithes, and the majority in value of the owners are a
-small minority of the persons affected by an enclosure, and all that
-they have to do is to meet round a table and name the commissioners
-who are to represent them.[76] Thus we find that the powerful persons
-who carried an enclosure against the will of the poor nominated the
-tribunal before which the poor had to make good their several claims.
-This was the way in which the constitution that Pitt was defending
-afforded equal security and protection to the rich and to the poor.
-
-It will be noticed further that two interests are chosen out for
-special representation. They are the lord of the manor and the
-impropriator of tithes: in other words, the very persons who are
-formally assigned a certain minimum in the distribution by the Act
-of Parliament. Every Act after 1774 declares that the lord of the
-manor is to have a certain proportion, and the tithe-owner a certain
-proportion of the land divided: scarcely any Act stipulates that any
-share at all is to go to the cottager or the small proprietor. Yet in
-the appointment of commissioners the interests that are protected by
-the Act have a preponderating voice, and the interests that are left
-to the caprice of the commissioners have no voice at all. Thurlow,
-speaking in the House of Lords in 1781,[77] said that it was grossly
-unjust to the parson that his property should be at the disposal of
-these commissioners, of whom he only nominated one. ‘He thanked God
-that the property of an Englishman depended not on so loose a tribunal
-in any other instance whatever.’ What, then, was the position of the
-poor and the small farmers who were not represented at all among the
-commissioners? In the paper already quoted, Sinclair mentions that
-in some cases the commissioners were peers, gentlemen and clergymen,
-residing in the neighbourhood, who acted without fees or emolument. He
-spoke of this as undertaking a useful duty, and it does not seem to
-have occurred to him that there was any objection to such a practice.
-‘To lay down the principle that men are to serve for nothing,’ said
-Cobbett, in criticising the system of unpaid magistrates, ‘puts me in
-mind of the servant who went on hire, who being asked what wages he
-demanded, said he wanted no wages: for that he always found about the
-house little things to pick up.’
-
-There is a curious passage in the General Report of the Board of
-Agriculture[78] on the subject of the appointment of commissioners. The
-writer, after dwelling on the unexampled powers that the commissioners
-enjoy, remarks that they are not likely to be abused, because a
-commissioner’s prospect of future employment in this profitable
-capacity depends on his character for integrity and justice. This is
-a reassuring reflection for the classes that promoted enclosures and
-appointed commissioners, but it rings with a very different sound in
-other ears. It would clearly have been much better for the poor if the
-commissioners had not had any prospect of future employment at all. We
-can obtain some idea of the kind of men whom the landowners considered
-to be competent and satisfactory commissioners from the Standing Orders
-of 1801, which forbade the employment in this capacity of the bailiff
-of the lord of the manor. It would be interesting to know how much of
-England was appropriated on the initiative of the lord of the manor, by
-his bailiff, acting under the authority given to him by the High Court
-of Parliament. It is significant, too, that down to 1801 a commissioner
-was only debarred from buying land in a parish in which he had acted in
-this capacity, until his award was made. The Act of 1801 debarred him
-from buying land under such circumstances for the following five years.
-
-The share of the small man in these transactions from first to last
-can be estimated from the language of Arthur Young in 1770. ‘The small
-proprietor whose property in the township is perhaps his all, has
-little or no weight in regulating the clauses of the Act of Parliament,
-has seldom, if ever, an opportunity of putting a single one in the Bill
-favourable to his rights, and has as little influence in the choice of
-Commissioners.’[79] But even this description does less than justice
-to his helplessness. There remains to be considered the procedure
-before the commissioners themselves. Most Enclosure Acts specified a
-date before which all claims had to be presented. It is obvious that
-there must have been very many small proprietors who had neither the
-courage nor the knowledge necessary to put and defend their case, and
-that vast numbers of claims must have been disregarded because they
-were not presented, or because they were presented too late, or because
-they were irregular in form. The Croydon Act, for example, prescribes
-that claimants must send in their claims ‘in Writing under their Hands,
-or the Hands of their Agents, distinguishing in such Claims the Tenure
-of the Estates in respect whereof such Claims are made, and stating
-therein such further Particulars as shall be necessary to describe
-such Claims with Precision.’ And if this was a difficult fence for the
-small proprietor, unaccustomed to legal forms and documents, or to
-forms and documents of any kind, what was the plight of the cottager?
-Let us imagine the cottager, unable to read or write, enjoying certain
-customary rights of common without any idea of their origin or history
-or legal basis: knowing only that as long as he can remember he has
-kept a cow, driven geese across the waste, pulled his fuel out of the
-neighbouring brushwood, and cut turf from the common, and that his
-father did all these things before him. The cottager learns that before
-a certain day he has to present to his landlord’s bailiff, or to the
-parson, or to one of the magistrates into whose hands perhaps he has
-fallen before now over a little matter of a hare or a partridge, or to
-some solicitor from the country town, a clear and correct statement
-of his rights and his claim to a share in the award. Let us remember
-at the same time all that we know from Fielding and Smollett of the
-reputation of lawyers for cruelty to the poor. Is a cottager to be
-trusted to face the ordeal, or to be in time with his statement, or to
-have that statement in proper legal form? The commissioners can reject
-his claim on the ground of any technical irregularity, as we learn
-from a petition presented to Parliament in 1774 by several persons
-interested in the enclosure of Knaresborough Forest, whose claims
-had been disallowed by the commissioners because of certain ‘mistakes
-made in the description of such tenements ... notwithstanding the said
-errors were merely from inadvertency, and in no way altered the merits
-of the petitioners’ claims.’ A Bill was before Parliament to amend
-the previous Act for enclosing Knaresborough Forest, in respect of
-the method of payment of expenses, and hence these petitioners had an
-opportunity of making their treatment public.[80] It is easy to guess
-what was the fate of many a small proprietor or cottager, who had to
-describe his tenement or common right to an unsympathetic tribunal.
-We are not surprised that one of the witnesses told the Enclosure
-Committee of 1844 that the poor often did not know what their claims
-were, or how to present them. It is significant that in the case of
-Sedgmoor, out of 4063 claims sent in, only 1798 were allowed.[81]
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now given an account of the procedure by which Parliamentary
-enclosures were carried out. We give elsewhere a detailed analysis,
-disentangled from the _Journals_ of Parliament and other sources, of
-particular enclosures. We propose to give here two illustrations of the
-temper of the Parliamentary Committees. One illustration is provided by
-a speech made by Sir William Meredith, one of the Rockingham Whigs, in
-1772, a speech that needs no comment. ‘Sir William Meredith moved, That
-it might be a general order, that no Bill, or clause in a Bill, making
-any offence capital, should be agreed to but in a Committee of the
-whole House. He observed, that at present the facility of passing such
-clauses was shameful: that he once passing a Committee-room, when only
-one Member was holding a Committee, with a clerk’s boy, he happened
-to hear something of hanging; he immediately had the curiosity to ask
-what was going forward in that small Committee that could merit such a
-punishment? He was answered, that it was an Inclosing Bill, in which
-a great many poor people were concerned, who opposed the Bill; that
-they feared those people would obstruct the execution of the Act, and
-therefore this clause was to make it capital felony in anyone who did
-so. This resolution was unanimously agreed to.’[82]
-
-The other illustration is provided by the history of an attempted
-enclosure in which we can watch the minds of the chief actors without
-screen or disguise of any kind: in this case we have very fortunately a
-vivid revelation of the spirit and manner in which Committees conducted
-their business, from the pen of the chairman himself. George Selwyn
-gives us in his letters, published in the _Carlisle Papers_, a view
-of the proceedings from the inside. It is worth while to set out in
-some detail the passages from these letters published in the _Carlisle
-Papers_, by way of supplementing and explaining the official records of
-the House of Commons.
-
-We learn from the _Journals_ of the House of Commons that, on 10th
-November, 1775, a petition was presented to the House of Commons
-for the enclosure of King’s Sedgmoor, in the County of Somerset,
-the petitioners urging that this land was of very little value in
-its present state, and that it was capable of great improvement by
-enclosure and drainage. Leave was given to bring in a Bill, to be
-prepared by Mr. St. John and Mr. Coxe. Mr. St. John was brother of
-Lord Bolingbroke. On 13th November, the Bill was presented and read
-a first time. Four days later it received a second reading, and was
-sent to a Committee of Mr. St. John and others. At this point, those
-who objected to the enclosure began to take action. First of all there
-is a petition from William Waller, Esq., who says that under a grant
-of Charles I. he is entitled to the soil of the moor: it is agreed
-that he shall be heard by counsel before the Committee. The next day
-there arrives a petition from owners and occupiers in thirty-five
-‘parishes, hamlets and places,’ who state that all these parishes have
-enjoyed rights of common without discrimination over the 18,000 acres
-of pasture on Sedgmoor: that these rights of pasture and cutting turf
-and rushes and sedges have existed from time immemorial, and that no
-Enclosure Act is wanted for the draining of Sedgmoor, because an Act of
-the reign of William III. had conferred all the necessary powers for
-this purpose on the Justices of the Peace. The petitioners prayed to be
-heard by themselves and counsel against the application for enclosure
-on Committee and on Report. The House of Commons ordered that the
-petition should lie on the Table, and that the petitioners should be
-heard when the Report had been received from Committee. Five days later
-three lords of manors (Sir Charles Kemys Tynte, Baronet, Copleston
-Warre Bampfylde, Esq., and William Hawker, Esq.) petition against the
-Bill and complain of the haste with which the promoters are pushing
-the Bill through Parliament. This petition is taken more seriously: a
-motion is made and defeated to defer the Bill for two months, but the
-House orders that the petitioners shall be heard before the Committee.
-Two of these three lords of manor present a further petition early in
-December, stating that they and their tenants are more than a majority
-in number and value of the persons interested, and a second petition
-is also presented by the thirty-seven parishes and hamlets already
-mentioned, in which it is contended that, in spite of the difficulties
-of collecting signatures in a scattered district in a very short time,
-749 persons interested had already signed the petition against the
-Bill, that the effect of the Bill had been misrepresented to many of
-the tenants, that the facts as to the different interests affected had
-been misrepresented to the Committee, that the number and rights of
-the persons supporting the Bill had been exaggerated (only 213 having
-signed their names as consenting), and that if justice was to be done
-to the various parties concerned, it was essential that time should be
-given for the hearing of complaints and the circulation of the Bill in
-the district. This petition was presented on 11th December, and the
-House of Commons ordered that the petitioners should be heard when the
-Report was received. Next day Mr. Selwyn, as Chairman of the Committee,
-presented a Report in favour of the Bill, mentioning among other things
-that the number of tenements concerned was 1269, and that 303 refused
-to sign; but attention was drawn to the fact that there were several
-variations between the Bill as it was presented to the House, and the
-Bill as it was presented to the parties concerned for their consent,
-and on this ground the Bill was defeated by 59 to 35 votes.
-
-This is the cold impersonal account of the proceedings given in the
-official journals, but the letters of Selwyn take us behind the scenes
-and supply a far livelier picture.[83] His account begins with a letter
-to Lord Carlisle in November:
-
- ‘Bully has a scheme of enclosure, which, if it succeeds, I am told
- will free him from all his difficulties. It is to come into our House
- immediately. If I had this from a better judgment than that of our
- sanguine counsellors, I should have more hopes from it. I am ready to
- allow that he has been very faulty, but I cannot help wishing to see
- him once more on his legs....’
-
-(Bully, of course, is Bolingbroke, brother of St. John, called the
-counsellor, author of the Bill.) We learn from this letter that there
-are other motives than a passion to drain Sedgmoor in the promotion of
-this great improvement scheme. We learn from the next letter that it is
-not only Bully’s friends and creditors who have some reason for wishing
-it well:
-
- ‘Stavordale is returning to Redlinch; I believe that he sets out
- to-morrow. He is also deeply engaged in this Sedgmoor Bill, and it
- is supposed that he or Lord Ilchester, which you please, will get
- 2000_l._ a year by it. He will get more, or save more at least, by
- going away and leaving the Moor in my hands, for he told me himself
- the other night that this last trip to town had cost him 4000_l._’
-
-Another letter warns Lord Carlisle that the only way to get his
-creditors to pay their debts to him, when they come into their money
-through the enclosure, is to press for payment, and goes on to describe
-the unexpected opposition the Bill had encountered. Selwyn had been
-made chairman of the Committee.
-
- ‘... My dear Lord, if your delicacy is such that you will not be
- pressing with him about it, you may be assured that you will never
- receive a farthing. I have spoke to Hare about it, who [was] kept
- in it till half an hour after 4; as I was also to-day, and shall be
- to-morrow. I thought that it was a matter of form only, but had no
- sooner begun to read the preamble to the Bill, but I found myself in a
- nest of hornets. The room was full, and an opposition made to it, and
- disputes upon every word, which kept me in the Chair, as I have told
- you. I have gained it seems great reputation, and am at this minute
- reputed one of the best Chairmen upon this stand. Bully and Harry came
- home and dined with me....’
-
-The next letter, written on 9th December, shows that Selwyn is afraid
-that Stavordale may not get his money out of his father, and also that
-he is becoming still more anxious about the fate of the Enclosure Bill,
-on which of course the whole pack of cards depends:
-
- ‘... I have taken the liberty to talk a good deal to Lord Stavordale,
- partly for his own sake and partly for yours, and pressed him much to
- get out of town as soon as possible, and not quit Lord I. [Ilchester]
- any more. His attention there cannot be of long duration, and his
- absence may be fatal to us all. I painted it in very strong colours,
- and he has promised me to go, as soon as this Sedgmoor Bill is
- reported. I moved to have Tuesday fixed for it. We had a debate and
- division upon my motion, and this Bill will at last not go down so
- glibly as Bully hoped that it would. It will meet with more opposition
- in the H. of Lords, and Lord North being adverse to it, does us no
- good. Lord Ilchester gets, it is said, £5000 a year by it, and amongst
- others Sir C. Tynte something, who, for what reason I cannot yet
- comprehend, opposes it....’
-
-The next letter describes the final catastrophe:
-
- ‘December 12. Tuesday night.... Bully has lost his Bill. I reported
- it to-day, and the Question was to withdraw it. There were 59 against
- us, and we were 35. It was worse managed by the agents, supposing no
- treachery, than ever business was. Lord North, Robinson, and Keene
- divided against. Charles[84] said all that could be said on our side.
- But as the business was managed, it was the worst Question that I
- ever voted for. We were a Committee absolutely of Almack’s,[85] so
- if the Bill is not resumed, and better conducted and supported, this
- phantom of 30,000_l._ clear in Bully’s pocket to pay off his annuities
- vanishes.
-
- ‘It is surprising what a fatality attends some people’s proceedings.
- I begged last night as for alms, that they would meet me to settle
- the Votes. I have, since I have been in Parliament, been of twenty
- at least of these meetings, and always brought numbers down by those
- means. But my advice was slighted, and twenty people were walking
- about the streets who could have carried this point.
-
- ‘The cause was not bad, but the Question was totally indigestible.
- The most conscientious man in the House in Questions of this nature,
- Sir F. Drake, a very old acquaintance of mine, told me that nothing
- could be so right as the enclosure. But they sent one Bill into
- the country for the assent of the people interested, and brought
- me another, differing in twenty particulars, to carry through the
- Committee, without once mentioning to me that the two Bills differed.
- This they thought was cunning, and I believe a happy composition of
- Bully’s cunning and John’s idea of his own parts. I had no idea, or
- could have, of this difference. The adverse party said nothing of it,
- _comme de raison_, reserving the objection till the Report, and it
- was insurmountable. If one of the Clerks only had hinted it to me,
- inexperienced as I am in these sort of Bills, I would have stopped it,
- and by that means have given them a better chance by a new Bill than
- they can have now, that people will have a pretence for not altering
- their opinion....’
-
-These letters compensate for the silence of Hansard, so real and
-instructive a picture do they present of the methods and motives of
-enclosure. ‘Bully has a scheme of enclosure which, if it succeeds, I
-am told will free him from all his difficulties.’ The journals may talk
-of the undrained fertility of Sedgmoor, but we have in this sentence
-the aspect of the enclosure that interests Selwyn, the Chairman of
-the Committee, and from beginning to end of the proceedings no other
-aspect ever enters his head. And it interests a great many other people
-besides Selwyn, for Bully owes money; so too does Stavordale, another
-prospective beneficiary: he owes money to Fox, and Fox owes money to
-Carlisle. Now Bully and Stavordale are not the only eighteenth-century
-aristocrats who are in difficulties; the waiters at Brooks’s and at
-White’s know that well enough, as Selwyn felt when, on hearing that
-one of them had been arrested for felony, he exclaimed, ‘What an idea
-of us he will give in Newgate.’ Nor is Bully the only aristocrat in
-difficulties whose thoughts turn to enclosure; Selwyn’s letters alone,
-with their reference to previous successes, would make that clear. It
-is here that we begin to appreciate the effect of our system of family
-settlements in keeping the aristocracy together. These young men, whose
-fortunes come and go in the hurricanes of the faro table, would soon
-have dissipated their estates if they had been free to do it; as they
-were restrained by settlements, they could only mortgage them. But
-there is a limit to this process, and after a time their debts begin
-to overwhelm them; perhaps also too many of their fellow gamblers are
-their creditors to make Brooks’s or White’s quite as comfortable a
-place as it used to be, for we may doubt whether all of these creditors
-were troubled with Lord Carlisle’s morbid delicacy of feeling. Happily
-there is an escape from this painful situation: a scheme of enclosure
-which will put him ‘once more on his legs.’ The other parties concerned
-are generally poor men, and there is not much danger of failure. Thus
-if we trace the adventures of the gaming table to their bitter end, we
-begin to understand that these wild revellers are gambling not with
-their own estates but with the estates of their neighbours. This is the
-only property they can realise. _Quidquid delirant reges plectuntur
-Achivi._
-
-The particular obstacle on which the scheme split was a fraudulent
-irregularity: the Bill submitted for signature to the inhabitants
-differing seriously (in twenty particulars) from the Bill presented
-to Parliament. Selwyn clearly attached no importance at all to the
-Petitions that were received against the Bill, or to the evidence of
-its local unpopularity. It is clear too, that it was very rare for a
-scheme like this to miscarry, for, speaking of his becoming Chairman
-of the Committee, he adds, ‘I thought it was a matter of form only.’
-Further with a little care this project would have weathered the
-discovery of the fraud of which the authors were guilty. ‘I begged
-last night as for alms that they would meet us to settle the Votes.
-I have, since I have been in Parliament, been of twenty at least of
-these meetings, and always brought numbers down by these means. But my
-advice was slighted, and twenty people were walking about the streets
-who could have carried this point.’ In other words, the Bill would
-have been carried, all its iniquities notwithstanding, if only Bully’s
-friends had taken Selwyn’s advice and put themselves out to go down
-to Westminster. So little impression did this piece of trickery make
-on the mind of the Chairman of the Committee, that he intended to the
-last, by collecting his friends, to carry the Bill, for the fairness
-and good order of which he was responsible, through the House of
-Commons. This glimpse into the operations of the Committee enables us
-to picture the groups of comrades who sauntered down from Almack’s of
-an afternoon to carve up a manor in Committee of the House of Commons.
-We can see Bully’s friends meeting round the table in their solemn
-character of judges and legislators, to give a score of villages to
-Bully, and a dozen to Stavordale, much as Artaxerxes gave Magnesia to
-Themistocles for his bread, Myus for his meat and Lampsacus for his
-wine. And if those friends happened to be Bully’s creditors as well,
-it would perhaps not be unjust to suppose that their action was not
-altogether free from the kind of gratitude that inspired the bounty of
-the great king.[86]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[33] _E.g._ Laxton enclosed on petition of Lord Carbery in 1772. Total
-area 1200 acres. Enclosure proceedings completed in the Commons in
-nineteen days. Also Ashbury, Berks, enclosed on petition of Lord Craven
-in 1770. There were contrary petitions. Also Nylands, enclosed in 1790
-on petition of the lady of the manor. Also Tilsworth, Beds, enclosed
-on petition of Charles Chester, Esq., 1767, and Westcote, Bucks, on
-petition of the most noble George, Duke of Marlborough, January 24,
-1765. Sometimes the lord of the manor associated the vicar with his
-petition: thus Waltham, Croxton and Braunston, covering 5600 acres, in
-Leicestershire, were all enclosed in 1766 by the Duke of Rutland and
-the local rector or vicar. The relations of Church and State are very
-happily illustrated by the language of the petitions, ‘A petition of
-the most noble John, Duke of Rutland, and the humble petition’ of the
-Rev. ---- Brown or Rastall or Martin.
-
-[34] This Standing Order does not seem to have been applied
-universally, for Mr. Bragge on December 1, 1800, made a motion that it
-should be extended to the counties where it had not hitherto obtained.
-See _Senator_, vol. xxvii., December 1, 1800.
-
-[35] See particulars in Appendix.
-
-[36] _A Six Months’ Tour through the North of England_, 1771, vol. i.
-p. 122.
-
-[37] Pp. 21 f.
-
-[38] Cf. Otmoor in next chapter.
-
-[39] See Appendix.
-
-[40] See Appendix.
-
-[41] See _House of Commons Journal_.
-
-[42] Eden, _The State of the Poor_, vol. ii. p. 157.
-
-[43] Eden, writing a few years later, remarks that since the enclosure
-‘the property in Holy Island has gotten into fewer hands,’ vol. ii. p.
-149.
-
-[44] Report of Select Committee on Most Effectual Means of Facilitating
-Enclosure, 1800.
-
-[45] Cf. also Wraisbury in Bucks, _House of Commons Journal_, June 17,
-1799, where the petitioners against the Bill claimed that they spoke
-on behalf of ‘by much the greatest Part of the Proprietors of the said
-Lands and Grounds,’ yet in the enumeration of consents the committee
-state that the owners of property assessed at £6, 18s. are hostile out
-of a total value of £295, 14s.
-
-[46] _House of Commons Journal_, March 21, 1796.
-
-[47] _House of Commons Journal_, June 10, 1801; cf. also case of
-Laleham. See Appendix.
-
-[48] _Ibid._, June 15, 1801.
-
-[49] _Ibid._, May 3, 1809.
-
-[50] _Ibid._, June 29, 1797.
-
-[51] See Appendix A (13).
-
-[52] _A Political Enquiry into the Consequences of enclosing Waste
-Lands_, 1785, p. 108.
-
-[53] See Appendix A (12).
-
-[54] House of Commons, May 1, 1845.
-
-[55] Aglionby, House of Commons, June 5, 1844.
-
-[56] Thurlow was Chancellor from 1778 to 1783 (when Fox contrived to
-get rid of him) and from 1783 to 1792.
-
-[57] _Parliamentary Register_, House of Lords, March 30, 1781.
-
-[58] Sir George Savile (1726-1784), M.P. for Yorkshire, 1759-1783;
-carried the Catholic Relief Bill, which provoked the Gordon Riots, and
-presented the great Yorkshire Petition for Economical Reform.
-
-[59] _Annual Register_, 1867, p. 68. For a detailed history of the
-Stanwell Enclosure, see Appendix A (10). Unhappily the farmers were
-only reprieved; Stanwell was enclosed at the second attempt.
-
-[60] See _Parliamentary Register_, House of Lords, March 30, 1781;
-April 6, 1781; June 14, 1781.
-
-[61] John Warren (1730-1800).
-
-[62] John Hinchcliffe (1731-1794), at one time Master of Trinity
-College, Cambridge.
-
-[63] _Parliamentary Register_, March 30, 1781.
-
-[64] _Senator_, vol. xxvi., July 2, 1800.
-
-[65] For both speeches see _Parliamentary Register_, May 24, 1802.
-
-[66] _Ibid._, June 14, 1781.
-
-[67] See Cheshunt, Louth, Simpson, and Stanwell in Appendix.
-
-[68] _Six Months’ Tour through the North of England_, 1771, vol. i. p.
-122.
-
-[69] See _Annual Register_, 1800, Appendix to Chronicle, p. 87.
-
-[70] _Parliamentary Register_, June 14, 1781.
-
-[71] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxvi. p. 111.
-
-[72] February 1, 1793.
-
-[73] See Chapter iv.
-
-[74] Vol. xxvi. p. 70.
-
-[75] Sinclair’s language shows that this was the general arrangement.
-Of course there are exceptions. See _e.g._ Haute Huntre and other cases
-in Appendix.
-
-[76] Cf. Billingsley’s _Report on Somerset_, p. 59, where the
-arrangements are described as ‘a _little system of patronage_. The
-lord of the soil, the rector, and a few of the principal commoners,
-monopolize and distribute the appointments.’
-
-[77] _Parliamentary Register_, June 14, 1781.
-
-[78] _General Report on Enclosures_, 1808.
-
-[79] _Six Months’ Tour through the North of England_, vol. i. p. 122.
-
-[80] See Appendix A (6).
-
-[81] _Report on Somerset_, p. 192.
-
-[82] _Parliamentary Register_, January 21, 1772.
-
-[83] _Carlisle MSS._; _Historical MSS. Commission_, pp. 301 ff.
-
-[84] Charles James Fox.
-
-[85] The earlier name of Brooks’s Club.
-
-[86] For the subsequent history of King’s Sedgmoor, see Appendix A
-(14).
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-ENCLOSURE (2)
-
-
-In the year 1774, Lord North’s Government, which had already received
-a bad bruise or two in the course of its quarrels with printers and
-authors, got very much the worst of it in an encounter that a little
-prudence would have sufficed to avert altogether. The affair has
-become famous on account of the actors, and because it was the turning
-point in a very important career. The cause of the quarrel has passed
-into the background, but students of the enclosure movement will find
-more to interest them in its beginning than in its circumstances and
-development.
-
-Mr. De Grey, Member for Norfolk, and Lord of the Manor of Tollington
-in that county, had a dispute of long standing with Mr. William Tooke
-of Purley, a landowner in Tollington, who had resisted Mr. De Grey’s
-encroachments on the common. An action on this subject was impending,
-but Mr. De Grey, who held, as Sir George Trevelyan puts it, ‘that the
-law’s delay was not intended for Members of Parliament’ got another
-Member of Parliament to introduce a petition for a Bill for the
-enclosure of Tollington. As it happened, Mr. Tooke was a friend of one
-of the clerks in the House of Commons, and this friend told him on
-6th January that a petition from De Grey was about to be presented. A
-fortnight later Mr. Tooke received from this clerk a copy of Mr. De
-Grey’s petition, in which the Lord Chief Justice, brother of Mr. De
-Grey was included. Mr. Tooke hurried to London and prepared a counter
-petition, and Sir Edward Astley, the member for the constituency,
-undertook to present that petition together with the petition from Mr.
-De Grey. There were some further negotiations, with the result that
-both sides revised their respective petitions, and it was arranged that
-they should be presented on 4th February. On that day the Speaker said
-the House was not full enough, and the petitions must be presented on
-the 7th. Accordingly Sir Edward Astley brought up both petitions on
-the 7th, but the Speaker said it was very extraordinary to present two
-contrary petitions at the same time. ‘Bring the first petition first.’
-When members began to say ‘Hear, hear,’ the Speaker remarked, ‘It is
-only a common petition for a common enclosure,’ and the Members fell
-into general conversation, paying no heed to the proceedings at the
-Table. In the midst of this the petition was read, and the Speaker
-asked for ‘Ayes and Noes,’ and declared that the Ayes had it. The
-petition asking for the Bill had thus been surreptitiously carried
-without the House being made aware that there was a contrary petition
-to be presented, the contrary petition asking for delay. The second
-petition was then read and ordered to lie on the Table.
-
-In ordinary circumstances nothing more would have been heard of the
-opposition to Mr. De Grey’s Bill. Hundreds of petitions may have been
-so stifled without the world being any the wiser. But Mr. Tooke, who
-would never have known of Mr. De Grey’s intention if he had not had
-a friend among the clerks of the House of Commons, happened to have
-another friend who was able to help him in a very different way in his
-predicament. This was Horne, who was now living in a cottage at Purley,
-reading law, on the desperate chance that a man, who was a clergyman
-against his will, would be admitted to the bar. Flushed rather than
-spent by his public quarrel with Wilkes, which was just dying down,
-Horne saw in Mr. Tooke’s wrongs an admirable opportunity for a champion
-of freedom, whose earlier exploits had been a little tarnished by his
-subsequent feuds with his comrades. Accordingly he responded very
-promptly, and published in the _Public Advertiser_ of 11th February,
-an anonymous indictment of the Speaker, Sir Fletcher Norton, based on
-his unjust treatment of these petitions. This letter scandalised the
-House of Commons and drew the unwary Government into a quarrel from
-which Horne emerged triumphant; for the Government, having been led on
-to proceed against Horne, was unable to prove his authorship of the
-letter. The incident had consequences of great importance for many
-persons. It was the making of Horne, for he became Horne Tooke, with
-£8000 from his friend and a reputation as an intrepid and vigilant
-champion of popular liberty that he retained to the day of his death.
-It was also the making of Fox, for it was this youth of twenty-five who
-had led the Government into its scrape, and the king could not forgive
-him. His temerity on this occasion provoked the famous letter from
-North. ‘Sir, His Majesty has thought proper to order a new Commission
-of the Treasury to be made out, in which I do not see your name.’ Fox
-left the court party to lend his impetuous courage henceforth to very
-different causes. But for social students the incident is chiefly
-interesting because it was the cause of the introduction of Standing
-Orders on Enclosure Bills. It had shown what might happen to rich men
-under the present system. Accordingly the House of Commons set to work
-to construct a series of Standing Orders to regulate the proceedings on
-Enclosure Bills.
-
-Most of these Standing Orders have already been mentioned in the
-previous chapter, but we propose to recapitulate their main provisions
-in order to show that the gross unfairness of the procedure, described
-in the last chapter, as between the rich and the poor, made no
-impression at all upon Parliament. The first Standing Orders dealing
-with Enclosure Bills were passed in 1774, and they were revised in
-1775, 1781, 1799, 1800 and 1801. These Standing Orders prevented a
-secret application to Parliament by obliging promoters to publish
-a notice on the church door; they introduced some control over the
-extortions of commissioners, and laid down that the Bill presented
-to Parliament should contain the names of the commissioners and a
-description of the compensation to be given to the lord of the manor
-and the impropriator of tithes. But they contained no safeguard at all
-against robbery of the small proprietors or the commoners. Until 1801
-there was no restriction on the choice of a commissioner, and it was
-only in that year that Parliament adopted the Standing Order providing
-that no lord of the manor, or steward, or bailiff of any lord or lady
-or proprietor should be allowed to act as commissioner in an enclosure
-in which he was an interested party.[87] In one respect Parliament
-deliberately withdrew a rule introduced to give greater regularity and
-publicity to the proceedings of committees. Under the Standing Orders
-of 1774, the Chairman of a Committee had to report not only whether the
-Standing Orders had been complied with, but also what evidence had been
-submitted to show that all the necessary formalities had been observed;
-but in the following year the House of Commons struck out this second
-provision. A Committee of the House of Commons suggested in 1799 that
-no petition should be admitted for a Parliamentary Bill unless a fourth
-part of the proprietors in number and value signed the application, but
-this suggestion was rejected.
-
-The poor then found no kind of shelter in the Standing Orders. The
-legislation of this period, from first to last, shows just as great an
-indifference to the injustice to which they were exposed. The first
-public Act of the time deals not with enclosures for growing corn,
-but with enclosures for growing wood. The Act of 1756 states in its
-preamble that the Acts of Henry VIII., Charles II. and William III. for
-encouraging the growth of timber had been obstructed by the resistance
-of the commoners, and Parliament therefore found it necessary to enact
-that any owner of waste could enclose for the purpose of growing timber
-with the approval of the majority in number and value of those who
-had common rights, and any majority of those who had common rights
-could enclose with the approval of the owner of the waste. Any person
-or persons who thought themselves aggrieved could appeal to Quarter
-Sessions, within six months after the agreement had been registered. We
-hear very little of this Act, and the enclosures that concern us are
-enclosures of a different kind. In the final years of the century there
-was a succession of General Enclosure Bills introduced and debated in
-Parliament, under the stimulus of the fear of famine. These Bills were
-promoted by the Board of Agriculture, established in 1793 with Sir
-John Sinclair as President, and Arthur Young as secretary. This Board
-of Agriculture was not a State department in the modern sense, but a
-kind of Royal Society receiving, not too regularly, a subsidy from
-Parliament.[88] As a result of its efforts two Parliamentary Committees
-were appointed to report on the enclosure of waste lands, and the
-Reports of these Committees, which agreed in recommending a General
-Enclosure Bill, were presented in 1795 and 1799. Bills were introduced
-in 1795, 1796, 1797 and 1800, but it was not until 1801 that any Act
-was passed.
-
-The first Bills presented to Parliament were General Enclosure Bills,
-that is to say, they were Bills for prescribing conditions on which
-enclosure could be carried out without application to Parliament. The
-Board of Agriculture was set on this policy partly, as we have seen,
-in the interest of agricultural expansion, partly as the only way of
-guaranteeing a supply of food during the French war. But these were
-not the only considerations in the mind of Parliament, and we are able
-in this case to see what happened to a disinterested proposal when it
-had to pass through the sieve of a Parliament of owners of land and
-tithes. For we have in the _Annals of Agriculture_[89] the form of the
-General Enclosure Bill of 1796 as it was presented to the Government
-by that expert body, the Board of Agriculture, and we have among the
-Parliamentary Bills in the British Museum (1) the form in which this
-Bill left a Select Committee, and (2) the form in which it left a
-second Select Committee of Knights of the Shire and Gentlemen of the
-Long Robe. We are thus able to see in what spirit the lords of the
-manor who sat in Parliament regarded, in a moment of great national
-urgency, the policy put before it by the Board of Agriculture. We
-come at once upon a fact of great importance. In the first version it
-is recognised that Parliament has to consider the future as well as
-the present, that it is dealing not only with the claims of a certain
-number of living cottagers, whose rights and property may be valued by
-the commissioners at a five pound note, but with the necessities of
-generations still to be born, and that the most liberal recognition
-of the right to pasture a cow, in the form of a cash payment to an
-individual, cannot compensate for the calamities that a society suffers
-in the permanent alienation of all its soil. The Bill as drafted in the
-Board of Agriculture enacted that in view of the probable increase of
-population, a portion of the waste should be set aside, and vested in
-a corporate body (composed of the lord of the manor, the rector, the
-vicar, the churchwardens and the overseers), for allotments for ever.
-Any labourer over twenty-one, with a settlement in the parish, could
-claim a portion and hold it for fifty years, rent free, on condition
-of building a cottage and fencing it. When the fifty years were over,
-the cottages, with their parcels of land, were to be let on leases of
-twenty-one years and over at reasonable rents, half the rent to go to
-the owner of the soil, and half to the poor rates. The land was never
-to be alienated from the cottage. All these far-sighted clauses vanish
-absolutely under the sifting statesmanship of the Parliament, of which
-Burke said in all sincerity, in his _Reflections on the Revolution in
-France_, that ‘our representation has been found perfectly adequate
-to all the purposes for which a representation of the people can be
-desired or devised.’
-
-There was another respect in which the Board of Agriculture was
-considered to be too generous to the poor by the lords of the manor,
-who made the laws of England. In version 1 of the Bill, not only those
-entitled to such right but also those who have enjoyed or exercised
-the right of getting fuel are to have special and inalienable fuel
-allotments made to them: in version 2 only those who are entitled
-to such rights are to have a fuel allotment, and in version 3, this
-compensation is restricted to those who have possessed fuel rights
-for ten years. Again in version 1, the cost of enclosing and fencing
-small allotments, where the owners are unable to pay, is to be borne by
-the other owners: in version 2, the small owners are to be allowed to
-mortgage their allotments in order to cover the cost. The importance
-of the proposal thus rejected by the Parliamentary Committee will
-appear when we come to consider the practical effects of Enclosure
-Acts. The only people who got their fencing done for them under most
-Acts were the tithe-owners, a class neither so poor nor so powerless in
-Parliament.
-
-However this Bill shared the fate of all other General Enclosure Bills
-at this time. There were many obstacles to a General Enclosure Bill.
-Certain Members of Parliament resisted them on the ground that if it
-were made legal for a majority to coerce a minority into enclosure
-without coming to Parliament, such protection as the smaller commoners
-derived from the possibility of Parliamentary discussion would
-disappear. Powis quarrelled with the Bill of 1796 on this ground, and
-he was supported by Fox and Grey, but his objections were overruled.
-However a more formidable opposition came from other quarters.
-Enclosure Acts furnished Parliamentary officials with a harvest of
-fees,[90] and the Church thought it dangerous that enclosure, affecting
-tithe-owners, should be carried through without the bishops being given
-an opportunity of interfering. These and other forces were powerful
-enough to destroy this and all General Enclosure Bills, intended to
-make application to Parliament unnecessary.
-
-The Board of Agriculture accordingly changed its plans. In 1800 the
-Board abandoned its design of a General Enclosure Bill, and presented
-instead a consolidating Bill, which was to cheapen procedure. Hitherto
-there had been great diversities of form and every Bill was an
-expensive little work of art of its own. The Act of 1801 was designed
-to save promoters of enclosure some of this trouble and expense. It
-took some forty clauses that were commonly found in Enclosure Bills and
-provided that they could be incorporated by reference in private Bills,
-thus cheapening legal procedure. Further, it allowed affidavits to be
-accepted as evidence, thus relieving the promoters from the obligation
-of bringing witnesses before the Committee to swear to every signature.
-All the recognition that was given to the difficulties and the claims
-of the poor was comprised in sections 12 and 13, which allow small
-allotments to be laid together and depastured in common, and instruct
-the commissioners to have particular regard to the convenience of the
-owners or proprietors of the smallest estates. In 1813, the idea of
-a General Bill was revived once more, and a Bill passed the House of
-Commons which gave a majority of three-fifths in value the right to
-petition Quarter Sessions for an enclosure. The Bill was rejected in
-the Lords. In 1836 a General Enclosure Bill was passed, permitting
-enclosure when two-thirds in number and value desired it, and in 1845
-Parliament appointed central Commissioners with a view to preventing
-local injustice.
-
-It is unfortunate that the Parliamentary Reports of the debates on
-General Enclosure Bills in the unreformed Parliament are almost as
-meagre as the debates on particular Enclosure Bills. We can gather from
-various indications that the rights of the clergy received a good deal
-of notice, and Lord Grenville made an indignant speech to vindicate
-his zeal in the cause of the Church, which had been questioned by
-opponents. The cause of the poor does not often ruffle the surface of
-discussion. This we can collect not only from negative evidence but
-also from a statement by Mr. Lechmere, Member for Worcester. Lechmere,
-whose loss of his seat in 1796 deprived the poor of one of their very
-few champions in Parliament, drew attention more than once during the
-discussions on scarcity and the high price of corn to the lamentable
-consequences of the disappearances of the small farms, and recommended
-drastic steps to arrest the process. Philip Francis gave him some
-support. The general temper of Parliament can be divined from his
-complaint that when these subjects were under discussion it was very
-difficult to make a House.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It must not be supposed that the apathy of the aristocracy was part of
-a universal blindness or anæsthesia, and that the method and procedure
-of enclosure were accepted as just and inevitable, without challenge
-or protest from any quarter. The poor were of course bitterly hostile.
-This appears not only from the petitions presented to Parliament,
-but from the echoes that have reached us of actual violence. It was
-naturally easier for the threatened commoners to riot in places where
-a single enclosure scheme affected a wide district, and most of the
-records of popular disturbances that have come down to us are connected
-with attempts to enclose moors that were common to several parishes.
-An interesting example is afforded by the history of the enclosure
-of Haute Huntre Fen in Lincolnshire. This enclosure, which affected
-eleven parishes, was sanctioned by Parliament in 1767, but three years
-later the Enclosure Commissioners had to come to Parliament to explain
-that the posts and rails that they had set up had been destroyed ‘by
-malicious persons, in order to hinder the execution of the said Act,’
-and to ask for permission to make ditches instead of fences.[91]
-An example of disturbances in a single village is given by the
-Bedfordshire reporter for the Board of Agriculture, who says that when
-Maulden was enclosed it was found necessary to send for troops from
-Coventry to quell the riots:[92] and another in the _Annual Register_
-for 1799[93] describing the resistance of the commoners at Wilbarston
-in Northamptonshire, and the employment of two troops of yeomanry to
-coerce them. The general hatred of the poor for enclosures is evident
-from the language of Eden, and from statements of contributors to the
-_Annals of Agriculture_. Eden had included a question about commons
-and enclosures in the questions he put to his correspondents, and he
-says in his preface that he had been disappointed that so few of his
-correspondents had given an answer to this question. He then proceeds
-to give this explanation: ‘This question, like most others, that can
-now be touched upon, has its popular and its unpopular sides: and
-where no immediate self-interest, or other partial leaning, interferes
-to bias the judgment, a good-natured man cannot but wish to think
-with the multitudes; stunned as his ears must daily be, with the
-oft-repeated assertion, that, to condemn commons, is to determine
-on depopulating the country.’[94] The writer of the _Bedfordshire
-Report_ in 1808 says that ‘it appears that the poor have invariably
-been inimical to enclosures, as they certainly remain to the present
-day.’[95] Dr. Wilkinson, writing in the _Annals of Agriculture_[96]
-in favour of a General Enclosure Bill says, ‘the grand objection to
-the inclosure of commons arises from the unpopularity which gentlemen
-who are active in the cause expose themselves to in their own
-neighbourhood, from the discontent of the poor when any such question
-is agitated.’ Arthur Young makes a similar statement.[97] ‘A general
-inclosure has been long ago proposed to administration, but particular
-ones have been so unpopular in some cases that government were afraid
-of the measure.’
-
-The popular feeling, though quite unrepresented in Parliament, was not
-unrepresented in contemporary literature. During the last years of the
-eighteenth century there was a sharp war of pamphlets on the merits
-of enclosure, and it is noticeable that both supporters and opponents
-denounced the methods on which the governing class acted. There is,
-among others, a very interesting anonymous pamphlet, published in 1781
-under the title of _An Inquiry into the Advantages and Disadvantages
-resulting from Bills of Inclosure_, in which the existing practice is
-reviewed and some excellent suggestions are made for reform. The writer
-proposed that the preliminary to a Bill should be not the fixing of a
-notice to the church door, but the holding of a public meeting, that
-there should be six commissioners, that they should be elected by the
-commoners by ballot, that no decision should be valid that was not
-unanimous, and that an appeal from that decision should lie not to
-Quarter Sessions, but to Judges of Assize. The same writer proposed
-that no enclosure should be sanctioned which did not allot one acre to
-each cottage.
-
-These proposals came from an opponent of enclosure, but the most
-distinguished supporters of enclosure were also discontented with the
-procedure. Who are the writers on eighteenth-century agriculture whose
-names and publications are known and remembered? They are, first of
-all, Arthur Young (1741-1820), who, though he failed as a merchant and
-failed as a farmer, and never ceased to regret his father’s mistake
-in neglecting to put him into the soft lap of a living in the Church,
-made for himself, by the simple process of observing and recording,
-a European reputation as an expert adviser in the art which he had
-practised with so little success. A scarcely less important authority
-was William Marshall (1745-1818), who began by trading in the West
-Indies, afterwards farmed in Surrey, and then became agent in Norfolk
-to Sir Harbord Harbord. It was Marshall who suggested the creation of
-a Board of Rural Affairs, and the preparation of Surveys and Minutes.
-Though he never held an official position, it was from his own choice,
-for he preferred to publish his own Minutes and Surveys rather than to
-write them for the Board. He was interested in philology as well as in
-agriculture; he published a vocabulary of the Yorkshire dialect and
-he was a friend of Johnson, whom he rather scandalised by condoning
-Sunday labour in agriculture under special circumstances. Nathaniel
-Kent (1737-1810) studied husbandry in the Austrian Netherlands, where
-he had been secretary to an ambassador, and on his return to England
-in 1766 he was employed as an estate agent and land valuer. He wrote
-a well-known book _Hints to Gentlemen of Landed Property_, and he had
-considerable influence in improving the management of various estates.
-He was, for a short time, bailiff of George III.’s farm at Windsor.
-
-All of these writers, though they are very far from taking the view
-which found expression in the riots in the Lincolnshire fens, or in the
-anonymous pamphlet already mentioned, addressed some very important
-criticisms and recommendations to the class that was enclosing the
-English commons. Both Marshall and Young complained of the injustice
-of the method of choosing commissioners. Marshall, ardent champion
-of enclosure as he was, and no sentimentalist on the subject of the
-commoners, wrote a most bitter account of the motives of the enclosers.
-‘At this juncture, it is true, the owners of manors and tithes, whether
-clergy or laity, men of ministry or men of opposition, are equally on
-the alert: not however pressing forward with offerings and sacrifices
-to relieve the present distresses of the country, but searching for
-vantage ground to aid them in the scramble.’[98] Holding this view,
-he was not unnaturally ill-content with the plan of letting the big
-landlords nominate the commissioners, and proposed that the lord of the
-soil and the owner or owners of tithes should choose one commissioner
-each, that the owner or owners of pasturage should choose two, and that
-the four should choose a fifth. Arthur Young proposed that the small
-proprietors should have a share in the nomination of commissioners
-either by a union of votes or otherwise, as might be determined.
-
-The general engrossing of farms was arraigned by Thomas Stone, the
-author of an important pamphlet, _Suggestions for rendering the
-inclosure of common fields and waste lands a source of population and
-of riches_, 1787, who proposed that in future enclosures farms should
-be let out in different sizes from £40 to £200 a year. He thought
-further that Parliament should consider the advisability of forbidding
-the alienation of cottagers’ property, in order to stop the frittering
-away of cottagers’ estates which was general under enclosure. Kent,
-a passionate enthusiast for enclosing, was not less critical of the
-practice of throwing farms together, a practice which had raised the
-price of provisions to the labourer, and he appealed to landlords to
-aid the distressed poor by reducing the size of their farms, as well as
-by raising wages. Arbuthnot, the author of a pamphlet on _An Inquiry
-into the Connection between the present Price of Provisions and the
-Size of Farms_, by a Farmer, 1773, who had defended the large-farm
-system against Dr. Price, wrote, ‘My plan is to allot to each cottage
-three or four acres which should be annexed to it without power or
-alienation and without rent while under the covenant of being kept in
-grass.’
-
-So much for writers on agriculture. But the eighteenth century produced
-two authoritative writers on social conditions. Any student of social
-history who wishes to understand this period would first turn to the
-three great volumes of Eden’s _State of the Poor_, published in 1797,
-as a storehouse of cold facts. Davies, who wrote _The Case of Labourers
-in Husbandry_, published in 1795, is less famous than he deserves to
-be, if we are to judge from the fact that the _Dictionary of National
-Biography_ only knows about him that he was Rector of Barkham in
-Berkshire, and a graduate of Jesus College, Oxford, that he received
-a D.D. degree in 1800, that he is the author of this book, and that
-he died, perhaps, in the year 1809. But Davies’ book, which contains
-the result of most careful and patient investigation, made a profound
-impression on contemporary observers. Howlett called it ‘incomparable,’
-and it is impossible for the modern reader to resist its atmosphere of
-reality and truth. This country parson gives us a simple, faithful and
-sincere picture of the facts, seen without illusion or prejudice, and
-free from all the conventional affectations of the time: a priceless
-legacy to those who are impatient of the generalisations with which
-the rich dismiss the poor. Now both of these writers warned their
-contemporaries of the danger of the uncontrolled tendencies of the age.
-Eden proposed that in every enclosure a certain quantity of land should
-be reserved for cottagers and labourers, to be vested in the whole
-district. He spoke in favour of the crofters in Scotland, and declared
-that provision of this kind was made for the labouring classes in the
-first settled townships of New England. Davies was still more emphatic
-in calling upon England to settle cottagers and to arrest the process
-of engrossing farms.[99]
-
-Thus of all the remembered writers of the period who had any practical
-knowledge of agriculture or of the poor, there is not one who did
-not try to teach the governing class the need for reform, and the
-dangers of the state into which they were allowing rural society
-to drift. Parliament was assailed on all sides with criticisms and
-recommendations, and its refusal to alter its ways was deliberate.
-
-Of the protests of the time the most important and significant came
-from Arthur Young. No man had been so impatient of objections to
-enclosure: no man had taken so severe and disciplinary a view of
-the labourer: no man had dismissed so lightly the appeals for the
-preservation of the fragmentary possessions of the poor. He had
-taught a very simple philosophy, that the more the landowner pressed
-the farmer, and the more the farmer pressed the labourer, the better
-it was for agriculture. He had believed as implicitly as Sinclair
-himself, and with apparently as little effort to master the facts, that
-the cottagers were certain to benefit by enclosure. All this gives
-pathos, as well as force, to his remarkable paper, published under the
-title _An Inquiry into the Propriety of applying Wastes to the better
-Maintenance and Support of the Poor_.
-
-The origin of this document is interesting. It was written in 1801, a
-few years after the Speenhamland system had begun to fix itself on the
-villages. The growth of the poor rates was troubling the minds of the
-upper and middle classes. Arthur Young, in the course of his travels
-at this time, stumbled on the discovery that in those parishes where
-the cottagers had been able to keep together a tiny patch of property,
-they had shown a Spartan determination to refuse the refuge of the Poor
-Law. When once he had observed this, he made further investigations
-which only confirmed his first impressions. This opened his eyes to the
-consequences of enclosure as it had been carried out, and he began to
-examine the history of these operations in a new spirit. He then found
-that enclosure had destroyed with the property of the poor one of the
-great incentives to industry and self-respect, and that his view that
-the benefit of the commons to the poor was ‘perfectly contemptible,’
-and ‘when it tempts them to become owners of cattle or sheep usually
-ruinous,’[100] was fundamentally wrong. Before the enclosures, the
-despised commons had enabled the cottager to keep a cow, and this,
-so far from bringing ruin, had meant in very many cases all the
-difference between independence and pauperism. His scrutiny of the
-Acts convinced him that in respect of this they had been unjust. ‘By
-nineteen out of twenty Inclosure Bills the poor are injured, and some
-grossly injured.... Mr. Forster of Norwich, after giving me an account
-of twenty inclosures in which he had acted as Commissioner, stated his
-opinion on their general effect on the poor, and lamented that he had
-been accessory to the injuring of 2000 poor people, at the rate of
-twenty families per parish.... The poor in these parishes may say, and
-with truth, “Parliament may be tender of property: all I know is that
-I had a cow and an Act of Parliament has taken it from me.”’
-
-This paper appeared on the eve of the Enclosure Act of 1801, the Act to
-facilitate and cheapen procedure, which Young and Sinclair had worked
-hard to secure. It was therefore an opportune moment for trying to
-temper enclosure to the difficulties of the poor. Arthur Young made a
-passionate appeal to the upper classes to remember these difficulties.
-‘To pass Acts beneficial to every other class in the State and hurtful
-to the lowest class only, when the smallest alteration would prevent
-it, is a conduct against which reason, justice and humanity equally
-plead.’ He then proceeded to outline a constructive scheme. He proposed
-that twenty millions should be spent in setting up half a million
-families with allotments and cottages: the fee-simple of the cottage
-and land to be vested in the parish, and possession granted under
-an Act of Parliament, on condition that if the father or his family
-became chargeable to the rates, the cottage and land should revert to
-the parish. The parishes were to carry out the scheme, borrowing the
-necessary money on the security of the rates.[101] ‘A man,’ he told
-the landlords, in a passage touched perhaps with remorse as well as
-with compassion, ‘will love his country the better even for a pig.’
-‘At a moment,’ so he concludes, ‘when a General Inclosure of Wastes is
-before Parliament, to allow such a measure to be carried into execution
-in conformity with the practice hitherto, without entering one voice,
-however feeble, in defence of the interests of the poor, would have
-been a wound to the feelings of any man not lost to humanity who had
-viewed the scenes which I have visited.’
-
-The appeal broke against a dense mass of class prejudice, and so far as
-any effect on the Consolidating Act of 1801 is concerned, Arthur Young
-might never have written a line. This is perhaps not surprising, for we
-know from Young’s autobiography (p. 350) that he did not even carry the
-Board of Agriculture with him, and that Lord Carrington, who was then
-President, only allowed him to print his appeal on the understanding
-that it was not published as an official document, and that the
-Board was in no way identified with it. Sinclair, who shared Young’s
-conversion, had ceased to be President in 1798. The compunction he
-tried to awaken did affect an Act here and there. A witness before the
-Allotments Committee of 1843 described the arrangements he contrived
-to introduce into an Enclosure Act. The witness was Mr. Demainbray, an
-admirable and most public-spirited parson, Rector of Broad Somerford
-in Wiltshire. Mr. Demainbray explained that when the Enclosure Act for
-his parish was prepared in 1806, he had been pressed to accept land in
-lieu of tithes, and that he took the opportunity to stipulate for some
-provision for the poor. As a consequence of his efforts, half an acre
-was attached to each cottage on the waste, the land being vested in
-the rector, churchwardens and overseers for the time being, and eight
-acres were reserved for the villagers for allotment and reallotment
-every Easter. This arrangement, which had excellent results, ‘every man
-looking forward to becoming a man of property,’ was copied in several
-of the neighbouring parishes. Dr. Slater has collected some other
-examples. One Act, passed in 1824 for Pottern in Wiltshire, vested
-the ownership of the enclosed common in the Bishop of Salisbury, who
-was lord of the manor, the vicar, and the churchwardens, in trust for
-the parish. The trustees were required to lease it in small holdings
-to poor, honest and industrious persons, who had not, except in cases
-of accident or sickness, availed themselves of Poor Law Relief.[102]
-Thomas Stone’s proposal for making inalienable allotments to cottagers
-was adopted in two or three Acts in the eastern counties, but the Acts
-that made some provision for the poor do not amount, in Dr. Slater’s
-opinion, to more than one per cent. of the Enclosure Acts passed before
-1845,[103] and this view is corroborated by the great stress laid in
-the Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor,
-upon a few cases where the poor were considered, and by a statement
-made by Mr. Demainbray in a pamphlet published in 1831.[104] In this
-pamphlet Mr. Demainbray quotes what Davies had said nearly forty years
-earlier about the effect of enclosures in robbing the poor, and then
-adds: ‘Since that time many hundred enclosures have taken place, but in
-how few of them has any reserve been made for the privileges which the
-poor man and his ancestors had for centuries enjoyed?’
-
-Some interesting provisions are contained in certain of the Acts
-analysed in the Appendix. At Stanwell the commissioners were to set
-aside such parcel as they thought proper not exceeding thirty acres, to
-be let out and the rents and profits were to be given for the benefit
-of such occupiers and inhabitants as did not receive parochial relief
-or occupy lands and tenements of more than £5 a year, and had not
-received any allotment under the Act. Middleton, the writer of the
-_Report on Middlesex_, says that the land produced £30 a year,[105]
-and he remarks that this is a much better way of helping the poor than
-leaving them land for their use. We may doubt whether the arrangement
-seemed equally attractive to the poor. It could not have been much
-compensation to John Carter, who owned a cottage, to receive three
-roods, twenty-six perches in lieu of his rights of common, which is
-his allotment in the award, for three-quarters of an acre is obviously
-insufficient for the pasture of a cow, but it was perhaps still less
-satisfactory for James Carter to know that one acre and seven perches
-were allotted to the ‘lawful owner or owners’ of the cottage and land
-which he occupied, and that his own compensation for the loss of his
-cow or sheep or geese was the cold hope that if he kept off the rates,
-Sir William Gibbons, the vicar, and the parish officers might give
-him a dole. The Laleham Commissioners were evidently men of a rather
-grim humour, for, in setting aside thirteen acres for the poor, they
-authorised the churchwardens and overseers to encourage the poor, if
-they were so minded, by letting this plot for sixty years and using the
-money so received to build a workhouse. A much more liberal provision
-was made at Cheshunt, where the poor were allowed 100 acres. At
-Knaresborough and Louth, the poor got nothing at all.
-
-Before we proceed to describe the results of enclosure on village
-life, we may remark one curious fact. In 1795 and 1796 there was some
-discussion in the House of Commons of the condition of the agricultural
-labourers, arising out of the proposal of Whitbread’s to enable the
-magistrates to fix a minimum wage. Pitt made a long speech in reply,
-and promised to introduce a scheme of his own for correcting evils
-that were too conspicuous to be ignored. This promise he kept next
-year in the ill-fated Poor Law Bill, which died, almost at its birth,
-of general hostility. That Bill will be considered elsewhere. All
-that we are concerned to notice here is that neither speech nor Bill,
-though they cover a wide range of topics, and though Pitt said that
-they represented the results of long and careful inquiry, hint at this
-cause of social disturbance, or at the importance of safe-guarding the
-interests of the poor in future enclosure schemes: this in spite of the
-fact that, as we have seen, there was scarcely any contemporary writer
-or observer who had not pointed out that the way in which the governing
-class was conducting these revolutions was not only unjust to the poor
-but perilous to the State.
-
-It is interesting, in the light of the failure to grasp and retrieve
-an error in national policy which marks the progress of these
-transactions, to glance at the contemporary history of France.
-The Legislative Assembly, under the influence of the ideas of the
-economists, decreed the division of the land of the communes in 1792.
-The following year this decree was modified. Certain provincial
-assemblies had asked for division, but many of the villages were
-inexorably hostile. The new decree of June 1793 tried to do justice
-to these conflicting wishes by making division optional. At the same
-time it insisted on an equitable division in cases where partition took
-place. But this policy of division was found to have done such damage
-to the interests of the poor that there was strenuous opposition, with
-the result that in 1796 the process was suspended, and in the following
-year it was forbidden.[106] Can any one suppose that if the English
-legislature had had as swift and ready a sense for things going wrong,
-the policy of enclosure would have been pursued after 1801 with the
-same reckless disregard for its social consequences?
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have given in the last chapter the history of an enclosure project
-for the light it throws on the play of motive in the enclosing class.
-We propose now to give in some detail the history of an enclosure
-project that succeeded for the light it throws on the attention which
-Parliament paid to local opinion, and on the generally received views
-as to the rights of the small commoners. Our readers will observe that
-this enclosure took place after the criticisms and appeals which we
-have described had all been published.
-
-Otmoor is described in Dunkin’s _History of Oxfordshire_,[107] as a
-‘dreary and extensive common.’ Tradition said that the tract of land
-was the gift of some mysterious lady ‘who gave as much ground as she
-could ride round while an oat-sheaf was burning, to the inhabitants of
-its vicinity for a public common,’ and hence came its name of Oatmoor,
-corrupted into Otmoor. Whatever the real origin of the name, which
-more prosaic persons connected with ‘_Oc_’, a Celtic word for ‘water,’
-this tract of land had been used as a ‘public common without stint ...
-from remote antiquity.’ Lord Abingdon, indeed, as Lord of the Manor of
-Beckley, claimed and exercised the right of appointing a moor-driver,
-who at certain seasons drove all the cattle into Beckley, where those
-which were unidentified became Lord Abingdon’s property. Lord Abingdon
-also claimed rights of soil and of sport: these, like his other claim,
-were founded on prescription only, as there was no trace of any grant
-from the Crown.
-
-The use to which Otmoor, in its original state, was put, is thus
-described by Dunkin. ‘Whilst this extensive piece of land remained
-unenclosed, the farmers of the several adjoining townships estimated
-the profits of a summer’s pasturage at 20s. per head, subject to
-the occasional loss of a beast by a peculiar distemper called the
-moor-evil. But the greatest benefit was reaped by the cottagers,
-many of whom turned out large numbers of geese, to which the coarse
-aquatic sward was well suited, and thereby brought up their families in
-comparative plenty.[108]
-
-‘Of late years, however, this dreary waste was surveyed with longing
-eyes by the surrounding landowners, most of whom wished to annex a
-portion of it to their estates, and in consequence spared no pains to
-recommend the enclosure as a measure beneficial to the country.’
-
-The promoters of the enclosure credited themselves with far loftier
-motives: prominent among them being a desire to improve the morals
-of the poor. An advocate of the enclosure afterwards described the
-pitiable state of the poor in pre-enclosure days in these words: ‘In
-looking after a brood of goslings, a few rotten sheep, a skeleton of a
-cow or a mangy horse, they lost more than they might have gained by
-their day’s work, and acquired habits of idleness and dissipation and
-a dislike to honest labour, which has rendered them the riotous and
-lawless set of men which they have now shown themselves to be.’ A pious
-wish to second the intention of Providence was also a strong incentive:
-‘God did not create the earth to lie waste for feeding a few geese, but
-to be cultivated by man, in the sweat of his brow.’[109]
-
-The first proposal for enclosure came to Parliament from George, Duke
-of Marlborough, and others on 11th March, 1801. The duke petitioned for
-the drainage and the allotment of the 4000 acres of Otmoor among the
-parishes concerned, namely Beckley (with Horton and Studley), Noke,
-Oddington, and Charlton (with Fencott and Moorcott). This petition was
-referred to a Committee, to consider amongst other things, whether the
-Standing Orders with reference to Drainage Bills had been duly complied
-with. The Committee reported in favour of allowing the introduction of
-the Bill, but made this remarkable admission, that though the Standing
-Orders with respect to the affixing of notices on church doors had been
-complied with on Sunday, 3rd August, ‘it appeared to the Committee
-that on the following Sunday, the 10th of August, the Person employed
-to affix the like Notices was prevented from so doing at Beckley,
-Oddington and Charlton, by a Mob at each Place, but that he read the
-Notices to the Persons assembled, and afterwards threw them amongst
-them into the Church Yards of those Parishes.’ Notice was duly affixed
-that Sunday at Noke. The next Sunday matters were even worse, for no
-notices were allowed to be fixed in any parish.
-
-The Bill that was introduced in spite of this local protest, was
-shipwrecked during its Committee stage by a petition from Alexander
-Croke, LL.D., Lord of the Manor of Studley with Whitecross Green, and
-from John Mackarness, Esq., who stated that as proprietors in the
-parish of Beckley, their interests had not been sufficiently considered.
-
-The next application to Parliament was not made till 1814. In the
-interval various plans were propounded, and Arthur Young, in his
-_Survey of Oxfordshire for the Board of Agriculture_, published in 1809
-(a work which Dunkin describes as supported by the farmers and their
-landlords and as having caught their strain), lamented the wretched
-state of the land. ‘I made various inquiries into the present value
-of it by rights of commonage; but could ascertain no more than the
-general fact, of its being to a very beggarly amount.... Upon the
-whole, the present produce must be quite contemptible, when compared
-with the benefit which would result from enclosing it. And I cannot
-but remark, that such a tract of waste land in summer, and covered
-the winter through with water, to remain in such a state, within five
-miles of Oxford and the Thames, in a kingdom that regularly imports to
-the amount of a million sterling in corn, and is almost periodically
-visited with apprehensions of want--is a scandal to the national
-policy.... If drained and enclosed, it is said that no difficulty would
-occur in letting it at 30s. per acre, and some assert even 40s.’ (p.
-228).
-
-When the new application was made in November 1814, it was again
-referred to a Committee, who again had to report turbulent behaviour
-in the district concerned. Notices had been fixed on all the church
-doors on 7th August, and on three doors on 14th August, ‘but it was
-found impracticable to affix the Notices on the Church doors of the
-other two Parishes on that day, owing to large Mobs, armed with every
-description of offensive weapons, having assembled for the purpose of
-obstructing the persons who went to affix the Notices, and who were
-prevented by violence, and threats of immediate death, from approaching
-the Churches.’[110] From the same cause no notices could be affixed on
-these two church doors on 21st or 28th August.
-
-These local disturbances were not allowed to check the career of the
-Bill. It was read a first time on 21st February, and a second time on
-7th March. But meanwhile some serious flaws had been discovered. The
-Duke of Marlborough and the Earl of Abingdon both petitioned against
-it. The Committee, however, were able to introduce amendments that
-satisfied both these powerful personages, and on 1st May Mr. Fane
-reported from the Committee that no persons had appeared for the
-said petitions, and that the parties concerned had consented to the
-satisfaction of the Committee, and had also consented ‘to the changing
-the Commissioners therein named.’ Before the Report had been passed,
-however, a petition was received on behalf of Alexander Croke,[111]
-Esq., who was now in Nova Scotia, which made further amendments
-necessary, and the Committee was empowered to send for persons, papers
-and records. Meanwhile the humbler individuals whose future was
-imperilled were also bestirring themselves. They applied to the Keeper
-of the Records in the Augmentation Office for a report on the history
-of Otmoor. This Report, which is published at length by Dunkin,[112]
-states that in spite of laborious research no mention of Otmoor could
-be found in any single record from the time of William the Conqueror
-to the present day. Even _Doomsday Book_ contained no reference to it.
-Nowhere did it appear in what manor Otmoor was comprehended, nor was
-there any record that any of the lords of neighbouring manors had ever
-been made capable of enjoying any rights of common upon it. The custom
-of usage without stint, in fact, pointed to some grant before the
-memory of man, and made it unlikely that any lord of the manor had ever
-had absolute right of soil. Armed, no doubt, with this learned report,
-some ‘Freeholders, Landholders, Cottagers and Persons’ residing in four
-parishes sent up a petition asking to be heard against the Bill. But
-they were too late: their petition was ordered to lie on the Table, and
-the Bill passed the Commons the same day (26th June) and received the
-Royal Assent on 12th July.
-
-The Act directed that one-sixteenth of the whole (which was stated
-to be over 4000 acres) should be given to the Lord of the Manor of
-Beckley, Lord Abingdon, in compensation of his rights of soil, and
-one-eighth as composition for all tithes. Thus Lord Abingdon received,
-to start with, about 750 acres. The residue was to be allotted among
-the various parishes, townships and hamlets, each allotment to be held
-as a common pasture for the township. So far, beyond the fact that
-Lord Abingdon had taken off more than a sixth part of their common
-pasture, and that the pasture was now divided up into different parts,
-it did not seem that the ordinary inhabitants were much affected. The
-sting lay in the arrangements for the future of these divided common
-pastures. ‘And if at any future time the major part in value of the
-several persons interested in such plot or parcels of land, should
-require a separate division of the said land, he (the commissioner) is
-directed to divide and allot the same among the several proprietors, in
-proportion to their individual rights and interests therein.’[113]
-
-We have, fortunately, a very clear statement of the way in which
-the ‘rights and interests’ of the poorer inhabitants of the Otmoor
-towns were regarded in the enclosure. These inhabitants, it must be
-remembered, had enjoyed rights of common without any stint from time
-immemorial, simply by virtue of living in the district. In a letter
-from ‘An Otmoor Proprietor’ to the Oxford papers in 1830, the writer
-(Sir Alexander Croke himself?), who was evidently a man of some local
-importance, explains that by the general rule of law a commoner is
-not entitled to turn on to the common more cattle than are sufficient
-to manure and stock the land to which the right of common is annexed.
-Accordingly, houses without land attached to them cannot, strictly
-speaking, claim a right of common. How then explain the state of
-affairs at Otmoor, where all the inhabitants, landed or landless,
-enjoyed the same rights? By prescription, he answers, mere houses do
-in point of fact sometimes acquire a right of common, but this right,
-though it may be said to be without stint, is in reality always liable
-to be stinted by law. Hence, when a common like Otmoor is enclosed, the
-allotments are made as elsewhere in proportion to the amount of land
-possessed by each commoner, whilst a ‘proportionable share’ is thrown
-in to those who own mere houses. But even this share, he points out,
-does not necessarily belong to the person who has been exercising the
-right of common, unless he happens to own his own house. It belongs
-to his landlord, who alone is entitled to compensation. A superficial
-observer might perhaps think this a hardship, but in point of fact it
-is quite just. The tenants, occupying the houses, must have been paying
-a higher rent in consideration of the right attached to the houses, and
-they have always been liable to be turned out by the landlord at will.
-‘They had no permanent interest, and it has been decided by the law
-that _no man can have any right in any common, as belonging to a house,
-wherein he has no interest but only habitation_: so that the poor, as
-such, had no right to the common whatever.’[114]
-
-The results of the Act, framed and administered on these lines, were
-described by Dunkin,[115] writing in 1823, as follows: ‘It now only
-remains to notice the effect of the operation of this act. On the
-division of the land allotted to the respective townships, a certain
-portion was assigned to each cottager in lieu of his accustomed
-commonage, but the delivery of the allotment did not take place,
-unless the party to whom it was assigned paid his share of the expenses
-incurred in draining and dividing the waste: and he was also further
-directed to enclose the same with a fence. The poverty of the cottager
-in general prevented his compliance with these conditions, and he was
-necessitated to sell his share for any paltry sum that was offered.
-In the spring of 1819, several persons at Charlton and elsewhere made
-profitable speculations by purchasing these commons for £5 each, and
-afterwards prevailing on the commissioners to throw them into one lot,
-thus forming a valuable estate. In this way was Otmoor lost to the poor
-man, and awarded to the rich, under the specious idea of benefitting
-the public.’ The expenses of the Act, it may be mentioned, came to
-something between £20,000 and £30,000, or more than the fee-simple of
-the soil.[116]
-
-Enclosed Otmoor did not fulfil Arthur Young’s hopes: ‘... instead
-of the expected improvement in the quality of the soil, it has been
-rendered almost totally worthless; a great proportion being at this
-moment over-rated at 5s. an acre yearly rent, few crops yielding
-any more than barely sufficient to pay for labour and seed.’[117]
-This excess of expenses over profits was adduced by the ‘Otmoor
-proprietor,’ to whom we have already referred, as an illustration of
-the public-spirited self-sacrifice of the enclosers, who were paying
-out of their own pockets for a national benefit, and by making some, at
-any rate, of the land capable of cultivation, were enabling the poor to
-have ‘an honest employment, instead of losing their time in idleness
-and waste.’[118] But fifteen years of this ‘honest employment’ failed
-to reconcile the poor to their new position, and in 1830 they were able
-to express their feelings in a striking manner.[119]
-
-In the course of his drainage operations, the commissioner had made a
-new channel for the river Ray, at a higher level, with the disastrous
-result that the Ray overflowed into a valuable tract of low land above
-Otmoor. For two years the farmers of this tract suffered severe losses
-(one farmer was said to have lost £400 in that time), then they took
-the law into their own hands, and in June 1829 cut the embankments,
-so that the waters of the Ray again flowed over Otmoor and left their
-valuable land unharmed. Twenty-two farmers were indicted for felony for
-this act, but they were acquitted at the Assizes, under the direction
-of Mr. Justice Parke, on the grounds that the farmers had a right to
-abate the nuisance, and that the commissioner had exceeded his powers
-in making this new channel and embankment.
-
-This judgment produced a profound impression on the Otmoor farmers
-and cottagers. They misread it to mean that all proceedings under
-the Enclosure Act were illegal and therefore null and void, and
-they determined to regain their lost privileges. Disturbances began
-at the end of August (28th August). For about a week, straggling
-parties of enthusiasts paraded the moor, cutting down fences here
-and there. A son of Sir Alexander Croke came out to one of these
-parties and ordered them to desist. He had a loaded pistol with him,
-and the moor-men, thinking, rightly or wrongly, that he was going to
-fire, wrested it from him and gave him a severe thrashing. Matters
-began to look serious: local sympathy with the rioters was so strong
-that special constables refused to be sworn in; the High Sheriff
-accordingly summoned the Oxfordshire Militia, and Lord Churchill’s
-troop of Yeomanry Cavalry was sent to Islip. But the inhabitants were
-not overawed. They determined to perambulate the bounds of Otmoor
-in full force, in accordance with the old custom. On Monday, 6th
-September, five hundred men, women and children assembled from the
-Otmoor towns, and they were joined by five hundred more from elsewhere.
-Armed with reap-hooks, hatchets, bill-hooks and duckets, they marched
-in order round the seven-mile-long boundary of Otmoor, destroying
-all the fences on their way. By noon their work of destruction was
-finished. ‘A farmer in the neighbourhood who witnessed the scene gives
-a ludicrous description of the zeal and perseverance of the women
-and children as well as the men, and the ease and composure with
-which they waded through depths of mud and water and overcame every
-obstacle in their march. He adds that he did not hear any threatening
-expressions against any person or his property, and he does not believe
-any individuals present entertained any feeling or wish beyond the
-assertion of what they conceived (whether correctly or erroneously) to
-be their prescriptive and inalienable right, and of which they speak
-precisely as the freemen of Oxford would describe their right to Port
-Meadow.’[120]
-
-By the time the destruction of fences was complete, Lord Churchill’s
-troop of yeomanry came up to the destroying band: the Riot Act was
-read, but the moormen refused to disperse. Sixty or seventy of them
-were thereupon seized and examined, with the result that forty-four
-were sent off to Oxford Gaol in wagons, under an escort of yeomanry.
-Now it happened to be the day of St. Giles’ Fair, and the street of
-St. Giles, along which the yeomanry brought their prisoners, was
-crowded with countryfolk and townsfolk, most of whom held strong views
-on the Otmoor question. The men in the wagons raised the cry ‘Otmoor
-for ever,’ the crowd took it up, and attacked the yeomen with great
-violence, hurling brickbats, stones and sticks at them from every side.
-The yeomen managed to get their prisoners as far as the turning down
-Beaumont Street, but there they were overpowered, and all forty-four
-prisoners escaped. At Otmoor itself peace now reigned. Through the
-broken fences cattle were turned in to graze on all the enclosures,
-and the villagers even appointed a herdsman to look after them. The
-inhabitants of the seven Otmoor towns formed an association called
-‘the Otmoor Association,’ which boldly declared that ‘the Right of
-Common on Otmoor was always in the inhabitants, and that a non-resident
-proprietor had no Right of Common thereon,’ and determined to raise
-subscriptions for legal expenses in defence of their right, calling
-upon ‘the pecuniary aid of a liberal and benevolent public ... to
-assist them in attempting to restore Otmoor once more to its original
-state.’[121]
-
-Meanwhile the authorities who had lost their prisoners once, sent down
-a stronger force to take them next time, and although at the Oxford
-City Sessions a bill of indictment against William Price and others
-for riot in St. Giles and rescue of the prisoners was thrown out, at
-the County Sessions the Grand Jury found a true Bill against the same
-William Price and others for the same offence, and also against Cooper
-and others for riot at Otmoor. The prisoners were tried at the Oxford
-Assizes next month, before Mr. Justice Bosanquet and Sir John Patteson.
-The jury returned a verdict which shows the strength of public opinion.
-‘We find the defendants guilty of having been present at an unlawful
-assembly on the 6th September at Otmoor, but it is the unanimous wish
-of the Jury to recommend all the parties to the merciful consideration
-of the Court.’ The judges responded to this appeal and the longest
-sentence inflicted was four months’ imprisonment.[122]
-
-The original enclosure was now fifteen years old, but Otmoor was
-still in rebellion, and the Home Office Papers of the next two years
-contain frequent applications for troops from Lord Macclesfield,
-Lord-Lieutenant, Sir Alexander Croke and other magistrates. Whenever
-there was a full moon, the patriots of the moor turned out and pulled
-down the fences. How strong was the local resentment of the overriding
-of all the rights and traditions of the commoners may be seen not
-only from the language of one magistrate writing to Lord Melbourne
-in January 1832: ‘all the towns in the neighbourhood of Otmoor are
-more or less infected with the feelings of the most violent, and
-cannot at all be depended on’: but also from a resolution passed by
-the magistrates at Oxford in February of that year, declaring that no
-constabulary force that the magistrates could raise would be equal to
-suppressing the Otmoor outrages, and asking for soldiers. The appeal
-ended with this significant warning: ‘Any force which Government may
-send down should not remain for a length of time together, but that to
-avoid the possibility of an undue connexion between the people and the
-Military, a succession of troops should be observed.’ So long and so
-bitter was the civil war roused by an enclosure which Parliament had
-sanctioned in absolute disregard of the opinions or the traditions or
-the circumstances of the mass of the people it affected.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[87] Most private Enclosure Acts provided that if a commissioner died
-his successor was to be somebody not interested in the property.
-
-[88] Sir John Sinclair complained in 1796 that the Board had not even
-the privilege of franking its letters.--_Annals of Agriculture_, vol.
-xxvi, p. 506.
-
-[89] Vol. xxvi. p. 85.
-
-[90] From the Select Committee on the Means of Facilitating Enclosures
-in 1800, reprinted in _Annual Register_, 1800, Appendix to Chronicle,
-p. 85 ff., we learn that the fees received alone in the House of
-Commons (Bill fees, small fees, committee fees, housekeepers’ and
-messengers’ fees, and engrossing fees) for 707 Bills during the
-fourteen years from 1786 to 1799 inclusive amounted to no less than
-£59,867, 6s. 4d. As the scale of fees in the House of Lords was about
-the same (Bill fees, yeoman, usher, door-keepers’ fees, order of
-committee, and committee fees) during these years about £120,000 must
-have gone into the pockets of Parliamentary officials.
-
-[91] See Appendix A (5).
-
-[92] _Bedford Report_, 1808, p. 235.
-
-[93] _Annual Register_, 1799, Chron., p. 27.
-
-[94] Eden, 1. Preface, p. xviii.
-
-[95] _Bedford Report_, p. 249. Cf. writer in Appendix of _Report on
-Middlesex_, pp. 507-15, ‘a gentleman of the least sensibility would
-rather suffer his residence to continue surrounded by marshes and
-bogs, than take the lead in what may be deemed an obnoxious measure.’
-This same writer urges, that the unpopularity of enclosures would be
-overcome were care taken ‘to place the inferior orders of mankind--the
-cottager and industrious poor--in such a situation, with regard to
-inclosures, that they should certainly have some share secured to them,
-and be treated with a gentle hand. Keep all in temper--let no rights be
-now disputed.... It is far more easy to prevent a clamour than to stop
-it when once it is raised. Those who are acquainted with the business
-of inclosure must know that there are more than four-fifths of the
-inhabitants in most neighbourhoods who are generally left out of the
-bill for want of property, and therefore cannot possibly claim any part
-thereof.’
-
-[96] Vol. xx. p. 456.
-
-[97] Vol. xxiv. p. 543.
-
-[98] _The Appropriation and Enclosure of Commonable and Intermixed
-Lands_, 1801.
-
-[99] ‘Allow to the cottager a little land about his dwelling for
-keeping a cow, for planting potatoes, for raising flax or hemp.
-2ndly, Convert the waste lands of the kingdom into _small_ arable
-farms, a certain quantity every year, to be let on favourable
-terms to industrious families. 3rdly, Restrain the engrossment and
-over-enlargement of farms. The propriety of those measures cannot, I
-think, be questioned.’--_The Case of Labourers in Husbandry_, p. 103.
-
-[100] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. i. p. 52.
-
-[101] This scheme marks a great advance on an earlier scheme which
-Young published in the first volume of the _Annals of Agriculture_. He
-then proposed that public money should be spent in settling cottagers
-or soldiers on the waste, giving them their holding free of rent and
-tithes for three lives, at the end of which time the land they had
-redeemed was to revert to its original owners.
-
-[102] Slater, pp. 126-7.
-
-[103] _Ibid._, p. 128.
-
-[104] _The Poor Man’s Best Friend, or Land to cultivate for his
-own Benefit._ Letter to the Marquis of Salisbury, by the Rev. S.
-Demainbray, B.D., 1831.
-
-[105] P. 126.
-
-[106] See for this subject _Cambridge Modern History_, vol. viii. chap.
-24, and P. Sagnac, _La Législation Civile de la Révolution Française_.
-
-[107] Vol. i. p. 119 ff.
-
-[108] Jackson’s _Oxford Journal_, September 11, 1830, said that a
-single cottager sometimes cleared as much as £20 a year by geese.
-
-[109] _Oxford University and City Herald_, September 25, 1830.
-
-[110] _House of Commons Journal_, February 17, 1815.
-
-[111] Alexander Croke (1758-1842), knighted in 1816, was from 1801-1815
-judge in the Vice-Admiralty Court, Nova Scotia. As a lawyer, he could
-defend his own interests.
-
-[112] Dunkin’s _Oxfordshire_, vol. i. pp. 122-3.
-
-[113] _Ibid._, p. 123.
-
-[114] Jackson’s _Oxford Journal_, September 18, 1830.
-
-[115] Vol. i. p. 124.
-
-[116] Jackson’s _Oxford Journal_, September 11, 1830.
-
-[117] _Ibid._
-
-[118] _Ibid._, September 18.
-
-[119] See Jackson’s _Oxford Journal_, and _Oxford University and City
-Herald_, for September 11, 1830, and also _Annual Register_, 1830,
-Chron., p. 142, and Home Office Papers, for what follows.
-
-[120] _Oxford University and City Herald_, September 11, 1830.
-
-[121] _Ibid._
-
-[122] Jackson’s _Oxford Journal_, March 5, 1831.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE VILLAGE AFTER ENCLOSURE
-
-
-THE governing class continued its policy of extinguishing the old
-village life and all the relationships and interests attached to it,
-with unsparing and unhesitating hand; and as its policy progressed
-there were displayed all the consequences predicted by its critics.
-Agriculture was revolutionised: rents leapt up: England seemed to be
-triumphing over the difficulties of a war with half the world. But it
-had one great permanent result which the rulers of England ignored. The
-anchorage of the poor was gone.
-
-For enclosure was fatal to three classes: the small farmer, the
-cottager, and the squatter. To all of these classes their common rights
-were worth more than anything they received in return. Their position
-was just the opposite of that of the lord of the manor. The lord of the
-manor was given a certain quantity of land (the conventional proportion
-was one-sixteenth[123]) in lieu of his surface rights, and that compact
-allotment was infinitely more valuable than the rights so compensated.
-Similarly the tithe-owner stood to gain with the increased rent. The
-large farmer’s interests were also in enclosure, which gave him a wider
-field for his capital and enterprise. The other classes stood to lose.
-
-For even if the small farmer received strict justice in the division
-of the common fields, his share in the legal costs and the additional
-expense of fencing his own allotments often overwhelmed him, and he
-was obliged to sell his property.[124] The expenses were always very
-heavy, and in some cases amounted to £5 an acre.[125] The lord of the
-manor and the tithe-owner could afford to bear their share, because
-they were enriched by enclosure: the classes that were impoverished by
-enclosure were ruined when they had to pay for the very proceeding that
-had made them the poorer. The promoter of the General Enclosure Bill of
-1796, it will be remembered, had proposed to exempt the poor from the
-expense of fencing, but the Select Committee disapproved, and the only
-persons exempted in the cases we have examined were the lords of the
-manor or tithe-owners.
-
-If these expenses still left the small farmer on his feet, he found
-himself deprived of the use of the fallow and stubble pasture, which
-had been almost as indispensable to him as the land he cultivated.
-‘Strip the small farms of the benefit of the commons,’ said one
-observer, ‘and they are all at one stroke levelled to the ground.’[126]
-It was a common clause in Enclosure Acts that no sheep were to be
-depastured on allotments for seven years.[127] The small farmer either
-emigrated to America or to an industrial town, or became a day
-labourer. His fate in the last resort may perhaps be illustrated by
-the account given by the historian of _Oxfordshire_ of the enclosure
-of Merton. ‘About the middle of last century a very considerable
-alteration was produced in the relative situation of different classes
-in the village. The Act of Parliament for the inclosure of the fields
-having annulled all leases, and the inclosure itself facilitated the
-plan of throwing several small farms into a few large bargains,[128]
-the holders of the farms who had heretofore lived in comparative
-plenty, became suddenly reduced to the situation of labourers, and in
-a few years were necessitated to throw themselves and their families
-upon the parish. The overgrown farmers who had fattened upon this
-alteration, feeling the pressure of the new burden, determined if
-possible to free themselves: they accordingly decided upon reducing
-the allowance of these poor to the lowest ratio,[129] and resolved
-to have no more servants so that their parishioners might experience
-no further increase from that source. In a few years the numbers of
-the poor rapidly declined: the more aged sank into their graves, and
-the youth, warned by their parents’ sufferings, sought a settlement
-elsewhere. The farmers, rejoicing in the success of their scheme,
-procured the demolition of the cottages, and thus endeavoured to secure
-themselves and their successors from the future expenses of supporting
-an increased population, so that in 1821 the parish numbered only
-thirty houses inhabited by thirty-four families.’[130] Another writer
-gave an account of the results of a Norfolk enclosure. ‘In passing
-through a village near Swaffham, in the County of Norfolk a few years
-ago, to my great mortification I beheld the houses tumbling into ruins,
-and the common fields all enclosed; upon enquiring into the cause of
-this melancholy alteration, I was informed that a gentleman of Lynn had
-bought that township and the next adjoining to it: that he had thrown
-the one into three, and the other into four farms; which before the
-enclosure were in about twenty farms: and upon my further enquiring
-what was becoming of the farmers who were turned out, the answer was
-that some of them were dead and the rest were become labourers.’[131]
-
-The effect on the cottager can best be described by saying that before
-enclosure the cottager was a labourer with land, after enclosure he
-was a labourer without land. The economic basis of his independence
-was destroyed. In the first place, he lost a great many rights for
-which he received no compensation. There were, for instance, the cases
-mentioned by Mr. Henry Homer (1719-1791), Rector of Birdingbury and
-Chaplain to Lord Leigh, in the pamphlet he published in 1769,[132]
-where the cottagers lost the privileges of cutting furze and turf on
-the common land, the proprietor contending that they had no right to
-these privileges, but only enjoyed them by his indulgence. In every
-other case, Mr. Homer urged, uninterrupted, immemorial usage gives a
-legal sanction even to encroachments. ‘Why should the poor, as poor,
-be excluded from the benefit of this general Indulgence; or why should
-any set of proprietors avail themselves of the inability of the poor to
-contend with them, to get possession of more than they enjoyed?’[133]
-
-Another right that was often lost was the prescriptive right of keeping
-a cow. The _General Report on Enclosures_ (p. 12) records the results
-of a careful inquiry made in a journey of 1600 miles, which showed that
-before enclosure cottagers often kept cows without a legal right, and
-that nothing was given them for the practice. Other cottagers kept cows
-by right of hiring their cottages and common rights, and on enclosure
-the land was thrown into a farm, and the cottager had to sell his
-cow. Two examples taken from the _Bedfordshire Report_ illustrate the
-consequences of enclosure to the small man. One is from Maulden:[134]
-‘The common was very extensive. I conversed with a farmer, and several
-cottagers. One of them said, enclosing would ruin England; it was worse
-than ten wars. Why, my friend, what have you lost by it? _I kept four
-cows before the parish was enclosed, and now I don’t keep so much as
-a goose; and you ask me what I lose by it!_’[135] The other is from
-Sandy:[136] ‘This parish was very peculiarly circumstanced; it abounds
-with gardeners, many cultivating their little freeholds, so that on
-the enclosure, there were found to be sixty-three proprietors, though
-nine-tenths, perhaps, of the whole belonged to Sir P. Monoux and Mr.
-Pym. These men kept cows on the boggy common, and cut fern for litter
-on the warren, by which means they were enabled to raise manure for
-their gardens, besides fuel in plenty: the small allotment of an
-acre and a half, however good the land, has been no compensation for
-what they were deprived of. They complain heavily, and know not how
-they will now manage to raise manure. This was no reason to preserve
-the deserts in their old state, but an ample one for giving a full
-compensation.’
-
-Lord Winchilsea stated in his letter to the Board of Agriculture in
-1796: ‘Whoever travels through the Midland Counties and will take the
-trouble of inquiring, will generally receive for answer that formerly
-there were a great many cottagers who kept cows, but that the land is
-now thrown to the farmers, and if he inquires still further, he will
-find that in those parishes the Poor Rates have increased in an amazing
-degree more than according to the average rise throughout England.’
-
-These cottagers often received nothing at all for the right they had
-lost, the compensation going to the owner of the cottage only. But even
-those cottagers who owned their cottage received in return for their
-common right something infinitely less valuable. For a tiny allotment
-was worth much less than a common right, especially if the allotment
-was at a distance from their cottage, and though the Haute Huntre Act
-binds the commissioners to give Lord FitzWilliam an allotment near
-his gardens, there was nothing in any Act that we have seen to oblige
-the commissioners to give the cottager an allotment at his door. And
-the cottagers had to fence their allotments or forfeit them. Anybody
-who glances at an award will understand what this meant. It is easy,
-for example, to imagine what happened under this provision to the
-following cottagers at Stanwell: Edmund Jordan (1-1/2 acres) J. and
-F. Ride (each 1-1/4 acres) T. L. Rogers (1-1/4 acres) Brooker Derby
-(1-1/4) Mary Gulliver (1-1/4 acres) Anne Higgs (1-1/4) H. Isherwood
-(1-1/4) William Kent (1-1/4) Elizabeth Carr (1 acre) Thomas Nash (1
-acre) R. Ride (just under 1 acre) William Robinson (just under 1 acre)
-William Cox (3/4 acre) John Carter (3/4 acre) William Porter (3/4 acre)
-Thomas King (1/2 acre) John Hetherington (under 1/2 an acre) J. Trout
-(1/4 acre and 4 perches) and Charles Burkhead (12 perches). It would be
-interesting to know how many of these small parcels of land found their
-way into the hands of Sir William Gibbons and Mr. Edmund Hill.
-
-The Louth award is still more interesting from this point of view.
-J. Trout and Charles Burkhead passing rich, the one on 1/4 acre and
-4 perches, the other on 12 perches, had only to pay their share of
-the expenses of the enclosure, and for their own fencing. Sir William
-Gibbons was too magnanimous a man to ask them to fence his 500 acres
-as well. But at Louth the tithe-owners, who took more than a third of
-the whole, were excused their share of the costs, and also had their
-fencing done for them by the other proprietors. The prebendary and the
-vicar charged the expenses of fencing their 600 acres on persons like
-Elizabeth Bryan who went off with 39 perches, Ann Dunn (35 perches),
-Naomi Hodgson, widow (35 perches), John Betts (34 perches), Elizabeth
-Atkins (32 perches), Will Boswell (31 perches), Elizabeth Eycon (28
-perches), Ann Hubbard, widow (15 perches), and Ann Metcalf, whose share
-of the spoil was 14 perches. The award shows that there were 67 persons
-who received an acre or less. Cottagers who received such allotments
-and had to fence them had no alternative but to sell, and little to do
-with the money but to drink it. This is the testimony of the _General
-Report on Enclosures_.[137]
-
-The squatters, though they are often spoken of as cottagers, must be
-distinguished from the cottager in regard to their legal and historical
-position. They were in a sense outside the original village economy.
-The cottager was, so to speak, an aboriginal poor man: the squatter a
-poor alien. He settled on a waste, built a cottage, and got together
-a few geese or sheep, perhaps even a horse or a cow, and proceeded to
-cultivate the ground.
-
-The treatment of encroachments seems to have varied very greatly, as
-the cases analysed in the Appendix show, and there was no settled
-rule. Squatters of less than twenty years’ standing seldom received
-any consideration beyond the privilege of buying their encroachment.
-Squatters of more than twenty or forty years’ standing, as the case
-might be, were often allowed to keep their encroachments, and in some
-cases were treated like cottagers, with a claim to an allotment. But,
-of course, like the cottagers, they lost their common rights.
-
-Lastly, enclosure swept away the bureaucracy of the old village:
-the viewers of fields and letters of the cattle, who had general
-supervision of the arrangements for pasturing sheep or cows in the
-common meadow, the common shepherd, the chimney peepers who saw that
-the chimneys were kept properly, the hayward, or pinder, who looked
-after the pound. Most of these little officials of the village court
-had been paid either in land or by fees. When it was proposed to
-abolish Parliamentary Enclosure, and to substitute a General Enclosure
-Bill, the Parliamentary officials, who made large sums out of fees from
-Enclosure Bills, were to receive compensation; but there was no talk of
-compensation for the stolen livelihood of a pinder or a chimney peeper,
-as there had been for the lost pickings of the officials of Parliament,
-or as there was whenever an unhappy aristocrat was made to surrender
-one of his sinecures. George Selwyn, who had been Paymaster of the
-Works for twenty-seven years at the time that Burke’s Act of 1782
-deprived him of that profitable title, was not allowed to languish very
-long on the two sinecures that were left to him. In 1784 Pitt consoled
-him with the lucrative name of Surveyor-General of Crown Lands. The
-pinder and the viewer received a different kind of justice. For the
-rich there is compensation, as the weaver said in Disraeli’s _Sybil_,
-but ‘sympathy is the solace of the poor.’ In this case, if the truth be
-told, even this solace was not administered with too liberal a hand.
-
-All these classes and interests were scattered by enclosure, but it
-was not one generation alone that was struck down by the blow. For
-the commons were the patrimony of the poor. The commoner’s child,
-however needy, was born with a spoon in his mouth. He came into a world
-in which he had a share and a place. The civilisation which was now
-submerged had spelt a sort of independence for the obscure lineage of
-the village. It had represented, too, the importance of the interest of
-the community in its soil, and in this aspect also the robbery of the
-present was less important than the robbery of the future. For one act
-of confiscation blotted out a principle of permanent value to the State.
-
-The immediate consequences of this policy were only partially visible
-to the governing or the cultivated classes. The rulers of England
-took it for granted that the losses of individuals were the gains of
-the State, and that the distresses of the poor were the condition of
-permanent advance. Modern apologists have adopted the same view; and
-the popular resistance to enclosure is often compared to the wild and
-passionate fury that broke against the spinning and weaving machines,
-the symbols and engines of the Industrial Revolution. History has drawn
-a curtain over those days of exile and suffering, when cottages were
-pulled down as if by an invader’s hand, and families that had lived
-for centuries in their dales or on their small farms and commons were
-driven before the torrent, losing
-
- ‘Estate and house ... and all their sheep,
- A pretty flock, and which for aught I know
- Had clothed the Ewbanks for a thousand years.’
-
-Ancient possessions and ancient families disappeared. But the first
-consequence was not the worst consequence: so far from compensating
-for this misery, the ultimate result was still more disastrous. The
-governing class killed by this policy the spirit of a race. The
-petitions that are buried with their brief and unavailing pathos in
-the _Journals_ of the House of Commons are the last voice of village
-independence, and the unnamed commoners who braved the dangers of
-resistance to send their doomed protests to the House of Commons that
-obeyed their lords, were the last of the English peasants. These were
-the men, it is not unreasonable to believe, whom Gray had in mind when
-he wrote:--
-
- ‘Some village Hampden that with dauntless breast
- The little tyrant of his fields withstood.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-As we read the descriptions of the state of France before the
-Revolution, there is one fact that comforts the imagination and braces
-the heart. We read of the intolerable services of the peasant, of
-his forced labour, his confiscated harvests, his crushing burdens,
-his painful and humiliating tasks, including in some cases even the
-duty of protecting the sleep of the seigneur from the croaking of
-the neighbouring marshes. The mind of Arthur Young was filled with
-this impression of unsupportable servitude. But a more discerning eye
-might have perceived a truth that escaped the English traveller. It
-is contained in an entry that often greets us in the official reports
-on the state of the provinces: _ce seigneur litige avec ses vassaux_.
-Those few words flash like a gleam of the dawn across this sombre
-and melancholy page. The peasant may be overwhelmed by the dîme,
-the taille, the corvée, the hundred and one services that knit his
-tenure to the caprice of a lord: he may be wretched, brutal, ignorant,
-ill-clothed, ill-fed, and ill-housed: but he has not lost his status:
-he is not a casual figure in a drifting proletariat: he belongs to a
-community that can withstand the seigneur, dispute his claims at law,
-resume its rights, recover its possessions, and establish, one day, its
-independence.
-
-In England the aristocracy destroyed the promise of such a development
-when it broke the back of the peasant community. The enclosures
-created a new organisation of classes. The peasant with rights and a
-status, with a share in the fortunes and government of his village,
-standing in rags, but standing on his feet, makes way for the labourer
-with no corporate rights to defend, no corporate power to invoke, no
-property to cherish, no ambition to pursue, bent beneath the fear of
-his masters, and the weight of a future without hope. No class in the
-world has so beaten and crouching a history, and if the blazing ricks
-in 1830 once threatened his rulers with the anguish of his despair, in
-no chapter of that history could it have been written, ‘This parish is
-at law with its squire.’ For the parish was no longer the community
-that offered the labourer friendship and sheltered his freedom: it was
-merely the shadow of his poverty, his helplessness, and his shame.
-‘Go to an ale-house kitchen of an old enclosed country, and there you
-will see the origin of poverty and poor-rates. For whom are they to be
-sober? For whom are they to save? For the parish? If I am diligent,
-shall I have leave to build a cottage? If I am sober, shall I have
-land for a cow? If I am frugal, shall I have half an acre of potatoes?
-You offer no motives; you have nothing but a parish officer and a
-workhouse!--Bring me another pot--.’[138]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[123] See the Evidence of Witnesses before the Committee on Commons
-Inclosure of 1844. (Baily, land-agent): ‘General custom to give the
-Lord of Manor 1/16th as compensation for his rights exclusive of the
-value of minerals and of his rights as a common right owner.’ Another
-witness (Coulson, a solicitor) defined the surface rights as ‘game and
-stockage,’ and said that the proportion determined upon was the result
-of a bargain beforehand.
-
-[124] ‘Many small proprietors have been seriously injured by being
-obliged in pursuance of ill-framed private bills to enclose lands which
-never repaid the expense.’ Marshall, _The Appropriation and Enclosure
-of Commonable and Intermixed Lands_, 1801, p. 52.
-
-[125] COST OF ENCLOSURE.--The expenses of particular Acts varied very
-much. Billingsley in his _Report on Somerset_ (p. 57) gives £3 an acre
-as the cost of enclosing a lowland parish, £2, 10s. for an upland
-parish. The enclosure of the 12,000 acre King’s Sedgmoor (_Ibid._, p.
-196) came (with the subdivisions) to no less than £59,624, 4s. 8d.,
-or nearly £5 an acre. Stanwell Enclosure, on the other hand, came to
-about 23s. an acre, and various instances given in the _Report for
-Bedfordshire_ work out at about the same figure. When the allotments
-to the tithe-owners and the lord of the manor were exempted, the sum
-per acre would of course fall more heavily on the other allottees,
-_e.g._ of Louth, where more than a third of the 1701 acres enclosed
-were exempt. In many cases, of course, land was sold to cover expenses.
-The cost of fencing allotments would also vary in different localities.
-In Somerset, from 7s. 7d. to 8s. 7d. for 20 feet of quickset hedge was
-calculated, in Bedfordshire, 10s. 6d. per pole. See also for expense
-Hasbach, pp. 64, 65, and _General Report on Enclosures_, Appendix xvii.
-Main Items:--
-
- 1. Country solicitor’s fees for drawing up Bill and attending in town;
-
- 2. Attendance of witnesses at House of Commons and House of Lords to
- prove that Standing Orders had been complied with;
-
- 3. Expenses of persons to get signatures of consents and afterwards to
- attend at House of Commons to swear to them (it once cost from £70 to
- £80 to get consent of principal proprietor);
-
- 4. Expense of Parliamentary solicitor, 20 gs., but more if opposition;
-
- 5. Expense of counsel if there was opposition;
-
- 6. Parliamentary fees, see p. 76.
-
-
-[126] _Inquiry into the Advantages and Disadvantages resulting from
-Bills of Enclosure_, 1780, p. 14.
-
-[127] Cf. Ashelworth, Cheshunt, Knaresborough.
-
-[128] Previous to enclosure there were twenty-five farmers: the land is
-now divided among five or six persons only.
-
-[129] It was then confidently said that several poor persons actually
-perished from want, and so great was the outcry that some of the
-farmers were hissed in the public market at Bicester.
-
-[130] Dunkin’s _Oxfordshire_, pp. 2 and 3.
-
-[131] F. Moore, _Considerations on the Exorbitant Price of
-Proprietors_, 1773, p. 22; quoted by Levy, p. 27.
-
-[132] _Essay on the Nature and Method of ascertaining the specific
-Share of Proprietors upon the Inclosure of Common fields, with
-observations on the inconveniences of common fields, etc._, p. 22.
-
-[133] The Kirton, Sutterton and Wigtoft (Lincs) Acts prescribed a
-penalty for taking turf or sod after the passing of the Act, of £10,
-and in default of payment imprisonment in the House of Correction with
-hard labour for three months.
-
-[134] P. 235.
-
-[135] The only provision for the poor in the Maulden Act, (36 Geo. III.
-c. 65) was a fuel allotment as a compensation for the ancient usage
-of cutting peat or moor turf. The trustees (rector, churchwarden and
-overseers) were to distribute the turf to poor families, and were to
-pay any surplus from the rent of the herbage to the poor rates.
-
-[136] P. 240.
-
-[137] At St. Neots a gentleman complained to Arthur Young in 1791 that
-in the enclosure which took place sixteen years before, ‘the poor were
-ill-treated by having about half a rood given them in lieu of a _cow
-keep_, the inclosure of which land costing more than they could afford,
-they sold the lots at £5, the money was drank out at the ale-house,
-and the men, spoiled by the habit, came, with their families to the
-parish.’--_Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xvi. p. 482.
-
-[138] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxxvi. p. 508.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-THE LABOURER IN 1795
-
-
-In an unenclosed village, as we have seen, the normal labourer did not
-depend on his wages alone. His livelihood was made up from various
-sources. His firing he took from the waste, he had a cow or a pig
-wandering on the common pasture, perhaps he raised a little crop on a
-strip in the common fields. He was not merely a wage earner, receiving
-so much money a week or a day for his labour, and buying all the
-necessaries of life at a shop: he received wages as a labourer, but in
-part he maintained himself as a producer. Further, the actual money
-revenue of the family was not limited to the labourer’s earnings, for
-the domestic industries that flourished in the village gave employment
-to his wife and children.
-
-In an enclosed village at the end of the eighteenth century the
-position of the agricultural labourer was very different. All his
-auxiliary resources had been taken from him, and he was now a wage
-earner and nothing more. Enclosure had robbed him of the strip that he
-tilled, of the cow that he kept on the village pasture, of the fuel
-that he picked up in the woods, and of the turf that he tore from the
-common. And while a social revolution had swept away his possessions,
-an industrial revolution had swept away his family’s earnings. To
-families living on the scale of the village poor, each of these losses
-was a crippling blow, and the total effect of the changes was to
-destroy their economic independence.
-
-Some of these auxiliary resources were not valued very highly by
-the upper classes, and many champions of enclosure proved to their
-own satisfaction that the advantage, for example, of the right of
-cutting fuel was quite illusory. Such writers had a very superficial
-knowledge of the lot of the cottagers. They argued that it would be
-more economical for the labourer to spend on his ordinary employment
-the time he devoted to cutting fuel and turf, and to buy firing out of
-his wages: an argument from the theory of the division of labour that
-assumed that employment was constant. Fortunately we have, thanks to
-Davies, a very careful calculation that enables us to form rather a
-closer judgment. He estimates[139] that a man could cut nearly enough
-in a week to serve his family all the year, and as the farmers will
-give the carriage of it in return for the ashes, he puts the total
-cost at 10s. a year, or a little more than a week’s wages.[140] If we
-compare this with his accounts of the cost of fuel elsewhere, we soon
-see how essential common fuel rights were to a labourer’s economy.
-At Sidlesham in Surrey, for instance,[141] in the expenses of five
-families of labourers, the fuel varies from £1, 15s. 0d. up to £4, 3s.
-0d., with an average of £2, 8s. 0d. per family. It must be remembered,
-too, that the sum of 10s. for fuel from the common is calculated on
-the assumption that the man would otherwise be working; whereas, in
-reality, he could cut his turf in slack times and in odd hours, when
-there was no money to be made by working for some one else.
-
-There was another respect in which the resources of a labouring family
-were diminished towards the end of the century, and this too was a
-loss that the rich thought trifling. From time immemorial the labourer
-had sent his wife and children into the fields to glean or leaze
-after the harvest. The profits of gleaning, under the old, unimproved
-system of agriculture, were very considerable. Eden says of Rode in
-Northamptonshire, where agriculture was in a ‘wretched state, from the
-land being in common-fields,’ that ‘several families will gather as
-much wheat as will serve them for bread the whole year, and as many
-beans as will keep a pig.’[142] From this point of view enclosure, with
-its improved methods of agriculture, meant a sensible loss to the poor
-of the parish, but even when there was less to be gleaned the privilege
-was by no means unimportant. A correspondent in the _Annals of
-Agriculture_,[143] writing evidently of land under improved cultivation
-in Shropshire, estimates that a wife can glean three or four bushels.
-The consumption of wheat, exclusive of other food, by a labourer’s
-family he puts at half a bushel a week at least; the price of wheat at
-13s. 6d. a bushel; the labourer’s wages at 7s. or 8s. To such a family
-gleaning rights represented the equivalent of some six or seven weeks’
-wages.
-
-With the introduction of large farming these customary rights were
-in danger. It was a nuisance for the farmer to have his fenced fields
-suddenly invaded by bands of women and children. The ears to be
-picked up were now few and far between, and there was a risk that
-the labourers, husbands and fathers of the gleaners, might wink at
-small thefts from the sheaves. Thus it was that customary rights,
-which had never been questioned before, and seemed to go back to
-the Bible itself, came to be the subject of dispute. On the whole
-question of gleaning there is an animated controversy in the _Annals of
-Agriculture_[144] between Capel Lofft,[145] a romantic Suffolk Liberal,
-who took the side of the gleaners, and Ruggles,[146] the historian,
-who argued against them. Capel Lofft was a humane and chivalrous
-magistrate who, unfortunately for the Suffolk poor, was struck off the
-Commission of the Peace a few years later, apparently at the instance
-of the Duke of Portland, for persuading the Deputy-Sheriff to postpone
-the execution of a girl sentenced to death for stealing, until he had
-presented a memorial to the Crown praying for clemency. The chief
-arguments on the side of the gleaners were (1) that immemorial custom
-gave legal right, according to the maxim, _consuetudo angliae lex est
-angliae communis_; (2) that Blackstone had recognised the right in
-his _Commentaries_, basing his opinion upon Hale and Gilbert, ‘Also
-it hath been said, that by the common law and customs of England the
-poor are allowed to enter and glean on another’s ground after harvest
-without being guilty of trespass, which humane provision seems borrowed
-from the Mosaic law’ (iii. 212, 1st edition); (3) that in Ireland the
-right was recognised by statutes of Henry VIII.’s reign, which modified
-it; (4) that it was a custom that helped to keep the poor free from
-degrading dependence on poor relief. It was argued, on the other hand,
-by those who denied the right to glean, that though the custom had
-existed from time immemorial, it did not rest on any basis of actual
-right, and that no legal sanction to it had ever been explicitly given,
-Blackstone and the authorities on whom he relied being too vague to be
-considered final. Further, the custom was demoralising to the poor;
-it led to idleness, ‘how many days during the harvest are lost by the
-mother of a family and all her children, in wandering about from field
-to field, to glean what does not repay them the wear of their cloathes
-in seeking’; it led to pilfering from the temptation to take handfuls
-from the swarth or shock; and it was deplorable that on a good-humoured
-permission should be grafted ‘a legal claim, in its use and exercise so
-nearly approaching to licentiousness.’
-
-Whilst this controversy was going on, the legal question was decided
-against the poor by a majority of judges in the Court of Common Pleas
-in 1788. One judge, Sir Henry Gould,[147] dissented in a learned
-judgment; the majority based their decision partly on the mischievous
-consequences of the practice to the poor. The poor never lost a right
-without being congratulated by the rich on gaining something better.
-It did not, of course, follow from this decision that the practice
-necessarily ceased altogether, but from that time it was a privilege
-given by the farmer at his own discretion, and he could warn off
-obnoxious or ‘saucy’ persons from his fields. Moreover, the dearer the
-corn, and the more important the privilege for the poor, the more the
-farmer was disinclined to largess the precious ears. Capel Lofft had
-pleaded that with improved agriculture the gleaners could pick up so
-little that that little should not be grudged, but the farmer found
-that under famine prices this little was worth more to him than the
-careless scatterings of earlier times.[148]
-
-The loss of his cow and his produce and his common and traditional
-rights was rendered particularly serious to the labourer by the general
-growth of prices. For enclosure which had produced the agrarian
-proletariat, had raised the cost of living for him. The accepted
-opinion that under enclosure England became immensely more productive
-tends to obscure the truth that the agricultural labourer suffered in
-his character of consumer, as well as in his character of producer,
-when the small farms and the commons disappeared. Not only had he to
-buy the food that formerly he had produced himself, but he had to buy
-it in a rising market. Adam Smith admitted that the rise of price of
-poultry and pork had been accelerated by enclosure, and Nathaniel
-Kent laid stress on the diminution in the supply of these and other
-small provisions. Kent has described the change in the position of
-the labourers in this respect: ‘Formerly they could buy milk, butter,
-and many other small articles in every parish, in whatever quantity
-they are wanted. But since small farms have decreased in number, no
-such articles are to be had; for the great farmers have no idea of
-retailing such small commodities, and those who do retail them carry
-them all to town. A farmer is even unwilling to sell the labourer who
-works for him a bushel of wheat, which he might get ground for three
-or four pence a bushel. For want of this advantage he is driven to the
-mealman or baker, who, in the ordinary course of their profit, get
-at least ten per cent. of them, upon this principal article of their
-consumption.’[149] Davies, the author of _The Case of Labourers in
-Husbandry_, thus describes the new method of distribution: ‘The great
-farmer deals in a wholesale way with the miller: the miller with the
-mealman: the mealman with the shopkeeper, of which last the poor man
-buys his flour by the bushel. For neither the miller nor the mealman
-will sell the labourer a less quantity than a sack of flour, under the
-retail price of shops, and the poor man’s pocket will seldom allow of
-his buying a whole sack at once.’[150]
-
-It is clear from these facts that it would have needed a very large
-increase of wages to compensate the labourer for his losses under
-enclosure. But real wages, instead of rising, had fallen, and fallen
-far. The writer of the _Bedfordshire Report_ (p. 67), comparing the
-period of 1730-50 with that of 1802-6 in respect of prices of wheat
-and labour, points out that to enable him to purchase equal quantities
-of bread in the second period and in the first, the pay of the day
-labourer in the second period should have been 2s. a day, whereas it
-was 1s. 6d. Nathaniel Kent, writing in 1796,[151] says that in the last
-forty or fifty years the price of provisions had gone up by 60 per
-cent., and wages by 25 per cent., ‘but this is not all, for the sources
-of the market which used to feed him are in a great measure cut off
-since the system of large farms has been so much encouraged.’ Professor
-Levy estimates that wages rose between 1760 and 1813 by 60 per cent.,
-and the price of wheat by 130 per cent.[152] Thus the labourer who now
-lived on wages alone earned wages of a lower purchasing power than the
-wages which he had formerly supplemented by his own produce. Whereas
-his condition earlier in the century had been contrasted with that of
-Continental peasants greatly to his advantage in respect of quantity
-and variety of food, he was suddenly brought down to the barest
-necessities of life. Arthur Young had said a generation earlier that
-in France bread formed nineteen parts in twenty of the food of the
-people, but that in England all ranks consumed an immense quantity of
-meat, butter and cheese.[153] We know something of the manner of life
-of the poor in 1789 and 1795 from the family budgets collected by Eden
-and Davies from different parts of the country.[154] These budgets
-show that the labourers were rapidly sinking in this respect to the
-condition that Young had described as the condition of the poor in
-France. ‘Bacon and other kinds of meat form a very small part of their
-diet, and cheese becomes a luxury.’ But even on the meagre food that
-now became the ordinary fare of the cottage, the labourers could not
-make ends meet. All the budgets tell the same tale of impoverished diet
-accompanied by an overwhelming strain and an actual deficit. The normal
-labourer, even with constant employment, was no longer solvent.
-
-If we wish to understand fully the predicament of the labourer, we
-must remember that he was not free to roam over England, and try his
-luck in some strange village or town when his circumstances became
-desperate at home. He lived under the capricious tyranny of the old law
-of settlement, and enclosure had made that net a much more serious fact
-for the poor. The destruction of the commons had deprived him of any
-career within his own village; the Settlement Laws barred his escape
-out of it. It is worth while to consider what the Settlement Laws were,
-and how they acted, and as the subject is not uncontroversial it will
-be necessary to discuss it in some detail.
-
-Theoretically every person had one parish, and one only, in which he
-or she had a settlement and a right to parish relief. In practice it
-was often difficult to decide which parish had the duty of relief,
-and disputes gave rise to endless litigation. From this point of view
-eighteenth-century England was like a chessboard of parishes, on which
-the poor were moved about like pawns. The foundation of the various
-laws on the subject was an Act passed in Charles II.’s reign (13 and
-14 Charles II. c. 12) in 1662. Before this Act each parish had, it
-is true, the duty of relieving its own impotent poor and of policing
-its own vagrants, and the infirm and aged were enjoined by law to
-betake themselves to their place of settlement, which might be their
-birthplace, or the place where they had lived for three years, but, as
-a rule, ‘a poor family might, without the fear of being sent back by
-the parish officers, go where they choose, for better wages, or more
-certain employment.’[155] This Act of 1662 abridged their liberty,
-and, in place of the old vagueness, established a new and elaborate
-system. The Act was declared to be necessary in the preamble, because
-‘by reason of some defects in the law, poor people are not restrained
-from going from one parish to another, and therefore do endeavour to
-settle themselves in those parishes where there is the best stock,
-the largest commons or wastes to build cottages, and the most woods
-for them to burn and destroy; and when they have consumed it, then
-to another parish; and at last become rogues and vagabonds; to the
-great discouragement of parishes to provide stock, when it is liable
-to be devoured by strangers.’ By the Act any new-comer, within forty
-days of arrival, could be ejected from a parish by an order from the
-magistrates, upon complaint from the parish officers, and removed to
-the parish where he or she was last legally settled. If, however, the
-new-comer settled in a tenement of the yearly value of £10, or could
-give security for the discharge of the parish to the magistrates’
-satisfaction, he was exempt from this provision.
-
-As this Act carried with it the consequence that forty days’ residence
-without complaint from the parish officers gained the new-comer a
-settlement, it was an inevitable temptation to Parish A to smuggle its
-poor into Parish B, where forty days’ residence without the knowledge
-of the parish officers would gain them a settlement. Fierce quarrels
-broke out between the parishes in consequence. To compose these it
-was enacted (1 James II. c. 17) that the forty days’ residence were
-to be reckoned only after a written notice had been given to a parish
-officer. Even this was not enough to protect Parish B, and by 3 William
-and Mary, c. 11 (1691) it was provided that this notice must be read in
-church, immediately after divine service, and then registered in the
-book kept for poor’s accounts. Such a condition made it practically
-impossible for any poor man to gain a settlement by forty days’
-residence, unless his tenement were of the value of £10 a year, but
-the Act allowed an immigrant to obtain a settlement in any one of four
-ways; (1) by paying the parish taxes; (2) by executing a public annual
-office in the parish; (3) by serving an apprenticeship in the parish;
-(4) by being hired for a year’s service in the parish. (This, however,
-only applied to the unmarried.) In 1697 (8 and 9 William III. c. 30)
-a further important modification of the settlement laws was made.
-To prevent the arbitrary ejection of new-comers by parish officers,
-who feared that the fresh arrival or his children might somehow or
-other gain a settlement, it was enacted that if the new-comer brought
-with him to Parish B a certificate from the parish officers of
-Parish A taking responsibility for him, then he could not be removed
-till he became actually chargeable. It was further decided by this
-and subsequent Acts and by legal decisions, that the granting of a
-certificate was to be left to the discretion of the parish officers and
-magistrates, that the cost of removal fell on the certificating parish,
-and that a certificate holder could only gain a settlement in a new
-parish by renting a tenement of £10 annual value, or by executing a
-parish office, and that his apprentice or hired servant could not gain
-a settlement.
-
-In addition to these methods of gaining a settlement there were four
-other ways, ‘through which,’ according to Eden, ‘it is probable
-that by far the greater part of the labouring Poor ... are actually
-settled.’[156] (1) Bastards, with some exceptions, acquired a
-settlement by birth[157]; (2) legitimate children also acquired a
-settlement by birth if their father’s, or failing that, their mother’s
-legal settlement was not known; (3) women gained a settlement by
-marriage; (4) persons with an estate of their own were irremovable, if
-residing on it, however small it might be.
-
-Very few important modifications had been made in the laws of
-Settlement during the century after 1697. In 1722 (9 George I. c. 7) it
-was provided that no person was to obtain a settlement in any parish by
-the purchase of any estate or interest of less value than £30, to be
-‘bona fide paid,’ a provision which suggests that parishes had connived
-at gifts of money for the purchase of estates in order to discard
-their paupers: by the same Act the payment of the scavenger or highway
-rate was declared not to confer a settlement. In 1784 (24 George III.
-c. 6) soldiers, sailors and their families were allowed to exercise
-trades where they liked, and were not to be removable till they became
-actually chargeable; and in 1793 (33 George III. c. 54) this latter
-concession was extended to members of Friendly Societies. None of these
-concessions affected the normal labourer, and down to 1795 a labourer
-could only make his way to a new village if his own village would give
-him a certificate, or if the other village invited him. His liberty was
-entirely controlled by the parish officers.
-
-How far did the Settlement Acts operate? How far did this body of
-law really affect the comfort and liberty of the poor? The fiercest
-criticism comes from Adam Smith, whose fundamental instincts rebelled
-against so crude and brutal an interference with human freedom. ‘To
-remove a man who has committed no misdemeanour, from a parish where
-he chuses to reside, is an evident violation of natural liberty and
-justice. The common people of England, however, so jealous of their
-liberty, but, like the common people of most other countries, never
-rightly understanding wherein it consists, have now, for more than a
-century together, suffered themselves to be exposed to this oppression
-without a remedy. Though men of reflexion, too, have sometimes
-complained of the law of settlements as a public grievance; yet it has
-never been the object of any general popular clamour, such as that
-against general warrants, an abusive practice undoubtedly, but such
-a one as was not likely to occasion any general oppression. There is
-scarce a poor man in England, of forty years of age, I will venture to
-say, who has not, in some part of his life, felt himself most cruelly
-oppressed by this ill-contrived law of settlements.’[158]
-
-Adam Smith’s view is supported by two contemporary writers on the Poor
-Law, Dr. Burn and Mr. Hay. Dr. Burn, who published a history of the
-Poor Law in 1764, gives this picture of the overseer: ‘The office of
-an Overseer of the Poor seems to be understood to be this, to keep an
-extraordinary look-out to prevent persons coming to inhabit without
-certificates, and to fly to the Justices to remove them: and if a man
-brings a certificate, then to caution the inhabitants not to let him
-a farm of £10 a year, and to take care to keep him out of all parish
-offices.’[159] He further says that the parish officers will assist a
-poor man in taking a farm in a neighbouring parish, and give him £10
-for the rent. Mr. Hay, M.P., protested in his remarks on the Poor Laws
-against the hardships inflicted on the poor by the Laws of Settlement.
-‘It leaves it in the breast of the parish officers whether they will
-grant a poor person a certificate or no.’[160] Eden, on the other hand,
-thought Adam Smith’s picture overdrawn, and he contended that though
-there were no doubt cases of vexatious removal, the Laws of Settlement
-were not administered in this way everywhere. Howlett also considered
-the operation of the Laws of Settlement to be ‘trifling,’ and instanced
-the growth of Sheffield, Birmingham, and Manchester as proof that there
-was little interference with the mobility of labour.
-
-A careful study of the evidence seems to lead to the conclusion that
-the Laws of Settlement were in practice, as they were on paper, a
-violation of natural liberty; that they did not stop the flow of
-labour, but that they regulated it in the interest of the employing
-class. The answer to Howlett is given by Ruggles in the _Annals of
-Agriculture_.[161] He begins by saying that the Law of Settlement
-has made a poor family ‘of necessity stationary; and obliged them to
-rest satisfied with those wages they can obtain where their legal
-settlement happens to be; a restraint on them which ought to insure to
-them wages in the parish where they must remain, more adequate to their
-necessities, because it precludes them in a manner from bringing their
-labour, the only marketable produce they possess, to the best market;
-it is this restraint which has, in all manufacturing towns, been one
-cause of reducing the poor to such a state of miserable poverty; for,
-among the manufacturers, they have too frequently found masters who
-have taken, and continue to take every advantage, which strict law will
-give; of consequence, the prices of labour have been, in manufacturing
-towns, in an inverse ratio of the number of poor settled in the place;
-and the same cause has increased that number, by inviting foreigners,
-in times when large orders required many workmen; the masters
-themselves being the overseers, whose duty as parish officers has been
-opposed by their interest in supplying the demand.’ In other words,
-when it suited an employer to let fresh workers in, he would, _qua_
-overseer, encourage them to come with or without certificates; but when
-they were once in and ‘settled’ he would refuse them certificates to
-enable them to go and try their fortunes elsewhere, in parishes where
-a certificate was demanded with each poor new-comer.[162] Thus it is
-not surprising to find, from Eden’s _Reports_, that certificates are
-never granted at Leeds and Skipton; seldom granted at Sheffield; not
-willingly granted at Nottingham, and that at Halifax certificates are
-not granted at present, and only three have been granted in the last
-eighteen years.
-
-It has been argued that the figures about removals in different
-parishes given by Eden in his second and third volumes show that the
-Law of Settlement was ‘not so black as it has been painted.’[163] But
-in considering the small number of removals, we must also consider the
-large number of places where there is this entry, ‘certificates are
-never granted.’ It needed considerable courage to go to a new parish
-without a certificate and run the risk of an ignominious expulsion, and
-though all overseers were not so strict as the one described by Dr.
-Burn, yet the fame of one vexatious removal would have a far-reaching
-effect in checking migration. It is clear that the law must have
-operated in this way in districts where enclosures took away employment
-within the parish. Suppose Hodge to have lived at Kibworth-Beauchamp in
-Leicestershire. About 1780, 3600 acres were enclosed and turned from
-arable to pasture; before enclosure the fields ‘were solely applied to
-the production of corn,’ and ‘the Poor had then plenty of employment
-in weeding, reaping, threshing, etc., and could also collect a great
-deal of corn by gleaning.’[164] After the change, as Eden admits, a
-third or perhaps a fourth of the number of hands would be sufficient
-to do all the farming work required. Let us say that Hodge was one of
-the superfluous two-thirds, and that the parish authorities refused him
-a certificate. What did he do? He applied to the overseer, who sent
-him out as a roundsman.[165] He would prefer to bear the ills he knew
-rather than face the unknown in the shape of a new parish officer,
-who might demand a certificate, and send him back with ignominy if he
-failed to produce one. If he took his wife and family with him there
-was even less chance of the demand for a certificate being waived.[166]
-So at Kibworth-Beauchamp Hodge and his companions remained, in a state
-of chronic discontent. ‘The Poor complain of hard treatment from the
-overseers, and the overseers accuse the Poor of being saucy.’[167]
-
-Now, at first sight, it seems obvious that it would be to the interest
-of a parish to give a poor man a certificate, if there were no market
-for his labour at home, in order to enable him to go elsewhere and
-make an independent living. This seems the reasonable view, but it
-is incorrect. In the same way, it would seem obvious that a parish
-would give slight relief to a person whose claim was in doubt rather
-than spend ten times the amount in contesting that claim at law. In
-point of fact, in neither case do we find what seems the reasonable
-course adopted. Parishes spent fortunes in lawsuits. And to the parish
-authorities it would seem that they risked more in giving Hodge a
-certificate than in obliging him to stay at home, even if he could not
-make a living in his native place; for he might, with his certificate,
-wander a long way off, and then fall into difficulties, and have to
-be fetched back at great expense, and the cost of removing him would
-fall on the certificating parish. There is a significant passage in
-the _Annals of Agriculture_[168] about the wool trade in 1788. ‘We
-have lately had some hand-bills scattered about Bocking, I am told,
-promising full employ to combers and weavers, that would migrate
-to Nottingham. Even if they chose to try this offer; as probably a
-parish certificate for such a distance would be refused; it cannot be
-attempted.’ Where parishes saw an immediate prospect of getting rid
-of their superfluous poor into a neighbouring parish with open fields
-or a common, they were indeed not chary of granting certificates. At
-Hothfield in Kent, for example, ‘full half of the labouring poor are
-certificated persons from other parishes: the above-mentioned common,
-which affords them the means of keeping a cow, or poultry, is supposed
-to draw many Poor into the parish; certificated persons are allowed to
-dig peat.’[169]
-
-In the Rules for the government of the Poor in the hundreds of Loes and
-Wilford in Suffolk[170] very explicit directions are given about the
-granting of certificates. In the first place, before any certificate
-is granted the applicant must produce an examination taken before a
-Justice of the Peace, showing that he belongs to one of the parishes
-within the hundred. Granted that he has complied with this condition,
-then, (1) if he be a labourer or husbandman no certificate will be
-granted him out of the hundreds unless he belongs to the parish of
-Kenton, and even in that case it is ‘not to exceed the distance of
-three miles’; (2) if he be a tradesman, artificer, or manufacturer a
-certificate may be granted to him out of the hundreds, but in no case
-is it to exceed the distance of twenty miles from the parish to which
-he belongs. The extent of the hundreds was roughly fourteen miles by
-five and a half.
-
-Eden, describing the neighbourhood of Coventry, says: ‘In a country
-parish on one side the city, chiefly consisting of cottages inhabited
-by ribbon-weavers, the Rates are as high as in Coventry; whilst, in
-another parish, on the opposite side, they do not exceed one-third of
-the City Rate: this is ascribed to the care that is taken to prevent
-manufacturers from settling in the parish.’[171] In the neighbourhood
-of Mollington (Warwickshire and Oxon) the poor rates varied from 2s.
-to 4s. in the pound. ‘The difference in the several parishes, it is
-said, arises, in a great measure, from the facility or difficulty of
-obtaining settlements: in several parishes, a fine is imposed on a
-parishioner, who settles a newcomer by hiring, or otherwise, so that a
-servant is very seldom hired for a year. Those parishes which have for
-a long time been in the habit of using these precautions, are now very
-lightly burthened with Poor. This is often the case, where farms are
-large, and of course in few hands; while other parishes, not politic
-enough to observe these rules, are generally burthened with an influx
-of poor neighbours.’[172] Another example of this is Deddington (Oxon)
-which like other parishes that possessed common fields suffered from
-an influx of small farmers who had been turned out elsewhere, whereas
-neighbouring parishes, possessed by a few individuals, were cautious in
-permitting newcomers to gain settlements.[173]
-
-This practice of hiring servants for fifty-one weeks only was common:
-Eden thought it fraudulent and an evasion of the law that would not
-be upheld in a court of justice,[174] but he was wrong, for the 1817
-Report on the Poor Law mentions among ‘the measures, justifiable
-undoubtedly in point of law, which are adopted very generally in many
-parts of the kingdom, to defeat the obtaining a settlement, that
-of hiring labourers for a less period than a year; from whence it
-naturally and necessarily follows, that a labourer may spend the season
-of his health and industry in one parish, and be transferred in the
-decline of life to a distant part of the kingdom.’[175] We hear little
-about the feelings of the unhappy labourers who were brought home by
-the overseers when they fell into want in a parish which had taken
-them in with their certificate, but it is not difficult to imagine
-the scene. It is significant that the Act of 1795 (to which we shall
-refer later), contained a provision that orders of removal were to be
-suspended in cases where the pauper was dangerously ill.
-
-From the Rules for the Government of the Poor in the Hundreds of Loes
-and Wilford, already alluded to, we learn some particulars of the
-allowance made for the removal of paupers. Twenty miles was to be
-considered a day’s journey; 2d. was to be allowed for one horse, and so
-on in proportion per mile: but if the distance were over twenty miles,
-or the overseer were obliged to be out all night, then 2s. was to be
-allowed for him, 1s. for his horse, and 6d. for each pauper.[176] It is
-improbable that such a scale of payment would induce the overseer to
-look kindly on the causes of his trouble: much less would a pauper be a
-_persona grata_ if litigation over his settlement had already cost the
-parish large sums.
-
-It has been necessary to give these particulars of the Law of
-Settlement for two reasons. In the first place, the probability of
-expulsion, ‘exile by administrative order,’ as it has been called,
-threw a shadow over the lives of the poor. In the second place, the
-old Law of Settlement became an immensely more important social
-impediment when enclosure and the great industrial inventions began to
-redistribute population. When the normal labourer had common rights
-and a strip and a cow, he would not wish to change his home on account
-of temporary distress: after enclosure he was reduced to a position in
-which his distress, if he stayed on in his own village, was likely to
-be permanent.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The want and suffering revealed in Davies’ and Eden’s budgets came to
-a crisis in 1795, the year of what may be called the revolt of the
-housewives. That year, when exceptional scarcity sharpened the edge
-of the misery caused by the changes we have summarised, was marked by
-a series of food riots all over England, in which a conspicuous part
-was taken by women. These disturbances are particularly interesting
-from the discipline and good order which characterise the conduct
-of the rioters. The rioters when they found themselves masters of
-the situation did not use their strength to plunder the shops: they
-organised distribution, selling the food they seized at what they
-considered fair rates, and handing over the proceeds to the owners.
-They did not rob: they fixed prices, and when the owner of provisions
-was making for a dearer market they stopped his carts and made him sell
-on the spot. At Aylesbury in March ‘a numerous mob, consisting chiefly
-of women, seized on all the wheat that came to market, and compelled
-the farmers to whom it belonged to accept of such prices as they
-thought proper to name.’[177] In Devonshire the rioters scoured the
-country round Chudleigh, destroying two mills: ‘from the great number
-of petticoats, it is generally supposed that several men were dressed
-in female attire.’[178] At Carlisle a band of women accompanied by boys
-paraded the streets, and in spite of the remonstrances of a magistrate,
-entered various houses and shops, seized all the grain, deposited it
-in the public hall, and then formed a committee to regulate the price
-at which it should be sold.[179] At Ipswich there was a riot over the
-price of butter, and at Fordingbridge, a certain Sarah Rogers, in
-company with other women started a cheap butter campaign. Sarah took
-some butter from Hannah Dawson ‘with a determination of keeping it at
-a reduced price,’ an escapade for which she was afterwards sentenced
-to three months’ hard labour at the Winchester Assizes. ‘Nothing but
-the age of the prisoner (being very young) prevented the Court from
-passing a more severe sentence.’[180] At Bath the women actually
-boarded a vessel, laden with wheat and flour, which was lying in the
-river and refused to let her go. When the Riot Act was read they
-retorted that they were not rioting, but were resisting the sending of
-corn abroad, and sang God save the King. Although the owner took an
-oath that the corn was destined for Bristol, they were not satisfied,
-and ultimately soldiers were called in, and the corn was relanded and
-put into a warehouse.[181] In some places the soldiers helped the
-populace in their work of fixing prices: at Seaford, for example, they
-seized and sold meat and flour in the churchyard, and at Guildford
-they were the ringleaders in a movement to lower the price of meat
-to 4d. a pound, and were sent out of the town by the magistrates in
-consequence.[182] These spontaneous leagues of consumers sprang up in
-many different parts, for in addition to the places already mentioned
-there were disturbances of sufficient importance to be chronicled in
-the newspapers, in Wiltshire, Suffolk, and Norfolk, whilst Eden states
-that at Deddington the populace seized on a boat laden with flour,
-but restored it on the miller’s promising to sell it at a reduced
-price.[183]
-
-These riots are interesting from many points of view. They are a rising
-of the poor against an increasing pressure of want, and the forces
-that were driving down their standard of life. They did not amount to
-a social rebellion, but they mark a stage in the history of the poor.
-To the rich they were a signal of danger. Davies declared that if the
-ruling classes learnt from his researches what was the condition of the
-poor, they would intervene to rescue the labourers from ‘the abject
-state into which they are sunk.’ Certainly the misery of which his
-budgets paint the plain surface could not be disregarded. If compassion
-was not a strong enough force to make the ruling classes attend to the
-danger that the poor might starve, fear would certainly have made them
-think of the danger that the poor might rebel. Some of them at any rate
-knew their Virgil well enough to remember that in the description of
-the threshold of Orcus, while ‘senectus’ is ‘tristis’ and ‘egestas’ is
-‘turpis,’ ‘fames’ is linked with the more ominous epithet ‘malesuada.’
-If a proletariat were left to starve despair might teach bad habits,
-and this impoverished race might begin to look with ravenous eyes on
-the lot of those who lived on the spoils and sinecures of the State.
-Thus fear and pity united to sharpen the wits of the rich, and to turn
-their minds to the distresses of the poor.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[139] Davies, _The Case of Labourers in Husbandry_, p. 15.
-
-[140] In some instances it is reckoned as costing only 7s. _Ibid._, see
-p. 185.
-
-[141] Davies, p. 181.
-
-[142] Eden, vol. ii. p. 547.
-
-[143] Vol. xxv. p. 488.
-
-[144] See _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. ix. pp. 13, 14, 165-167,
-636-646, and vol. x. pp. 218-227.
-
-[145] Capel Lofft (1751-1824); follower of Fox; writer of poems and
-translations from Virgil and Petrarch; patron of Robert Bloomfield,
-author of _Farmer’s Boy_. Called by Boswell ‘This little David of
-popular spirit.’
-
-[146] Thomas Ruggles (1737-1813), author of _History of the Poor_,
-published in 1793, Deputy-Lieutenant of Essex and Suffolk.
-
-[147] Sir Henry Gould, 1710-1794.
-
-[148] The _Annals of Agriculture_ (vol. xvii. p. 293) contains a
-curious apology by a gleaner in 1791 to the owner of some fields, who
-had begun legal proceedings against her and her husband. ‘Whereas
-I, Margaret Abree, wife of Thomas Abree, of the city of New Sarum,
-blacksmith, did, during the barley harvest, in the month of September
-last, many times wilfully and maliciously go into the fields of, and
-belonging to, Mr. Edward Perry, at Clarendon Park, and take with me my
-children, and did there leaze, collect, and carry away a quantity of
-barley.... Now we do hereby declare, that we are fully convinced of the
-illegality of such proceedings, and that no person has a right to leaze
-any sort of grain, or to come on any field whatsoever, without the
-consent of the owner; and are also truly sensible of the obligation we
-are under to the said Edward Perry for his lenity towards us, inasmuch
-as the damages given, together with the heavy cost incurred, would have
-been much greater than we could possibly have discharged, and must
-have amounted to perpetual imprisonment, as even those who have least
-disapproved of our conduct, would certainly not have contributed so
-large a sum to deliver us from the legal consequences of it. And we do
-hereby faithfully promise never to be guilty of the same, or any like
-offence in future. Thomas Abree, Margaret Abree. Her + Mark.’ It is
-interesting to compare with this judge-made law of England the Mosaic
-precept: ‘And when ye reap the harvest of your land, thou shalt not
-make clean riddance of the corners of thy field when thou reapest,
-neither shalt thou gather any gleaning of thy harvest: thou shalt leave
-them unto the poor, and to the stranger’ (Leviticus xxiii. 22).
-
-[149] Kent, _Hints_, p. 238.
-
-[150] P. 34; cf. Marshall on the Southern Department, p. 9, ‘Yorkshire
-bacon, generally of the worst sort, is retailed to the poor from little
-chandlers’ shops at an advanced price, bread in the same way.’
-
-[151] _Notes on the Agriculture of Norfolk_, p. 165.
-
-[152] _Large and Small Holdings_, p. 11.
-
-[153] Young’s _Political Arithmetic_, quoted by Lecky, vol. vii. p. 263
-note.
-
-[154] See Appendix B for six of these budgets.
-
-[155] Ruggles, _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xiv. p. 205.
-
-[156] Eden, vol. i. p. 180.
-
-[157] The parish might have the satisfaction of punishing the mother by
-a year’s hard labour (7 James I. c. 4, altered in 1810), but could not
-get rid of the child.
-
-[158] _Wealth of Nations_, vol. i. p. 194.
-
-[159] Quoted by Eden, vol. i. p. 347.
-
-[160] See _Ibid._, p. 296.
-
-[161] Vol. xiv. pp. 205, 206.
-
-[162] An example of a parish where the interests of the employer and
-of the parish officers differed is given in the _House of Commons
-Journal_ for February 4, 1788, when a petition was presented from Mr.
-John Wilkinson, a master iron-founder at Bradley, near Bilston, in
-the parish of Wolverhampton. The petitioner states ‘that the present
-Demand for the Iron of his Manufacture and the Improvement of which
-it is capable, naturally encourage a very considerable Extension of
-his Works, but that the Experience he has had of the vexatious Effect,
-as well as of the constantly increasing Amount of Poor Rates to which
-he is subject, has filled him with Apprehensions of final Ruin to his
-Establishment; and that the Parish Officers ... are constantly alarming
-his Workmen with Threats of Removal to the various Parishes from which
-the Necessity of employing skilful Manufacturers has obliged him to
-collect them.’ He goes on to ask that his district shall be made
-extra-parochial to the poor rates.
-
-[163] Hasbach, pp. 172-3.
-
-[164] Eden, vol. ii. p. 384.
-
-[165] See p. 148.
-
-[166] The unborn were the special objects of parish officers’ dread.
-At Derby the persons sent out under orders of removal are chiefly
-pregnant girls. (Eden, vol. ii. p. 126.) Bastards (see above) with
-some exceptions gained a settlement in their birthplace, and Hodge’s
-legitimate children might gain one too if there was any doubt about the
-place of their parents’ settlements.
-
-[167] Eden, vol. ii. p. 383.
-
-[168] Vol. ix. p. 660.
-
-[169] Eden, vol. ii. p. 288. In considering the accounts of the state
-of the commons, it must be remembered that the open parishes thus paid
-the penalty of enclosure elsewhere. _Colluvies vicorum._ But these open
-fields and commons were becoming rapidly more scarce.
-
-[170] _Ibid._, p. 691.
-
-[171] Eden, vol. iii. p. 743.
-
-[172] _Ibid._
-
-[173] _Ibid._, vol. ii. p. 591.
-
-[174] _Ibid._, p. 654, _re_ Litchfield. ‘In two or three small parishes
-in this neighbourhood, which consist of large farms, there are very
-few poor: the farmers, in order to prevent the introduction of poor
-from other parishes, hire their servants for fifty-one weeks only. I
-conceive, however, that this practice would be considered, by a court
-of justice, as fraudulent, and a mere evasion in the master; and that
-a servant thus hired, if he remained the fifty-second week with his
-master, on a fresh contract, would acquire a settlement in the parish.’
-
-[175] See _Annual Register_, 1817, p. 298.
-
-[176] Eden, vol. ii. p. 689.
-
-[177] _Reading Mercury_, April 20, 1795; also _Ipswich Journal_, March
-28.
-
-[178] _Ipswich Journal_, April 18.
-
-[179] _Ibid._, August 8.
-
-[180] _Ibid._
-
-[181] _Ibid._
-
-[182] _Reading Mercury_, April 27, 1795.
-
-[183] Eden, vol. ii. p. 591.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-THE REMEDIES OF 1795
-
-
-The collapse of the economic position of the labourer was the result of
-many causes, and in examining the various remedies that were proposed
-we shall see that they touch in turn on the several deficiencies
-that produced this failure. The governing fact of the situation was
-that the labourer’s wages no longer sufficed to provide even a bare
-and comfortless existence. It was necessary then that his wages
-should be raised, or that the effects of the rise in prices should
-be counteracted by changes of diet and manner of life, or that the
-economic resources which formerly supplemented his earnings should in
-some way be restored, unless he was to be thrown headlong on to the
-Poor Law. We shall see what advice was given and what advice was taken
-in these momentous years.
-
-
-DIET REFORM
-
-A disparity between income and expenditure may be corrected by
-increasing income or by reducing expenditure. Many of the upper classes
-thought that the second method might be tried in this emergency, and
-that a judicious change of diet would enable the labourer to face the
-fall of wages with equanimity. The solution seemed to lie in the simple
-life. Enthusiasts soon began to feel about this proposal the sort of
-excitement that Robinson Crusoe enjoyed when discovering new resources
-on his island: an infinite vista of kitchen reform beckoned to their
-ingenious imaginations: and many of them began to persuade themselves
-that the miseries of the poor arose less from the scantiness of their
-incomes than from their own improvidence and unthriftiness.[184]
-The rich set an example in the worst days by cutting off pastry and
-restricting their servants to a quartern loaf a week each.[185] It was
-surely not too much in these circumstances to ask the poor to adapt
-their appetites to the changed conditions of their lives, and to shake
-off what Pitt called ‘groundless prejudices’ to mixed bread of barley,
-rye, and wheat.[186] Again oatmeal was a common food in the north, why
-should it not be taken in the south? If no horses except post horses
-and perhaps cavalry horses were allowed oats, there would be plenty for
-the poor.[187] A Cumberland labourer with a wife and family of five
-was shown by Eden[188] to have spent £7, 9s. 2d. a year on oatmeal and
-barley, whereas a Berkshire labourer with a wife and four children at
-home spent £36, 8s. a year on wheaten bread alone.[189] Clearly the
-starving south was to be saved by the introduction of cheap cereals.
-
-Other proposals of this time were to break against the opposition of
-the rich. This broke against the opposition of the poor. All attempts
-to popularise substitutes failed, and the poorer the labourer grew
-the more stubbornly did he insist on wheaten bread. ‘Even household
-bread is scarcely ever used: they buy the finest wheaten bread, and
-declare (what I much doubt), that brown bread disorders their bowels.
-Bakers do not now make, as they formerly did, bread of unsifted flour:
-at some farmers’ houses, however, it is still made of flour, as it
-comes from the mill; but this practice is going much into disuse.
-20 years ago scarcely any other than brown bread was used.’[190] At
-Ealing, when the charitable rich raised a subscription to provide
-the distressed poor with brown bread at a reduced price, many of the
-labourers thought it so coarse and unpalatable that they returned the
-tickets though wheaten bread was at 1s. 3d. the quartern loaf.[191]
-Correspondent after correspondent to the _Annals of Agriculture_ notes
-and generally deplores the fact that the poor, as one of them phrases
-it, are too fine-mouthed to eat any but the finest bread.[192] Lord
-Sheffield, judging from his address to Quarter Sessions at the end of
-1795, would have had little mercy on such grumblers. After explaining
-that in his parish relief was now given partly in potatoes, partly in
-wheaten flour, and partly in oaten or barley flour, he declared: ‘If
-any wretches should be found so lost to all decency, and so blind as
-to revolt against the dispensations of providence, and to refuse the
-food proposed for their relief, the parish officers will be justified
-in refusing other succour, and may be assured of support from the
-magistracy of the county.’[193]
-
-To the rich, the reluctance of the labourer to change his food came
-as a painful surprise. They had thought of him as a roughly built and
-hardy animal, comparatively insensible to his surroundings, like the
-figure Lucretius drew of the primeval labourer:
-
- Et majoribus et solidis magis ossibus intus
- Fundatum, et validis aptum per viscera nervis;
- Nec facile ex aestu, nec frigore quod caperetur,
- Nec novitate cibi, nec labi corporis ulla.
-
-They did not know that a romantic and adventurous appetite is one of
-the blessings of an easy life, and that the more miserable a man’s
-condition, and the fewer his comforts, the more does he shrink from
-experiments of diet. They were therefore surprised and displeased to
-find that labourers rejected soup, even soup served at a rich man’s
-table, exclaiming, ‘This is washy stuff, that affords no nourishment:
-we will not be fed on meal, and chopped potatoes like hogs.’[194] The
-dislike of change of food was remarked by the Poor Law Commissioners
-in 1834, who observed that the labourer had acquired or retained ‘with
-the moral helplessness some of the other peculiarities of a child. He
-is often disgusted to a degree which other classes scarcely conceive
-possible, by slight differences in diet; and is annoyed by anything
-that seems to him strange and new.’[195]
-
-Apart from the constitutional conservatism of the poor there were good
-reasons for the obstinacy of the labourers. Davies put one aspect
-of the case very well. ‘If the working people of other countries are
-content with bread made of rye, barley, or oats, have they not milk,
-cheese, butter, fruits, or fish, to eat with that coarser bread? And
-was not this the case of our own people formerly, when these grains
-were the common productions of our land, and when scarcely wheat
-enough was grown for the use of the nobility and principal gentry?
-Flesh-meat, butter, and cheese, were then at such moderate prices,
-compared with the present prices, that poor people could afford to
-use them in common. And with a competent quantity of these articles,
-a coarser kind of bread might very well satisfy the common people of
-any country.’[196] He also states that where land had not been so
-highly improved as to produce much wheat, barley, oatmeal, or maslin
-bread were still in common use. Arthur Young himself realised that the
-labourer’s attachment to wheaten bread was not a mere superstition of
-the palate. ‘In the East of England I have been very generally assured,
-by the labourers who work the hardest, that they prefer the finest
-bread, not because most pleasant, but most contrary to a lax habit of
-body, which at once prevents all _strong_ labour. The quality of the
-bread that is eaten by those who have meat, and perhaps porter and
-port, is of very little consequence indeed; but to the hardworking
-man, who nearly lives on it, the case is abundantly different.’[197]
-Fox put this point in a speech in the House of Commons in the debate
-on the high price of corn in November 1795. He urged gentlemen, who
-were talking of mixed bread for the people, ‘not to judge from any
-experiment made with respect to themselves. I have myself tasted bread
-of different sorts, I have found it highly pleasant, and I have no
-doubt it is exceedingly wholesome. But it ought to be recollected
-how very small a part the article of bread forms of the provisions
-consumed by the more opulent classes of the community. To the poor it
-constitutes, the chief, if not the sole article of subsistence.’[198]
-The truth is that the labourer living on bread and tea had too delicate
-a digestion to assimilate the coarser cereals, and that there was,
-apart from climate and tradition, a very important difference between
-the labourer in the north and the labourer in the south, which the
-rich entirely overlooked. That difference comes out in an analysis of
-the budgets of the Cumberland labourer and the Berkshire labourer.
-The Cumberland labourer who spent only £7, 9s. on his cereals, spent
-£2, 13s. 7d. a year on milk. The Berkshire labourer who spent £36, 8s.
-on wheaten bread spent 8s. 8d. a year on milk. The Cumberland family
-consumed about 1300 quarts in the year, the Berkshire family about two
-quarts a week. The same contrast appears in all budget comparisons
-between north and south. A weaver at Kendal (eight in the family)
-spends £12, 9s. on oatmeal and wheat, and £5, 4s. on milk.[199] An
-agricultural labourer at Wetherall in Cumberland (five in family)
-spends £7, 6s. 9d. on cereals and £2, 13s. 4d. on milk.[200] On the
-other side we have a labourer in Shropshire (four in family) spending
-£10, 8s. on bread (of wheat rye), and only 8s. 8d. on milk,[201] and
-a cooper at Frome, Somerset (seven in family) spending £45, 10s. on
-bread, and about 17s. on milk.[202] These figures are typical.[203]
-
-Now oatmeal eaten with milk is a very different food from oatmeal taken
-alone, and it is clear from a study of the budgets that if oatmeal
-was to be acclimatised in the south, it was essential to increase
-the consumption of milk. But the great difference in consumption
-represented not a difference of demand, but a difference of supply. The
-southern labourer went without milk not from choice but from necessity.
-In the days when he kept cows he drank milk, for there was plenty of
-milk in the village. After enclosure, milk was not to be had. It may
-be that more cows were kept under the new system of farming, though
-this is unlikely, seeing that at this time every patch of arable was
-a gold-mine, but it is certainly true that milk became scarce in the
-villages. The new type of farmer did not trouble to sell milk at home.
-‘Farmers are averse to selling milk; while poor persons who have only
-one cow generally dispose of all they can spare.’[204] The new farmer
-produced for a larger market: his produce was carried away, as Cobbett
-said, to be devoured by ‘the idlers, the thieves, the prostitutes who
-are all taxeaters in the wens of Bath and London.’ Davies argued, when
-pleading for the creation of small farms, ‘The occupiers of these small
-farms, as well as the occupiers of Mr. _Kent’s_ larger cottages, would
-not think much of retailing to their poorer neighbours a little corn or
-a little milk, as they might want, which the poor can now seldom have
-at all, and never but as a great favour from the rich farmers.’[205]
-Sir Thomas Bernard mentioned among the advantages of the Winchilsea
-system the ‘no inconsiderable convenience to the inhabitants of that
-neighbourhood, that these cottagers are enabled to supply them, at a
-very moderate price, with milk, cream, butter, poultry, pig-meat, and
-veal: articles which, in general, are not worth the farmer’s attention,
-and which, therefore, are supplied by speculators, who greatly enhance
-the price on the public.’[206] Eden[207] records that in Oxfordshire
-the labourers bitterly complain that the farmers, instead of selling
-their milk to the poor, give it to their pigs, and a writer in the
-Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor says
-that this was a practice not unusual in many parts of England.[208]
-
-The scarcity of milk must be considered a contributory cause of the
-growth of tea-drinking, a habit that the philanthropists and Cobbett
-agreed in condemning. Cobbett declared in his _Advice to Young
-Men_[209] that ‘if the slops were in fashion amongst ploughmen and
-carters, we must all be starved; for the food could never be raised.
-The mechanics are half ruined by them.’ In the Report on the Poor
-presented to the Hants Quarter Sessions in 1795,[210] the use of tea is
-described as ‘a vain present attempt to supply to the spirits of the
-mind what is wanting to the strength of the body; but in its lasting
-effects impairing the nerves, and therein equally injuring both the
-body and the mind.’ Davies retorted on the rich who found fault with
-the extravagance of the poor in tea-drinking, by pointing out that it
-was their ‘last resource.’ ‘The topic on which the declaimers against
-the extravagance of the poor display their eloquence with most success,
-is _tea-drinking_. Why should such people, it is asked, indulge in a
-luxury which is only proper for their betters; and not rather content
-themselves with milk, which is in every form wholesome and nourishing?
-Were it true that poor people could every where procure so excellent
-an article as milk, there would be then just reason to reproach them
-for giving the preference to the miserable infusion of which they
-are so fond. But it is not so. Wherever the poor can get milk, do
-they not gladly use it? And where they cannot get it, would they not
-gladly exchange their tea for it?[211]... Still you exclaim, _Tea is
-a luxury_. If you mean fine hyson tea, sweetened with refined sugar,
-and softened with cream, I readily admit it to be so. But _this_ is
-not the tea of the poor. Spring water, just coloured with a few leaves
-of the lowest-priced tea, and sweetened with the brownest sugar, is
-the luxury for which you reproach them. To this they have recourse
-from mere necessity: and were they now to be deprived of this, they
-would immediately be reduced to bread and water. Tea-drinking is not
-the cause, but the consequence, of the distresses of the poor.’[212]
-We learn from the _Annals of Agriculture_ that at Sedgefield in
-Durham[213] many of the poor declared that they had been driven to
-drinking tea from not being able to procure milk.[214]
-
-No doubt the scarcity of milk helped to encourage a taste that was
-very quickly acquired by all classes in England, and not in England
-only, for, before the middle of the eighteenth century, the rapid
-growth of tea-drinking among the poor in the Lowlands of Scotland was
-affecting the revenue very seriously.[215] The English poor liked tea
-for the same reason that Dr. Johnson liked it, as a stimulant, and the
-fact that their food was monotonous and insipid made it particularly
-attractive. Eden shows that by the end of the eighteenth century it
-was in general use among poor families, taking the place both of beer
-and of milk, and excluding the substitutes that Eden wished to make
-popular. It seems perhaps less surprising to us than it did to him,
-that when the rich, who could eat or drink what they liked, enjoyed
-tea, the poor thought bread and tea a more interesting diet than bread
-and barley water.
-
-A few isolated attempts were made to remedy the scarcity of milk,[216]
-which had been caused by enclosure and the consolidation of farms.
-Lord Winchilsea’s projects have already been described. In the Reports
-of the Society for bettering the Condition of the Poor, there are two
-accounts of plans for supplying milk cheap, one in Staffordshire, where
-a respectable tradesman undertook to keep a certain number of cows
-for the purpose in a parish where ‘the principal number of the poorer
-inhabitants were destitute of all means of procuring milk for their
-families,’[217] another at Stockton in Durham, where the bishop made
-it a condition of the lease of a certain farm, that the tenant should
-keep fifteen cows whose milk was to be sold at 1/2d. a pint to the
-poor.[218] Mr. Curwen again, the Whig M.P. for Carlisle, had a plan
-for feeding cows in the winter with a view to providing the poor with
-milk.[219]
-
-There was another way in which the enclosures had created an
-insuperable obstacle to the popularising of ‘cheap and agreeable
-substitutes’ for expensive wheaten bread. The Cumberland housewife
-could bake her own barley bread in her oven ‘heated with heath, furze
-or brush-wood, the expence of which is inconsiderable’[220]; she had
-stretches of waste land at her door where the children could be sent
-to fetch fuel. ‘There is no comparison to the community,’ wrote a
-contributor to the _Annals of Agriculture_,[221] ‘whether good wheat,
-rye, turnips, etc., are not better than brakes, goss, furz, broom, and
-heath,’ but as acre after acre in the midlands and south was enclosed,
-the fuel of the poor grew ever scantier. When the common where he had
-gleaned his firing was fenced off, the poor man could only trust for
-his fuel to pilferings from the hedgerows. To the spectator, furze from
-the common might seem ‘gathered with more loss of time than it appears
-to be worth’[222]; to the labourer whose scanty earnings left little
-margin over the expense of bread alone, the loss of firing was not
-balanced by the economy of time.[223]
-
-Insufficient firing added to the miseries caused by insufficient
-clothes and food. An ingenious writer in the _Annals of
-Agriculture_[224] suggested that the poor should resort to the stables
-for warmth, as was the practice in the duchy of Milan. Fewer would
-suffer death from want of fire in winter, he argued, and also it would
-be a cheap way of helping them, as it cost no fuel, for cattle were so
-obliging as to dispense warmth from their persons for nothing. But even
-this plan (which was not adopted) would not have solved the problem
-of cooking. The labourer might be blamed for his diet of fine wheaten
-bread and for having his meat (when he had any) roasted instead of made
-into soup, but how could cooking be done at home without fuel? ‘No
-doubt, a labourer,’ says Eden,[225] ‘whose income was only £20 a year,
-would, in general, act wisely in substituting hasty-pudding, barley
-bread, boiled milk, and potatoes, for bread and beer; but in most parts
-of this county, he is debarred not more by prejudice, than by local
-difficulties, from using a diet that requires cooking at home. The
-extreme dearness of fuel in Oxfordshire, compels him to purchase his
-dinner at the baker’s; and, from his unavoidable consumption of bread,
-he has little left for cloaths, in a country where warm cloathing is
-most essentially wanted.’ In Davies’ more racy and direct language, ‘it
-is but little that in the present state of things the belly can spare
-for the back.’[226] Davies also pointed out the connection between dear
-fuel and the baker. ‘Where fuel is scarce and dear, poor people find it
-cheaper to buy their bread of the baker than to bake for themselves....
-But where fuel abounds, and costs only the trouble of cutting and
-carrying home, there they may save something by baking their own
-bread.’[227] Complaints of the pilfering of hedgerows were very common.
-‘Falstaff says “his soldiers found linen on every hedge”; and I fear
-it is but too often the case, that labourers’ children procure fuel
-from the same quarter.’[228] There were probably many families like
-the two described in Davies[229] who spent nothing on fuel, which
-they procured by gathering cow-dung, and breaking their neighbours’
-hedges.’[230]
-
-In some few cases, the benevolent rich did not content themselves with
-attempting to enforce the eighth commandment, but went to the root of
-the matter, helping to provide a substitute for their hedgerows. An
-interesting account of such an experiment is given in the _Reports
-on the Poor_,[231] by Scrope Bernard. ‘There having been several
-prosecutions at the Aylesbury Quarter Sessions, for stealing fuel last
-winter, I was led to make particular inquiries, respecting the means
-which the poor at Lower Winchendon had of providing fuel. I found that
-there was no fuel then to be sold within several miles of the place;
-and that, amid the distress occasioned by the long frost, a party of
-cottagers had joined in hiring a person, to fetch a load of pit-coal
-from Oxford, for their supply. In order to encourage this disposition
-to acquire fuel in an honest manner,’ a present was made to all this
-party of as much coal again as they had already purchased carriage
-free. Next year the vestry determined to help, and with the aid of
-private donations coal was distributed at 1s. 4d. the cwt. (its cost
-at the Oxford wharf), and kindling faggots at 1d. each. ‘It had been
-said that the poor would not find money to purchase them, when they
-were brought: instead of which out of 35 poor families belonging to
-the parish, 29 came with ready money, husbanded out of their scanty
-means, to profit with eagerness of this attention to their wants; and
-among them a person who had been lately imprisoned by his master for
-stealing wood from his hedges.’ Mr. Bernard concludes his account with
-some apt remarks on the difficulties of combining honesty with grinding
-poverty.[232]
-
-
-MINIMUM WAGE
-
-The attempts to reduce cottage expenditure were thus a failure. We must
-now describe the attempts to increase the cottage income. There were
-two ways in which the wages of the labourers might have been raised.
-One way, the way of combination, was forbidden by law. The other way
-was the fixing of a legal minimum wage in relation to the price of
-food. This was no new idea, for the regulation of wages by law was a
-venerable English institution, as old as the Statute of Edward III. The
-most recent laws on the subject were the famous Act of Elizabeth, an
-Act of James I., and an Act of George II. (1747). The Act of Elizabeth
-provided that the Justices of the Peace should meet annually and assess
-the wages of labourers in husbandry and of certain other workmen.
-Penalties were imposed on all who gave or took a wage in excess of
-this assessment. The Act of James I. was passed to remove certain
-ambiguities that were believed to have embarrassed the operation of the
-Act of Elizabeth, and among other provisions imposed a penalty on all
-who gave a wage below the wage fixed by the magistrates. The Act of
-1747[233] was passed because the existing laws were ‘insufficient and
-defective,’ and it provided that disputes between masters and men could
-be referred to the magistrates, ‘although no rate or assessment of
-wages has been made that year by the Justices of the shire where such
-complaint shall be made.’
-
-Two questions arise on the subject of this legislation, Was it
-operative? In whose interests was it administered, the interests of the
-employers or the interests of the employed? As to the first question
-there is a good deal of negative evidence to show that during the
-eighteenth century these laws were rarely applied. An example of an
-assessment (an assessment declaring a maximum) made by the Lancashire
-magistrates in 1725, was published in the _Annals of Agriculture_ in
-1795[234] as an interesting curiosity, and the writer remarks: ‘It
-appears from Mr. Ruggles’ excellent _History of the Poor_ that such
-orders must in general be searched for in earlier periods, and a
-friend of ours was much surprised to hear that any magistrates in the
-present century would venture on so bold a measure.’[235]
-
-As to the second question, at the time we are discussing it was
-certainly taken for granted that this legislation was designed to keep
-wages down. So implicitly was this believed that the Act of James I.
-which provided penalties in cases where wages were given below the
-fixed rate was generally ignored, and speakers and writers mentioned
-only the Act of Elizabeth, treating it as an Act for fixing a maximum.
-Whitbread, for example, when introducing a Bill in 1795 to fix a
-minimum wage, with which we deal later, argued that the Elizabethan
-Act ought to be repealed because it fixed a maximum. This view of the
-earlier legislation was taken by Fox, who supported Whitbread’s Bill,
-and by Pitt who opposed it. Fox said of the Act of Elizabeth that
-‘it secured the master from a risk which could but seldom occur, of
-being charged exorbitantly for the quantity of service; but it did not
-authorise the magistrate to protect the poor from the injustice of a
-grinding and avaricious master, who might be disposed to take advantage
-of their necessities, and undervalue the rate of their services.’[236]
-Pitt said that Whitbread ‘imagined that he had on his side of the
-question the support of experience in this country, and appealed to
-certain laws upon the statute-book in confirmation of his proposition.
-He did not find himself called upon to defend the principle of these
-statutes, but they were certainly introduced for purposes widely
-different from the object of the present bill. They were enacted to
-guard the industry of the country from being checked by a general
-combination among labourers; and the bill now under consideration was
-introduced solely for the purpose of remedying the inconveniences which
-labourers sustain from the disproportion existing between the price of
-labour and the price of living.’[237] Only one speaker in the debates,
-Vansittart, afterwards Chancellor of the Exchequer, took the view
-that legislation was not needed because the Act of James I. gave the
-magistrates the powers with which Whitbread sought to arm them.
-
-It was natural that many minds searching after a way of escape from the
-growing distress of the labourers, at a time when wages had not kept
-pace with prices, should have turned to the device of assessing wages
-by law in accordance with the price of provisions. If prices could
-not be assimilated to wages, could not wages be assimilated to prices?
-Nathaniel Kent, no wild visionary, had urged employers to raise wages
-in proportion to the increase of their profits, but his appeal had
-been without effect. But the policy of regulating wages according to
-the price of food was recommended in several quarters, and it provoked
-a great deal of discussion. Burke, whose days were closing in, was
-tempted to take part in it, and he put an advertisement into the papers
-announcing that he was about to publish a series of letters on the
-subject. The letters never appeared, but Arthur Young has described the
-visit he paid to Beaconsfield at this time and Burke’s rambling thunder
-about ‘the absurdity of regulating labour and the mischief of our
-poor laws,’ and Burke’s published works include a paper _Thoughts and
-Details on Scarcity_, presented to Pitt in November 1795. In this paper
-Burke argued that the farmer was the true guardian of the labourer’s
-interest, in that it would never be profitable to him to underpay the
-labourer: an uncompromising application of the theory of the economic
-man, which was not less superficial than the Jacobins’ application of
-the theory of the natural man.
-
-In October 1795 Arthur Young sent out to the various correspondents of
-the Board of Agriculture a circular letter containing this question
-among others: ‘It having been recommended by various quarter-sessions,
-that the price of labour should be regulated by that of bread corn,
-have the goodness to state what you conceive to be the advantages or
-disadvantages of such a system?’[238] Arthur Young was himself in
-favour of the proposal, and the Suffolk magistrates, at a meeting which
-he attended on the 12th of October, ordered: ‘That the Members for this
-county be requested by the chairman to bring a bill into parliament, so
-to regulate the price of labour, that it may fluctuate with the average
-price of bread corn.’[239] Most of the replies were adverse, but the
-proposal found a warm friend in Mr. Howlett, the Vicar of Dunmow,
-who put into his answer some of the arguments which he afterwards
-developed in a pamphlet published in reply to Pitt’s criticisms of
-Whitbread’s Bill.[240] Howlett argued that Parliament had legislated
-with success to prevent combinations of workmen, and as an example he
-quoted the Acts of 8 George III., which had made the wages of tailors
-and silk-weavers subject to the regulations of the magistrates. It was
-just as necessary and just as practicable to prevent a combination of
-a different kind, that of masters. ‘Not a combination indeed formally
-drawn up in writing and sanctioned under hand and seal, a combination,
-however, as certain (the result of contingencies or providential
-events) and as fatally efficacious as if in writing it had filled five
-hundred skins of parchment: a combination which has operated for many
-years with a force rapidly increasing, a combination which has kept
-back the hire of our labourers who have reaped down our fields, and
-has at length torn the clothes from their backs, snatched the food
-from their mouths, and ground the flesh from their bones.’ Howlett, it
-will be seen, took the same view as Thelwall, that the position of the
-labourers was deteriorating absolutely and relatively. He estimated
-from a survey taken at Dunmow that the average family should be taken
-as five; if wages had been regulated on this basis, and the labourer
-had been given per head no more than the cost of a pauper’s keep in the
-workhouse sixty years ago, he would have been very much better off in
-1795. He would himself take a higher standard. In reply to the argument
-that the policy of the minimum wage would deprive the labourers of all
-spur and incentive he pointed to the case of the London tailors; they
-at any rate displayed plenty of life and ingenuity, and nobody could
-say that the London fashions did not change fast enough. Employers
-would no more raise wages without compulsion than they would make good
-roads without the aid of turnpikes or the prescription of statutes
-enforced by the magistrates. His most original contribution to the
-discussion was the argument that the legal regulation should not be
-left to the unassisted judgment of the magistrates: ‘it should be
-the result of the clearest, fullest, and most accurate information,
-and at length be judiciously adapted to each county, hundred, or
-district in every quarter of the kingdom.’ Howlett differed from some
-of the supporters of a minimum wage, in thinking that wages should be
-regulated by the prices of the necessaries of life, not merely by that
-of bread corn.
-
-The same policy was advocated by Davies in _The Case of Labourers
-in Husbandry_.[241] Davies argued that if the minimum only were
-fixed, emulation would not be discouraged, for better workmen would
-both be more sure of employment and also obtain higher wages. He
-suggested that the minimum wage should be fixed by calculating the
-sum necessary to maintain a family of five, or by settling the scale
-of day wages by the price of bread alone, treating the other expenses
-as tolerably steady. He did not propose to regulate the wages of any
-but day labourers, nor did he propose to deal with piecework, although
-piecework had been included in the Act of Elizabeth. He further
-suggested that the regulation should be in force only for half the
-year, from November to May, when the labourers’ difficulties pressed
-hardest upon them. Unfortunately he coupled with his minimum wage
-policy a proposal to give help from the rates to families with more
-than five members, if the children were unable to earn.
-
-But the most interesting of all the declarations in favour of a minimum
-wage was a declaration from labourers. A correspondent sent the
-following advertisement to the _Annals of Agriculture_:--
-
- ‘The following is an advertisement which I cut out of a Norwich
- newspaper:--
-
- “DAY LABOURERS
-
- “At a numerous meeting of the day labourers of the little parishes
- of Heacham, Snettisham, and Sedgford, this day, 5th November, in the
- parish church of Heacham, in the county of Norfolk, in order to take
- into consideration the best and most peaceable mode of obtaining a
- redress of all the severe and peculiar hardships under which they
- have for many years so patiently suffered, the following resolutions
- were unanimously agreed to:--1st, That--_The labourer is worthy of
- his hire_, and that the mode of lessening his distresses, as hath
- been lately the fashion, by selling him flour under the market
- price, and thereby rendering him an object of a parish rate, is
- not only an indecent insult on his lowly and humble situation (in
- itself sufficiently mortifying from his degrading dependence on the
- caprice of his employer) but a fallacious mode of relief, and every
- way inadequate to a radical redress of the manifold distresses of
- his calamitous state. 2nd, That the price of labour should, at all
- times, be proportioned to the price of wheat, which should invariably
- be regulated by the average price of that necessary article of life;
- and that the price of labour, as specified in the annexed plan, is
- not only well calculated to make the labourer happy without being
- injurious to the farmer, but it appears to us the only rational means
- of securing the permanent happiness of this valuable and useful class
- of men, and, if adopted in its full extent, will have an immediate and
- powerful effect in reducing, if it does not entirely annihilate, that
- disgraceful and enormous tax on the public--the POOR RATE.
-
- “_Plan of the Price of Labour proportionate to the Price of Wheat_
-
- per last. per day.
-
- When wheat shall be 14l. the price of labour shall be 1s. 2d.
- „ „ 16 „ „ „ 1s. 4d.
- „ „ 18 „ „ „ 1s. 6d.
- „ „ 20 „ „ „ 1s. 8d.
- „ „ 22 „ „ „ 1s. 10d.
- „ „ 24 „ „ „ 2s. 0d.
- „ „ 26 „ „ „ 2s. 2d.
- „ „ 28 „ „ „ 2s. 4d.
- „ „ 30 „ „ „ 2s. 6d.
- „ „ 32 „ „ „ 2s. 8d.
- „ „ 34 „ „ „ 2s. 10d.
- „ „ 36 „ „ „ 3s. 0d.
-
- And so on, according to this proportion.
-
- “3rd, That a petition to parliament to regulate the price of labour,
- conformable to the above plan, be immediately adopted; and that
- the day labourers throughout the county be invited to associate
- and co-operate in this necessary application to parliament, as a
- peaceable, legal, and probable mode of obtaining relief; and, in doing
- this, no time should be lost, as the petition must be presented before
- the 29th January 1796.
-
- “4th, That one shilling shall be paid into the hands of the treasurer
- by every labourer, in order to defray the expences of advertising,
- attending on meetings, and paying counsel to support their petition in
- parliament.
-
- “5th, That as soon as the sense of the day labourers of this county,
- or a majority of them, shall be made known to the clerk of the
- meeting, a general meeting shall be appointed, in some central town,
- in order to agree upon the best and easiest mode of getting the
- petition signed: when it will be requested that one labourer, properly
- instructed, may be deputed to represent two or three contiguous
- parishes, and to attend the above intended meeting with a list of
- all the labourers in the parishes he shall represent, and pay their
- respective subscriptions; and that the labourer, so deputed, shall
- be allowed two shillings and six pence a day for his time, and two
- shillings and six pence a day for his expences.
-
- “6th, That Adam Moore, clerk of the meeting, be directed to have the
- above resolutions, with the names of the farmers and labourers who
- have subscribed to and approved them, advertised in one Norwich and
- one London paper; when it is hoped that the above plan of a petition
- to parliament will not only be approved and immediately adopted by the
- day labourers of this county, but by the day labourers of every county
- in the kingdom.
-
- “7th, That all letters, _post paid_, addressed to Adam Moore,
- labourer, at Heacham, near Lynn, Norfolk, will be duly noticed.”[242]
-
-This is one of the most interesting and instructive documents of the
-time. It shows that the labourers, whose steady decline during the
-next thirty years we are about to trace, were animated by a sense of
-dignity and independence. Something of the old spirit of the commoners
-still survived. But there is no sequel to this incident. This great
-scheme of a labourers’ organisation vanishes: it passes like a flash of
-summer lightning. What is the explanation? The answer is to be found,
-we suspect, in the Treason and Sedition Acts that Pitt was carrying
-through Parliament in this very month. Under those Acts no language
-of criticism was safe, and fifty persons could not meet except in the
-presence of a magistrate, who had power to extinguish the meeting and
-arrest the speaker. Those measures inflicted even wider injury upon the
-nation than Fox and Sheridan and Erskine themselves believed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The policy of a minimum wage was brought before Parliament in the
-winter of 1795, in a Bill introduced by Samuel Whitbread, one of
-the small band of brave Liberals who had stood by Fox through the
-revolutionary panic. Whitbread is a politician to whom history has done
-less than justice, and he is generally known only as an implacable
-opponent of the Peninsular War. That opposition he contrived to
-conduct, as we know from the _Creevey Papers_, in such a way as to
-win and keep the respect of Wellington. Whitbread’s disapproval of
-that war, of which Liberals like Holland and Lord John Russell, who
-took Fox’s view of the difference of fighting revolutions by the aid
-of kings and fighting Napoleon by the aid of peoples, were strong
-supporters, sprang from his compassion for the miseries of the English
-poor. His most notable quality was his vivid and energetic sympathy;
-he spent his life in hopeless battles, and he died by his own hand of
-public despair. The Bill he now introduced was the first of a series of
-proposals designed for the rescue of the agricultural labourers. It was
-backed by Sheridan and Grey,[243] and the members for Suffolk.
-
-The object of the Bill[244] was to explain and amend the Act of
-Elizabeth, which empowered Justices of the Peace at or within six weeks
-of every General Quarter Sessions held at Easter to regulate the wages
-of labourers in husbandry. The provisions of the Bill were briefly as
-follows. At any Quarter Sessions the justices could agree, if they
-thought fit, to hold a General Sessions for carrying into execution
-the powers given them by the Act. If they thought good to hold such
-a General Sessions, the majority of them could ‘rate and appoint the
-wages and fix and declare the hours of working of all labourers in
-husbandry, by the day, week, month or year, and with beer or cyder or
-without, respect being had to the value of money and the plenty or
-scarcity of the time.’ This rate was to be printed and posted on the
-church doors, and was to hold good till superseded by another made in
-the same way. The rate was not to apply to any tradesman or artificer,
-nor to any labourer whose diet was wholly provided by his employer, nor
-to any labourer _bona fide_ employed on piecework, nor to any labourer
-employed by the parish. The young, the old, and the infirm were also
-exempted from the provisions of the Act. It was to be lawful ‘to
-contract with and pay to any male person, under the age of ----[245]
-years, or to any man who from age or infirmity or any other incapacity
-shall be unable to do the ordinary work of a labouring man, so much as
-he shall reasonably deserve for the work which he shall be able to do
-and shall do.’ In case of complaint the decision as to the ability of
-the labourer rested with the justices.
-
-With the above exceptions no labourer was to be hired under the
-appointed rates, and any contract for lower wages was void. If
-convicted of breaking the law, an employer was to be fined; if he
-refused to pay the fine, his goods were to be distrained on, and
-if this failed to produce enough to pay the expenses, he could be
-committed to the common gaol or House of Correction. A labourer with
-whom an illegal contract was made was to be a competent witness.
-
-The first discussions of the Bill were friendly in tone. On 25th
-November Whitbread asked for leave to bring it in. Sir William Young,
-Lechmere, Charles Dundas, and Sir John Rous all spoke with sympathy
-and approval. The first reading debate took place on 9th December, and
-though Whitbread had on that occasion the powerful support of Fox,
-who, while not concealing his misgivings about the Bill, thought the
-alternative of leaving the great body of the people to depend on the
-charity of the rich intolerable, an ominous note was struck by Pitt and
-Henry Dundas on the other side. The Bill came up for second reading
-on 12th February 1796.[246] Whitbread’s opening speech showed that he
-was well aware that he would have to face a formidable opposition.
-Pitt rose at once after the motion had been formally seconded by one
-of the Suffolk members, and assailed the Bill in a speech that made
-an immediate and overwhelming impression. He challenged Whitbread’s
-argument that wages had not kept pace with prices; he admitted the
-hardships of the poor, but he thought the picture overdrawn, for
-their hardships had been relieved by ‘a display of beneficence never
-surpassed at any period,’ and he argued that it was a false remedy
-to use legislative interference, and to give the justices the power
-to regulate the price of labour, and to endeavour ‘to establish by
-authority what would be much better accomplished by the unassisted
-operation of principles.’ This led naturally to an attack on the
-restrictions on labour imposed by the Law of Settlement, and a
-discussion of the operation of the Poor Laws, and the speech ended,
-after a glance at the great possibilities of child employment, with
-the promise of measures which should restore the original purity of
-the Poor Laws, and make them a blessing instead of the curse they had
-become. The speech seems to have dazzled the House of Commons, and few
-stood up against the general opinion that Whitbread’s proposal was
-dangerous, and that the whole question had better be left to Pitt.
-Lechmere, a Worcestershire member, was one of them, and he made an
-admirable little speech in which he tried to destroy the general
-illusion that the poor could not be unhappy in a country where the
-rich were so kind. Whitbread himself defended his Bill with spirit
-and ability, showing that Pitt had not really found any substantial
-argument against it, and that Pitt’s own remedies were all hypothetical
-and distant. Fox reaffirmed his dislike of compulsion, but restated
-at the same time his opinion that Whitbread’s Bill, though not an
-ideal solution, was the best solution available of evils which pressed
-very hardly on the poor and demanded attention. General Smith pointed
-out that one of Pitt’s remedies was the employment of children, and
-warned him that he had himself seen some of the consequences of the
-unregulated labour of children ‘whose wan and pale complexions bespoke
-that their constitutions were already undermined, and afforded but
-little promise of a robust manhood, or of future usefulness to the
-community.’ But the general sense of the House was reflected in the
-speeches of Buxton, Coxhead and Burdon, whose main argument was that
-the poor were not in so desperate a plight as Whitbread supposed, and
-that whatever their condition might be, Pitt was the most likely person
-to find such remedies as were practicable and effective. The motion for
-second reading was negatived without a division. The verdict of the
-House was a verdict of confidence in Pitt.
-
-Four years later (11th February 1800) Whitbread repeated his
-attempt.[247] He asked for leave to bring in a Bill to explain and
-amend the Act of Elizabeth, and said that he had waited for Pitt to
-carry out his promises. He was aware of the danger of overpaying
-the poor, but artificers and labourers should be so paid as to be
-able to keep themselves and their families in comfort. He saw no
-way of securing this result in a time of distress except the way he
-had suggested. Pitt rose at once to reply. He had in the interval
-brought in and abandoned his scheme of Poor Law Reform. He had spent
-his only idea, and he was now confessedly without any policy at all.
-All that he could contribute was a general criticism of legislative
-interference, and another discourse on the importance of letting labour
-find its own level. He admitted the fact of scarcity, but he believed
-the labouring class seldom felt fewer privations. History scarcely
-provides a more striking spectacle of a statesman paying himself with
-soothing phrases in the midst of a social cyclone. The House was more
-than ever on his side. All the interests and instincts of class were
-disguised under the gold dust of Adam Smith’s philosophy. Sir William
-Young, Buxton, Wilberforce, Ellison, and Perceval attacked the Bill.
-Whitbread replied that charity as a substitute for adequate wages had
-mischievous effects, for it took away the independence of the poor,
-‘a consideration as valuable to the labourer as to the man of high
-rank,’ and as for the argument that labour should be left to find
-its own level, the truth surely was that labour found its level by
-combinations, and that this had been found to be so great an evil that
-Acts of Parliament had been passed against it.
-
-The date of the second reading of the Bill was hotly disputed:[248] the
-friends of the measure wanted it to be fixed for 28th April, so that
-Quarter Sessions might have time to deliberate on the proposals; the
-opponents of the measure suggested 25th February, on the grounds that
-it was dangerous to keep the Bill in suspense so long: ‘the eyes of all
-the labouring poor,’ said Mr. Ellison, ‘must in that interval be turned
-upon it.’ The opponents won their point, and when the Bill came up for
-second reading its fate was a foregone conclusion. Whitbread made one
-last appeal, pleading the cause of the labourers bound to practical
-serfdom in parishes where the landowner was an absentee, employed at
-starvation wages by farmers, living in cottages let to them by farmers.
-But his appeal was unheeded: Lord Belgrave retorted with the argument
-that legislative interference with agriculture could not be needed,
-seeing that five hundred Enclosure Bills had passed the House during a
-period of war, and the Bill was rejected.
-
-So died the policy of the minimum wage. Even later it had its
-adherents, for, in 1805, Sir Thomas Bernard criticised it[249] as
-the ‘favourite idea of some very intelligent and benevolent men.’ He
-mentioned as a _reductio ad absurdum_ of the scheme, that had the rate
-of wages been fixed by the standard of 1780 when the quartern loaf was
-6d. and the labourer’s pay 9s. a week, the result in 1800 when the
-quartern loaf cost 1s. 9d. would have been a wage of £1, 11s. 6d.
-
-When Whitbread introduced his large and comprehensive Poor Law Bill in
-1807,[250] the proposal for a minimum wage was not included.
-
-From an examination of the speeches of the time and of the answers
-to Arthur Young’s circular printed in the _Annals of Agriculture_,
-it is evident that there was a genuine fear among the opponents of
-the measure that if once wages were raised to meet the rise in prices
-it would not be easy to reduce them when the famine was over. This
-was put candidly by one of Arthur Young’s correspondents: ‘it is
-here judged more prudent to indulge the poor with bread corn at a
-reduced price than to raise the price of wages.’[251] The policy of
-a minimum wage was revived later by a society called ‘The General
-Association established for the Purpose of bettering the Condition of
-the Agricultural and Manufacturing Labourers.’ Three representatives of
-this society gave evidence before the Select Committee on Emigration in
-1827, and one of them pointed out as an illustration of the injustice
-with which the labourers were treated, that in 1825 the wages of
-agricultural labourers were generally 9s. a week, and the price of
-wheat 9s. a bushel, whereas in 1732 the wages of agricultural labour
-were fixed by the magistrates at 6s. a week, and the price of wheat was
-2s. 9d. the bushel. In support of this comparison he produced a table
-from _The Gentleman’s Magazine_ of 1732:--
-
- Wheat in February 1732, 23s. to 25s. per quarter.
- Wheat in March 1732, 20s. to 22s. per quarter.
-
-Yearly wages appointed by the Justices to be taken by the servants in
-the county of Kent, not exceeding the following sums:
-
- Head ploughman waggoner or seedsman £8 0 0
- His mate 4 0 0
- Best woman 3 0 0
- Second sort of woman 2 0 0
- Second ploughman 6 0 0
- His mate 3 0 0
- Labourers by day in summer 1 2
- In winter 1 0
-
-
-JUSTICES OF GLOUCESTER
-
- Head servant in husbandry 5 0 0
- Second servant in husbandry 4 0 0
- Driving boy under fourteen 1 0 0
- Head maid servant or dairy servant 2 10 0
- Mower in harvest without drink per day 1 2
- With drink 1 0
- Other day labourers with drink 1 0
- From corn to hay harvest with drink 0 8
- Mowers and reapers in corn harvest with drink 1 0
- Labourers with diet 0 4
- Without diet or drink 0 10
- Carpenter wheelwright or mason without drink 1 2
- With drink 1 0
-
-One of the witnesses pointed out that there were five millions of
-labourers making with their families eight millions, and that if the
-effect of raising their wages was to increase their expenditure by a
-penny a day, there would be an increase of consumption amounting to
-twelve millions a year. These arguments made little impression on the
-Committee, and the representations of the society were dismissed with
-contempt: ‘It is from an entire ignorance of the universal operation of
-the principle of Supply and Demand regulating the rate of wages that
-all these extravagant propositions are advanced, and recommendations
-spread over the country which are so calculated to excite false
-hopes, and consequently discontent, in the minds of the labouring
-classes. Among the most extravagant are those brought forward by the
-Society established for the purpose of bettering the condition of the
-manufacturing and agricultural labourers.’
-
-
-POOR LAW REFORM
-
-Pitt, having secured the rejection of Whitbread’s Minimum Wage Bill in
-1796, produced his own alternative: Poor Law Reform. It is necessary to
-state briefly what were the Poor Law arrangements at the time of his
-proposals.
-
-The Poor Law system reposed on the great Act of Elizabeth (1601), by
-which the State had acknowledged and organised the duty to the poor
-which it had taken over from the Church. The parish was constituted
-the unit, and overseers, unsalaried and nominated by the J.P.’s, were
-appointed for administering relief, the necessary funds being obtained
-by a poor rate. Before 1722 a candidate for relief could apply either
-to the overseers or to the magistrate. By an Act passed in that year,
-designed to make the administration stricter, application was to be
-made first to the overseer. If the overseer rejected the application
-the claimant could submit his case to a magistrate, and the magistrate,
-after hearing the overseer’s objection, could order that relief
-should be given. There were, however, a number of parishes in which
-applications for relief were made to salaried guardians. These were
-the parishes that had adopted an Act known as Gilbert’s Act, passed in
-1782.[252] In these parishes,[253] joined in incorporations, the parish
-overseers were not abolished, for they still had the duty of collecting
-and accounting for the rates, but the distribution was in the hands
-of paid guardians, one for each parish, appointed by the justices
-out of a list of names submitted by the parishioners. In each set of
-incorporated parishes there was a ‘Visitor’ appointed by the justices,
-who had practically absolute power over the guardians. If the guardians
-refused relief, the claimant could still appeal, as in the case of the
-overseers, to the justices.
-
-Such was the parish machinery. The method of giving relief varied
-greatly, but the main distinction to be drawn is between (1) out
-relief, or a weekly pension of a shilling or two at home; and (2)
-indoor relief, or relief in a workhouse, or poorhouse, or house of
-industry. Out relief was the earlier institution, and it held its own
-throughout the century, being the only form of relief in many parishes.
-Down to 1722 parishes that wished to build a workhouse had to get a
-special Act of Parliament. In that year a great impetus was given to
-the workhouse movement by an Act[254] which authorised overseers, with
-the consent of the vestry, to start workhouses, or to farm out the
-poor, and also authorised parishes to join together for this purpose.
-If applicants for relief refused to go into the workhouse, they
-forfeited their title to any relief at all. A great many workhouses
-were built in consequence of this Act: in 1732 there were stated to be
-sixty in the country, and about fifty in the metropolis.[255]
-
-Even if the applicant for relief lived in a parish which had built or
-shared in a workhouse, it did not follow that he was forced into it.
-He lost his title to receive relief outside, but his fate would depend
-on the parish officers. In the parishes which had adopted Gilbert’s
-Act the workhouse was reserved for the aged, for the infirm, and for
-young children. In most parishes there was out relief as well as indoor
-relief: in some parishes outdoor relief being allowed to applicants
-of a certain age or in special circumstances. In some parishes all
-outdoor relief had stopped by 1795.[256] There is no doubt that
-in most parishes the workhouse accommodation would have been quite
-inadequate for the needs of the parish in times of distress. It was
-quite common to put four persons into a single bed.
-
-The workhouses were dreaded by the poor,[257] not only for the dirt
-and disease and the devastating fevers that swept through them,[258]
-but for reasons that are intelligible enough to any one who has read
-Eden’s descriptions. Those descriptions show that Crabbe’s picture is
-no exaggeration:--
-
- ‘Theirs is yon House that holds the Parish-Poor,
- Whose walls of mud scarce bear the broken door;
- There, where the putrid vapours, flagging, play,
- And the dull wheel hums doleful through the day;--
- There Children dwell who know no Parents’ care;
- Parents, who know no Children’s love, dwell there!
- Heart-broken Matrons on their joyless bed,
- Forsaken Wives and Mothers never wed;
- Dejected Widows with unheeded tears,
- And crippled Age with more than childhood fears;
- The Lame, the Blind, and, far the happiest they!
- The moping Idiot and the Madman gay.
- Here too the Sick their final doom receive,
- Here brought, amid the scenes of grief, to grieve,
- Where the loud groans from some sad chamber flow,
- Mixt with the clamours of the crowd below;
- Here sorrowing, they each kindred sorrow scan,
- And the cold charities of man to man:
- Whose laws indeed for ruin’d Age provide,
- And strong compulsion plucks the scrap from pride;
- But still that scrap is bought with many a sigh,
- And pride embitters what it can’t deny.’[259]
-
-A good example of this mixture of young and old, virtuous and vicious,
-whole and sick, sane and mad, is given in Eden’s catalogue of the
-inmates of Epsom Workhouse in January 1796.[260] There were eleven
-men, sixteen women, and twenty-three children. We read of J. H., aged
-forty-three, ‘always ... somewhat of an idiot, he is now become
-quite a driveller’; of E. E., aged sixty-two, ‘of a sluggish, stupid
-character’; of A. M., aged twenty-six, ‘afflicted with a leprosy’; of
-R. M., aged seventy-seven, ‘worn out and paralytic’; of J. R., aged
-seventeen, who has contracted so many disorderly habits that decent
-people will not employ him. It is interesting to notice that it was
-not till 1790 that the Justices of the Peace were given any power of
-inspecting workhouses.
-
-In 1796, before Pitt’s scheme was brought in, the Act of 1722, which
-had been introduced to stiffen the administration of the Poor Laws,
-was relaxed. An Act,[261] of which Sir William Young was the author,
-abolished the restriction of right to relief to persons willing to
-enter the workhouse, and provided that claimants could apply for relief
-directly to a magistrate. The Act declares that the restrictions had
-been found ‘inconvenient and oppressive.’ It is evidence, of course, of
-the increasing pressure of poverty.
-
-But to understand the arrangements in force at this time, and also the
-later developments, we must glance at another feature of the Poor Law
-system. The Poor Laws were a system of employment as well as a system
-of relief. The Acts before 1722 are all called Acts for the Relief
-of the Poor: the Act of 1722 speaks of ‘the Settlement, Employment
-and Relief.’ That Act empowered parishes to farm out the poor to
-an employer. Gilbert’s Act of 1782 provided that in the parishes
-incorporated under that Act the guardians were not to send able-bodied
-poor to the poorhouse, but to find work for them or maintain them until
-work was found: the guardian was to take the wage and provide the
-labourer with a maintenance. Thus there grew up a variety of systems
-of public employment: direct employment of paupers on parish work:
-the labour rate system, or the sharing out of the paupers among the
-ratepayers: the roundsman system by which pauper labour was sold to the
-farmers.[262]
-
-This was the state of things that Pitt proposed to reform. His general
-ideas on Poor Law reform were put before the House of Commons in the
-debate on the second reading of Whitbread’s Bill.[263] He thought that
-persons with large families should be treated as entitled to relief,
-that persons without a settlement, falling into want, should not be
-liable to removal at the caprice of the parish officer, that Friendly
-Societies should be encouraged, and that Schools of Industry should be
-established. ‘If any one would take the trouble to compute the amount
-of all the earnings of the children who are already educated in this
-manner, he would be surprised, when he came to consider the weight
-which their support by their own labours took off the country, and the
-addition which, by the fruits of their toil, and the habits to which
-they were formed, was made to its internal opulence.’ On 22nd December
-of that year, in a new Parliament, he asked for leave to bring in a
-Bill for the better Support and Maintenance of the Poor. He said the
-subject was too extensive to be discussed at that stage, that he only
-proposed that the Bill should be read a first and second time and
-sent to a committee where the blanks could be filled up, and the Bill
-printed before the holidays, ‘in order that during the interval of
-Parliament it might be circulated in the country and undergo the most
-serious investigation.’[264] Sheridan hinted that it was unfortunate
-for the poor that Pitt had taken the question out of Whitbread’s hands,
-to which Pitt replied that any delay in bringing forward his Bill was
-due to the time spent on taking advice. On 28th February of the next
-year (1797), while strangers were excluded from the Gallery, there
-occurred what the _Parliamentary Register_ calls ‘a conversation upon
-the farther consideration of the report of the Poor’s Bill,’ in which
-nobody but Pitt defended the Bill, and Sheridan and Joliffe attacked
-it. With this its Parliamentary history ends.
-
-The main features of the Bill were these.[265] Schools of Industry were
-to be established in every parish or group of parishes. These schools
-were to serve two purposes. First, the young were to be trained there
-(this idea came, of course, from Locke). Every poor man with more
-than two children who were not self-supporting, and every widow with
-more than one such child, was to be entitled to a weekly allowance in
-respect of each extra child. Every allowance child who was five years
-or over was to be sent to the School of Industry, unless his parent
-could instruct and employ him, and the proceeds of his work was to go
-towards the upkeep of the school. Secondly, grown-up people were to
-be employed there. The authorities were to provide ‘a proper stock of
-hemp, flax, silk, cotton, wool, iron, leather or other materials, and
-also proper tools and implements for the employment of the poor,’ and
-they were empowered to carry on all trades under this Act, ‘any law or
-custom to the contrary notwithstanding.’ Any person lawfully settled
-in a parish was entitled to be employed in the school; any person
-residing in a parish, able and willing to be employed at the usual
-rates, was entitled to be employed there when out of work. Poor persons
-refusing to be employed there were not to be entitled to relief. The
-authorities might either pay wages at a rate fixed by the magistrates,
-or they might let the employed sell their products and merely repay the
-school for the material, or they might contract to feed them and take
-a proportion of their receipts. If the wages paid in the school were
-insufficient, they were to be supplemented out of the rates.
-
-The proposals for outside relief were briefly and chiefly these. A
-person unable to earn the full rate of wages usually given might
-contract with his employer to work at an inferior rate, and have the
-balance between his earnings and an adequate maintenance made up by
-the parish. Money might be advanced under certain circumstances for
-the purchase of a cow or other animal, if it seemed likely that such a
-course would enable the recipient to maintain himself without the help
-of the parish. The possession of property up to thirty pounds was not
-to disqualify a person for relief. A parochial insurance fund was to be
-created, partly from private subscriptions and partly from the rates.
-No person was to be removed from a parish on account of relief for
-temporary disability or sickness.
-
-The most celebrated and deadly criticism came from Bentham, who is
-often supposed to have killed the Bill. Some of his objections are
-captious and eristical, and he is a good deal less than just to the
-good elements of the scheme. Pitt deserves credit for one statesmanlike
-discovery, the discovery that it is bad policy to refuse to help a
-man until he is ruined. His cow-money proposal was also conceived in
-the right spirit if its form was impracticable. But the scheme as
-a whole was confused and incoherent, and it deserved the treatment
-it received. It was in truth a huge patchwork, on which the ideas
-of living and dead reformers were thrown together without order
-or plan. As a consequence, its various parts did not agree. It is
-surprising that the politician who had attacked Whitbread’s Bill as an
-interference with wages could have included in his scheme the proposal
-to pay wages in part out of rates. The whole scheme, though it would
-have involved a great expenditure, would have produced very much the
-same result as the Speenhamland system, by virtue of this clause. Pitt
-showed no more judgment or foresight than the least enlightened of
-County Justices in introducing into a scheme for providing relief, and
-dealing with unemployment, a proposal that could only have the effect
-of reducing wages. The organisation of Schools of Industry as a means
-of dealing with unemployment has sometimes been represented as quite
-a new proposal, but it was probably based on the suggestion made by
-Fielding in 1753 in his paper, ‘A proposal for making an effectual
-provision for the poor, for amending their morals, and for rendering
-them useful members of society.’ Fielding proposed the erection of a
-county workhouse, which was to include a house of correction. He drew
-up a sharp and drastic code which would have authorised the committal
-to his County House, not only of vagrants, but of persons of low degree
-found harbouring in an ale-house after ten o’clock at night. But the
-workhouse was not merely to be used as a penal settlement, it was
-to find work for the unemployed. Any person who was unable to find
-employment in his parish could apply to the minister or churchwardens
-for a pass, and this pass was to give him the right to claim admission
-to the County House where he was to be employed. The County House was
-also to be provided with instructors who could teach native and foreign
-manufactures to the inmates. Howlett, one of Pitt’s critics, was
-probably right in thinking that Pitt was reviving this scheme.
-
-The Bill excited general opposition. Bentham’s analysis is the most
-famous of the criticisms that have survived, but in some senses
-his opposition was less serious than the dismay of magistrates and
-ratepayers. Hostile petitions poured into the House of Commons from
-London and from all parts of the country; among others there were
-petitions from Shrewsbury, Oswestry, Worcester, Bristol, Lincoln,
-Carmarthen, Bedford, Chester and Godalming.[266] Howlett attacked the
-scheme on the ground of the danger of parish jobbery and corruption.
-Pitt apparently made no attempt to defend his plan, and he surrendered
-it without a murmur. We are thus left in the curious and disappointing
-position of having before us a Bill on the most important subject of
-the day, introduced and abandoned by the Prime Minister without a
-word or syllable in its defence. Whitbread observed[267] four years
-later that the Bill was brought in and printed, but never brought
-under the discussion of the House. Pitt’s excuse is significant: ‘He
-was, as formerly, convinced of its propriety; but many objections had
-been started to it by those whose opinion he was bound to respect.
-Inexperienced himself in country affairs, and in the condition of the
-poor, he was diffident of his own opinion, and would not press the
-measure upon the attention of the House.’
-
-Poor Law Reform was thus abandoned, but two attempts were made, at the
-instance of Pitt, one of them with success, to soften the brutalities
-of the Law of Settlement. Neither proposal made it any easier to gain
-a settlement, and Pitt very properly declared that they did not go
-nearly far enough. Pitt had all Adam Smith’s just hatred of these
-restrictions, and in opposing Whitbread’s Bill for a minimum wage he
-pointed to ‘a radical amendment’ of the Law of Settlement as the true
-remedy. He was not the formal author of the Act of 1795, but it may
-safely be assumed that he was the chief power behind it. This Act[268]
-provided that nobody was to be removeable until he or she became
-actually chargeable to the parish. The preamble throws light on the
-working of the Settlement laws. It declares that ‘Many industrious
-poor persons, chargeable to the parish, township, or place where they
-live, merely from want of work there, would in any other place where
-sufficient employment is to be had, maintain themselves and families
-without being burthensome to any parish, township, or place; and
-such poor persons are for the most part compelled to live in their
-own parishes, townships, or places, and are not permitted to inhabit
-elsewhere, under pretence that they are likely to become chargeable to
-the parish, township, or place into which they go for the purpose of
-getting employment, although the labour of such poor persons might, in
-many instances, be very beneficial to such parish, township, or place.’
-The granting of certificates is thus admitted to have been ineffectual.
-The same Act provided that orders of removal were to be suspended in
-cases where the pauper was dangerously ill, a provision that throws
-some light on the manner in which these orders had been executed, and
-that no person should gain a settlement by paying levies or taxes, in
-respect of any tenement of a yearly value of less than ten pounds.[269]
-
-From this time certificates were unnecessary, and if a labourer moved
-from Parish A to Parish B he was no longer liable to be sent back at
-the caprice of Parish B’s officers until he became actually chargeable,
-but, of course, if from any cause he fell into temporary distress, for
-example, if he were out of work for a few weeks, unless he could get
-private aid from ‘the opulent,’ he had to return to his old parish.
-An attempt was made to remedy this state of things by Mr. Baker who,
-in March 1800, introduced a Bill[270] to enable overseers to assist
-the deserving but unsettled poor in cases of temporary distress. He
-explained that the provisions of the Bill would apply only to men who
-could usually keep themselves, but from the high cost of provisions had
-to depend on parochial aid. He found a powerful supporter in Pitt, who
-argued that if people had enriched a parish with their industry, it was
-unfair that owing to temporary pressure they should be removed to a
-place where they were not wanted, and that it was better for a parish
-to suffer temporary inconvenience than for numbers of industrious men
-to be rendered unhappy and useless. But in spite of Pitt’s unanswerable
-case, the Bill, which was denounced by Mr. Buxton as oppressive to
-the landed interest, by Lord Sheffield as ‘subversive of the whole
-economy of the country,’ by Mr. Ellison as submerging the middle ranks,
-and by Sir William Pulteney as being a ‘premium for idleness and
-extravagance,’ was rejected by thirty votes to twenty-three.[271]
-
-
-ALLOTMENTS
-
-Another policy that was pressed upon the governing class was the policy
-of restoring to the labourer some of the resources he had lost with
-enclosure, of putting him in such a position that he was not obliged
-to depend entirely on the purchasing power of his wages at the shop.
-This was the aim of the allotment movement. The propaganda failed, but
-it did not fail for the want of vigorous and authoritative support. We
-have seen in a previous chapter that Arthur Young awoke in 1801 to the
-social mischief of depriving the poor of their land and their cows,
-and that he wanted future Enclosure Acts to be juster and more humane.
-Cobbett suggested a large scheme of agrarian settlement to Windham in
-1806. These proposals had been anticipated by Davies, whose knowledge
-of the actual life of the poor made him understand the important
-difference between a total and a partial dependence on wages. ‘Hope is
-a cordial, of which the poor man has especially much need, to cheer his
-heart in the toilsome journey through life. And the fatal consequence
-of that policy, which deprives labouring people of the expectation of
-possessing any property in the soil, must be the extinction of every
-generous principle in their minds.... No gentleman should be permitted
-to pull down a cottage, until he had first erected another, upon one of
-Mr. Kent’s plans, either on some convenient part of the waste, or on
-his own estate, with a certain quantity of land annexed.’ He praised
-the Act of Elizabeth which forbade the erection of cottages with less
-than four acres of land around them, ‘that poor people might secure for
-themselves a maintenance, and not be obliged on the loss of a few days
-labour to come to the parish,’[272] and urged that this prohibition,
-which had been repealed in 1775,[273] should be set up again.
-
-The general policy of providing allotments was never tried, but we
-know something of individual experiments from the Reports of the
-Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing the Comforts of the
-Poor. This society took up the cause of allotments very zealously, and
-most of the examples of private benevolence seem to have found their
-way into the pages of its reports.
-
-These experiments were not very numerous. Indeed, the name of Lord
-Winchilsea recurs so inevitably in every allusion to the subject as to
-create a suspicion that the movement and his estates were coextensive.
-This is not the truth, but it is not very wide of the truth, for
-though Lord Winchilsea had imitators, those imitators were few. The
-fullest account of his estate in Rutlandshire is given by Sir Thomas
-Bernard.[274] The estate embraced four parishes--Hambledon, Egleton,
-Greetham, and Burley on the Hill. The tenants included eighty cottagers
-possessing one hundred and seventy-four cows. ‘About a third part
-have all their land in severalty; the rest of them have the use of a
-cow-pasture in common with others; most of them possessing a small
-homestead, adjoining to their cottage; every one of them having a
-good garden, and keeping one pig at least, if not more.... Of all the
-rents of the estate, none are more punctually paid than those for the
-cottagers’ land.’ In this happy district if a man seemed likely to
-become a burden on the parish his landlord and neighbours saved the
-man’s self-respect and their own pockets as ratepayers, by setting
-him up with land and a cow instead. So far from neglecting their work
-as labourers, these proprietors of cows are described as ‘most steady
-and trusty.’ We have a picture of this little community leading a
-hard but energetic and independent life, the men going out to daily
-work, but busy in their spare hours with their cows, sheep, pigs, and
-gardens; the women and children looking after the live stock, spinning,
-or working in the gardens: a very different picture from that of the
-landless and ill-fed labourers elsewhere.
-
-Other landlords, who, acting on their own initiative, or at the
-instance of their agents, helped their cottagers by letting them land
-on which to keep cows were Lord Carrington and Lord Scarborough in
-Lincolnshire, and Lord Egremont on his Yorkshire estates (Kent was his
-agent). Some who were friendly to the allotments movement thought it a
-mistake to give allotments of arable land in districts where pasture
-land was not available. Mr. Thompson, who writes the account of Lord
-Carrington’s cottagers with cows, thought that ‘where cottagers occupy
-arable land, it is very rarely of advantage to them, and generally a
-prejudice to the estate.’[275] He seems, however, to have been thinking
-more of small holdings than of allotments. ‘The late Abel Smith,
-Esq., from motives of kindness to several cottagers on his estates in
-Nottinghamshire, let to each of them a small piece of arable land. I
-have rode over that estate with Lord Carrington several times since it
-descended to him, and I have invariably observed that the tenants upon
-it, who occupy only eight or ten acres of arable land, are poor, and
-their land in bad condition. They would thrive more and enjoy greater
-comfort with the means of keeping two or three cows each than with
-three times their present quantity of arable land; but it would be a
-greater mortification to them to be deprived of it than their landlord
-is disposed to inflict.’[276] On the other hand, a striking instance
-of successful arable allotments is described by a Mr. Estcourt in the
-Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor.[277]
-The scene was the parish of Long Newnton in Wilts, which contained
-one hundred and forty poor persons, chiefly agricultural labourers,
-distributed in thirty-two families, and the year was 1800. The price of
-provisions was very high, and ‘though all had a very liberal allowance
-from the poor rate’ the whole village was plunged in debt and misery.
-From this hopeless plight the parish was rescued by an allotment scheme
-that Mr. Estcourt established and described. Each cottager who applied
-was allowed to rent a small quantity of land at the rate of £1, 12s. an
-acre[278] on a fourteen years’ lease: the quantity of land let to an
-applicant depended on the number in his family, with a maximum of one
-and a half acres: the tenant was to forfeit his holding if he received
-poor relief other than medical relief. The offer was greedily accepted,
-two widows with large families and four very old and infirm persons
-being the only persons who did not apply for a lease. A loan of £44
-was divided among the tenants to free them from their debts and give
-them a fresh start. They were allowed a third of their plot on Lady
-Day 1801, a second third on Lady Day 1802, and the remainder on Lady
-Day 1803. The results as recorded in 1805 were astonishing. None of
-the tenants had received any poor relief: all the conditions had been
-observed: the loan of £44 had long been repaid and the poor rate had
-fallen from £212, 16s. to £12, 6s. ‘They are so much beforehand with
-the world that it is supposed that it must be some calamity still more
-severe than any they have ever been afflicted with that could put them
-under the necessity of ever applying for relief to the parish again....
-The farmers of this parish allow that they never had their work better
-done, their servants more able, willing, civil, and sober, and that
-their property was never so free from depredation as at present.’[279]
-
-Some philanthropists, full of the advantages to the poor of possessing
-live-stock, argued that it was a good thing for cottagers to keep
-cows even in arable districts. Sir Henry Vavasour wrote an account in
-1801[280] of one of his cottagers who managed to keep two cows and two
-pigs and make a profit of £30 a year on three acres three perches of
-arable with a summer’s gait for one of his cows. The man, his wife, and
-his daughter of twelve worked on the land in their spare hours. The
-Board of Agriculture offered gold medals in 1801 for the best report of
-how to keep one or two cows on arable land, and Sir John Sinclair wrote
-an essay on the subject, reproduced in the account of ‘Useful Projects’
-in the _Annual Register_.[281] Sir John Sinclair urged that if the
-system was generally adopted it would remove the popular objections to
-enclosure.
-
-Other advocates of the policy of giving the labourers land pleaded only
-for gardens in arable districts; ‘a garden,’ wrote Lord Winchilsea,
-‘may be allotted to them in almost every situation, and will be found
-of infinite use to them. In countries, where it has never been the
-custom for labourers to keep cows, it may be difficult to introduce
-it; but where no gardens have been annexed to the cottages, it is
-sufficient to give the ground, and the labourer is sure to know what
-to do with it, and will reap an immediate benefit from it. Of this I
-have had experience in several places, particularly in two parishes
-near Newport Pagnell, Bucks, where there never have been any gardens
-annexed to the labourers’ houses, and where, upon land being allotted
-to them, they all, without a single exception, have cultivated their
-gardens extremely well, and profess receiving the greatest benefits
-from them.’[282] ‘A few roods of land, at a fair rent,’ wrote a
-correspondent in the _Annals of Agriculture_ in 1796,[283] ‘would do
-a labourer as much good as wages almost doubled: there would not,
-then, be an idle hand in his family, and the man himself would often
-go to work in his root yard instead of going to the ale house.’[284]
-The interesting report on the ‘Inquiry into the General State of the
-Poor’ presented at the Epiphany General Quarter Sessions for Hampshire
-and published in the _Annals of Agriculture_,[285] a document which
-does not display too much indulgence to the shortcomings of labourers,
-recommends the multiplication of cottages with small pieces of ground
-annexed, so that labourers might live nearer their work, and spend
-the time often wasted in going to and from their work, in cultivating
-their plot of ground at home. ‘As it is chiefly this practice which
-renders even the state of slavery in the West Indies tolerable, what an
-advantage would it be to the state of free service here!’[286]
-
-The experiments in the provision of allotments of any kind were few,
-and they are chiefly interesting for the light they reflect on the
-character of the labourer of the period. They show of what those
-men and women were capable whose degradation in the morass of the
-Speenhamland system is the last and blackest page in the history of
-the eighteenth century. Their rulers put a stone round their necks,
-and it was not their character but their circumstances that dragged
-them into the mire. In villages where allotments were tried the
-agricultural labourer is an upright and self-respecting figure. The
-immediate moral effects were visible enough at the time. Sir Thomas
-Bernard’s account of the cottagers on Lord Winchilsea’s estate contains
-the following reflections: ‘I do not mean to assert that the English
-cottager, narrowed as he now is in the means and habits of life, may
-be immediately capable of taking that active and useful station in
-society, that is filled by those who are the subject of this paper.
-To produce so great an improvement in character and circumstances of
-life, will require time and attention. The cottager, however, of
-this part of the county of Rutland, _is not of a different species
-from other English cottagers_; and if he had not been protected and
-encouraged by his landlord, he would have been the same hopeless and
-comfortless creature that we see in some other parts of England. The
-farmer (with the assistance of the steward) would have taken his land;
-the creditor, his cow and pig; and the workhouse, his family.’[287]
-
-We have seen, in discussing enclosures, that the policy of securing
-allotments to the labourers in enclosure Acts was defeated by the class
-interests of the landlords. Why, it may be asked, were schemes such
-as those of Lord Winchilsea’s adopted so rarely in villages already
-enclosed? These arrangements benefited all parties. There was no
-doubt about the demand; ‘in the greatest part of this kingdom,’ wrote
-one correspondent, ‘the cottager would rejoice at being permitted to
-pay the utmost value given by the farmers, for as much land as would
-keep a cow, if he could obtain it at that price.’[288] The steadiness
-and industry of the labourers, stimulated by this incentive, were
-an advantage both to the landlords and to the farmers. Further, it
-was well known that in the villages where the labourers had land,
-poor rates were light.[289] Why was it that a policy with so many
-recommendations never took root? Perhaps the best answer is given in
-the following story. Cobbett proposed to the vestry of Bishops Walthams
-that they should ‘ask the Bishop of Winchester to grant an acre of
-waste land to every married labourer. All, however, but the village
-schoolmaster voted against it, on the ground ... that it would make the
-men “too saucy,” that they would “breed more children” and “want higher
-wages.”’[290]
-
-The truth is that enclosures and the new system of farming had set up
-two classes in antagonism to allotments, the large farmer, who disliked
-saucy labourers, and the shopkeeper, who knew that the more food the
-labourer raised on his little estate the less would he buy at the
-village store. It had been to the interest of a small farmer in the old
-common-field village to have a number of semi-labourers, semi-owners
-who could help at the harvest: the large farmer wanted a permanent
-supply of labour which was absolutely at his command. Moreover, the
-roundsman system maintained his labourers for him when he did not
-want them. The strength of the hostility of the farmers to allotments
-is seen in the language of those few landlords who were interested
-in this policy. Lord Winchilsea and his friends were always urging
-philanthropists to proceed with caution, and to try to reason the
-farmers out of their prejudices. The Report of the Poor Law Commission
-in 1834 showed that these prejudices were as strong as ever. ‘We can do
-little or nothing to prevent pauperism; the farmers will have it: they
-prefer that the labourers should be slaves; they object to their having
-gardens, saying “The more they work for themselves, the less they work
-for us.”’[291] This was the view of Boys, the writer in agricultural
-subjects, who, criticising Kent’s declaration in favour of allotments,
-remarks: ‘If farmers in general were to accommodate their labourers
-with two acres of land, a cow and two or three pigs, they would
-probably have more difficulty in getting their hard work done--as the
-cow, land, etc., would enable them to live with less earnings.’[292]
-Arthur Young and Nathaniel Kent made a great appeal to landlords and to
-landlords’ wives to interest themselves in their estates and the people
-who lived on them, but landlords’ bailiffs did not like the trouble of
-collecting a number of small rents, and most landlords preferred to
-leave their labourers to the mercy of the farmers. There was, however,
-one form of allotment that the farmers themselves liked: they would
-let strips of potato ground to labourers, sometimes at four times the
-rent they paid themselves, getting the land manured and dug into the
-bargain.[293]
-
-The Select Vestry Act of 1819[294] empowered parishes to buy or lease
-twenty acres of land, and to set the indigent poor to work on it, or
-to lease it out to any poor and industrious inhabitant. A later Act of
-1831[295] raised the limit from twenty to fifty acres, and empowered
-parishes to enclose fifty acres of waste (with the consent of those who
-had rights on it) and to lease it out for the same purposes. Little
-use was made of these Acts, and perhaps the clearest light is thrown
-on the extent of the allotment movement by a significant sentence
-that occurs in the Report of the Select Committee on Allotments in
-1843. ‘It was not until 1830, when discontent had been so painfully
-exhibited amongst the peasantry of the southern counties that this
-method of alleviating their situation was much resorted to.’ In other
-words, little was done till labourers desperate with hunger had set the
-farmers’ ricks blazing.
-
-
-THE REMEDY ADOPTED. SPEENHAMLAND
-
-The history has now been given of the several proposals made at this
-time that for one reason or another fell to the ground. A minimum wage
-was not fixed, allotments were only sprinkled with a sparing hand on an
-estate here and there, there was no revolution in diet, the problems of
-local supply and distribution were left untouched, the reconstruction
-of the Poor Law was abandoned. What means then did the governing class
-take to tranquillise a population made dangerous by hunger? The answer
-is, of course, the Speenhamland Act. The Berkshire J.P.’s and some
-discreet persons met at the Pelican Inn at Speenhamland[296] on 6th
-May 1795, and there resolved on a momentous policy which was gradually
-adopted in almost every part of England.
-
-There is a strange irony in the story of this meeting which gave such
-a fatal impetus to the reduction of wages. It was summoned in order to
-raise wages, and so make the labourer independent of parish relief. At
-the General Quarter Sessions for Berkshire held at Newbury on the 14th
-April, Charles Dundas, M.P.,[297] in his charge to the Grand Jury[298]
-dwelt on the miserable state of the labourers and the necessity of
-increasing their wages to subsistence level, instead of leaving them
-to resort to the parish officers for support for their families, as
-was the case when they worked for a shilling a day. He quoted the
-Acts of Elizabeth and James with reference to the fixing of wages.
-The Court, impressed by his speech, decided to convene a meeting for
-the rating of wages. The advertisement of the meeting shows that this
-was the only object in view. ‘At the General Quarter Sessions of the
-Peace for this county held at Newbury, on Tuesday, the 14th instant,
-the Court, having taken into consideration the great Inequality of
-Labourers’ Wages, and the insufficiency of the same for the necessary
-support of an industrious man and his family; and it being the opinion
-of the Gentlemen assembled on the Grand Jury, that many parishes
-have not advanced their labourers’ weekly pay in proportion to the
-high price of corn and provisions, do (in pursuance of the Acts of
-Parliament, enabling and requiring them so to do, either at the Easter
-Sessions, yearly, or within six weeks next after) earnestly request the
-attendance of the Sheriff, and all the Magistrates of this County, at
-a Meeting intended to be held at the Pelican Inn in Speenhamland, on
-Wednesday, the sixth day of May next, at ten o’clock in the forenoon,
-for the purpose of consulting together with such discreet persons as
-they shall think meet, and they will then, having respect to the plenty
-and scarcity of the time, and other circumstances (if approved of)
-proceed to limit, direct, and appoint the wages of day labourers.’[299]
-
-The meeting was duly held on 6th May.[300] Mr. Charles Dundas was in
-the chair, and there were seventeen other magistrates and discreet
-persons present, of whom seven were clergymen. It was resolved
-unanimously ‘that the present state of the poor does require further
-assistance than has been generally given them.’ Of the details of the
-discussion no records have come down to us, nor do we know by what
-majority the second and fatal resolution rejecting the rating of wages
-and substituting an allowance policy was adopted. According to Eden,
-the arguments in favour of adopting the rating of wages were ‘that
-by enforcing a payment for labour, from the employers, in proportion
-to the price of bread, some encouragement would have been held out
-to the labourer, as what he would have received, would have been
-payment for labour. He would have considered it as his right, and
-not as charity.’[301] But these arguments were rejected, and a pious
-recommendation to employers to raise wages, coupled with detailed
-directions for supplementing those wages from parish funds, adopted
-instead.[302] The text of the second resolution runs thus: ‘Resolved,
-that it is not expedient for the Magistrates to grant that assistance
-by regulating the wages of Day Labourers according to the directions of
-the Statutes of the 5th Elizabeth and 1st James: But the Magistrates
-very earnestly recommend to the Farmers and others throughout the
-county to increase the Pay of their Labourers in proportion to the
-present Price of Provisions; and agreeable thereto the Magistrates now
-present have unanimously Resolved, That they will in their several
-divisions, make the following calculations and allowances for the
-relief of all poor and industrious men and their families, who, to the
-satisfaction of the Justices of their parish, shall endeavour (as far
-as they can), for their own support and maintenance, that is to say,
-when the gallon loaf of second flour, weighing 8 lbs. 11 oz. shall
-cost one shilling, then every poor and industrious man shall have for
-his own support 3s. weekly, either produced by his own or his family’s
-labour or an allowance from the poor rates, and for the support of his
-wife and every other of his family 1s. 6d. When the gallon loaf shall
-cost 1s. 4d., then every poor and industrious man shall have 4s. weekly
-for his own, and 1s. 10d. for the support of every other of his family.
-
-‘And so in proportion as the price of bread rises or falls (that is to
-say), 3d. to the man and 1d. to every other of the family, on every
-penny which the loaf rises above a shilling.’
-
-In other words, it was estimated that the man must have three gallon
-loaves a week, and his wife and each child one and a half.
-
-It is interesting to notice that at this same famous Speenhamland
-meeting the justices ‘wishing, as much as possible, to alleviate the
-Distresses of the Poor with as little burthen on the occupiers of the
-Land as possible’ recommended overseers to cultivate land for potatoes
-and to give the workers a quarter of the crop, selling the rest at one
-shilling a bushel; overseers were also recommended to purchase fuel and
-to retail it at a loss.
-
-The Speenhamland policy was not a full-blown invention of that unhappy
-May morning in the Pelican Inn. The principle had already been adopted
-elsewhere. At the Oxford Quarter Sessions on 13th January 1795, the
-justices had resolved that the following incomes were ‘absolutely
-necessary for the support of the poor, industrious labourer, and that
-when the utmost industry of a family cannot produce the undermentioned
-sums, it must be made up by the overseer, exclusive of rent, viz.:--
-
-‘A single Man according to his labour.
-
-‘A Man and his Wife not less than 6s. a week.
-
-‘A Man and his Wife with one or two Small Children, not less than 7s. a
-week.
-
-‘And for every additional Child not less than 1s. a week.’ This
-regulation was to be sent to all overseers within the county.[303]
-
-But the Speenhamland magistrates had drawn up a table which became
-a convenient standard, and other magistrates found it the simplest
-course to accept the table as it stood. The tables passed rapidly from
-county to county. The allowance system spread like a fever, for while
-it is true to say that the northern counties took it much later and
-in a milder form, there were only two counties still free from it in
-1834--Northumberland and Durham.
-
-To complete our picture of the new system we must remember the results
-of Gilbert’s Act. It had been the practice in those parishes that
-adopted the Act to reserve the workhouse for the infirm and to find
-work outside for the unemployed, the parish receiving the wages of
-such employment and providing maintenance. This outside employment
-had spread to other parishes, and the way in which it had been worked
-may be illustrated by cases mentioned by Eden, writing in the summer
-and autumn of 1795. At Kibworth-Beauchamp in Leicestershire, ‘in the
-winter, and at other times, when a man is out of work, he applies to
-the overseer, who sends him from house to house to get employ: the
-housekeeper, who employs him, is obliged to give him victuals, and 6d.
-a day; and the parish adds 4d.; (total 10d. a day;) for the support
-of his family: persons working in this manner are called rounds-men,
-from their going round the village or township for employ.’[304] At
-Yardley Goben, in Northamptonshire, every person who paid more than
-£20 rent was bound in his turn to employ a man for a day and to pay
-him a shilling.[305] At Maids Morton the roundsman got 6d. from the
-employer and 6d. or 9d. from the parish.[306] At Winslow in Bucks the
-system was more fully developed. ‘There seems to be here a great want
-of employment: most labourers are (as it is termed,) _on the Rounds_;
-that is, they go to work from one house to another _round_ the parish.
-In winter, sometimes 40 persons are on the rounds. They are wholly paid
-by the parish, unless the householders choose to employ them; and from
-these circumstances, labourers often become very lazy, and imperious.
-Children, about ten years old, are put on the rounds, and receive
-from the parish from 1s. 6d. to 3s. a week.’[307] The Speenhamland
-systematised scale was easily grafted on to these arrangements. ‘During
-the late dear season, the Poor of the parish went in a body to the
-Justices, to complain of their want of bread. The Magistrates sent
-orders to the parish officers to raise the earnings of labourers, to
-certain weekly sums, according to the number of their children; a
-circumstance that should invariably be attended to in apportioning
-parochial relief. These sums were from 7s. to 19s.; and were to be
-reduced, proportionably with the price of bread.’[308]
-
-The Speenhamland system did not then spring Athene-like out of the
-heads of the justices and other discreet persons whose place of meeting
-has given the system its name. Neither was the unemployment policy
-thereafter adopted a sudden inspiration of the Parliament of 1796. The
-importance of these years is that though the governing classes did
-not then introduce a new principle, they applied to the normal case
-methods of relief and treatment that had hitherto been reserved for the
-exceptions. The Poor Law which had once been the hospital became now
-the prison of the poor. Designed to relieve his necessities, it was now
-his bondage. If a labourer was in private employment, the difference
-between the wage his master chose to give him and the recognised
-minimum was made up by the parish. Those labourers who could not find
-private employment were either shared out among the ratepayers, or else
-their labour was sold by the parish to employers, at a low rate, the
-parish contributing what was needed to bring the labourers’ receipts up
-to scale. Crabbe has described the roundsman system:
-
- ‘Alternate Masters now their Slave command,
- Urge the weak efforts of his feeble hand,
- And when his age attempts its task in vain,
- With ruthless taunts, of lazy poor complain.’[309]
-
-The meshes of the Poor Law were spread over the entire labour system.
-The labourers, stripped of their ancient rights and their ancient
-possessions, refused a minimum wage and allotments, were given instead
-a universal system of pauperism. This was the basis on which the
-governing class rebuilt the English village. Many critics, Arthur
-Young and Malthus among them, assailed it, but it endured for forty
-years, and it was not disestablished until Parliament itself had passed
-through a revolution.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[184] Eden, vol. i. p. 495.
-
-[185] Resolution of Privy Council, July 6, 1795, and Debate and
-Resolution in House of Commons. _Parliamentary Register_, December 11,
-1795, and Lord Sheffield in _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 31.
-
-[186] See _Senator_ for March 1, 1796, p. 1147.
-
-[187] See Wilberforce’s speech, _Parliamentary Register_ and _Senator_,
-February 18, 1800.
-
-[188] Eden, vol. ii. pp. 104-6.
-
-[189] _Ibid._, p. 15.
-
-[190] _Ibid._, p. 280.
-
-[191] _Ibid._, p. 426.
-
-[192] See _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxiv. pp. 63, 171, 177, 204,
-285, 316, etc.
-
-[193] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 678.
-
-[194] Eden, vol. i. p. 533.
-
-[195] Perhaps the unpopularity of soup is partly explained by a letter
-published in the _Annals of Agriculture_ in December 1795, vol. xxvi.
-p. 215. The writer says it is the custom for most families in the
-country ‘to give their poor neighbours the pot liquor, that is, the
-liquor in which any meat has been boiled, and to which they sometimes
-add the broken bread from the parlour and kitchen tables: this,’ he
-adds, ‘makes but an indifferent mess.’ The publications of the time
-contain numerous recipes for cheap soups: ‘the power of giving an
-increased effect to Christian benevolence by these soups’ (_Reports on
-Poor_, vol. i. p. 167) was eagerly welcomed. Cf. Mrs. Shore’s account
-of stewed ox’s head for the poor, according to which, at the cost of
-2s. 6d. with the leavings of the family, a savoury mess for fifty-two
-persons could be prepared (_Ibid._, p. 60).
-
-[196] Davies, pp. 31-2.
-
-[197] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 455.
-
-[198] _Parliamentary Register_, November 2, 1795.
-
-[199] Eden, vol. iii. p. 769.
-
-[200] _Ibid._, vol. ii. p. 97.
-
-[201] _Ibid._, p. 621.
-
-[202] _Ibid._, p. 645.
-
-[203] In many budgets no milk is included.
-
-[204] _Reports on Poor_, vol. iv. p. 151.
-
-[205] Davies, p. 104.
-
-[206] _Reports on Poor_, vol. ii. p. 178.
-
-[207] Vol. ii. p. 587.
-
-[208] _Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 134; another reason for the dearth
-of milk was the growing consumption of veal in the towns. Davies says
-(p. 19), ‘Suckling is here so profitable (to furnish veal for London)
-that the poor can seldom either buy or beg milk.’
-
-[209] P. 27.
-
-[210] See _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. pp. 367-8.
-
-[211] Davies, p. 37.
-
-[212] _Ibid._, p. 39.
-
-[213] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxvi. p. 121.
-
-[214] The dearness of malt was another fact which helped the
-introduction of tea. Cf. Davies, p. 38: ‘Time was when _small beer_ was
-reckoned one of the necessaries of life, even in poor families.’
-
-[215] Lecky, _History of England in Eighteenth Century_, vol. ii. p.
-318.
-
-[216] In connection with the dearth of milk it is important to notice
-the rise in the price of cheese. ‘Poor people,’ says Davies, (p. 19),
-‘reckon cheese the dearest article they can use’ (cf. also p. 143), and
-in his comparison of prices in the middle of the eighteenth century
-with those of 1787-94 he gives the price of 112 lbs. of cheese at
-Reading Fair as from 17s. to 21s. in the first period, and 40s. to
-46s. in the second. Retail cheese of an inferior sort had risen from
-2-1/2d. or 3d. a lb. to 4-1/2d. or 5d. (p. 65); cf. also correspondent
-in _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. ii. p. 442. ‘Every inhabitant of Bath
-must be sensible that butter and cheese have risen in price one-third,
-or more, within these twenty years.’ (Written in 1784).
-
-[217] _Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 129.
-
-[218] _Ibid._, vol. iii. p. 78.
-
-[219] _Annual Register_, 1806, p. 974; ‘My local situation afforded
-me ample means of knowing how greatly the lower orders suffered from
-being unable to procure a supply of milk; and I am fully persuaded of
-the correctness of the statement that the labouring poor lose a number
-of their children from the want of a food so pre-eminently adapted to
-their support’; cf. also Curwen’s _Hints_.
-
-[220] Eden, vol. i. p. 510.
-
-[221] Vol. iii. p. 96.
-
-[222] Eden, vol. iii. p. 694.
-
-[223] Cf. _Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 43; ‘Where there are commons,
-the ideal advantage of cutting flags, peat, or whins, often causes
-a poor man to spend more time in procuring such fuel, than, if he
-reckoned his labour, would purchase for him double the quantity of good
-firing.’
-
-[224] Vol. iv. p. 496.
-
-[225] Vol. ii. p. 587.
-
-[226] Davies, p. 28.
-
-[227] _Ibid._, p. 118.
-
-[228] Eden, vol. iii. p. 805.
-
-[229] P. 179.
-
-[230] Cf. also Eden’s description of a labourer’s expenses, vol. iii.
-p. 797, where he says that whilst hedging and ditching, they are
-allowed to take home a faggot every evening, whilst the work lasts,
-‘but this is by no means sufficient for his consumption: his children,
-therefore, are sent into the fields, to collect wood where they can;
-and neither hedges nor trees are spared by the young marauders, who are
-thus, in some degree, educated in the art of thieving.’
-
-[231] Vol. ii. p. 231.
-
-[232] Cf. also for the difficulties of the poor in getting fuel, the
-account by the Rev. Dr. Glasse; _Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 58.
-‘Having long observed, that there is scarcely any article of life, in
-respect to which the poor are under greater difficulties, or for the
-supply of which they have stronger temptations to dishonest practices,
-than that of fuel,’ he laid up in summer a store of coals in Greenford
-(Middlesex), and Wanstead, and sold them rather under original cost
-price, carriage free, in winter. ‘The benefit arising from the relief
-afforded them in this article of coals, is obvious: they are habituated
-to pay for what they have; whereas at the shop they ran in debt.
-When their credit was at an end, they contrived to do without coals,
-by having recourse to wood-stealing; than which I know no practise
-which tends more effectually to introduce into young minds a habit of
-dishonesty; it is also very injurious to the farmer, and excites a
-degree of resentment in his breast, which, in many instances, renders
-him averse to affording relief to the poor, even when real necessity
-calls loudly for it.’
-
-[233] 20 George II. c. 19.
-
-[234] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 305 ff.
-
-[235] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 298.
-
-[236] _Parliamentary Register_, December 9, 1795.
-
-[237] _Ibid._, February 12, 1796.
-
-[238] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxv. p. 345.
-
-[239] _Ibid._, p. 316.
-
-[240] _An Examination of Mr. Pitt’s Speech in the House of Commons,
-February 12, 1796._
-
-[241] P. 106 ff.
-
-[242] _Annals of Agriculture_, 1795, vol. xxv. p. 503.
-
-[243] _Parliamentary Debates._
-
-[244] Printed in _Parliamentary Papers_ for 1795-6.
-
-[245] The age was not filled up.
-
-[246] For report of debate see _Parliamentary Register_ for that date.
-
-[247] See _Parliamentary Register_.
-
-[248] See _Parliamentary Register_, February 14, 1800.
-
-[249] _Reports on Poor_, vol. v. p. 23.
-
-[250] See p. 179.
-
-[251] _Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxvi. p. 178.
-
-[252] 22 George III. c. 83.
-
-[253] In 1834 there were 924 comprised in 67 incorporations (Nicholls,
-vol. ii. p. 91.)
-
-[254] 9 George I. c. 7.
-
-[255] Eden, vol. i. p. 269.
-
-[256] _E.g._ Oxford and Shrewsbury.
-
-[257] There is a significant entry in the Abstracts of Returns to
-the 1775 Poor Relief Committee in reference to the building of that
-death-trap, the Bulcamp House of Industry. ‘In the Expences for
-Building is included £500 for building a Part which was pulled down by
-a Mob.’
-
-[258] At Heckingham in Norfolk a putrid fever, in 1774, killed 126
-out of 220 inmates (Eden, vol. ii. p. 473, quoting Howlett); cf. also
-Ruggles, _History of the Poor_, vol. ii. p. 266.
-
-[259] ‘The Village,’ pp. 16 and 17.
-
-[260] Eden, vol. iii. p. 694 ff.
-
-[261] 36 George III. c. 23.
-
-[262] The last of these systems had been included in a Bill introduced
-by Sir William Young in 1788. ‘In order to relieve agricultural
-labourers, who are often, during the winter, out of employment, the
-vestry in every parish is empowered, by notice affixed to the church
-door, to settle a rate of wages to be paid to labourers out of employ,
-from the 30th Nov. to the 28th of Feb.; and to distribute and send
-them round in rotation to the parishioners, proportionally as they pay
-to the Rates; to be paid by the person employing them two-thirds of
-the wages so settled, and one-third by the parish-officers out of the
-Rates.’--Eden, vol. i. p. 397.
-
-[263] _Parliamentary Register_, February 12, 1796.
-
-[264] _Ibid._, December 22, 1796.
-
-[265] The Bill is printed in House of Commons Papers, 1796. The ‘Heads
-of the Bill’ as circulated appear in the _Annals of Agriculture_, vol.
-xxvi. pp. 260 ff. and 359 ff. Eden gives in the form of Appendices (1)
-the Heads of the Bill, (2) the Amendments introduced in Committee.
-
-[266] _House of Commons Journal._
-
-[267] _Parliamentary Register_, February 11, 1800.
-
-[268] 35 George III. c. 101.
-
-[269] For Whitbread’s proposals to amend the Law of Settlement in 1807
-see next chapter. An attempt was made in 1819 (59 George III. c. 50) to
-define and simplify the conditions under which the hiring of a tenement
-of £10 annual value conferred the right to a settlement. The term
-of residence was extended to a year, the nature of the tenement was
-defined, and it was laid down that the rent must be £10, and paid for
-a whole year. But so unsuccessful was this piece of legislation that
-it was found necessary to pass a second Act six years later (1826, 6
-George IV. c. 57), and a third Act in 1831 (1 William IV. c. 18).
-
-[270] _Senator_, March 1800.
-
-[271] See Debates in _Senator_, March 31 and April 3, 1800, and
-_Parliamentary Register_. Cf. for removals for temporary distress, Sir
-Thomas Bernard’s Charge to Overseers in the Hundred of Stoke. Bucks.
-_Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 260. ‘With regard to the removal of
-labourers belonging to other parishes, consider thoroughly what you
-may lose, and what the individual may suffer, by the removal, before
-you apply to us on the subject. Where you have had, for a long time,
-the benefit of their labour, and where all they want is a little
-_temporary_ relief, reflect whether, after so many years spent in your
-service, this is the _moment_ and the _cause_, for removing them from
-the scene of their daily labour to a distant parish, etc.’ (1798).
-
-[272] Davies, pp. 102-4.
-
-[273] 15 George III. c. 32.
-
-[274] _Reports on Poor_, vol. ii. p. 171.
-
-[275] _Reports on Poor_, vol. ii. p. 136.
-
-[276] _Ibid._, p. 137.
-
-[277] _Ibid._, vol. v. p. 66.
-
-[278] Mr. Estcourt mentions that the land ‘would let to a farmer at
-about 20s. per acre now.’
-
-[279] It is interesting to find that these allotments were still
-being let out successfully in 1868. See p. 4145 of the Report on the
-Employment of Children, Young Persons, and Women in Agriculture, 1868.
-
-[280] _Reports on Poor_, vol. iii. p. 329.
-
-[281] 1803, p. 850.
-
-[282] _Reports on Poor_, vol. i. p. 100.
-
-[283] Vol. xxvi. p. 4.
-
-[284] The most distinguished advocate of this policy was William
-Marshall, the agricultural writer who published a strong appeal for
-the labourers in his book _On the Management of Landed Estates_, 1806,
-p. 155; cf. also Curwen’s _Hints_, p. 239: ‘A farther attention to the
-cottager’s comfort is attended with little cost; I mean giving him a
-small garden, and planting that as well as the walls of his house with
-fruit trees.’
-
-[285] Vol. xxv. p. 349.
-
-[286] _Ibid._, p. 358.
-
-[287] _Reports on Poor_, vol. ii. p. 184.
-
-[288] _Ibid._, p. 134.
-
-[289] Cf. _Poor Law Report_, 1817, Appendix G, p. 4.
-
-[290] Capes, _Rural Life in Hampshire_, p. 282.
-
-[291] _Poor Law Report_, 1834, p. 61; cf. _ibid._, p. 185.
-
-[292] Notes to Kent’s _Norfolk_, p. 178.
-
-[293] See _Poor Law Report_, 1834, p. 181, and _Allotments Committee_,
-1843, p. 108.
-
-[294] 59 George III. c. 12.
-
-[295] 1 and 2 William IV. c. 42.
-
-[296] Speenhamland is now part of Newbury. The Pelican Inn has
-disappeared, but the Pelican Posting House survives.
-
-[297] Charles Dundas, afterwards Lord Amesbury, 1751-1832; Liberal M.P.
-for Berkshire, 1794-1832, nominated by Sheridan for the Speakership in
-1802 but withdrew.
-
-[298] _Reading Mercury_, April 20, 1795.
-
-[299] _Reading Mercury_, April 20, 1795.
-
-[300] See _Ibid._, May 11, 1795.
-
-[301] Eden, vol. i. p. 578.
-
-[302] On the same day a ‘respectable meeting’ at Basingstoke, with
-the Mayor in the chair, was advocating the fixing of labourers’ wages
-in accordance with the price of wheat without any reference to parish
-relief.--_Reading Mercury_, May 11, 1795.
-
-[303] See _Ipswich Journal_, February 7, 1795, and _Reading Mercury_,
-July 6, 1795.
-
-[304] Eden, vol. ii. p. 384.
-
-[305] _Ibid._, p. 548.
-
-[306] _Ibid._, p. 27.
-
-[307] Eden, vol. ii. p. 29.
-
-[308] _Ibid._, p. 32.
-
-[309] ‘The Village,’ Book I.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-AFTER SPEENHAMLAND
-
-
-The Speenhamland system is often spoken of as a piece of pardonable
-but disastrous sentimentalism on the part of the upper classes. This
-view overlooks the predicament in which these classes found themselves
-at the end of the eighteenth century. We will try to reconstruct the
-situation and to reproduce their state of mind. Agriculture, which
-had hitherto provided most people with a livelihood, but few people
-with vast fortunes, had become by the end of the century a great
-capitalist and specialised industry. During the French war its profits
-were fabulous, and they were due partly to enclosures, partly to the
-introduction of scientific methods, partly to the huge prices caused
-by the war. It was producing thus a vast surplus over and above the
-product necessary for maintenance and for wear and tear. Consequently,
-as students of Mr. Hobson’s _Industrial System_ will perceive, there
-arose an important social problem of distribution, and the Poor Law was
-closely involved with it.
-
-This industry maintained, or helped to maintain, four principal
-interests: the landlords, the tithe-owners, the farmers, and the
-labourers. Of these interests the first two were represented in the
-governing class, and in considering the mind of that class we may
-merge them into one. The sympathies of the farmers were rather with
-the landlords than with the labourers, but their interests were not
-identical. The labourers were unrepresented either in the Government or
-in the voting power of the nation. If the forces had been more equally
-matched, or if Parliament had represented all classes, the surplus
-income of agriculture would have gone to increase rents, tithes,
-profits, and wages. It might, besides turning the landlords into great
-magnates like the cotton lords of Lancashire, and throwing up a race of
-farmers with scarlet coats and jack boots, have raised permanently the
-standard and character of the labouring class, have given them a decent
-wage and decent cottages. The village population whose condition, as
-Whitbread said, was compared by supporters of the slave trade with that
-of the negroes in the West Indies, to its disadvantage, might have been
-rehoused on its share of this tremendous revenue. In fact, the revenue
-went solely to increase rent, tithes, and to some extent profits.
-The labourers alone had made no advance when the halcyon days of the
-industry clouded over and prices fell. The rent receiver received
-more rent than was needed to induce him to let his land, the farmer
-made larger profits than were necessary to induce him to apply his
-capital and ability to farming, but the labourer received less than was
-necessary to maintain him, the balance being made up out of the rates.
-Thus not only did the labourer receive no share of this surplus; he did
-not even get his subsistence directly from the product of his labour.
-Now let us suppose that instead of having his wages made up out of the
-rates he had been paid a maintenance wage by the farmer. The extra cost
-would have come out of rent to the same extent as did the subsidy from
-the rates. The landlord therefore made no sacrifice in introducing the
-Speenhamland system, for though the farmers thought that they could
-obtain a reduction of rent more easily if they could plead high rates
-than if they pleaded the high price of labour,[310] it is obvious that
-the same conditions which produced a reduction of rents in the one case
-must ultimately have produced a reduction in the other. As it was, none
-of this surplus went to labour, and the proportion in which it was
-divided between landlord and farmer was not affected by the fact that
-the labourer was kept alive partly from the rates and not wholly from
-wages.[311]
-
-Now the governing class which was confronted with the situation that
-we have described in a previous chapter consisted of two classes who
-had both contrived to slip off their obligations to the State. They
-were both essentially privileged classes. The landlords were not
-in the eye of history absolute owners; they had held their land on
-several conditions, one of which was the liability to provide military
-services for the Crown, and this obligation they had commuted into a
-tax on the nation. The tithe-owners had for centuries appropriated to
-their own use a revenue that was designed in part for the poor. Tithes
-were originally taxation for four objects: (1) the bishop; (2) the
-maintenance of the fabric of the Church; (3) the relief of the poor;
-(4) the incumbent. After the endowment of the bishopricks the first of
-these objects dropped out. The poor had not a very much longer life.
-It is true that the clergy were bidden much later to use tithes, _non
-quasi suis sed quasi commendatis_, and Dryden in his character of the
-Good Parson had described their historical obligations:
-
- ‘True priests, he said, and preachers of the Word
- Were only stewards of their sovereign Lord:
- Nothing was theirs but all the public store,
- Intrusted riches to relieve the poor.’
-
-The right of the poor to an allowance from the tithes was declared in
-an Act of Richard II. and an Act of Henry IV. After that it disappears
-from view. Of course, great masses of tithe property had passed, by
-the time we are considering, into secular hands. The monasteries
-appropriated about a third of the livings of England, and the tithes
-in these parishes passed at the Reformation to the Crown, whence they
-passed in grants to private persons. No responsibility for the poor
-troubled either the lay or spiritual owners of tithes, and though
-they used the name of God freely in defending their claims, they were
-stewards of God in much the same sense as George IV. was the defender
-of the faith. The landowners and tithe-owners had their differences
-when it came to an Enclosure Bill, but these classes had the same
-interests in the disposal of the surplus profits of agriculture; and
-both alike were in a vulnerable position if the origin and history of
-their property came under too fierce a discussion.
-
-There was a special reason why the classes that had suddenly become
-very much richer should dread too searching a discontent at this
-moment. They had seen tithes, and all seignorial dues abolished
-almost at a single stroke across the Channel, and they were at this
-time associating constantly with the emigrant nobility of France,
-whose prospect of recovering their estates seemed to fade into a more
-doubtful distance with every battle that was fought between the France
-who had given the poor peasant such a position as the peasant enjoyed
-nowhere else, and her powerful neighbour who had made her landlords
-the richest and proudest class in Europe. The French Convention had
-passed a decree (November 1792), declaring that ‘wherever French
-armies shall come, all taxes, tithes, and privileges of rank are to
-be abolished, all existing authorities cancelled, and provisional
-administrations elected by universal suffrage. The property of the
-fallen Government, of the privileged classes and their adherents to be
-placed under French protection.’ This last sentence had an unpleasant
-ring about it; it sounded like a terse paraphrase of _non quasi suis
-sed quasi commendatis_. In point of fact there was not yet any violent
-criticism of the basis of the social position of the privileged classes
-in England. Even Paine, when he suggested a scheme of Old Age Pensions
-for all over fifty, and a dowry for every one on reaching the age of
-twenty-one, had proposed to finance it by death duties. Thelwall,
-who wrote with a not unnatural bitterness about the great growth of
-ostentatious wealth at a time when the poor were becoming steadily
-poorer, told a story which illustrated very well the significance of
-the philanthropy of the rich. ‘I remember I was once talking to a
-friend of the charity and benevolence exhibited in this country, when
-stopping me with a sarcastic sneer, “Yes,” says he, “we steal the
-goose, and we give back the giblets.” “No,” said a third person who was
-standing by, “giblets are much too dainty for the common herd, we give
-them only the pen feathers.”’[312] But the literature of Radicalism
-was not inflammatory, and the demands of the dispossessed were for
-something a good deal less than their strict due. The richer classes,
-however, were naturally anxious to soothe and pacify the poor before
-discontent spread any further, and the Speenhamland system turned out,
-from their point of view, a very admirable means to that end, for it
-provided a maintenance for the poor by a method which sapped their
-spirit and disarmed their independence. They were anxious that the
-labourers should not get into the way of expecting a larger share in
-the profits of agriculture, and at the same time they wanted to make
-them contented. Thelwall[313] stated that when he was in the Isle of
-Wight, the farmers came to a resolution to raise the price of labour,
-and that they were dissuaded by one of the greatest proprietors in the
-island, who called a meeting and warned the farmers that they would
-make the common people insolent and would never be able to reduce their
-wages again.
-
-An account of the introduction of the system into Warwickshire and
-Worcestershire illustrates very well the state of mind in which this
-policy had its origin. ‘In Warwickshire, the year 1797 was mentioned
-as the date of its commencement in that county, and the scales of
-relief giving it authority were published in each of these counties
-previously to the year 1800. It was apprehended by many at that time,
-that either the wages of labour would rise to a height from which it
-would be difficult to reduce them when the cause for it had ceased,
-or that during the high prices the labourers might have had to endure
-privations to which it would be unsafe to expose them. To meet the
-emergency of the time, various schemes are said to have been adopted,
-such as weekly distributions of flour, providing families with clothes,
-or maintaining entirely a portion of their families, until at length
-the practice became general, and a right distinctly admitted by the
-magistrates was claimed by the labourer to parish relief, on the ground
-of inadequate wages and number in family. I was informed that the
-consequences of the system were not wholly unforeseen at the time, as
-affording a probable inducement to early marriages and large families;
-but at this period there was but little apprehension on that ground.
-A prevalent opinion, supported by high authority, that population was
-in itself a source of wealth, precluded all alarm. The demands for the
-public service were thought to endure a sufficient draught for any
-surplus people; and it was deemed wise by many persons at this time
-to present the Poor Laws to the lower classes, as an institution for
-their advantage, peculiar to this country; and to encourage an opinion
-among them, that by this means their own share in the property of the
-kingdom was recognised.’[314] To the landlords the Speenhamland system
-was a safety-valve in two ways. The farmers got cheap labour, and the
-labourers got a maintenance, and it was hoped thus to reconcile both
-classes to high rents and the great social splendour of their rulers.
-There was no encroachment on the surplus profits of agriculture, and
-landlords and tithe-owners basked in the sunshine of prosperity. It
-would be a mistake to represent the landlords as deliberately treating
-the farmers and the labourers on the principle which Cæsar boasted
-that he had applied with such success, when he borrowed money from his
-officers to give it to his soldiers, and thus contrived to attach both
-classes to his interest; but that was in effect the result and the
-significance of the Speenhamland system.
-
-This wrong application of those surplus profits was one element in
-the violent oscillations of trade during the generation after the
-war. A long war adding enormously to the expenditure of Government
-must disorganise industry seriously in any case, and in this case the
-demoralisation was increased by a bad currency system. The governing
-class, which was continually meditating on the subject of agricultural
-distress, holding inquiries, and appointing committees, never conceived
-the problem as one of distribution. The Select Committee of 1833 on
-Agriculture, for example, expressly disclaims any interest in the
-question of rents and wages, treating these as determined by a law
-of Nature, and assuming that the only question for a Government was
-the question of steadying prices by protection. What they did not
-realise was that a bad distribution of profits was itself a cause of
-disturbance. The most instructive speech on the course of agriculture
-during the French war was that in which Brougham showed in the House
-of Commons, on 9th April 1816, how the country had suffered from
-over-production during the wild elation of high prices, and how a
-tremendous system of speculative farming had been built up, entangling
-a variety of interests in this gamble. If those days had been employed
-to raise the standard of life among the labourers and to increase their
-powers of consumption, the subsequent fall would have been broken.
-The economists of the time looked on the millions of labourers as an
-item of cost, to be regarded like the price of raw material, whereas
-it is clear that they ought to have been regarded also as affording
-the best and most stable of markets. The landlord or the banker who
-put his surplus profits into the improvement and cultivation of land,
-only productive under conditions that could not last and could not
-return, was increasing unemployment in the future, whereas if the same
-profits had been distributed in wages among the labourers, they would
-have permanently increased consumption and steadied the vicissitudes
-of trade. Further, employment would have been more regular in another
-respect, for the landowner spent his surplus on luxuries, and the
-labourer spent his wages on necessaries.
-
-Now labour might have received its share of these profits either in an
-increase of wages, or in the expenditure of part of the revenue in a
-way that was specially beneficial to it. Wages did not rise, and it was
-a felony to use any pressure to raise them. What was the case of the
-poor in regard to taxation and expenditure? Taxation was overwhelming.
-A Herefordshire farmer stated that in 1815 the rates and taxes on a
-farm of three hundred acres in that county were:--
-
- £ _s._ _d._
- Property tax, landlord and tenant 95 16 10
- Great tithes 64 17 6
- Lesser tithes 29 15 0
- Land tax 14 0 0
- Window lights 24 1 6
- Poor rates, landlord 10 0 0
- Poor rates, tenant 40 0 0
- Cart-horse duty, landlord, 3 horses 2 11 0
- Two saddle horses, landlord 9 0 0
- Gig 6 6 0
- Cart-horse duty, tenant 7 2 0
- One saddle horse, tenant 2 13 6
- Landlord’s malt duty on 60 bushels of barley 21 0 0
- Tenant’s duty for making 120 bushels of barley
- into malt 42 0 0
- New rate for building shire hall, paid by landlord 9 0 0
- New rate for building shire hall, paid by tenant 3 0 0
- Surcharge 2 8 0
- ----------
- £383 11 4[315]
- ----------
-
-The _Agricultural and Industrial Magazine_, a periodical published by
-a philanthropical society in 1833, gave the following analysis of the
-taxation of a labourer earning £22, 10s. a year:--
-
- £ _s._ _d._
- 1. Malt 4 11 3
- 2. Sugar 0 17 4
- 3. Tea and Coffee 1 4 0
- 4. Soap 0 13 0
- 5. Housing 0 12 0
- 6. Food 3 0 0
- 7. Clothes 0 10 0
- ---------
- £11 7 7
- ---------
-
-But in the expenditure from this taxation was there a single item
-in which the poor had a special interest? The great mass of the
-expenditure was war expenditure, and that was not expenditure in which
-the poor were more interested than the rest. Indeed, much of it was
-expenditure which could not be associated directly or indirectly with
-their interests, such as the huge subsidies to the courts of Europe.
-Nearly fifty millions went in these subventions, and if some of them
-were strategical others were purely political. Did the English labourer
-receive any profit from the two and a half millions that Pitt threw to
-the King of Prussia, a subsidy that was employed for crushing Kosciusko
-and Poland, or from the millions that he gave to Austria, in return
-for which Austria ceded Venice to Napoleon? Did he receive any benefit
-from the million spent every year on the German legion, which helped
-to keep him in order in his own country? Did he receive any benefit
-from the million and a half which, on the confession of the Finance
-Committee of the House of Commons in 1810, went every year in absolute
-sinecures? Did he receive any benefit from the interest on the loans
-to the great bankers and contractors, who made huge profits out of the
-war and were patriotic enough to lend money to the Government to keep
-it going? Did he receive any benefit from the expenditure on crimping
-boys or pressing seamen, or transporting and imprisoning poachers and
-throwing their families by thousands on the rates? Pitt’s brilliant
-idea of buying up a cheap debt out of money raised by a dear one cost
-the nation twenty millions, and though Pitt considered the Sinking
-Fund his best title to honour, nobody will pretend that the poor of
-England gained anything from this display of his originality.[316]
-In these years Government was raising by taxation or loans over a
-hundred millions, but not a single penny went to the education of
-the labourer’s children, or to any purpose that made the perils and
-difficulties of his life more easy to be borne. If the sinecures had
-been reduced by a half, or if the great money-lenders had been treated
-as if their claims to the last penny were not sacrosanct, and had been
-made to take their share of the losses of the time, it would have been
-possible to set up the English cottager with allotments on the modest
-plan proposed by Young or Cobbett, side by side with the great estates
-with which that expenditure endowed the bankers and the dealers in
-scrip.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now, so long as prices kept up, the condition of the labourer was
-masked by the general prosperity of the times. The governing class
-had found a method which checked the demand for higher wages and the
-danger that the labourer might claim a share in the bounding wealth of
-the time. The wolf was at the door, it is true, but he was chained, and
-the chain was the Speenhamland system. Consequently, though we hear
-complaints from the labourers, who contended that they were receiving
-in a patronising and degrading form what they were entitled to have
-as their direct wages, the note of rebellion was smothered for the
-moment. At this time it was a profitable proceeding to grow corn on
-almost any soil, and it is still possible to trace on the unharvested
-downs of Dartmoor the print of the harrow that turned even that wild
-moorland into gold, in the days when Napoleon was massing his armies
-for invasion. During these years parishes did not mind giving aid from
-the rates on the Speenhamland scale, and, though under this mischievous
-system population was advancing wildly, there was such a demand for
-labour that this abundance did not seem, as it seemed later, a plague
-of locusts, but a source of strength and wealth. The opinion of the
-day was all in favour of a heavy birth rate, and it was generally
-agreed, as we have seen, that Pitt’s escapades in the West Indies and
-elsewhere would draw off the surplus population fast enough to remove
-all difficulties. But although the large farmers prayed incessantly to
-heaven to preserve Pitt and to keep up religion and prices, the day
-came when it did not pay to plough the downs or the sands, and tumbling
-prices brought ruin to the farmers whose rents and whole manner of
-living were fixed on the assumption that there was no serious danger
-of peace, and that England was to live in a perpetual heyday of famine
-prices.
-
-With the fall in prices, the facts of the labourer’s condition were
-disclosed. Doctors tell us that in some cases of heart disease there
-is a state described as compensation, which may postpone failure for
-many years. With the fall in 1814 compensation ceased, and the disease
-which it obscured declared itself. For it was now no longer possible
-to absorb the redundant population in the wasteful roundsman system,
-and the maintenance standard tended to fall with the growing pressure
-on the resources from which the labourer was kept. By this time all
-labour had been swamped in the system. The ordinary village did not
-contain a mass of decently paid labourers and a surplus of labourers,
-from time to time redundant, for whom the parish had to provide as best
-it could. It contained a mass of labourers, all of them underpaid, whom
-the parish had to keep alive in the way most convenient to the farmers.
-Bishop Berkeley once said that it was doubtful whether the prosperity
-that preceded, or the calamities that succeeded, the South Sea Bubble
-had been the more disastrous to Great Britain: that saying would very
-well apply to the position of the agricultural labourer in regard to
-the rise and the fall of prices. With the rise of prices the last
-patch of common agriculture had been seized by the landlords, and the
-labourer had been robbed even of his garden;[317] with the fall, the
-great mass of labourers were thrown into destitution and misery. We may
-add that if that prosperity had been briefer, the superstition that an
-artificial encouragement of population was needed--the superstition of
-the rich for which the poor paid the penalty--would have had a shorter
-life. As it was, at the end of the great prosperity the landlords
-were enormously rich; rents had in some cases increased five-fold
-between 1790 and 1812:[318] the large farmers had in many cases climbed
-into a style of life which meant a crash as soon as prices fell; the
-financiers had made great and sudden fortunes; the only class for whom
-a rise in the standard of existence was essential to the nation, had
-merely become more dependent on the pleasure of other classes and the
-accidents of the markets. The purchasing power of the labourer’s wages
-had gone down.
-
-The first sign of the strain is the rioting of 1816. In that year
-the spirit which the governing class had tried to send to sleep by
-the Speenhamland system, burst out in the first of two peasants’
-revolts. Let us remember what their position was. They were not the
-only people overwhelmed by the fall in prices. Some landlords, who
-had been so reckless and extravagant as to live up to the enormous
-revenue they were receiving, had to surrender their estates to the
-new class of bankers and money-lenders that had been made powerful by
-the war. Many farmers, who had taken to keeping liveried servants and
-to copying the pomp of their landlords, and who had staked everything
-on the permanence of prices, were now submerged. Small farmers too,
-as the answers sent to the questions issued this year by the Board
-of Agriculture show, became paupers. The labourer was not the only
-sufferer. But he differed from the other victims of distress in that
-he had not benefited, but, as we have seen, had lost, by the prosperity
-of the days when the plough turned a golden furrow. His housing had
-not been improved; his dependence had not been made less abject or
-less absolute; his wages had not risen; and in many cases his garden
-had disappeared. When the storm broke over agriculture his condition
-became desperate. In February 1816 the Board of Agriculture sent out
-a series of questions, one of which asked for an account of the state
-of the poor, and out of 273 replies 237 reported want of employment
-and distress, and 25 reported that there was not unemployment or
-distress.[319] One of the correspondents explained that in his district
-the overseer called a meeting every Saturday, when he put up each
-labourer by name to auction, and they were let generally at from
-1s. 6d. to 2s. per week and their provisions, their families being
-supported by the parish.[320]
-
-In 1816 the labourers were suffering both from unemployment and
-from high prices. In 1815, as the _Annual Register_[321] puts it,
-‘much distress was undergone in the latter part of the year by the
-trading portion of the community. This source of private calamity was
-unfortunately coincident with an extraordinary decline in agricultural
-prosperity, immediately proceeding from the greatly reduced price of
-corn and other products, which bore no adequate proportion to the
-exorbitant rents and other heavy burdens pressing upon the farmer.’
-At the beginning of 1816 there were gloomy anticipations of a fall in
-prices, and Western[322] moved a series of resolutions designed to
-prevent the importation of corn. But as the year advanced it became
-evident that the danger that threatened England was not the danger
-of abundance but the danger of scarcity. A bitterly cold summer was
-followed by so meagre a harvest that the price of corn rose rapidly
-beyond the point at which the ports were open for importation. But high
-prices which brought bidders at once for farms that had been unlet made
-bread and meat dear to the agricultural labourer, without bringing him
-more employment or an advance of wages, and the riots of 1816 were the
-result of the misery due to this combination of misfortunes.
-
-The riots broke out in May of that year, and the counties affected
-were Norfolk, Suffolk, Huntingdon and Cambridgeshire. Nightly
-assemblies were held, threatening letters were sent, and houses, barns
-and ricks were set on fire. These fires were a prelude to a more
-determined agitation, which had such an effect on the authorities that
-the Sheriff of Suffolk and Mr. Willet, a banker of Brandon near Bury,
-hastened to London to inform the Home Secretary and to ask for the
-help of the Government in restoring tranquillity. Mr. Willet’s special
-interest in the proceedings is explained in a naïve sentence in the
-_Annual Register_: ‘A reduction in the price of bread and meat was the
-avowed object of the rioters. They had fixed a maximum for the price of
-both. They insisted that the lowest price of wheat must be half a crown
-a bushel, and that of prime joints of beef fourpence per pound. Mr.
-Willet, a butcher at Brandon, was a marked object of their ill-will,
-in which Mr. Willet, the banker, was, from the similarity of his name,
-in danger of sharing. This circumstance, and a laudable anxiety to
-preserve the public peace, induced him to take an active part and exert
-all his influence for that purpose.’[323] The rioters numbered some
-fifteen hundred, and they broke up into separate parties, scattering
-into different towns and villages. In the course of their depredations
-the house of the right Mr. Willet was levelled to the ground, after
-which the wrong Mr. Willet, it is to be hoped, was less restless.[324]
-‘They were armed with long, heavy sticks, the ends of which, to the
-extent of several inches, were studded with short iron spikes, sharp at
-the sides and point. Their flag was inscribed “_Bread or Blood!_” and
-they threatened to march to London.’[325]
-
-During the next few days there were encounters between insurgent mobs
-in Norwich and Bury and the yeomanry, the dragoons, and the West
-Norfolk Militia. No lives seem to have been lost, but a good deal
-of property was destroyed, and a number of rioters were taken into
-custody. The _Times_ of 25th May says, in an article on these riots,
-that wages had been reduced to a rate lower than the magistrates
-thought reasonable, for the magistrates, after suppressing a riot near
-Downham, acquiesced in the propriety of raising wages, and released the
-offenders who had been arrested with a suitable remonstrance. There was
-a much more serious battle at Littleport in the Isle of Ely, when the
-old fighting spirit of the fens seems to have inspired the rioters.
-They began by driving from his house a clergyman magistrate of the name
-of Vachel, after which they attacked several houses and extorted money.
-They then made for Ely, where they carried out the same programme.
-This state of anarchy, after two or three days, ended in a battle in
-Littleport in which two rioters were killed, and seventy-five taken
-prisoners. The prisoners were tried next month by a Special Commission:
-twenty-four were capitally convicted; of these five were hung, five
-were transported for life, one was transported for fourteen years,
-three for seven years, and ten were imprisoned for twelve months in
-Ely gaol.[326] The spirit in which one of the judges, Mr. Christian,
-the Chief Justice of the Isle of Ely, conducted the proceedings may be
-gathered from his closing speech, in which he said that the rioters
-were receiving ‘great wages’ and that ‘any change in the price of
-provisions could only lessen that superfluity, which, I fear, they too
-frequently wasted in drunkenness.’[327]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The pressure of the changed conditions of the nation on this system
-of maintenance out of the rates is seen, not only in the behaviour of
-the labourers, but also in the growing anxiety of the upper classes
-to control the system, and in the tenacity with which the parishes
-contested settlement claims. This is the great period of Poor Law
-litigation. Parish authorities kept a stricter watch than ever on
-immigrants. In 1816, for example, the Board of Agriculture reported
-that according to a correspondent ‘a late legal decision, determining
-that keeping a cow gained a settlement, has deprived many cottagers
-of that comfort, as it is properly called.’[328] This decision was
-remedied by the 1819 Act[329] to amend the Settlement Laws as regards
-renting tenements, and the Report on the Poor Law in 1819 states
-that in consequence there ‘will no longer be an obstacle to the
-accommodation which may be afforded in some instances to a poor family,
-by renting the pasturage of a cow, or some other temporary profit from
-the occupation of land.’[330] Lawsuits between parishes were incessant,
-and in 1815 the money spent on litigation and the removal of paupers
-reached the gigantic figure of £287,000.
-
-In Parliament, too, the question of Poor Law Reform was seen to be
-urgent, but the problem assumed a particular and very limited shape.
-The significance of this development can be illustrated by comparing
-the character and the fate of a measure Whitbread had introduced in
-1807 with the character and the fate of the legislation after Waterloo.
-
-Whitbread’s scheme had aimed at (1) improving and humanising the Law of
-Settlement; (2) reforming the administration of the Poor Law as such
-in such a way as to give greater encouragement to economy and a fairer
-distribution of burdens; (3) stimulating thrift and penalising idleness
-in the labourers; (4) reforming unemployment policy.
-
-The proposals under the first head provided that settlement might be
-gained by five years’ residence as a householder, if the householder
-had not become chargeable or been convicted of crime, or been absent
-for more than six weeks in a year. Two Justices of the Peace were to
-have power on complaint of the parish authorities to adjudicate on the
-settlement of any person likely to become chargeable, subject to an
-appeal to Quarter Sessions.
-
-The proposals under the second head aimed partly at vestry reform
-and partly at rating reform. In those parishes where there was an
-open vestry, all ratepayers were still equal as voters, but Whitbread
-proposed to give extra voting power at vestry meetings in proportion
-to assessment.[331] He wished to reform rating, by making stock in
-trade and personal property (except farming stock), which produced
-profit liable to assessment, by authorising the vestry to exempt such
-occupiers of cottages as they should think fit, and by giving power
-to the Justices of the Peace to strike out of the rate any person
-occupying a cottage not exceeding five pounds in yearly value, who
-should make application to them, such exemptions not to be considered
-parochial relief. He also proposed that the county rate should be
-charged in every parish in proportion to the assessed property in the
-parish, and that any parish whose poor rate was for three years more
-than double the average of the parish rate in the county, should have
-power to apply to Quarter Sessions for relief out of county stock.
-
-Whitbread’s proposals for stimulating thrift and penalising idleness
-were a strange medley of enlightenment and childishness. He proposed
-to give the parish officers power to build cottages which were to be
-let at the best rents that were to be obtained: but the parish officers
-might with the consent of the vestry allow persons who could not pay
-rent to occupy them rent free, or at a reduced rent. He proposed also
-to create a National Bank, something of the nature of a Post Office
-Savings Bank, to be employed both as a savings bank and an insurance
-system for the poor. With these two excellent schemes he combined a
-ridiculous system of prizes and punishments for the thrifty and the
-irresponsible. Magistrates were to be empowered to give rewards (up to
-a maximum of £20) with a badge of good conduct, to labourers who had
-brought up large families without parish help, and to punish any man
-who appeared to have become chargeable from idleness or misconduct, and
-to brand him with the words, ‘criminal Poor.’
-
-In his unemployment policy Whitbread committed the fatal mistake,
-common to almost all the proposals of the time, of mixing up poor
-relief with wages in a way to depress and demoralise the labour market.
-The able-bodied unemployed, men, youths, or single women, were to be
-hired out by parish officers at the best price to be obtained. The
-wages were to be paid to the worker. If the worker was a single man
-or woman, or a widower with no children dependent on him, his or her
-earnings were to be made up by the parish to a sum necessary to his or
-her subsistence. If he or she had children, they were to be made up to
-three-quarters, or four-fifths, or the full average rate, according to
-the number of children. No single man or woman was to be hired out for
-more than a year, and no man or woman with dependent children for more
-than a month.
-
-The proposals were attacked vigorously by two critics who were not
-often found in company, Cobbett and Malthus. Cobbett criticised the
-introduction of plural voting at vestry meetings in an excellent
-passage in the _Political Register_.[332] ‘Many of those who pay rates
-are but a step or two from pauperism themselves; and they are the most
-likely persons to consider duly the important duty of doing, in case of
-relief, what they would be done unto. “But,” Mr. Whitbread will say,
-“is it right for these persons to _give away the money of others_.” It
-is _not_ the money of others, any more than the amount of tithes is
-the farmer’s money. The maintenance of the poor is a charge upon the
-land, a charge duly considered in every purchase and in every lease.
-Besides, as the law now stands, though every parishioner has a vote
-in vestry, must it not be evident, to every man who reflects, that a
-man of large property and superior understanding will have weight in
-proportion? That he will, in fact, have _many votes_? If he play the
-tyrant, even little men will rise against him, and it is right they
-should have the power of so doing; but, while he conducts himself with
-moderation and humanity, while he behaves as he ought to do to those
-who are beneath him in point of property, there is no fear but he will
-have a sufficiency of weight at every vestry. The votes of the inferior
-persons in the parish are, in reality, dormant, unless in cases where
-some innovation, or some act of tyranny, is attempted. They are, like
-the sting of the bee, weapons merely of defence.’
-
-Malthus’ criticisms were of a very different nature.[333] He objected
-particularly to the public building of cottages, and the assessment of
-personal property to the rates. He argued that the scarcity of houses
-was the chief reason ‘why the Poor Laws had not been so extensive
-and prejudicial in their effects as might have been expected.’ If a
-stimulus was given to the building of cottages there would be no check
-on the increase of population. A similar tendency he ascribed to the
-rating of personal property. The employers of labour had an interest
-in the increase of population, and therefore in the building of
-cottages. This instinct was at present held in check by consideration
-of the burden of the rates. If, however, they could distribute that
-burden more widely, this consideration would have much less weight.
-Population would increase and wages would consequently go down. ‘It
-has been observed by Dr. Adam Smith that no efforts of the legislature
-had been able to raise the salary of curates to that price which
-seemed necessary for their decent maintenance: and the reason which
-he justly assigns is that the bounties held out to the profession by
-the scholarships and fellowships of the universities always occasioned
-a redundant supply. In the same manner, if a more than usual supply
-of labour were encouraged by the premiums of small tenements, nothing
-could prevent a great and general fall in its price.’
-
-The Bill was introduced in 1807, before the fall of the Whig Ministry,
-and it went to a Committee. But the Tory Parliament elected that year
-to support Portland and his anti-Catholic Government was unfriendly,
-and the county magistrates to whom the draft of the Bill was sent
-for criticisms were also hostile. Whitbread accordingly proceeded no
-further. At this time the Speenhamland system seemed to be working
-without serious inconvenience, and there was therefore no driving power
-behind such proposals. But after 1815 the conditions had changed, and
-the apathy of 1807 had melted away. The ruling class was no longer
-passive and indifferent about the growth of the Speenhamland system:
-both Houses of Parliament set inquiries on foot, schemes of emigration
-were invited and discussed, and measures of Vestry Reform were carried.
-But the problem was no longer the problem that Whitbread had set out
-to solve. Whitbread had proposed to increase the share of property
-in the control of the poor rates, but he had also brought forward a
-constructive scheme of social improvement. The Vestry Reformers of
-this period were merely interested in reducing the rates; the rest of
-Whitbread’s programme was forgotten.
-
-In 1818 an Act[334] was passed which established plural voting in
-vestries, every ratepayer whose rateable value was £50 and over being
-allowed a vote for every £25 of rateable property. In the following
-year an Act[335] was passed which allowed parishes to set up a select
-vestry, and ordained that in these parishes the overseers should
-give such relief as was ordered by the Select Vestry, and further
-allowed the appointment of salaried assistant overseers. These
-changes affected the administration of the Speenhamland system very
-considerably: and the salaried overseers made themselves hated in many
-parishes by the Draconian regime which they introduced. The parish
-cart, or the cart to which in some parishes men and women who asked
-for relief were harnessed, was one of the innovations of this period.
-The administrative methods that were adopted in these parishes are
-illustrated by a fact mentioned by a clerk to the magistrates in Kent,
-in October 1880.[336] The writer says that there was a severe overseer
-at Ash, who had among other applicants for relief an unemployed
-shepherd, with a wife and five children living at Margate, thirteen
-miles away. The shepherd was given 9s. a week, but the overseer
-made him walk to Ash every day except Sunday for his eighteenpence.
-The shepherd walked his twenty-six miles a day on such food as he
-could obtain out of his share of the 9s. for nine weeks, and then
-his strength could hold out no longer. The writer remarked that the
-shepherd was an industrious and honest man, out of work through no
-fault of his own. It was by such methods that the salaried overseers
-tried to break the poor of the habit of asking for relief, and it
-is not surprising that such methods rankled in the memories of the
-labourers. In this neighbourhood the writer attributed the fires of
-1830 more to this cause than to any other.
-
-These attempts to relieve the ratepayer did nothing to relieve the
-labourer from the incubus of the system. His plight grew steadily
-worse. A Committee on Agricultural Wages, of which Lord John Russell
-was chairman, reported in 1824 that whereas in certain northern
-counties, where the Speenhamland system had not yet taken root, wages
-were 12s. to 15s., in the south they varied from 8s. or 9s. a week to
-3s. for a single man and 4s. 6d. for a married man.[337] In one part of
-Kent the lowest wages in one parish were 6d. a day, and in the majority
-of parishes 1s. a day. The wages of an unmarried man in Buckinghamshire
-in 1828, according to a clergyman who gave evidence before the
-Committee of that year on the Poor Laws, were 3s. a week, and the wages
-of a married man were 6s. a week. In one parish in his neighbourhood
-the farmers had lately reduced the wages of able-bodied married men to
-4s. a week. Thus the Speenhamland system had been effective enough in
-keeping wages low, but as a means of preserving a minimum livelihood
-it was breaking down by this time on all sides. We have seen from the
-history of Merton in Oxfordshire[338] what happened in one parish long
-before the adversities of agriculture had become acute. It is easy from
-this case to imagine what happened when the decline in employment
-and agriculture threw a steadily increasing burden on the system of
-maintenance from the rates. In some places, as the Commissioners of
-1834 reported, the labourers were able by intimidation to keep the
-system in force, but though parishes did not as a rule dare to abandon
-or reform the system, they steadily reduced their scale.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The most direct and graphic demonstration of this fact, which has not
-apparently ever been noticed in any of the voluminous discussions
-of the old Poor Law system, is to be seen in the comparison of the
-standards of life adopted at the time the system was introduced with
-the standards that were adopted later. In 1795, as we have seen, the
-magistrates at Speenhamland recommended an allowance of three gallon
-loaves for each labourer, and a gallon loaf and a half for his wife
-and for each additional member of his family. This scale, it must be
-remembered, was not peculiar to Berkshire. It was the authoritative
-standard in many counties. We are able to compare this with some
-later scales, and the comparison yields some startling results. In
-Northamptonshire in 1816 the magistrates fixed a single man’s allowance
-at 5s., and the allowance for a man and his wife at 6s., the price
-of wheat the quartern loaf being 11-1/2d.[339] On this scale a man
-is supposed to need a little over two and a half gallon loaves, and
-a man and his wife a little more than three gallon loaves, or barely
-more than a single man was supposed to need in 1795. This is a grave
-reduction, but the maintenance standard fell very much lower before
-1832. For though we have scales for Cambridgeshire and Essex for 1821
-published in the Report of the Poor Law Commission of 1834,[340] which
-agree roughly with the Northamptonshire scale (two gallon loaves for a
-man, and one and a half for a woman), in Wiltshire, according to the
-complicated scale adopted at Hindon in 1817, a man was allowed one
-and three-fifths gallon loaves, and a woman one and one-tenth.[341] A
-Hampshire scale, drawn up in 1822 by eight magistrates, of whom five
-were parsons, allowed only one gallon loaf a head, with 4d. a week
-per head in addition to a family of four persons, the extra allowance
-being reduced by a penny in cases where there were six in the family,
-and by twopence in cases where there were more than six.[342] The
-Dorsetshire magistrates in 1826 allowed a man the equivalent of one
-and a half gallon loaves and a penny over, and a woman or child over
-fourteen one and one-sixth.[343] We have a general statement as to
-the scales in force towards the end of our period in a passage in
-M‘Culloch’s _Political Economy_ quoted in the _Edinburgh Review_ for
-January 1831 (p. 353): ‘The allowance scales now issued from time to
-time by the magistrates are usually framed on the principle that every
-labourer should have a gallon loaf of standard wheaten bread weekly for
-every member of his family and one over: that is four loaves for three
-persons, five for four, six for five, and so on.’ That is, a family of
-four persons would have had seven and a half gallon loaves in 1795, and
-only five gallon loaves in 1831.
-
-Now the Speenhamland scale did not represent some easy and luxurious
-standard of living; it represented the minimum on which it was supposed
-that a man employed in agriculture could support life. In thirty-five
-years the standard had dropped, according to M‘Culloch’s statement, as
-much as a third, and this not because of war or famine, for in 1826
-England had had eleven years of peace, but in the ordinary course of
-the life of the nation. Is such a decline in the standard of life
-recorded anywhere else in history?
-
-How did the labourers live at all under these conditions? Their life
-was, of course, wretched and squalid in the extreme. Cobbett describes
-a group of women labourers whom he met by the roadside in Hampshire
-as ‘such an assemblage of rags as I never saw before even amongst the
-hoppers at Farnham.’ Of the labourers near Cricklade he said: ‘Their
-dwellings are little better than pig-beds, and their looks indicate
-that their food is not nearly equal to that of a pig. These wretched
-hovels are stuck upon little beds of ground on the _roadside_ where
-the space has been wider than the road demanded. In many places they
-have not two rods to a hovel. It seems as if they had been swept off
-the fields by a hurricane, and had dropped and found shelter under
-the banks on the roadside. Yesterday morning was a sharp frost, and
-this had set the poor creatures to digging up their little plots of
-potatoes. In my whole life I never saw human wretchedness equal
-to this; no, not even amongst the free negroes in America who, on
-an average, do not work one day out of four.’[344] The labourers’
-cottages in Leicestershire he found were ‘hovels made of mud and
-straw, bits of glass or of old cast-off windows, without frames or
-hinges frequently, and merely stuck in the mud wall. Enter them and
-look at the bits of chairs or stools, the wretched boards tacked
-together to serve for a table, the floor of pebble broken or of the
-bare ground; look at the thing called a bed, and survey the rags on
-the backs of the inhabitants.’[345] A Dorsetshire clergyman, a witness
-before the Committee on Wages in 1824, said that the labourers lived
-almost entirely on tea and potatoes; a Bedfordshire labourer said that
-he and his family lived mainly on bread and cheese and water, and
-that sometimes for a month together he never tasted meat; a Suffolk
-magistrate described how a labourer out of work, convicted of stealing
-wood, begged to be sent at once to a House of Correction, where he
-hoped to find food and employment. If Davies had written an account
-of the labouring classes in 1820 or 1830, the picture he drew in 1795
-would have seemed bright in comparison. But even this kind of life
-could not be supported on such provision as was made by the parish.
-How, then, did the labourers maintain any kind of existence when
-society ceased to piece together a minimum livelihood out of rates and
-wages?
-
- * * * * *
-
-For the answer to this question we must turn to the history of crime
-and punishment; to the Reports of the Parliamentary Committees
-on Labourers’ Wages (1824), on the Game Laws (1823 and 1828), on
-Emigration (1826 and 1827), on Criminal Commitments and Convictions and
-Secondary Punishments (1827, 1828, 1831, and 1832), and the evidence
-of those who were in touch with this side of village life. From these
-sources we learn that, rate aid not being sufficient to bring wages to
-the maintenance level, poaching, smuggling, and ultimately thieving
-were called in to rehabilitate the labourer’s economic position.[346]
-He was driven to the wages of crime. The history of the agricultural
-labourer in this generation is written in the code of the Game Laws,
-the growing brutality of the Criminal Law, and the preoccupation of
-the rich with the efficacy of punishment.
-
-We know from Fielding with what sort of justice the magistrates treated
-persons accused of poaching in the reign of George III.’s grandfather,
-but when he wrote his account of Squire Western, and when Blackstone
-wrote that the Game Laws had raised up a little Nimrod in every manor,
-the blood of men and boys had not yet been spilt for the pleasures of
-the rich. It is only after Fielding and Blackstone were both in their
-graves that this page of history became crimson, and that the gentlemen
-of England took to guarding their special amusements by methods of
-which a Member of Parliament declared that the nobles of France had not
-ventured on their like in the days of their most splendid arrogance.
-The little Nimrods who made and applied their code were a small and
-select class. They were the persons qualified under the law of Charles
-II. to shoot game, _i.e._ persons who possessed a freehold estate of at
-least £100 a year, or a leasehold estate of at least £150 a year, or
-the son or heir-apparent of an esquire or person of higher degree. The
-legislation that occupies so much of English history during a period
-of misery and famine is devoted to the protection of the monopoly of
-this class, comprising less than one in ten thousand of the people of
-England. A Member of Parliament named Warburton said in the House of
-Commons that the only parallel to this monopoly was to be found in
-Mariner’s account of the Tonga Islands, where rats were preserved as
-game. Anybody might eat rats there, but nobody was allowed to kill them
-except persons descended from gods or kings.
-
-With the general growth of upper-class riches and luxury there came
-over shooting a change corresponding with the change that turned
-hunting into a magnificent and extravagant spectacle. The habit set
-in of preserving game in great masses, of organising the battue, of
-maintaining armies of keepers. In many parts of the country, pheasants
-were now introduced for the first time. Whereas game had hitherto
-kept something of the wildness, and vagrancy, and careless freedom of
-Nature, the woods were now packed with tame and docile birds, whose gay
-feathers sparkled among the trees, before the eyes of the half-starved
-labourers breaking stones on the road at half a crown a week. The
-change is described by witnesses such as Sir James Graham and Sir
-Thomas Baring, magistrates respectively in Cumberland and Hampshire,
-before the Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions
-in 1827. England was, in fact, passing through a process precisely
-opposite to that which had taken place in France: the sport of the rich
-was becoming more and more of an elaborate system, and more of a vested
-interest. This development was marked by the growth of an offensive
-combination among game preservers; in some parts of the country game
-associations were formed, for the express purpose of paying the costs
-of prosecutions, so that the poacher had against him not merely a bench
-of game preservers, but a ring of squires, a sort of Holy Alliance for
-the punishment of social rebels, which drew its meshes not round a
-parish but round a county. Simultaneously, as we have seen, a general
-change was coming over the circumstances and position of the poor. The
-mass of the people were losing their rights and independence; they were
-being forced into an absolute dependence on wages, and were living on
-the brink of famine. These two developments must be kept in mind in
-watching the building up of the game code in the last phase of the
-ancient régime.
-
-The Acts for protecting game passed after the accession of George III.
-are in a crescendo of fierceness. The first important Act was passed
-In 1770. Under this Act any one who killed game of any kind between
-sunsetting and sunrising, or used any gun, or dog, snare, net, or other
-engine for destroying game at night, was, on conviction by one witness
-before one Justice of the Peace, to be punished with imprisonment for
-not less than three months or more than six. For a subsequent offence
-he was to be imprisoned for not more than twelve months or less than
-six, and to be whipped publicly between the hours of twelve and one
-o’clock. This was light punishment compared with the measures that were
-to follow. In the year 1800, the year of Marengo, when all England
-was braced up for its great duel with the common enemy of freedom and
-order, and the labourers were told every day that they would be the
-first to suffer if Napoleon landed in England, the English Parliament
-found time to pass another Act to punish poachers, and to teach justice
-to mend her slow pace. By this Act when two or more persons were found
-in any forest, chase, park, wood, plantation, paddock, field, meadow,
-or other open or enclosed ground, having any gun, net, engine, or other
-instrument, with the intent to destroy, take, or kill game, they were
-to be seized by keepers or servants, and on conviction before a J.P.,
-they were to be treated as rogues and vagabonds under the Act of 1744,
-_i.e._ they were to be punished by imprisonment with hard labour; an
-incorrigible rogue, _i.e._ a second offender, was to be imprisoned for
-two years with whipping. Further, if the offender was over twelve years
-of age, the magistrates might sentence him to serve in the army or
-navy. If an incorrigible rogue escaped from the House of Correction he
-was to be liable to transportation for seven years.
-
-Two consequences followed from this Act. Now that punishment was made
-so severe, the poacher had a strong reason for violence: surrender
-meant service in a condemned regiment, and he therefore took the risks
-of resistance. The second consequence was the practice of poaching in
-large groups. The organisation of poaching gangs was not a natural
-development of the industry; it was adopted in self-defence.[347] This
-Act led inevitably to those battles between gamekeepers and labourers
-that became so conspicuous a feature of English life at this time, and
-in 1803 Lord Ellenborough passed an Act which provided that any persons
-who presented a gun or tried to stab or cut ‘with intent to obstruct,
-resist, or prevent the lawful apprehension or detainer of the person or
-persons so stabbing or cutting, or the lawful apprehension or detainer
-of any of his, her, or their accomplices for any offences for which
-he, she, or they may respectively be liable by law to be apprehended,
-imprisoned, or detained,’ should suffer death as a felon. In 1816, when
-peace and the fall of prices were bringing new problems in their train,
-there went through Parliament, without a syllable of debate, a Bill of
-which Romilly said that no parallel to it could be found in the laws of
-any country in the world. By that Act a person who was found at night
-unarmed, but with a net for poaching, in any forest, chase, or park
-was to be punished by transportation for seven years. This Act Romilly
-induced Parliament to repeal in the following year, but the Act that
-took its place only softened the law to the extent of withdrawing this
-punishment from persons found with nets, but without guns or bludgeons:
-it enacted that any person so found, armed with gun, crossbow,
-firearms, bludgeon, or any other offensive weapon, was to be tried at
-Quarter Sessions, and if convicted, to be sentenced to transportation
-for seven years: if such offender were to return to Great Britain
-before his time was over, he was to be transported for the rest of his
-life.[348]
-
-This savage Act, though by no means a dead letter, as Parliamentary
-Returns show, seems to have defeated its own end, for in 1828 it was
-repealed, because, as Lord Wharncliffe told the House of Lords, there
-was a certain reluctance on the part of juries to convict a prisoner,
-when they knew that conviction would be followed by transportation.
-The new Act of 1828, which allowed a person to be convicted before two
-magistrates, reserved transportation for the third offence, punishing
-the first offence by three months’, and the second by six months’
-imprisonment. But the convicted person had to find sureties after his
-release, or else go back to hard labour for another six months if it
-was a first offence, or another twelve months if it was his second.
-Further, if three men were found in a wood and one of them carried a
-gun or bludgeon, all three were liable to be transported for fourteen
-years.[349] Althorp’s Bill of 1831 which abolished the qualifications
-of the Act of Charles II., gave the right to shoot to every landowner
-who took out a certificate, and made the sale of game legal, proposed
-in its original form to alter these punishments, making that for the
-first and second offences rather more severe (four and eight months),
-and that for the third, two years’ imprisonment. In Committee in the
-House of Commons the two years were reduced to one year on the proposal
-of Orator Hunt. The House of Lords, however, restored the punishments
-of the Act of 1828.
-
-These were the main Acts for punishing poachers that were passed
-during the last phase of the ancient régime. How large a part they
-played in English life may be imagined from a fact mentioned by the
-Duke of Richmond in 1831.[350] In the three years between 1827 and
-1830 one in seven of all the criminal convictions in the country were
-convictions under the Game Code. The number of persons so convicted
-was 8502, many of them being under eighteen. Some of them had been
-transported for life, and some for seven or fourteen years. In some
-years the proportion was still higher.[351] We must remember, too, what
-kind of judges had tried many of these men and boys. ‘There is not a
-worse-constituted tribunal on the face of the earth,’ said Brougham
-in 1828, ‘not even that of the Turkish Cadi, than that at which
-summary convictions on the Game Laws constantly take place; I mean
-a bench or a brace of sporting justices. I am far from saying that,
-on such subjects, they are actuated by corrupt motives; but they are
-undoubtedly instigated by their abhorrence of that _caput lupinum_,
-that _hostis humani generis_, as an Honourable Friend of mine once
-called him in his place, that _fera naturæ_--a poacher. From their
-decisions on those points, where their passions are the most likely to
-mislead them, no appeal in reality lies to a more calm and unprejudiced
-tribunal; for, unless they set out any matter illegal on the face of
-the conviction, you remove the record in vain.’[352]
-
-The close relation of this great increase of crime to the general
-distress was universally recognised. Cobbett tells us that a gentleman
-in Surrey asked a young man, who was cracking stones on the roadside,
-how he could live upon half a crown a week. ‘I don’t live upon it,’
-said he. ‘How do you live then?’ ‘Why,’ said he, ‘I _poach_: it is
-better to be hanged than to be starved to death.’[353] This story
-receives illustration after illustration in the evidence taken by
-Parliamentary Committees. The visiting Justices of the Prisons in
-Bedfordshire reported in 1827 that the great increase in commitments,
-and particularly the number of commitments for offences against the
-Game Laws, called for an inquiry. More than a third of the commitments
-during the last quarter had been for such offences. The Report
-continues:--
-
-‘In many parishes in this county the wages given to young unmarried
-agricultural labourers, in the full strength and vigour of life, seldom
-exceed 3s. or 3s. 6d. a week, paid to them, generally, under the
-description of roundsmen, by the overseers out of the poor rates; and
-often in the immediate vicinity of the dwellings of such half-starved
-labourers there are abundantly-stocked preserves of game, in which,
-during a single night, these dissatisfied young men can obtain a rich
-booty by snaring hares and taking or killing pheasants ... offences
-which they cannot be brought to acknowledge to be any violation of
-private property. Detection generally leads to their imprisonment, and
-imprisonment introduces these youths to familiarity with criminals of
-other descriptions, and thus they become rapidly abandoned to unlawful
-pursuits and a life of crime.’[354] Mr. Orridge, Governor of the
-Gaol of Bury St. Edmunds, gave to the Committee on Commitments and
-Convictions[355] the following figures of prisoners committed to the
-House of Correction for certain years:--
-
- 1805, 221 1815, 387 1824, 457
- 1806, 192 1816, 476 1825, 439
- 1807, 173 1817, 430 1826, 573.
-
-He stated that the great increase in the number of commitments began
-in the year 1815 with the depression of agriculture and the great
-dearth of employment: that men were employed on the roads at very low
-rates: that the commitments under the Game Laws which in 1810 were
-five, in 1811 four, and in 1812 two, were seventy-five in 1822, a year
-of great agricultural distress, sixty in 1823, sixty-one in 1824, and
-seventy-one in 1825. Some men were poachers from the love of sport, but
-the majority from distress. Mr. Pym, a magistrate in Cambridgeshire,
-and Sir Thomas Baring, a magistrate for Hampshire, gave similar
-evidence as to the cause of the increase of crime, and particularly of
-poaching, in these counties. Mr. Bishop, a Bow Street officer, whose
-business it was to mix with the poachers in public-houses and learn
-their secrets, told the Committee on the Game Laws in 1823 that there
-had not been employment for the labouring poor in most of the places
-he had visited. Perhaps the most graphic picture of the relation of
-distress to crime is given in a pamphlet, _Thoughts and Suggestions on
-the Present Condition of the Country_, published in 1830 by Mr. Potter
-Macqueen, late M.P. for Bedford.
-
-‘In January 1829, there were ninety-six prisoners for trial in Bedford
-Gaol, of whom seventy-six were able-bodied men, in the prime of life,
-and, chiefly, of general good character, who were driven to crime by
-sheer want, and who would have been valuable subjects had they been
-placed in a situation, where, by the exercise of their health and
-strength, they could have earned a subsistence. There were in this
-number eighteen poachers, awaiting trial for the capital offence of
-using arms in self-defence when attacked by game-keepers; of these
-eighteen men, one only was not a parish pauper, and he was the agent
-of the London poulterers, who, passing under the apparent vocation of
-a rat-catcher, paid these poor creatures more in one night than they
-could obtain from the overseer for a week’s labour. I conversed with
-each of these men singly, and made minutes of their mode of life. The
-two first I will mention are the two brothers, the Lilleys, in custody
-under a charge of firing on and wounding a keeper, who endeavoured to
-apprehend them whilst poaching. They were two remarkably fine young
-men, and very respectably connected. The elder, twenty-eight years
-of age, married, with two small children. When I inquired how he
-could lend himself to such a wretched course of life, the poor fellow
-replied: ‘Sir, I had a pregnant wife, with one infant at her knee, and
-another at her breast; I was anxious to obtain work, I offered myself
-in all directions, but without success; if I went to a distance, I was
-told to go back to my parish, and when I did so, I was allowed ...
-What? Why, for myself, my babes, and my wife, in a condition requiring
-more than common support, and unable to labour, I was allowed 7s. a
-week for all; for which I was expected to work on the roads from light
-to dark, and to pay three guineas a year for the hovel which sheltered
-us.’ The other brother, aged twenty-two, unmarried, received 6d. a day.
-These men were hanged at the spring assizes. Of the others, ten were
-single men, their ages varying from seventeen to twenty-seven. Many had
-never been in gaol before, and were considered of good character. Six
-of them were on the roads at 6d. per day. Two could not obtain even
-this pittance. One had been refused relief on the ground that he had
-shortly previous obtained a profitable piece of job-work, and one had
-existed on 1s. 6d. during the fortnight before he joined the gang in
-question. Of five married men, two with wife and two children received
-7s., two with wife and one child 6s., and one with wife and four small
-children 11s.’[356]
-
-If we wish to obtain a complete picture of the social life of the
-time, it is not enough to study the construction of this vindictive
-code. We must remember that a sort of civil war was going on between
-the labourers and the gamekeepers. The woods in which Tom Jones
-fought his great fight with Thwackum and Blifil to cover the flight
-of Molly Seagrim now echoed on a still and moonless night with the
-din of a different sort of battle: the noise of gunshots and blows
-from bludgeons, and broken curses from men who knew that, if they were
-taken, they would never see the English dawn rise over their homes
-again: a battle which ended perhaps in the death or wounding of a
-keeper or poacher, and the hanging or transportation of some of the
-favourite Don Quixotes of the village. A witness before the Committee
-on the Game Laws said that the poachers preferred a quiet night.
-Crabbe, in the poacher poem (Book XXI. of _Tales of the Hall_) which
-he wrote at the suggestion of Romilly, takes what would seem to be the
-more probable view that poachers liked a noisy night:
-
- ‘It was a night such bold desires to move
- Strong winds and wintry torrents filled the grove;
- The crackling boughs that in the forest fell,
- The cawing rooks, the cur’s affrighted yell;
- The scenes above the wood, the floods below,
- Were mix’d, and none the single sound could know;
- “Loud blow the blasts,” they cried, “and call us as they blow.”’
-
-Such an encounter is put into cold arithmetic in an official return
-like this[357]:--
-
-‘An account of the nineteen persons committed to Warwick Gaol for trial
-at the Lent Assizes 1829 for shooting and wounding John Slinn at Combe
-Fields in the County of Warwick whilst endeavouring to apprehend them
-for destroying game in the night with the result thereof:--
-
- +---------+--------+---------------------------------------------+------------+
- | | | Capitally convicted and reprieved with-- | |
- | | +--------------+--------------+---------------+ |
- | Above 14| Above | | | Imprisonment | |
- |and under|20 years|Transportation|Transportation| with hard | Admitted |
- | 20 years| of age.| for life. | for 14 |labour in House|to Evidence.|
- | of age. | | | years. | of Correction | |
- | | | | | for 2 years. | |
- +---------+--------+--------------+--------------+---------------+------------+
- | 11 | 8 | 7 | 9 | 1 | 2 |
- +---------+--------+--------------+--------------+---------------+------------+
-
-Seven peasants exiled for life, nine exiled for fourteen years, and two
-condemned to the worst exile of all. In that village at any rate there
-were many homes that had reason to remember the day when the pleasures
-of the rich became the most sacred thing in England.
-
-But the warfare was not conducted only by these methods. For the
-gentlemen of England, as for the genius who fought Michael and Gabriel
-in the great battle in the sixth book of _Paradise Lost_, science did
-not spread her light in vain. There was a certain joy of adventure
-in a night skirmish, and a man who saw his wife and children slowly
-starving, to whom one of those golden birds that was sleeping on its
-perch the other side of the hedge, night after night, till the day when
-it should please the squire to send a shot through its purple head,
-meant comfort and even riches for a week, was not very much afraid of
-trusting his life and his freedom to his quick ear, his light foot, or
-at the worst his powerful arm. So the game preservers invented a cold
-and terrible demon: they strewed their woods with spring guns, that
-dealt death without warning, death without the excitement of battle,
-death that could catch the nimblest as he slipped and scrambled through
-the hiding bracken. The man who fell in an affray fell fighting, his
-comrades by his side; it was a grim and uncomforted fate to go out
-slowly and alone, lying desolate in the stained bushes, beneath the
-unheeding sky. It is not clear when these diabolical engines, as Lord
-Holland called them, were first introduced, but they were evidently
-common by 1817, when Curwen made a passionate protest in the House of
-Commons, and declared, ‘Better the whole race of game was extinct than
-that it should owe its preservation to such cruel expedients.’[358]
-Fortunately for England the spring guns, though they scattered murder
-and wounds freely enough (Peel spoke in 1827 of ‘daily accidents and
-misfortunes’), did not choose their victims with so nice an eye as a
-Justice of the Peace, and it was often a gamekeeper or a farm servant
-who was suddenly tripped up by this lurking death. By 1827 this state
-of things had become such a scandal that Parliament intervened and
-passed an Act, introduced in the Lords by Lord Suffield, who had made
-a previous attempt in 1825, to make the setting of spring guns a
-misdemeanor.[359]
-
-The Bill did not pass without considerable opposition. Tennyson, who
-introduced it in the Commons, declared that the feudal nobility in
-ancient France had never possessed a privilege comparable with this
-right of killing and maiming, and he said that the fact that Coke of
-Norfolk[360] and Lord Suffield, both large game preservers, refused
-to employ them showed that they were not necessary. Members of both
-Houses of Parliament complained bitterly of the ‘morbid sensibility’
-that inspired the proposal, and some of them defended spring guns as
-a labour-saving machine, speaking of them with the enthusiasm that
-a manufacturer might bestow on the invention of an Arkwright or a
-Crompton. One member of the House of Commons, a Colonel French, opposed
-the Bill with the argument that the honest English country gentleman
-formed ‘the very subject and essence of the English character,’ while
-Lord Ellenborough opposed it in the other House on the ground that it
-was contrary to the principles of the English law, which gave a man
-protection for his property in proportion to the difficulty with which
-it could be defended by ordinary means.
-
-The crime for which men were maimed or killed by these engines or
-torn from their homes by summary and heartless justice was, it must
-be remembered, no crime at all in the eyes of the great majority of
-their countrymen. At this time the sale of game was prohibited under
-stern penalties, and yet every rich man in London, from the Lord Mayor
-downwards, entertained his guests with game that he had bought from
-a poulterer. How had the poulterer bought it? There was no secret
-about the business. It was explained to two Select Committees, the
-first of the House of Commons in 1823, and the second of the House of
-Lords in 1828, by poulterers who lived by these transactions, and by
-police officers who did nothing to interfere with them. Daniel Bishop,
-for example, one of the chief Bow Street officers, described the
-arrangements to the Committee in 1823.[361]
-
-‘Can you state to the Committee, how the Game is brought from the
-poachers up to London, or other market?... The poachers generally
-meet the coachman or guards of the mails or vans, and deliver it to
-them after they are out of a town, they do not deliver it in a town;
-then it is brought up to London, sometimes to their agents; but the
-coachmen and guards mostly have their friends in London where they
-know how to dispose of it, and they have their contracts made at so
-much a brace.... There is no intermediate person between the poacher
-and the coachman or guard that conveys it to town?... Very seldom;
-generally the head of the gang pays the rest of the men, and he sends
-off the Game.... When the game arrives in London, how is it disposed
-of?... They have their agents, the bookkeepers at most of the inns, the
-porters who go out with the carts; any persons they know may go and get
-what quantity they like, by sending an order a day or two before; there
-are great quantities come up to Leadenhall and Newgate markets.’
-
-Nobody in London thought the worse of a poulterer for buying poached
-game; and nobody in the country thought any the worse of the poacher
-who supplied it. A witness before the Committee in 1823 said that in
-one village the whole of the village were poachers, ‘the constable
-of the village, the shoemaker and other inhabitants of the village.’
-Another witness before the Lords in 1828 said that occupiers and
-unqualified proprietors agreed with the labourers in thinking that
-poaching was an innocent practice.
-
-Those who wished to reform the Game Laws argued that if the sale
-of game were legalised, and if the anomalous qualifications were
-abolished, the poacher’s prize would become much less valuable, and
-the temptation would be correspondingly diminished. This view was
-corroborated by the evidence given to the Select Committees. But all
-such proposals were bitterly attacked by the great majority of game
-preservers. Lord Londonderry urged against this reform in 1827 ‘that
-it would deprive the sportsman of his highest gratification ... the
-pleasure of furnishing his friends with presents of game: nobody
-would care for a present which everybody could give’![362] Other game
-preservers argued that it was sport that made the English gentlemen
-such good officers, on which the _Edinburgh Review_ remarked: ‘The
-hunting which Xenophon and Cicero praise as the best discipline for
-forming great generals from its being war in miniature must have been
-very unlike pheasant shooting.’[363] Lord Deerhurst declared, when the
-proposal was made fourteen years earlier, that this was not the time to
-disgust resident gentlemen. The English aristocracy, like the French,
-would only consent to live in the country on their own terms. When the
-squires threatened to turn _émigrés_ if anybody else was allowed to
-kill a rabbit, or if a poacher was not put to risk of life and limb,
-Sydney Smith gave an answer that would have scandalised the House of
-Commons, ‘If gentlemen cannot breathe fresh air without injustice, let
-them putrefy in Cranbourne Court.’
-
-But what about the justice of the laws against poachers? To most
-members of Parliament there would have been an element of paradox in
-such a question. From the discussions on the subject of the Game Laws
-a modern reader might suppose that poachers were not men of flesh and
-blood, but some kind of vermin. There were a few exceptions. In 1782,
-when Coke of Norfolk, acting at the instance of the magistrates of that
-county, proposed to make the Game Laws more stringent, Turner, the
-member for York, made a spirited reply; he ‘exclaimed against those
-laws as cruel and oppressive on the poor: he said it was a shame that
-the House should always be enacting laws for the safety of gentlemen;
-he wished they would make a few for the good of the poor.... For his
-own part, he was convinced, that if he had been a common man, he would
-have been a poacher, in spite of all the laws; and he was equally
-sure that the too great severity of the laws was the cause that the
-number of poachers had increased so much.’[364] Fox (29th April 1796)
-protested with vigour against the morality that condemned poachers
-without mercy, and condoned all the vices of the rich, but he, with
-Sheridan, Curwen, Romilly, and a few others were an infinitesimal
-minority.
-
-The aristocracy had set up a code, under which a man or boy who had
-offended against the laws, but had done nothing for which any of his
-fellows imputed discredit to him, was snatched from his home, thrown
-into gaol with thieves and criminals, and perhaps flung to the other
-side of the world, leaving his family either to go upon the rates or
-to pick up a living by such dishonesties as they could contrive. This
-last penalty probably meant final separation. Mr. T. G. B. Estcourt,
-M.P., stated in evidence before the Select Committee on Secondary
-Punishments in 1831[365] that as men who had been transported were not
-brought back at the public expense, they scarcely ever returned,[366]
-that agricultural labourers specially dreaded transportation, because
-it meant ‘entire separation’ from ‘former associates, relations, and
-friends,’ and that since he and his brother magistrates in Wiltshire
-had taken to transporting more freely, committals had decreased. The
-special misery that transportation inflicted on men of this class
-is illustrated in Marcus Clarke’s famous novel, _For the Term of
-His Natural Life_. In the passage describing the barracoon on the
-transport ship, Clarke throws on the screen all the different types of
-character--forgers, housebreakers, cracksmen, footpads--penned up in
-that poisonous prison. ‘The poacher grimly thinking of his sick wife
-and children would start as the night-house ruffian clapped him on the
-shoulder and bade him with a curse to take good heart and be a man.’
-Readers of Mr. Hudson’s character sketches of the modern Wiltshire
-labourer can imagine the scene. To the lad who had never been outside
-his own village such a society must have been unspeakably alien and
-terrible: a ring of callous and mocking faces, hardened, by crime and
-wrong and base punishment, to make bitter ridicule of all the memories
-of home and boyhood and innocence that were surging and breaking round
-his simple heart.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The growing brutality of the Game Laws, if it is the chief, is not the
-only illustration of the extent to which the pressure of poverty was
-driving the labourers to press upon law and order, and the kind of
-measures that the ruling class took to protect its property. Another
-illustration is the Malicious Trespass Act.
-
-In 1820 Parliament passed an Act which provided that any person
-convicted before a single J.P. within four months of the act of doing
-any malicious injury to any building, hedge, fence, tree, wood, or
-underwood was to pay damage not exceeding £5, and if he was unable to
-pay these damages he was to be sent to hard labour in a common gaol
-or House of Correction for three months. The law before the passing
-of this Act was as it is to-day, _i.e._ the remedy lay in an action
-at law against the trespasser, and the trespasser under the Act of
-William and Mary had to pay damages. The Act of 1820 was passed without
-any debate that is reported in _Hansard_, but it is not unreasonable
-to assume that it was demanded for the protection of enclosures and
-game preserves.[367] This Act exempted one set of persons entirely,
-‘persons engaged in hunting, and qualified persons in pursuit of game.’
-These privileged gentlemen could do as much injury as they pleased.
-
-One clause provided that every male offender under sixteen who did not
-pay damages, and all costs and charges and expenses forthwith, might
-be sent by the magistrate to hard labour in the House of Correction
-for six weeks. Thus a child who broke a bough from a tree by the
-roadside might be sent by the magistrate, who would in many cases be
-the owner of the tree, to the House of Correction, there to learn
-the ways of criminals at an age when the magistrate’s own children
-were about half-way through their luxurious education. This was no
-_brutum fulmen_. Children were sent to prison in great numbers.[368]
-Brougham said in 1828: ‘There was a Bill introduced by the Rt. Hon.
-Gentleman opposite for extending the payment of expenses of witnesses
-and prosecutors out of the county rates. It is not to be doubted that
-it has greatly increased the number of Commitments, and has been
-the cause of many persons being brought to trial, who ought to have
-been discharged by the Magistrates. The habit of committing, from
-this and other causes, has grievously increased everywhere of late,
-and especially of boys. Eighteen hundred and odd, many of them mere
-children, have been committed in the Warwick district during the last
-seven years.’[369] The Governor of the House of Correction in Coldbath
-Fields, giving evidence before the Committee on Secondary Punishments
-in 1831, said that he had under his charge a boy of ten years old
-who had been in prison eight times. Capper, the Superintendent of
-the Convict Establishment, told the same Committee that some of the
-boy convicts were so young that they could scarcely put on their
-clothes, and that they had to be dressed. Richard Potter’s diary for
-1813 contains this entry: ‘Oct. 13.--I was attending to give evidence
-against a man. Afterwards, two boys, John and Thomas Clough, aged 12
-and 10 years, were tried and found guilty of stealing some Irish linen
-out of Joseph Thorley’s warehouse during the dinner hour. The Chairman
-sentenced them to seven years’ transportation. On its being pronounced,
-the Mother of those unfortunate boys came to the Bar to her children,
-and with them was in great agony, imploring mercy of the Bench. With
-difficulty the children were removed. The scene was so horrifying
-I could remain no longer in court.’[370] Parliament put these
-tremendous weapons into the hands of men who believed in using them,
-who administered the law on the principle by which Sir William Dyott
-regulated his conduct as a magistrate, that ‘nothing but the terror of
-human suffering can avail to prevent crime.’
-
-The class that had, in Goldsmith’s words, hung round ‘our paltriest
-possessions with gibbetts’ never doubted its power to do full justice
-to the helpless creatures who tumbled into the net of the law. Until
-1836 a man accused of a felony was not allowed to employ counsel to
-make his defence in the Court. His counsel (if he could afford to have
-one) could examine and cross-examine witnesses, and that was all; the
-prisoner, whatever his condition of mind, or his condition of body,
-had to answer the speech of the prosecuting counsel himself. In nine
-cases out of ten he was quite an unlearned man; he was swept into the
-glare of the Court blinking from long months of imprisonment in dark
-cells; the case against him was woven into a complete and perfect story
-by the skilled fingers of a lawyer, and it was left to this rude and
-illiterate man, by the aid of his own memory and his own imagination,
-his life on the razor’s edge, his mind bewildered by his strange and
-terrible surroundings, to pick that story to pieces, to expose what was
-mere and doubtful inference, to put a different complexion on a long
-and tangled set of events, to show how a turn here or a turn there in
-the narrative would change black into white and apparent guilt into
-manifest innocence. Sydney Smith, whose opinions on the importance of
-giving the poor a fair trial were as enlightened as his opinions on
-their proper treatment in prison were backward, has described the scene.
-
- ‘It is a most affecting moment in a Court of Justice, when the
- evidence has all been heard, and the Judge asks the prisoner what he
- has to say in his defence. The prisoner who has (by great exertions,
- perhaps of his friends) saved up money enough to procure Counsel, says
- to the Judge “that he leaves his defence to his Counsel.” We have
- often blushed for English humanity to hear the reply. “Your Counsel
- cannot speak for you, you must speak for yourself”; and this is the
- reply given to a poor girl of eighteen--to a foreigner--to a deaf
- man--to a stammerer--to the sick--to the feeble--to the old--to the
- most abject and ignorant of human beings!... How often have we seen a
- poor wretch, struggling against the agonies of his spirit, and the
- rudeness of his conceptions, and his awe of better-dressed men and
- better-taught men, and the shame which the accusation has brought upon
- his head, and the sight of his parents and children gazing at him in
- the Court, for the last time perhaps, and after a long absence!’[371]
-
-Brougham said in the House of Commons that there was no man who
-visited the Criminal Courts who did not see the fearful odds against
-the prisoner. This anomaly was peculiar to England, and in England it
-was peculiar to cases of felony. Men tried for misdemeanours, or for
-treason, or before the House of Lords could answer by the mouth of
-counsel. It was only in those cases where the prisoners were almost
-always poor and uneducated men and women, as Lord Althorp pointed
-out in an admirable speech in the House of Commons, that the accused
-was left to shift for himself. Twice, in 1824 and in 1826, the House
-of Commons refused leave to bring in a Bill to redress this flagrant
-injustice, encouraged in that refusal not only by Canning, but, what is
-much more surprising, by Peel.
-
-The favourite argument against this reform, taking precedence of the
-arguments that to allow persons the aid of counsel in putting their
-statement of fact would make justice slower, more expensive, and more
-theatrical, was the contention that the judge did, in point of fact,
-represent the interest of the prisoner: a confused plea which it did
-not require any very highly developed gift of penetration to dissect.
-But how far, in point of fact, were the judges able to enter into the
-poor prisoner’s mind? They had the power of sentencing to death for
-hundreds of trivial offences. It was the custom to pass the brutal
-sentence which the law allowed to be inflicted for felonies, and then
-to commute it in all except a few cases. By what considerations did
-judges decide when to be severe? Lord Ellenborough told Lauderdale that
-he had left a man to be hanged at the Worcester Assizes because he
-lolled out his tongue and pretended to be an idiot, on which Lauderdale
-asked the Chief Justice what law there was to punish that particular
-offence with death. We learn from Romilly’s _Memoirs_[372] that one
-judge left three men to be hanged for thefts at the Maidstone Assizes
-because none of them could bring a witness to his character.
-
-The same disposition to trust to the discretion of the judge, which
-Camden described as the law of tyrants, explains the vitality of the
-system of prescribing death as the punishment for hundreds of paltry
-offences. During the last fifty years the energy of Parliament in
-passing Enclosure Acts had been only rivalled by its energy in creating
-capital offences. The result was a penal code which had been condemned
-by almost every Englishman of repute of the most various opinions, from
-Blackstone, Johnson, and Goldsmith to Burke and Bentham. This system
-made the poor man the prey of his rich neighbours. The most furious
-punishments were held _in terrorem_ over the heads of prisoners, and
-the wretched man who was caught in the net was exposed to all the
-animosities that he might have provoked in his ordinary life. Dr. Parr
-put this point writing to Romilly in 1811.
-
-‘There is, indeed, one consideration in the case of bad men which
-ought to have a greater weight than it usually has in the minds of
-the Judges. Dislike from party, quarrels with servants or neighbours,
-offence justly or unjustly taken in a quarrel, jealousy about game, and
-twenty other matters of the same sort, frequently induce men to wish to
-get rid of a convicted person: and well does it behove every Judge to
-be sure that the person who recommends the execution of the sentence is
-a man of veracity, of sense, of impartiality and kindness of nature in
-the habitual character of his mind. I remember hearing from Sergeant
-Whitaker that, while he was trying a man for a capital offence at
-Norwich, a person brought him a message from the late Lord Suffield,
-“that the prisoner was a good-for-nothing fellow, and he hoped the
-Judge would look to him”; and the Sergeant kindled with indignation,
-and exclaimed in the hearing of the Court, “Zounds! would Sir Harbord
-Harbord have me condemn the man before I have tried him?” What Sir
-Harbord did during the trial, many squires and justices of the peace,
-upon other occasions, do after it; and were I a Judge, I should listen
-with great caution to all unfavourable representations. The rich, the
-proud, the irascible, and the vindictive are very unfit to estimate the
-value of life to their inferiors.’[373]
-
-We can see how the squires and the justices would close in round a man
-of whom they wanted, with the best intentions in the world, to rid
-their parish, woods, and warrens, when the punishment he was to receive
-turned on his reputation as it was estimated by the gentlemen of his
-neighbourhood. Was Sir Harbord Harbord very far removed from the state
-of mind described in the Sixth Satire of Juvenal?
-
- ‘“Pone crucem servo.” “Meruit quo crimine servus
- Supplicium? quis testis adest? quis detulit? Audi:
- Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa est.”
- “O demens, ita servus homo est? nil fecerit, esto:
- Hoc volo, sic jubeo, sit pro ratione voluntas.”’
-
-And Sir Harbord Harbord had in hundreds of cases what he had not in
-this case, the power to wreak his anger on ‘a good-for-nothing fellow.’
-
-When Romilly entered on his noble crusade and tried very cautiously
-to persuade Parliament to repeal the death penalty in cases in which
-it was rarely carried out, he found the chief obstacle in his way
-was the fear that became common among the governing class at this
-time, the fear that existing methods of punishment were ceasing to be
-deterrent. In 1810 he carried his Bill, for abolishing this penalty for
-the crime of stealing privately to the amount of five shillings in a
-shop, through the House of Commons, and the Bill was introduced in the
-House of Lords by Lord Holland. There it was rejected by twenty-one to
-eleven, the majority including the Archbishop of Canterbury and six
-other bishops.[374] The chief speeches against the Bill were made by
-Eldon and Ellenborough. Ellenborough argued that transportation was
-regarded, and justly regarded, by those who violated the law as ‘a
-summer airing by an easy migration to a milder climate.’
-
-The nightmare that punishment was growing gentle and attractive to the
-poor came to haunt the mind of the governing class. It was founded
-on the belief that as human wretchedness was increasing, there was a
-sort of law of Malthus, by which human endurance tended to outgrow the
-resources of repression. The agricultural labourers were sinking into
-such a deplorable plight that some of them found it a relief to be
-committed to the House of Correction, where, at least, they obtained
-food and employment, and the magistrates began to fear in consequence
-that ordinary punishments could no longer be regarded as deterrent,
-and to reason that some condition had yet to be discovered which
-would be more miserable than the general existence of the poor. The
-justices who punished Wiltshire poachers found such an El Dorado of
-unhappiness in transportation. But disturbing rumours came to the ears
-of the authorities that transportation was not thought a very terrible
-punishment after all, and the Government sent out to Sir George Arthur,
-the Governor of Van Diemen’s Land, certain complaints of this kind. The
-answer which the Governor returned is published with the Report of the
-Committee on Secondary Punishments, and the complete correspondence
-forms a very remarkable set of Parliamentary Papers. The Governor
-pointed out that these complaints, which made such an impression on
-Lord Melbourne, came from employers in Australia, who wanted to have
-greater control over their servants. Arthur was no sentimentalist;
-his sympathies had been drilled in two hard schools, the army and the
-government of prisoners; his account of his own methods shows that in
-describing the life of a convict he was in no danger of falling into
-the exaggerations or the rhetoric of pity. In these letters he made
-it very clear that nobody who knew what transportation meant could
-ever make the mistake of thinking it a light punishment. The ordinary
-convict was assigned to a settler. ‘Deprived of liberty, exposed to
-all the caprice of the family to whose service he may happen to be
-assigned, and subject to the most summary laws, the condition of a
-convict in no respect differs from that of a slave, except that his
-master cannot apply corporal punishment by his own hands or those
-of his overseer, and has a property in him for a limited period
-only.’ Further, ‘idleness and insolence of expression, or even of
-looks, anything betraying the insurgent spirit, subjects him to the
-chain-gang, or the triangle, or to hard labour on the roads.’[375]
-We can imagine what the life of an ordinary convict might become. In
-earlier days every convict who went out began as an assigned servant,
-and it was only for misconduct in the colony or on the way thither that
-he was sent to a Penal Settlement, but the growing alarm of the ruling
-class on the subject of punishment led to a demand for more drastic
-sentences, and shortly after the close of our period Lord Melbourne
-introduced a new system, under which convicts might be sentenced from
-home to the Penal Settlement, and any judge who thought badly of a
-prisoner might add this hideous punishment to transportation.
-
-The life of these Settlements has been described in one of the most
-vivid and terrible books ever written. Nobody can read Marcus Clarke’s
-great novel without feeling that the methods of barbarism had done
-their worst and most devilish in Macquarie Harbour and Port Arthur.
-The lot of the prisoners in _Resurrection_ is by comparison a paradise.
-Not a single feature that can revolt and stupefy the imagination
-is wanting to the picture. Children of ten committing suicide, men
-murdering each other by compact as an escape from a hell they could no
-longer bear, prisoners receiving a death sentence with ecstasies of
-delight, punishments inflicted that are indistinguishable from torture,
-men stealing into the parched bush in groups, in the horrible hope that
-one or two of them might make their way to freedom by devouring their
-comrades--an atmosphere in which the last faint glimmer of self-respect
-and human feeling was extinguished by incessant and degrading cruelty.
-Few books have been written in any language more terrible to read. Yet
-not a single incident or feature is imaginary: the whole picture is
-drawn from the cold facts of the official reports.[376] And this system
-was not the invention of some Nero or Caligula; it was the system
-imposed by men of gentle and refined manners, who talked to each other
-in Virgil and Lucan of liberty and justice, who would have died without
-a murmur to save a French princess from an hour’s pain or shame, who
-put down the abominations of the Slave Trade, and allowed Clive and
-Warren Hastings to be indicted at the bar of public opinion as monsters
-of inhumanity; and it was imposed by them from the belief that as
-the poor were becoming poorer, only a system of punishment that was
-becoming more brutal could deter them from crime.
-
-If we want to understand how completely all their natural feelings were
-lost in this absorbing fear, we must turn to the picture given by an
-observer who was outside their world; an observer who could enter into
-the misery of the punished, and could describe what transportation
-meant to boys of nine and ten, exposed to the most brutal appetites
-of savage men; to chained convicts, packed for the night in boxes so
-narrow that they could only lie on one side; to crushed and broken men,
-whose only prayer it was to die. From him we learn how these scenes and
-surroundings impressed a mind that could look upon a convict settlement
-as a society of living men and boys, and not merely as the Cloaca
-Maxima of property and order.[377]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[310] _Poor Law Report_, 1834, p. 60.
-
-[311] The big landlord under this method shared the privilege of paying
-the labourer’s wages with the small farmer.
-
-[312] _Tribune_, vol. ii. p. 317.
-
-[313] _Ibid._, p. 339.
-
-[314] Poor Law Commission Report of 1834, p. 126.
-
-[315] See Curtler’s _Short History of Agriculture_, p. 249.
-
-[316] Smart, _Economic Annals_, p. 36.
-
-[317] ‘It was during the war that the cottagers of England were chiefly
-deprived of the little pieces of land and garden, and made solely
-dependent for subsistence on the wages of their daily labour, or the
-poor rates. Land, and the produce of it, had become so valuable,
-that the labourer was envied the occupation of the smallest piece
-of ground which he possessed: and even “the bare-worn common” was
-denied.’--_Kentish Chronicle_, December 14, 1830.
-
-[318] Curtler, p. 243.
-
-[319] _Agricultural State of the Kingdom_, Board of Agriculture, 1816,
-p. 7.
-
-[320] _Ibid._, pp. 250-1.
-
-[321] P. 144.
-
-[322] C. C. Western (1767-1844); whig M.P., 1790-1832; chief
-representative of agricultural interests; made peer in 1833.
-
-[323] _Annual Register_, 1816, Chron., p. 67.
-
-[324] The disturbances at Brandon ceased immediately on the concession
-of the demands of the rioters; flour was reduced to 2s. 6d. a stone,
-and wages were raised for two weeks to 2s. a head. The rioters were
-contented, and peace was restored.--_Times_, May 23, 1816.
-
-[325] _Annual Register_, 1816, Chron., p. 67.
-
-[326] _Cambridge Chronicle_, June 28, 1816.
-
-[327] _Times_, June 26. A curious irony has placed side by side with
-the account in the _Annual Register_ of the execution of the five men
-who were hung for their share in this spasm of starvation and despair,
-the report of a meeting, with the inevitable Wilberforce in the chair,
-for raising a subscription for rebuilding the Protestant Church at
-Copenhagen, which had been destroyed by the British Fleet at the
-bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807.
-
-[328] _Agricultural State of the Kingdom_, p. 13.
-
-[329] 59 George III. c. 50.
-
-[330] See _Annual Register_, 1819, p. 320.
-
-[331] Those assessed at £100 were to have two votes, those at £150
-three votes, and those at £400 four votes. Whitbread did not propose to
-copy the provision of Gilbert’s Act, which withdrew all voting power
-in vestries in parishes that adopted that Act from persons assessed at
-less than £5.
-
-[332] _Political Register_, August 29, 1807, p. 329.
-
-[333] Letter to Samuel Whitbread, M.P., on his proposed Bill for the
-Amendment of the Poor Laws, 1807.
-
-[334] 58 George III. c. 69.
-
-[335] 59 George III. c. 12.
-
-[336] H. O. Papers, Municipal and Provincial.
-
-[337] Of course the system was only one of the causes of this
-difference in wages.
-
-[338] P. 99.
-
-[339] See _Agricultural State of the Kingdom_, Board of Agriculture, p.
-231, and Cobbett, _Political Register_, October 5, 1816.
-
-[340] Pp. 21 and 23.
-
-[341] The table is given in the Report of the Committee on the Poor
-Laws, 1828.
-
-[342] Cobbett, _Political Register_, September 21, 1822. Cobbett wrote
-one of his liveliest articles on this scale, setting out the number of
-livings held by the five parsons, and various circumstances connected
-with their families.
-
-[343] _Ibid._, September 9, 1826.
-
-[344] _Rural Rides_, p. 17.
-
-[345] _Ibid._, p. 609.
-
-[346] The farmers were usually sympathetic to poaching as a habit, but
-it was not so much from a perception of its economic tendencies, as
-from a general resentment against the Game Laws.
-
-[347] See Cobbett; _Letters to Peel_; _Political Register_; and Dr.
-Hunt’s evidence before the Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and
-Convictions, 1827.
-
-[348] A manifesto was published in a Bath paper in reply to this Act;
-it is quoted by Sydney Smith, _Essays_, p. 263: ‘TAKE NOTICE.--We
-have lately heard and seen that there is an act passed, and whatever
-poacher is caught destroying the game is to be transported for seven
-years.--_This is English Liberty!_
-
-‘Now we do swear to each other that the first of our company that this
-law is inflicted on, that there shall not be one gentleman’s seat in
-our country escape the rage of fire. The first that impeaches shall
-be shot. We have sworn not to impeach. You may think it a threat, but
-they will find it a reality. The Game Laws were too severe before. The
-Lord of all men sent these animals for the peasants as well as for the
-prince. God will not let his people be oppressed. He will assist us in
-our undertaking, and we will execute it with caution.’
-
-[349] The Archbishop of Canterbury prosecuted a man under this Act
-in January 1831, for rescuing a poacher from a gamekeeper without
-violence, on the ground that he thought it his duty to enforce the
-provisions of the Act.
-
-[350] House of Lords, September 19, 1831.
-
-[351] A magistrate wrote to Sir R. Peel in 1827 to say that many
-magistrates sent in very imperfect returns of convictions, and that the
-true number far exceeded the records.--Webb, _Parish and County_, p.
-598 note.
-
-[352] _Brougham Speeches_, vol. ii. p. 373.
-
-[353] _Political Register_, March 29, 1823, vol. xxiv. p. 796.
-
-[354] Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions, 1827,
-p. 30.
-
-[355] _Ibid._, p. 39.
-
-[356] Quoted in _Times_, December 18, 1830.
-
-[357] Return of Convictions under the Game Laws from 1827 to 1830.
-Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed, February 14, 1831, p. 4.
-
-[358] _Hansard_, June 9, 1817.
-
-[359] Scotland was exempted from the operation of this statute, for
-whilst the Bill was going through Parliament, a case raised in a
-Scottish Court ended in a unanimous decision by the six Judges of the
-High Court of Justiciary that killing by a spring gun was murder.
-Hence the milder provisions of this Act were not required. See _Annual
-Register_, 1827, p. 185, and Chron., p. 116.
-
-[360] That Coke of Norfolk did not err on the side of mercy towards
-poachers is clear from his record. His biographer (Mrs. Stirling)
-states that one of his first efforts in Parliament was to introduce a
-Bill to punish night poaching.
-
-[361] P. 29 ff.
-
-[362] _Annual Register_, 1827, p. 184.
-
-[363] _Edinburgh Review_, December 1831.
-
-[364] _Parliamentary Register_, February 25, 1782.
-
-[365] P. 42.
-
-[366] ‘Speaking now of country and agricultural parishes, I do not know
-above one instance in all my experience.’
-
-[367] Some Enclosure Acts prescribed special penalties for the breaking
-of fences. See cases of Haute Huntre and Croydon in Appendix.
-
-[368] See Mr. Estcourt’s evidence before Select Committee on Secondary
-Punishments, 1831, p. 41.
-
-[369] _Present State of the Law_, p. 41.
-
-[370] _From Ploughshare to Parliament_, p. 186; the _Annual Register_
-for 1791 records the execution of two boys at Newport for stealing, one
-aged fourteen and the other fifteen.
-
-[371] Sydney Smith, _Essays_, p. 487.
-
-[372] Vol. ii. p. 153.
-
-[373] Romilly, _Memoirs_, vol. ii. p. 181.
-
-[374] It was again rejected in 1813 by twenty to fifteen, the majority
-including five bishops.
-
-[375] _Correspondence on the Subject of Secondary Punishments_, 1834,
-p. 22.
-
-[376] See Select Committee on Secondary Punishments, 1831, and Select
-Committee on Transportation, 1838.
-
-[377] See evidence of Dr. Ullathorne, Roman Catholic Vicar-General
-of New Holland and Van Diemen’s Land, before the 1838 Committee on
-Transportation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE ISOLATION OF THE POOR
-
-
-The upper classes, to whom the fact that the labourers were more
-wretched in 1830 than they had been in 1795 was a reason for making
-punishment more severe, were not deliberately callous and cruel in
-their neglect of all this growing misery and hunger. Most of those who
-thought seriously about it had learnt a reasoned insensibility from
-the stern Sibyl of the political economy in fashion, that strange and
-partial interpretation of Adam Smith, Malthus and Ricardo which was
-then in full power. This political economy had robbed poverty of its
-sting for the rich by representing it as Nature’s medicine, bitter
-indeed, but less bitter than any medicine that man could prescribe.
-If poverty was sharper at one time than another, this only meant
-that society was more than ever in need of this medicine. But the
-governing class as a whole did not think out any such scheme or order
-of society, or master the new science of misery and vice. They thought
-of the poor not in relation to the mysterious forces of Nature, but
-in relation to the privileges of their own class in which they saw
-no mystery at all. Their state of mind is presented in a passage
-in Bolingbroke’s _Idea of a Patriot King_. ‘As men are apt to make
-themselves the measure of all being, so they make themselves the final
-cause of all creation. Thus the reputed orthodox philosophers in all
-ages have taught that the world was made for man, the earth for him
-to inhabit, and all the luminous bodies in the immense expanse around
-us for him to gaze at. Kings do no more, nay not so much, when they
-imagine themselves the final cause for which societies were formed and
-governments instituted.’ If we read ‘the aristocracy’ for ‘kings’ we
-shall have a complete analysis of the social philosophy of the ruling
-class. It was from this centre that they looked out upon the world.
-When the misery of the poor reacted on their own comfort, as in the
-case of poaching or crime or the pressure on the rates, they were aware
-of it and took measures to protect their property, but of any social
-problem outside these relations they were entirely unconscious. Their
-philosophy and their religion taught them that it was the duty of the
-rich to be benevolent, and of the poor to be patient and industrious.
-The rich were ready to do their part, and all they asked of the poor
-was that they should learn to bear their lot with resignation. Burke
-had laid down the true and full philosophy of social life once and for
-all. ‘Good order is the foundation of all good things. To be enabled
-to acquire, the people, without being servile, must be tractable and
-obedient. The magistrate must have his reverence, the laws their
-authority. The body of the people must not find the principles of
-natural subordination by art rooted out of their minds. They must
-respect that property of which they cannot partake. They must labour
-to obtain what by labour can be obtained; and when they find, as
-they commonly do, the success disproportioned to the endeavour, they
-must be taught their consolation in the final proportions of eternal
-justice.’[378]
-
-The upper classes, looking upon the world in this way, considered that
-it was the duty of the poor man to adapt himself, his tastes, his
-habits, and his ambitions, to the arrangements of a society which it
-had pleased Providence to organise on this interesting plan. We have
-in the pages of Eden the portrait of the ideal poor woman, whose life
-showed what could be done if poverty were faced in the proper spirit.
-‘Anne Hurst was born at Witley in Surrey; there she lived the whole
-period of a long life, and there she died. As soon as she was thought
-able to work, she went to service: there, before she was twenty, she
-married James Strudwick, who, like her own father, was a day labourer.
-With this husband she lived, a prolific, hard-working, contented wife,
-somewhat more than fifty years. He worked more than threescore years on
-one farm, and his wages, summer and winter, were regularly a shilling a
-day. He never asked more nor was never offered less. They had between
-them seven children: and lived to see six daughters married and three
-the mothers of sixteen children: all of whom were brought up, or are
-bringing up, to be day labourers. Strudwick continued to work till
-within seven weeks of the day of his death, and at the age of four
-score, in 1787, he closed, in peace, a not inglorious life; for, to the
-day of his death, he never received a farthing in the way of parochial
-aid. His wife survived him about seven years, and though bent with age
-and infirmities, and little able to work, excepting as a weeder in a
-gentleman’s garden, she also was too proud to ask or receive any relief
-from the parish. For six or seven of the last years of her life, she
-received twenty shillings a year from the person who favoured me with
-this account, which he drew up from her own mouth. With all her virtue,
-and all her merit, she yet was not much liked in her neighbourhood;
-people in affluence thought her haughty, and the Paupers of the parish,
-seeing, as they could not help seeing, that her life was a reproach
-to theirs, aggravated all her little failings. Yet, the worst thing
-they had to say of her was, that she was proud; which, they said, was
-manifested by the way in which she buried her husband. Resolute, as she
-owned she was, to have the funeral, and everything that related to it,
-what she called decent, nothing could dissuade her from having handles
-to his coffin and a plate on it, mentioning his age. She was also
-charged with having behaved herself crossly and peevishly towards one
-of her sons-in-law, who was a mason and went regularly every Saturday
-evening to the ale house as he said just to drink a pot of beer.
-James Strudwick in all his life, as she often told this ungracious
-son-in-law, never spent five shillings in any idleness: luckily (as
-she was sure to add) he had it not to spend. A more serious charge
-against her was that, living to a great age, and but little able to
-work, she grew to be seriously afraid, that, at last, she might become
-chargeable to the parish (the heaviest, in her estimation, of all human
-calamities), and that thus alarmed she did suffer herself more than
-once, during the exacerbations of a fit of distempered despondency,
-peevishly (and perhaps petulantly) to exclaim that God Almighty, by
-suffering her to remain so long upon earth, seemed actually to have
-forgotten her.’ ‘Such,’ concludes Eden, ‘are the simple annals of Dame
-Strudwick: and her historian, partial to his subject, closes it with
-lamenting that such village memoirs have not oftener been sought for
-and recorded.’[379] This was the ideal character for the cottage. How
-Eden or anybody else would have hated this poor woman in whom every
-kindly feeling had been starved to death if she had been in his own
-class! We know from Creevey what his friends thought of ‘the stingy
-kip’ Lambton when they found themselves under his roof, where ‘a round
-of beef at a side table was run at with as much keenness as a banker’s
-shop before a stoppage.’ A little peevishness or even petulance with
-God Almighty would not have seemed the most serious charge that could
-be brought against such a neighbour. But if every villager had had Dame
-Strudwick’s hard and narrow virtues, and had crushed all other tastes
-and interests in the passion for living on a shilling a day in a cold
-and bitter independence, the problem of preserving the monopolies of
-the few without disorder or trouble would have been greatly simplified.
-There would have been little danger, as Burke would have said, that the
-fruits of successful industry and the accumulations of fortune would
-be exposed to ‘the plunder of the negligent, the disappointed, and the
-unprosperous.’
-
-The way in which the ruling class regarded the poor is illustrated in
-the tone of the discussions when the problem of poverty had become
-acute at the end of the eighteenth century. When Pitt, who had been
-pestered by Eden to read his book, handed a volume to Canning, then his
-secretary, that brilliant young politician spent his time writing a
-parody on the grotesque names to be found in the Appendix, and it will
-be recollected that Pitt excused himself for abandoning his scheme for
-reforming the Poor Law, on the ground that he was inexperienced in the
-condition of the poor. It was no shame to a politician to be ignorant
-of such subjects. The poor were happy or unhappy in the view of the
-ruling class according to the sympathy the rich bestowed on them. If
-there were occasional misgivings they were easily dispelled. Thus one
-philosopher pointed out that though the position of the poor man might
-seem wanting in dignity or independence, it should be remembered by way
-of consolation that he could play the tyrant over his wife and children
-as much as he liked.[380] Another train of soothing reflections was
-started by such papers as that published in the _Annals of Agriculture_
-in 1797, under the title ‘On the Comforts enjoyed by the Cottagers
-compared to those of the ancient Barons.’ In such a society a sentiment
-like that expressed by Fox when supporting Whitbread’s Bill in 1795,
-that ‘it was not fitting in a free country that the great body of the
-people should depend on the charity of the rich,’ seemed a challenging
-paradox. Eden thought this an extraordinary way of looking at the
-problem, and retorted that it was gratifying to see how ready the rich
-were to bestow their benevolent attentions. This was the point of view
-of Pitt and of almost all the speakers in the debate that followed
-Fox’s outburst, Buxton going so far as to say that owing to those
-attentions the condition of the poor had never been ‘so eligible.’ Just
-as the boisterous captain in _Evelina_ thought it was an honour to a
-wretched Frenchwoman to be rolled in British mud, so the English House
-of Commons thought that poverty was turned into a positive blessing by
-the kindness of the rich.
-
-Writing towards the end of the ancient régime, Cobbett maintained
-that in his own lifetime the tone and language of society about the
-poor had changed very greatly for the worse, that the old name of
-‘the commons of England’ had given way to such names as ‘the lower
-orders,’ ‘the peasantry,’ and ‘the population,’ and that when the poor
-met together to demand their rights they were invariably spoken of by
-such contumelious terms as ‘the populace’ or ‘the mob.’ ‘In short,
-by degrees beginning about fifty years ago the industrious part of
-the community, particularly those who create every useful thing by
-their labour, have been spoken of by everyone possessing the power
-to oppress them in any degree in just the same manner in which we
-speak of the animals which compose the stock upon a farm. This is not
-the manner in which the forefathers of us, the common people, were
-treated.’[381] Such language, Cobbett said, was to be heard not only
-from ‘tax-devourers, bankers, brewers, monopolists of every sort, but
-also from their clerks, from the very shopkeepers and waiters, and from
-the fribbles stuck up behind the counter to do the business that ought
-to be done by a girl.’ This is perhaps only another way of saying that
-the isolation of the poor was becoming a more and more conspicuous
-feature of English society.
-
-Many causes combined to destroy the companionship of classes, and most
-of all the break-up of the old village which followed on the enclosures
-and the consolidation of farms. In the old village, labourers and
-cottagers and small farmers were neighbours. They knew each other
-and lived much the same kind of life. The small farmer was a farmer
-one day of the week and a labourer another; he married, according to
-Cobbett, the domestic servant of the gentry, a fact that explains the
-remark of Sophia Western’s maid to the landlady of the inn, ‘and let
-me have the bacon cut very nice and thin, for I can’t endure anything
-that’s gross. Prythee try if you can’t do a little tolerably for once;
-and don’t think you have a farmer’s wife or some of those creatures
-in the house.’ The new farmer lived in a different latitude. He
-married a young lady from the boarding school. He often occupied the
-old manor house.[382] He was divided from the labourer by his tastes,
-his interests, his ambitions, his display and whole manner of life.
-The change that came over the English village in consequence was
-apparent to all observers with social insight. When Goldsmith wanted to
-describe a happy village he was careful to choose a village of the old
-kind, with the farmers ‘strangers alike to opulence and to poverty,’
-and Crabbe, to whose sincere and realist pen we owe much of our
-knowledge of the social life of the time, gives a particularly poignant
-impression of the cold and friendless atmosphere that surrounded the
-poor:
-
- ‘Where Plenty smiles, alas! she smiles for few,
- And those who taste not, yet behold her store,
- Are as the slaves that dig the golden ore,
- The wealth around them makes them doubly poor.’[383]
-
-Perhaps the most vivid account of the change is given in a letter from
-Cobbett in the _Political Register_ for 17th March 1821,[384] addressed
-to Mr. Gooch:--
-
- ‘I hold a return to _small farms_ to be _absolutely necessary_ to a
- restoration to anything like an English community; and I am quite
- sure, that the ruin of the present race of farmers, generally, is
- a necessary preliminary to this.... The life of the husbandman
- cannot be that of _a gentleman_ without injury to society at large.
- When farmers become _gentlemen_ their labourers become _slaves_. A
- _Virginian_ farmer, as he is called, very much resembles a _great
- farmer_ in England; but then, the Virginian’s work is done by slaves.
- It is in those States of America, where the farmer is only the
- _first labourer_ that all the domestic virtues are to be found, and
- all that public-spirit and that valour, which are the safeguards
- of American independence, freedom, and happiness. You, Sir, with
- others, complain of the increase of the _poor-rates_. But, you seem
- to forget, that, in the destruction of the small farms, as separate
- farms, small-farmers have become mere hired labourers.... Take
- England throughout _three farms have been turned into one within
- fifty years_, and the far greater part of the change has taken place
- within the last _thirty years_; that is to say, since the commencement
- of the deadly system of PITT. Instead of families of small farmers
- with all their exertions, all their decency of dress and of manners,
- and all their scrupulousness as to character, we have _families of
- paupers_, with all the improvidence and wrecklessness belonging to an
- irrevocable sentence of poverty for life. Mr. CURWEN in his _Hints on
- Agriculture_, observes that he saw some where in Norfolk, I believe
- it was, _two hundred_ farmers worth from _five to ten thousand pounds
- each_; and exclaims “What a _glorious_ sight!” In commenting on this
- passage in the Register, in the year 1810, I observed “Mr. CURWEN only
- saw the _outside_ of the sepulchre; if he had seen the _two or three
- thousand_ half-starved labourers of these two hundred farmers, and the
- _five or six thousand_ ragged wives and children of those labourers;
- if the farmers had brought those with them, the sight would not have
- been so _glorious_.”’
-
-A practice referred to in the same letter of Cobbett’s that tended
-to widen the gulf between the farmer and the labourer was the
-introduction of bailiffs: ‘Along with enormous prices for corn came
-in the employment of _Bailiffs_ by farmers, a natural consequence of
-large farms; and to what a degree of insolent folly the system was
-leading, may be guessed from an observation of Mr. ARTHUR YOUNG, who
-recommended, that the Bailiff should have a good horse to ride, and
-a _bottle of port wine every day at his dinner_: while in the same
-work, Mr. YOUNG gives great numbers of rules for saving labour upon
-a farm. A pretty sort of farm where the bailiff was to have a bottle
-of port wine at his dinner! The custom was, too, to bring bailiffs
-from some _distant part_, in order to prevent them from having any
-feeling of compassion for the labourers. _Scotch_ bailiffs above
-all, were preferred, as being thought harder than any others that
-could be obtained; and thus (with shame I write the words!) the farms
-of _England_, like those of _Jamaica_, were supplied with drivers
-from Scotland!... Never was a truer saying, than that of the common
-people, that a Scotchman makes a “good _sole_, but a d----d bad _upper
-leather_.”’[385] Bamford, speaking of 1745, says: ‘Gentlemen then lived
-as they ought to live: as real gentlemen will ever be found living: in
-kindliness with their neighbours; in openhanded charity towards the
-poor, and in hospitality towards all friendly comers. There were no
-grinding bailiffs and land stewards in those days to stand betwixt the
-gentleman and his labourer or his tenant: to screw up rents and screw
-down livings, and to invent and transact all little meannesses for so
-much per annum.’[386] Cobbett’s prejudice against Scotsmen, the race of
-‘feelosofers,’ blinded him to virtues which were notoriously theirs, as
-in his round declaration that all the hard work of agriculture was done
-by Englishmen and Irishmen, and that the Scotsmen chose such tasks as
-‘peeping into melon frames.’ But that his remarks upon the subject of
-the introduction of Scottish bailiffs reflected a general feeling may
-be seen from a passage in Miss Austen’s _Emma_, ‘Mr. Graham intends to
-have a Scotch bailiff for his new estate. Will it answer? Will not the
-old prejudice be too strong?’
-
-The change in the status of the farmer came at a time of a general
-growth of luxury. All classes above the poor adopted a more extravagant
-and ostentatious style and scale of living. This was true, for example,
-of sporting England. Fox-hunting dates from this century. Before the
-eighteenth century the amusement of the aristocracy was hunting the
-stag, and that of the country squire was hunting the hare. It was
-because Walpole kept beagles at Richmond and used to hunt once a week
-that the House of Commons has always made Saturday a holiday. In the
-Peninsular War, Wellington kept a pack of hounds at headquarters, but
-they were fox-hounds. In its early days fox-hunting had continued the
-simpler traditions of hare-hunting, and each small squire kept a few
-couple of hounds and brought them to the meet. Gray has described his
-uncle’s establishment at Burnham, where every chair in the house was
-taken up by a dog. But as the century advanced the sport was organised
-on a grander scale: the old buck-hounds and slow horses were superseded
-by more expensive breeds, and far greater distances were covered.
-Fox-hunting became the amusement both of the aristocracy and of the
-squires, and it resembled rather the pomp and state of stag-hunting
-than the modest pleasures of Walpole and his friends. In all other
-directions there was a general increase of magnificence in life. The
-eighteenth century was the century of great mansions, and some of
-the most splendid palaces of the aristocracy were built during the
-distress and famine of the French war. The ambitions of the aristocracy
-became the ambitions of the classes that admired them, as we know
-from Smollett, and Sir William Scott in 1802, speaking in favour of
-the non-residence of the clergy, ‘expressly said that they and their
-families ought to appear at watering-places, and that this was amongst
-the means of making them respected by their flocks!’[387]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The rich and the poor were thus growing further and further apart, and
-there was nobody in the English village to interpret these two worlds
-to each other. M. Babeau has pointed out that in France, under the
-ancient régime, the lawyers represented and defended in some degree
-the rights of the peasants. This was one consequence of the constant
-litigation between peasants and seigneurs over communal property.
-The lawyers who took the side of the peasants lived at their expense
-it is true, but they rendered public services, they presented the
-peasants’ case before public opinion, and they understood their ideas
-and difficulties. This explains a striking feature of the French
-Revolution, the large number of local lawyers who became prominent
-as champions of revolutionary ideas. One of Burke’s chief complaints
-of the Constituent Assembly was that it contained so many country
-attorneys and notaries, ‘the fomenters and conductors of the petty war
-of village vexation.’[388] In England the lawyers never occupied this
-position, and it is impossible to imagine such a development taking
-place there. The lawyers who interested themselves in the poor were
-enlisted not in the defence of the rights of the commoners but in the
-defence of the purses of the parishes. For them the all-important
-question was not what rights the peasant had against his lord, but on
-which parish he had a claim for maintenance.
-
-The causes of litigation were endless: if a man rented a tenement of
-the annual value of £10 he acquired a settlement. But his rental might
-not have represented the annual value, and so the further question
-would come up, Was the annual value actually £10? ‘If it may be really
-not far from that sum, and the family of the pauper be numerous, the
-interests of the contending parishes, supported by the conflicting
-opinions of their respective surveyors, leads to the utmost expense
-and extremity of litigation.’[389] If the annual value were not in
-dispute there might be nice and intricate questions about the kind of
-tenement and the nature of the tenure: if the settlement was claimed
-in virtue of a contract of hiring, was the contract ‘general, special,
-customary, retrospective, conditional, personal’ or what not?[390] If
-the settlement was claimed in virtue of apprenticeship,[391] what was
-the nature of the indentures and so on. If claimed for an estate of
-£30, was the estate really worth £30, and how was it acquired? These
-are a few of the questions in dispute, and to add to the confusion ‘on
-no branch of the law have the judgments of the superior court been so
-contradictory.’[392]
-
-Thus the principal occupation of those lawyers whose business brought
-them into the world of the poor was of a nature to draw their
-sympathies and interests to the side of the possessing classes, and
-whereas peasants’ ideas were acclimatised outside their own class in
-France as a consequence of the character of rural litigation and of
-rural lawyers, the English villager came before the lawyer, not as a
-client, but as a danger; not as a person whose rights and interests
-had to be explored and studied, but as a person whose claims on the
-parish had to be parried or evaded. It is not surprising, therefore,
-to find that both Fielding and Smollett lay great stress on the
-reputation of lawyers for harshness and extortion in their treatment
-of the poor, regarding them, like Carlyle, as ‘attorneys and law
-beagles who hunt ravenous on the earth.’ Readers of the adventures
-of Sir Launcelot Greaves will remember Tom Clarke ‘whose goodness
-of heart even the exercise of his profession had not been able to
-corrupt. Before strangers he never owned himself an attorney without
-blushing, though he had no reason to blush for his own practice, for he
-constantly refused to engage in the cause of any client whose character
-was equivocal, and was never known to act with such industry as when
-concerned for the widow and orphan or any other object that sued _in
-forma pauperis_.’ Fielding speaks in a foot-note to _Tom Jones_ of
-the oppression of the poor by attorneys, as a scandal to the law, the
-nation, Christianity, and even human nature itself.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was another class that might, under different circumstances, have
-helped to soothe and soften the isolation of the poor, but the position
-and the sympathies of the English Church made this impossible. This
-was seen very clearly by Adam Smith, who was troubled by the fear that
-‘enthusiasm,’ the religious force so dreaded by the men of science and
-reason, would spread among the poor, because the clergy who should have
-controlled and counteracted it were so little in touch with the mass
-of the people. Under the government of the Anglican Church, as set up
-by the Reformation, he pointed out, ‘the clergy naturally endeavour
-to recommend themselves to the sovereign, to the court, and to the
-nobility and gentry of the country, by whose influence they chiefly
-expect to obtain preferment.’[393] He added that such a clergy are very
-apt to neglect altogether the means of maintaining their influence and
-authority with the lower ranks of life. The association of the Anglican
-Church with the governing class has never been more intimate and
-binding than it was during the eighteenth century. This was true alike
-of bishops and of clergy. The English bishop was not a gay Voltairean
-like the French, but he was just as zealous a member of the privileged
-orders, and the system over which he presided and which he defended
-was a faint copy of the gloriously coloured scandals of the French
-Church. The prelates who lived upon those scandals were described by
-Robespierre, with a humour that he did not often indulge, as treating
-the deity in the same way as the mayor of the palace used to treat
-the French kings. ‘Ils l’ont traité comme jadis les maires du palais
-traitèrent les descendants de Clovis pour régner sous son nom et se
-mettre à sa place. Ils l’ont relégué dans le ciel comme dans un palais,
-et ne l’ont appelé sur la terre que pour demander à leur profit des
-dîmes, des richesses, des honneurs, des plaisirs et de la puissance.’
-When Archbishop Dillon declared against the civil constitution he said
-that he and his colleagues acted as gentlemen and not as theologians.
-The Archbishop of Aix spoke of tithes as a voluntary offering
-from the piety of the faithful. ‘As to that,’ said the Duke de la
-Rochefoucault, ‘there are now forty thousand cases in the Courts.’
-Both these archbishops would have found themselves quite at home among
-the spiritual peers in the House of Lords, where the same decorous
-hypocrisies mingled with the same class atmosphere. For the English
-bishops, though they were not libertines like the French, never learnt
-so to be Christians as to forget to be aristocrats, and their religious
-duties were never allowed to interfere with the demands of scholarship
-or of pleasure. Perhaps the most distinguished product of this régime
-was Bishop Watson of Llandaff, who invented an improved gunpowder
-and defended Christianity against Paine and Gibbon. These were his
-diversions; his main business was carried on at his magnificent country
-seat on the banks of Windermere. He was bishop for thirty-four years,
-and during the whole of that time he never lived within his diocese,
-preferring to play the part of the grand seigneur planting trees in
-Westmorland. He has left a sympathetic and charming account of what
-he modestly calls his retirement from public life, an event not to be
-confused with abdication of his see, and of how he built the palace
-where he spent the emoluments of Llandaff and the long autumn of his
-life.
-
-It was natural to men who lived in this atmosphere to see politics
-through the spectacles of the aristocracy. To understand how strongly
-the view that the Church existed to serve the aristocracy, and the
-rest of the State through the aristocracy, was fixed in the minds of
-the higher clergy, we have only to look at the case of a reformer
-like Bishop Horsley. The bishop is chiefly known as a preacher, a
-controversialist, and the author of the celebrated dictum that the
-poor had nothing to do with the laws except to obey them. His battle
-with Priestley has been compared to the encounter of Bentley and
-Collins, a comparison that may not give Horsley more, but certainly
-gives Priestley less than his due. When he preached before the House
-of Lords on the death of Louis XVI. his audience rose and stood in
-silent reverence during his peroration. The cynical may feel that it
-was not difficult to inspire emotion and awe in such a congregation
-on such a subject at such a time, but we know from De Quincey that
-Horsley’s reputation as a preacher stood remarkably high. He was one
-of the leaders of the Church in politics; for our purposes it is more
-important to note that he was one of the reforming bishops. Among other
-scandals he attacked the scandal of non-residence, and he may be taken
-as setting in this regard the strictest standard of his time; yet he
-did not scruple to go and live in Oxford for some years as tutor to
-Lord Guernsey, during the time that he was Rector of Newington, as
-plain a confession as we could want that in the estimation of the most
-public-spirited of the clergy the nobility had the first claims on the
-Church. These social sympathies were confirmed by common political
-interests. The privileges of the aristocracy and of the bishops were
-in fact bound up together, and both bishops and aristocracy had good
-reason to shrink from breaking a thread anywhere. Perhaps the malicious
-would find the most complete and piquant illustration of the relations
-of the Church and the governing class in the letter written by Dr.
-Goodenough to Addington, who had just made him Dean of Rochester, when
-the clerkship of the Pells, worth £3000 a year, was about to become
-vacant. ‘I understand that Colonel Barré is in a very precarious
-state. I hope you will have the fortitude to nominate Harry to be
-his successor.’ Harry, Addington’s son, was a boy at Winchester. The
-father’s fortitude rose to the emergency: the dean blossomed a little
-later into a bishop.
-
-But if the French and the English bishops both belonged to the
-aristocracy in feelings and in habits, a great difference distinguishes
-the rank and file of the clergy in the two countries. The French priest
-belonged by circumstances and by sympathy to the peasant class. The
-bishop regarded the country curé as _un vilain sentant le fumier_, and
-treated him with about as much consideration as the seigneur showed
-to his dependants. The priest’s quarrel with the bishop was like the
-peasant’s quarrel with the seigneur: for both priest and peasant
-smarted under the arrogant airs of their respective superiors, and
-the bishop swallowed up the tithes as the seigneur swallowed up the
-feudal dues. Sometimes the curé put himself at the head of a local
-rebellion. In the reign of Louis XV. the priests round Saint-Germain
-led out their flocks to destroy the game which devoured their crops,
-the campaign being announced and sanctified from the pulpit. In the
-Revolution the common clergy were largely on the side of the peasants.
-Such a development was inconceivable in England. As the curé’s windows
-looked to the village, the parson’s windows looked to the hall. When
-the parson’s circumstances enabled him to live like the squire, he rode
-to hounds, for though, as Blackstone tells us, Roman Canon Law, under
-the influence of the tradition that St. Jerome had once observed that
-the saints had eschewed such diversions, had interdicted _venationes et
-sylvaticas vagationes cum canibus et accipitribus_ to all clergymen,
-this early severity of life had vanished long before the eighteenth
-century. He treated the calls of his profession as trifling accidents
-interrupting his normal life of vigorous pleasure. On becoming Bishop
-of Chester, Dr. Blomfield astonished the diocese by refusing to license
-a curate until he had promised to abstain from hunting, and by the pain
-and surprise with which he saw one of his clergy carried away drunk
-from a visitation dinner. One rector, whom he rebuked for drunkenness,
-replied with an injured manner that he was never drunk on duty.
-
-There were, it is true, clergymen of great public spirit and devoted
-lives, and such men figure in these pages, but the Church, as a whole,
-was an easy-going society, careful of its pleasures and comforts,
-living with the moral ideas and as far as possible in the manner of
-the rich. The rivalry of the Methodist movement had given a certain
-stimulus to zeal, and the Vicar of Corsley in Wilts,[394] for example,
-added a second service to the duties of the Sunday, though guarding
-himself expressly against the admission of any obligation to make it
-permanent. But it was found impossible to eradicate from the system
-certain of the vices that belong to a society which is primarily a
-class. Some of the bishops set themselves to reduce the practice of
-non-residence. Porteus, Bishop of London, devoted a great part of his
-charge to his clergy in 1790 to this subject, and though he pleaded
-passionately for reform he cannot be said to have shut his eyes to
-the difficulties of the clergy. ‘There are, indeed, two impediments
-to constant residence which cannot easily be surmounted; the first
-is (what unfortunately prevails in some parts of this diocese)
-unwholesomeness of situation; the other is the possession of a second
-benefice. Yet even these will not justify _a total and perpetual_
-absence from your cures. The unhealthiness of many places is of late
-years by various improvements greatly abated, and there are now few so
-circumstanced as not to admit of residence there in _some_ part of the
-year without any danger to the constitution.’ Thus even Bishop Porteus,
-who in this very charge reminded the clergy that they were called by
-the titles of stewards, watchmen, shepherds, and labourers, never went
-the length of thinking that the Church was to be expected to minister
-to the poor in all weathers and in all climates.
-
-The exertions of the reforming bishops did not achieve a conspicuous
-success, for the second of the difficulties touched on by Porteus was
-insurmountable. In his _Legacy to Parsons_, Cobbett, quoting from the
-_Clerical Guide_, showed that 332 parsons shared the revenues of 1496
-parishes, and 500 more shared those of 1524. Among the pluralists were
-Lord Walsingham, who besides enjoying a pension of £700 a year, was
-Archdeacon of Surrey, Prebendary of Winchester, Rector of Calbourne,
-Rector of Fawley, perpetual Curate of Exbury, and Rector of Merton; the
-Earl of Guildford, Rector of Old Alresford, Rector of New Alresford,
-perpetual Curate of Medsted, Rector of St. Mary, Southampton, including
-the great parish of South Stoneham, Master of St. Cross Hospital, with
-the revenue of the parish of St. Faith along with it. There were three
-Pretymans dividing fifteen benefices, and Wellington’s brother was
-Prebendary of Durham, Rector of Bishopwearmouth, Rector of Chelsea, and
-Rector of Therfield. This method of treating the parson’s profession
-as a comfortable career was so closely entangled in the system of
-aristocracy, that no Government which represented those interests
-would ever dream of touching it. Parliament intervened indeed, but
-intervened to protect those who lived on these abuses. For before 1801
-there were Acts of Parliament on the Statute Book (21 Henry VIII. c.
-13, and 13 Elizabeth c. 20), which provided certain penalties for
-non-residence. In 1799 a certain Mr. Williams laid informations against
-hundreds of the clergy for offences against these Acts. Parliament
-replied by passing a series of Acts to stay proceedings, and finally
-in 1803 Sir William Scott, member for the University of Oxford, passed
-an Act which allowed the bishops to authorise parsons to reside out of
-their parishes. It is not surprising to find that in 1812, out of ten
-thousand incumbents, nearly six thousand were non-resident.
-
-In the parishes where the incumbent was non-resident, if there was a
-clergyman at all in the place, it was generally a curate on a miserable
-pittance. Bishop Porteus, in the charge already mentioned, gives some
-interesting information about the salaries of curates: ‘It is also
-highly to the honour of this Diocese that in general the stipends
-allowed to the curates are more liberal than in many other parts of the
-kingdom. In several instances I find that the stipend for one church
-only is £50 a year; for two £60 and the use of a parsonage; and in the
-unwholesome parts of the Diocese £70 and even £80 (that is £40 for each
-church), with the same indulgence of a house to reside in.’ Many of the
-parishes did not see much of the curate assigned to them. ‘A man must
-have travelled very little in the kingdom,’ said Arthur Young in 1798,
-‘who does not know that country towns abound with curates who never
-see the parishes they serve, but when they are absolutely forced to it
-by duty.’[395] But the ill-paid curate, even when he was resident and
-conscientious, as he often was, moved like the pluralist rector in the
-orbit of the rich. He was in that world though not of it. All his hopes
-hung on the squire. To have taken the side of the poor against him
-would have meant ruin, and the English Church was not a nursery of this
-kind of heroism. It is significant that almost every eighteenth-century
-novelist puts at least one sycophantic parson in his or her gallery of
-portraits.[396]
-
-In addition to the social ties that drew the clergy to the aristocracy,
-there was a powerful economic hindrance to their friendship with the
-poor. De Tocqueville thought that the tithe system brought the French
-priest into interesting and touching relations with the peasant: a view
-that has seemed fanciful to later historians, who are more impressed
-by the quarrels that resulted. But De Tocqueville himself could
-scarcely argue that the tithe system helped to warm the heart of the
-labourer to the Church of England in cases such as those recorded in
-the Parliamentary Paper issued in 1833, in which parson magistrates
-sent working men to prison for refusing to pay tithes to their rector.
-Day labouring men had originally been exempted from liability to pay
-tithes, but just as the French Church brought more and more of the
-property and industry of the State within her confiscating grasp,
-so the English Parliament, from the reign of William III., had been
-drawing the parson’s net more closely round the labourer. Moreover,
-as we shall see in a later chapter, the question of tithes was in the
-very centre of the social agitations that ended in the rising of 1830
-and its terrible punishment. In this particular quarrel the farmers and
-labourers were on the same side, and the parsons as a body stood out
-for their own property with as much determination as the landlords.
-
-In one respect the Church took an active part in oppressing the
-village poor, for Wilberforce and his friends started, just before
-the French Revolution, a Society for the Reformation of Manners,
-which aimed at enforcing the observance of Sunday, forbidding any
-kind of social dissipation, and repressing freedom of speech and of
-thought whenever they refused to conform to the superstitions of the
-morose religion that was then in fashion. This campaign was directed
-against the license of the poor alone. There were no stocks for the
-Sabbath-breakers of Brooks’s: a Gibbon might take what liberties he
-pleased with religion: the wildest Methodist never tried to shackle the
-loose tongues or the loose lives of the gay rich. The attitude of the
-Church to the excesses of this class is well depicted in Fielding’s
-account of Parson Supple, who never remonstrated with Squire Western
-for swearing, but preached so vigorously in the pulpit against the
-habit that the authorities put the laws very severely in execution
-against others, ‘and the magistrate was the only person in the parish
-who could swear with impunity.’ This description might seem to border
-on burlesque, but there is an entry in Wilberforce’s diary that reveals
-a state of mind which even Fielding would have found it impossible
-to caricature. Wilberforce was staying at Brighton, and this is his
-description of an evening he spent at the Pavilion with the first
-gentleman of Europe: ‘The Prince and Duke of Clarence too very civil.
-Prince showed he had read Cobbett. Spoke strongly of the blasphemy of
-his late papers and most justly.’[397] We can only hope that Sheridan
-was there to enjoy the scene, and that the Prince was able for once
-to do justice to his strong feelings in language that would not shock
-Wilberforce’s ears.
-
-Men like Wilberforce and the magistrates whom he inspired did not
-punish the rich for their dissolute behaviour; they only found in that
-behaviour another argument for coercing the poor. As they watched
-the dishevelled lives of men like George Selwyn, their one idea of
-action was to punish a village labourer for neglecting church on
-Sunday morning. We have seen how the cottagers paid in Enclosure
-Bills for their lords’ adventures at play. They paid also for their
-lords’ dissipations in the loss of innocent pleasures that might have
-brought some colour into their grey lives. The more boisterous the
-fun at Almack’s, the deeper the gloom thrown over the village. The
-Select Committee on Allotments that reported in 1843 found one of the
-chief causes of crime in the lack of recreations. Sheridan at one time
-and Cobbett at another tried to revive village sports, but social
-circumstances were too strong for them. In this respect the French
-peasant had the advantage. Babeau’s picture of his gay and sociable
-Sunday may be overdrawn, but a comparison of Crabbe’s description
-of the English Sunday with contemporary descriptions of Sunday as
-it was spent in a French village, shows that the spirit of common
-gaiety, killed in England by Puritanism and by the destruction of the
-natural and easy-going relations of the village community, survived
-in France through all the tribulations of poverty and famine. The
-eighteenth-century French village still bore a resemblance in fact
-to the mediæval English village, and Goldsmith has recorded in _The
-Traveller_ his impressions of ‘mirth and social ease.’ Babeau gives
-an account of a great variety of village games, from the violent
-contests in Brittany for the ‘choule,’ in one of which fourteen players
-were drowned, to the gentler dances and the children’s romps that
-were general in other parts of France, and Arthur Young was very much
-struck by the agility and the grace that the heavy peasants displayed
-in dancing on the village green. Windham, speaking in a bad cause, the
-defence of bull-baiting in 1800, laid stress on the contrast: ‘In the
-south of France and in Spain, at the end of the day’s labour, and in
-the cool of the evening’s shade, the poor dance in mirthful festivity
-on the green, to the sound of the guitar. But in this country no such
-source of amusement presents itself. If they dance, it must be often in
-a marsh, or in the rain, for the pleasure of catching cold. But there
-is a substitute in this country well known by the name of _Hops_. We
-all know the alarm which the very word inspires, and the sound of the
-fiddle calls forth the magistrate to dissolve the meeting. Men bred
-in ignorance of the world, and having no opportunity of mixing in its
-scenes or observing its manners, may be much worse employed than in
-learning something of its customs from theatrical representations; but
-if a company of strolling players make their appearance in a village,
-they are hunted immediately from it as a nuisance, except, perhaps,
-there be a few people of greater wealth in the neighbourhood, whose
-wives and daughters patronize them.’[398] Thus all the influences of
-the time conspired to isolate the poor, and the changes, destructive of
-their freedom and happiness, that were taking place in their social and
-economic surroundings, were aggravated by a revival of Puritanism which
-helped to rob village life of all its natural melody and colour.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[378] _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ (fourth edition), p.
-359.
-
-[379] Eden, vol. i. p. 579.
-
-[380] _Reports on Poor_, vol. ii. p. 325.
-
-[381] _Political Register_, vol. lxxviii. p. 710.
-
-[382] Hasbach, p. 131.
-
-[383] ‘Village,’ Book 1.
-
-[384] Vol. xxxviii. p. 750 ff.
-
-[385] Cobbett’s _Political Register_, March 17, 1821, p. 779.
-
-[386] Bamford, _Passages in the Life of a Radical_, p. 38.
-
-[387] _Rural Rides_, p. 460.
-
-[388] _Reflections_, p. 61.
-
-[389] _Poor Law Report_, 1817.
-
-[390] Cf. _Ibid._, 1834, p. 161.
-
-[391] Cf. case of apprentice, _Annual Register_, 1819, p. 195.
-
-[392] _Poor Law Report_, 1817; in some cases there were amicable
-arrangements to keep down legal expenses; _e.g._ at Halifax (Eden), the
-overseer formed a society of the officers of adjoining parishes. Cases
-were referred to them, and the decision of the majority was accepted.
-
-[393] _Wealth of Nations_, vol. iii. p. 234.
-
-[394] _Life in an English Village_, by Maude F. Davies, p. 58.
-
-[395] _Inquiry into the State of the Public Mind among the Lower
-Classes_, p. 27.
-
-[396] The parsons under Squire Allworthy’s roof, the parson to whom
-Pamela appealed in vain, and, most striking of all, Mr. Collins in
-_Pride and Prejudice_.
-
-[397] _Life_, vol. iv. p. 277.
-
-[398] _Parliamentary Register_, April 18, 1800.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE VILLAGE IN 1830
-
-
-We have described the growing misery of the labourer, the increasing
-rigours of the criminal law, and the insensibility of the upper
-classes, due to the isolation of the poor. What kind of a community
-was created by the Speenhamland system after it had been in force for
-a generation? We have, fortunately, a very full picture given in a
-Parliamentary Report that is generally regarded as one of the landmarks
-of English history. We cannot do better than set out the main features
-of the Report of the Poor Law Commissioners of 1834, and the several
-effects they traced to this system.
-
-The first effect is one that everybody could have anticipated: the
-destruction of all motives for effort and ambition. Under this system
-‘the most worthless were sure of _something_, while the prudent, the
-industrious, and the sober, with all their care and pains, obtained
-_only something_; and even that scanty pittance was doled out to
-them by the overseer.’[399] All labourers were condemned to live on
-the brink of starvation, for no effort of will or character could
-improve their position. The effect on the imagination was well summed
-up in a rhetorical question from a labourer who gave evidence to
-a Commissioner. ‘When a man has his spirit broken what is he good
-for?’[400] The Poor Law Commissioners looked at it from a different
-point of view: ‘The labourer feels that the existing system, though
-it generally gives him low wages, always gives him work. It gives
-him also, strange as it may appear, what he values more, a sort of
-independence. He need not bestir himself to seek work; he need not
-study to please his master; he need not put any restraint upon his
-temper; he need not ask relief as a favour. He has all a slave’s
-security for subsistence, without his liability to punishment.... All
-the other classes of society are exposed to the vicissitudes of hope
-and fear; he alone has nothing to lose or to gain.’[401]
-
-But it is understating the result of the system on individual
-enterprise to say that it destroyed incentives to ambition; for in some
-parishes it actually proscribed independence and punished the labourer
-who owned some small property. Wages under these conditions were so
-low that a man with a little property or a few savings could not keep
-himself alive without help from the parish, but if a man was convicted
-of possessing anything he was refused parish help. It was dangerous
-even to look tidy or neat, ‘ragged clothes are kept by the poor, for
-the express purpose of coming to the vestry in them.’[402] The Report
-of the Commissioners on this subject recalls Rousseau’s description of
-the French peasant with whom he stayed in the course of his travels,
-who, when his suspicions had been soothed, and his hospitable instincts
-had been warmed by friendly conversation, produced stores of food from
-the secret place where they had been hidden to escape the eye of the
-tax-collector. A man who had saved anything was ruined. A Mr. Hickson,
-a Northampton manufacturer and landowner in Kent, gave an illustration
-of this.
-
-‘The case of a man who has worked for me will show the effect of the
-parish system in preventing frugal habits. This is a hard-working,
-industrious man, named William Williams. He is married, and had saved
-some money, to the amount of about £70, and had two cows; he had also
-a sow and ten pigs. He had got a cottage well furnished; he was a
-member of a benefit club at Meopham, from which he received 8s. a week
-when he was ill. He was beginning to learn to read and write, and sent
-his children to the Sunday School. He had a legacy of about £46, but
-he got his other money together by saving from his fair wages as a
-waggoner. Some circumstances occurred which obliged me to part with
-him. The consequence of this labouring man having been frugal and saved
-money, and got the cows, was that no one would employ him, although
-his superior character as a workman was well known in the parish. He
-told me at the time I was obliged to part with him: “Whilst I have
-these things I shall get no work; I must part with them all; I must be
-reduced to a state of beggary before any one will employ me.” I was
-compelled to part with him at Michaelmas; he has not yet got work, and
-he has no chance of getting any until he has become a pauper; for until
-then the paupers will be preferred to him. He cannot get work in his
-own parish, and he will not be allowed to get any in other parishes.
-Another instance of the same kind occurred amongst my workmen. Thomas
-Hardy, the brother-in-law of the same man, was an excellent workman,
-discharged under similar circumstances; he has a very industrious wife.
-They have got two cows, a well-furnished cottage, and a pig and fowls.
-Now he cannot get work, because he has property. The pauper will be
-preferred to him, and he can qualify himself for it only by becoming a
-pauper. If he attempts to get work elsewhere, he is told that they do
-not want to fix him on the parish. Both these are fine young men, and
-as excellent labourers as I could wish to have. The latter labouring
-man mentioned another instance of a labouring man in another parish
-(Henstead), who had once had more property than he, but was obliged to
-consume it all, and is now working on the roads.’[403] This effect of
-the Speenhamland arrangements was dwelt on in the evidence before the
-Committee on Agricultural Labourers’ Wages in 1824. Labourers had to
-give up their cottages in a Dorsetshire village because they could not
-become pensioners if they possessed a cottage, and farmers would only
-give employment to village pensioners. Thus these cottagers who had not
-been evicted by enclosure were evicted by the Speenhamland system.
-
-It is not surprising that in the case of another man of independent
-nature in Cambridgeshire, who had saved money and so could get no work,
-we are told that the young men pointed at him, and called him a fool
-for not spending his money at the public-house, ‘adding that then he
-would get work.’[404] The statesmen who condemned the labourer to this
-fate had rejected the proposal for a minimum wage, on the ground that
-it would destroy emulation.
-
-There was one slight alleviation of this vicious system, which the
-Poor Law Commissioners considered in the very different light of
-an aggravation. If society was to be reorganised on such a basis
-as this, it was at any rate better that the men who were made to
-live on public money should not be grateful to the ratepayers. The
-Commissioners were pained by the insolence of the paupers. ‘The parish
-money,’ said a Sussex labourer, ‘is now chucked to us like as to a
-dog,’[405] but the labourers did not lick the hand that threw it. All
-through the Report we read complaints of the ‘insolent, discontented,
-surly pauper,’ who talks of ‘right’ and ‘income,’ and who will soon
-fight for these supposed rights and income ‘unless some step is taken
-to arrest his progress to open violence.’ The poor emphasised this
-view by the terms they applied to their rate subsidies, which they
-sometimes called ‘their reglars,’ sometimes ‘the county allowance,’
-and sometimes ‘The Act of Parliament allowance.’ Old dusty rentbooks
-of receipts and old dirty indentures of apprenticeship were handed
-down from father to son with as much care as if they had been deeds of
-freehold property, as documentary evidence to their right to a share
-in the rates of a particular parish.[406] Of course there was not a
-uniform administration, and the Commissioners reported that whilst in
-some districts men were disqualified for relief if they had any wages,
-in others there was no inquiry into circumstances, and non-necessitous
-persons dipped like the rest into the till. In many cases only the
-wages received during the last week or fortnight were taken into
-account, and thus the allowance would be paid to some persons who at
-particular periods received wages in excess of the scale. This accounts
-for the fact stated by Thorold Rogers from his own experience that
-there were labourers who actually saved considerable sums out of the
-system.
-
-The most obvious and immediate effect was the effect which had been
-foreseen without misgiving in Warwickshire and Worcestershire. The
-married man was employed in preference to the bachelor, and his income
-rose with the birth of each child. But there was one thing better
-than to marry and have a family, and that was to marry a mother of
-bastards, for bastards were more profitable than legitimate children,
-since the parish guaranteed the contribution for which the putative
-father was legally liable. It was easier to manage with a family than
-with a single child. As one young woman of twenty-four with four
-bastard children put it, ‘If she had one more she should be very
-comfortable.’[407] Women with bastard children were thus very eligible
-wives. The effect of the whole system on village morals was striking
-and widespread, and a witness from a parish which was overwhelmed
-with this sudden deluge of population said to the Commission, ‘the
-eighteen-penny children will eat up this parish in ten years more,
-unless some relief be afforded us.’[408] Before this period, if we are
-to believe Cobbett, it had been rare for a woman to be with child at
-the time of her marriage; in these days of demoralisation and distress
-it became the habit.
-
-The effects produced by this system on the recipients of relief were
-all of them such as might have been anticipated, and in this respect
-the Report of the Commissioners contained no surprises. It merely
-illustrated the generalisations that had been made by all Poor Law
-Reformers during the last fifteen years. But the discovery of the
-extent of the corruption which the system had bred in local government
-and administration was probably a revelation to most people. It
-demoralised not only those who received but those who gave. A network
-of tangled interests spread over local life, and employers and
-tradesmen were faced with innumerable temptations and opportunities
-for fraud. To take the case of the overseer first. Suppose him to be
-a tradesman: he was liable to suffer in his custom if he refused to
-relieve the friends, or it might be the workmen of his customers. It
-would require a man of almost superhuman rigidity of principle to be
-willing not only to lose time and money in serving a troublesome and
-unprofitable office, but to lose custom as well.[409] From the resolve
-not to lose custom he might gradually slip down to the determination to
-reimburse himself for ‘the vexatious demands’ on his time, till a state
-of affairs like that in Slaugham came about.
-
-‘Population, 740. Expenditure, £1706. The above large sum of money is
-expended principally in orders on the village shops for flour, clothes,
-butter, cheese, etc.: the tradesmen serve the office of overseer by
-turns; the two last could neither read nor write.’[410]
-
-If the overseer were a farmer there were temptations to pay part of
-the wages of his own and his friends’ labourers out of parish money,
-or to supply the workhouse with his own produce. The same temptations
-beset the members of vestries, whether they were open or select.
-‘Each vestryman, so far as he is an immediate employer of labour, is
-interested in keeping down the rate of wages, and in throwing part of
-their payment on others, and, above all, on the principal object of
-parochial fraud, the tithe-owner: if he is the owner of cottages, he
-endeavours to get their rent paid by the parish; if he keeps a shop, he
-struggles to get allowance for his customers or debtors; if he deals
-in articles used in the workhouse, he tries to increase the workhouse
-consumption; if he is in humble circumstances, his own relations or
-friends may be among the applicants.’[411] Mr. Drummond, a magistrate
-for Hants and Surrey, said to the Committee on Labourers’ Wages in
-1824, that part of the poor-rate expenditure was returned to farmers
-and landowners in exorbitant cottage rents, and that the farmers always
-opposed a poor man who wished to build himself a cottage on the waste.
-
-In the case of what was known as the ‘labour rate’ system, the members
-of one class combined together to impose the burden of maintaining the
-poor on the shoulders of the other classes. By this system, instead of
-the labourer’s wages being made up to a fixed amount by the parish,
-each ratepayer was bound to employ, and to pay at a certain rate, a
-certain number of labourers, whether he wanted them or not. The number
-depended sometimes on his assessment to the poor rate, sometimes on the
-amount of acres he occupied (of the use to which the land was put no
-notice was taken, a sheep-walk counting for as much as arable fields):
-when the occupiers of land had employed a fixed number of labourers,
-the surplus labourers were divided amongst all the ratepayers according
-to their rental. This plan was superficially fair, but as a matter of
-fact it worked out to the advantage of the big farmers with much arable
-land, and pressed hard on the small ones who cultivated their holdings
-by their own and their children’s labour, and, in cases where they were
-liable to the rate, on the tradesmen who had no employment at which
-to set an agricultural labourer. After 1832 (2 and 3 William IV. c.
-96) the agreement of three-fourths of the ratepayers to such a system
-was binding on all, and the large farmers often banded together to
-impose it on their fellow ratepayers by intimidation or other equally
-unscrupulous means: thus at Kelvedon in Essex we read: ‘There was no
-occasion in this parish, nor would it have been done but for a junto of
-powerful landholders, putting down opposition by exempting a sufficient
-number, to give themselves the means of a majority.’[412]
-
-Landlords in some cases resorted to Machiavellian tactics in order to
-escape their burdens.
-
-‘Several instances have been mentioned to us, of parishes nearly
-depopulated, in which almost all the labour is performed by persons
-settled in the neighbouring villages or towns; drawing from them, as
-allowance, the greater part of their subsistence.’[413] This method is
-described more at length in the following passage:--
-
-‘When a parish is in the hands of only one proprietor, or of
-proprietors so few in number as to be able to act, and to compel their
-tenants to act, in unison, and adjoins to parishes in which property is
-much divided, they may pull down every cottage as it becomes vacant,
-and prevent the building of new ones. By a small immediate outlay
-they may enable and induce a considerable portion of those who have
-settlements in their parish to obtain settlements in the adjoining
-parishes: by hiring their labourers for periods less than a year, they
-may prevent the acquisition of new settlements in their own. They may
-thus depopulate their own estates, and cultivate them by means of the
-surplus population of the surrounding district.’[414] A clergyman in
-Reading[415] said that he had between ten and twenty families living in
-his parish and working for the farmers in their original parish, whose
-cottages had been pulled down over their heads. Occasionally a big
-proprietor of parish A, in order to lessen the poor rates, would, with
-unscrupulous ingenuity, take a farm in parish B, and there hire for the
-year a batch of labourers from A: these at the end of their term he
-would turn off on to the mercies of parish B which was now responsible
-for them, whilst he sent for a fresh consignment from parish A.[416]
-
-The Report of the Commission is a remarkable and searching picture
-of the general demoralisation produced by the Speenhamland system,
-and from that point of view it is most graphic and instructive. But
-nobody who has followed the history of the agricultural labourer can
-fail to be struck by its capital omission. The Commissioners, in their
-simple analysis of that system, could not take their eyes off the
-Speenhamland goblin, and instead of dealing with that system as a wrong
-and disastrous answer to certain difficult questions, they treated the
-system itself as the one and original source of all evils. They sighed
-for the days when ‘the paupers were a small disreputable minority,
-whose resentment was not to be feared, and whose favour was of no
-value,’ and ‘all other classes were anxious to diminish the number of
-applicants, and to reduce the expenses of their maintenance.’[417] They
-did not realise that the governing class had not created a Frankenstein
-monster for the mere pleasure of its creation; that they had not set
-out to draw up an ideal constitution, as Rousseau had done for the
-Poles. In 1795 there was a fear of revolution, and the upper classes
-threw the Speenhamland system over the villages as a wet blanket
-over sparks. The Commissioners merely isolated the consequences of
-Speenhamland and treated them as if they were the entire problem, and
-consequently, though their report served to extinguish that system, it
-did nothing to rehabilitate the position of the labourer, or to restore
-the rights and status he had lost. The new Poor Law was the only gift
-of the Reformed Parliament to the agricultural labourer; it was an
-improvement on the old, but only in the sense that the east wind is
-better than the sirocco.
-
- * * * * *
-
-What would have happened if either of the other two remedies had been
-adopted for the problem to which the Speenhamland system was applied,
-it is impossible to say. But it is easy to see that the position of
-the agricultural labourer, which could not have been worse, might have
-been very much better, and that the nation, as apart from the landlords
-and money-lords, would have come out of this whirlpool much stronger
-and much richer. This was clear to one correspondent of the Poor Law
-Commission, whose memorandum, printed in an Appendix,[418] is more
-interesting and profound than any contribution to the subject made by
-the Commissioners themselves. M. Chateauvieux set out an alternative
-policy to Speenhamland, which, if the governing class of 1795 or the
-governing class of 1834 had been enlightened enough to follow it, would
-have set up a very different labouring class in the villages from the
-helpless proletariat that was created by the enclosures.
-
-‘Mais si au lieu d’opérer le partage des biens communaux,
-l’administration de la commune s’était bornée à louer pour quelques
-années des parcelles des terres qu’elle possède en vaine pâture, et
-cela à très bas prix, aux journaliers domiciliés sur son territoire, il
-en serait resulté:
-
- ‘(1) Que le capital de ces terres n’aurait point été aliéné et absorbé
- dans la propriété particulière.
-
- ‘(2) Que ce capital aurait été néanmoins utilisé pour la reproduction.
-
- ‘(3) Qu’il aurait servi à l’amélioration du sort des pauvres qui
- l’auraient défriché, de toute la différence entre le prix du loyer
- qu’ils en auraient payé, et le montant du revenu qu’ils auraient
- obtenu de sa recolte.
-
- ‘(4) Que la commune aurait encaissé le montant de ses loyers, et
- aurait augmenté d’autant les moyens dont elle dispose pour le
- soulagement de ces pauvres.’
-
-M. Chateauvieux understood better than any of the Commissioners,
-dominated as they were by the extreme individualist economy of the
-time, the meaning of Bolingbroke’s maxim that a wise minister considers
-his administration as a single day in the great year of Government; but
-as a day that is affected by those which went before and must affect
-those which are to come after. A Government of enclosing landowners
-was perhaps not to be expected to understand all that the State was in
-danger of losing in the reckless alienation of common property.
-
-What of the prospects of the other remedy that was proposed? At first
-sight it seems natural to argue that had Whitbread’s Minimum Wage Bill
-become an Act of Parliament it would have remained a dead letter.
-The administration depended on the magistrates and the magistrates
-represented the rent-receiving and employing classes. A closer scrutiny
-warrants a different conclusion. At the time that the Speenhamland
-plan was adopted there were many magistrates in favour of setting a
-minimum scale. The Suffolk magistrates, for example, put pressure on
-the county members to vote for Whitbread’s Bill, and those members,
-together with Grey and Sheridan, were its backers. The Parliamentary
-support for the Bill was enough to show that it was not only in Suffolk
-that it would have been adopted; there were men like Lechmere and
-Whitbread scattered about the country, and though they were men of far
-more enlightened views than the average J.P., they were not without
-influence in their own neighbourhoods. It is pretty certain, therefore,
-that if the Bill had been carried, it would have been administered in
-some parts of the country. The public opinion in support of the Act
-would have been powerfully reinforced by the pressure of the labourers,
-and this would have meant a more considerable stimulus than might at
-first be supposed, for the Report of the Poor Law Commissioners shows
-that the pressure of the labourers was a very important factor in the
-retention of the allowance system in parishes where the overseers
-wished to abandon it, and if the labourers could coerce the local
-authorities into continuing the Speenhamland system, they could have
-coerced the magistrates into making an assessment of wages. The
-labourers were able by a show of violence to raise wages and to reduce
-prices temporarily, as is clear from the history of 1816 and 1830.
-It is not too much to suppose that they could have exercised enough
-influence in 1795 to induce magistrates in many places to carry out a
-law that was on the Statute Book. Further, it is not unreasonable to
-suppose that agricultural labourers’ unions to enforce the execution of
-the law would have escaped the monstrous Combination Law of 1799 and
-1800, for even in 1808 the Glasgow and Lancashire cotton-weavers were
-permitted openly to combine for the purpose of seeking a legal fixing
-of wages.[419]
-
-If assessment had once become the practice, the real struggle would
-have arisen when the great prosperity of agriculture began to decline;
-at the time, that is, when the Speenhamland system began to show those
-symptoms of strain that we have described. Would the customary wage,
-established under the more favourable conditions of 1795, have stood
-against that pressure? Would the labourers have been able to keep up
-wages, as critics of the Whitbread Bill had feared that they would?
-In considering the answers to that question, we have to reckon with
-a force that the debaters of 1795 could not have foreseen. In 1795
-Cobbett was engaged in the politics and polemics of America, and if
-any member of the House of Commons knew his name, he knew it as the
-name of a fierce champion of English institutions, and a fierce enemy
-of revolutionary ideas; a hero of the _Anti-Jacobin_ itself. In 1810
-Cobbett was rapidly making himself the most powerful tribune that
-the English poor have ever known. Cobbett’s faults are plain enough,
-for they are all on the surface. His egotism sometimes seduced his
-judgment; he had a strongly perverse element in his nature; his opinion
-of any proposals not his own was apt to be petulant and peevish, and
-it might perhaps be said of him that he generally had a wasp in his
-bonnet. These qualities earned for him his title of the Contentious
-Man. They would have been seriously disabling in a Cabinet Minister,
-but they did not affect his power of collecting and mobilising and
-leading the spasmodic forces of the poor.
-
-Let us recall his career in order to understand what his influence
-would have been if the labourers had won their customary wage in 1795,
-and had been fighting to maintain it fifteen or twenty years later.
-His adventures began early. When he was thirteen his imagination
-was fired by stories the gardener at Farnham told him of the glories
-of Kew. He ran away from home, and made so good an impression on the
-Kew gardener that he was given work there. His last coppers on that
-journey were spent in buying Swift’s _Tale of a Tub_. He returned home,
-but his restless dreams drove him again into the world. He tried to
-become a sailor, and ultimately became a soldier. He left the army,
-where he had made his mark and received rapid promotion, in order to
-expose a financial scandal in his regiment, but on discovering that
-the interests involved in the countenance of military abuses were
-far more powerful than he had supposed, he abandoned his attempt and
-fled to France. A few months later he crossed to America, and settled
-down to earn a living by teaching English to French refugees. This
-peaceful occupation he relinquished for the congenial excitements
-of polemical journalism, and he was soon the fiercest pamphleteer
-on the side of the Federals, who took the part of England, in their
-controversies with the Democrats, who took the part of the Revolution.
-So far as the warfare of pamphlets went, Cobbett turned the scale. The
-Democrats could not match his wit, his sarcasm, his graphic and pointed
-invectives, his power of clever and sparkling analysis and ridicule.
-This warfare occupied him for nearly ten years, and he returned to
-England in time to have his windows broken for refusing to illuminate
-his house in celebration of the Peace of Amiens. In 1802 he started the
-_Political Register_. At that time he was still a Tory, but a closer
-study of English life changed his opinions, and four years later he
-threw himself into the Radical movement. The effect of his descent on
-English politics can only be compared to the shock that was given to
-the mind of Italy by the French methods of warfare, when Charles VIII.
-led his armies into her plains to fight pitched battles without any
-of the etiquette or polite conventions that had graced the combats of
-the condottieri. He gave to the Reform agitation an uncompromising
-reality and daring, and a movement which had become the dying echo of
-a smothered struggle broke into storm and thunder. Hazlitt scarcely
-exaggerated his dæmonic powers when he said of him that he formed a
-fourth estate of himself.
-
-Now Cobbett may be said to have spent twenty years of his life in the
-effort to save the labourers from degradation and ruin. He was the only
-man of his generation who regarded politics from this standpoint. This
-motive is the key to his career. He saw in 1816 that the nation had to
-choose between its sinecures, its extravagant army, its rulers’ mad
-scheme of borrowing at a higher rate to extinguish debt, for which it
-was paying interest at a low rate, its huge Civil List and privileged
-establishments, the interests of the fund-holders and contractors
-on the one hand, and its labourers on the other. In that conflict
-of forces the labourer could not hold his own. Later, Cobbett saw
-that there were other interests, the interests of landowners and of
-tithe-holders, which the State would have to subordinate to national
-claims if the labourer was to be saved. In that conflict, too, the
-labourer was beaten. He was unrepresented in Parliament, whereas the
-opposing interests were massed there. Cobbett wanted Parliamentary
-Reform, not like the traditional Radicals as a philosophy of rights,
-but as an avalanche of social power. Parliamentary Reform was never
-an end to him, nor the means to anything short of the emancipation of
-the labourer. In this, his main mission, Cobbett failed. The upper
-classes winced under his ruthless manners, and they trembled before
-his Berserker rage, but it is the sad truth of English history that
-they beat him. Now if, instead of throwing himself against this world
-of privilege and vested interests in the hopes of wringing a pittance
-of justice for a sinking class, it had been his task to maintain a
-position already held, he would have fought under very different
-conditions. If, when prices began to fall, there had been a customary
-wage in most English villages, the question would not have been whether
-the ruling class was to maintain its privileges and surplus profits by
-letting the labourer sink deeper into the morass, but whether it was
-to maintain these privileges and profits by taking something openly
-from him. It is easier to prevent a dog from stealing a bone than
-to take the bone out of his mouth. Cobbett was not strong enough to
-break the power of the governing class, but he might have been strong
-enough to defend the customary rights of the labouring class. As it
-was, the governing class was on the defensive at every point. The
-rent receivers, the tithe owners, the mortgagers, the lenders to the
-Government and the contractors all clung to their gains, and the food
-allowance of the labourer slowly and steadily declined.
-
-There was this great difference between the Speenhamland system and
-a fixed standard of wages. The Speenhamland system after 1812 was
-not applied so as to maintain an equilibrium between the income and
-expenditure of the labourer: it was applied to maintain an equilibrium
-between social forces. The scale fell not with the fall of prices to
-the labourer, but with the fall of profits to the possessing classes.
-The minimum was not the minimum on which the labourer could live, but
-the minimum below which rebellion was certain. This was the way in
-which wages found their own level. They gravitated lower and lower
-with the growing weakness of the wage-earner. If Cobbett had been at
-the head of a movement for preserving to the labourer a right bestowed
-on him by Act of Parliament, either he would have succeeded, or the
-disease would have come to a crisis in 1816, instead of taking the form
-of a lingering and wasting illness. Either, that is, other classes
-would have had to make the economies necessary to keep the labourers’
-wages at the customary point, or the labourers would have made their
-last throw before they had been desolated and weakened by another
-fifteen years of famine.
-
-There is another respect in which the minimum wage policy would have
-profoundly altered the character of village society. It would have
-given the village labourers a bond of union before they had lost the
-memories and the habits of their more independent life; it would have
-made them an organised force, something like the organised forces that
-have built up a standard of life for industrial workmen. An important
-passage in Fielding’s _Tom Jones_ shows that there was material for
-such combination in the commoners of the old village. Fielding is
-talking of his borrowings from the classics and he defends himself
-with this analogy: ‘The ancients may be considered as a rich common,
-where every person who hath the smallest tenement in Parnassus hath
-a free right to batten his muse: or, to place it in a clearer light,
-we moderns are to the ancients what the poor are to the rich. By the
-poor here I mean that large and venerable body which in English we
-call the mob. Now whoever hath had the honour to be admitted to any
-degree of intimacy with this mob must well know, that it is one of
-their established maxims to plunder and pillage their rich neighbours
-without any reluctance: and that this is held to be neither sin nor
-crime among them. And so constantly do they abide and act by this
-maxim, that in every parish almost in the kingdom there is a kind of
-confederacy ever carrying on against a certain person of opulence
-called the squire whose property is considered as free booty by all
-his poor neighbours; who, as they conclude that there is no manner
-of guilt in such depredations, look upon it as a point of honour and
-moral obligation to conceal and to preserve each other from punishment
-on all such occasions. In like manner are the ancients such as Homer,
-Virgil, Horace, Cicero and the rest to be esteemed among us writers as
-so many wealthy squires from whom we, the poor of Parnassus, claim an
-immemorial custom of taking whatever we can come at.’[420]
-
-It would not have been possible to create a great labourers’ union
-before the Combination Laws were repealed in 1824, but if the labourers
-had been organised to defend their standard wage, they would have
-established a tradition of permanent association in each village. The
-want of this was their fatal weakness. All the circumstances make the
-spirit of combination falter in the country. In towns men are face to
-face with the brutal realities of their lives, unsoftened by any of
-the assuaging influences of brook and glade and valley. Men and women
-who work in the fields breathe something of the resignation and peace
-of Nature; they bear trouble and wrong with a dangerous patience.
-Discontent moves, but it moves slowly, and whereas storms blow up in
-the towns, they beat up in the country. That is one reason why the
-history of the anguish of the English agricultural labourer so rarely
-breaks into violence. Castlereagh’s Select Committee in 1817 rejoiced
-in the discovery that ‘notwithstanding the alarming progress which has
-been made in extending disaffection, its success has been confined
-to the principal manufacturing districts, and that scarcely any of
-the agricultural population have lent themselves to these violent
-projects.’ There is a Russian saying that the peasant must ‘be boiled
-in the factory pot’ before a revolution can succeed. And if it is
-difficult in the nature of things to make rural labourers as formidable
-to their masters as industrial workers, there is another reason why
-the English labourer rebelled so reluctantly and so tardily against
-what Sir Spencer Walpole called, in the true spirit of a classical
-politician, ‘his inevitable and hereditary lot.’ Village society was
-constantly losing its best and bravest blood. Bamford’s description
-of the poacher who nearly killed a gamekeeper’s understrapper in a
-quarrel in a public-house, and then hearing from Dr. Healey that
-his man was only stunned, promised the doctor that if there was but
-one single hare on Lord Suffield’s estates, that hare should be in
-the doctor’s stew-pot next Sunday, reminds us of the loss a village
-suffered when its poachers were snapped up by a game-preserving bench,
-and tossed to the other side of the world. During the years between
-Waterloo and the Reform Bill the governing class was decimating the
-village populations on the principle of the Greek tyrant who flicked
-off the heads of the tallest blades in his field; the Game Laws,
-summary jurisdiction, special commissions, drove men of spirit and
-enterprise, the natural leaders of their fellows, from the villages
-where they might have troubled the peace of their masters. The village
-Hampdens of that generation sleep on the shores of Botany Bay. Those
-who blame the supine character of the English labourer forget that his
-race, before it had quite lost the memories and the habits of the days
-of its independence and its share in the commons, was passed through
-this sieve. The scenes we shall describe in the next chapter show that
-the labourers were capable of great mutual fidelity when once they
-were driven into rebellion. If they had had a right to defend and a
-comradeship to foster from the first, Cobbett, who spent his superb
-strength in a magnificent onslaught on the governing class, might have
-made of the race whose wrongs he pitied as his own, an army no less
-resolute and disciplined than the army O’Connell made of the broken
-peasants of the West.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[399] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 243.
-
-[400] _Ibid._, p. 84.
-
-[401] _Ibid._, pp. 56-7.
-
-[402] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 244.
-
-[403] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, pp. 78-9.
-
-[404] _Ibid._, p. 80.
-
-[405] _Ibid._, p. 291.
-
-[406] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 94.
-
-[407] _Ibid._, p. 172.
-
-[408] _Ibid._, p. 66.
-
-[409] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, pp. 98-104.
-
-[410] _Ibid._, p. 100.
-
-[411] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 108.
-
-[412] _Ibid._, p. 210.
-
-[413] Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 73.
-
-[414] _Ibid._, p. 157.
-
-[415] _Ibid._, p. 158.
-
-[416] _Ibid._, p. 161.
-
-[417] _Ibid._, p. 130.
-
-[418] Appendix F, No. 3, to 1st Report of Commissioners.
-
-[419] See Webb’s _History of Trade Unionism_, p. 59.
-
-[420] _Tom Jones_, Bk. XII. chap. i.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT
-
- Where not otherwise stated the authorities for the two following
- chapters are the Home Office Papers for the time (Municipal and
- Provincial, Criminal, Disturbances, Domestic, etc.), the _Times_ and
- local papers.
-
-
-I
-
-A traveller who wished to compare the condition of the English and the
-French rural populations in 1830 would have had little else to do than
-to invert all that had been written on the subject by travellers a
-century earlier. At the beginning of the eighteenth century England had
-the prosperous and France the miserable peasantry. But by the beginning
-of the nineteenth century the French peasant had been set free from
-the impoverishing and degrading services which had made his lot so
-intolerable in the eyes of foreign observers; he cultivated his own
-land, and lived a life, spare, arduous, and exacting but independent.
-The work of the Revolution had been done so thoroughly in this respect
-that the Bourbons, when Wellington and the allies lifted them back on
-to their throne, could not undo it. It is true that the future of the
-French peasants was a subject of some anxiety to English observers,
-and that M‘Culloch committed himself to the prediction that in half
-a century, owing to her mass of small owners, France would be the
-greatest pauper-warren in Europe. If any French peasant was disturbed
-by this nightmare of the political economy of the time, he had the grim
-satisfaction of knowing that his position could hardly become worse
-than the position that the English labourer already occupied. He would
-have based his conclusion, not on the wild language of revolutionaries,
-but on the considered statement of those who were so far from
-meditating revolution that they shrank even from a moderate reform of
-Parliament. Lord Carnarvon said in one House of Parliament that the
-English labourer had been reduced to a plight more abject than that of
-any race in Europe; English landlords reproduced in the other that
-very parallel between the English labourer and the West Indian negro
-which had figured so conspicuously in Thelwall’s lectures. Thelwall, as
-Canning reminded him in a savage parody on the Benedicite, got pelted
-for his pains. Since the days of those lectures all Europe had been
-overrun by war, and England alone had escaped what Pitt had called
-the liquid fire of Jacobinism. There had followed for England fifteen
-years of healing peace. Yet at the end of all this time the conquerors
-of Napoleon found themselves in a position which they would have done
-well to exchange with the position of his victims. The German peasant
-had been rescued from serfdom; Spain and Italy had at least known a
-brief spell of less unequal government. The English labourer alone was
-the poorer; poorer in money, poorer in happiness, poorer in sympathy,
-and infinitely poorer in horizon and in hope. The riches that he had
-been promised by the champions of enclosure had faded into something
-less than a maintenance. The wages he received without land had a lower
-purchasing power than the wages he had received in the days when his
-wages were supplemented by common rights. The standard of living which
-was prescribed for him by the governing class was now much lower than
-it had been in 1795.
-
-This was not part of a general decline. Other classes for whom the
-rulers of England prescribed the standard had advanced during the
-years in which the labourers had lost ground. The King’s Civil List
-had been revised when provisions rose. The salaries of the judges
-had been raised by three several Acts of Parliament (1799, 1809, and
-1825), a similar course had been taken in the case of officials. Those
-who have a taste for the finished and unconscious cynicism of this
-age will note--recollecting that the upper classes refused to raise
-wages in 1795 to meet the extra cost of living, on the ground that it
-would be difficult afterwards to reduce them--that all the upper-class
-officials, whose salaries were increased because living was more
-expensive, were left to the permanent enjoyment of that increase. The
-lives of the judges, the landlords, the parsons, and the rest of the
-governing class were not become more meagre but more spacious in the
-last fifty years. During that period many of the great palaces of the
-English nobility had been built, noble libraries had been collected,
-and famous galleries had grown up, wing upon wing. The agricultural
-labourers whose fathers had eaten meat, bacon, cheese, and vegetables
-were living on bread and potatoes. They had lost their gardens, they
-had ceased to brew their beer in their cottages. In their work they
-had no sense of ownership or interest. They no longer ‘sauntered after
-cattle’ on the open common, and at twilight they no longer ‘played
-down the setting sun’; the games had almost disappeared from the
-English village, their wives and children were starving before their
-eyes, their homes were more squalid, and the philosophy of the hour
-taught the upper classes that to mend a window or to put in a brick
-to shield the cottage from damp or wind was to increase the ultimate
-miseries of the poor. The sense of sympathy and comradeship, which
-had been mixed with rude and unskilful government, in the old village
-had been destroyed in the bitter days of want and distress. Degrading
-and repulsive work was invented for those whom the farmer would not
-or could not employ. De Quincey, wishing to illustrate the manners of
-eighteenth-century France, used to quote M. Simond’s story of how he
-had seen, not very long before the Revolution, a peasant ploughing with
-a team consisting of a donkey and a woman. The English poor could have
-told him that half a century later there were English villages in which
-it was the practice of the overseer to harness men and women to the
-parish cart, and that the sight of an idiot woman between the shafts
-was not unknown within a hundred miles of London.[421] Men and women
-were living on roots and sorrel; in the summer of the year 1830 four
-harvest labourers were found under a hedge dead of starvation, and Lord
-Winchilsea, who mentioned the fact in the House of Lords, said that
-this was not an exceptional case. The labourer was worse fed and worse
-housed than the prisoner, and he would not have been able to keep body
-and soul together if he had not found in poaching or in thieving or in
-smuggling the means of eking out his doles and wages.
-
-The feelings of this sinking class, the anger, dismay, and despair with
-which it watched the going out of all the warm comfort and light of
-life, scarcely stir the surface of history. The upper classes have told
-us what the poor ought to have thought of these vicissitudes; religion,
-philosophy, and political economy were ready with alleviations and
-explanations which seemed singularly helpful and convincing to the
-rich. The voice of the poor themselves does not come to our ears. This
-great population seems to resemble nature, and to bear all the storms
-that beat upon it with a strange silence and resignation. But just
-as nature has her power of protest in some sudden upheaval, so this
-world of men and women--an underground world as we trace the distance
-that its voices have to travel to reach us--has a volcanic character
-of its own, and it is only by some volcanic surprise that it can speak
-the language of remonstrance or menace or prayer, or place on record
-its consciousness of wrong. This world has no member of Parliament,
-no press, it does not make literature or write history; no diary or
-memoirs have kept alive for us the thoughts and cares of the passing
-day. It is for this reason that the events of the winter of 1830 have
-so profound an interest, for in the scenes now to be described we have
-the mind of this class hidden from us through all this period of pain,
-bursting the silence by the only power at its command. The demands
-presented to the farmer, the parson, and the squire this winter tell us
-as much about the South of England labourer in 1830 as the cahiers tell
-us of the French peasants in 1789.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have seen that in 1795 and in 1816 there had been serious
-disturbances in different parts of England. These had been suppressed
-with a firm hand, but during hard winters sporadic violence and blazing
-hay-stacks showed from time to time that the fire was still alive under
-the ashes. The rising of 1830 was far more general and more serious;
-several counties in the south of England were in state bordering on
-insurrection; London was in a panic, and to some at least of those who
-had tried to forget the price that had been paid for the splendour of
-the rich, the message of red skies and broken mills and mob diplomacy
-and villages in arms sounded like the summons that came to Hernani.
-The terror of the landowners during those weeks is reflected in such
-language as that of the Duke of Buckingham, who talked of the country
-being in the hands of the rebels, or of one of the Barings, who said
-in the House of Commons that if the disorders went on for three or
-four days longer they would be beyond the reach of almost any power to
-control them. This chapter of social history has been overshadowed by
-the riots that followed the rejection of the Reform Bill. Every one
-knows about the destruction of the Mansion House at Bristol, and the
-burning of Nottingham Castle; few know of the destruction of the hated
-workhouses at Selborne and Headley. The riots at Nottingham and Bristol
-were a prelude to victory; they were the wild shout of power. If the
-rising of 1830 had succeeded, and won back for the labourer his lost
-livelihood, the day when the Headley workhouse was thrown down would be
-remembered by the poor as the day of the taking of the Bastille. But
-this rebellion failed, and the men who led that last struggle for the
-labourer passed into the forgetfulness of death and exile.
-
-Kent was the scene of the first disturbances. There had been some
-alarming fires in the west of the county during the summer, at
-Orpington and near Sevenoaks. In one case the victim had made himself
-unpopular by pulling down a cottage built on a common adjoining his
-property, and turning out the occupants. How far these fires were
-connected with later events it is impossible to say: the authors were
-never discovered. The first riot occurred at Hardres on Sunday the
-29th of August, when four hundred labourers destroyed some threshing
-machines.[422] Next day two magistrates with a hundred special
-constables and some soldiers went to Hardres Court, and no more was
-heard of the rioters. The _Spectator_ early next year announced that it
-had found as a result of inquiries that the riots began with a dispute
-between farmers over a threshing machine, in the course of which a
-magistrate had expressed strong views against the introduction of these
-machines. The labourers proceeded to destroy the machine, whereupon,
-to their surprise, the magistrate turned on them and punished them; in
-revenge they fired his ricks. ‘A farmer in another village, talking of
-the distress of the labourers, said, “Ah, I should be well pleased if
-a plague were to break out among them, and then I should have their
-carcases as manure, and right good stuff it would make for my hops.”
-This speech, which was perhaps only intended as a brutal jest, was
-reported; it excited rage instead of mirth, and the stacks of the
-jester were soon in a blaze. This act of incendiarism was open and
-deliberate. The incendiary is known, and not only has he not been
-tried, he has not even been charged.’[423] Cobbett, on the other hand,
-maintained that the occasion of the first riots was the importation
-of Irish labourers, a practice now some years old, that might well
-inflame resentment, at a time when the governing class was continually
-contending that the sole cause of distress was excessive population,
-and that the true solution was the removal of surplus labourers to the
-colonies.
-
-Whatever the actual origin of the first outbreak may have been,
-the destruction of machinery was to be a prominent feature of this
-social war. This was not merely an instinct of violence, there was
-method and reason in it. Threshing was one of the few kinds of work
-left that provided the labourer with a means of existence above
-starvation level. A landowner and occupier near Canterbury wrote to
-the _Kent Herald_,[424] that in his parish, where no machines had been
-introduced, there were twenty-three barns. He calculated that in these
-barns fifteen men at least would find employment threshing corn up till
-May. If we suppose that each man had a wife and three children, this
-employment would affect seventy-five persons. ‘An industrious man who
-has a barn never requires poor relief; he can earn from 15s. to 20s.
-per week; he considers it almost as his little freehold, and that in
-effect it certainly is.’ It is easy to imagine what the sight of one
-of these hated engines meant to such a parish; the fifteen men, their
-wives and families would have found cold comfort, when they had become
-submerged in the morass of parish relief, in the reflection that the
-new machine extracted for their master’s and the public benefit ten
-per cent. more corn than they could hammer out by their free arms.
-The destruction of threshing machines by bands of men in the district
-round Canterbury continued through September practically unchecked.
-By the end of the month three of the most active rioters were in
-custody, and the magistrates were under the pleasant illusion that
-there would be voluntary surrenders. In this they were disappointed,
-and the disturbances spread over a wider area, which embraced the
-Dover district. Early in October there was a riot at Lyminge, at which
-Sir Edward Knatchbull and the Rev. Mr. Price succeeded in arresting
-the ringleaders, and bound over about fifty other persons. Sir Edward
-Knatchbull, in writing to the Home Office, stated that the labourers
-said ‘they would rather do anything than encounter such a winter as the
-last.’ Mr. Price had to pay the penalty for his active part in this
-affair, and his ricks were fired.
-
-Large rewards were promised from the first to informers, these rewards
-including a wise offer of establishment elsewhere, but the prize was
-refused, and rick-burning spread steadily through a second month.
-Threatening letters signed ‘Swing,’ a mysterious name that for the next
-few weeks spread terror over England, were received by many farmers and
-landowners. The machine-breakers were reported not to take money or
-plunder, and to refuse it if offered. Their programme was extensive and
-formidable. When the High Sheriff attended one of their meetings to
-remonstrate with them, they listened to his homily with attention, but
-before dispersing one of them said, ‘We will destroy the cornstacks and
-threshing machines this year, next year we will have a turn with the
-parsons, and the third we will make war upon the statesmen.’[425]
-
-On 24th October seven prisoners were tried at the East Kent Quarter
-Sessions, for machine-breaking. They pleaded guilty, and were let off
-with a lenient sentence of three days’ imprisonment and an harangue
-from Sir Edward Knatchbull. Hitherto all attempts to discover the
-incendiaries had been baffled, but on 21st October a zealous magistrate
-wrote to the Home Office to say that he had found a clue. He had
-apprehended a man called Charles Blow, and since the evidence was not
-sufficient to warrant committal for arson, he had sent him to Lewes
-Jail as a vagrant for three months. ‘In company with Blow was a girl
-of about ten years of age (of the name of Mary Ann Johnson), but of
-intelligence and cunning far beyond her age. It having been stated to
-me that she had let fall some expressions which went to show that she
-could if she pleased communicate important information, I committed
-her also for the same period as Blow.’ Now the fires in question had
-taken place in Kent, and the vagrants were apprehended in Sussex,
-consequently the officials of both counties meddled with the matter and
-between them spoilt the whole plan, for Mary Ann and her companion were
-questioned by so many different persons that they were put on their
-guard, and failed to give the information that was expected. Thus at
-any rate, Lord Camden, the Lord-Lieutenant, explained their silence,
-but he did not despair, ‘if the Parties cannot even be convicted I am
-apt to think their Committal now will do good, though they may be to
-be liberated afterwards, but nothing is so likely to produce alarm and
-produce evidence as a Committal for a Capital Crime.’ However, as no
-more is heard of Mary Ann, it may be assumed that when she had served
-her three months she left Lewes Jail a sadder and a wiser child.
-
-Towards the end of October, after something of a lull in the middle
-of the month, the situation became more serious. Dissatisfaction,
-or, as some called it, ‘frightful anarchy,’ spread to the Maidstone
-and Sittingbourne districts. Sir Robert Peel was anxious to take
-strong measures. ‘I beg to repeat to you that I will adopt any
-measure--will incur any expense at the public charge--that can
-promote the suppression of the outrages in Kent and the detection
-of the offenders.’ A troop of cavalry was sent to Sittingbourne. In
-the last days of October, mobs scoured the country round Maidstone,
-demanding half a crown a day wages and constant employment, forcing
-all labourers to join them, and levying money, beer, and provisions.
-At Stockbury, between Maidstone and Sittingbourne, one of these mobs
-paraded a tricolour and a black flag. On 30th October the Maidstone
-magistrates went out with a body of thirty-four soldiers to meet a mob
-of four hundred people, about four miles from Maidstone, and laid hold
-of the three ringleaders. The arrests were made without difficulty or
-resistance, from which it looks as if these bands of men were not very
-formidable, but the officer in command of the soldiers laid stress
-in his confidential report on the dangers of the situation and the
-necessity for fieldpieces, and Peel promptly ordered two pieces of
-artillery to be dispatched.
-
-At the beginning of November disturbances broke out in Sussex, and
-the movement developed into an organised demand for a living wage. By
-the middle of the month the labourers were masters over almost all
-the triangle on the map, of which Maidstone is the apex and Hythe
-and Brighton are the bases. The movement, which was more systematic,
-thorough, and successful in this part of the country than anywhere
-else, is thus described by the special correspondent of the _Times_,
-17th November: ‘Divested of its objectionable character, as a dangerous
-precedent, the conduct of the peasantry has been admirable. There is no
-ground for concluding that there has been any extensive concert amongst
-them. Each parish, generally speaking, has risen _per se_; in many
-places their proceedings have been managed with astonishing coolness
-and regularity; there has been little of the ordinary effervescence
-displayed on similar occasions. The farmers have notice to meet the
-men: a deputation of two or more of the latter produce a written
-statement, well drawn up, which the farmers are required to sign; the
-spokesman, sometimes a Dissenting or Methodist teacher, fulfils his
-office with great propriety and temper. Where disorder has occurred,
-it has arisen from dislike to some obnoxious clergyman, or tithe man,
-or assistant overseer, who has been trundled out of the parish in a
-wheelbarrow, or drawn in triumph in a load of ballast by a dozen old
-women. The farmers universally agreed to the demands they made: that
-is, they were not mad enough to refuse requests which they could not
-demonstrate to be unreasonable in themselves, and which were urged by
-three hundred or four hundred men after a barn or two had been fired,
-and each farmer had an incendiary letter addressed to him in his
-pocket.’
-
-There was another development of the movement which is not noted in
-this account by the correspondent of the _Times_. It often happened
-that the farmers would agree to pay the wages demanded by the
-labourers, but would add that they could not continue to pay those
-wages unless rents and tithes were reduced. The labourers generally
-took the hint and turned their attention to tithes and rents,
-particularly to tithes. Their usual procedure was to go in a body to
-the rector, often accompanied by the farmers, and demand an abatement
-of tithes, or else to attend the tithe audit and put some not unwelcome
-pressure upon the farmers to prevent them from paying.
-
-It must not be supposed that the agitation for a living wage was
-confined to the triangular district named above, though there it
-took a more systematic shape. Among the Home Office Papers is a very
-interesting letter from Mr. D. Bishop, a London police officer,
-written from Deal on 11th November, describing the state of things in
-that neighbourhood: ‘I have gone to the different Pot Houses in the
-Villages, disguised among the Labourers, of an evening and all their
-talk is about the wages, some give 1s. 8d. per day some 2s. some 2s.
-3d.... all they say they want is 2s. 6d. per day and then they say
-they shall be comfortable. I have every reason to believe the Farmers
-will give the 2s. 6d. per day after a bit ... they are going to have a
-meeting and I think it will stop all outrages.’
-
-The disturbances in Sussex began with a fire on 3rd November at an
-overseer’s in Battle. The explanation suggested by the authorities
-was that the paupers had been ‘excited by a lecture lately given here
-publicly by a person named Cobbett.’ Next night there was another
-fire at Battle; but it was at Brede, a village near Rye, that open
-hostilities began. As the rising at Brede set the fashion for the
-district, it is perhaps worth while to describe it in some detail.[426]
-
-For a long time the poor of Brede had smarted under the insults of
-Mr. Abel, the assistant overseer, who, among other innovations, had
-introduced one of the hated parish carts, and the labourers were
-determined to have a reckoning with him. After some preliminary
-discussions on the previous day, the labourers held a meeting on 5th
-November, and deputed four men to negotiate with the farmers. At the
-conference which resulted, the following resolutions, drawn up by the
-labourers, were signed by both parties[427]:--
-
- ‘Nov. 5, 1830. At a meeting held this day at the Red Lion, of the
- farmers, to meet the poor labourers who delegated David Noakes Senior,
- Thomas Henley, Joseph Bryant and Th. Noakes, to meet the gentlemen
- this day to discuss the present distress of the poor.... Resolution 1.
- The gentlemen agree to give to every able-bodied labourer with wife
- and two children 2s. 3d. per day, from this day to the 1st of March
- next, and from the 1st of March to the 1st of Oct. 2s. 6d. per day,
- and to have 1s. 6d. per week with three children, and so on according
- to their family. Resolution 2. The poor are determined to take the
- present overseer, Mr. Abell, out of the parish to any adjoining parish
- and to use him with civility.’
-
-The meeting over, the labourers went to Mr. Abel’s house with their
-wives and children and some of the farmers, and placed the parish cart
-at his door. After some hammering at the gates, Mr. Abel was persuaded
-to come out and get into the cart. He was then solemnly drawn along
-by women and children, accompanied by a crowd of five hundred, to the
-place of his choice, Vine Hall, near Robertsbridge, on the turnpike
-road, where he was deposited with all due solemnity. Mr. Abel made his
-way to the nearest magistrate to lodge his complaint, while the people
-of the parish returned home and were regaled with beer by the farmers:
-‘and Mr. Coleman ... he gave every one of us half a pint of Beer, women
-and men, and Mr. Reed of Brede High gave us a Barrel because we had
-done such a great thing in the Parish as to carry that man away, and
-Mr. Coleman said he never was better pleased in his life than with the
-day’s work which had been done.’[428]
-
-The parish rid of Mr. Abel, the next reform in the new era was to be
-the reduction of tithes, and here the farmers needed the help of the
-labourers. What happened is best told in the words of one of the chief
-actors. He describes how, a little before the tithe audit, his employer
-came to him when he was working in the fields and suggested that the
-labourers should see if they could ‘get a little of the tithe off’;
-they were only to show themselves and not to take any violent action.
-Other farmers made the same suggestions to their labourers. ‘We went
-to the tithe audit and Mr. Hele came out and spoke to us a good while
-and I and David Noakes and Thomas Noakes and Thomas Henley answered him
-begging as well as we could for him to throw something off for us and
-our poor Children and to set up a School for them and Mr. Hele said he
-would see what he could do.
-
-‘Mr. Coleman afterwards came out and said Mr. Hele had satisfied them
-all well and then Mr. Hele came out and we made our obedience to him
-and he to us, and we gave him three cheers and went and set the Bells
-ringing and were all as pleased as could be at what we had done.’
-
-The success of the Brede rising had an immediate effect on the
-neighbourhood, and every parish round prepared to deport its obnoxious
-overseer and start a new life on better wages. Burwash, Ticehurst,
-Mayfield, Heathfield, Warbleton and Ninfield were among the parishes
-that adopted the Brede programme. Sometimes the assistant overseer
-thought it wise to decamp before the cart was at his door. Sometimes
-the mob was aggressive in its manners. ‘A very considerable Mob,’
-wrote Sir Godfrey Webster from Battle Abbey on 9th November, ‘to the
-amount of nearly 500, having their Parish Officer in custody drawn
-in a Dung Cart, attempted to enter this town at eleven o’clock this
-Morning.’ The attempt was unsuccessful, and twenty of the rioters were
-arrested. The writer of this letter is chiefly famous as Lady Holland’s
-first husband. In this emergency he seems to have displayed great
-zeal and energy. A second letter of his on 12th November gives a good
-description of the state of affairs round Mayfield. ‘The Collector of
-Lord Carrington’s Tithes had been driven out of the Parish and the
-same Proceeding was intended to be adopted towards the Parish Officer
-who fled the place, it had been intended by the Rioters to have taken
-by Force this Morning as many Waggons as possible (forcibly) carried
-off the Tithe Corn and distributed it amongst themselves in case of
-interruption they were resolved to burn it. One of the most violent
-and dangerous papers I have yet seen (a copy of which I enclose) was
-carried round the 3 adjoining Parishes and unfortunately was assented
-to by too many Occupiers of Land. I arrived in Time to prevent its
-circulation at Mayfield a small Town tho’ populous parish 3000. By
-apprehending the Bearer of the Paper who acted as Chief of the Party
-and instantly in presence of a large Mob committing him for Trial I
-succeeded in repressing the tumultuous action then going on, and by
-subsequently calling together the Occupiers of Land, and afterwards the
-Mob (composed wholly of Agricultural Labourers) I had the satisfaction
-of mediating an arrangement between them perfectly to the content of
-each party, and on my leaving Mayfield this afternoon tranquillity was
-perfectly restored at that Place.’ The violent and dangerous paper
-enclosed ran thus: ‘Now gentlemen this is wat we intend to have for a
-maried man to have 2s. and 3d. per Day and all over two children 1s.
-6d. per head a week and if a Man has got any boys or girls over age
-for to have employ that they may live by there Labour and likewise all
-single men to have 1s. 9d. a day per head and we intend to have the
-rents lowered likewise and this is what we intend to have before we
-leave the place and if ther is no alteration we shall proceed further
-about it. For we are all at one and we will keep to each other.’
-
-At Ringmer in Sussex the proceedings were marked by moderation and
-order. Lord Gage, the principal landowner of the neighbourhood, knowing
-that disturbances were imminent, met the labourers by appointment on
-the village green. There were about one hundred and fifty persons
-present. By this time magistrates in many places had taken to arresting
-arbitrarily the ringleaders of the men, and hence when Lord Gage, who
-probably had no such intention, asked for the leader or captain nobody
-came forward, but a letter was thrown into the ring with a general
-shout. The letter which Lord Gage picked up and took to the Vestry
-for consideration read as follows: ‘We the labourers of Ringmer and
-surrounding villages, having for a long period suffered the greatest
-privations and endured the most debasing treatment with the greatest
-resignation and forbearance, in the hope that time and circumstances
-would bring about an amelioration of our condition, till, worn out
-by hope deferred and disappointed in our fond expectations, we have
-taken this method of assembling ourselves in one general body, for the
-purpose of making known our grievances, and in a peaceable, quiet,
-and orderly manner, to ask redress; and we would rather appeal to
-the good sense of the magistracy, instead of inflaming the passions
-of our fellow labourers, and ask those gentlemen who have done us the
-favour of meeting us this day whether 7d. a day is sufficient for a
-working man, hale and hearty, to keep up the strength necessary to
-the execution of the labour he has to do? We ask also, is 9s. a week
-sufficient for a married man with a family, to provide the common
-necessaries of life? Have we no reason to complain that we have been
-obliged for so long a period to go to our daily toil with only potatoes
-in our satchels, and the only beverage to assuage our thirst the cold
-spring; and on retiring to our cottages to be welcomed by the meagre
-and half-famished offspring of our toilworn bodies? All we ask, then,
-is that our wages may be advanced to such a degree as will enable us
-to provide for ourselves and families without being driven to the
-overseer, who, by the bye, is a stranger amongst us, and as in most
-instances where permanent overseers are appointed, are men callous to
-the ties of nature, lost to every feeling of humanity, and deaf to
-the voice of reason. We say we want wages sufficient to support us,
-without being driven to the overseer to experience his petty tyranny
-and dictation. We therefore ask for married men 2s. 3d. per day to
-the first of March, and from that period to the first of October 2s.
-6d. a day: for single men 1s. 9d. a day to the first of March, and
-2s. from that time to the first of October. We also request that the
-permanent overseers of the neighbouring parishes may be directly
-discharged, particularly Finch, the governor of Ringmer poorhouse and
-overseer of the parish, that in case we are obliged, through misfortune
-or affliction, to seek parochial relief, we may apply to one of our
-neighbouring farmers or tradesmen, who would naturally feel some
-sympathy for our situation, and who would be much better acquainted
-with our characters and claims. This is what we ask at your hands--this
-is what we expect, and we sincerely trust this is what we shall not be
-under the painful necessity of demanding.’
-
-While the Vestry deliberated the labourers remained quietly in the yard
-of the poorhouse. One of them, a veteran from the Peninsular War who
-had lost a limb, contrasted his situation on 9d. a day with that of the
-Duke of Wellington whose ‘skin was whole’ and whose pension was £60,000
-a year. After they had waited some time, they were informed that their
-demands were granted, and they dispersed to their homes with huzzas and
-tears of joy, and as a sign of the new and auspicious era they broke
-up the parish grindstone, a memory of the evil past.[429]
-
-An important feature of the proceedings in Kent and Sussex was the
-sympathy of other classes with the demands of the labourers. The
-success of the movement in Kent and Sussex, and especially of the
-rising that began at Brede, was due partly, no doubt, to the fact that
-smuggling was still a common practice in those counties, and that the
-agricultural labourers thus found their natural leaders among men who
-had learnt audacity, resourcefulness, and a habit of common action
-in that school of danger. But the movement could not have made such
-headway without any serious attempt to suppress it if the other classes
-had been hostile. There was a general sense that the risings were due
-to the neglect of the Government. Mr. Hodges, one of the Members for
-Kent, declared in the House of Commons on 10th December that if the
-Duke of Wellington had attended to a petition received from the entire
-Grand Jury of Kent there would have been no disturbances.[430]
-
-The same spirit is displayed in a letter written by a magistrate at
-Battle, named Collingwood. ‘I have seen three or four of our parochial
-insurrections, and been with the People for hours alone and discussing
-their matters with them which they do with a temper and respectful
-behaviour and an intelligence which must interest everyone in their
-favor. The poor in the Parishes in the South of England, and in Sussex
-and Kent greatly, have been ground to the dust in many instances by
-the Poor Laws. Instead of happy peasants they are made miserable and
-sour tempered paupers. Every Parish has its own peculiar system,
-directed more strictly, and executed with more or less severity or
-harshness. A principal tradesman in Salehurst (Sussex) in one part
-of which, Robertsbridge, we had our row the other night, said to me
-these words “You attended our meeting the other day and voted with me
-against the two principal Rate payers in this parish, two Millers,
-paying the people in two gallons of bad flour instead of money. You
-heard how saucy they were to their betters, can you wonder if they
-are more violent to their inferiors? They never call a man Tom, Dick
-etc. but you d----d rascal etc., at every word, and force them to take
-their flour. Should you wonder that they are dissatisfied?” These
-words he used to me a week before our Robertsbridge Row. Each of these
-Parochial Rows differs in character as the man whom they select as
-leader differs in impudence or courage or audacity or whatever you may
-call it. If they are opposed at the moment, their resistance shows
-itself in more or less violent outrages; personally I witnessed but
-one, that of Robertsbridge putting Mr. Johnson into the cart, and that
-was half an accident. I was a stranger to them, went among them and
-was told by hundreds after that most unjustifiable assault that I was
-safe among them as in my bed, and I never thought otherwise. One or two
-desperate characters, and such there are, may at any moment make the
-contest of Parish A differ from that of Parish B, but their spirit, as
-far as regards loyalty and love for the King and Laws, is, I believe,
-on my conscience, sound. I feel convinced that all the cavalry in the
-world, if sent into Sussex, and all the spirited acts of Sir Godfrey
-Webster, who, however, is invaluable here will (not?) stop this spirit
-from running through Hampshire, Wiltshire, Somersetshire, where Mr.
-Hobhouse, your predecessor, told me the other day that they have got
-the wages for single men down to 6s. per week (on which they _cannot
-live_) through many other counties. In a week you will have demands for
-cavalry from Hampshire under the same feeling of alarm as I and all
-here entertained: the next week from Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and all
-the counties in which the poor Rates have been raised for the payment
-of the poor up to Essex and the very neighbourhood of London, where Mr.
-Geo. Palmer, a magistrate, told me lately that the poor single man is
-got down to 6s. I shall be over to-morrow probably at Benenden where
-they are resolved not to let either Mr. Hodges’s taxes, the tithes or
-the King’s taxes be paid. So I hear, and so I dare say two or three
-carter boys may have said. I shall go to-morrow and if I see occasion
-will arrest some man, and break his head with my staff. But do you
-suppose that that (though a show of vigor is not without avail) will
-prevent Somersetshire men from crying out, when the train has got to
-them, we will not _live_ on 6s. per week, for living it is not, but
-a long starving, and we will have tithes and taxes, and I know not
-what else done away with. The only way to stop them is to run before
-the evil. Let the Hampshire Magistrates and Vestries raise the wages
-before the Row gets to their County, and you will stop the thing from
-spreading, otherwise you will not, I am satisfied. In saying all this,
-I know that I differ with many able and excellent Magistrates, and my
-opinion may be wrong, but I state it to you.’
-
-It is not surprising that magistrates holding these opinions acted
-rather less vigorously than the central Government wished, and that
-Lord Camden’s appeals to them not to let their political feelings
-and ‘fanciful Crotchets’[431] interfere with their activity were
-unsuccessful. But even had all the magistrates been united and eager
-to crush the risings they could not act without support from classes
-that were reluctant to give it. The first thought of the big landed
-proprietors was to re-establish the yeomanry, but they found an
-unexpected obstacle in the temper of the farmers. The High Sheriff,
-after consultation with the Home Secretary, convened a meeting for
-this purpose at Canterbury on 1st November, but proceedings took an
-unexpected turn, the farmers recommending as a preferable alternative
-that public salaries should be reduced, and the meeting adjourned
-without result. There were similar surprises at other meetings summoned
-with this object, and landlords who expected to find the farmers
-rallying to their support were met with awkward resolutions calling
-for reductions in rent and tithes. The _Kent Herald_ went so far as
-to say that only the dependents of great landowners will join the
-yeomanry, ‘this most unpopular corps.’ The magistrates found it equally
-difficult to enlist special constables, the farmers and tradesmen
-definitely refusing to act in this capacity at Maidstone, at Cranbrook,
-at Tonbridge, and at Tonbridge Wells,[432] as well as in the smaller
-villages. The chairman of the Battle magistrates wrote to the Home
-Office to say that he intended to reduce his rents in the hope that the
-farmers would then consent to serve.
-
-Even the Coast Blockade Service was not considered trustworthy.
-‘It is the last force,’ wrote one magistrate, ‘I should resort to,
-on account of the feeling which exists between them and the people
-hereabouts.’[433] In the absence of local help, the magistrates had to
-rely on military aid to quell a mob, or to execute a warrant. Demands
-for troops from different quarters were incessant, and sometimes
-querulous. ‘If you cannot send a military force,’ wrote one indignant
-country gentleman from Heathfield on 14th November, ‘for God’s sake,
-say so, without delay, in order that we may remove our families to
-a place of safety from a district which want of support renders us
-totally unable longer to defend.’[434] Troops were despatched to
-Cranbrook, but when the Battle magistrates sent thither for help they
-were told to their great annoyance that no soldiers could be spared.
-The Government indeed found it impossible to supply enough troops. ‘My
-dear Lord Liverpool,’ wrote Sir Robert Peel on 15th November, ‘since
-I last saw you I have made arrangements for sending every disposable
-cavalry soldier into Kent and the east part of Sussex. General Dalbiac
-will take the command. He will be at Battel to-day to confer with
-the Magistracy and to attempt to establish some effectual plan of
-operations against the rioters.’
-
-The 7th Dragoon Guards at Canterbury were to provide for East Kent;
-the 2nd Dragoon Guards at Maidstone were to provide for Mid-Kent;
-and the 5th Dragoon Guards at Tunbridge Wells for the whole of East
-Sussex. Sir Robert Peel meanwhile thought that the magistrates should
-themselves play a more active part, and he continually expressed the
-hope that they would ‘meet and concert some effectual mode of resisting
-the illegal demands.’[435] He deprecated strongly the action of
-certain magistrates in yielding to the mobs. Mr. Collingwood, who has
-been mentioned already, received a severe reproof for his behaviour
-at Goudhurst, where he had adopted a conciliatory policy and let off
-the rioters on their own recognisances. ‘We did not think the case a
-very strong one,’ he wrote on 18th November, ‘or see any very urgent
-necessity for the apprehension of Eaves, nor after Captain King’s
-statement that he had not felt a blow, could we consider the assault
-of a magistrate proved. The whole parish unanimously begged them off,
-and said that their being discharged on their own recognisances would
-probably contribute to the peace of the parish.’
-
-The same weakness, or sympathy, was displayed by magistrates in the
-western part of Sussex, where the rising spread after the middle
-of November. In the Arundel district the magistrates anticipated
-disturbances by holding a meeting of the inhabitants to fix the scale
-of wages. The wages agreed on were ‘2s. a day wet and dry and 1s. 6d. a
-week for every child (above 2) under 4,’ during the winter: from Lady
-Day to Michaelmas 14s. a week, wet and dry, with the same allowance for
-children. A scale was also drawn up for lads and young men. The mobs
-were demanding 14s. a week all the year round, but they seem to have
-acquiesced in the Arundel scale, and to have given no further trouble.
-At Horsham, the labourers adopted more violent measures and met with
-almost universal sympathy. There was a strong Radical party in that
-town, and one magistrate described it later as ‘a hot Bed of Sedition.’
-Attempts were made, without success, to show that the Radicals were at
-the bottom of the disturbances. The district round Horsham was in an
-agitated state. Among others who received threatening letters was Sir
-Timothy Shelley of Field Place. The letter was couched in the general
-spirit of Shelley’s song to the men of England:--
-
- ‘Men of England, wherefore plough,
- For the lords who lay ye low,’
-
-which his father may, or may not, have read. The writer urged him,
-‘if you wish to escape the impending danger in this world and in that
-which is to come,’ to go round to the miserable beings from whom he
-exacted tithes, ‘and enquire and hear from there own lips what disstres
-there in.’ Like many of these letters, it contained at the end a rough
-picture of a knife, with ‘Beware of the fatel daggar’ inscribed on it.
-
-In Horsham itself the mob, composed of from seven hundred to a thousand
-persons, summoned a vestry meeting in the church. Mr. Sanctuary, the
-High Sheriff for Sussex, described the episode in a letter to the
-Home Office on the same day (18th November). The labourers, he said,
-demanded 2s. 6d. a day, and the lowering of rents and tithes: ‘all
-these complaints were attended to----thought reasonable and complied
-with,’ and the meeting dispersed quietly. Anticipating, it may be,
-some censure, he added, ‘I should have found it quite impossible to
-have prevailed upon any person to serve as special constable----most
-of the tradespeople and many of the farmers considering the demands of
-the people but just (and) equitable----indeed many of them advocated
-(them)----a doctor spoke about the taxes----but no one backed
-him----that was not the object of the meeting.’ A lady living at
-Horsham wrote a more vivid account of the day’s work. She described how
-the mob made everybody come to the church. Mr. Simpson, the vicar, went
-without more ado, but Mr. Hurst, senior, owner of the great tithes,
-held out till the mob seized a chariot from the King’s Arms and dragged
-it to his door. Whilst the chariot was being brought he slipped out,
-and entered the church with his two sons. All the gentlemen stood up
-at the altar, while the farmers encouraged the labourers in the body of
-the church. ‘Mr. Hurst held out so long that it was feared blood would
-be shed, the Doors were shut till the Demands were granted, no lights
-were allowed, the Iron railing that surrounds the Monuments torn up,
-and the sacred boundary between the chancel and Altar overleapt before
-he would yield.’ Mr. Hurst himself wrote to the Home Office to say that
-it was only the promise to reduce rents and tithes that had prevented
-serious riots, but he met with little sympathy at headquarters. ‘I
-cannot concur,’ wrote Sir Robert Peel, ‘in the opinion of Mr. Hurst
-that it was expedient or necessary for the Vestry to yield to the
-demands of the Mob. In every case that I have seen, in which the mob
-has been firmly and temperately resisted, they have given way without
-resorting to personal violence.’ A neighbouring magistrate, who shared
-Sir Robert Peel’s opinion about the affair, went to Horsham a day
-or two later to swear in special constables. He found that out of
-sixty-three ‘respectable householders’ four only would take the oath.
-Meanwhile the difficulties of providing troops increased with the area
-of disturbances. ‘I have requested that every effort may be made to
-reinforce the troops in the western part of Sussex,’ wrote Sir Robert
-Peel to a Horsham magistrate on 18th November, ‘and you may judge
-of the difficulty of doing so, when I mention to you that the most
-expeditious mode of effecting this is to bring from Dorchester _the
-only_ cavalry force that is in the West of England. This, however,
-shall be done, and 100 men (infantry) shall be brought from the
-Garrison of Portsmouth.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Until the middle of November the rising was confined to Kent, Sussex
-and parts of Surrey, with occasional fires and threatening letters in
-neighbouring counties. After that time the disturbances became more
-serious, spreading not only to the West of Sussex, but to Berkshire,
-Hampshire, and Wiltshire. On 22nd November the Duke of Buckingham wrote
-from Avington in Hampshire to the Duke of Wellington: ‘Nothing can be
-worse than the state of this neighbourhood. I may say that this part
-of the country is wholly in the hands of the rebels ... 1500 rioters
-are to assemble to-morrow morning, and will attack any farmhouses where
-there are threshing machines. They go about levying contributions on
-every gentleman’s house. There are very few magistrates; and what
-there are are completely cowed. In short, something decisive must
-instantly be done.’
-
-The risings in these counties differed in some respects from the rising
-in Kent and Sussex. The disturbances were not so much like the firing
-of a train of discontent, they were rather a sudden and spontaneous
-explosion. They lasted only about a week, and were well described in
-a report of Colonel Brotherton, one of the two military experts sent
-by Lord Melbourne to Wiltshire to advise the magistrates. He wrote on
-28th November: ‘The insurrectionary movement seems to be directed by
-no plan or system, but merely actuated by the spontaneous feeling of
-the peasantry and quite at random.’ The labourers went about in larger
-numbers, combining with the destruction of threshing machines and the
-demand for higher wages a claim for ‘satisfaction’ as they called it
-in the form of ready money. It was their practice to charge £2 for
-breaking a threshing machine, but in some cases the mobs were satisfied
-with a few coppers. The demand for ready money was not a new feature,
-for many correspondents of the Home Office note in their letters that
-the mobs levied money in Kent and Sussex, but hitherto this ‘sturdy
-begging,’ as Cobbett called it, had been regarded by the magistrates
-as unimportant. The wages demanded in these counties were 2s. a day,
-whereas the demands in Kent and usually in Sussex had been for 2s. 6d.
-or 2s. 3d. Wages had fallen to a lower level in Hampshire, Berkshire
-and Wiltshire. The current rate in Wiltshire was 7s., and Colonel Mair,
-the second officer sent down by the Home Office, reported that wages
-were sometimes as low as 6s. It is therefore not surprising to learn
-that in two parishes the labourers instead of asking for 2s. a day,
-asked only for 8s. or 9s. a week. In Berkshire wages varied from 7s. to
-9s., and in Hampshire the usual rate seems to have been 8s.
-
-The rising in Hampshire was marked by a considerable destruction of
-property. At Fordingbridge, the mob under the leadership of a man
-called Cooper, broke up the machinery both at a sacking manufactory
-and at a manufactory of threshing machines. Cooper was soon clothed in
-innumerable legends: he was a gipsy, a mysterious gentleman, possibly
-the renowned ‘Swing’ himself. At the Fordingbridge riots he rode
-on horseback and assumed the title of Captain Hunt. His followers
-addressed him bareheaded. In point of fact he was an agricultural
-labourer of good character, a native of East Grimstead in Wilts,
-who had served in the artillery in the French War. Some two months
-before the riots his wife had robbed him, and then eloped with a
-paramour. This unhinged his self-control; he gave himself up to drink
-and despair, and tried to forget his misery in reckless rioting. Near
-Andover again a foundry was destroyed by a mob, after the ringleader,
-Gilmore, had entered the justices’ room at Andover, where the justices
-were sitting, and treated with them on behalf of the mob. Gilmore also
-was a labourer; he was twenty-five years old and had been a soldier.
-
-The most interesting event in the Hampshire rising was the destruction
-of the workhouses at Selborne and Headley. Little is reported of the
-demolition of the poorhouse at Selborne. The indictment of the persons
-accused of taking part in it fell through on technical grounds, and
-as the defendants were also the persons charged with destroying the
-Headley workhouse, the prosecution in the Selborne case was abandoned.
-The mob first went to Mr. Cobbold, Vicar of Selborne, and demanded
-that he should reduce his tithes, telling him with some bluntness ‘we
-must have a touch of your tithes: we think £300 a year quite enough
-for you ... £4 a week is quite enough.’ Mr. Cobbold was thoroughly
-alarmed, and consented to sign a paper promising to reduce his tithes,
-which amounted to something over £600, by half that sum. The mob were
-accompanied by a good many farmers who had agreed to raise wages if
-the labourers would undertake to obtain a reduction of tithes, and
-these farmers signed the paper also. After Mr. Cobbold’s surrender the
-mob went on to the workhouse at Headley, which served the parishes of
-Bramshott, Headley and Kingsley. Their leader was a certain Robert
-Holdaway, a wheelwright, who had been for a short time a publican. He
-was a widower, with eight small children, described by the witnesses
-at his trial as a man of excellent character, quiet, industrious, and
-inoffensive. The master of the workhouse greeted Holdaway with ‘What,
-Holdy, are you here?’ ‘Yes, but I mean you no harm nor your wife nor
-your goods: so get them out as soon as you can, for the house must
-come down.’ The master warned him that there were old people and
-sick children in the house. Holdaway promised that they should be
-protected, asked where they were, and said the window would be marked.
-What followed is described in the evidence given by the master of the
-workhouse: ‘There was not a room left entire, except that in which the
-sick children were. These were removed into the yard on two beds, and
-covered over, and kept from harm all the time. This was done by the
-mob. They were left there because there was no room for them in the
-sick ward. The sick ward was full of infirm old paupers. It was not
-touched, but of all the rest of the place not a room was left entire.’
-The farmers looked on whilst the destruction proceeded, and one at
-least of the labourers in the mob declared afterwards that his master
-had forced him to join.
-
-In Wiltshire also the destruction of property was not confined to
-threshing machines. At Wilton, the mob, under the leadership of a
-certain John Jennings, aged eighteen,[436] who declared that he ‘was
-going to break the machinery to make more work for the poor people,’
-did £500 worth of damage in a woollen mill. Another cloth factory at
-Quidhampton was also injured; in this affair an active part was taken
-by a boy even younger than Jennings, John Ford, who was only seventeen
-years old.[437]
-
-The riot which attracted most attention of all the disturbances in
-Wiltshire took place at Pyt House, the seat of Mr. John Benett, M.P.
-for the county. Mr. Benett was a well-known local figure, and had given
-evidence before several Committees on Poor Laws. The depth of his
-sympathy with the labourers may be gauged by the threat that he uttered
-before the Committee of 1817 to pull down his cottages if Parliament
-should make length of residence a legal method of gaining a settlement.
-Some member of the Committee suggested that if there were no cottages
-there would be no labourers, but Mr. Benett replied cheerfully enough
-that it did not matter to a labourer how far he walked to his work:
-‘I have many labourers coming three miles to my farm every morning
-during the winter’ (the hours were six to six) ‘and they are the most
-punctual persons we have.’ At the time he gave this evidence, he stated
-that about three-quarters of the labouring population in his parish
-of Tisbury received relief from the poor rates in aid of wages, and
-he declared that it was useless to let them small parcels of land.
-The condition of the poor had not improved in Mr. Benett’s parish
-between 1817 and 1830, and Lord Arundel, who lived in it, described
-it as ‘a Parish in which the Poor have been more oppressed and are in
-greater misery as a whole than any Parish in the Kingdom.’[438] It is
-not surprising that when the news of what had been achieved in Kent
-and Sussex spread west to Wiltshire, the labourers of Tisbury rose
-to demand 2s. a day, and to destroy the threshing machines. A mob of
-five hundred persons collected, and their first act was to destroy a
-threshing machine, with the sanction of the owner, Mr. Turner, who sat
-by on horseback, watching them. They afterwards proceeded to the Pyt
-House estate. Mr. Benett met them, parleyed and rode with them for some
-way; they behaved politely but firmly, telling him their intentions.
-One incident throws a light on the minds of the actors in these scenes.
-‘I then,’ said Mr. Benett afterwards, ‘pointed out to them that they
-could not trust each other, for any man, I said, by informing against
-ten of you will obtain at once £500.’ It was an adroit speech, but
-as it happened the Wiltshire labourers, half starved, degraded and
-brutalised, as they might be, had a different standard of honour from
-that imagined by this magistrate and member of Parliament, and the
-devilish temptation he set before them was rejected. The mob destroyed
-various threshing machines on Mr. Benett’s farms, and refused to
-disperse; at last, after a good deal of sharp language from Mr. Benett,
-they threw stones at him. At the same time a troop of yeomanry from
-Hindon came up and received orders to fire blank cartridges above the
-heads of the mob. This only produced laughter; the yeomanry then began
-to charge; the mob took shelter in the plantations round Pyt House and
-stoned the yeomanry, who replied by a fierce onslaught, shooting one
-man dead on the spot,[439] wounding six by cutting off fingers and
-opening skulls, and taking a great number of prisoners. At the inquest
-at Tisbury on the man John Harding, who was killed, the jury returned
-a verdict of justifiable homicide, and the coroner refused to grant
-a warrant for burial, saying that the man’s action was equivalent to
-_felo de se_. Hunt stated in the House of Commons that the foreman of
-the jury was the father of one of the yeomen.
-
-We have seen that in these counties the magistrates took a very grave
-view of the crime of levying money from householders. This was often
-done by casual bands of men and boys, who had little connection with
-the organised rising. An examination of the cases described before
-the Special Commissions gives the impression that in point of fact
-there was very little danger to person or property. A farmer’s wife
-at Aston Tirrold in Berkshire described her own experience to the
-Abingdon Special Commission. A mob came to her house and demanded beer.
-Her husband was out and she went to the door. ‘Bennett was spokesman.
-He said “Now a little of your beer if you please.” I answered “Not a
-drop.” He asked “Why?” and I said “I cannot give beer to encourage
-riot.” Bennett said “Why you don’t call this rioting do you?” I said
-“I don’t know what you call it, but it is a number of people assembled
-together to alarm others: but don’t think I’m afraid or daunted at it.”
-Bennett said “Suppose your premises should be set on fire?” I said
-“Then I certainly should be alarmed but I don’t suppose either of you
-intends doing that.” Bennett said “No, we do not intend any such thing,
-I don’t wish to alarm you and we are not come with the intention of
-mischief.”’ The result of the dialogue was that Bennett and his party
-went home without beer and without giving trouble.
-
-It was natural that when mob-begging of this kind became fashionable,
-unpopular individuals should be singled out for rough and threatening
-visits. Sometimes the assistant overseers were the objects of special
-hatred, sometimes the parson. It is worth while to give the facts of
-a case at St. Mary Bourne in Hampshire, because stress was laid upon
-it in the subsequent prosecutions as an instance of extraordinary
-violence. The clergyman, Mr. Easton, was not a favourite in his parish,
-and he preached what the poor regarded as a harsh and a hostile sermon.
-When the parish rose, a mob of two hundred forced their way into the
-vicarage and demanded money, some of them repeating, ‘Money or blood.’
-Mrs. Easton, who was rather an invalid, Miss Lucy Easton, and Master
-Easton were downstairs, and Mrs. Easton was so much alarmed that she
-sent Lucy upstairs to fetch 10s. Meanwhile Mr. Easton had come down,
-and was listening to some extremely unsympathetic criticisms of his
-performances in the pulpit. ‘Damn you,’ said Daniel Simms,[440] ‘where
-will your text be next Sunday?’ William Simms was equally blunt and
-uncompromising. Meanwhile Lucy had brought down the half-sovereign, and
-Mrs. Easton gave it to William Simms,[441] who thereupon cried ‘All
-out,’ and the mob left the Eastons at peace.
-
-One representative of the Church was distinguished from most of the
-country gentlemen and clergymen of the time by his treatment of one
-of these wandering mobs. Cobbett’s letter to the Hampshire parsons,
-published in the _Political Register_, 15th January 1831, contains an
-account of the conduct of Bishop Sumner, the Bishop of Winchester. ‘I
-have, at last, found a Bishop of the _Law_ Church to _praise_. The
-facts are these: the Bishop, in coming from Winchester to his palace
-at Farnham, was met about a mile before he got to the latter place,
-by a band of sturdy beggars, whom some call robbers. They stopped his
-carriage, and asked for some money, which he gave them. But he did not
-_prosecute_ them: he had not a man of them called to account for his
-conduct, but, the next day, set _twenty-four labourers to constant
-work_, opened his Castle to the distressed of all ages, and supplied
-all with food and other necessaries who stood in need of them. This was
-becoming a Christian teacher.’ Perhaps the bishop remembered the lines
-from Dryden’s _Tales from Chaucer_, describing the spirit in which the
-good parson regarded the poor:
-
- ‘Who, should they steal for want of his relief,
- He judged himself accomplice with the thief.’
-
-There was an exhibition of free speaking at Hungerford, where the
-magistrates sat in the Town Hall to receive deputations from various
-mobs, in connection with the demand for higher wages. The magistrates
-had made their peace with the Hungerford mob, when a deputation from
-the Kintbury mob arrived, led by William Oakley, a young carpenter of
-twenty-five. Oakley addressed the magistrates in language which they
-had never heard before in their lives and were never likely to hear
-again. ‘You have not such d----d flats to deal with now, as you had
-before; we will have 2s. a day till Lady Day, and 2s. 6d. afterwards
-for labourers and 3s. 6d. for tradesmen. And as we are here we will
-have £5 before we leave the place or we will smash it.... You gentlemen
-have been living long enough on the good things, now is our time and
-we will have them. You gentlemen would not speak to us now, only you
-are afraid and intimidated.’ The magistrates acceded to the demands
-of the Kintbury mob and also gave them the £5, after which they gave
-the Hungerford mob £5, because they had behaved well, and it would be
-unjust to treat them worse than their Kintbury neighbours. Mr. Page,
-Deputy-Lieutenant for Berks, sent Lord Melbourne some tales about
-this same Kintbury mob, which was described by Mr. Pearse, M.P., as
-a set of ‘desperate savages.’ ‘I beg to add some anecdotes of the mob
-yesterday to illustrate the nature of its component parts. They took £2
-from Mr. Cherry a magistrate and broke his Machine. Afterwards another
-party came and demanded One Pound----when the two parties had again
-formed into one, they passed by Mr. Cherry’s door and said they had
-taken one pound too much, which they offered to return to him which it
-is said he refused--they had before understood that Mrs. Cherry was
-unwell and therefore came only in small parties. A poor woman passed
-them selling rabbitts, some few of the mob took some by force, the
-ringleader ordered them to be restored. At a farmer’s where they had
-been regaled with bread cheese and beer one of them stole an umbrella:
-the ringleader hearing of it, as they were passing the canal threw him
-into it and gave him a good ducking.’[442]
-
-In the early days of the rising in Hampshire, Wiltshire and Berkshire,
-there was a good deal of sympathy with the labourers. The farmers in
-many cases made no objection to the destruction of their threshing
-machines. One gentleman of Market Lavington went so far as to say that
-‘nearly all the Wiltshire Farmers were willing to destroy or set aside
-their machines.’ ‘My Lord,’ wrote Mr. Williams, J.P., from Marlborough,
-‘you will perhaps be surprised to hear that the greatest number of
-the threshing machines destroyed have been put out for the Purpose by
-the Owners themselves.’ The Duke of Buckingham complained that in the
-district round Avington ‘the farmers have not the Spirit and in some
-instances not the Wish to put down’ disturbances.[443] At a meeting in
-Winchester, convened by the Mayor to preserve the peace (reported in
-the _Hampshire Chronicle_ of 22nd November), Dr. Newbolt, a clergyman
-and magistrate, described his own dealings with one of the mobs. The
-mob said they wanted 12s. a week wages: this he said was a reasonable
-demand. He acted as mediator between the labourers and farmers, and
-as a result of his efforts the farmers agreed to these terms, and the
-labourers returned to work, abandoning their project of a descent
-on Winchester. The Mayor of Winchester also declared that the wages
-demanded were not unreasonable, and he laid stress on the fact that the
-object of the meeting was not to appoint special constables to come
-into conflict with the people, but merely to preserve the peace. Next
-week Dr. Newbolt put an advertisement into the _Hampshire Chronicle_,
-acknowledging the vote of thanks that had been passed to him, and
-reaffirming his belief that conciliation was the right policy.[444] At
-Overton, in Hampshire, Henry Hunt acted as mediator between the farmers
-and a hungry and menacing mob. Such was the fear of the farmers that
-they gave him unlimited power to make promises on their behalf: he
-promised the labourers that their wages should be raised from 9s. to
-12s., with house rent in addition, and they dispersed in delight.
-
-Fortune had so far smiled upon the rising, and there was some hope of
-success. If the spirit that animated the farmers, and in Kent many of
-the landowners, had lasted, the winter of 1830 might have ended in an
-improvement of wages and a reduction of rents and tithes throughout
-the south of England. In places where the decline of the labourer had
-been watched for years without pity or dismay, magistrates were now
-calling meetings to consider his circumstances, and the Home Office
-Papers show that some, at any rate, of the country gentlemen were
-aware of the desperate condition of the poor. Unhappily the day of
-conciliatory measures was a brief one. Two facts frightened the upper
-classes into brutality: one was the spread of the rising, the other
-the scarcity of troops.[445] As the movement spread, the alarm of the
-authorities inspired a different policy, and even those landowners who
-recognised that the labourers were miserable, thought that they were in
-the presence of a rising that would sweep them away unless they could
-suppress it at once by drastic means. They pictured the labourers as
-Huns and the mysterious Swing as a second Attila, and this panic they
-contrived to communicate to the other classes of society.
-
-Conciliatory methods consequently ceased; the upper classes substituted
-action for diplomacy, and the movement rapidly collapsed. Little
-resistance was offered, and the terrible hosts of armed and desperate
-men melted down into groups of weak and ill-fed labourers, armed with
-sticks and stones. On 26th November the _Times_ could report that
-seventy persons had been apprehended near Newbury, and that ‘about
-60 of the most forward half-starved fellows’ had been taken into
-custody some two miles from Southampton. Already the housing of the
-Berkshire prisoners was becoming a problem, the gaols at Reading and
-Abingdon being overcrowded: by the end of the month the Newbury Mansion
-House and Workhouse had been converted into prisons. This energy had
-been stimulated by a circular letter issued on 24th November, in
-which Lord Melbourne urged the lord-lieutenants and the magistrates
-to use firmness and vigour in quelling disturbances, and virtually
-promised them immunity for illegal acts done in discharge of their
-duty. A village here and there continued to give the magistrates some
-uneasiness, for example, Broughton in Hants, ‘an open village in an
-open country ... where there is no Gentleman to overawe them,’[446] but
-these were exceptions. The day of risings was over, and from this time
-forward, arson was the only weapon of discontent. At Charlton in Wilts,
-where ‘the magistrates had talked of 12s. and the farmers had given
-10s.,’ a certain Mr. Polhill, who had lowered the wages one Saturday to
-9s., found his premises in flame. ‘The poor,’ remarked a neighbouring
-magistrate, ‘naturally consider that they will be beaten down again
-to 7s.’[447] By 4th December the _Times_ correspondent in Wiltshire
-and Hampshire could report that quiet was restored, that the peasantry
-were cowed, and that men who had been prominent in the mobs were being
-picked out and arrested every day. He gave an amusing account of the
-trials of a special correspondent, and of the difficulties of obtaining
-information. ‘The circular of Lord Melbourne which encourages the
-magistrates to seize suspected persons, and promises them impunity if
-the motives are good (such is the construction of the circular in these
-parts), and which the magistrates are determined to act upon, renders
-inquiries unsafe, and I have received a few good natured hints on
-this head. Gentlemen in gigs and post chaises are peculiar objects of
-jealousy. A cigar, which is no slight comfort in this humid atmosphere,
-is regarded on the road as a species of pyrotechnical tube; and even an
-eye glass is in danger of being metamorphosed into a newly invented air
-gun, with which these _gentlemen_ ignite stacks and barns as they pass.
-An innocent enquiry of whose house or farm is that? is, under existing
-circumstances, an overt act of incendiarism.’
-
-In such a state of feeling, it was not surprising that labourers were
-bundled into prison for sour looks or discontented conversation. A
-zealous magistrate wrote to the Home Office on 13th December after a
-fire near Maidenhead, to say that he had committed a certain Greenaway
-to prison on the following evidence: ‘Dr. Vansittart, Rector of
-Shottesbrook, gave a sermon a short time before the fire took place,
-recommending a quiet conduct to his Parishioners. Greenaway said openly
-in the churchyard, we have been quiet too long. His temper is bad,
-always discontented and churlish, frequently changing his Master from
-finding great difficulty in maintaining a large family from the Wages
-of labour.’
-
-Meanwhile the rising had spread westward to Dorset and Gloucestershire,
-and northward to Bucks. In Dorsetshire and Gloucestershire, the
-disturbances were much like those in Wiltshire. In Bucks, in addition
-to the usual agricultural rising, with the breaking of threshing
-machines and the demand for higher wages, there were riots in High
-Wycombe, and considerable destruction of paper-making machinery by
-the unemployed. Where special grievances existed in a village, the
-labourers took advantage of the rising to seek redress for them. Thus
-at Walden in Bucks, in addition to demanding 2s. a day wages with 6d.
-for each child and a reduction of tithes, they made a special point of
-the improper distribution of parish gifts. ‘Another person said that
-buns used to be thrown from the church steeple and beer given away in
-the churchyard, and a sermon preached on the bun day. Witness (the
-parson) told them that the custom had ceased before he came to the
-parish, but that he always preached a sermon on St. George’s day, and
-two on Sundays, one of which was a volunteer. He told them that he had
-consulted the Archdeacon on the claim set up for the distribution of
-buns, and that the Archdeacon was of opinion that no such claim could
-be maintained.’
-
-At Benson or Bensington, in Oxfordshire, the labourers, after
-destroying some threshing machines, made a demonstration against a
-proposal for enclosure. Mr. Newton, a large proprietor, had just made
-one of many unsuccessful attempts to obtain an Enclosure Act for the
-parish. Some thousand persons assembled in the churchyard expecting
-that Mr. Newton would try to fix the notice on the church door, but as
-he did not venture to appear, they proceeded to his house, and made him
-promise never again to attempt to obtain an Enclosure Act.[448]
-
-The movement for obtaining higher wages by this rude collective
-bargaining was extinguished in the counties already mentioned by the
-beginning of December, but disturbances now developed over a larger
-area. A ‘daring riot’ took place at Stotfold in Bedfordshire. The
-labourers met together to demand exemption from taxes, dismissal of the
-assistant overseer, and the raising of wages to 2s. a day. The last
-demand was refused, on which the labourers set some straw alight in
-a field to alarm the farmers. Mr. Whitbread, J.P., brought a hundred
-special constables, and arrested ten ringleaders, after which the riot
-ceased. There were disturbances in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex; and in
-many other counties the propertied classes were terrified from time
-to time by the news of fires. In Cambridgeshire there were meetings
-of labourers to demand higher wages, in some places with immediate
-success, and one magistrate was alarmed by rumours of a design to march
-upon Cambridge itself on market day. In Devonshire Lord Ebrington
-reported an agitation for higher wages with encouragement from the
-farmers. He was himself impressed by the low wages in force, and had
-raised them in places still quiet; a mistake for which he apologised.
-Even Hereford, ‘this hitherto submissive and peaceful county,’ was not
-unaffected. In Northamptonshire there were several fires, and also
-risings round Peterborough, Oundle and Wellingborough, and a general
-outbreak in the Midlands was thought to be imminent. Hayricks began
-to blaze as far north as Carlisle. Swing letters were delivered in
-Yorkshire, and in Lincolnshire the labourer was said to be awakening
-to his own importance. There were in fact few counties quite free
-from infection, and a leading article appeared in the _Times_ on 6th
-December, in which it was stated that never had such a dangerous state
-of things existed to such an extent in England, in the period of
-well-authenticated records. ‘Let the rich be taught that Providence
-will not suffer them to oppress their fellow creatures with impunity.
-Here are tens of thousands of Englishmen, industrious, kind-hearted,
-but broken-hearted beings, exasperated into madness by insufficient
-food and clothing, by utter want of necessaries for themselves and
-their unfortunate families.’
-
-Unfortunately Providence, to whom the _Times_ attributed these
-revolutionary sentiments, was not so close to the scene as Lord
-Melbourne, whose sentiments on the subject were very different. On 8th
-December he issued a circular, which gave a death-blow to the hope that
-the magistrates would act as mediators on behalf of the labourers.
-After blaming those magistrates who, under intimidation, had advised
-the establishment of a uniform rate of wages, the Home Secretary went
-on, ‘Reason and experience concur in proving that a compliance with
-demands so unreasonable in themselves, and urged in such a manner, can
-only lead, and probably within a very short period of time, to the most
-disastrous results.’ He added that the justices had ‘no general legal
-authority to settle the amount of the wages of labour.’ The circular
-contained a promise on the part of the Government that they would adopt
-‘every practicable and reasonable measure’ for the alleviation of the
-labourers’ privations.
-
-From this time the magistrates were everywhere on the alert for the
-first signs of life and movement among the labourers, and they forbade
-meetings of any kind. In Suffolk and Essex the labourers who took
-up the cry for higher wages were promptly thrown into prison, and
-arbitrary arrests became the custom. The movement was crushed, and the
-time for retribution had come. The gaols were full to overflowing,
-and the Government appointed Special Commissions to try the rioters
-in Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset, Berks, and Bucks. Brougham, who was
-now enjoying the office in whose pompous manner he must have lisped
-in his cradle, told the House of Lords on 2nd December, ‘Within a few
-days from the time I am addressing your Lordships, the sword of justice
-shall be unsheathed to smite, if it be necessary, with a firm and
-vigorous hand, the rebel against the law.’
-
-The disturbances were over, but the panic had been such that the
-upper classes could not persuade themselves that England was yet
-tranquil. As late as Christmas Eve the Privy Council gave orders to the
-archbishop to prepare ‘a form of prayer to Almighty God, on account
-of the troubled state of certain parts of the United Kingdom.’ The
-archbishop’s composition, which was published after scores of men and
-boys had been sentenced to transportation for life, must have been
-recited with genuine feeling by those clergymen who had either broken,
-or were about to break, their agreement to surrender part of their
-tithes. One passage ran as follows: ‘Restore, O Lord, to Thy people
-the quiet enjoyment of the many and great blessings which we have
-received from Thy bounty: defeat and frustrate the malice of wicked and
-turbulent men, and turn their hearts: have pity, O Lord, on the simple
-and ignorant, who have been led astray, and recall them to a sense of
-their duty; and to persons of all ranks and conditions in this country
-vouchsafe such a measure of Thy grace, that our hearts being filled
-with true faith and devotion, and cleansed from all evil affections,
-we may serve Thee with one accord, in duty and loyalty to the King, in
-obedience to the laws of the land, and in brotherly love towards each
-other....’
-
-We shall see in the next chapter what happened to ‘the simple and
-ignorant’ who had fallen into the hands of the English judges.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[421] See Fawley, p. 279.
-
-[422] _Kent Herald_, September 2, 1830.
-
-[423] _Times_, January 3, 1831.
-
-[424] September 30, 1830.
-
-[425] _Brighton Chronicle_, October 6, quoted in _Times_, October 14.
-
-[426] For Brede see H. O. Papers, Extracts from Poor Law Commissioners’
-Report, published 1833, and newspapers.
-
-[427] They were signed by G. S. Hill, minister, by eight farmers and
-the four labourer delegates.
-
-[428] Affidavit in H. O. Papers.
-
-[429] _Times_, November 25.
-
-[430] The petition was as follows: ‘We feel that in justice we ought
-not to suffer a moment to pass away without communicating to your
-Grace the great and unprecedented distress which we are enabled from
-our own personal experience to state prevails among all the peasantry
-to a degree not only dreadful to individuals, but also to an extent
-which, if not checked, must be attended with serious consequences to
-the national prosperity.’ Mr. Hodges does not mention the date, merely
-stating that it was sent to Wellington when Prime Minister.
-
-[431] H. O. Papers.
-
-[432] _Ibid._
-
-[433] _Ibid._
-
-[434] H. O. Papers.
-
-[435] _Ibid._
-
-[436] Transported for life to New South Wales.
-
-[437] Ford was capitally convicted and sentenced to transportation for
-life, but his sentence was commuted to imprisonment.
-
-[438] H. O. Papers.
-
-[439] According to local tradition he was killed not by the yeomanry
-but by a farmer, before the troop came up. See Hudson, _A Shepherd’s
-Life_, p. 248.
-
-[440] Transported for life to New South Wales.
-
-[441] Transported for life to New South Wales.
-
-[442] H. O. Papers.
-
-[443] _Ibid._
-
-[444] Ten days later, after Lord Melbourne’s circular of December 8,
-Dr. Newbolt changed his tone. Writing to the Home Office he deprecated
-the censure implied in that circular, and stated that his conduct
-was due to personal infirmities and threats of violence: indeed he
-had subsequently heard from a certain Mr. Wickham that ‘I left his
-place just in time to save my own life, as some of the Mob had it in
-contemplation to drag me out of the carriage, and to destroy me upon
-the spot, and it was entirely owing to the interference of some of the
-better disposed of the Peasantry that my life was preserved.’
-
-[445] See p. 258.
-
-[446] H. O. Papers.
-
-[447] _Ibid._
-
-[448] See _Oxford University and City Herald_, November 20 and 27,
-1830.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT
-
-II
-
-
-The bands of men and boys who had given their rulers one moment of
-excitement and lively interest in the condition of the poor had made
-themselves liable to ferocious penalties. For the privileged classes
-had set up a code under which no labourer could take a single step for
-the improvement of the lot of his class without putting his life and
-liberties in a noose. It is true that the savage laws which had been
-passed against combination in 1799 and 1800 had been repealed in 1824,
-and that even under the less liberal Act of the following year, which
-rescinded the Act of 1824, it was no longer a penal offence to form a
-Trades Union. But it is easy to see that the labourers who tried to
-raise their wages were in fact on a shelving and most perilous slope.
-If they used threats or intimidation or molested or obstructed, either
-to get a labourer to join with them or to get an employer to make
-concessions, they were guilty of a misdemeanour punishable with three
-months’ imprisonment. They were lucky if they ran no graver risk than
-this. Few of the prosecutions at the Special Commissions were under the
-Act of 1825. A body of men holding a meeting in a village where famine
-and unemployment were chronic, and where hardly any one had been taught
-to read or write, might very soon find themselves becoming what the Act
-of 1714 called a riotous assembly, and if a magistrate took alarm and
-read the Riot Act, and they did not disperse within one hour, every
-one of them might be punished as a felon. The hour’s interval did not
-mean an hour’s grace, for, as Mr. Justice Alderson told the court at
-Dorchester, within that hour ‘all persons, even private individuals,
-may do anything, using force even to the last extremity to prevent the
-commission of a felony.’
-
-There were at least three ways in which labourers meeting together
-to demonstrate for higher wages ran a risk of losing their lives, if
-any of their fellows got out of hand from temper, or from drink, or
-from hunger and despair. Most of the prosecutions before the Special
-Commissions were prosecutions under three Acts of 1827 and 1828,
-consolidating the law on the subject of offences against property and
-offences against the person. Under the eighth section of one Act (7 and
-8 George IV. c. 30), any persons riotously or tumultuously assembled
-together who destroyed any house, stable, coach-house, outhouse, barn,
-granary, or any building or erection or machinery used in carrying
-on any trade or manufacture were to suffer death as felons. In this
-Act there is no definition of riot, and therefore ‘the common law
-definition of a riot is resorted to, and in such a case if any one of
-His Majesty’s subjects was terrified there was a sufficient terror and
-alarm to substantiate that part of the charge.’[449] Under the sixth
-section of another Act, any person who robbed any other person of any
-chattel, money, or valuable security was to suffer death as a felon.
-Now if a mob presented itself before a householder with a demand for
-money, and the householder in fear gave even a few coppers, any person
-who was in that mob, whether he had anything to do with this particular
-transaction or not, whether he was aware or ignorant of it, was guilty
-of robbery, and liable to the capital penalty. Under section 12 of the
-Act of the following year, generally known as Lansdowne’s Act, which
-amended Ellenborough’s Act of 1803, it was a capital offence to attempt
-to shoot at a person, or to stab, cut, or wound him, with intent to
-murder, rob, or maim. Under this Act, as it was interpreted, if an
-altercation arose and any violence was offered by a single individual
-in the mob, the lives of the whole band were forfeit. This was put
-very clearly by Baron Vaughan: ‘There seems to be some impression that
-unless the attack on an individual is made with some deadly weapons,
-those concerned are not liable to capital punishment; but it should
-be made known to all persons that if the same injury were inflicted
-by a blow of a stone, all and every person forming part of a riotous
-assembly is equally guilty as he whose hand may have thrown it, and
-all alike are liable to death.’ Under section 4 of one Act of 1827 the
-penalty for destroying a threshing machine was transportation for seven
-years, and under section 17 the penalty for firing a rick was death.
-These were the terrors hanging over the village labourers of whom
-several hundreds were now awaiting their trial.
-
-The temper of the judges was revealed in their charges to the Grand
-Juries. In opening the Maidstone Assizes on 14th December, Mr. Justice
-Bosanquet[450] declared that though there might be some distress it
-was much exaggerated, and that he was sure that those whom he had
-the honour to address would find it not only their duty but their
-pleasure to lend an ear to the wants of the poor.[451] Mr. Justice
-Taunton[452] was even more reassuring on this subject at the Lewes
-Assizes: the distress was less than it had been twelve months before.
-‘I regret to say,’ he went on, ‘there are persons who exaggerate the
-distress and raise up barriers between different classes--who use the
-most inflammatory language--who represent the rich as oppressors of
-the poor. It would be impertinent in me to say anything to you as to
-your treatment of labourers or servants. That man must know little of
-the gentry of England, whether connected with the town or country,
-who represents them as tyrants to the poor, as not sympathising in
-their distress, and as not anxious to relieve their burdens and to
-promote their welfare and happiness.’[453] In opening the Special
-Commission at Winchester Baron Vaughan[454] alluded to the theory that
-the tumults had arisen from distress and admitted that it might be
-partly true, but, he continued, ‘every man possessed of the feelings
-common to our nature must deeply lament it, and endeavour to alleviate
-it (as you gentlemen no doubt have done and will continue to do), by
-every means which Providence has put within his power.’ If individuals
-were aggrieved by privations and injuries, they must apply to the
-Legislature, which alone could afford them relief, ‘but it can never be
-tolerated in any country which professes to acknowledge the obligations
-of municipal law, that any man or body of men should be permitted to
-sit in judgment upon their own wrongs, or to arrogate to themselves
-the power of redressing them. To suffer it would be to relapse into
-the barbarism of savage life and to dissolve the very elements by
-which society is held together.’[455] The opinions of the Bench on the
-sections of the Act (7 and 8 George IV. c. 30) under which men could
-be hung for assembling riotously and breaking machinery were clearly
-expressed by Mr. Justice Parke[456] (afterwards Lord Wensleydale) at
-Salisbury: ‘If that law ceases to be administered with due firmness,
-and men look to it in vain for the security of their rights, our wealth
-and power will soon be at an end, and our capital and industry would
-be transferred to some more peaceful country, whose laws are more
-respected or better enforced.’[457] By another section of that Act
-seven years was fixed as the maximum penalty for breaking a threshing
-machine. Mr. Justice Alderson[458] chafed under this restriction,
-and he told two men, Case and Morgan, who were found guilty at the
-Salisbury Special Commission of going into a neighbouring parish and
-breaking a threshing machine, that had the Legislature foreseen such
-crimes as theirs, it would have enabled the court to give them a
-severer sentence.[459]
-
-Mr. Justice Park[460] was equally stern and uncompromising in defending
-the property of the followers of the carpenter of Nazareth against the
-unreasoning misery of the hour. Summing up in a case at Aylesbury, in
-which one of the charges was that of attempting to procure a reduction
-of tithes, he remarked with warmth: ‘It was highly insolent in such men
-to require of gentlemen, who had by an expensive education qualified
-themselves to discharge the sacred duties of a Minister of the Gospel,
-to descend from that station and reduce themselves to the situation of
-common labourers.’[461]
-
-Few judges could resist the temptation to introduce into their charges
-a homily on the economic benefits of machinery. Mr. Justice Park was
-an exception, for he observed at Aylesbury that the question of the
-advantages of machinery was outside the province of the judges, ‘and
-much mischief often resulted from persons stepping out of their line
-of duty.’[462] Mr. Justice Alderson took a different view, and the
-very next day he was expounding the truths of political economy at
-Dorchester, starting with what he termed the ‘beautiful and simple
-illustration’ of the printing press.[463] The illustration must have
-seemed singularly intimate and convincing to the labourers in the dock
-who had never been taught their letters.
-
-Such was the temper of the judges. Who and what were the prisoners
-before them? After the suppression of the riots, the magistrates could
-pick out culprits at their leisure, and when a riot had involved the
-whole of the village the temptation to get rid by this method of
-persons who for one reason or another were obnoxious to the authorities
-was irresistible. Hunt, speaking in the House of Commons,[464] quoted
-the case of Hindon; seven men had been apprehended for rioting and they
-were all poachers. Many of the prisoners had already spent a month in
-an overcrowded prison; almost all of them were poor men; the majority
-could not read or write.[465] Few could afford counsel, and it must
-be remembered that counsel could not address the court on behalf of
-prisoners who were being tried for breaking machines, or for belonging
-to a mob that asked for money or destroyed property. By the rules of
-the gaol, the prisoners at Salisbury were not allowed to see their
-attorney except in the presence of the gaoler or his servant. The
-labourers’ ignorance of the law was complete and inevitable. Many of
-them thought that the King or the Government or the magistrates had
-given orders that machines were to be broken. Most of them supposed
-that if a person from whom they demanded money threw it down or gave
-it without the application of physical force, there was no question
-of robbery. We have an illustration of this illusion in a trial at
-Winchester when Isaac Hill, junior, who was charged with breaking a
-threshing machine near Micheldever, for which the maximum penalty was
-seven years, pleaded in his defence that he had not broken the machine
-and that all that he did ‘was to ask the prosecutor civilly for the
-money, which the mob took from him, and the prosecutor gave it to him,
-and that he thanked him very kindly for it,’[466] an admission which
-made him liable to a death penalty. A prisoner at Salisbury, when he
-was asked what he had to say in his defence to the jury, replied:
-‘Now, my Lord, I ‘se got nothing to say to ’em, I doant knaow any on
-’em.’[467] The prisoners were at this further disadvantage that all
-the witnesses whom they could call as to their share in the conduct
-of a mob had themselves been in the mob, and were thus liable to
-prosecution. Thus when James Lush (who was afterwards selected for
-execution) and James Toomer appealed to a man named Lane, who had just
-been acquitted on a previous charge, to give evidence that they had
-not struck Mr. Pinniger in a scuffle, Mr. Justice Alderson cautioned
-Lane that if he acknowledged that he had been in the mob he would be
-committed. Lane chose the safer part of silence.[468] In another case a
-witness had the courage to incriminate himself. When the brothers Simms
-were being tried for extorting money from Parson Easton’s wife, a case
-which we have already described, Henry Bunce, called as a witness for
-the defence, voluntarily declared, in spite of a caution from the judge
-(Alderson), that he had been present himself and that William Simms did
-not use the expression ‘blood or money.’ He was at once ordered into
-custody. ‘The prisoner immediately sprung over the bar into the dock
-with his former comrades, seemingly unaffected by the decision of the
-learned judge.’[469]
-
-Perhaps the darkest side of the business was the temptation held
-out to prisoners awaiting trial to betray their comrades. Immunity
-or a lighter sentence was freely offered to those who would give
-evidence. Stokes, who was found guilty at Dorchester of breaking a
-threshing machine, was sentenced by Mr. Justice Alderson to a year’s
-imprisonment, with the explanation that he was not transported
-because ‘after you were taken into custody, you gave very valuable
-information which tended greatly to further the ends of justice.’[470]
-These transactions were not often dragged into the daylight, but
-some negotiations of this character were made public in the trial of
-Mr. Deacle next year. Mr. Deacle, a well-to-do gentleman farmer, was
-tried at the Lent Assizes at Winchester for being concerned in the
-riots. One of the witnesses against him, named Collins, admitted in
-cross-examination that he believed he should have been prosecuted
-himself, if he had not promised to give evidence against Mr. Deacle;
-another witness, named Barnes, a carpenter, stated in cross-examination
-that during the trials at the Special Commission, ‘he being in the
-dock, and about to be put on his trial, the gaoler Beckett called
-him out, and took him into a room where there were Walter Long, a
-magistrate, and another person, whom he believed to be Bingham Baring,
-who told him that he should not be put upon his trial if he would
-come and swear against Deacle.’ When the next witness was about to be
-cross-examined, the counsel for the prosecution abruptly abandoned the
-case.[471]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first Special Commission was opened at Winchester with suitable
-pomp on 18th December. Not only the prison but the whole town was
-crowded, and the inhabitants of Winchester determined to make the best
-of the windfall. The jurymen and the _Times_ special correspondent
-complained bitterly of the abnormal cost of living, the latter
-mentioning that in addition to extraordinary charges for beds, 5s.
-a day was exacted for firing and tallow candles, bedroom fire not
-included. The three judges sent down as commissioners were Baron
-Vaughan, Mr. Justice Parke, and Mr. Justice Alderson. With them were
-associated two other commissioners, Mr. Sturges Bourne, of assistant
-overseer fame, and Mr. Richard Pollen. The Duke of Wellington, as
-Lord-Lieutenant, sat on the Bench. The Attorney-General, Mr. Sergeant
-Wilde, and others appeared to prosecute for the Crown. The County took
-up every charge, the Government only the more serious ones.
-
-There were three hundred prisoners, most of them charged with extorting
-money by threats or with breaking machinery. What chance had they of a
-fair trial? They started with the disabilities already described. They
-were thrown by batches into the dock; the pitiless law was explained
-to the jury; extenuating circumstances were ruled out as irrelevant.
-‘We do not come here,’ said Mr. Justice Alderson, ‘to inquire into
-grievances. We come here to decide law.’ But though evidence about
-wages or distress was not admitted, the judges did not scruple to give
-their own views of the social conditions which had produced these
-disturbances. Perhaps the most flagrant example was provided by a trial
-which happily was for a misdemeanour only. Seven men were indicted
-for conspiring together and riotously assembling for the purpose of
-raising wages and for compelling others to join them. The labourers of
-the parish of Fawley had combined together for two objects, the first
-to raise their wages, which stood at 9s. a week, the second to get rid
-of the assistant overseer, who had introduced a parish cart, to which
-he had harnessed women and boys, amongst others an idiot woman, named
-Jane Stevens. The labourers determined to break up the cart, but they
-desisted on the promise of a farmer that a horse should be bought for
-it. Lord Cavan was the large landowner of the parish. He paid his men
-as a rule 9s. a week, but two of them received 10s. The mob came up to
-his house to demand an increase of wages: Lord Cavan was out, quelling
-rioters elsewhere. Lady Cavan came down to see them. ‘Seeing you are my
-neighbours and armed,’ said she, ‘yet, as I am an unprotected woman,
-I am sure you will do no harm.’ The labourers protested that they
-meant no harm, and they did no harm. ‘I asked them,’ said Lady Cavan
-afterwards, in evidence, ‘why they rose then, there was no apparent
-distress round Eaglehurst, and the wages were the same as they had been
-for several years. I have been in several of their cottages and never
-saw any appearance of distress. They said they had been oppressed long
-and would bear it no longer.’ One man told her that he had 9s. a week
-wages and 3s. from the parish, he had heard that the 3s. was to be
-discontinued. With the common-sense characteristic of her class Lady
-Cavan assured him that he was not improving his position by idling.
-The labourers impressed the Cavan men, and went on their peaceful way
-round the parish. The farmers who gave evidence for the prosecution
-were allowed to assert that there was no distress, but when it came to
-evidence for the defence a stricter standard of relevancy was exacted.
-One witness for the prisoners said of the labourers: ‘The men were in
-very great distress; many of the men had only a few potatoes in their
-bag when they came to work.’ ‘The learned judges objected to this
-course of examination being continued: it might happen that through
-drinking a man might suffer distress.’ The Attorney-General, in his
-closing speech, asserted again that the prisoners did not seem to have
-been in distress. Baron Vaughan, in summing up, said that men were not
-to assemble and conspire together for the purpose of determining what
-their wages should be. ‘That which at first might be in itself a lawful
-act, might in the event become illegal.... A respectful statement or
-representation of their grievances was legal, and to which no one would
-object, but the evidence, if they believed it, showed that the conduct
-of this assembly was far from being respectful. No one could feel more
-for the distresses of the people than he did, but he would never endure
-that persons should by physical strength compel wages to be raised.
-There was no country where charity fell in a purer stream than in
-this. Let the man make his appeal in a proper and respectful manner,
-and he might be assured that appeal would never be heard in vain....
-His Lordship spoke very highly of the conduct of Lady Cavan. She had
-visited the cottages of all those who lived in the neighbourhood, she
-knew they were not distressed, and she also felt confident from her
-kindness to them that they would not offer her any violence.’ All seven
-were found guilty; four were sentenced to six months hard labour, and
-three to three months.
-
-Very few, however, of the cases at Winchester were simple
-misdemeanours, for in most instances, in addition to asking for higher
-wages, the labourers had made themselves liable to a prosecution for
-felony, either by breaking a threshing machine or by asking for money.
-Those prisoners who had taken part in the Fordingbridge riots, or in
-the destruction of machinery near Andover, or in the demolition of
-the Headley Workhouse, were sentenced to death or to transportation
-for life. Case after case was tried in which prisoners from different
-villages were indicted for assault and robbery. The features varied
-little, and the spectators began to find the proceedings monotonous.
-Most of the agricultural population of Hampshire had made itself liable
-to the death penalty, if the authorities cared to draw the noose. The
-three hundred who actually appeared in Court were like the men on whom
-the tower of Siloam fell.
-
-A case to which the prosecution attached special importance arose out
-of an affair at the house of Mr. Eyre Coote. A mob of forty persons,
-some of whom had iron bars, presented themselves before Mr. Coote’s
-door at two o’clock in the morning. Two bands of men had already
-visited Mr. Coote that evening, and he had given them beer: this third
-band was a party of stragglers. Mr. Coote stationed his ten servants
-in the portico, and when the mob arrived he asked them, ‘What do you
-want, my lads?’ ‘Money,’ was the answer. ‘Money,’ said Mr. Coote, ‘you
-shan’t have.’ One of the band seemed to Mr. Coote about to strike him.
-Mr. Coote seized him, nine of the mob were knocked down and taken, and
-the rest fled. Six of the men were prosecuted for feloniously demanding
-money. Baron Vaughan remarked that outrages like this made one wonder
-whether one was in a civilised country, and he proceeded to raise its
-moral tone by sentencing all the prisoners to transportation for life,
-except one, Henry Eldridge, who was reserved for execution. He had
-been already capitally convicted of complicity in the Fordingbridge
-riots, and this attempt to ‘enter the sanctuary of Mr. Eyre Coote’s
-home’ following upon that crime, rendered him a suitable ‘sacrifice to
-be made on the altar of the offended justice’ of his country.
-
-In many of the so-called robberies punished by the Special Commissions
-the sums taken were trifling. George Steel, aged eighteen, was
-sentenced to transportation for life for obtaining a shilling, when
-he was in liquor, from Jane Neale: William Sutton, another boy of
-eighteen, was found guilty of taking 4d. in a drunken frolic: Sutton,
-who was a carter boy receiving 1s. 6d. a week and his food, was given
-an excellent character by his master, who declared that he had never
-had a better servant. The jury recommended him to mercy, and the judges
-responded by sentencing him to death and banishing him for life. George
-Clerk, aged twenty, and E. C. Nutbean, aged eighteen, paid the same
-price for 3d. down and the promise of beer at the Greyhound. Such cases
-were not exceptional, as any one who turns to the reports of the trials
-will see.
-
-The evidence on which prisoners were convicted was often of the most
-shadowy kind. Eight young agricultural labourers, of ages varying from
-eighteen to twenty-five, were found guilty of riotously assembling
-in the parish of St. Lawrence Wootten and feloniously stealing £2
-from William Lutely Sclater of Tangier Park. ‘We want to get a little
-satisfaction from you’ was the phrase they used. Two days later another
-man, named William Farmer, was charged with the same offence. Mr.
-Sclater thought that Farmer was like the man in the mob who blew a
-trumpet or horn, but could not swear to his identity. Other witnesses
-swore that he was with the mob elsewhere, and said, ‘Money wa want and
-money wa will hae.’ On this evidence he was found guilty, and though
-Mr. Justice Alderson announced that he felt warranted in recommending
-that he should not lose his life, ‘yet, it was his duty,’ he continued,
-‘to state that he should for this violent and disgraceful outrage be
-sent out of the country, and separated for life from those friends and
-connections which were dear to him here: that he should have to employ
-the rest of his days in labour, at the will and for the profit of
-another, to show the people of the class to which the prisoner belonged
-that they cannot with impunity lend their aid to such outrages against
-the peace and security of person and property.’
-
-We have seen that at the time of the riots it was freely stated
-that the farmers incited the labourers to make disturbances. Hunt
-went so far as to say in the House of Commons that in nineteen
-cases out of twenty the farmers encouraged the labourers to break
-the threshing machines. The county authorities evidently thought it
-unwise to prosecute the farmers, although it was proved in evidence
-that there were several farmers present at the destruction of the
-Headley Workhouse, and at the demonstration at Mr. Cobbold’s house.
-Occasionally a farmer, in testifying to a prisoner’s character, would
-admit that he had been in a mob himself. In such cases the judge
-administered rebukes, but the prosecution took no action. There was,
-however, one exception. A small farmer, John Boys, of the parish of
-Owslebury, had thrown himself heartily into the labourers’ cause. A
-number of small farmers met and decided that the labourers’ wages
-ought to be raised. Boys agreed to take a paper round for signature.
-The paper ran as follows: ‘We the undersigned are willing to give 2s.
-per day for able-bodied married men, and 9s. per week for single men,
-on consideration of our rents and tithes being abated in proportion.’
-In similar cases, as a rule, the farmers left it to the labourers to
-collect signatures, and Boys, by undertaking the work himself, made
-himself a marked man. He had been in a mob which extorted money from
-Lord Northesk’s steward at Owslebury, and for this he was indicted for
-felony. But the jury, to the chagrin of the prosecution, acquitted
-him. What followed is best described in the report of Sergeant Wilde’s
-speech in the House of Commons (21st July 1831). ‘Boyce was tried
-and acquitted: but he (Mr. Wilde) being unable to account for the
-acquittal, considering the evidence to have been clear against him,
-and feeling that although the jury were most respectable men, they
-might possibly entertain some sympathy for him in consequence of his
-situation in life, thought it his duty to send a communication to the
-Attorney-General, stating that Boyce was deeply responsible for the
-acts which had taken place: that he thought he should not be allowed to
-escape, and recommending that he be tried before a different jury in
-the other Court. The Attorney-General sent to him (Mr. Wilde) to come
-into the other Court, and the result was that Boyce was then tried and
-convicted.’ In the other more complaisant Court, Farmer Boys and James
-Fussell, described as a genteel young man of about twenty, living with
-his mother, were found guilty of heading a riotous mob for reducing
-rents and tithes and sentenced to seven years’ transportation.[472]
-
-This was not the only case in which the sympathies of the jury created
-a difficulty. The Home Office Papers contain a letter from Dr.
-Quarrier, a Hampshire magistrate, who had been particularly vigorous in
-suppressing riots, stating that Sir James Parke discharged a jury at
-the Special Commission ‘under the impression that they were reluctant
-to convict the Prisoners which was more strongly impressed upon the
-mind of the Judge, by its being reported to his Lordship that “some of
-the Gosport Jurors had said, while travelling in the stage coach to
-Winchester, that they would not convict in cases where the Labourers
-had been driven to excess by Poverty and low Wages!” It was ascertained
-that some of those empannelled upon the acquitting Jury were from
-Gosport, which confirmed the learned Judge in the determination to
-discharge them.’[473]
-
-An interesting feature of the trials at Winchester was the number of
-men just above the condition of agricultural labourers who threw in
-their lot with the poor: the village mechanics, the wheelwrights,
-carpenters, joiners, smiths, and the bricklayers, shoemakers, shepherds
-and small holders were often prominent in the disturbances. To the
-judges this fact was a riddle. The threshing machines had done these
-men no injury; they had not known the sting of hunger; till the time
-of the riots their characters had been as a rule irreproachable.
-_Nemo repente turpissimus fuit_, and yet apparently these persons had
-suddenly, without warning, turned into the ‘wicked and turbulent men’
-of the archbishop’s prayer. Such culprits deserved, in the opinions
-of the bench, severer punishment than the labourers, whom their
-example should have kept in the paths of obedience and peace.[474]
-Where the law permitted, they were sentenced to transportation for
-life. One heinous offender of this type, Gregory, a carpenter, was
-actually earning 18s. a week in the service of Lord Winchester. But
-the most interesting instances were two brothers, Joseph and Robert
-Mason, who lived at Bullington. They rented three or four acres, kept
-a cow, and worked for the neighbouring farmers as well. Joseph, who
-was thirty-two, had a wife and one child; Robert, who was twenty-four,
-was unmarried. Between them they supported a widowed mother. Their
-characters were exemplary, and the most eager malice could detect no
-blot upon their past. But their opinions were dangerous: they regularly
-took in Cobbett’s _Register_ and read it aloud to twenty or thirty
-of the villagers. Further, Joseph had carried on foot a petition
-for reform to the king at Brighton from a hundred and seventy-seven
-‘persons, belonging to the working and labouring classes’ of Wonston,
-Barton Stacey and Bullington, and was reported to have given some
-trouble to the king’s porter by an importunate demand for an audience.
-The recital of these facts gave rise to much merriment at his trial,
-and was not considered irrelevant by judges who ruled out all allusions
-to distress.[475] An interesting light is thrown on the history of
-this petition by a fragment of a letter, written by Robert Mason to
-a friend, which somehow fell into the hands of a Captain Thompson of
-Longparish, and was forwarded by him to the Home Office as a valuable
-piece of evidence.
-
- ‘_P.S._--Since I wrote the above I have saw and talked with two
- persons who say “Bullington Barton and Sutton has sent a petition and
- why not Longparish Hursborne and Wherwell send another.” I think as
- much, to be sure if we had all signed one, one journey and expense
- would have served but what is expence? Why I would engage to carry a
- Petition and deliver it at St. James for 30 shillings, and to a place
- like Longparish what is that? If you do send one pray do not let
- Church property escape your notice. There is the Church which cost
- Longparish I should think nearly £1500 yearly: yes and there is an old
- established Chaple which I will be bound does not cost £25 annually.
- For God sake....’ (illegible).
-
-The first charge brought against the Masons was that of robbing Sir
-Thomas Baring’s steward of £10 at East Stretton. The money had been
-taken by one of the mobs; the Masons were acquitted. They were next
-put on their trial together with William Winkworth, a cobbler and a
-fellow reader of Cobbett, and ten others, for a similar offence. This
-time they were accused of demanding £2 or £5 from Mr. W. Dowden of
-Micheldever. The Attorney-General, in opening the case, drew attention
-to the circumstances of the Masons and Winkworth, saying that the
-offence with which they were charged was of a deeper dye, because they
-were men of superior education and intelligence. A humane clergyman,
-Mr. Cockerton, curate of Stoke Cheriton, gave evidence to the effect
-that if the men had been met in a conciliatory temper in the morning
-they would have dispersed. Joseph Mason and William Winkworth were
-found guilty, and sentenced, in the words of the judge, to ‘be cut off
-from all communion with society’ for the rest of their lives. Robert
-Mason was still unconvicted, but he was not allowed to escape. The next
-charge against him was that of going with a mob which extorted five
-shillings from the Rev. J. Joliffe at Barton Stacey. He admitted that
-he had accompanied the mob, partly because the labourers had urged him
-to do so, partly because he hoped that Mr. Joliffe, being accustomed to
-public speaking, would be able to persuade the labourers to disperse
-before any harm was done. There was no evidence to show that he had
-anything to do with the demand for money. He was found guilty and
-sentenced to transportation for life. When asked what he had to say
-for himself, he replied, ‘If the learned Counsel, who has so painted
-my conduct to you, was present at that place and wore a smock frock
-instead of a gown, and a straw hat instead of a wig, he would now be
-standing in this dock instead of being seated where he is.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Six men were reserved for execution, and told that they must expect
-no mercy on this side of the grave: Cooper, the leader in the
-Fordingbridge riots; Holdaway, who had headed the attack on Headley
-Workhouse; Gilmore, who had entered the justices’ room in Andover
-‘in rather a violent manner’ and parleyed with the justices, and
-afterwards, in spite of their remonstrances, been a ringleader in the
-destruction of a foundry in the parish of Upper Clatford; Eldridge,
-who had taken part in the Fordingbridge riot and also ‘invaded the
-sanctuary’ of Mr. Eyre Coote’s home; James Aunalls, a lad of nineteen,
-who had extorted money at night with threats of a fire, from a person
-whom he bade look over the hills, where a fire was subsequently seen,
-and Henry Cook. Cook was a ploughboy of nineteen, who could neither
-read nor write. For most of his life, since the age of ten, he had
-been a farm hand. For six months before the riots he had been employed
-at sawing, at 10s. a week, but at the time of the rising he was out
-of work. After the riots he got work as a ploughboy at about 5s. a
-week till his arrest. Like the other lads of the neighbourhood he had
-gone round with a mob, and he was found guilty, with Joseph Mason, of
-extorting money from William Dowden. For this he might have got off
-with transportation for life, but another charge was preferred against
-him. Mr. William Bingham Baring, J.P., tried, with the help of some
-of his servants, to quell a riot at Northingdon Down Farm. Silcock,
-who seemed the leader of the rioters, declared that they would break
-every machine. Bingham Baring made Silcock repeat these words several
-times and then seized him. Cook then aimed a blow at Bingham Baring
-with a sledge-hammer and struck his hat. So far there was no dispute
-as to what had happened. One servant of the Barings gave evidence to
-the effect that he had saved his master’s life by preventing Cook from
-striking again; another afterwards put in a sworn deposition to the
-effect that Cook never attempted to strike a second blow. All witnesses
-agreed that Bingham Baring’s hat had suffered severely: some of them
-said that he himself had been felled to the ground. Whatever his
-injuries may have been, he was seen out a few hours later, apparently
-in perfect health; next day he was walking the streets of Winchester;
-two days later he was presented at Court, and within a week he was
-strong enough to administer a sharp blow himself with his stick to a
-handcuffed and unconvicted prisoner, a display of zeal for which he had
-to pay £50. Cook did not put up any defence. He was sentenced to death.
-
-Perhaps it was felt that this victim to justice was in some respects
-ill chosen, for reasons for severity were soon invented. He was a
-heavy, stolid, unattractive boy, and his appearance was taken to
-indicate a brutal and vicious disposition. Stories of his cruelties
-to animals were spread abroad. ‘The fate of Henry Cook,’ said the
-_Times_ correspondent (3rd January 1831), ‘excites no commiseration.
-From everything I have heard of him, justice has seldom met with a
-more appropriate sacrifice. He shed some tears shortly after hearing
-his doom, but has since relapsed into a brutal insensibility to his
-fate.’ His age was raised to thirty, his wages to 30s. a week. Denman
-described him in the House of Commons, after his execution, as a
-carpenter earning 30s. a week, who had struck down one of the family of
-his benefactor, and had only been prevented from killing his victim by
-the interposition of a more faithful individual. This is the epitaph
-written on this obscure ploughboy of nineteen by the upper classes.
-His own fellows, who probably knew him at least as well as a Denman
-or a Baring, regarded his punishment as murder. Cobbett tells us that
-the labourers of Micheldever subscribed their pennies to get Denman’s
-misstatements about Cook taken out of the newspapers. When his body was
-brought home after execution, the whole parish went out to meet it, and
-he was buried in Micheldever churchyard in solemn silence.
-
-Bingham Baring himself, as has been mentioned, happened to offend
-against the law by an act of violence at this time. He was not like
-Cook, a starving boy, but the son of a man who was reputed to have made
-seven millions of money, and was called by Erskine the first merchant
-in Europe. He did not strike his victim in a riot, but in cold blood.
-His victim could not defend himself, for he was handcuffed, being taken
-to prison on a charge on which he was subsequently acquitted. The man
-struck was a Mr. Deacle, a small farmer who had had his own threshing
-machine broken, and was afterwards arrested with his wife, by Bingham
-Baring and a posse of magistrates, on suspicion of encouraging the
-rioters. Deacle’s story was that Baring and the other magistrates
-concerned in the arrest treated his wife with great insolence in the
-cart in which they drove the Deacles to prison, and that Bingham Baring
-further struck him with a stick. For this Deacle got £50 damages in an
-action he brought against Baring. ‘This verdict,’ said the _Morning
-Herald_, ‘seemed to excite the greatest astonishment; for most of the
-Bar and almost every one in Court said, if on the jury, they would have
-given at least £5000 for so gross and wanton an insult and unfeeling
-conduct towards those who had not offered the least resistance; the
-defendants not addressing the slightest evidence in palliation or
-attempting to justify it.’ The judge, in summing up, ‘could not help
-remarking that the handcuffing was, to say the least of it, a very
-harsh proceeding towards a lady and gentleman who had been perfectly
-civil and quiet.’ Meanwhile the case of the magistrates against the
-Deacles had collapsed in the most inglorious manner. Though they had
-handcuffed these two unresisting people, they had thought it wiser
-not to proceed against them. Deacle, however, insisted on being tried,
-and by threatening the magistrates with an action, he obliged them
-to prosecute. He was tried at the Assizes, and, as we have seen, the
-trial came to an abrupt conclusion under circumstances that threw the
-gravest suspicion on the methods of the authorities.[476] Meanwhile
-the treatment these two persons had received (and we can imagine from
-their story how innocent poor people, without friends or position,
-were handled) had excited great indignation, and the newspapers were
-full of it. There were petitions sent up to Parliament for a Committee
-of Inquiry. Now the class to which Cook was unlucky enough to belong
-had never sent a single member to Parliament, but the Baring family
-had five Members in the House of Commons at this very moment, one of
-whom had taken part with Bingham Baring in the violent arrest of the
-Deacles. The five, moreover, were very happily distributed, one of them
-being Junior Lord of the Treasury in Grey’s Government and husband
-of Grey’s niece, and another an important member of the Opposition
-and afterwards Chancellor of the Exchequer under Peel. The Barings
-therefore were in less danger of misrepresentation or misunderstanding;
-the motion for a Committee was rejected by a great majority on the
-advice of Althorp and Peel; the leader of the House of Commons came
-forward to testify that the Barings were friends of his, and the
-discussion ended in a chorus of praise for the family that had been
-judged so harshly outside the walls of Parliament.
-
-When the Special Commission had finished its labours at Winchester,
-101 prisoners had been capitally convicted; of these 6 were left for
-execution. The remaining 95 were, with few exceptions, transported for
-life. Of the other prisoners tried, 36 were sentenced to transportation
-for various periods, 65 were imprisoned with hard labour, and 67 were
-acquitted. Not a single life had been taken by the rioters, not a
-single person wounded. Yet the riots in this county alone were punished
-by more than a hundred capital convictions, or almost double the number
-that followed the devilish doings of Lord George Gordon’s mob. The
-spirit in which Denman regarded the proceedings is illustrated by his
-speech in the House of Commons on the amnesty debate: ‘No fewer than
-a hundred persons were capitally convicted at Winchester, of offences
-for every one of which their lives might have been justly taken,
-and ought to have been taken, if examples to such an extent had been
-necessary.’[477]
-
- * * * * *
-
-These sentences came like a thunderclap on the people of Winchester,
-and all classes, except the magistrates, joined in petitions to the
-Government for mercy. The _Times_ correspondent wrote as follows:--
-
- ‘WINCHESTER, Friday Morning, _7th Jan._
-
- ‘The scenes of distress in and about the jail are most terrible. The
- number of men who are to be torn from their homes and connexions is so
- great that there is scarcely a hamlet in the county into which anguish
- and tribulation have not entered. Wives, sisters, mothers, children,
- beset the gates daily, and the governor of the jail informs me that
- the scenes he is obliged to witness at the time of locking up the
- prison are truly heart-breaking.
-
- ‘You will have heard before this of the petitions which have been
- presented to the Home Office from Gosport, Portsmouth, Romsey,
- Whitchurch, and Basingstoke, praying for an extension of mercy to
- all the men who now lie under sentence of death. A similar petition
- has been got up in this city. It is signed by the clergy of the Low
- Church, some of the bankers, and every tradesman in the town without
- exception. Application was made to the clergy of the Cathedral for
- their signatures, but they refused to give them, except conditionally,
- upon reasons which I cannot comprehend. They told the petitioners,
- as I am informed, that they would not sign any such petition unless
- the grand jury and the magistracy of the county previously affixed
- their names to it. Now such an answer, as it appears to me, is an
- admission on their part that no mischief would ensue from not carrying
- into effect the dreadful sentence of the law; for I cannot conceive
- that if they were of opinion that mischief would ensue from it, they
- would sign the petition, even though it were recommended by all the
- talent and respectability of the Court of Quarter Sessions. I can
- understand the principles on which that man acts, who asserts and
- laments the necessity of vindicating the majesty of the law by the
- sacrifice of human life; but I cannot understand the reasons of those
- who, admitting that there is no necessity for the sword of justice to
- strike the offender, decline to call upon the executive government to
- stay its arm, and make their application for its mercy dependent on
- the judgment, or it may be the caprice, of an influential aristocracy.
- Surely, of all classes of society, the clergy is that which ought not
- to be backward in the remission of offences. They are daily preaching
- mercy to their flocks, and it wears but an ill grace when they are
- seen refusing their consent to a practical application of their own
- doctrines. Whatever my own opinion may be, as a faithful recorder
- of the opinions of those around me, I am bound to inform you, that,
- except among the magistracy of the county, there is a general, I had
- almost said a universal, opinion among all ranks of society, that no
- good will be effected by sacrificing human life.’[478]
-
-This outburst of public opinion saved the lives of four of the six men
-who had been left for execution. The two who were hung were Cooper
-and Cook. But the Government and the judges were determined that the
-lessons of civilisation should not be wanting in impressiveness or in
-dignity. They compelled all the prisoners who had been condemned by
-the Commission to witness the last agonies of the two men whom public
-opinion had been unable to rescue. The account given in the _Times_
-of 17th January shows that this piece of refined and spectacular
-discipline was not thrown away, and that the wretched comrades of
-the men who were hanged suffered as acutely as Denman or Alderson
-themselves could have desired. ‘At this moment I cast my eyes down
-into the felons’ yard, and saw many of the convicts weeping bitterly,
-some burying their faces in their smock frocks, others wringing their
-hands convulsively, and others leaning for support against the wall
-of the yard and unable to cast their eyes upwards.’ This was the last
-vision of English justice that each labourer carried to his distant
-and dreaded servitude, a scene that would never fade from his mind.
-There was much that England had not taught him. She had not taught him
-that the rich owed a duty to the poor, that society owed any shelter
-to the freedom or the property of the weak, that the mere labourer
-had a share in the State, or a right to be considered in its laws, or
-that it mattered to his rulers in what wretchedness he lived or in
-what wretchedness he died. But one lesson she had taught him with such
-savage power that his simple memory would not forget it, and if ever
-in an exile’s gilding dreams he thought with longing of his boyhood’s
-famine-shadowed home, that inexorable dawn would break again before
-his shrinking eyes and he would thank God for the wide wastes of the
-illimitable sea.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Special Commission for Wiltshire opened at Salisbury on 2nd
-January 1831. The judges were the same as those at Winchester; the
-other commissioners were Lord Radnor, the friend of Cobbett, and Mr. T.
-G. B. Estcourt. Lord Lansdowne, the Lord-Lieutenant, sat on the bench.
-The foreman of the Grand Jury was Mr. John Benett, who has already
-figured in these pages as the proprietor whose property was destroyed
-and the magistrate who committed the culprits. There were three hundred
-prisoners awaiting trial.
-
-The method in which the prosecutions were conducted in Wiltshire,
-though it did not differ from the procedure followed in Hampshire and
-elsewhere, provoked some criticism from the lawyers. The prosecutions
-were all managed by the county authorities. The clerks of the
-committing magistrates in the different districts first took the
-depositions, and then got up all the prosecutions in their capacity of
-solicitors to the same magistrates prosecuting as county authorities,
-to the exclusion of the solicitors of the individual prosecutors.
-Further, all the prosecutions were managed for the county by a single
-barrister, who assisted the Attorney-General and left no opening for
-other members of the Bar. The counsel for one of the prisoners objected
-to this method, not only on the ground of its unfairness to the legal
-profession, but on the wider ground of the interests of justice. For
-it was inconsistent with the impartiality required from magistrates
-who committed prisoners, that they should go on to mix themselves up
-with the management of the prosecution; in many cases these magistrates
-served again as grand jurors in the proceedings against the prisoners.
-Such procedure, he argued ‘was calculated to throw at least a strong
-suspicion on the fair administration of justice.’ These protests,
-however, were silenced by the judges, and though the Attorney-General
-announced that he was willing that the counsel for the magistrates
-should retire, no change was made in the arrangements.
-
-The Salisbury prisoners were under a further disadvantage peculiar,
-it is to be hoped, to that gaol. They were forbidden to see their
-attorney except in the presence of the gaoler or his servants. This
-rule seems to have been construed by the authorities in a manner that
-simplified considerably the task of the prosecution. The facts of the
-case of James Lush, condemned to death on two charges of extorting
-money in a mob, were made public by Hunt in a letter to the _Times_,
-22nd January 1831. Lush was a very poor man, but when first committed
-he sent for an attorney and made a full confession. ‘This confession,
-so confidentially made to his attorney (by an extraordinary rule of
-the gaol) the legal adviser was compelled to submit to the inspection
-of the gaoler, which paper he kept in his hands for several days and
-in all human probability, this document, or a copy of it, was either
-submitted to the inspection of the judge, or placed in the hands of
-the prosecutor, the Crown Solicitor, or the Attorney-General: when
-this man was called up for trial, such was his extreme poverty, that
-he could not raise a guinea to fee counsel, and he was left destitute,
-without legal advice or assistance.’ The Attorney-General could only
-answer this charge in the House of Commons by declaring that he had no
-recollection of any such circumstance himself, and that no gentleman of
-the Bar would avail himself of information obtained in such a manner.
-Lush could not distinguish these niceties of honour, or understand why
-his confession should be examined and kept by the gaoler unless it
-was to be used against him, and it is not surprising that he thought
-himself betrayed. It is only fair to Lord Melbourne to add that when
-Hunt drew his attention to this iniquitous rule in Salisbury Gaol he
-had it abolished.
-
-The cases tried were very similar to those at Winchester; batch after
-batch of boys and men in the prime of life were brought up to the dock
-for a brief trial and sentence of exile. Such was the haste that in one
-case at least the prisoners appeared with the handcuffs still on their
-wrists, a circumstance which elicited a rebuke from the judge, and
-an excuse of overwork from the gaoler. Amongst the first cases eight
-prisoners, varying in age from seventeen to thirty, were sentenced to
-transportation for life for doing £500 worth of damage at Brasher’s
-cloth mill at Wilton. Thirteen men were transported for seven years and
-one for fourteen years for breaking threshing machines on the day of
-the Pyt House affray. Mr. John Benett was satisfied with this tale of
-victims in addition to the man killed by the yeomanry, and refrained
-from prosecuting for the stones thrown at him. For this he took great
-credit in the House of Commons, and no doubt it was open to him to
-imitate Bingham Baring’s friends, and to talk of that kind of outrage
-as ‘murder.’
-
-At Salisbury, as at Winchester, evidence about distress and wages was
-ruled out by the judges whenever possible; thus when twelve men, nine
-of whom were afterwards transported for seven years, were being tried
-for breaking a threshing machine on the farm of a man named Ambrose
-Patience, the cross-examination of Patience, which aimed at eliciting
-facts about wages and distress, was stopped by the court on the ground
-that in a case of this sort such evidence was scarcely regular; it was
-intimated, however, that the court would hear representations of this
-kind later. But some light was thrown incidentally in the course of
-the trials on the circumstances of the prisoners. Thus one of the Pyt
-House prisoners urged in his defence: ‘My Lord, I found work very bad
-in my own parish for the last three years, and having a wife and three
-children to support I was glad to get work wherever I could get it. I
-had some work at a place four miles from my house.’ He then described
-how on his way to work he was met by the mob and forced to join them.
-‘It is a hard case with me, my Lord; I was glad to get work though I
-could earn only seven shillings per week, and it cost me a shilling a
-week for iron, so that I had only six shillings a week to support five
-persons.’ Another prisoner, Mould of Hatch, was stated by Lord Arundel
-to be very poor: he had a wife and six children, of whom one or two had
-died of typhus since his committal. They had nothing to live on but
-what they got at Lord Arundel’s house. The benevolent Lord Arundel, or
-the parish, must have supported the survivors indefinitely, for Mould
-was exiled for seven years. Barett again, another of these prisoners,
-was supporting himself, a wife, and a child on 5s. a week. The usual
-rate of wages in Wiltshire was 7s. a week.
-
-Evidence about the instigation of the labourers by those in good
-circumstances was also ruled out, and much that would be interesting
-in the history of the riots has thus perished. When six men were being
-prosecuted for breaking a threshing machine on the farm of Mr. Judd at
-Newton Toney, counsel for the defence started a cross-examination of
-the prosecutor designed to show that certain landowners in the parish
-had instigated the labourers to the outrages, but he was stopped by Mr.
-Justice Alderson, who declared that such an inquiry was not material to
-the issue, which was the guilt or innocence of the prisoners. If the
-prisoners were found guilty these circumstances would be laid before
-the court in mitigation of punishment. However strong the mitigating
-circumstances in this case were, the punishment was certainly not
-mitigated, for all six men were sentenced to the maximum penalty of
-seven years’ transportation. In a similar case in Whiteparish it
-came out in the evidence that Squire Bristowe had sent down buckets
-of strong beer, and that Squire Wynne, who was staying with Squire
-Bristowe, was present at the breaking of the machine. In the affair at
-Ambrose Patience’s farm already mentioned, the defence of the prisoners
-was that Farmer Parham had offered them half a hogshead of cider if
-they would come and break his machine, whilst in another case three
-men were acquitted because one of the witnesses for the prosecution,
-a young brother of the farmer whose property had been destroyed,
-unexpectedly disclosed the fact that his brother had said to the mob:
-‘Act like men, go and break the machine, but don’t go up to the house.’
-
-The proportion of charges of extorting money was smaller at Salisbury
-than at Winchester: most of the indictments were for breaking machines
-only. In some instances the prosecution dropped the charge of robbery,
-thinking transportation for seven years a sufficient punishment for
-the offence. Three brothers were sentenced to death for taking half a
-crown: nobody received this sentence for a few coppers. In this case
-the three brothers, William, Thomas, and John Legg, aged twenty-eight,
-twenty-one, and eighteen, had gone at midnight to the kitchen door
-of the house of Mrs. Montgomery, wife of a J.P., and asked the
-manservant for money or beer. The man gave them half a crown, and they
-thanked him civilly and went away. A curious light is thrown on the
-relations between robbers and the robbed in the trial of six men for
-machine-breaking at West Grimstead: the mob of fifty persons asked the
-farmer for a sovereign, he promised to pay it next day, whereupon one
-of the mob, a man named Light who was his tenant, offered to pay the
-sovereign himself and to deduct it from the rent.
-
-At Salisbury, as at Winchester, the fate of the victims depended
-largely on the character given to the prisoners by the local gentry.
-This was especially the case towards the end when justice began to
-tire, and a good many charges were dropped. Thus Charles Bourton was
-only imprisoned for three months for breaking a threshing machine,
-whilst John Perry was transported for seven years for the same offence.
-But then John Perry had been convicted seven or eight times for
-poaching.
-
-In Wiltshire, as in Hampshire, the judges were particularly severe
-to those prisoners who were not agricultural labourers. A striking
-instance is worth quoting, not only as illustrating this special
-severity, but also because it shows that the judges when inflicting the
-maximum penalty of seven years’ transportation for machine-breaking
-were well aware that it was tantamount to exile for life. Thomas
-Porter, aged eighteen, a shepherd, Henry Dicketts, aged nineteen, a
-bricklayer’s labourer, Aaron Shepherd, aged forty (occupation not
-stated), James Stevens, aged twenty-five, an agricultural labourer, and
-George Burbage, aged twenty-four, also an agricultural labourer, were
-found guilty of machine-breaking at Mr. Blake’s at Idmiston. Stevens
-and Burbage escaped with two years’ and one year’s imprisonment with
-hard labour, respectively, and the following homily from Mr. Justice
-Alderson to think over in prison: ‘You are both thrashers and you might
-in the perversion of your understanding think that these machines are
-detrimental to you. Be assured that your labour cannot ultimately be
-hurt by the employment of these machines. If they are profitable to
-the farmer, they will also be profitable ultimately to the labourer,
-though they may for a time injure him. If they are not profitable to
-the farmer he will soon cease to employ them.’ The shepherd boy of
-eighteen, the bricklayer’s labourer of nineteen, and their companion of
-forty were reserved for a heavier penalty: ‘As to you, Aaron Shepherd,
-I can give you no hope of remaining in this country. You Thomas Porter,
-are a shepherd, and you Henry Dicketts, are a bricklayer’s labourer.
-You have nothing to do with threshing machines. They do not interfere
-with your labour, and you could not, even in the darkness of your
-ignorance, suppose that their destruction would do you any good.... I
-hope that your fate will be a warning to others. You will leave the
-country, all of you: you will see your friends and relations no more:
-for though you will be transported for seven years only, it is not
-likely that at the expiration of that term you will find yourselves in
-a situation to return. You will be in a distant land at the expiration
-of your sentence. The land which you have disgraced will see you no
-more: the friends with whom you are connected will be parted from you
-for ever in this world.’
-
-Mr. Justice Alderson’s methods received a good deal of attention in
-one of the Salisbury trials, known as the Looker case. Isaac Looker,
-a well-to-do farmer, was indicted for sending a threatening letter to
-John Rowland: ‘Mr. Rowland, Haxford Farm, Hif you goes to sware against
-or a man in prisson, you have here farm burnt down to ground, and thy
-bluddy head chopt off.’ Some evidence was produced to show that Isaac
-Looker had asserted in conversation that it was the magistrates and
-the soldiers, and not the mobs, who were the real breakers of the
-peace. But this did not amount to absolute proof that he had written
-the letter: to establish this conclusion the prosecution relied on the
-evidence of four witnesses; the first had quarrelled with Looker, and
-had not seen his writing for four or five years; the second denied that
-there had been any quarrel, but had not been in the habit of speaking
-to the prisoner for five or six years, or seen his writing during that
-time; the third had not had ‘much of a quarrel’ with him, but had not
-seen his writing since 1824; the fourth was the special constable who
-found in Looker’s bureau, which was unlocked and stood in the kitchen
-where the family sat, a blank piece of paper that fitted on to the
-piece on which the letter was written. More witnesses were called for
-the defence than for the prosecution, and they included the vestry
-clerk of Wimborne, an ex-schoolmaster; all of these witnesses had known
-Looker’s writing recently, and all of them swore that the threatening
-letter was not in his writing. Mr. Justice Alderson summed up against
-the prisoner, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and sentence of
-transportation for life was passed upon Looker in spite of his vehement
-protestations of innocence. ‘I cannot attend to these asseverations,’
-said Mr. Justice Alderson, ‘for we all know that a man who can be
-guilty of such an offence as that of which you have been convicted,
-will not hesitate to deny it as you now do. I would rather trust to
-such evidence as has been given in your case, than to the most solemn
-declarations even on the scaffold.’
-
-The learned judge and the jury then retired for refreshment, when a
-curious development took place. Edward, son of Isaac Looker, aged
-eighteen years, came forward and declared that he had written the
-letter in question and other letters as well. He wrote a copy from
-memory, and the handwriting was precisely similar. He explained that
-he had written the letters without his father’s knowledge and without
-a thought of the consequences, in order to help two cousins who were
-in gaol for machine-breaking. He had heard people say that ‘it would
-get my cousins off if threatening letters were written.’ He had let his
-father know in prison that he had written the letters, and had also
-told his father’s solicitor. Edward Looker was subsequently tried and
-sentenced to seven years’ transportation: Isaac’s case was submitted to
-the Home Secretary for pardon.
-
-Although, as we have said, the Government, or its representatives, grew
-rather more lenient towards the end of the proceedings at Salisbury,
-it was evidently thought essential to produce some crime deserving
-actual death. The culprit in this case was Peter Withers, a young man
-of twenty-three, married and with five children. His character till
-the time of the riots was exemplary. He was committed on a charge of
-riot, and briefed a lawyer to defend him for this misdemeanour. Just
-before the trial came on the charge was changed, apparently by the
-Attorney-General, to the capital charge of assaulting Oliver Calley
-Codrington with a hammer. His counsel was of course unprepared to
-defend him on this charge, and, as he explained afterwards, ‘it was
-only by the humane kindness of the Attorney-General who allowed him
-to look at his brief that he was aware of all the facts to be alleged
-against his client.’ Withers himself seemed equally unprepared; when
-asked for his defence he said that he would leave it to his counsel, as
-of course he had arranged to do when the charge was one of misdemeanour
-only.
-
-The incident occurred in an affray at Rockley near Marlborough. Mr.
-Baskerville, J.P., rode up with some special constables to a mob of
-forty or fifty men, Withers amongst them, and bade them go home. They
-refused, declaring that they did not care a damn for the magistrates.
-Mr. Baskerville ordered Mr. Codrington, who was a special constable, to
-arrest Withers. A general mêlée ensued, blows were given and received,
-and Codrington was hit by a hammer thrown by Withers. Withers’ own
-version of the affair was that Codrington attacked him without
-provocation in a ferocious manner with a hunting whip, loaded with
-iron at the end. Baskerville also struck him. He aimed his hammer at
-Codrington and it missed. Codrington’s horse then crushed him against
-the wall, and he threw his hammer a second time with better aim. There
-was nothing in the evidence of the prosecution to discredit this
-version, and both Baskerville and Codrington admitted that they might
-have struck him. Codrington’s injuries were apparently more serious
-than Bingham Baring’s; it was stated that he had been confined to bed
-for two or three days, and to the house from Tuesday to Saturday, and
-that he had a scar of one and a half inches on the right side of his
-nose. No surgeon, however, appeared as a witness, and the hammer was
-not produced in court. Withers was found guilty and reserved, together
-with Lush, for execution.
-
-The special correspondent of the _Times_ who had been present at
-Winchester made an interesting comparison between the Hampshire and
-the Wiltshire labourers on trial (8th January 1831). The Wiltshire
-labourers he described as more athletic in appearance and more hardy
-in manner. ‘The prisoners here turn to the witnesses against them with
-a bold and confident air: cross-examine them, and contradict their
-answers, with a confidence and a want of common courtesy, in terms of
-which comparatively few instances occurred in the neighbouring county.’
-In this behaviour the correspondent detected the signs of a very low
-state of moral intelligence.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the time came for the last scene in court there was no trace of
-the bold demeanour which had impressed the _Times_ correspondent during
-the conduct of the trials. For the people of Wiltshire, like the people
-of Hampshire, were stunned by the crash and ruin of this catastrophic
-vengeance. The two men sentenced to death were reprieved, but one
-hundred and fifty-four men and boys were sentenced to transportation,
-thirty-three of them for life, the rest for seven or fourteen years,
-with no prospect of ever returning to their homes. And Alderson and
-his brother judges in so punishing this wild fling of folly, or
-hope, or despair, were not passing sentence only on the men and boys
-before them: they were pronouncing a doom not less terrible on wives
-and mothers and children and babes in arms in every village on the
-Wiltshire Downs. One man begged to be allowed to take his child,
-eight months old, into exile, for its mother had died in childbirth,
-and it would be left without kith or kin. He was told by the judge
-that he should have remembered this earlier. The sentence of final
-separation on all these families and homes was received with a frenzy
-of consternation and grief, and the judges themselves were affected
-by the spectacle of these broken creatures in the dock and round the
-court, abandoned to the unchecked paroxysms of despair.[479] ‘Such a
-total prostration of the mental faculties by fear,’ wrote the _Times_
-correspondent, ‘and such a terrible exhibition of anguish and despair,
-I never before witnessed in a Court of Justice.’ ‘Immediately on the
-conclusion of this sentence a number of women, who were seated in court
-behind the prisoners, set up a dreadful shriek of lamentation. Some of
-them rushed forward to shake hands with the prisoners, and more than
-one voice was heard to exclaim, “Farewell, I shall never see you more.”’
-
-‘The whole proceedings of this day in court were of the most afflicting
-and distressing nature. But the laceration of the feelings did not end
-with the proceedings in court. The car for the removal of the prisoners
-was at the back entrance to the court-house and was surrounded by
-a crowd of mothers, wives, sisters and children, anxiously waiting
-for a glance of their condemned relatives. The weeping and wailing
-of the different parties, as they pressed the hands of the convicts
-as they stepped into the car, was truly heartrending. We never saw
-so distressing a spectacle before, and trust that the restored
-tranquillity of the country will prevent us from ever seeing anything
-like it again.’
-
-The historian may regret that these men do not pass out before him in
-a cold and splendid defiance. Their blind blow had been struck and it
-had been answered; they had dreamt that their lot might be made less
-intolerable, and the governing class had crushed that daring fancy for
-ever with banishment and the breaking of their homes; it only remained
-for them to accept their fate with a look of stone upon their faces
-and a curse of fire in their hearts. So had Muir and Palmer and many
-a political prisoner, victims of the tyrannies of Pitt and Dundas,
-of Castlereagh and Sidmouth, gone to their barbarous doom. So had
-the Lantenacs and the Gauvains alike gone to the guillotine. History
-likes to match such calm and unshaken bearing against the distempered
-justice of power. Here she is cheated of her spectacle. Outwardly it
-might seem a worse fate for men of education to be flung to the hulks
-with the coarsest of felons: for men whose lives had been comfortable
-to be thrust into the dirt and disorder of prisons. But political
-prisoners are martyrs, and martyrs are not the stuff for pity. However
-bitter their sufferings, they do not suffer alone: they are sustained
-by a Herculean comradeship of hopes and of ideas. The darkest cage is
-lighted by a ray from Paradise to men or women who believe that the
-night of their sufferings will bring a dawn less cold and sombre to
-mankind than the cold and sombre dawn of yesterday. But what ideas
-befriended the ploughboy or the shepherd torn from his rude home? What
-vision had he of a nobler future for humanity? To what dawn did he
-leave his wife or his mother, his child, his home, his friends, or his
-trampled race? What robe of dream and hope and fancy was thrown over
-his exile or their hunger, his poignant hour of separation, or their
-ceaseless ache of poverty and cold
-
- ‘to comfort the human want
- From the bosom of magical skies’?
-
- * * * * *
-
-The three judges who had restored respect for law and order in
-Wiltshire and Hampshire next proceeded to Dorchester, where a Special
-Commission to try the Dorsetshire rioters was opened on 11th January.
-The rising had been less serious in Dorset than in the two other
-counties, and there were only some fifty prisoners awaiting trial on
-charges of machine-breaking, extorting money and riot. The Government
-took no part in the prosecutions; for, as it was explained in a letter
-to Denman, ‘the state of things is quite altered; great effect has
-been produced: the law has been clearly explained, and prosecutions
-go on without the least difficulty.’[480] Baron Vaughan and Mr.
-Justice Parke had given the charges at Winchester and Salisbury: it
-was now the turn of Mr. Justice Alderson, and in his opening survey
-of the social conditions of the time he covered a wide field. To the
-usual dissertation on the economics of machinery he added a special
-homily on the duties incumbent on the gentry, who were bidden to
-discourage and discountenance, and if necessary to prosecute, the
-dangerous publications that were doing such harm in rural districts.
-But their duties did not end here, and they were urged to go home and
-to educate their poorer neighbours and to improve their conditions.
-The improvement to be aimed at, however, was not material but moral.
-‘Poverty,’ said Mr. Justice Alderson, ‘is indeed, I fear, inseparable
-from the state of the human race, but poverty itself and the misery
-attendant on it, would no doubt be greatly mitigated if a spirit of
-prudence were more generally diffused among the people, and if they
-understood more fully and practised better their civil, moral and
-religious duties.’
-
-The Dorsetshire labourers had unfortunately arrived at the precipitate
-conclusion that a spirit of prudence would not transform 7s. a week
-into a reasonable livelihood. They used no violence beyond breaking up
-the threshing machines. ‘We don’t intend to hurt the farmer,’ they told
-the owner of one machine, ‘but we are determined that the land shall
-come down, and the tithes, and we will have more wages.’ When money
-was taken it seems to have been demanded and received in an amicable
-spirit. The sums asked for were often very small. Sentence of death was
-pronounced on two men, Joseph Sheppard and George Legg, for taking 2s.
-from Farmer Christopher Morey at Buckland Newton. The mob asked for
-money, and the farmer offered them 1s.: they replied that they wanted
-1s. 6d., and the farmer gave them 2s. Sheppard’s character was very
-good, and it came out that he and the prosecutor had had a dispute
-about money some years before. He was transported, but not for life.
-Legg was declared by the prosecutor to have been ‘saucy and impudent,’
-and to have ‘talked rough and bobbish.’ His character, however, was
-stated by many witnesses, including the clergyman, to be exemplary.
-He had five children whom he supported without parish help on 7s. a
-week: a cottage was given him but no fuel. Baron Vaughan was so much
-impressed by this evidence that he declared that he had never heard
-better testimony to character, and that he would recommend a less
-severe penalty than transportation. But Legg showed a lamentable want
-of discretion, for he interrupted the judge with these words: ‘I would
-rather that your Lordship would put twenty-one years’ transportation
-upon me than be placed in the condition of the prosecutor. I never said
-a word to him, that I declare.’ Baron Vaughan sardonically remarked
-that he had not benefited himself by this observation.
-
-The tendency to give less severe punishment, noticed in the closing
-trials at Salisbury, was more marked at Dorchester. Nine men were
-let off on recognisances and ten were not proceeded against: in the
-case of six of these ten the prosecutor, one Robert Bullen, who had
-been robbed of 4s. and 2s. 6d., refused to come forward. But enough
-sharp sentences were given to keep the labourers in submission for the
-future. One man was transported for life and eleven for seven years:
-fifteen were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment; seven were
-acquitted. It was not surprising that the special correspondent of the
-_Times_ complained that such meagre results scarcely justified the
-pomp and expense of a Special Commission. In the neighbouring county
-of Gloucester, where the country gentlemen carried out the work of
-retribution without help from headquarters, seven men were transported
-for fourteen years, twenty for seven years, and twenty-five were
-sentenced to terms of imprisonment ranging from six months to three
-years. All of these sentences were for breaking threshing machines.
-
-The disturbances in Berks and Bucks had been considered serious enough
-to demand a Special Commission, and Sir James Alan Park, Sir William
-Bolland and Sir John Patteson were the judges appointed. The first of
-the two Berkshire Commissions opened at Reading on 27th December. The
-Earl of Abingdon, Lord-Lieutenant of the County, and Mr. Charles Dundas
-were the two local commissioners. Mr. Dundas has figured already in
-these pages as chairman of the meeting at Speenhamland. One hundred and
-thirty-eight prisoners were awaiting trial at Reading: they were most
-of them young, only eighteen being forty or over. The rest, with few
-exceptions, varied from seventeen to thirty-five in age, and must have
-lived all their lives under the Speenhamland system.
-
-It is impossible to compare the accounts of the Special Commissions in
-Berks and Bucks with those in Hampshire and Wiltshire without noticing
-a difference in the treatment of the rioters. The risings had been
-almost simultaneous, the offences were of the same character, and the
-Commissions sat at the same time. The difference was apparent from
-the first, and on 1st January the _Times_ published a leading article
-pleading for uniformity, and pointing out that the Berkshire Commission
-was ‘a merciful contrast’ to that at Winchester. The cause is probably
-to be found in the dispositions and characters of the authorities
-responsible in the two cases. The country gentlemen of Berkshire,
-represented by a man like Mr. Dundas, were more humane than the country
-gentlemen of Hampshire, represented by men like the Duke of Wellington
-and the Barings; Mr. Gurney, the public prosecutor at Reading, was more
-lenient than Sir Thomas Denman, and the Reading judges were more kindly
-and considerate than the judges at Winchester. Further, there had been
-in Berkshire little of the wild panic that swept over the country
-houses in Hampshire and Wiltshire. The judges at Reading occasionally
-interjected questions on the prisoners’ behalf, and in many cases they
-did not conceal their satisfaction at an acquittal. Further, they had
-a more delicate sense for the proprieties. Contrary to custom, they
-asked neither the Grand Jury nor the magistrates to dinner on the first
-day, being anxious, we are told, to free the administration of justice
-‘from the slightest appearance of partiality in the eyes of the lower
-classes.’ The Lord Chancellor and Lord Melbourne had been consulted and
-had approved.
-
-It must not be supposed that Mr. Justice Park’s theories of life and
-social relationships differed from those of his brothers at Winchester.
-In his address to the Grand Jury he repudiated with indignation
-the ‘impudent and base slander ... that the upper ranks of society
-care little for the wants and privations of the poor. I deny this
-positively, upon a very extensive means of knowledge upon subjects of
-this nature. But every man can deny it who looks about him and sees
-the vast institutions in every part of the kingdom for the relief of
-the young and the old, the deaf and the lame, the blind, the widow,
-the orphan----and every child of wretchedness and woe. There is not a
-calamity or distress incident to humanity, either of body or of mind,
-that is not humbly endeavoured to be mitigated or relieved, by the
-powerful and the affluent, either of high or middling rank, in this
-our happy land, which for its benevolence, charity, and boundless
-humanity, has been the admiration of the world.’ The theory that the
-rich kept the poor in a state of starvation and that this was the cause
-of the disturbances, he declared later to be entirely disproved by the
-conduct of one of the mobs in destroying a threshing machine belonging
-to William Mount, Esq., at Wasing, ‘Mr. Mount having given away £100
-no longer ago than last winter to assist the lower orders during that
-inclement season.’
-
-A feature of the Reading Commission was the difficulty of finding
-jurymen. All farmers were challenged on behalf of the prisoners, and
-matters were at a deadlock until the judges ordered the bystanders to
-be impannelled.
-
-The earlier cases were connected with the riots in Hungerford. Property
-in an iron foundry had been destroyed, and fifteen men were found
-guilty on this capital charge. One of the fifteen was William Oakley,
-who now paid the penalty for his £5 and strong language. But when the
-first cases were over, Mr. Gurney began to drop the capital charge, and
-to content himself, as a rule, with convictions for breaking threshing
-machines. One case revealed serious perjury on one side or the other.
-Thomas Goodfellow and Cornelius Bennett were charged with breaking a
-threshing machine at Matthew Batten’s farm. The prisoners produced four
-witnesses, two labourers, a woman whose husband was in prison for the
-riots, and John Gaiter, who described himself as ‘not quite a master
-bricklayer,’ to prove that Matthew Batten had encouraged the riots. The
-first three witnesses declared that Batten had asked the rioters to
-come and break his machine in order to serve out his landlord and Mr.
-Ward, and had promised them victuals and £1. Batten and his son, on the
-other hand, swore that these statements were false. The prisoners were
-found guilty, with a recommendation to mercy which was disregarded.
-Goodfellow, who was found guilty of breaking other machines as well,
-was sentenced to fourteen, and Cornelius Bennett to seven years’
-transportation. The judge spoke of their scandalous attempt to blacken
-the character of a respectable farmer: ‘it pleased God however that the
-atrocious attempt had failed.’ It would be interesting to know what
-were the relations between Matthew Batten and his landlord.
-
-On the last day of the trials Mr. Gurney announced that there would be
-no more prosecutions for felony, as enough had been done in the way of
-making examples. Some interesting cases of riot were tried. The most
-important riot had taken place as early as 19th November, and the hero
-of the proceedings was the Rev. Edward Cove, the venerable Vicar of
-Brimpton, one of the many parson magistrates. A mob had assembled in
-order to demand an increase of wages, and it was met by Mr. Cove and
-his posse of special constables. On occasions like this, Mr. Gurney
-remarked, we become sensible of the great advantages of our social
-order. Mr. Cove without more ado read the Riot Act; the mob refused
-to disperse; his special constables thereupon attacked them, and a
-general mêlée followed in which hard blows were given and taken. No
-one attempted to strike Mr. Cove himself, but one of his companions
-received from a rioter, whom he identified, a blow rivalling that given
-to Mr. Bingham Baring, which beat the crown of his hat in and drove the
-rim over his eyes: it was followed by other and more serious blows on
-his head and body. The counsel for the defence tried to show that it
-was distress that had caused the rioters to assemble, and he quoted a
-remark of the Chairman of Quarter Sessions that the poor were starved
-almost into insurrection; but all evidence about wages was ruled out.
-The court were deeply impressed by this riot, and Mr. Justice Park
-announced that it had alarmed him and his fellow judges more ‘than
-anything that had hitherto transpired in these proceedings.’ ‘Had one
-life been lost,’ he continued, ‘the lives of every individual of the
-mob would have been forfeited, and the law must have been carried into
-effect against those convicted.’ As it was, nobody was condemned to
-death for his share in the affray, though the more violent, such as
-George Williams, alias ‘Staffordshire Jack,’ a ‘desperate character,’
-received heavier penalties for machine-breaking in consequence.
-
-Three men were reserved for execution: William Oakley, who was told
-that as a carpenter he had no business to mix himself up in these
-transactions; Alfred Darling, a blacksmith by trade, who had been found
-guilty on several charges of demanding money; and Winterbourne, who had
-taken part in the Hungerford affair in the magistrates’ room, and had
-also acted as leader in some cases when a mob asked for money. In one
-instance the mob had been content with £1 instead of the £2 for which
-it had asked for breaking a threshing machine, Winterbourne remarking,
-‘we will take half price because he has stood like a man.’
-
-Public opinion in Berkshire was horrified at the prospect of taking
-life. Petitions for mercy poured in from Reading, including one from
-ladies to the queen, from Newbury, from Hungerford, from Henley, and
-from other places. Two country gentlemen, Mr. J. B. Monck and Mr.
-Wheble, made every exertion to save the condemned men. They waited with
-petitions on Lord Melbourne, who heard them patiently for an hour. They
-obtained a reprieve for Oakley and for Darling, who were transported
-for life; Winterbourne they could not save: he was hung on 11th
-January, praying to the last that his wife, who was dangerously ill of
-typhus, might die before she knew of his fate.
-
-Fifty-six men were sentenced to transportation from
-Reading--twenty-three for life, sixteen for fourteen years, seventeen
-for seven years: thirty-six were sent to prison for various terms.
-
-The same commissioners went on to Abingdon where proceedings opened on
-6th January. Here there were only forty-seven prisoners, all but two of
-whom were agricultural labourers, most of them very young. The cases
-resembled those tried at Reading, but it is clear that the evidence
-of Mrs. Charlotte Slade, whose conduct we have already described, and
-her method of dealing with the rioters, made a great impression on Mr.
-Justice Park and his colleagues, and opened their eyes to the true
-perspective of the rhetorical language that had assumed such terrifying
-importance to other judges. One young labourer, Richard Kempster by
-name, who was found guilty of breaking a threshing machine, had carried
-a black-and-red flag in the mob, and when arrested had exclaimed, ‘be
-damned if I don’t wish it was a revolution, and that all was a fire
-together’: it is easy to imagine the grave homily on the necessity of
-cutting such a man off for ever from his kind that these words would
-have provoked from the judges at Winchester. Mr. Justice Park and
-his colleagues sentenced Kempster to twelve months’ imprisonment. At
-Abingdon only one man was sentenced to be transported; Thomas Mackrell,
-an agricultural labourer of forty-three. Another, Henry Woolridge,
-had sentence of death commuted to eighteen months’ imprisonment.
-Thirty-five others were sent to prison for various terms.
-
-The same three judges proceeded to Aylesbury to try the Buckinghamshire
-rioters. The chief event in this county had been the destruction of
-paper-making machinery at Wycombe. The Commission opened on 11th
-January: the Duke of Buckingham and Mr. Maurice Swabey were the local
-commissioners. There were one hundred and thirty-six prisoners to
-be tried, almost all young and illiterate: only eighteen were forty
-years of age or over. Forty-four men and boys were found guilty of
-the capital charge of destroying paper machinery. Most of the other
-prisoners who were charged with breaking threshing machines were
-allowed to plead guilty and let off on their own recognisances, or
-else the charge was not pressed. An exception was made in a case in
-which some members of a mob had been armed with guns. Three men who had
-carried guns were sent to transportation for seven years, and thirteen
-others involved were sent to prison for two years or eighteen months.
-Several men were tried for rioting, and those who had combined a demand
-for increased wages with a request for the restoration of parish
-buns were sent to prison for six weeks.[481] One more trial is worth
-notice, because it suggests that even in Buckinghamshire, where the
-general temper was more lenient, individuals who had made themselves
-obnoxious were singled out for special treatment. John Crook, a miller,
-was indicted with four others for riotously assembling and breaking a
-winnowing machine at Mr. Fryer’s at Long Crendon. As Crook was charged
-with a misdemeanour his counsel could address the jury, and we learn
-from his speech that Crook had been kept in prison since 2nd December,
-though £2000 had been offered in bail and many other prisoners had
-been allowed out. The explanation, it was argued, was to be found in
-the fact that Crook had come into some property which qualified him to
-hold a gun licence and to kill game. He was sentenced to three months’
-imprisonment without hard labour, and to pay a fine of £10.
-
-Thirty-two men in all were sent to prison for the agricultural
-disturbances in addition to the three sentenced to transportation.
-Forty-two of those concerned in the breaking of paper-making machinery
-received sentence of death, but their punishment was commuted to life
-transportation for one, seven years’ transportation for twenty-two, and
-imprisonment for various terms for the rest. Two men were reserved for
-execution. One, Thomas Blizzard, was thirty years old, with a wife and
-three children. His character was excellent. At the time of the riots
-he was a roundsman, receiving 1s. a day from the overseer’s and 1s.
-6d. a week from a farmer. He told his employer at Little Marlow that
-he would take a holiday to go machine-breaking, for he would endure
-imprisonment, or even transportation, rather than see his wife and
-children cry for bread. John Sarney, the other, was fifty-six years
-old and had a wife and six children: he kept a small beer-shop and his
-character was irreproachable. Petitions on behalf of the two men were
-signed extensively, and the sentence was commuted to transportation for
-life. The Aylesbury sentences seem lenient in comparison with those
-given at Salisbury and Winchester, but they did not seem lenient to
-the people in the district. ‘Pen cannot describe,’ wrote a _Times_
-correspondent, ‘the heart-rending scene of despair, misery and want,
-prevailing at Flackwell-Heath, the residence of the families of the
-major part of the misguided men now incarcerated at Aylesbury.’ The
-same correspondent tells of a benevolent Quaker, who had become rich as
-a maker of paper, helping these families by stealth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The work of the Special Commissions was now over. Melbourne had
-explained in Parliament that they had been set up ‘to expound the law’
-and to bring home to the ignorant the gravity of their crimes against
-social order. In spite of the daily imposition of ferocious punishments
-on poachers and thieves, the poor apparently did not know in what
-letters of blood the code against rioting and discontent was composed.
-These three weeks had brought a lurid enlightenment into their dark
-homes. In the riots, as we have seen, the only man who had been
-killed was a rioter, killed according to the reports of the time by a
-yeomanry soldier, according to local tradition by a farmer, and for
-that offence he had been refused Christian burial. On the other side,
-not a single person had been killed or seriously wounded. For these
-riots, apart from the cases of arson, for which six men or boys were
-hung, aristocratic justice exacted three lives, and the transportation
-of four hundred and fifty-seven men and boys,[482] in addition to
-the imprisonment of about four hundred at home. The shadow of this
-vengeance still darkens the minds of old men and women in the villages
-of Wiltshire, and eighty years have been too short a time to blot out
-its train of desolating memories.[483] Nobody who does not realise what
-Mr. Hudson has described with his intimate touch, the effect on the
-imagination and the character of ‘a life of simple unchanging action
-and of habits that are like instincts, of hard labour in sun and rain
-and wind from day to day,’ can ever understand what the breaking of all
-the ties of life and home and memory meant to the exiles and to those
-from whose companionship they were then torn for ever.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have said that one feature of the rising was the firing of stacks
-and ricks and barns. This practice was widespread, and fires broke
-out even in counties where the organised rising made little progress.
-Associations for the detection of incendiaries were formed at an
-early stage, and immense rewards were offered. Yet not a single case
-of arson was tried before the Special Commissions, and the labourers
-kept their secret well. Many of the governing class in the early days
-persuaded themselves that the labourers had no secret to keep, and
-that the fires were due to any one except the labourers, and to any
-cause except distress. Perhaps the wish was father to the thought,
-for as the _Times_ observed, persons responsible for grinding the
-faces of their labourers preferred to think the outrages the work of
-strangers. Sometimes it was smugglers, suffering from the depression in
-their trade: sometimes it was foreigners: sometimes it was mysterious
-gentlemen in gigs, driving furiously about the country, led by Captain
-Swing, scattering fireballs and devastation. These were the fashionable
-theories in the House of Lords, although Richmond reminded his brother
-peers that there had been a flood of petitions representing the
-sufferings of the labourers from the very beginning of the year, and
-that the House of Lords had not thought it necessary to give them the
-slightest attention. Lord Camden ascribed the outrages to the French
-spirit, and argued that the country was enjoying ‘what was undeniably
-a genial autumn.’ The Duke of Wellington took the same view, denying
-that the troubles were due to distress: the most influential cause of
-disturbances was the example, ‘and I will unhesitatingly say the bad
-and the mischievous example, afforded by the neighbouring States.’
-Eldon remarked that many of the prisoners taken in the riots were
-foreigners, a point on which Melbourne undeceived him. The speakers who
-regarded the disturbances in the south of England as the overflow of
-the Paris Revolution had no positive evidence to produce, but they had
-a piece of negative evidence which they thought conclusive. For if the
-labourers knew who were the incendiaries, they would surely have given
-information. In some cases a reward of £1000 with a free pardon for
-all except the actual author was waiting to be claimed, ‘and yet not
-one of the miserable beings have availed themselves of the prospect of
-becoming rich.’
-
-Some eleven cases of arson were tried at the Assizes in Essex, Kent,
-Sussex, and Surrey: all the prisoners were agricultural labourers and
-most of them were boys. Eight were convicted, often on very defective
-evidence, and six were executed. One of the eight, Thomas Goodman, a
-boy of eighteen, saved his life by declaring in prison that the idea
-had been put into his head by a lecture of Cobbett’s. Two brothers of
-the name of Pakeman, nineteen and twenty years old, were convicted on
-the evidence of Bishop, another lad of eighteen, who had prompted
-them to set fire to a barn, and later turned king’s evidence ‘after
-a gentleman in the gaol had told him of the big reward.’ This fire
-seems to have been a piece of bravado, as no doubt many others were,
-for Bishop remarked, as the three were sitting under a hedge after
-lighting the barn, ‘who says we can’t have a fire too, as well as
-them at Blean?’ The two boys, who had never been taught to read or
-write, scandalised the public by displaying a painful indifference
-to the ministrations of the chaplain, and dying without receiving
-the sacrament.[484] A half-witted boy of fourteen, Richard Pennells,
-was tried at Lewes for setting fire to his master’s haystack for a
-promise of sixpence from a man who was not discovered. His master, who
-prosecuted, remarked that he was ‘dull of apprehension, but not so much
-as not to know right from wrong.’ The boy, who had no counsel, offered
-no defence, and stood sobbing in the dock. The jury found him guilty,
-with a recommendation to mercy on account of his youth and imperfect
-understanding. Sentence of death was recorded, but he was told that his
-life would be spared.
-
-These same Lewes Assizes, conducted by Mr. Justice Taunton, afforded
-a striking example of the comparative treatment of different crimes.
-Thomas Brown, a lad of seventeen, was charged with writing the
-following letter to Lord Sheffield, ‘Please, my Lord, I dont wise to
-hurt you. This is the case al the world over. If you dont get rid of
-your foreign steward and farmer and bailiff in a few days time--less
-than a month--we will burn him up, and you along with him. My writing
-is bad, but my firing is good my Lord.’ Lord Sheffield gave evidence
-as to the receipt of the letter: the prisoner, who had no counsel, was
-asked by the judge if he would like to put any questions, and he only
-replied that he hoped that his lordship would forgive him. The judge
-answered that his lordship had not the power, and sentenced Brown to
-transportation for life.[485] Later on in the same Assizes, Captain
-Winter, a man of sixty, captain of a coasting vessel, was tried for
-the murder of his wife, who had been killed in a most brutal manner.
-He had been hacking and wounding her for four hours at night, and she
-was last seen alive at half past two in the morning, naked and begging
-for mercy. Her body was covered with wounds. The man’s defence was
-that he came home drunk, that he found his wife drunk, and that he had
-no knowledge of what followed. To the general surprise Captain Winter
-escaped with a verdict of manslaughter. ‘The prisoner,’ wrote the
-_Times_ correspondent, ‘is indebted for his life to the very merciful
-way in which Mr. Justice Taunton appeared to view the case, and the
-hint which he threw out to the jury, that the parties might have had
-a quarrel, in which case her death by the prisoner would amount to
-manslaughter only.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the disturbances began, the Duke of Wellington was Prime Minister,
-and Sir Robert Peel Home Secretary. But in November 1830 Wellington,
-who had made a last effort to rally the old Tories, sulking over his
-surrender on Catholic Emancipation, by some sudden thunder against
-Reform, had been beaten on the Civil List and resigned. Reform was
-inevitable, and with Reform the Whigs. Thus, towards the close of the
-year of the Revolution that drove Charles X. from France, Lord Grey
-became Prime Minister, to carry the measure which as Charles Grey,
-lieutenant of Charles Fox, he had proposed in the House of Commons in
-1793, a few months after Louis XVI. had lost his head in the Revolution
-which had maddened and terrified the English aristocracy. Fortune
-had been sparing in her favours to this cold, proud, honourable and
-courageous man. She had shut him out from power for twenty-three years,
-waiting to make him Prime Minister until he was verging on seventy, and
-all the dash and ardour of youth had been chilled by disappointment
-and delay. But she had reserved her extreme of malice to the end, for
-it was her chief unkindness that having waited so long she did not
-wait a little longer. Grey, who had been forty-four years in public
-life, and forty-three in opposition, took office at the moment that
-the rising passed into Hampshire and Wiltshire, and thus his first act
-as Prime Minister was to summon his colleagues to a Cabinet meeting to
-discuss, not their plans for Parliamentary Reform, but the measures to
-be taken in this alarming emergency. After a lifetime of noble protest
-against war, intolerance, and repression, he found himself in the toils
-and snares of the consequences of a policy in which war, intolerance,
-and repression had been constant and conspicuous features. And those
-consequences were especially to be dreaded by such a man at such a
-time.
-
-Grey became Prime Minister to carry Reform, and Reform was still
-enveloped to many minds in the wild fancies and terrors of a Jacobin
-past. To those who knew, conscious as they were of their own modest
-purposes and limited aim, that their accession to power boded to many
-violence, confusion, and the breaking up of the old ways and life of
-the State, it was maddening that these undiscerning peasants should
-choose this moment of all others for noise and riot. The struggle for
-Reform was certain to lead to strife, and it was hard that before
-they entered upon it England should already be in tumult from other
-causes. Moreover, Grey had to reckon with William IV. So long as he
-could remember, the Court had been the refuge of all that was base
-in English politics, and it was a question whether Liberal ideas had
-suffered more from the narrow and darkened mind of George III. or the
-mean and incorrigible perfidy of George IV. In comparison with his
-father, the new king had the wisdom of a Bentham or an Adam Smith; in
-comparison with his brother, he had the generous and loyal heart of a
-Philip Sidney or a Falkland. But seen in any less flattering mirror, he
-was a very ordinary mortal, and Grey had known this jolly, drinking,
-sailor prince too long and too well to trust either his intellect or
-his character, under too fierce or too continuous a strain. These
-riots tried him severely. No sooner was William on his throne than
-the labourers came out of their dens, looking like those sansculottes
-whose shadows were never far from the imagination of the English upper
-classes. The king’s support of Reform was no violent enthusiasm, and
-the slightest threat of disorder might disturb the uneasy equilibrium
-of his likes and fears. In the long run it depended on the will of this
-genial mediocrity--so strangely had Providence mixed caprice and design
-in this world of politics--whether or not Reform should be carried,
-and carried without bloodshed. Throughout these months then, the king,
-always at Melbourne’s elbow, trying to tempt and push the Government
-into more drastic measures, was a very formidable enemy to the cause of
-moderation and of justice.
-
-These influences were strong, and there was little to counteract them.
-For there was nobody in the world which Grey and Melbourne alike
-inhabited who could enter into the minds of the labourers. This is
-readily seen, if we glance at two men who were regarded as extreme
-Radicals in the House of Commons, Hobhouse and Burdett. Each of these
-men had served the cause of Reform in prison as well as in Parliament,
-and each with rather ridiculous associations; Hobhouse’s imprisonment
-being connected with the ballad inspired by the malicious and disloyal
-wit of his friend and hero, Byron, and Burdett’s with the ludicrous
-scene of his arrest, with his boy spelling out Magna Charta on his
-knee. It is difficult for those who have read Hobhouse’s _Diaries_
-to divine what play of reason and feeling ever made him a Radical,
-but a Radical he was, an indefatigable critic of the old régime, and
-in particular of such abuses as flogging in the army. Burdett was a
-leader in the same causes. To these men, if to any, the conduct of
-the labourers might have seemed to call for sympathy rather than for
-violence. But if we turn to Hobhouse’s _Diary_ we see that he was
-never betrayed into a solitary expression of pity or concern for the
-scenes we have described, and as for Burdett, he was all for dragooning
-the discontented counties and placing them under martial law. And
-even Radnor, who as a friend of Cobbett was much less academic in his
-Radicalism, sat on the Wiltshire Commission without making any protest
-that has reached posterity.
-
-All the circumstances then made it easy for Grey and his colleagues
-to slip into a policy of violence and repression. They breathed an
-atmosphere of panic, and they dreaded the recoil of that panic on their
-own schemes. Yet when all allowance is made for this insidious climate,
-when we remember that no man is so dangerous as the kind man haunted
-by the fear of seeming weak, at a moment when he thinks his power of
-doing good depends on his character for strength; when we remember,
-too, the tone of Society caught between scare and excitement, the
-bad inspiration of the Court, the malevolent influence of an alarmed
-Opposition, the absorbing interest of making a ministry, the game apart
-from the business of politics, it is still difficult to understand how
-men like Grey and Holland and Durham could ever have lent themselves to
-the cruelties of this savage retribution. When first there were rumours
-of the intention of the Government to put down the riots with severe
-measures, Cobbett wrote a passage in which he reviewed the characters
-of the chief ministers, Grey with his ‘humane disposition,’ Holland
-‘who never gave his consent to an act of cruelty,’ Althorp ‘who has
-never dipped his hand in blood,’ Brougham ‘who with all his half Scotch
-crotchets has at any rate no blood about him,’ to show that the new
-ministers, unlike many of their Tory predecessors, might be trusted to
-be lenient and merciful. Two of these men, Grey and Holland, had made a
-noble stand against all the persecutions of which Tory Governments had
-been guilty, defending with passion men whose opinions they regarded
-with horror; if any record could justify confidence it was theirs.
-Unfortunately the politician who was made Home Secretary did not share
-in this past. The common talk at the time of Melbourne’s appointment
-was that he was too lazy for his office; the real criticism should have
-been that he had taken the side of Castlereagh and Sidmouth in 1817.
-As Home Secretary he stopped short of the infamous measures he had
-then approved; he refused to employ spies, and the Habeas Corpus was
-not suspended. But nobody can follow the history of this rising, and
-the history of the class that made it, without recognising that the
-punishment which exiled these four hundred and fifty labourers is a
-stain, and an indelible stain, on the reputation of the Government that
-lives in history on the fame of the Reform Bill. It is difficult to
-believe that either Fox or Sheridan could have been parties to it. The
-chief shame attaches to Melbourne, who let the judges do their worst,
-and to Lansdowne, who sat beside the judges on the Salisbury bench, but
-the fact that the Prime Minister was immersed in the preparation of a
-reform, believed by his contemporaries to be a revolution, does not
-relieve him of his share of the odium, which is the due of Governments
-that are cruel to the weak, and careless of justice to the poor.
-
-One effort was made, apart from the intercession of public opinion,
-to induce the Government to relax its rigours. When the panic had
-abated and the last echo of the riots had been stilled by this summary
-retribution, a motion was proposed in the House of Commons for a
-general amnesty. Unhappily the cause of the labourers was in the hands
-of Henry Hunt, a man whose wisdom was not equal to his courage, and
-whose egregious vanity demoralised and spoilt his natural eloquence.
-If those who were in close sympathy with his general aims could not
-tolerate his manners, it is not surprising that his advocacy was a
-doubtful recommendation in the unsympathetic atmosphere of the House
-of Commons. He was a man of passionate sincerity, and had already
-been twice in prison for his opinions, but the ruling class thinking
-itself on the brink of a social catastrophe, while very conscious of
-Hunt’s defects, was in no mood to take a detached view of this virtue.
-The debate, which took place on the 8th of February 1831, reflects
-little credit on the House of Commons, and the division still less,
-for Hume was Hunt’s only supporter. The chief speakers against the
-motion were Benett of Wiltshire, George Lamb, brother of Melbourne and
-Under-Secretary at the Home Office, and Denman, the Attorney-General.
-Lamb amused himself and the House with jests on the illiterate letter
-for writing which the boy Looker was then on the high seas, and Denman
-threw out a suggestion that Looker’s father had had a share in the
-boy’s guilt. Denman closed his speech by pouring scorn on those who
-talked sentimentality, and declaring that he would ever look back with
-pride on his part in the scenes of this memorable winter.
-
-So far the Government had had it all their own way. But in their
-anxiety to show a resolute front and to reassure those who had
-suspected that a reform Government would encourage social disorder by
-weakness, Lord Grey and his colleagues were drawn into a scrape in
-which they burnt their fingers rather badly. They decided to prosecute
-two writers for inciting the labourers to rebel. The two writers were
-Richard Carlile and William Cobbett. Carlile was the natural prey for
-a Government in search of a victim. He had already spent six or seven
-years of his lion-hearted life in prison for publishing the writings
-of Paine and Hone: his wife, his sister, and his shopman had all paid
-a similar penalty for their association, voluntary or involuntary,
-with his public-spirited adventures. The document for which he stood
-in the dock at the Old Bailey early in January 1831 was an address to
-the agricultural labourers, praising them for what they had done, and
-reviewing their misfortunes in this sentence: ‘The more tame you have
-grown, the more you have been oppressed and despised, the more you have
-been trampled on.’ Carlile defended himself in a speech that lasted
-four hours and a half. The jury disagreed, but after several hours they
-united on a verdict of acquittal on the charge of bringing the Crown
-into contempt, and of guilty on the charge of addressing inflammatory
-language to the labouring classes. He was sentenced to imprisonment for
-two years, to pay a fine, and to find sureties.
-
-Cobbett’s trial was a more important event, for whereas Carlile was the
-Don Quixote of liberty of mind, Cobbett was a great political force,
-and his acquittal would give a very serious shock to the prestige of
-the Government that attacked him. The attention of the authorities
-had been called to Cobbett’s speeches very early in the history of the
-riots, and the Home Office Papers show that appeals to the Government
-to prosecute Cobbett were the most common of all the recommendations
-and requests that poured into Whitehall from the country. Some of these
-letters were addressed to Sir Robert Peel, and one of them is endorsed
-with the draft of a reply: ‘My dear Sir,--If you can give me the name
-of the person who heard Cobbett make use of the expression to which you
-refer you would probably enable me to render no small public service by
-the prosecution of Cobbett for sedition.--Very faithfully Yours, Robert
-Peel.’
-
-In an evil moment for themselves, Peel’s successors decided to take
-action, not indeed on his speeches, but on his articles in the
-_Political Register_. The character of those articles might perhaps be
-described as militant and uncompromising truth. They were inflammatory,
-because the truth was inflammatory. Nobody who knew the condition
-of the labourers could have found in them a single misstatement or
-exaggeration. The only question was whether it was in the public
-interest to publish them in a time of disturbance. From this point of
-view the position of the Government was seriously weakened by the fact
-that the _Times_ had used language on this very subject which was not
-one whit less calculated to excite indignation against the rich, and
-the _Times_, though it was the organ of wealthy men, was in point of
-fact considerably cheaper to buy than the _Register_, the price of
-which Cobbett had raised to a shilling in the autumn of 1830. But this
-was not the only reason why the Government was in danger of exposing
-itself to a charge of malice in choosing Cobbett for a prosecution.
-The unrest in the southern counties had been due to a special set of
-economic causes, but there was unrest due to other causes in other
-parts of England. It was not the misery of ploughboys and labourers
-in Hampshire and Kent that had made Wellington and Peel decide that
-it was unsafe for the King to dine at the Guildhall in the winter of
-1830: the Political Unions, which struck such terror into the Court and
-the politicians, were not bred in the villages. There was a general
-and acute discontent with extravagant government, with swollen lists
-and the burden of sinecures, with the whole system of the control of
-the boroughs and its mockery of representation. Now in such a state
-of opinion every paper on the side of reform might be charged with
-spreading unrest. Statistics of sinecures, and pensions, and the fat
-revenues of bishopricks, were scattered all over England, and the
-facts published in every such sheet were like sparks thrown about near
-a powder magazine. The private citizens who wrote to the Home Office
-in the winter of 1830 mentioned these papers almost as often as they
-mentioned Cobbett’s lectures. Many of these papers were based on a
-pamphlet written by Sir James Graham, First Lord of the Admiralty
-in the very Government that prosecuted Cobbett. One of the Barings
-complained in the House of Commons in December 1830, that the official
-papers on offices and sinecures which the Reform Government had itself
-presented to Parliament to satisfy public opinion of its sincerity in
-the cause of retrenchment were the cause of mischief and danger. At
-such a time no writer, who wished to help the cause of reform, could
-measure the effects of every sentence so nicely as to escape the charge
-of exciting passion, and the Government was guilty of an extraordinary
-piece of folly in attacking Cobbett for conduct of which their own
-chief supporters were guilty every time they put a pen to paper.
-
-The trial took place in July 1831 at the Guildhall. It was the great
-triumph of Cobbett’s life, as his earlier trial had been his great
-humiliation. There was very little of the lion in the Cobbett who
-faltered before Vicary Gibbs in 1810; there was very little of the lamb
-in the Cobbett who towered before Denman in 1831. And the court that
-witnessed his triumph presented a strange scene. The trial had excited
-intense interest, and Cobbett said that every county in England was
-represented in the company that broke, from time to time, into storms
-of cheering. The judge was Tenterden, the Chief Justice, who, as a
-bitter enemy of reform, hated alike accusers and accused. Six members
-of the Cabinet, the Prime Minister himself and the Lord Chancellor,
-Melbourne and Durham, Palmerston and Goderich listened, from no choice
-of their own, to the scathing speech in which Cobbett reviewed their
-conduct. Benett of Pyt House was there, a spectre of vengeance from one
-Commission, and the father of the boy Cook of Micheldever, a shadow of
-death from another. All the memories of those terrible weeks seemed
-to gather together in the suspense of that eager crowd watching this
-momentous encounter.
-
-Denman, who prosecuted, employed a very different tone towards Cobbett
-from the tone that Perceval had used at the first of Cobbett’s trials.
-Perceval, when prosecuting Cobbett for some articles on Ireland in
-the _Register_ in 1803, asked the jury with the patrician insolence
-of a class that held all the prizes of life, ‘Gentlemen, who is Mr.
-Cobbett? Is he a man writing purely from motives of patriotism? _Quis
-homo hic est? Quo patre natus?_’ No counsel prosecuting Cobbett
-could open with this kind of rhetoric in 1831: Denman preferred to
-describe him as ‘one of the greatest masters of the English language.’
-Denman’s speech was brief, and it was confined mainly to a paraphrase
-of certain of Cobbett’s articles and to comments upon their effect.
-It was no difficult task to pick out passages which set the riots
-in a very favourable light, and emphasised the undoubted fact that
-they had brought some improvement in the social conditions, and that
-nothing else had moved the heart or the fears of the ruling class.
-But the speech was not long over before it became evident that
-Cobbett, like another great political defendant, though beginning as
-the accused, was to end as the accuser. His reply to the charge of
-exciting the labourers to violence was immediate and annihilating.
-In December 1830, after the publication of the article for which
-he was now being tried, Brougham, as President of the Society for
-the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, had asked and obtained Cobbett’s
-leave to reprint his earlier ‘Letter to the Luddites,’ as the most
-likely means of turning the labourers from rioting and the breaking
-of machines. There stood the Lord Chancellor in the witness-box, in
-answer to Cobbett’s subpœna, to admit that crushing fact. This was a
-thunderclap to Denman, who was quite ignorant of what Brougham had
-done, and, as we learn from Greville, he knew at once that his case
-was hopeless. Cobbett passed rapidly from defence to attack. Grey,
-Melbourne, Palmerston, Durham, and Goderich had all been subpœna’d in
-order to answer some very awkward questions as to the circumstances
-under which Thomas Goodman had been pardoned. The Lord Chief Justice
-refused to allow the questions to be put, but at least these great
-Ministers had to listen as Cobbett told the story of those strange
-transactions, including a visit from a parson and magistrates to a ‘man
-with a rope round his neck,’ which resulted in Goodman’s unexplained
-pardon and the publication of a statement purporting to come from
-him ascribing his conduct to the incitement at Cobbett’s ‘lacture.’
-Cobbett destroyed any effect that Goodman’s charge might have had
-by producing a declaration signed by one hundred and three persons
-present at the lecture--farmers, tradesmen, labourers, carpenters,
-and shoemakers--denying that Cobbett had made the statement ascribed
-to him in Goodman’s confession, one of the signatories being the
-farmer whose barn Goodman had burnt. He then proceeded to contrast the
-treatment Goodman had received with the treatment received by others
-convicted of incendiarism, and piecing together all the evidence of
-the machinations of the magistrates, constructed a very formidable
-indictment to which Denman could only reply that he knew nothing of
-the matter, and that Cobbett was capable of entertaining the most
-absurd suspicions. On another question Denman found himself thrown on
-the defensive, for he was now confronted with his own misstatements
-in Parliament about Cook, and the affidavits of Cook’s father present
-in court. Denman could only answer that till that day no one had
-contradicted him, though he could scarcely have been unaware that the
-House of Commons was not the place in which a Minister’s statement
-about the age, occupation, pay, and conduct of an obscure boy was
-most likely to be challenged. Denman made a chastened reply, and the
-jury, after spending the night at the Guildhall, disagreed, six voting
-each way. Cobbett was a free man, for the Whigs, overwhelmed by the
-invective they had foolishly provoked, remembered, when too late, the
-wise saying of Maurice of Saxony about Charles V.: ‘I have no cage big
-enough for such a bird,’ and resisted all the King’s invitations to
-repeat their rash adventure. To those who have made their melancholy
-way through the trials at Winchester and Salisbury, at which rude boys
-from the Hampshire villages and the Wiltshire Downs, about to be tossed
-across the sea, stood shelterless in the unpitying storm of question
-and insinuation and abuse, there is a certain grim satisfaction in
-reading this last chapter and watching Denman face to face, not with
-the broken excuses and appeals of ignorant and helpless peasants, but
-with a volleyed thunder that swept into space all his lawyer’s artifice
-and skill. Justice plays strange tricks upon mankind, but who will say
-that she has not her inspirations?
-
- * * * * *
-
-One more incident has to be recorded in the tale of suppression.
-The riots were over, but the fires continued. In the autumn of 1831
-Melbourne, in a shameful moment, proposed a remedy borrowed from the
-evil practices which a Tory Parliament had consented at last to forbid.
-The setting of spring guns and man-traps, the common device of game
-preservers, had been made a misdemeanour in 1826 by an Act of which
-Suffield was the author. Melbourne now proposed to allow persons who
-obtained a license from two magistrates to protect their property by
-these means. The Bill passed the House of Lords, and the _Journals_
-record that it was introduced in the House of Commons, but there, let
-us hope from very horror at the thought of this moral relapse, silently
-it disappears.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Grey met Parliament as Prime Minister he said that the Government
-recognised two duties: the duty of finding a remedy for the distress
-of the labourers, and the duty of repressing the riots with severity
-and firmness. We have seen how the riots were suppressed; we have now
-to see what was done towards providing a remedy. This side of the
-picture is scarcely less melancholy than the other; for when we turn
-to the debates in Parliament we see clearly how hopeless it was to
-expect any solution of an economic problem from the legislators of the
-time. Now, if ever, circumstances had forced the problem on the mind of
-Parliament, and in such an emergency as this men might be trusted to
-say seriously and sincerely what they had to suggest. Yet the debates
-are a mêlée of futile generalisations, overshadowed by the doctrine
-which Grey himself laid down that ‘all matters respecting the amount
-of rent and the extent of farms would be much better regulated by the
-individuals who were immediately interested than by any Committee of
-their Lordships.’ One peer got into trouble for blurting out the truth
-that the riots had raised wages; another would curse machinery as
-vigorously as any labourer; many blamed the past inattention of the
-House of Lords to the labourers’ misery; and one considered the first
-necessity of the moment was the impeachment of Wellington. Two men had
-actual and serious proposals to make. They were Lord King and Lord
-Suffield.
-
-Both of these men are striking figures. King (1776-1833) was an
-economist who had startled the Government in 1811 by calling for the
-payments of his rents in the lawful coin of the realm. This dramatic
-manœuvre for discrediting paper money had been thwarted by Lord
-Stanhope, who, though in agreement with King on many subjects, strongly
-approved of paper money in England as he had approved of assignats in
-France. Lord Holland tells a story of how he twitted Stanhope with
-wanting to see history repeat itself, and how Stanhope answered with
-a chuckle: ‘And if they take property from the drones and give it to
-the bees, where, my dear Citoyen, is the great harm of that?’ King
-was always in a small minority and his signature was given, together
-with those of Albemarle, Thanet, and Holland, to the protest against
-establishing martial law in Ireland in 1801, which was written with
-such wounding directness that it was afterwards blackened out of the
-records of the House of Lords, on the motion of the infamous Lord
-Clare. But he was never in a smaller minority than he was on this
-occasion when he told his fellow landlords that the only remedy for the
-public distress was the abolition of the Corn Laws. Such a proposal
-stood no chance in the House of Lords or in the House of Commons.
-Grey declared that the abolition of the Corn Laws would lead to the
-destruction of the country, and though there were Free Traders among
-the Whigs, even nine years after this Melbourne described such a policy
-as ‘the wildest and maddest scheme that has ever entered into the
-imagination of man to conceive.’
-
-Suffield (1781-1835), the only other politician with a remedy, is
-an interesting and attractive character. Originally a Tory, and
-the son of Sir Harbord Harbord, who was not a man of very tender
-sensibilities, Suffield gradually felt his way towards Liberalism. He
-was too large-minded a man to be happy and at ease in an atmosphere
-where the ruling class flew instinctively in every crisis to measures
-of tyranny and repression. Peterloo completed his conversion. From
-that time he became a champion of the poor, a fierce critic of the
-Game Laws, and a strong advocate of prison reform. He is revealed in
-his diary and all the traditions of his life as a man of independence
-and great sincerity. Suffield’s policy in this crisis was the policy
-of home colonisation, and its fate can best be described by means of
-extracts from a memoir prepared by R. M. Bacon, a Norwich journalist
-and publicist of importance, and printed privately in 1838, three years
-after Suffield had been killed by a fall from his horse. They give a
-far more intimate and graphic picture of the mind of the Government
-than the best reported debates in the records of Parliament.
-
-We have seen in a previous chapter that there had been at this time a
-revival of the movement for restoring the land to the labourers. One
-of the chief supporters of this policy was R. M. Bacon, who, as editor
-of the _Norwich Mercury_, was in close touch with Suffield. Bacon set
-out an elaborate scheme of home colonisation, resembling in its main
-ideas the plan sketched by Arthur Young thirty years earlier, and this
-scheme Suffield took up with great enthusiasm. Its chief recommendation
-in his eyes was that it applied public money to establishing labourers
-with a property of their own, so that whereas, under the existing
-system, public money was used, in the form of subsidies from the rates,
-to depress wages, public money would be used under this scheme to
-raise them. For it was the object of the plan to make the labourers
-independent of the farmers, and to substitute the competition of
-employers for the competition of employed. No other scheme, Suffield
-used to maintain, promised any real relief. If rents and taxes were
-reduced the farmer would be able, but would not be compelled, to give
-better wages: if taxes on the labourers’ necessaries were reduced,
-the labourers would be able to live on a smaller wage, and as long as
-they were scrambling for employment they were certain to be ground
-down to the minimum of subsistence. The only way to rescue them from
-this plight was to place them again in such a position that they were
-not absolutely dependent on the farmers. This the Government could do
-by purchasing land, at present waste, and compelling parishes, with
-the help of a public loan, to set up labourers upon it, and to build
-cottages with a fixed allotment of land.
-
-Suffield’s efforts to persuade the Government to take up this
-constructive policy began as soon as Grey came into office. His
-first letters to Bacon on the subject are written in November. The
-opposition, he says, is very strong, and Sturges Bourne and Lansdowne
-are both hostile. On 17th November he writes that a peer had told him
-that he had sat on an earlier committee on this subject with Sturges
-Bourne, as chairman, and that ‘those who understood the subject best
-agreed with Malthus that vice and misery alone could _cure_ the evil.’
-On 19th November he writes that he has had a conference with Brougham,
-with about the same success as his conference with Lansdowne and
-Sturges Bourne. On the 23rd he writes that he has been promised an
-interview at the Home Office; on the 25th ‘no invitation from Lord
-Melbourne----the truth is he cannot find one moment of leisure. The
-Home Office is distracted by the numerous representations of imminent
-danger to property, if not to life, and applications for protection.’
-Later in the same day he writes that he has seen both Grey and
-Melbourne: ‘I at once attacked Grey. I found him disposed to give every
-possible consideration to the matter. He himself has in Northumberland
-seen upon his own property the beneficent effects of my plan, namely
-of apportioning land to cottagers, but he foresaw innumerable
-difficulties.’ A House of Lords Committee had been appointed on the
-Poor Laws at the instance of Lord Salisbury, and Suffield hoped to
-persuade this committee to report in favour of his scheme. He therefore
-pressed Grey to make a public statement of sympathy. Grey said ‘he
-would intimate that Government would be disposed to carry into effect
-any measure of relief recommended by the Committee; very pressed but
-would call Cabinet together to-morrow.’ The interview with Melbourne
-was very different. ‘Next I saw Lord Melbourne. “Oppressed as you
-are,” said I, “I am willing to relieve you from a conference, but you
-must say something on Monday next and I fear you have not devoted much
-attention to the subject.” “I understand it perfectly,” he replied,
-“and that is the reason for my saying nothing about it.” “How is this
-to be explained?” “Because I consider it hopeless.” “Oh, you think
-with Malthus that vice and misery are the only cure?” “No,” said Lord
-Melbourne, “but the evil is in numbers and the sort of competition that
-ensues.” “Well then I have measures to propose which may meet this
-difficulty.” “Of these,” said Lord Melbourne, “I know nothing,” and
-he turned away from me to a friend to enquire respecting outrages.’
-Suffield concludes on a melancholy note: ‘The fact is, with the
-exception of a few individuals, the subject is deemed by the world
-a bore: every one who touches on it is a bore, and nothing but the
-strongest conviction of its importance to the country would induce me
-to subject myself to the indifference that I daily experience when I
-venture to intrude the matter on the attention of legislators.’
-
-A fortnight later Suffield was very sanguine: ‘Most satisfactory
-interview with Melbourne: thinks Lord Grey will do the job in the
-recess.’ But the sky soon darkens again, and on the 27th Suffield
-writes strongly to Melbourne on the necessity of action, and he adds:
-‘Tranquillity being now restored, all the farmers are of course
-reducing their wages to that miserable rate that led to the recent
-disturbances.’ Unhappily the last sentence had a significance which
-perhaps escaped Suffield. Believing as he did in his scheme, he
-thought that its necessity was proved by the relapse of wages on the
-restoration of tranquillity, but vice and misery-ridden politicians
-might regard the restoration of tranquillity as an argument for
-dropping the scheme. After this the first hopes fade away. There is
-strong opposition on the Select Committee to Suffield’s views, and he
-is disappointed of the prompt report in favour of action which he
-had expected from it. The Government are indisposed to take action,
-and Suffield, growing sick and impatient of their slow clocks, warns
-Melbourne in June that he cannot defend them. Melbourne replies that
-such a measure could not be maturely considered or passed during the
-agitation over the Reform Bill. Later in the month there was a meeting
-between Suffield and Melbourne, of which unfortunately no record is
-preserved in the Memoir, with the result that Suffield declared in
-Parliament that the Government had a plan. In the autumn of 1831 an
-Act was placed on the Statute Book which was the merest mockery of all
-Suffield’s hopes, empowering churchwardens or overseers to hire or
-lease, and under certain conditions to enclose, land up to a limit of
-fifty acres, for the employment of the poor. It is difficult to resist
-the belief that if the riots had lasted longer they might have forced
-the Government to accept the scheme, in the efficacy of which it had
-no faith, as the price of peace, and that the change in temperature
-recorded in Suffield’s _Diary_ after the middle of December marks the
-restoration of confidence at Whitehall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-So perished the last hope of reform and reparation for the poor. The
-labourers’ revolt was ended; and four hundred and fifty men had spent
-their freedom in vain. Of these exiles we have one final glimpse; it is
-in a letter from the Governor of Van Diemen’s Land to Lord Goderich:
-‘If, my Lord, the evidence, or conduct, of particular individuals,
-can be relied on as proof of the efficiency or non-efficiency of
-transportation, I am sure that a strong case indeed could be made
-out in its favour. I might instance the rioters who arrived by the
-_Eliza_, several of whom died almost immediately from disease, induced
-apparently by despair. A great many of them went about dejected and
-stupefied with care and grief, and their situation after assignment was
-not for a long time much less unhappy.’[486]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[449] Russell, _On Crimes and Misdemeanours_, p. 371.
-
-[450] Sir J. B. Bosanquet (1773-1847).
-
-[451] _Times_, December 15, 1830.
-
-[452] Sir W. E. Taunton (1773-1835).
-
-[453] The _Times_ on December 25 quoted part of this charge in a
-leading article with some sharp strictures.
-
-[454] Sir John Vaughan (1769-1839).
-
-[455] _Times_, December 21, 1830.
-
-[456] Sir James Parke (1782-1868).
-
-[457] _Times_, January 3, 1831.
-
-[458] Sir E. H. Alderson (1787-1857).
-
-[459] _Times_, January 6, 1831. Cf. letter of Mr. R. Pollen, J.P.,
-afterwards one of Winchester Commissioners, to Home Office, November
-26: ‘It may be worth considering the law, which exempts all _Threshing
-Machines_ from capital punishment, should such scenes as these occur
-again amongst the agricultural classes. I confess I view with great
-regret that they have found the mode of combining, which I had hoped
-was confined to the manufacturing classes.’
-
-[460] Sir J. A. Park (1763-1838).
-
-[461] _Times_, January 15, 1831.
-
-[462] _Ibid._, January 12, 1831.
-
-[463] _Ibid._
-
-[464] February 8, 1831.
-
-[465] There are no statistics for Wilts, Hants, Bucks, and Dorsetshire
-prisoners. At Reading out of 138 prisoners 37 could read, and 25 of the
-37 could also write. At Abingdon, out of 47, 17 could read, and 6 of
-them could also write. In Wilts and Hants the proportion was probably
-smaller, as the people were more neglected.
-
-[466] _Times_, December 24, 1830.
-
-[467] _Ibid._, January 8, 1831.
-
-[468] _Times_, January 7, 1831.
-
-[469] _Ibid._, December 24, 1830. Henry Bunce was transported for life
-to New South Wales.
-
-[470] _Ibid._, January 14.
-
-[471] Cobbett, _Political Register_, vol. lxxiii. p. 535, and local
-papers.
-
-[472] Fussell’s sentence was commuted to imprisonment. Boys was sent to
-Van Diemen’s Land.
-
-[473] H. O. Papers, Municipal and Provincial. Hants, 1831, March 24.
-
-[474] As early as November 26, Mr. Richard Pollen, Chairman of Quarter
-Sessions and afterwards a commissioner at Winchester, had written to
-the Home Office, ‘I have directed the Magistrates’ attention very
-much to the class of People found in the Mobs many miles from their
-own homes, Taylors, Shoemakers etc., who have been found always very
-eloquent, they are universally politicians: they should be, I think,
-selected.’--H. O. Papers.
-
-[475] For a full account of the incident, including the text of the
-petition and list of signatures, see Cobbett’s _Two-penny Trash_, July
-1, 1832.
-
-[476] See p. 277.
-
-[477] February 8, 1831.
-
-[478] _Times_, January 8, 1831. The _Times_ of the same day contains an
-interesting petition from the Birmingham Political Union on behalf of
-all the prisoners tried before the Special Commissions.
-
-[479] The scene is still vividly remembered by an old woman over ninety
-years of age with whom Mr. Hudson spoke.
-
-[480] H. O. Papers, Disturbance Entry-Book, Letter of January 3, 1831.
-
-[481] See p. 268.
-
-[482] Three boats carried the convicts, the _Eliza_ and the _Proteus_
-to Van Diemen’s Land, the _Eleanor_ to New South Wales. The list of the
-prisoners on board shows that they came from the following counties:--
-
- Berks, 44
- Bucks, 29
- Dorset, 13
- Essex, 23
- Gloucester, 24
- Hampshire, 100
- Hunts, 5
- Kent, 22
- Norfolk, 11
- Oxford, 11
- Suffolk, 7
- Sussex, 17
- Wilts, 151
- ---
- TOTAL, 457
-
-If this represents the total, some sentences of transportation must
-have been commuted for imprisonment; possibly some rioters were sent
-later, for Mr. Potter MacQueen, in giving evidence before the Committee
-on Secondary Punishments, spoke of the six hundred able-bodied men
-who had been transported in consequence of being concerned in the
-Swing offences.--Report of Committee, p. 95. Four years later Lord
-John Russell, as Home Secretary, pardoned 264 of the convicts, in 1836
-he pardoned 86 more, and in 1837 the survivors, mostly men sentenced
-for life or for fourteen years, were given pardons conditional on
-their ‘continuing to reside in Australia for the remainder of their
-sentences.’ No free passages back were granted, and Mr. Hudson states
-that very few, not more than one in five or six, ever returned.--_A
-Shepherd’s Life_, p. 247.
-
-[483] See Hudson, _Ibid._
-
-[484] See _Annual Register_ and local papers.
-
-[485] He was sent to Van Diemen’s Land. It is only fair to Lord
-Sheffield to say that he applied in vain to Lord Melbourne for a
-mitigation of the life sentence. See Criminal Entry-Book, H. O. Papers.
-
-[486] Correspondence on Secondary Punishment, March 1834, p. 23.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CONCLUSION
-
-
-A row of eighteenth-century houses, or a room of normal
-eighteenth-century furniture, or a characteristic piece of
-eighteenth-century literature, conveys at once a sense of satisfaction
-and completeness. The secret of this charm is not to be found in any
-special beauty or nobility of design or expression, but simply in an
-exquisite fitness. The eighteenth-century mind was a unity, an order;
-it was finished, and it was simple. All literature and art that really
-belong to the eighteenth century are the language of a little society
-of men and women who moved within one set of ideas; who understood each
-other; who were not tormented by any anxious or bewildering problems;
-who lived in comfort, and, above all things, in composure. The classics
-were their freemasonry. There was a standard for the mind, for the
-emotions, for the taste: there were no incongruities. When you have a
-society like this, you have what we roughly call a civilisation, and
-it leaves its character and canons in all its surroundings and its
-literature. Its definite ideas lend themselves readily to expression.
-A larger society seems an anarchy in contrast; just because of its
-escape into a greater world it seems powerless to stamp itself on
-wood or stone; it is condemned as an age of chaos and mutiny, with
-nothing to declare. In comparison with the dishevelled century that
-follows, the eighteenth century was neat, well dressed and nicely
-appointed. It had a religion, the religion of quiet common sense and
-contentment with a world that it found agreeable and encouraging; it
-had a style, the style of the elegant and polished English of Addison
-or Gibbon. Men who were not conscious of any strain or great emotion
-asked of their writers and their painters that they should observe in
-their art the equanimity and moderation that were desirable in life.
-They did not torture their minds with eager questions; there was no
-piercing curiosity or passionate love or hatred in their souls; they
-all breathed the same air of distinguished satisfaction and dignified
-self-control. English institutions suited them admirably; a monarchy so
-reasonable nobody could mind; Parliament was a convenient instrument
-for their wishes, and the English Church was the very thing to keep
-religion in its place. What this atmosphere could produce at its best
-was seen in Gibbon or in Reynolds; and neither Gibbon nor Reynolds
-could lose themselves in a transport of the imagination. To pass from
-the eighteenth century to the Revolt, from Pope to Blake, or from
-Sheridan to Shelley, is to burst from this little hothouse of sheltered
-and nurtured elegance into an infinite wild garden of romance and
-mystery. For the eighteenth century such escape was impossible, and if
-any one fell into the fatal crime of enthusiasm, his frenzy took the
-form of Methodism, which was a more limited world than the world he had
-quitted.
-
-The small class that enjoyed the monopoly of political power and social
-luxuries, round whose interests and pleasures the State revolved,
-consisted, down to the French war, of persons accustomed to travel, to
-find amusement and instruction in foreign galleries and French salons,
-and to study the fashions and changes of thought, and letters and
-religion, outside England; of persons who liked to surround themselves
-with the refinements and the decorations of life, and to display their
-good taste in collecting old masters, or fine fragments of sculpture,
-or the scattered treasures of an ancient library. Perhaps at no time
-since the days when Isabella d’Este consoled herself for the calamities
-of her friends and relatives with the thought of the little Greek
-statues that were brought by these calamities into the market, has
-there been a class so keenly interested in the acquisition of beautiful
-workmanship, for the sake of the acquisition rather than for the sake
-of the renown of acquiring it. The eighteenth-century collectors
-bought with discernment as well as with liberality: they were not the
-slaves of a single rage or passion, and consequently they enriched
-the mansions of England with the achievements of various schools.
-Of course the eighteenth century had its own fashion in art, and no
-admiration is more unintelligible to modern taste than the admiration
-for Guercino and Guido Reni and the other seventeenth-century painters
-of Bologna. But the pictures that came across the Channel in such great
-numbers were not the products of one school, or indeed the products of
-one country. Dutch, Flemish, French, Italian, they all streamed into
-England, and the nation suddenly found itself, or rather its rulers,
-very rich in masterpieces. The importance of such a school of manners
-as this, with its knowledge of other worlds and other societies, its
-interest in literature and art, its cosmopolitan atmosphere, can
-only be truly estimated by those who remember the boorish habits of
-the country gentlemen of the earlier eighteenth century described by
-Fielding. With the French war this cosmopolitan atmosphere disappeared.
-Thenceforth the aristocracy were as insular in their prejudices
-as any of their countrymen, and Lord Holland, who preserved the
-larger traditions of his class, provoked suspicion and resentment by
-travelling in Spain during the Peninsular War.[487]
-
-But if the art and literature of the eighteenth century show the
-predominance of a class that cultivated its taste outside England, and
-that regarded art and literature as mere ministers to the pleasure
-of a few,[488] they show also that that class had political power
-as well as social privileges. There is no art of the time that can
-be called national either in England or in France, but the art of
-eighteenth-century England bears a less distant relation to the English
-people than the art of eighteenth-century France to the people of
-France, just in proportion as the great English houses touched the
-English people more closely than Versailles touched the French. English
-art is less of mere decoration and less of mere imitation, for, though
-it is true that Chippendale, Sheraton, and the Adam brothers were
-all in one sense copying the furniture of other countries--Holland,
-China, France--they all preserved a certain English strain, and it was
-the flavour of the vernacular, so to speak, that saved their designs
-from the worst foreign extravagance. They were designing, indeed, for
-a class and not for a nation, but it was for a class that had never
-broken quite away from the life of the society that it controlled.
-The English aristocracy remained a race of country gentlemen. They
-never became mere loungers or triflers, kicking their heels about a
-Court and amusing themselves with tedious gallantries and intrigues.
-They threw themselves into country life and government, and they were
-happiest away from London. The great swarms of guests that settled on
-such country seats as Holkham were like gay and boisterous schoolboys
-compared with the French nobles who had forgotten how to live in the
-country, and were tired of living at Versailles. If anything could
-exceed Grey’s reluctance to leave his great house in Northumberland
-for the excitements of Parliament, it was Fox’s reluctance to leave
-his little house in Surrey. The taste for country pleasures and for
-country sports was never lost, and its persistence explains the
-physical vitality of the aristocracy. This was a social fact of great
-importance, for it is health after all that wins half the battles of
-classes. No quantity of Burgundy and Port could kill off a race that
-was continually restoring its health by life in the open air; it did
-not matter that Squire Western generally spent the night under the
-table if he generally spent the day in the saddle. This inheritance of
-an open-air life is probably the reason that in England, in contrast
-to France and Italy, good looks are more often to be found in the
-aristocracy than in other classes of society.
-
-It was due to this physical vigour that the aristocracy, corrupt and
-selfish though it was, never fell into the supreme vice of moral
-decadence. The other European aristocracies crumbled at once before
-Napoleon: the English aristocracy, amidst all its blunders and errors,
-kept its character for endurance and fortitude. Throughout that long
-struggle, when Napoleon was strewing Europe with his triumphs and, as
-Sheridan said, making kings the sentinels of his power, England alone
-never broke a treaty or made a surrender at his bidding. For ten years
-Pitt seems the one fixed point among the rulers of Europe. It is not,
-of course, to be argued that the ruling class showed more valour and
-determination than any other class of Englishmen would have shown: the
-empire-builders of the century, men of daring and enterprise on distant
-frontiers, were not usually of the ruling class, and Dr. Johnson once
-wrote an essay to explain why it was that the English common soldier
-was the bravest of the common soldiers of the world. The comparison
-is between the English aristocracy and the other champions of law and
-order in the great ordeal of this war, and in that comparison the
-English aristocracy stands out in conspicuous eminence in a Europe of
-shifting and melting governments.
-
-The politics of a small class of privileged persons enjoying an
-undisputed power might easily have degenerated into a mere business of
-money-making and nothing else. There is plenty of this atmosphere in
-the eighteenth-century system: a study merely of the society memoirs
-of the age is enough to dissipate the fine old illusion that men of
-blood and breeding have a nice and fastidious sense about money. Just
-the opposite is the truth. Aristocracies have had their virtues, but
-the virtue of a magnificent disdain for money is not to be expected in
-a class which has for generations taken it as a matter of course that
-it should be maintained by the State. At no time in English history
-have sordid motives been so conspicuous in politics as during the days
-when power was most a monopoly of the aristocracy. No politicians
-have sacrificed so much of their time, ability, and principles to the
-pursuit of gain as the politicians of the age when poor men could only
-squeeze into politics by twos or threes in a generation, when the
-aristocracy put whole families into the House of Commons as a matter
-of course, and Burke boasted that the House of Lords was wholly, and
-the House of Commons was mainly, composed for the defence of hereditary
-property.
-
-But the politics of the eighteenth century are not a mere scramble
-for place and power. An age which produced the two Pitts could not be
-called an age of mere avarice. An age which produced Burke and Fox
-and Grey could not be called an age of mere ambition. The politics of
-this little class are illuminated by the great and generous behaviour
-of individuals. If England was the only country where the ruling
-class made a stand against Napoleon, England was the only country
-where members of the ruling class were found to make a stand for the
-ideas of the Revolution. Perhaps the proudest boast that the English
-oligarchy can make is the boast that some of its members, nursed as
-they had been in a soft and feathered world of luxury and privilege,
-could look without dismay on what Burke called the strange, wild,
-nameless, enthusiastic thing established in the centre of Europe. The
-spectacle of Fox and Sheridan and Grey leading out their handful of
-Liberals night after night against the Treason and Sedition Bills, at a
-time when an avalanche of terror had overwhelmed the mind of England,
-when Pitt, Burke, and Dundas thought no malice too poisoned, Gillray
-and Rowlandson no deforming touch of the brush too brutal, when the
-upper classes thought they were going to lose their property, and the
-middle classes thought they were going to lose their religion, is one
-of the sublime spectacles of history. This quality of fearlessness
-in the defence of great causes is displayed in a fine succession
-of characters and incidents; Chatham, whose courage in facing his
-country’s dangers was not greater than his courage in blaming his
-country’s crimes; Burke, with his elaborate rage playing round the
-dazzling renown of a Rodney; Fox, whose voice sounds like thunder
-coming over the mountains, hurled at the whole race of conquerors;
-Holland, pleading almost alone for the abolition of capital punishment
-for stealing before a bench of bishops; a man so little given to
-revolutionary sympathies as Fitzwilliam, leaving his lord-lieutenancy
-rather than condone the massacre of Peterloo. If moral courage is the
-power of combating and defying an enveloping atmosphere of prejudice,
-passion, and panic, a generation which was poor in most of the public
-virtues was, at least, conspicuously rich in one. Foreign policy, the
-treatment of Ireland, of India, of slaves, are beyond the scope of
-this book, but in glancing at the class whose treatment of the English
-poor has been the subject of our study, it is only just to record
-that in other regions of thought and conduct they bequeathed a great
-inheritance of moral and liberal ideas: a passion for justice between
-peoples, a sense for national freedom, a great body of principle by
-which to check, refine, and discipline the gross appetites of national
-ambition. Those ideas were the ideas of a minority, but they were
-expressed and defended with an eloquence and a power that have made
-them an important and a glorious part of English history. In all this
-development of liberal doctrine it is not fanciful to see the ennobling
-influence of the Greek writers on whom every eighteenth-century
-politician was bred and nourished.
-
-Fox thought in the bad days of the war with the Revolution that his
-own age resembled the age of Cicero, and that Parliamentary government
-in England, undermined by the power of the Court, would disappear
-like liberty in republican Rome. There is a strange letter in which,
-condoling with Grey on his father’s becoming a peer, he remarks that
-it matters the less because the House of Commons will soon cease to be
-of any importance. This prediction was falsified, and England never
-produced a Cæsar. There is, however, a real analogy in the social
-history of the two periods. The English ruling class corresponds to
-the Roman senatorial order, both classes claiming office on the same
-ground of family title, a Cavendish being as inevitable as a Claudius,
-and an Æmilius as a Gower. The _equites_ were the second rank of the
-Roman social aristocracy, as the manufacturers or bankers were of the
-English. A Roman _eques_ could pass into the senatorial order by
-holding the quæstorship; an English manufacturer could pass into the
-governing class by buying an estate. The English aristocracy, like the
-Roman, looked a little doubtfully on new-comers, and even a Cicero or a
-Canning might complain of the freezing welcome of the old nobles; but
-it preferred to use rather than to exclude them.
-
-In both societies the aristocracy regarded the poor in much the
-same spirit, as a problem of discipline and order, and passed on to
-posterity the same vague suggestion of squalor and turbulence. Thus
-it comes that most people who think of the poor in the Roman Republic
-think only of the great corn largesses; and most people who think of
-the poor in eighteenth-century England think only of the great system
-of relief from the rates. Mr. Warde Fowler has shown how hard it is to
-find in the Roman writers any records of the poor. So it is with the
-records of eighteenth-century England. In both societies the obscurity
-which surrounded the poor in life has settled on their wrongs in
-history. For one person who knows anything about so immense an event
-as the disappearance of the old English village society, there are
-a hundred who know everything about the fashionable scenes of high
-politics and high play, that formed the exciting world of the upper
-classes. The silence that shrouds these village revolutions was not
-quite unbroken, but the cry that disturbed it is like a noise that
-breaks for a moment on the night, and then dies away, only serving to
-make the stillness deeper and more solemn. The _Deserted Village_ is
-known wherever the English language is spoken, but Goldsmith’s critics
-have been apt to treat it, as Dr. Johnson treated it, as a beautiful
-piece of irrelevant pathos, and his picture of what was happening in
-England has been admired as a picture of what was happening in his
-discolouring dreams. Macaulay connected that picture with reality in
-his ingenious theory, that England provided the village of the happy
-and smiling opening, and Ireland the village of the sombre and tragical
-end. One enclosure has been described in literature, and described by
-a victim, John Clare, the Northamptonshire peasant, who drifted into
-a madhouse through a life of want and trouble. Those who recall the
-discussions of the time, and the assumption of the upper classes that
-the only question that concerned the poor was the question whether
-enclosure increased employment, will be struck by the genuine emotion
-with which Clare dwells on the natural beauties of the village of
-his childhood, and his attachment to his home and its memories. But
-Clare’s day was brief and he has few readers.[489] In art the most
-undistinguished features of the most undistinguished members of the
-aristocracy dwell in the glowing colours of a Reynolds; the poor have
-no heirlooms, and there was no Millet to preserve the sorrow and
-despair of the homeless and dispossessed. So comfortably have the rich
-soothed to sleep the sensibilities of history. These debonair lords who
-smile at us from the family galleries do not grudge us our knowledge of
-the escapades at Brooks’s or at White’s in which they sowed their wild
-oats, but we fancy they are grateful for the poppy seeds of oblivion
-that have been scattered over the secrets of their estates. Happy the
-race that can so engage the world with its follies that it can secure
-repose for its crimes.
-
-De Quincey has compared the blotting out of a colony of Alexander’s in
-the remote and unknown confines of civilisation, to the disappearance
-of one of those starry bodies which, fixed in longitude and latitude
-for generations, are one night observed to be missing by some wandering
-telescope. ‘The agonies of a perishing world have been going on,
-but all is bright and silent in the heavenly host.’ So is it with
-the agonies of the poor. Wilberforce, in the midst of the scenes
-described in this volume, could declare, ‘What blessings do we enjoy
-in this happy country; I am reading ancient history, and the pictures
-it exhibits of the vices and the miseries of men fill me with mixed
-emotions of indignation, horror and gratitude.’ Amid the great distress
-that followed Waterloo and peace, it was a commonplace of statesmen
-like Castlereagh and Canning that England was the only happy country in
-the world, and that so long as the monopoly of their little class was
-left untouched, her happiness would survive. That class has left bright
-and ample records of its life in literature, in art, in political
-traditions, in the display of great orations and debates, in memories
-of brilliant conversation and sparkling wit; it has left dim and meagre
-records of the disinherited peasants that are the shadow of its wealth;
-of the exiled labourers that are the shadow of its pleasures; of the
-villages sinking in poverty and crime and shame that are the shadow of
-its power and its pride.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[487] See a remarkable letter from Lord Dudley. ‘He has already been
-enough on the Continent for any reasonable end, either of curiosity
-or instruction, and his availing himself so immediately of this
-opportunity to go to a foreign country again looks a little too much
-like distaste for his own.’--Letters to Ivy from the first Earl of
-Dudley, October 1808.
-
-[488] See on this subject a very interesting article by Mr. L. March
-Phillipps in the _Contemporary Review_, August 1911.
-
-[489] Helpstone was enclosed by an Act of 1809. Clare was then sixteen
-years old. His association with the old village life had been intimate,
-for he had tended geese and sheep on the common, and he had learnt the
-old country songs from the last village cowherd. His poem on Helpstone
-was published in 1820.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A (1)
-
- The information about Parliamentary Proceedings in Appendix A is taken
- from the _Journals_ of the House of Commons or of the House of Lords
- for the dates mentioned. The place where the Award is at present
- enrolled is given, where possible, under the heading ‘Award.’ A
- Return, asked for by Sir John Brunner, was printed February 15, 1904,
- of Inclosure Awards, deposited with Clerks of the Peace or of County
- Councils.
-
-
-ARMLEY, LEEDS, YORKS.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1793
-
-
-AREA.--About 175 acres.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Waste Ground, called Armley Moor or Common.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 21, 1793._--Petition for
-enclosure from ‘several of the Owners of Lands within the Manor and
-Township of Armley,’ stating that this parcel of waste ground is,
-in its present state, incapable of improvement. Leave given, bill
-presented March 15.
-
-_March 28._--Petition against the bill from various owners and
-proprietors of Messuages, Cottages, Lands and Tenements who ‘by virtue
-thereof, or otherwise, have an indisputable Right of Common upon the
-said Moor,’ stating that ‘they conceive that an Inclosure of the said
-Moor and Waste Ground would be productive of no Advantage to any
-of the Proprietors claiming a Right of Common thereon, but, on the
-contrary, would very materially injure and prejudice their respective
-Estates in the said Townships, by laying upon the said Township the
-Burthen of making, maintaining, and repairing the necessary new Roads,
-which must be set out to a considerable Extent over the said Moor and
-Waste Ground, and also by increasing the Poors Rate, inasmuch as the
-Petitioners conceive that the Inhabitants of the said Town of Armley,
-who are very numerous, and principally poor Manufacturers of broad
-Woollen Cloth, receive considerable Benefit and Advantage from the
-present open State of the said Moor and Waste Ground, particularly in
-having Tenters and Frames to stretch and dry their Cloth, Warps, and
-Wool, after it has been dyed, put up and fixed upon the said Moor and
-Waste Ground, which Privileges and Advantages have hitherto conduced to
-alleviate the Distresses and Hardships of the said poor Manufacturers
-in the said Township of Armley, and which, if the said Inclosure takes
-Place, they will be totally deprived of and reduced to Poverty and
-Want.’ The Petition was ordered to be heard on second reading.
-
-_April 9._--Bill read a second time. House informed that Petitioners
-declined to be heard on second reading. The Petition was referred to
-the Committee.
-
-_April 17._--(1) Petition against the bill from John Taylor, giving
-same reasons as last petition. (2) Petition from various master
-manufacturers of broad woollen cloth in Armley against the bill,
-stating that, as the Moor only contains about 160 Acres, inclosure
-which involves division ‘amongst so great a Number of Claimants in
-small Allotments,’ and also ‘the heavy and unavoidable Expenses of
-obtaining the Act, surveying, dividing, inclosing, and improving’
-will confer little or no Benefit on the proprietors, whereas it will
-certainly deprive the poor Manufacturers, who are very numerous, of (1)
-the Privileges and Advantages of fixing their Tenters, etc., ‘which
-they and their Ancestors have hitherto enjoyed’; and (2) ‘of that
-Pasturage upon the said Common which they have hitherto much depended
-upon.’ Both Petitions to be heard at Report stage; (3) Petition against
-the bill from various owners and proprietors who ‘at the Instance of
-several other Owners of Lands’ signed a petition for inclosure, ‘under
-an Idea, that the Inclosure would meet with the Approbation of, and
-be of general Utility to the Inhabitants of the said Town,’ but now
-finding that this idea was mistaken, and that Inclosure would be of
-general disadvantage, ask that their names should be erased, and that
-if the bill is brought in, they should be heard against it. Petition
-referred to Committee. Petitioners to be heard, ‘if they think fit’
-(‘they’ ambiguous, might be Committee or Petitioners).
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_April 29._--Wilberforce reported
-from the Committee; Standing Orders complied with, Committee had
-considered the two petitions referred to them (apparently they had not
-heard Counsel), and had found that the Allegations of the Bill were
-true, and that the parties concerned had given their consent ‘(except
-the Owners of Land of the Annual Value of £172, 8s. 2d. who refused to
-sign the Bill; and also, except the Owners of Lands of the Annual Value
-of £35, 15s. 9d., who declared themselves neuter; and that the Whole of
-the Land entitled to Right of Common is of the Annual Value of £901,
-12s. 1d.).’ There is nothing to suggest that the petitioners against
-the bill were heard at this stage. The Bill passed Commons and Lords.
-Royal Assent, June 3, 1793.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 33 George. III. c. 61.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--One only. William Whitelock of Brotherton, Yorks,
-Gentleman. He is also to act as surveyor. Vacancy to be filled, if
-necessary, by ‘the major part in value’ of those interested in the
-Common. An arbitrator is to be appointed by the Recorder of Leeds.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONER.--£1, 11s. 6d. for each working day. As
-surveyor, his remuneration is to be settled by the Recorder of Leeds.
-
-CLAIMS.--The Commissioner is to hear and to determine upon all claims,
-but if any one is dissatisfied the matter can be referred to the
-Arbitrator, whose decision is final. If the appeal is vexatious, the
-Arbitrator can award costs against the appellant. The Arbitrator’s
-decision is final except in respect of matters of Title which can still
-be tried at law.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Provisions for Lord of the Manor._--(1) The equivalent in value of
-one-sixteenth of the whole in lieu of his right in the soil.
-
-(2) His other manorial rights to continue as before, including his
-mineral rights, but he is forbidden to ‘enter into or damage any House,
-Garden, or Pleasure Ground’ hereafter made on the Common, and if he
-damages property he must pay for satisfaction either a yearly rent of
-£3 an acre or part of an acre actually used and damaged, or else make
-such compensation as shall be awarded by two indifferent persons, one
-chosen by the Lord of the Manor, the other by the person who sustains
-the damage. If these two cannot agree, they must choose an Umpire whose
-decision is to be final.
-
-(3) The Lord of the Manor is to have the use of a spring in the close
-belonging to Samuel Blackburn.
-
-_Provisions for Tithe Owners._--None.
-
-_Provisions for the Poor._--(1) Allotment to Cottagers of 8-1/2 acres
-in six or more distinct and separate places, as near as possible to the
-Cottages on or adjoining the Common ‘which shall for ever hereafter
-remain open and uninclosed, and shall be used and enjoyed by the
-Occupiers of the several Cottages or Dwelling Houses now or hereafter
-to be built within the said Township of Armley, for the setting up and
-using of Tenters, Stretchers for Warp, Wool Hedges,’ etc., under the
-direction of the Minister, Chapel Wardens, and Overseers. No buildings
-are to be erected on this ground, and no rent paid for the use of it;
-no roads or paths may be made through it, and no buildings erected
-within 20 yards on the South or West.
-
-(2) Allotment to the Poor.--2 acres, to be vested in the Minister,
-Chapel Wardens, and Overseers, and used for a Poor House, School House,
-and for the benefit of a School master. Until used for these purposes,
-the rent and profits are to go towards the Poor Assessment.
-
-_Allotment for Stone_ for roads, etc.--5 acres (for the making and
-repairing of highways and private roads).
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--To be divided out amongst the persons having
-right of common according to their several rights and interests,
-quantity, quality, and situation considered, provided ‘that in case
-it shall be determined that the Owners of any Messuages or Cottages,
-or Scites of Messuages and Cottages, are entitled to Right of Common
-on the said Common or Waste Ground, then that the said Commissioner
-... shall award and allot such Parcels of the Common and Waste Ground
-to the Owners of such Messuages or Cottages, as have been erected for
-Sixty Years and upwards, unless the same shall have been erected upon
-the Scite of an ancient Messuage or Cottage, as to him ... shall appear
-a fair Compensation for such Right,’ and in making this allotment he
-is not to pay any regard to the value of these Messuages and Cottages
-one to another, except with reference to the Quantity of land. If any
-allottee is dissatisfied with his share, he can appeal for arbitration
-to the Recorder of Leeds, whose decision is to be final, except in
-cases where the question concerns any Right of Common claimed ‘for
-or in respect of any ancient Houses or Scites of Houses, Lands or
-Grounds,’ when there may be an appeal at law, if notice is given within
-a specified time. Allotments must be accepted within 6 months after
-award. Failure to accept excludes allottee from all benefits. (Saving
-clause for infants, etc.).
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--(1) Incroachments 60 years old and more to be treated
-as old inclosures with right of common, except such Incroachments as
-have been made by or for the Curate of Armley for the time being.
-(2) Incroachments from 40 to 60 years old to remain with possessors
-but not to confer any right of common. (3) Incroachments made within
-40 years to be deemed part of the Common to be divided, but to be
-allotted to present holders as part of their allotments. But if
-they do not lie adjoining the incroacher’s ancient estates then the
-Commissioner can allot them to anyone, giving ‘adequate Satisfaction
-for any Improvement’ to the incroacher. The above does not apply to two
-inclosures made by Stephen Todd, Esqr. and by Joseph Akeroyd which are
-to be allotted to them respectively under their present indentures of
-lease.
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done by allottees under the Commissioner’s directions.
-_Exception._--The allotment of 2 acres for the poor is to be fenced
-and enclosed at the expense of the other proprietors. If allottees
-refuse to fence, the Commissioner can do it for them and charge them,
-ultimately distraining. To protect the young quickset, no sheep or
-lambs are to be depastured in allotments for 7 years, unless special
-fences are made, and no cattle, sheep or lambs are to graze in the
-roads and ways for 10 years.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To be paid by the proprietors in such proportion as the
-Commissioner decides. The Commissioner’s accounts are to be entered in
-a book, and produced when 5 proprietors require it. To meet expenses,
-allotments may be mortgaged in some cases, with consent of the
-Commissioner, up to 60s. an acre.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--All leases, as regards right of common and
-other rights on the waste ground for 21 years and under to be null
-and void, the lessor making such satisfaction to the lessee as the
-Commissioner thinks a fit equivalent.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners have full power to set out and stop up roads and
-footpaths.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases where
-the Commissioner’s or Arbitrator’s decision is said to be final; or
-where some other provision is made, _e.g._ to Recorder of Leeds about
-allotments.
-
-
-AWARD.--Not with Clerk of the Peace or of County Council or in Record
-Office.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (2)
-
-ASHELWORTH, GLOUCESTER.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1797
-
-
-AREA.--Not given in Act. Commonable Land of every kind stated in
-Petition (see below) as 310 Acres in all.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--‘Open and Common Fields, Meadows, and Pastures,
-Commonable and intermixed Lands, and a Tract of Waste Ground, being
-Part and Parcel of a Common called Corse Lawn,[490] and also a Plot,
-Piece, or Parcel of Land or Ground, on the Eastern Side of the said
-Parish,[491] adjoining to, and lately Part of the Parish of Hasfield
-... but now Part of the Parish of Ashelworth’.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 21, 1797._--Petition for
-enclosure from various owners of lands and estates. March 24, Bill read
-first time.
-
-_April 7, 1797._--Petition from various Landowners and Owners of Mease
-Places, against the bill, stating ‘That there are only about 310 Acres
-of Commonable Land belonging to Land Owners of the said Parish, of
-which 148 Acres are Meadow Land, called the _Upper Ham_, lying in the
-Manor of _Hasfield_, the Right of Common upon which belongs exclusively
-to the Petitioners (and some others) as Owners of Fifty Five Mease
-Places within the said Parish, and the Petitioners are the Owners of
-Thirty-four of such Mease Places; and that the Remainder of the said
-Commonable Land consists of a Common Meadow, called _Lonkergins Ham_,
-containing about eight Acres (upon which Six Persons have a Right of
-Common) and about 150 Acres of Waste Land, Part of a Tract of Land
-called Corse Lawn, upon which Waste Land all the Land Owners of the
-said Parish are entitled to a Right of Common; and that the several
-Estates within the said Parish, lie very compact and convenient, and
-many of such Estates are exempt from the Payment of Great Tithes;
-and that of the Remainder of such Estates the Great Tithes (except a
-Portion of which the Vicar was endowed) belong to Charles Hayward Esq.,
-who is Lord of the Manor of Ashelworth, and Owner of an Estate in the
-said Parish; and that there is no one Object in the Bill sufficient,
-under the Circumstances of the Case, to justify the enormous Expences
-which will attend the obtaining and carrying it into Execution,
-but that, on the Contrary, it is fraught with great Evil, and will
-be extremely injurious to the Petitioners,’ and asking that the
-Petitioners may be permitted to examine Witnesses and to be heard by
-their Counsel against the bill.
-
-Petitioners to be heard on Second reading.
-
-_April 10._--Second reading of bill. House informed that Petitioners
-did not wish to be heard at that stage. Bill committed. Petitioners to
-be heard when Bill reported if they think fit.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_May 3, 1797._--Mr. Lygon reported
-from the Committee that the Standing Orders were complied with; that
-the allegations were true; and that the Parties concerned had consented
-to the satisfaction of the Committee ‘(except the Owners of Property
-assessed to the Land Tax at £11, 0s. 5d., and that the whole of the
-Property is assessed at £86, 14s. 10d.) and that no Person appeared
-before the Committee to oppose the Bill.’ (Nothing about hearing
-Petitioners.) Bill passed both Houses with some amendments. In the
-House of Lords an amendment was made about referring the quarrel
-between the Vicar of Ashelworth and the Rector of Hasfield on the
-subject of tithes to arbitration. Royal Assent, June 6, 1797.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 37 George III. c. 108.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed. Richard Richardson of Bath: Francis
-Webb of Salisbury: Thomas Fulljames of Gloucester, Gentlemen. Two to be
-a quorum. Surveyor to be appointed by Commissioners. Vacancies, both
-Commissioners and Surveyors, to be filled up by remaining Commissioners
-from persons not interested. If they fail to fill up, ‘the major part
-in value’ of the Proprietors and Persons interested can do so.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS.--2 guineas each working day. Survey to be
-made, unless the existing one seems satisfactory and correct.
-
-
-SPECIAL CLAUSES.--It is enacted ‘That all Fields or Inclosures
-containing the Property of Two or more Persons within One Fence, and
-also all Inclosures containing the Property of One Person only, if
-the same be held by or under different Tenures or Interests, shall be
-considered as Commonable Land, and be divided and allotted accordingly.’
-
-Also ‘all Homesteads, Gardens, Orchards, old Inclosures, and other
-Lands and Grounds,’ shall, with the consent of their proprietors or
-Trustees, ‘be deemed and considered to be open and uninclosed Land for
-the Purpose of the Division and Allotment hereby intended,’ provided
-that Charles Hayward has to get Bishop of Bristol’s consent.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims to be delivered in writing at first and second
-Meeting, and no claim to be received after second Meeting, except for
-some special cause allowed by Commissioners. Commissioners to hold
-a subsequent meeting and give account in writing of what claims are
-admitted and rejected.
-
-Persons whose claims are rejected can bring an action on a feigned
-issue against some other Proprietor. Verdict to be final and
-conclusive. If Plaintiff wins, Commissioners pay costs; if Defendant
-wins, Plaintiff pays. Action must be brought within a specified time (3
-months).
-
-_Exceptions._--(1) If the Commissioners disallow the claim of the Dean
-and Chapter of Westminster to the Right of Soil in ‘A,’ then the Dean
-and Chapter may bring an action within 12 months against the Bishop of
-Bristol and Charles Hayward for ascertaining the rights of soil. Costs
-to be paid by losers.
-
-(2) If the Commissioners allow the above claim, then the Bishop of
-Bristol or Charles Hayward can bring an action _mutatis mutandis_.
-
-Also, If any dispute or difference arises between the Parties
-interested in the inclosure ‘touching or concerning the respective
-Shares, Rights, and Interests which they or any of them shall claim’
-in the land to be inclosed, ‘or touching and concerning the respective
-Shares and Proportions’ which they ought to have, the Commissioners
-have power to examine and determine the same; their determination to be
-‘final, binding and conclusive upon and to all Parties.’ Commissioners
-can on request of person who wins his point assess costs on person who
-loses it, and ultimately distrain on his goods.
-
-_Exception._--Commissioners to have no jurisdiction about Titles.
-
-Tithe owners are to send in their claims with all particulars.
-Commissioners’ determination to be final ‘(if the Parties in Dispute
-think proper and agree thereto)’; but not to affect power to try titles
-at law.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Lord of the Manor._--(1) The Bishop of Bristol is Lord of the Manor of
-Ashelworth (except ‘A’ and ‘B’), and Charles Hayward is his lessee. He
-is to have such part as Commissioners judge full compensation, to be
-‘not less than 1/15’ of the Waste Land to be inclosed.
-
-(2) Dean and Chapter of Westminster and also the Bishop of Bristol
-claim Right of Soil in ‘A,’ whichever establishes his claim to have not
-less than 1/15 of ‘A.’
-
-(3) John Parker Esq., is Lord of Manor of ‘B’: to have not less than
-1/15 of ‘B’.
-
-_Tithe Owners._--Allotment to be made from land about to be inclosed
-for all tithes on all land (including present inclosures), as
-follows:--
-
-Not less in value than One Fifth of Arable Land. Not less in value than
-One Ninth of Meadow or Pasture Ground, Homesteads, Gardens, Orchards
-and Woodlands. Where Tithes only partially due, full equivalent to be
-given.
-
-The Vicar of Ashelworth and the Rector of Hasfield can have their
-disputed rights to tithes of ‘B’ settled by Arbitration.
-
-Owners of old inclosures who have not large enough allotments to pay
-their due proportion of the tithe allotments, are to pay a lump sum of
-money instead; _unless_ the Commissioners deem it convenient to allot
-part of the old inclosures to the tithe owners instead; in which case
-the land so set out is to ‘be deemed Part of the Lands to be divided,
-allotted, and inclosed by virtue of this Act.’
-
-Full equivalent to the Vicar for his Glebe Lands and their right of
-Common.
-
-_For Stone, Gravel_, etc.--From 2 to 3 acres; ‘to be used and enjoyed
-in Common’ by proprietors and inhabitants, ‘for the Purpose only of
-getting Stone, Gravel, or other Materials for making and repairing the
-Roads and Ways within the said Parish.’ Herbage of above to be allotted
-to whomsoever Commissioners direct, or for some general, parochial or
-other use.
-
-_To Proprietors of Cottages._--Every proprietor or owner of a cottage
-and land of the annual value of £4 or under is to have from 1/2 acre to
-2 acres ‘as they the said Commissioners shall think proper.’
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--Amongst the various persons interested
-according to their respective rights and interests. Allotments to be as
-near homestead or old inclosure as conveniently may be. If two or more
-persons with allotments of not more than 2 acres each want to have the
-same laid together in order to avoid the expence of inclosing, they are
-to give notice to the Commissioners, and the Commissioners are then
-to put these allotments together ‘and in and by their Award to direct
-how and in what manner such small Allotments shall be cultivated, and
-in what Manner and Proportion, and with what Cattle the same shall be
-stocked, depastured and fed, during the Time the same shall lie open to
-each other,’ and if at any time the Major part of proprietors of the
-small Allotments wish it, they are to be inclosed.
-
-Award with full particulars of allotments and of orders and regulations
-for putting Act in execution to be drawn up, and to be ‘binding and
-conclusive upon and to all Persons, to all Intents and Purposes
-whatsoever.’
-
-Allotments to be of same tenure as property in virtue of which they are
-given. Allotments must be accepted within 6 months; if allottee fails
-to accept, the Commissioners can put in a salaried Bailiff or Receiver
-to manage allotment till allottee accepts, when any surplus profits are
-to be handed over to allottee. (Saving clause for infants, etc.).
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done by respective allottees according to
-Commissioners’ directions.
-
-_Exceptions._--(1) In the case of allotments to Trustees for parochial
-or charitable purposes, the Commissioners are to deduct a portion for
-these allottees’ share of fencing and expenses. This deducted land
-is to be divided amongst other proprietors. The Commissioners do the
-fencing.
-
-(2) Glebe and Tithe Allotments to be fenced by other proprietors, and
-the fences to be kept in repair for 7 years at expense of persons named
-by the Commissioners.
-
-If an allottee fails to fence, his neighbour can complain to a J. P.
-(not interested) and obtain an order to do it and charge expenses on
-allottee, or else enter and receive rents.
-
-If any allottee has an unfair share of fencing the Commissioners can
-equalise matters. No sheep or lambs to be kept in any inclosure for 7
-years, unless special fences are made. No sheep or lambs ever to be
-kept in the roads.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--Part of the Common or Waste Land to be sold to defray
-expenses. If the money so raised is not sufficient, ‘the deficiency
-shall be paid, borne, and defrayed’ by the various proprietors
-(excluding the Tithe owners and the Lords of the Manor for their
-respective allotments) in such proportion as the Commissioners direct.
-
-Land may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre.
-
-Money advanced for Act to have 5 per cent. interest.
-
-Commissioners must keep accounts, which must be open to inspection.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners to set out roads, ways and footpaths, all others
-to be stopped up. But no turnpike road to be interfered with.
-
-
-COMPENSATION.--Leases at rack-rent to be void; owners paying or
-receiving such satisfaction as the Commissioners think right.
-
-Compensation (under Commissioners’ direction) to be paid by new
-allottee to former owner for timber, underwood, etc., or else former
-owner can enter and cut down, unless Commissioners direct that trees
-etc. are not to be cut.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--Commissioners to have full power
-to direct the course of husbandry.
-
-
-POWER OR APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases ‘where the
-Orders, Directions and Determinations of the said Commissioners are
-directed to be conclusive, binding and final.’
-
-
-AWARD.--Date, August 24, 1798. With Clerk of Peace or of County
-Council, Gloucester.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (3)
-
-CHESHUNT.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1799
-
-
-AREA.--2741 Acres.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Common Fields and common Lammas meadows about 1555
-acres; A common called Cheshunt Common about 1186 acres.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 23, 1799._--Petition for
-enclosure from Sir George William Prescott Bt. (Lord of the Manor), the
-Rev. Joseph Martin (Tithe owner), Oliver Cromwell, William Tatnall and
-others. Leave given. Bill read twice; committed April 25.
-
-_May 7, 1799._--Petition against the bill from various proprietors of
-Lands and Common Rights setting forth ‘That a very great Proportion
-of such Open Fields and Commonable Lands are of so bad a Quality, as
-to be incapable of any Improvement equivalent to the Expenses of the
-Inclosure; and that the said Commons in their present State, are well
-fitted for the breeding of Sheep and Support of lean Stock, and that
-many of the Inhabitants of the said Parish, who, by reason of their
-Residence and Occupation of small Tenements, have Rights of Common,
-are enabled, by the lawful Enjoyment of such Common Rights, to support
-themselves and their Families; but, as almost all the said Commons lie
-at the extreme Edge of the Parish, and are subject to very numerous
-and extensive Common Rights, any Allotments of the said Commons to
-the lesser Commoners must be too small, and too distant from their
-Habitations, to be of any substantial Use to them, which Inconveniences
-are now prevented by the Use of general Herdsmen; and that the
-Inclosure of the said Open Fields and other Commonable Lands would be,
-in many other Respects highly injurious to the Rights and Interests of
-the Petitioners.’ Petitioners to be heard before the Committee. All to
-have voices.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_May 24._--Mr. Baker reported
-from the Committee that they had heard Counsel for the Petitioners;
-that the allegations were true; that the Parties concerned had given
-their consent to the bill, and also to the changing of one of the
-Commissioners named therein ‘(except the Proprietors of 314 Acres
-and 19 Perches of Land, who refused to sign the Bill; and also, the
-Proprietors of 408 Acres, 3 Roods and 22 Perches who were neuter;
-and that the whole Property belonging to Persons interested in the
-Inclosure consists of 6930 Acres, or thereabouts).’
-
-Bill passed both Houses. June 13, Royal Assent.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 39 George III. c. 75.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed.
-
-(1) John Foakes of Gray’s Inn, Gentleman representing the Lord of the
-Manor.
-
-(2) Richard Davis of Lewknor, Oxford, Gentleman representing the
-Impropriator of the Great Tithes.
-
-(3) Daniel Mumford, of Greville St., Hatton Gardens, Gentleman,
-representing the other Proprietors of Estates with Right of Common or a
-major part in value. Two to be a quorum. Vacancies to be filled up by
-the parties represented from persons not interested in the enclosure.
-Surveyor appointed, Henry Craster of Cheshunt.
-
-
-PAYMENT.--Commissioners, Surveyor, and Clerk or Agent to Commissioners
-each to have 2 guineas a day for each working day.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims with particulars of tenure, etc., to be handed in
-at specified times; claimants must give such particulars ‘as shall be
-necessary to describe such Claims with as much Precision as they can.’
-No claim to be received afterwards, unless for some special cause.
-Commissioners’ determination on claims to be final and conclusive, if
-no objection is made. If objection is made, the objector can (1) try
-the matter at law on a feigned issue; or (2) submit the question to 2
-arbitrators, the claimant naming one arbitrator, the objector naming
-the other. If the arbitrators disagree, they can name an umpire, whose
-decision is final and conclusive. Commissioners can award costs.
-Commissioners to have no jurisdiction over matters of title which can
-be tried at law.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_To Lords of the Manor._--(7 of them.)
-
-(1) Sir G. W. Prescott of Cheshunt.
-
-(2) Rev. J. Martin of the Manors of the Rectory of Cheshunt.
-
-(3) Anne Shaw, widow, of the Manors of Andrews and Le Mott.
-
-(4) Francis Morland of the Manors of Theobalds, Tongs, Clays, Clarks,
-Dareys, Cross-Brookes, and Cullens.
-
-(5) Robert William Sax, and
-
-(6) Mary Jane Sax, and
-
-(7) Joseph Jackson, of the Manors of Beaumont and Perriers.
-
-So much ‘as shall in the Judgment of the said Commissioners be an
-adequate Compensation and Satisfaction’ for their Rights and Interests.
-
-_Tithe Owners._--One-fifth of arable or tillage, and one-ninth of the
-other land to be divided which is subject to tithes.
-
-Above to be divided between Impropriator of Great Tithes and Vicar.
-
-For Glebe Lands, a full equivalent. If any owner of old inclosed land
-who has no land in the common fields, but possesses a Right of Common
-over Cheshunt Common, wishes it, part of his allotment can (with the
-tithe owner’s consent) be set aside and given to the tithe owners, and
-his Land will be free of tithes for ever.
-
-_For Stone and Gravel_, etc.--2 Acres, to be used in common by
-proprietors and tenants, for their own use and also for the roads.
-
-_For Cottagers._--An allotment of 100 Acres, exclusive of Roads, to
-be vested in the Lord of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens, and
-Overseers, ‘for the Use of the Occupiers of Houses or Cottages within
-the said Parish already having Right of Common, without more than
-One Rood of Land belonging to and used with the same as a Garden or
-Orchard, the Yearly Rent of which, at the Time of passing this Act,
-shall not exceed Six Pounds, without paying any thing for such Use.’
-
-The number of the Houses with their rents and the number of cattle are
-to be described in the Award. No one else is to send cattle on to the
-100 acres.
-
-These cottagers are also to have the herbage of the 2-acre allotment
-for stone and gravel.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--Amongst the various persons interested in
-proportion to their various rights and interests, Quantity, Quality,
-and Situation considered.
-
-Small allotments may, on application of allottees, if Commissioners
-think proper, be laid together, and enjoyed in common under
-Commissioners’ direction.
-
-Each Copyholder of all the Manors is to have a separate and distinct
-allotment. If any allottee is dissatisfied with his allotment, he can
-send in a complaint to the Commissioners, who are to hear and determine
-the matter; their determination is to be final and conclusive.
-
-The Award is to be final and conclusive. If any allottee fails to
-accept his allotment, or molests another in accepting, he is to be
-‘divested of all Right, Estate, and Interest whatsoever’ in the Lands
-to be divided.
-
-The tenure of the allotment to be that of the estate in virtue of which
-it is given.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Not mentioned.
-
-
-FENCING.--Not specifically mentioned, but from clauses _re_ tithe
-owners, etc., must be done at allottee’s expense.
-
-Beasts, cattle, etc., not to be depastured on the new allotments for 7
-years unless special fences made, or a proper person sent to look after
-cattle.
-
-Tithe owners’ allotments to be fenced, and fencing kept in repair for 7
-years by the other proprietors.
-
-The 100-acre allotment for cottagers to be fenced at the expense of the
-owners of the residue of the common. Mortgage up to £2 an acre allowed
-for expense of fencing.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To be borne by all owners and proprietors (except the Rector
-and the Vicar, in regard to their Glebe and Tythe Allotments) in
-proportion to their shares, at an equal pound rate to be fixed by the
-Commissioners. If allottees fail to pay, Commissioners can distrain or
-enter and receive rents, etc.
-
-Commissioners must keep accounts which must be open to inspection. If
-they receive more money than is needed, the surplus is to go to the
-Poor Rates.
-
-
-COMPENSATION.--All rack-rent leases to be void, the owners giving the
-tenants ‘reasonable Satisfaction’; but where it seems more equitable to
-the Commissioners, the allotment can be held by the tenant during his
-lease at a rent to the owner fixed by the Commissioners.
-
-Satisfaction for crops and for ploughing, manuring and tilling to be
-given by new allottee.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--Commissioners to have full power
-to direct the course of husbandry.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners to have full power to set out and to stop up
-roads and footpaths (except that they are not to make them over
-‘Gardens, Orchards, Plantations, and other Private Grounds’), and if
-ancient footways or paths are stopped up, the owners of old inclosed
-land, for whose accommodation it is done, are to pay something towards
-the general expenses of the act.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not when Commissioners’
-or others’ determination is said to be final and conclusive.
-
-
-AWARD.--Enrolled at Westminster, February 27, 1806. Record Office.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF AWARD:--
-
- Whole area divided out including roads, some old
- inclosures and homesteads given up to be _a._ _r._ _p._
- allotted, 2,667 2 33
- ------------
- Tithe owners in various allotments including 106
- acres for exonerating old inclosures, and 1-3/4 _a._ _r._ _p._
- acre for Vicar’s Glebe and Right of Common, 474 1 13
-
- The Lord of the Manor (Sir G. B. Prescott) and
- the trustees of the late Lord of the Manor,
- including 38-3/4 acres or 1/18 for manorial rights, 438 0 24
-
- Mrs. Anne Shaw, 376 2 7
- Oliver Cromwell, Esq., 107 3 29
- Occupiers of Cottages, 100 0 0
- Gravel Pits, 1 3 13
-
-The remainder (excluding roads) is allotted amongst 213 allottees:--
-
- From 50-100 acres 4 }
- From 30-50 acres 3 } Above 10 acres 23
- From 10-30 acres 16 }
-
- From 1-10 acres 141
-
- From 1/2-1 acre 37 }
- From 1/4-1/2 acre 8 } Below 1 acre 49
- Below 1/4 acre 4 }
- ---
- 213
- ---
-
-The Award shows that there must have been 86 owners of the 1555 acres
-of Open Fields and Lammas Meadows as 86 allottees receive allotments in
-lieu of land. Of these 86, 63 receive allotments of under 10 acres in
-lieu of their land. (13 from 5-10 acres, 37 from 1-5 acres, 13 below 1
-acre.)
-
-
-AMENDING ACT _re_ the 100 Acres Allotment, 1813.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_November 6, 1813._--Petition from the Lord
-of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens and Overseers for amending Act.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_November 20, 1813._--Reported
-that the parties concerned had consented except 9 Persons with right of
-common who refused, and 3 who were neuter; the total number of persons
-having right of common being 183.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF AMENDING ACT.--(Local and Personal, 54 George III. c.
-2.)
-
-
-NEW ARRANGEMENTS RESPECTING 100-ACRE ALLOTMENT.--The Commissioners had
-set out the 100 Acres for the use of certain occupiers, who were to
-be entitled to turn out on May 12 till February 2 either 1 Horse or 2
-Cows or other Neat Cattle, or 7 Sheep; ‘And whereas, partly owing to
-the great Extent of the said Parish of Cheshunt, and to the Distance
-at which the greater Part of the Cottages or Houses, mentioned in
-the Schedule to the said Award, are situated from the said Plot or
-Allotment of One hundred Acres, and partly to the Inability of most
-of the Occupiers of such Cottages or Houses to maintain or keep any
-Horses, Cows, or other Neat Cattle or Sheep, the Persons for whose
-Benefit and Advantage such Plot or Allotment of Land was intended,
-derive little if any Advantage therefrom; but the Herbage of such Plot
-or Allotment of Land is consumed by the Cattle of Persons having no
-Right to depasture the same’; it is enacted that the Trustees are to
-have power to let out the 100 Acres to one or more tenants for not more
-than 21 years, ‘at the best and most improved yearly Rent or Rents
-that can at the Time be reasonably had and obtained for the same. The
-proceeds of the rents (when expenses are paid, see below) are to be
-divided among the occupiers of the houses and cottages mentioned in the
-Schedule.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--The Allotment is to be mortgaged up to £500 for the expenses.
-
-To repay the mortgage £50 is to be set aside from the rents yearly.
-
-Interest at 5% on the sum borrowed is to be paid from the rents.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (4)
-
-CROYDON, SURREY.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1797
-
-
-AREA.--2950 acres.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Open and Common Fields, about 750 acres, Commons,
-Marshes, Heaths, Wastes and Commonable Woods, Lands, and Grounds about
-2200 acres.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_November 7, 1796._--Petition for enclosure
-from Hon. Richard Walpole, John Cator, Esq., Richard Carew, Esq., John
-Brickwood, Esq., and others. Leave given; bill presented May 8, 1797;
-read twice and committed.
-
-_May 18, 1797._--(1) Petition against the bill from Richard Davis and
-others, as prejudicial to their rights and interests; (2) Petition
-against it from James Trecothick, Esq. Both petitions to be heard
-before Committee. May 26, Petition against the bill from Richard Davis
-and others stating ‘that the said Bill goes to deprive the Inhabitants
-of the said Parish and the Poor thereof in particular, of certain
-ancient Rights and Immunities granted to them (as they have been
-informed) by some, or one, of the Predecessors of His present Majesty,
-and that the said Bill seems calculated to answer the Ends of certain
-Individuals.’
-
-Petitioners to be heard when the Bill was reported.
-
-_June 7._--Petition of various inhabitants of Croydon against the bill;
-similar to last petition. To be heard when Bill reported.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_June 19._--Lord William Russell
-reported from the Committee, standing orders complied with, that the
-Petitions had been considered, allegations true; parties concerned had
-given their consent to the satisfaction of the Committee, ‘(except the
-Owners of 230 Acres 2 Roods and 25 Perches of Inclosed Land, and 67
-Acres 1 Rood and 31 Perches of Common Field Land, who refused to sign
-the Bill; and also the Owners of 225 Acres 1 Rood and 34 Perches of
-Inclosed Land, and 7 Acres 3 Roods and 5 Perches of Common Field Land,
-who, on being applied to, returned no Answer; and that the Whole of the
-Land consists of 6316 Acres and 37 Perches of Inclosed Land, and 733
-Acres 1 Rood and 39 Perches of Common Field Land, or thereabouts)....’
-
-The same day (June 19) petition from various Freeholders, Copyholders,
-Leaseholders and Inhabitant Householders of Croydon stating that the
-promoters of the bill have named Commissioners without consulting the
-persons interested ‘at an open and public meeting,’ and that since
-the Archbishop of Canterbury as Lord of the Soil of the Wastes has
-named one Commissioner (James Iles of Steyning, Gentleman) the other
-two Commissioners ought, ‘in common Justice and Impartiality’ to be
-nominated by the proprietors of lands and the Parish at large; and as
-they understand that the Tithe owners and other Proprietors wish John
-Foakes, named in the bill, to remain a Commissioner, asking leave
-to nominate as the third Thomas Penfold of Croydon, Gentleman. Lord
-William Russell proposed to recommit the bill in order to consider this
-petition, but obtained only 5 votes for his motion against 51.
-
-The Bill passed Commons.
-
-In the Lords a Petition was read July 4, 1797, against the Bill from
-the Freeholders, Copyholders, Leaseholders and Inhabitant-Freeholders
-of Croydon, praying their Lordships, ‘To take their Case into their
-most serious Consideration.’ Petition referred to Committee.
-
-_July 10, 1797._--Bill passed Lords in a House of 4 Peers. (Bishop of
-Bristol, Lords Walsingham, Kenyon, and Stewart of Garlies.)
-
-[3 of these had been members of the Committee of 6 to whom the Bill was
-committed.]
-
-Royal Assent, July 19.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 37 George III. c. 144.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed. (1) James Iles of Steyning, Sussex;
-(2) John Foakes of Gray’s Inn; (3) Thomas Crawter of Cobham, Gentlemen.
-
-The first represents the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord of the Manor
-of Croydon, the other two represent the proprietors of estates with
-right of common (the Archbishop excluded) ‘or the major part in value’
-(such value to be collected from the rentals in land tax assessments).
-Vacancies to be filled up by the parties represented. New Commissioners
-not to be interested in the inclosure. Two Surveyors appointed by name:
-vacancies to be filled up by Commissioners.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS.--2 guineas a day. Surveyors to be paid what
-the Commissioners think ‘just and reasonable.’
-
-
-CLAIMS.--To be delivered in at the meeting or meetings advertised for
-the purpose. None to be received after, except for some special cause.
-Claimants must send in claims ‘in Writing under their Hands, or the
-Hands of their Agents, distinguishing in such Claims the Tenure of the
-Estates in respect whereof such Claims are made, and stating therein
-such further Particulars as shall be necessary to describe such Claims
-with Precision.’ The Commissioners are to hold a meeting to hear and
-determine about claims, and if no objections are raised, then their
-determination is final and conclusive. If objections are raised, then
-any one person whose claim is disallowed, or any three persons who
-object to the allowance of some one else’s claim, can proceed to trial
-at the Assizes on a feigned issue. The verdict of the trial is to be
-final. Due notice of trial must be given and the allotment suspended.
-The Commissioners cannot determine on questions of title which may
-still be tried at law.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Provisions for Lord of the Manor._--The Archbishop of Canterbury is
-Lord of the Manor of Croydon and also of Waddon, and there are six
-other Lords whose manors lie either wholly or partly within the parish,
-_i.e._ (1) Robert Harris, Esq., of Bermondsey; (2) Richard Carew,
-Esq., of Norbury; (3) John Cator, Esq., of Bensham; (4) William Parker
-Hamond, Esq., of Haling; (5) James Trecothick, Esq., of Addington,
-otherwise Temple, who also claims for Bardolph and Bures. (6) The
-Warden and Poor of the Hospital of Holy Trinity (Whitgift Foundation)
-of Croham. Each of these 7 Lords is to have one-eighteenth of the
-Commons and Wastes lying within his Manor. But whereas James Trecothick
-claims some quit-rents in the Manor of Croydon, if he makes good his
-claim to the Commissioners, then the Archbishop’s eighteenth is to be
-divided between James Trecothick and the Archbishop, and this is to
-be taken by James Trecothick as his whole share as Lord of a Manor.
-The Archbishop can also have part of Norwood Common in lieu of his due
-share of Norwood woodlands.
-
-Manorial rights, save Right of Soil, continue as before.
-
-Compensation for the timber in Norwood Woodlands is to be fixed by the
-Commissioners and paid by the allottees to the Archbishop.
-
-_Provision for Tithe Owners._--For Rectorial Tithes, such parcel or
-parcels as Commissioners judge to be full equivalent.
-
-Whereas the Archbishop claims that Norwood Woodlands (295 acres)
-are exempt from all tithes, this claim is to be determined by the
-Commissioners or at law, and if not found good, another parcel to be
-set out as full equivalent.
-
-But the tithe allotments in all are not to equal in value more than
-one-ninths of the Commons, marshes etc.
-
-For Vicar’s tithes over Norwood Common, an equivalent parcel of land.
-
-_Provisions for the Poor._--If the inhabitants of Croydon prove their
-claim to Rights of Common on Norwood Common, and in Norwood Commonable
-Woods to the satisfaction of the Commissioners, or before a Court (if
-it is tried at law) then the Commissioners are to set out from the
-Commons, Wastes, etc., as much land as they judge to be equivalent to
-such right, ‘having particular Regard to the Accommodation of Houses
-and Cottages contiguous to the said Commons, etc.,’ and this land is
-to remain common, for the use of the inhabitants of Croydon, subject
-to the right of getting gravel from it. Suppose, however, that the
-inhabitants’ claim is not allowed, or if allowed does not equal 215
-acres of common in value: even then the Commissioners are to set out
-215 acres for the above purpose. These 215 acres are to be vested in
-the Vicar, Churchwardens, Overseers, and 6 Inhabitants chosen at a
-Vestry meeting. These trustees can inclose as much as a seventh part
-and let it on lease for 21 years. They are to manage the common with
-regard to stint, etc., and to dispose of rents.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--The open common fields, commons, marshes,
-etc., to be divided amongst the several persons ‘according to their
-respective Rights and Interests,’ due regard being paid to Quality,
-Quantity, and Situation, and the allotments being placed as near the
-Homesteads, etc., as is consistent with general convenience.
-
-All houses erected 20 years and more before the Act, and the Sites of
-all such houses to be considered as ancient messuages entitled to right
-of common, with the exception of houses built on encroachments, the
-owners of which are to have whatever allotment the Commissioners think
-fair and reasonable.
-
-The Commissioners are to give notice of a place where a schedule
-of allotments can be inspected and of a meeting where objections
-can be heard. The Commissioners are to hear complaints, but their
-determination is to be binding and conclusive on all parties.
-
-When the award is drawn up ‘the said Allotments, Partitions, Divisions,
-and Exchanges, and all Orders, and Directions, Penalties, Impositions,
-Regulations and Determinations so to be made as aforesaid, in and by
-such Award or Instrument, shall be, and are hereby declared to be
-final, binding and conclusive unto and upon all Persons interested in
-the said Division and Inclosure.’ Persons who refuse to accept within
-an appointed time, or who molest others who accept, are ‘divested of
-all Right of Possession, Right of Pasturage and Common, and all other
-Right, Estate and Interest whatsoever in the allotments.’ Allotments
-are to be of the same tenure as the estates in right of which they are
-given. Copyhold allotments in the Manors of Croydon and Waddon can be
-enfranchised by the Commissioners at the request of the allottees, a
-part of such allotments being deducted and given to the Archbishop for
-compensation. Allotments may be laid together if the different owners
-wish it.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Those made within 6 months not to count. Those of 20
-years old and over to remain with present possessor, but not to confer
-right to an allotment.
-
-Encroachments under 20 years old, (1) if the encroacher has a right to
-an allotment, then it shall be given to him as whole or part of that
-allotment (not reckoning the value of buildings and improvements);
-(2) if the allotment to which he has a right is unequal in value to
-the encroachment, or if he has no right to an allotment, he can pay
-the surplus or the whole price at the rate of £10 an acre; (3) if the
-encroacher cannot or will not purchase, the Commissioners are to allot
-him his encroachment for which he is to pay rent at the rate of 12s.
-an acre a year for ever, such rent being apportioned to whomever the
-Commissioners direct as part of their allotment.
-
-Provisions are also made for giving encroachers allotments elsewhere
-instead, in certain cases.
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done by allottees. If the proportion of fencing to
-be done by any allottee is unfair, the Commissioners have power to
-equalise it. _Exception._--(1) The allotment to Rector for Tithes which
-is to be fenced at the expense of or by the person or persons whom the
-Commissioners appoint; (2) The allotments belonging to certain estates
-leased out at reserved rents by the Archbishop and by Trinity Hospital
-for 21 years, are to be fenced by the lessees; to compensate lessees
-new leases are to be allowed; (3) Allotments to Charity Estates (except
-Trinity Hospital) are to have a part deducted from them and be fenced
-by the Commissioners. If any proprietor refuses to fence, his neighbour
-can, on complaint to a J.P., obtain an order or an authorisation to
-enter, do the fencing, and take the rents till it is paid for.
-
-Guard fences to protect the quickset are allowed.
-
-_Penalty for damaging fences_ from 40s. to £10. The owner of the
-damaged fence may give evidence. Half the penalty goes to the informer
-and half to the owner. But if the owner informs, the whole penalty goes
-to the Overseer.
-
-Estates may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre to meet expenses of
-fencing. Roads are not to be depastured for 10 years.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To meet all expenses (including the lawsuits on feigned
-issues) part of the Commons, Wastes, etc., are to be sold by public
-auction. Private sales are also authorised, but no one person may buy
-privately more than 2 acres; except that if James Trecothick, Esq., so
-wishes, the Commissioners are to sell him by private contract part of
-Addington Hills at what they judge a fair and reasonable price.
-
-Any surplus is to be paid to the Highways or Poor Rates within 6 months
-after award. Commissioners are to keep Accounts, which must be open to
-Inspection.
-
-Common Rights and Interests may be sold before the execution of the
-award by allottees except the Archbishop, the Vicar, Trinity Hospital,
-and Trustees for Charitable purposes.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--In the case of leases at rack-rent the
-Commissioners are to set out the allotment to the owner, but the owner
-is to pay fair compensation to the tenant for loss of right of common,
-either by lowering his rent or by paying him a gross sum of money as
-the Commissioners direct. _Exception._--If the Commissioners think it a
-more equitable course they may allot the allotment to the tenant during
-his lease, and settle what extra rent he shall pay in respect of the
-owner’s expense in fencing, etc.
-
-Satisfaction for crops, ploughing, tilling, manuring, etc. is to be
-given in cases where the ground is allotted to a new possessor.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners have power to set out and shut up roads (turnpike
-roads excluded), footpaths, etc., but if they shut up a footpath
-through old inclosed land, the person for whose benefit it is shut is
-to pay such compensation as the Commissioners decide, the money going
-towards the Expenses of the Act.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases, _e.g._
-claims and allotment, where the Commissioners’ decisions are final and
-conclusive or a provision for trial at law is made.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--As soon as the Act is passed the
-Commissioners are to have sole direction of the course of husbandry.
-Exception.--They are not to interfere with Thomas Wood and Peter Wood,
-Gentlemen, in their cultivation of such parts of the common fields of
-Waddon as are leased to them by the Archbishop. (Four years of the
-lease are still to run.)
-
-
-AWARD.--Date, March 2, 1801. Clerk of Peace or of County Council,
-Surrey.
-
-
-AMENDING ACT, 1803.--(Private, 43 George III. c. 53.)
-
-Passed in response to a petition (February 16, 1803) from the Vicar,
-Churchwardens, Overseers, and other inhabitants of Croydon, stating
-that whereas the Commissioners have set out 237 acres 2 roods for the
-inhabitants of Croydon, instead of 215 acres, doubts have arisen as to
-whether this land is vested in trustees as was directed to be done with
-the 215 acres.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES.--The 237 acres 2 roods to be treated as the 215 acres.
-Land up to 5 acres to be sold to defray cost of this new Act; any
-surplus to go to Use and Benefit of Poor, any deficit to be made up by
-rents or sale of gravel.
-
-
-NOTE ON RESULTS.--Third Report of Select Committee on Emigration,
-1826-7, p. 369. Dr. Benjamin Wills stated that as the result of the
-loss of common rights suffered under the Bill, he had seen some 900
-persons summoned for the Poor Rate. ‘By the destruction of the common
-rights, and giving no remuneration to the poor man, a gentleman has
-taken an immense tract of it and converted it into a park: a person in
-the middling walk of life has bought an acre or two; and though this
-common in its original state was not so valuable as it has been made,
-yet the poor man should have been consulted in it; and the good that it
-was originally to him was of such a nature that, destroying that, has
-had an immense effect.’
-
-
-APPENDIX A (5)
-
-HAUTE HUNTRE, LINCS.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1767
-
-
-AREA.--22,000 Acres ‘more or less.’
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Haute Huntre, Eight Hundred or Holland Fen and other
-commonable places adjacent.
-
-Owners and Proprietors of Houses and Toftsteads in the following 11
-Parishes or Townships have Right of Common:--Boston West, Skirbeck
-Quarter, Wyberton, Frampton, Kirton, Algarkirke, Fosdyke, Sutterton,
-Wigtoft, Swineshead, and Brothertoft; and also in a place called Dog
-Dyke in the Parish of Billinghay.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_December 4, 1766._--Petition for enclosure
-from various owners and proprietors with right of common, asking that
-the fen shall be divided up into specific allotments for each Town.
-Leave given. Bill read first time, December 9.
-
-_March 4, 1767._--Long petition against the bill from (1) the Master,
-Fellows and Scholars of Trinity College, Cambridge, which College
-is Impropriator of the Great Tythes, and Patron of the Vicarage of
-Swineshead, (2) the Rev. John Shaw, Patron and Rector of Wyberton, (3)
-Zachary Chambers, Esq., Lord of the Manor of Swineshead, and others.
-The petition gave a history of the movement for enclosure. On August
-26, 1766, a meeting of several gentlemen and others was held at the
-Angel Inn, Sleaford, at which a resolution was passed that a Plan or
-Survey of the fen with a return of the Houses etc., with Right of
-Common should be made before a bill was brought in. On October 16,
-1766, a public meeting of several proprietors was held at Sleaford at
-which some of those present proposed to read a bill for dividing and
-inclosing the fen; the great majority however of those present objected
-to this course, and requested and insisted that as no Survey had been
-produced, nothing further should be done till the following spring,
-‘but notwithstanding the said Request, some few of the said Proprietors
-then present proposed that a Petition for the said Bill might then be
-signed; which Proposition being rejected by a considerable Majority,
-the said few Proprietors declared their Resolution to sign such a
-Petition, as soon as their then Meeting was broke up, without any
-Resolutions being concluded upon, or the Sentiments of the Majority of
-the Proprietors either entered down or paid any Regard to, and without
-making any Adjournment of the said Meeting; and that, soon after the
-said Meeting broke up, some of the Proprietors present at the said
-Meeting signed the Petition, in consequence of which the said Bill hath
-been brought in.’ The petitioners also pointed out that the petition
-for enclosure was signed by very few proprietors except those in Boston
-West, and requested that no further measures should be taken till next
-session, and that meanwhile the Survey in question should be made, and
-suggested that the present bill was in many respects exceptionable, and
-asked to be heard by Counsel against the bill as it now stood. Petition
-to lie on table till second reading.
-
-_March 6, 1767._--Bill read second time and committed. Petition
-referred to Committee.
-
-_March 21._--Petition against the bill from Sir Charles Frederick,
-Knight of the Bath, sole owner of Brothertoft, where there are 51
-Cottages or Toftsteads with right of common. Referred to Committee.
-
-_March 27._--Petition against the bill from Sir Gilbert Heathcote,
-Bart. and others; bill injurious to interests. Referred to Committee.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_April 29, 1767._--Lord Brownlow
-Bertie reported from the Committee; Committee had heard Counsel in
-favour of the first petition and considered the other two; that the
-Allegations of the Bill were true; and that the Parties concerned had
-given their consent to the Bill to the satisfaction of the Committee
-‘(except 94 Persons with Right of Common and Property of the Annual
-Value of £3177, 2s. 6d. who refused, and except 53 Persons with Right
-of Common and Property of the Annual Value of £694, 10s. who could not
-be found, and except 40 Persons with Right of Common and Property of
-the Annual Value of £1310, 0s. 6d. who declared they were indifferent,
-and that the whole Number of Persons with Right of Common is 614, and
-the whole Property of the Annual Value of £23,347, 8s.).’ Several
-amendments were made in the Bill and it was sent up to the Lords.
-In the Lords, petitions against it were received from Sir Gilbert
-Heathcote (May 7) and Samuel Reynardson, Esq. (May 14), both of which
-were referred to the Committee. Several amendments were made, including
-the insertion of a clause giving the Proprietors or Occupiers the same
-right of common over the Parish allotment as they already had over the
-whole. Royal Assent, June 29, 1767.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 7 George III. c. 112.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Five are to be appointed; they are to be chosen by
-eleven persons, each representing one of the eleven townships. These
-eleven persons are to be elected in each township by the owners and
-proprietors of Houses, Toftsteads, and Lands which formerly paid
-Dyke-reeve assessments; except in the case of Brothertoft, where Sir
-Charles Frederick, as sole owner and proprietor, nominates the person.
-No person interested in the inclosure is to be chosen as Commissioner,
-and in addition to the usual oath of acting ‘without favour or
-affection’ the Commissioners are required to take the following oath:--
-
-‘I, A. B., do swear, that I am neither Proprietor nor Occupier of,
-nor, to the best of my Knowledge, am I concerned as Guardian, Steward
-or Agent for any Proprietor of any Houses, Toftsteads, or Lands within
-any of the Parishes of’ (names given) ‘or for any Person to whom any
-Allotment is to be made by virtue of the said Act.’
-
-Three Commissioners are a quorum. Vacancies are to be filled by the
-11 persons elected as before. If they fail to do so, the remaining
-Commissioners can nominate. Survey to be made by persons appointed
-by the Commissioners, and number of present Houses and Toftsteads to
-be recorded except in Boston West and Brothertoft. Edward Draper of
-Boston, Gentleman, to be Clerk.
-
-
-PAYMENT.--Commissioners each to have £210 and no more. Two guineas to
-be deducted for each day’s absence.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--Nothing is said about sending in claims, as the survey giving
-the Houses, etc., does instead. If any difference or dispute arise
-between parties interested in the division with respect to shares,
-rights, interests, and proportions, the Commissioners are to hear them,
-and their determination is to be binding and conclusive.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_To Lords of the Manor._--Zachary Chambers, Esq., is Lord of the Manor
-of Swineshead; Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is Lord of the Manor of
-Frampton. These two are intitled jointly to the soil of the fen, and
-Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is also intitled ‘to the Brovage or
-Agistment’ of 480 head of cattle on the fen every year.
-
-(1) Zachary Chambers, Esq., is to have 120 Acres in one piece in a part
-called Brand End in lieu of his rights of soil and of all mines and
-quarries of what nature whatsoever.
-
-(2) Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is to have 120 Acres in one piece,
-near Great Beets, for his rights of soil and of mines and quarries.[492]
-
-Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is also to have in lieu of his right of
-Brovage a parcel of the same number of acres that were given by an Act
-of 9 James I. to the Lords of the Manor of Swineshead for Brovage.
-
-_Tithe Owners._--Not mentioned.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--After part has been sold for expenses (see
-below) and after allotment to the Lords of the Manor, the residue is
-to be divided amongst the eleven townships and Dog Dyke in proportion
-and according to the number of Houses and Toftsteads in each parish.
-For Brothertoft and Dog Dyke there are special arrangements; in
-the ten remaining townships or parishes, the following method is
-to be pursued:--For each House or Tenement there must be 4 acres,
-and for each Toftstead 2 acres allowed; when this proportion has
-been set out, the remainder is to be shared out in proportion to
-the Dyke-reeve assessments before the passing of a recent drainage
-Act. Quantity, Quality, and Situation are to be considered. _Special
-provision._--Boston West is to have the same proportion of fen as
-Frampton.
-
-The share that each of the above ten townships receives is to be the
-common fen belonging to the township or parish, subject to the same
-common rights as the present fen, and is to be contiguous to the
-township.
-
-_Brothertoft and Dog Dyke allotments._--The allotment for Brothertoft
-is to be half as many acres as are allotted to Boston West, and is to
-go to Sir Charles Frederick, sole owner and proprietor, and to be near
-Brothertoft.
-
-The Allotment to Dog Dyke is to be calculated in reference to the share
-that Brothertoft receives. Each House or Toftstead in Dog Dyke is to
-have 2/3 of the proportion that each House or Toftstead in Brothertoft
-is assigned. The Dog Dyke Allotment is to go to Earl Fitzwilliam, the
-sole owner, and is to be near the Earl’s gardens.
-
-If any half-year lands, and other inclosed lands, directed to be sold
-(see Expenses) remain unsold, these are to be sold and the leases are
-to be allotted to the parishes in such proportions as the Commissioners
-direct.
-
-An award is to be drawn up and its provisions are binding and
-conclusive.
-
-
-FENCING.--Each township’s share is to be divided by an 8-feet wide
-ditch and a quick hedge, and guarded with a fence and rail 4-1/2 feet
-high, with double bars of fir or deal and with oak posts; the fence
-and the rail are to be nailed or mortified together. The Commissioners
-do this fencing out of the money raised for defraying the expenses of
-the Act, but each township is to keep up its fences according to the
-Commissioners’ directions. The fences, etc., are to be made within 18
-months.
-
-_Penalty_ for wilfully and maliciously cutting, breaking down, burning,
-demolishing, or destroying any division fence:
-
- 1st offence (before 2 J.P.’s), fine of £5 to £20, or from 1 to 3
- months in House of Correction.
-
- 2nd offence (before 2 J.P.’s), fine of £10 to £40, or from 6 to 12
- months in House of Correction.
-
- 3rd offence (before Quarter Sessions), transportation for 7 years as a
- felon.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To defray all expenses the Commissioners can--
-
-(1) sell the Right of Acreage or Common upon certain specified
-half-year lands,[493] _e.g._ The Frith, Great Beets, Little Beets, the
-Mown Rakes, etc., to the owners and proprietors of these lands. If the
-owners refuse to buy or do not pay enough to cover the expenses of the
-Act, the Commissioners can--
-
-(2) sell part of the Fen. In this case the first land to be sold is
-Coppin Sykes Plot, Ferry Corner Plot, Pepper Gowt Plot, and Brand End
-Plot; the next land, Gibbet Hills.
-
-As Coppin Sykes Plot, etc., belong to the Commissioners of two Drainage
-Acts, the drainage Commissioners can as compensation charge rates on
-the respective townships instead, and if any township refuses to pay,
-they can inclose a portion of its allotment, but not for tillage.
-
-_Penalty for taking turf or sod_ after Act.
-
-Culprit can be tried before one J.P., and fined from 40s. to £10,
-or, if he or she fails to pay, be given hard labour in the House of
-Correction for 1 to 3 months, or till the penalty is paid. Notice of
-this penalty is to be fixed on Church and Chapel Doors and published in
-newspapers.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases where the
-Commissioners’ decisions are said to be final and conclusive.
-
-
-AWARD.--Date, May 19, 1769. With Clerk of Peace or County Council,
-Lincoln.
-
-From _Annual Register_, 1769, p. 116 (Chronicle for July 16):
-
-‘Holland Fen, in Lincolnshire, being to be inclosed by act of
-parliament, some desperate persons have been so incensed at what they
-called their right being taken from them, that in the dead of night
-they shot into the windows of several gentlemen whom they thought
-active in procuring the act for inclosure; but happily no person has
-been killed.’
-
-
-AMENDING ACT, 1770.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_January 25, 1770._--Petition for an
-amending Act from the Commissioners who carried out the previous one;
-stating that ‘the Posts and Rails for many Miles in the Division
-Fences, which have been erected pursuant to the Directions of the said
-Act, have been pulled down, and the greatest Part thereof destroyed,
-together with great Part of the Materials for completing the said
-Fencing,’ and asking for leave to take down the Fencing and to make
-wide ditches instead.
-
-Leave given. Bill passed both Houses and received Royal Assent.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF AMENDING ACT.--(Private, 10 George III. c. 40.)
-
-The Commissioners are empowered to take down the posts and rails, and
-to make ditches 10 feet wide and 5 feet deep as boundaries instead.
-
-The Posts and Rails are to be sold, and the proceeds are to defray
-the expenses of this Act and the costs of the Commissioners. The
-Commissioners are to have a sum of £31, 10s. each as payment, with 2
-guineas deducted for each day’s absence.
-
-Edward Draper, Clerk to the Commissioners, is to be repaid up to £1000,
-his costs in prosecuting fence-destroyers.
-
-If any proprietor has already made ditches wide enough, he is to be
-repaid his proportion.
-
-Any surplus is to be handed over to Drainage Commissioners.
-
-
-NOTES:--
-
- Act. Award.
- Boston West division was enclosed in 1771 1772
- Algarkirke cum Fosdyke „ 1771
- Frampton „ „ „ 1784
- Kirton „ „ „ 1772 1773
- Skirbeck „ „ „ 1771 1772
- Swineshead „ „ „ 1773 1774
- Sutterton „ „ „ 1772 1773
- Wigtoft „ „ „ 1772 1773
- Wyberton „ „ „ 1789
-
-
-APPENDIX A (6)
-
-KNARESBOROUGH FOREST.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1770
-
-
-AREA.--About 20,000 acres.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Open, Commonable or Waste Lands.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 8, 1770._--Petition for enclosure
-from several freehold and copyhold tenants within the Forest; stating
-that the said tracts are of little advantage now, whereas it would
-be of public utility to have them divided into just allotments and
-enclosed. Leave given, bill presented, read twice, March 19; committed
-March 28. Petition against the bill from ‘a very great Number of the
-Freeholders, and Customary or Copyhold Tenants having Right of Common,’
-stating that the bill contains provisions very injurious to the
-petitioners and others. Referred to the Committee.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_May 7, 1770._--Lord Strange
-reported from the Committee that the allegations of the bill were true,
-that no person had appeared before the Committee to oppose the bill,
-and that ‘the Parties concerned had given their Consent’ ‘(except the
-Proprietors of Land in the Seven Lower Constableries, assessed to
-the Land Tax at £47, 2s. 3d. per Annum, and the Proprietors of Land
-in the Four Higher Constableries assessed to the Land Tax at £118,
-3s. 6-3/4d., and that the whole of the Assessment in the Seven Lower
-Constableries, and for Estates of several Persons adjoining, being
-within the District called the Forest, in virtue whereof Right of
-Common is enjoyed, amounts to £497, 1s. 4-1/2d., and in the Four High
-Hamlets to £183, 9s. 8d.).’
-
-The bill passed both Houses and received the Royal Assent on May 19.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 10 George III. c. 94.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Five appointed. William Hill of Tadcaster, Gentleman;
-Joseph Butter of Bowthorp, Surveyor; William Chippendale of Ripley,
-Surveyor; John Flintoff of Boroughbridge, Surveyor; Thomas Furness of
-Otley, Gentleman. Vacancies to be filled up by remaining Commissioners.
-Three are a quorum.
-
-
-ARBITRATORS.--Nine appointed by name. Two can act. Vacancies to be
-filled up by Commissioners from barristers.
-
-
-SURVEYORS.--Three named, two of them are also Commissioners. Vacancies
-to be filled up by Commissioners.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS, ARBITRATORS AND SURVEYORS.--Nothing stated.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims to be delivered in at the first, second or third
-meeting; claims must be in writing and must specify and contain ‘an
-Account and Description of the Messuage or Messuages, antient Building
-or Buildings, and Lands’ in respect of which the claim is made, and
-also the name or names of the person or persons in actual possession.
-For a month after the third meeting all claims are to be open to the
-inspection of other claimants. Failure to deliver in ‘such Writing and
-Account as aforesaid’ at the first three meetings debars the would-be
-claimant from all right to allotment, ‘Infancy, Coverture, Lunacy, or
-any other general legal Impediment whatsoever of or in any such Person
-in anywise notwithstanding.’
-
-If claims are duly made and no objection raised to them by any
-person, they are to be allowed finally and conclusively at the
-fourth meeting; and no right so allowed can be disputed afterwards.
-Supposing objections are made by any two other claimants or by any
-Commissioner present, then the matter is to be referred to two or more
-of the arbitrators whose decision is to be final and conclusive. If
-unreasonable, unjust, frivolous or vexatious claims or objections are
-made, the Arbitrators can assess the costs on the maker.
-
-In deciding on claims, 40 years’ enjoyment of commonage is to be
-considered to confer a right, when it is enjoyed in respect of owning
-ancient messuages, etc., whether situated within or without the limits
-of the Forest (save and except in respect of Commonage by Vicinage).
-
-The quantity and the value of the lands in virtue of which claims are
-made, are to be adjudged by the Commissioners, and such judgment is to
-be final and conclusive, but no ancient Messuage or Building or Scite
-thereof is to be allowed at greater value than any other.
-
-Disputes between landlords and tenants are to be referred to the
-Arbitrators, and their award is to be final and conclusive.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Provisions for the Lord of the Manor_ (the King).--(1) One-tenth part
-of the whole, after allotments for Stone Quarries, watering places
-and roads have been deducted; ‘the said Tenth Part to consist of a
-proportionable Share of the best and worst kind of Land as near as may
-be.’
-
-(2) All incroachments made within 40 years, and held by persons not
-entitled to right of common; but see Incroachments.
-
-(3) The King’s rights to Mines, Minerals, and Quarries (except Stone
-Quarries) are not to be prejudiced, but he or his lessee is to pay
-reasonable satisfaction for any damage done, such satisfaction to
-be determined by 2 or more J.P.’s, or, if the parties are still
-dissatisfied, by a Jury of 12.
-
-_Provisions for Tithe Owners._--Such portions as the Commissioners
-shall adjudge to be ‘full Recompence and Satisfaction.’
-
-_For Stone Quarries, Watering Places, and Roads._--Such allotment as
-the Commissioners think requisite.
-
-_For Harrogate Stray._--‘Whereas there are within the constableries
-of Bilton with Harrowgate and Beckwith with Rosset, or One of them,
-certain Wells or Springs of medicinal Waters, commonly called
-Harrowgate Spaws, to which during the Summer Season great Numbers of
-Persons constantly resort to receive the Benefit of the said Waters
-to the great Advantage and Emolument of Tradesmen, Farmers, and other
-Persons in that Neighbourhood, and the Persons resorting to the said
-Waters now have the Benefit of taking the Air upon the open Part of
-the said Constableries,’ it is enacted that 200 acres of land near the
-said springs shall be set apart and left free and open for ever. The
-Freeholders and Copyholders within the said Constableries are to have
-right of pasture on these 200 acres, the stint being regulated by the
-Commissioners, and such right of common being taken as part of their
-respective allotments.
-
-_For the Poor._--None.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--To be allotted to the Persons entitled to
-commonage ‘in Proportion to the real Value of their several and
-respective Messuages, Lands, and Tenements’ in respect of which they
-are entitled. Quality and situation to be considered in settling the
-Quantum. Allotments must be accepted within six months after award (see
-also Fencing).
-
-Award to be drawn up with all particulars, but nothing is specifically
-said about its being final. It is to be Evidence in Courts of Law.
-
-Stone Quarries are to be vested in the landholders. Allotments to
-be of the same tenure as the property in virtue of which they are
-given. Timber is to belong to copyholders as if they were freeholders.
-Disputes arising in the execution of the Act, which do not affect the
-persons in general interested in the Inclosure, can, if all the Parties
-concerned in the particular dispute wish it, be referred to some other
-Arbitrator or Arbitrators not mentioned in the Act, and his or their
-decision is to be final.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--(1) Incroachments 40 years old and upwards, with all
-buildings thereon, to be absolute property of persons in possession;
-but Copyhold.
-
-(2) Incroachments made within 40 years.
-
-(_a_) If incroachers are also owners who have a right of common, then
-the incroachments are to be given as their respective allotments
-(reckoning the value of the land only). If any particular incroachment
-is bigger than the allotment to which the incroacher is entitled, the
-surplus ground is to be treated as ordinary distributable ground.
-
-(_b_) If incroachers are not entitled to right of common, then their
-incroachments, together with all the buildings on them, are to go
-to the King as Lord of the Manor; But whereas these incroachments
-‘consist chiefly of Buildings and Inclosures which have been erected
-and inclosed, or are held and enjoyed by poor Persons who have, by
-their own Industry and Labour, built and improved the same, or by
-Persons who have been at considerable Charges therein,’ His Majesty
-is graciously pleased to grant Leases for 40 years in possession, ‘to
-the End no Person whatsoever may be removed from or deprived of his,
-her, or their present Possessions.’ These leases are to hold good even
-though not amounting to one-third of the improved annual value of the
-incroachments. After 40 years, full rents must be taken. _Exception_ to
-(2 _b_).--Small incroachments made for Workhouses, for cottages of Poor
-chargeable to the Parish, or for Free Schools, are to be assigned to
-Trustees for benefit of the users.
-
-In spite of above provisions any Incroachments which the Commissioners
-think fit can be set out for roads, ditches, or fences, etc.
-
-
-FENCING.--In the paragraph about selling land for expenses it says
-that the Ring fences to be made by Commissioners, but elsewhere it
-says fencing to be done by allottees under Commissioners’ directions.
-_Exception._--Tithe allotments which are to be fenced by other
-proprietors, and certain other cases. If allottees do not fence,
-Commissioners do it for them and charge. If any persons think their
-allotments not worth fencing, then two or more of them whose allotments
-are contiguous can agree to leave them unenclosed, provided that within
-12 months they set up a good stone wall or other substantial Fence
-between their allotments and those of others. They must keep this wall
-or fence in repair always.
-
-No sheep or goats to be kept for 7 years in any Inclosure adjoining a
-boundary fence, unless a special wall or Pale-fence is provided.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To be defrayed by sale at auction of parcels of land.
-Any surplus to be distributed amongst allottees in proportion to
-allotments. But if a Majority in Value of the persons interested do
-not wish any land sold, they can signify the same in writing, and can
-deposit a sufficient sum of money for the purposes of the Act with the
-Commissioners, and then the provisions for sale cease. Mortgages, in
-certain cases up to 50s. an acre, to meet expenses are allowed.
-
-
-ROADS.--In Award, Commissioners are to give orders for laying out
-roads, etc.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--None.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases where
-decisions are said to be final and conclusive.
-
-
-AWARD.--June 25, 1775. Duchy of Lancaster.
-
-
-AMENDING ACT, 1774.--(Private, 14 George III. c. 54.)
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 21, 1774._--Petition from Sir
-Bellingham Graham, Bart., Walter Masterman, Esq., and others stating
-that the land to defray expenses is not yet sold, and asking for
-an amending Act to enable the Petitioners and others to pay their
-respective shares instead of the land being sold. Leave given and
-bill brought in. March 23, 1774, Petition from Mary Denison of Leeds,
-widow, and her heirs, who had ‘neglected to deliver her Claim of Common
-Right within the Time limited by the said Act, of which Neglect the
-Petitioners were not acquainted till after the Third Meeting of the
-Commissioners; soon after which the Petitioners caused a Claim to be
-made and delivered, but the said Commissioners refused to accept the
-same,’ asking for relief. Petition referred to the Committee, with
-instructions that they have power to make provision in the bill.
-
-_March 25._--Petition from several persons asking relief on same
-grounds as Ellen Oxley (see April 15 below).
-
-Petition from various persons asking that their allotments may be near
-within their townships.
-
-_April 14._--Petition from Daniel Lascelles, Esq., Sir Savile Slingsby,
-Oliver Coghill, Esq., and the Rev. William Roundell stating that
-they sent in claims as owners of rights of common; that these claims
-were referred to the Arbitrators; and that ‘it was discovered that
-Mistakes were made in the Description of such Tenements, or some Parts
-therof; and that, notwithstanding the said Errors arose merely from
-Inadvertency, and in no respect altered the Merits of the Petitioners’
-Claims, the Arbitrators did not think fit to permit the Petitioners to
-rectify the same,’ but disallowed the claims. The Petitioners ask for
-reconsideration.
-
-_April 15._--Petitions from Rev. Thomas Collins who through
-‘Inadvertency’ had neglected to deliver in his claim of common right in
-respect of two Copyhold Messuages within the specified time, and from
-Francis Bedford, ditto, _re_ copyhold close.
-
-_April 15._--Petition from Ellen Oxley and John Clarke, stating that
-they preferred claims of common rights to the Commissioners; that
-these claims were objected to and referred to the Arbitrators, who
-heard divers claims, several of which they disallowed; that as Ellen
-Oxley and John Clarke could not produce such evidence as was required
-by the Arbitrators in support of their claims, they withdrew them;
-that subsequently a Verdict was produced and read in evidence to the
-Arbitrators, by means of which similar claims were allowed.
-
-Bill passed both Houses. Royal Assent.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF AMENDING ACT.--(Private, 14 George III. c. 54.)
-
-New Commissioner added, Richard Richardson (who was one of the
-Surveyors under the former Act).
-
-
-EXPENSES.--Commissioners can set out allotments without abatement for
-sale to 48 persons named, and other allottees who give notice. In the
-case of these allottees, the Commissioners are to settle their quota of
-charges and assess them accordingly.
-
-The Commissioners in rendering their account may charge one guinea
-a day for loss of time, and 10s. a day for expenses. The surveyors’
-charges must be ‘reasonable and moderate.’ The Commissioners must give
-an account before they call for payment, and the account is to be open
-to inspection at the charge of 6d.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--The claims of 32 persons named, which have been disallowed
-or withdrawn (1) for want of evidence; (2) for misnomers; (3) for
-failure to deliver in time, are to be reconsidered. Such claims must
-be delivered in at the first meeting, and must not be greater than
-they were before. They can be referred on appeal to the Arbitrators as
-before, but the appellant must now give security for costs in case the
-appeal fails.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--As some encroachments of over 40 years standing are
-found to have no right of common (and so cannot contribute their share
-to the Tithe Allotment), tithes can be charged on these in the form of
-rent charges.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions in respect of the Commissioners’
-accounts, if any person interested thinks any item unreasonable, and no
-satisfactory explanation is forthcoming.
-
-
-AWARD (for 2 Acts).--June 25, 1775. Duchy of Lancaster.
-
-From the Award we learn as follows:--
-
-Over 2751 Acres were sold to meet the expenses of the Act.
-
-The King received 2344 acres.
-
-The tithe owners received 4694 acres odd.
-
-The remainder was divided amongst over 700 different persons and
-bodies. The allottees’ shares varied from as much as 1386 acres
-(Devisees of Sir John Ingelby, Bart.) down to a few perches.
-
-The amount that went to trustees for the use of the poor, including the
-various small incroachments (for schools, workhouses, etc.), which were
-allowed to stand was about 32 acres.
-
-
-NOTES ON AFTER-HISTORY.--_Annals of Agriculture_, vol. xxvii. p.
-292.--In 1793 Arthur Young bought an estate in Knaresborough Forest
-of about 4400 acres; 4000 acres of this was waste land, let out at a
-rental of 6d. an acre; 2751 acres of the estate were copyhold, and had
-been sold to pay the expenses of inclosure. The rest had formed part of
-the King’s allotment, and was hired on a long lease. On the 400 acres
-of cultivated land there were 3 farmhouses. The game of the waste was
-let for £30 a year; peats dug from it produced £6 to £8 a year, and
-Arthur Young calculated that one Scotch wether could be supported per
-acre.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (7)
-
-LALEHAM.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1774
-
-
-AREA.--(From Award), 918 Acres.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--‘Several large and open Fields,’ ‘and likewise
-certain Wastes and Commons.’
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--
-
-
-FIRST ATTEMPT, JANUARY 31, 1767.--Petition from Sir James Lowther, Lord
-of the Manor, and from ‘divers owners’ for enclosure of the open fields
-and commons, and also of ‘a large Pasture called Laleham Burway.’ Leave
-given, but bill dropped after first reading.
-
-_Second attempt, December 7, 1767._--Petition for enclosure from Sir
-James Lowther alone, on behalf of himself and others. Leave given; bill
-prepared by Mr. Anthony Bacon and Mr. Fuller, read twice and committed
-(December 14) to Mr. Bacon, Mr. Jenkinson, Sir James Lowther, and
-others.
-
-_December 21, 1767._--Petition against the bill from various persons,
-being Owners, Proprietors and Occupiers entitled to Rights of Common,
-and also Owners of Cow Gates on Laleham Burway, setting forth ‘that
-the Inclosure sought by the said Bill is contrary to the general Sense
-and Opinion of the Petitioners and others, who compose a Majority in
-Number of the Owners or Proprietors of, or Persons interested’ in the
-Inclosure, and also stating that the meadow of Laleham Burway is not
-within the Manor of Laleham, but has been proved by a trial at law to
-be part of the Manor of Chertsey Beaumont. Petitioners to be heard on
-Report.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_December 21, 1767_ (same
-day).--Mr. Anthony Bacon reported from the Committee that the
-Allegations of the Bill were true, and ‘that the Parties concerned had
-given their Consent to the Bill, to the Satisfaction of the Committee
-(except the Proprietors of Estates, who are entitled to Right of Common
-in the said Manor, who are rated to the Poors Rate to the Amount of
-£8, 2s. 0d. per Annum; and also the Proprietors of Estates, who are
-intitled to Right of Common in the said Manor, who are rated to the
-Poors Rate to the Amount of 15s. per Annum, who, being applied to,
-refused to sign the Bill, but declared they would not oppose the same;
-and that the whole of the Estates, in the said Manor, are rated to
-the Poors Rate to the Amount of £27, 6s. 6d. or thereabouts; and that
-the Proprietors of Eighty-six Cow Pastures or Farines, had refused to
-give their Consent to the said Bill; and that the whole Number of Cow
-Pastures, or Farines, are 292-1/2); and that no Person appeared before
-the Committee to oppose the said Bill.’
-
-The consideration of the Report was put off several times; February
-25, 1768, a debate on the subject, resumed on February 29, with the
-result that the Bill was defeated.
-
-_Third Attempt, February 28, 1774._--Petition from various owners and
-occupiers for enclosure of Laleham and of Laleham Burway. Leave given.
-Bill read first time March 18.
-
-_March 22._--Petition against the bill from various owners and
-proprietors of certain Messuages, Cottages, Farmsteads, Lands and
-Rights of Common, and also owners of Cattle gates on Laleham Burway,
-setting forth that the ‘Bill is contrary to the general Sense and
-Opinion of the Petitioners and others, who compose a great Majority
-of the real Owners and Proprietors of, or Persons interested in, the
-Lands and Grounds intended to be inclosed: and that the Petitioners
-conceive that the said Bill, if passed into a Law, will in general be
-injurious to all the Petitioners, and in particular highly burthensome
-and oppressive to such of them who enjoy small and inconsiderable
-Rights and Interests therein.’ The Petition again pointed out that
-Laleham Burway was not in the Manor of Laleham, and that apart from
-that fact, ‘Inclosure would render the Enjoyment thereof’ inconvenient
-if not impracticable. To be heard by Counsel on second reading. On
-April 15 came another Petition from William Barwell, Esq., and other
-proprietors in and near Chertsey, opposing the enclosure of Laleham
-Burway as detrimental to the proprietors thereof and to the inhabitants
-in general of Chertsey, and suggesting that it is ‘calculated only for
-the private Emolument of some One or few’ of the proprietors. Petition
-to lie on table.
-
-_May 20._--Bill read a second time. Both above Petitions read and
-Counsel against the Bill heard and several witnesses examined. Bill
-committed.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_June 7, 1774._--Mr. Norton
-reported from the Committee, that the allegations were true and that
-the parties concerned had consented ‘(except the Owners of 13 Houses
-intitled to Right of Common and the Proprietors of Lands rated to the
-Land Tax of £35, 4s. 6d. per Annum who refused to sign the Bill, and
-also except the Proprietors of Lands rated to the Land Tax at 9s. per
-Annum who could not be found; and that the whole Number of Houses
-having Right of Common is 80, and the whole of the said Lands are rated
-to the Land Tax at £168, 2s. 6d. per Annum).’
-
-A Clause was offered to be added to the Bill, for giving an Appeal
-to Quarter Sessions,[494] and this was agreed to. Other clauses to
-restrain the Commissioners from setting out a road over Laleham South
-Field and for saving the rights of tithe owners were also added.
-
-The Bill passed both Houses and received the Royal Assent, June 22,
-1774.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 14 George III. c. 114.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed:--Ralph Gowland, Esq., of Laleham;
-Thomas Jackman of Guildford; Henry Brumbridge of Thorpe.
-
-Two a quorum. Vacancies to be filled by remaining Commissioners from
-persons not interested in allotments or division.
-
-Surveyor or surveyors to be appointed by Commissioners.
-
-
-PAYMENT.--Nothing stated.
-
-A special clause enacting that they are to make the division and
-allotment on or before December 24, 1774, ‘or as soon after as
-conveniently may be done.’[495]
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims to be delivered in writing with particulars of
-right or title in respect of which claim is made at 1st or 2nd meeting.
-If any claim is objected to at 1st, 2nd, or 3rd meeting by another
-claimant then the Commissioners can hear and determine, and their
-determination is final and binding. _Exception._--If a claimant refuses
-to refer the matter to the Commissioners, then he or she can bring
-an action at law against the objector on an issue to be settled if
-necessary by the officer of the Court. But if the claimant whose claim
-is objected to fails to bring the action, and still refuses to refer
-the question to the Commissioners, then (after 3 months) he loses all
-his rights.
-
-There is also a clause ‘for the better settling the Rights and Claims
-of all the said parties so interested and concerned as aforesaid’ by
-which it is enacted that in case any difference touching rights and
-claims arises between any of the parties so interested and concerned,
-the Commissioners have power to hear and finally determine the same,
-‘which Determination shall be binding and conclusive to all Parties.’
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Lord of the Manor_ (Sir James Lowther).--No special provision
-mentioned, but see Award.
-
-Clause to say that the Lord of the Manor’s rights are not to be
-prejudiced by the Act ‘(except such Common of Pasture, or other Rights
-of Common, as can or may be claimed by or belonging to him).’
-
-_Tithe Owners._--Nothing in the Act to affect any right or title to
-tithes.
-
-_Provision for the Poor._--Nothing mentioned, but see Award.
-
-_Allotment._--The Commissioners are to make the allotments amongst the
-several persons ‘intitled to any Lands, Grounds, Right of Common or
-other Property,’ in proportion to ‘the real value of their several and
-respective Shares and Interests and Right of Common or other Property
-through and over the said Common Fields, or other the Premises to be
-allotted and divided.’ Quantity, Quality and Convenience are to be
-considered. The Commissioners are to draw up an Award as soon as is
-convenient after allotment, and ‘the several Allotments, Partitions
-and Divisions so made’ in and by the Award ‘shall be and are hereby
-declared to be binding and conclusive unto and upon all and every the
-several Parties interested in the said open and common Fields, common
-Pastures, and commonable Lands.’ Allotments must be accepted within 12
-months after award. (Saving clause for infants, etc.) Failure to accept
-excludes allottee from all benefits in lands and estates allotted to
-any other person, and the Commissioners can appoint a Bailiff or rent
-receiver with full power to manage the allotment in question, any
-surplus of profits to go to the original allottee who has refused to
-accept--until he changes his mind and accepts it.
-
-Allotments are to be of the same tenure as the estates for which they
-are claimed. The Herbage of the Lanes and Public Roads to be allotted
-to such person or persons as the Commissioners direct.
-
-A special clause to exempt Laleham Burway from division.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Not mentioned.
-
-
-FENCING.--No instructions given; except that when an allotment abuts on
-the highway, the fences are to be kept up by the owner.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--To be paid by the ‘Owners and Proprietors and Persons
-interested of and in the said Lands and Grounds’ in such proportion as
-the Commissioners decide. If persons refuse to pay, Commissioners can
-distrain or else enter on allotment and take rents. Allotments may be
-mortgaged up to 40s. an acre.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS AND OTHERS.--Leases at rack-rent ‘shall cease
-and be totally extinguished’ if Commissioners give notice; the owner
-giving such compensation to the tenant as the Commissioners direct.
-
-Underwoods, hedges, shrubs, etc., are not to be grubbed up or destroyed
-before allotment without special permission from the Commissioners, but
-are to remain for the benefit of the allottee, the allottee paying the
-former owner such compensation as the Commissioners direct.
-
-Also, If any land with woods, underwoods, hedges, shrubs, etc., is
-allotted to someone who does not already hold it, then the first
-owner may enter and fell, grub up and cut down the underwood, hedges,
-etc., and take them away, unless the same have been allotted by the
-Commissioners to the new owner.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--Only with respect to roads, and then to Quarter
-Sessions only.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--Not mentioned.
-
-
-AWARD.--Date, 1803. Record Office. During the 29 years between the Act
-and the Award 10 Commissioners were concerned, (A) Ralph Gowland, (B)
-Thomas Jackman, (C) Henry Brumbridge, (D) George Wheatley, (E) John
-Baynes Garforth, (F) Sir Philip Jennings Clarke, (G) Richard Penn,
-(H) Sir William Gibbons (see Stanwell), (I) Thomas Chapman, (J) George
-Kinderley, as follows:--
-
-C refused to act straight away. A then appointed D. B refused to sit
-in 1781. A and D appointed E. A died 1787. D and E appointed F. F died
-1788. D and E appointed G. D died 1802. E and G were desirous of being
-discharged from acting further. H was ‘duly appointed.’ E and G refused
-to act. H appointed I and J. H, I and J gave the award.
-
-_Distribution of Land._--918 acres odd, exclusive of roads, were
-divided out as follows:--
-
- Acres.
-
- _Lord Lowther_[496] (including 18-1/2 for his rights of soil), 626-1/2
- _Six other owners_ (in shares varying from 68-1/4 to John
- Coggan, Martha his wife, to 16-1/4 to the Vicar, 223-1/4
- _Twenty-three owners_ (in shares varying from 7-1/2 acres, Messrs.
- Blackwell and Elson, to 16 perches John Goodwin, 51-1/4
- Churchwardens and Overseers for the Poor (see below), 13
- Gravel Pit, 4
- -------
- 918
-
-The destiny of the 13 acres vested in the Churchwardens and Overseers
-is described thus: they are ‘for the use of the poor of Laleham, as a
-compensation for their loss of Common, the said 13 acres in lieu of the
-herbage of the roads the use of which by the poor was thought might
-be injurious to the young quick by the grazing of their cattle on the
-roads, and as the Majority of the Proprietors have agreed’ to give up
-this 13 acres as an equivalent for the Herbage, the Herbage is given to
-the proprietors instead.
-
-The Churchwardens and Overseers may do one of two things with the 13
-acres plot, they may (1) lease it out for 21 years at ‘the best and
-greatest rent’ to a parishioner: (the plan shows the 13 acres to have
-been wedged in between Lord Lowther’s fields), or (2) ‘if they should
-think it more advantageous to the parish to raise a certain sum of
-money upon it for the Purpose of erecting a Workhouse’ they may let it
-out for 60 years.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (8)
-
-LOUTH, LINCOLNSHIRE.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1801
-
-
- AREA.--In Petition for Enclosure, about 1770 Acres.
- In Act „ „ 1854 „
- In Award „ „ 1701 „
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--‘Open Common Fields, Meadows, Pastures, and other
-Commonable Lands and Waste Grounds.’
-
-Description from Eden, vol. ii. p. 395 (June 1795).--‘Most of the
-land belonging to this town lies in 2 large common fields, which are
-fallowed and cropped alternately: in several parts of these common
-fields there are large tracts of waste land, upon which a great number
-of poor people summer each a cow, which in winter go at large in these
-fields. The Poor complain heavily of the farmers, saying, “That they
-encroach on their property”; and the farmers say, “That the Poor take
-the opportunity of eating their corn with their cattle.” Tithes are
-here taken in kind.’
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_March 11, 1801._--Petition for enclosure
-from various persons, owners, or interested in estates in Louth. Leave
-given. Bill read twice, and committed on June 5. Same day, Petition
-of various Freeholders and Proprietors of old inclosed land against
-the bill; setting forth that there are ‘now more than 750 acres of old
-inclosed Meadows and Pasture Lands very contiguous to the Town; and
-that the Soil of these Open Fields is best adapted for Wheat and Beans,
-of which it produces excellent Crops alternately, and is in a very high
-State of Cultivation; and that there is no Waste Land, as the Commons
-are a very rich Pasture, which keep a large Quantity of Cattle, the
-Property of a great many industrious People, who have Common Rights,
-and are enabled by their Common Rights to maintain their Families,
-and increase the Population and Prosperity of the Town of Louth’; and
-asking the House either to reject the Bill ‘or not to suffer that Part
-thereof to pass into a Law, which would compel the Petitioners to
-relinquish Part of their Old Inclosed Land against their Consent, but
-permit them to remain subject to the Tythes they have hitherto paid.’
-Petition referred to the Committee. All to have Voices.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_June 17, 1801._--Mr. Annesley
-reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders had been complied
-with; that the allegations were true; and that the parties concerned
-had consented ‘(except the Proprietors of Messuages, Cottages and
-Toftsteads, having Right of Common of the Annual Value of £465, 10s.
-who refused to sign the Bill, and also except the Proprietors of
-Messuages, Cottages and Toftsteads having Right of Common of the Annual
-Value of £177, 15s. who were neuter; and that the Whole of the Property
-interested in the Inclosure is of the Annual Value of £1670, 12s.).’
-The Bill passed both Houses. Royal Assent, June 24, 1801.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Local and Personal, 41 George III. c. 124.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed. (1) John Renshaw of Owthorpe, Notts,
-gentleman, on behalf of Tithe owners;
-
-(2) Isaac Leatham of Barton-le-Street, Yorks, gentleman, on behalf of
-the majority in value of the proprietors of common fields, meadows and
-commonable Lands and Waste Grounds (tithe owners excluded);
-
-(3) John Parkinson of Asgarby, Lincs, gentleman, on behalf of the
-majority in value of the proprietors of ancient inclosures and of
-Common Right Houses and Toftsteads (tithe owners excluded).
-
-Two to be a quorum. Vacancies to be filled by the party represented
-from persons ‘not interested in the inclosure.’
-
-Surveyor appointed by name. Vacancy to be filled by majority in value
-of all those interested.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS.--2 guineas each a day. Surveyor to be paid
-what Commissioners think fit.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims to be delivered in with full particulars at
-meetings held for the purpose; no claims to be received afterwards
-except for some special cause. Full notice of a meeting to examine
-claims to be given. Commissioners can determine on claims, but if any
-claimant is dissatisfied with their determination he or she can try
-the matter at law by bringing an action on a feigned issue against any
-person interested in the Lands. Jury’s Verdict to be final. Defendant’s
-costs to be borne by all or some of the persons interested, as the
-Commissioners determine. If no notice of such action is given, then the
-determination of the Commissioners on claims is final and conclusive.
-But the Commissioners are not to determine on questions of title which
-can be tried at law. Such suits are not to impede inclosure, and the
-allotment is to be set out to the person in possession. Claimants in
-respect of Messuages, Cottages, Tofts, or Toftsteads need not prove
-usage of Right of Common.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_The Lord of the Manor_ (_i.e._ The Warden and Six Assistants of the
-Town of Louth and Free School of King Edward the Sixth) to have one
-twentieth in value of the Waste Lands and other Lands which are not the
-separate Property of any Person or Persons; in particular a piece of
-Common called _Julian Bower_ with the Trees on it is to be included as
-part of the Allotment.
-
-_Tithe Owners._--(1) The Worshipful Roger Kedington, M.A., Prebendary
-of the Prebendal of Louth in Lincoln, impropriator of the Rectory of
-Louth, and patron of Vicarage; (2) William Hutton, Esq., lessee of
-above for 3 Lives; (3) Rev. Wolley Jolland, Vicar of Louth, entitled to
-Vicarage House and Garden and also to a Right of Common, and to small
-Tythes.
-
-(1) Allotments which Commissioners consider equal in value and a full
-Compensation for present unenclosed Glebe Lands and Rights of Common.
-
-(2) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed (of every
-kind) as shall equal in value 1/5 part of all the open, arable and
-tillage land ‘(although the same may be occasionally used in Meadow or
-Pasture)’ ‘and which are not Waste Lands.’
-
-(3) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed as shall, in
-Commissioners’ judgment, equal in value all the Great and Small Tythes
-and other Ecclesiastical Dues on ancient Inclosed Arable and Tillage
-Lands.
-
-(4) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed as shall equal
-in value 1/8 part of all the ancient enclosed Meadow and Pasture Lands,
-Grounds and Homesteads ‘(not being Glebe Lands, consecrated Burying
-Grounds, or Orchards or Gardens),’ and of the Near East Field, Far East
-Field, Great Roarings, Butter Closes, and all other open and commonable
-Meadow or Pasture Lands, Commons and Grounds to be inclosed which are
-subject to tithes and ecclesiastical dues.
-
-_Arrangements for Owners of Old Inclosures._--(See Petition on March
-11, 1801). Owners of old Inclosures who have not sufficient allotments
-in the land to be inclosed, to contribute from them their proportion
-of the above Tithe allotments, can _either_ have part of their old
-inclosures allotted instead (with their consent) _or_ pay such gross
-sum of money towards the expenses of the Act as the Commissioners
-direct, whilst a portion of the land to be inclosed is given to the
-tithe owner.
-
-After this Act the only Tithes which remain are those for Gardens and
-Orchards, and Tithes of Mills, Pigs, Poultry, Bees and Honey; also
-Surplice Fees, Easter Offering and Mortuaries are untouched.
-
-_For Repair of Roads._--Sufficient pieces or parcels to be vested in
-the Surveyor of Highways.
-
-_For Fairs._--A piece of ground called ‘The Quarry’ is to be allotted
-to the Lords of the Manor for the holding of Fairs.
-
-_Provision for the Poor._--None.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--Amongst the various persons interested with
-due regard to Quantity, Quality and Situation. No undue Preference
-to be shown. The open fields to be allotted to their present owners,
-unless the owners ask for allotment elsewhere.
-
-If an allottee is dissatisfied with his allotment, the Commissioners
-must hear his complaints, but their determination is final till the
-Award is made.
-
-The Award is to be drawn up and read over to the Proprietors and all
-the orders and directions, penalties, impositions, regulations and
-determinations of the Award are to be final, binding and conclusive on
-all parties.
-
-If an allottee refuses to accept or molests anyone else who accepts, he
-or she must pay the penalties decided on by the Commissioners.
-
-The tenure of allotments is to be the same as that of the estate in
-virtue of which they are claimed.
-
-The grass on the road allotment is to be allotted to such person or
-persons as the Commissioners direct, or else be applied for some
-general, Parochial, or other use.
-
-No person is to graze cattle, dig, cultivate or plant in any road or
-way under penalty of a fine of £3.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Incroachments 20 years old and over are to stand.
-Incroachments made within 20 years are to be treated as part of the
-Commons to be divided, but, if the Commissioners think it fit and
-convenient they can be allotted to the person in possession, without
-considering the value of erections or improvements (1) as the whole
-or part of his allotment; (2) as his allotment, the allottee paying
-such extra sum of money as the Commissioners think fit (this is
-supposing the allotment he is entitled to is less in value than the
-incroachment); (3) for such sum of money as the Commissioners think fit
-(this is supposing he is not entitled to any allotment).
-
-_But_ if the Commissioners do not think it fit and convenient to allot
-an incroachment to the person in possession, they may (1) sell it at
-public auction and apply the money to the purposes of the Act; (2)
-allot it to someone else, in which case a ‘reasonable’ sum of money
-is to be given to the dispossessed owner, the new allottee paying the
-whole or part of it.
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done by the several proprietors as the Commissioners
-direct.
-
-_Exception._--(1) The Tithe Owners’ allotments are to be fenced by the
-other proprietors.
-
-(2) In the case of allotments to Churchwardens, Overseers or Colleges,
-Chantries, Charities, etc., the Commissioners are to fence, deducting
-such portion of the allotments as is equal to the expenses of fencing
-and to these allottees’ share of the expenses of the Act.
-
-The portion deducted is to be divided amongst the other Proprietors who
-have to pay the expenses.
-
-If any allottee refuses to fence, the Commissioners can do it and
-charge the expenses on the allotment, appointing a Bailiff to receive
-rents and money.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--The expenses of the Act are to be defrayed by all the
-Proprietors benefited in proportion to the value of their allotments,
-_except_ the Lords of the Manor and the Tithe owners in respect of
-their special allotments, and except the holders in trust for public
-bodies. (These last have had a portion deducted. See Fencing.)
-
-The cost of the survey of the land to be inclosed is to be borne
-by those interested in it, and the cost of the survey of the old
-inclosures by the proprietors of old inclosures.
-
-Mortgages are allowed under certain conditions (except to Tithe owners)
-up to £4 an acre.
-
-Commissioners are to keep accounts which must be open to inspection. A
-penalty is specified for failure to keep them. Money amounting to £50
-is to be paid in to a Banker.
-
-Proprietors (tithe owners excepted) can sell their Common Rights or
-allotments before the Award.
-
-
-COMPENSATION.--(1) Leases at Rack Rent of any land to be inclosed,
-either alone or together with any Messuages, Cottages, Toftsteads,
-etc., to be void; the proprietor paying the lessee such satisfaction
-as the Commissioners direct. _Exception._--No lease of any Messuage,
-Cottage, Toftstead, Lands, Hereditaments or ancient Estate in respect
-of which allotment is made for Right of Common is to be void; but the
-allotments made to these are to belong to the proprietors who must pay
-to the lessees such satisfaction as the Commissioners direct.
-
-(2) Satisfaction (adjudged by the Commissioners) is to be given for
-standing crops by the new allottee, unless the owner of the crops likes
-to come and reap them.
-
-Satisfaction is also to be given to the occupier for ploughing,
-tilling and manuring, but no Swarth 6 years old is to be ploughed till
-allotments are entered on.
-
-(3) If any trees, shrubs, etc., go with the ground to a new proprietor,
-the old proprietor is to be paid their valuation (as judged by the
-Commissioners).
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--The Commissioners are to have
-absolute power to determine the course of husbandry.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners to have power to set out and stop up roads and
-footpaths (turnpike roads excepted), but are to give notice in a local
-newspaper _re_ public carriage roads, and any person who thinks himself
-or herself aggrieved can appeal to Quarter Sessions whose decision is
-final.
-
-If an ancient road or path is shut up, the person for whose
-accommodation it is shut up may be required by the Commissioners to pay
-compensation either (1) to person or persons injured or (2) for general
-expenses of the Act.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not where
-Commissioners’ determinations are said to be final.
-
-
-AWARD.--Date, 1806. Record Office.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF AWARD:--
-
-
- _a._ _r._ _p._
- Whole Area divided out, 1701 3 21
- -----------
- Tithe Owners (various allotments), in all, 584 3 6[497]
- One of the tithe holders also receives, 24 3 4
- The Lords of the Manor, 109 2 4[498]
- Lords of the Manor, as Guardians of the
- Free School, 69 3 19
- Allotments for repairing roads, 2 0 3
- For Fairs, 4 1 12
- -----------
- 795 1 8
- -----------
-
- The remainder is divided out amongst 130 allottees:--
-
- From 50-100 acres 4 }
- From 30-50 acres 7 }
- From 10-30 acres 10 } Above 10 acres 21
- -- }
- 21 }
- -- From 1-10 acres 42
-
- From 1/2 acre-1 acre 22 }
- From 1/4 acre-1/2 acre 10 }
- Below 1/4 acre 35[499] } Below 1 acre 67
- -- } ---
- 67 } 130
- -- ---
-
-The smallest allotments are, Ann Metcalf, Spinster, 14 perches, which
-she must fence on the N. and W. sides; Ann Hubbard, Widow, 15 perches,
-which she must fence on the S. and W. sides.
-
-These, like the other small allotments, are in lieu of Right of Common
-and all other Interest.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (9)
-
-SIMPSON, BUCKS.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1770
-
-
-AREA.--Not specified anywhere. The annual value unenclosed is stated to
-be £773, so the acreage was probably over 1500.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Open and Common Fields, Lammas Grounds and Pastures.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--
-
-_First Attempt, December 13, 1762._--Petition from Walden Hanmer,
-Esq., Lord of the Manor, William Edge, Gentleman, and other owners
-and proprietors, stating that the holdings are at present intermixed
-and dispersed, that the land in its present state is in great measure
-incapable of Improvement, and that if it were divided and inclosed
-great Benefit would accrue, and asking for leave to bring in a Bill to
-enclose. Leave was given, and the Bill passed its second reading and
-was sent to Committee. On March 16, 1763, came a petition against it
-from John Goodman and Nicholas Lucas, Gentlemen, and other owners and
-proprietors against the bill, ‘alleging that the Petitioners are Owners
-and Proprietors of Four Fifth Parts, and upwards, of the said Fields,
-Grounds, and Pastures, so intended to be inclosed, and of several
-Rights and Privileges incident thereto,’ stating that the bill would
-be greatly detrimental to all of them and ‘tend to the Ruin of many of
-them,’ and asking to be heard by Counsel against the bill. Petition to
-be heard when the bill was reported.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_March 25, 1763._--Mr. Lowndes
-reported from the Committee, that the allegations were true and that
-‘the Parties concerned had given their Consent to the Bill, to the
-Satisfaction of the Committee (except Michael Woodward, Nicholas Lucas,
-senior, Lewis Goodman, who, being asked to sign a Bill testifying their
-Consent, and whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds amounts to
-£31 a Year, or thereabouts, but the Witness could not ascertain the
-Interest of the said Lewis Goodman and Thomas Goodman, said that they
-had no Objection to the Inclosure, but did not care to sign, and also
-except Luke Goodman and Edward Chad, whose Interest in the said Lands
-and Grounds is £16 a Year; Edward Chad said he was by no means for
-it, and Luke Goodman said, he would neither meddle nor make; and also
-except Joseph Etheridge, a Minor, whose Interest in the said Lands and
-Grounds is £38 a Year; and Mary Etheridge, his Guardian whose Interest
-in the said Lands and Grounds is £16 a Year, said, she never was for
-it, as being a Woman, and having nobody to look after her Fencing; and
-also except ---- Loughton, John Goodman, and Son, whose Interest in
-the said Lands and Grounds is £24 a Year; John Goodman said, he would
-lose his Life before he would lose his Land; his Son said, he did not
-care to meddle; and also except John Goodman, who, being asked to
-sign a Bill, testifying his Consent, and whose Interest in the said
-Lands and Grounds is £55 a year, said he would not sign it; and except
-Sear Newman, whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds amounts to
-£30 a Year, who said he had no Objection to it, but did not care to
-meddle or make, upon Account of his Father being so much against it;
-and it appeared to your Committee, by Articles of Agreement, dated
-the 31st Day of December, 1761, that the said John Goodman and Sear
-Newman did thereby consent and agree to an Inclosure of all the Open
-and Commonable Fields, Lands, Cow Pasture, and Fields, within the
-said Parish of Simpson, and to pay their respective Proportions of
-the Expence of an Act of Parliament; and other the necessary Expences
-attending the same; and also except John Newman, whose Interest in the
-said Lands and Grounds is £30 a Year, who said he would not sign it;
-and also except Nicholas Lucas the younger, whose Interest in the said
-Fields is £36 a Year, who said he had no Objection to sign, if the
-Cow Pasture had been left open; and also except Daniel Lucas, whose
-Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is £25 a Year, who refused
-signing; and also except George Wilkes, whose Interest in the said
-Lands and Grounds is £1, 10s. a Year, who said he had no Occasion
-to sign, because he had agreed with Mr. Hanmer for the Purchase of
-his Commons; and also except Richard Goodman, Edward Ashwell, for a
-Minor, Edward Cooke and John Fox, whose Interest in the said Lands
-and Grounds together amounts to £5, 10s. a Year, who were not applied
-to; and also except Sarah Hawes, Widow, who is lately dead; and also
-except George Stone, whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is
-£3 a Year, who was not applied to, because he had sold his Interest to
-Mr. Hanmer, who has consented to the Bill; and also except Six out of
-Eight of the Feoffees of Lands belonging to the Poor of Simpson, which
-Lands are of the yearly Value of £24: and also except the Feoffees of
-certain Charity Lands and Grounds, of the yearly Value of £16; William
-Cooper, one of the Feoffees, being asked to sign a Bill testifying his
-Consent, said he was against it; and that the yearly Value of the said
-Lands and Grounds, in the said Fields, Cow Pasture, Common Meadows,
-Lammas Grounds, and Waste Grounds, amounts to Seven Hundred Ninety-nine
-Pounds, Fifteen Shillings, or thereabouts;)....’
-
-After the Report was read, Counsel was heard for the Petitioners
-against the Bill, but the Bill was read a third time and sent up to the
-Lords. March 29, it was read a second time, and a Petition against it
-from John Goodman, John Newman, Nicholas Lucas and others was received.
-April 14, Lord St. John of Bletsoe reported it without amendments from
-the Committee, but it was defeated on its third reading.
-
-_Second Attempt, January 15, 1765._--Walden Hanmer, Esquire, the
-Rector, and others again petitioned for enclosure. Leave was given to
-bring in a bill, but nothing came of it.
-
-_Third Attempt, February 6, 1770._--Walden Hanmer, Esquire, and others
-again petitioned for enclosure. Leave was given, and a bill read twice
-and sent to Committee.
-
-_March 6, 1770._--‘A Petition of the Major Part of the Owners and
-Proprietors’ against the Bill, stating ‘that the Petitioners are very
-well satisfied with the Situation and Convenience of their respective
-Lands and Properties in their present uninclosed State,’ and that the
-Bill will do them great Injury.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_March 6, 1770_ (same day).--Mr.
-Kynaston reported that the allegations were true, and that the Parties
-concerned had consented to the Bill ‘to the Satisfaction of the
-Committee,’ with the following exceptions--Five Persons with property
-of the annual value of £192, 10s.; Sear Numan, with property of annual
-value of £20, 15s., ‘who said he must do as his Father would have
-him’; John Lucas the younger, with property of the annual value of
-15s.; George Cross, ‘who would not say any Thing,’ with property of
-the annual value of £5; Elizabeth Mead, ‘who said she should sell when
-inclosed,’ with property of the annual value of £2, 10s.; and Five
-Persons, who said they would not oppose the Bill, with property of the
-annual value of £77, 10s. The annual value of ‘the whole of the Estates
-in the said Fields intended to be inclosed’ was given as £773. The
-Bill passed the Commons and the Lords, where a petition against it was
-considered. It received the Royal Assent on March 29, 1770.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 10 George III. c. 42.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Three appointed. (1) The Rev. John Lord of Drayton
-Parslow, Clerk; (2) Thomas Harrison of Stoney Stratford, Gentleman; (3)
-Francis Burton of Aynho, Northamptonshire, Gentleman. Two a quorum.
-Vacancies to be filled up by remaining Commissioner or Commissioners
-from persons ‘not interested in the Division and Inclosure.’ No
-particulars of payment.
-
-A survey to be made by a surveyor nominated by Commissioners.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--The Commissioners are ‘to hear and finally determine’ any
-differences about Interests and Rights.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Provisions for Lord of the Manor._--None (as there seems to have been
-no common or waste ground concerned).
-
-His manorial rights, right of common excepted, to go on as before.
-
-_Provisions for Tithe Owners._--The Rector to have (1) such parcels of
-Land as shall be a full equivalent of his glebe lands and common Right;
-(2) 1/7 part of all the rest, ‘Quantity as well as Quality considered,’
-as full compensation for all Tithes.
-
-In the case of old inclosures which have allotments, the Commissioners
-can give him either part of these or part of the owner’s allotment in
-place of tithes, and in case of old inclosures, etc., which have no
-allotment, they remain subject to Tithes.
-
-The Rector is exonerated from keeping a Bull and a Boar.
-
-_Provision for Gravel_, _Sand_, _etc._--See Allotment of Residue.
-
-_Provision for Poor._--None.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--As soon as is convenient after the survey is
-made, the Commissioners are to set out and allot the land in proportion
-to the respective interests and right of common of the claimants,
-‘having a due Regard to the Situation and Convenience, as well as to
-the Quantity and Quality of the Lands and Grounds.’ The award, which
-contains their decision, is to be final and conclusive.
-
-Allotments must be accepted within 12 calendar months. Failure to
-accept excludes the allottee from all Benefits under the Act. (Saving
-clause for infants, etc.)
-
-If material is needed for the roads, the surveyors may, under an
-order from two J. P.’s not interested in the inclosure, enter on any
-allotment and take it, except where the allotment is a garden, park,
-orchard, paddock, wood, or ground planted with an avenue of trees for
-the ornament of any House.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Not mentioned; as no common.
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done ‘at the proper Costs and Charges’ of the
-respective allottees, as directed by the Commissioners, except in the
-case of the Rector, whose allotment is to be fenced for him by the
-other proprietors, and whose fences, if they abut on a highway, are
-to be kept up by the other proprietors for 7 years. The fencing of all
-allotments must be carried out within 12 months after the Award, and
-if any person refuse to fence, the Commissioners, on complaint of a
-neighbour, can do the fencing and charge it to the recalcitrant owner,
-distraining on his goods, if necessary. If any one proprietor has more
-than his fair share of fencing to do, then the Commissioners can make
-the other proprietors pay something towards it. If any allotment abuts
-on a common field, fencing is not compulsory.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--These are to be paid by the Owners and Proprietors ‘by an
-equal Pound Rate according to the Value of the Lands and Grounds each
-Person shall have allotted to him.’ Proprietors are allowed to mortgage
-their allotments up to 40s. an acre in order to meet expenses.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--All rack-rent leases are to be null and
-void, the owners making such satisfaction to the tenants as the
-Commissioners think reasonable.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners to have full power to set out and shut up roads,
-footpaths, etc.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only; and not in cases where
-the Commissioners’ decisions are final and conclusive, as, _e.g._, on
-claims and allotments.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN ACT AND AWARD.--Directly the Act is passed, till
-the allotments are made, the Commissioners are to have ‘the sole,
-intire and absolute Management, Order and Direction’ of all the land
-with regard to cultivation, flocks, etc., any usage to the contrary
-notwithstanding.
-
-
-AWARD.--Bucks, with Clerk of the Peace or Clerk of the Council. Date,
-April 26, 1771.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (10)
-
-STANWELL.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1789
-
-
-AREA.--According to Act ‘by Estimation about 3000 Acres,’ but Award
-gives 2126 Acres only.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--‘Large open fields, Arable and Meadow Grounds, and
-Lammas Lands, about 1621 acres, and also several Commons, Moors and
-Waste Lands,’ about 505 acres (unstinted).
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--
-
-_First Attempt, December 12, 1766._--Petition for Enclosure from the
-Lord of the Manor, the Impropriator of the Great Tythes, the Vicar, and
-the most considerable Proprietors. Leave given. Bill read first time,
-January 27, 1767.
-
-_February 18, 1767._--Petition against the bill from various ‘Owners
-or Occupiers of Cottages or Tenements in the parish of Stanwell,’
-setting forth ‘that the Petitioners in Right of their said Cottages and
-Tenements are severally intitled to Common of Pasture for their Cattle
-and Sheep upon all the said Commons, Moors, and Waste Lands, at all
-Times of the Year, except for Sheep, without any Stint whatsoever, as
-also a Right of intercommoning their Cattle and Sheep, with those of
-the Tenants of divers other Manors, at all Times in the Year, upon the
-large Common called _Hounslow Heath_: and the Petitioners in the Rights
-aforesaid, are also intitled to and do enjoy Common of Turbary on the
-said Commons and Heath, and that the Lord of the Manor of Stanwell
-lately caused part of the said Moors within the said Parish, to be
-fenced in, and inclosed with Pales for his own sole and separate Use,
-without the Consent of the Petitioners and other Persons intitled to a
-Right of Common therein, which said Pales have been since pulled down
-by several of the Petitioners and others, against whom several Actions
-have been commenced by the Lord of the said Manor, in order to try the
-Petitioners’ said Right of Common therein, all which Actions are now
-depending; and that the Petitioners apprehend, and believe, in case
-the said Bill should pass into a Law, the Legality of the Petitioners’
-said Rights will be left to the Determination of Commissioners
-unqualified to judge of the same: and that in case the Petitioners’
-said Rights should be allowed by such Commissioners, that no adequate
-Compensation in Land will or can be awarded to the Petitioners for the
-same: and that the dividing and inclosing the said Commons, Moors, and
-Waste Lands within the said Parish, will greatly injure and distress
-many....’ Another petition was presented on the same day from George
-Richard Carter, Esq., Samuel Clark, Esq., Jervoise Clark, Esq., John
-Bullock, Esq., and several others, being owners and proprietors of
-Farms and Lands in the parish of Stanwell, setting forth that the
-Petitioners, as also the Owners of near 100 Cottages or Tenements
-within the said Parish, and their respective Tenants are entitled to
-right of pasture as in the petition given above, and stating that
-inclosing will be attended with great inconvenience.
-
-On February 26 came yet another petition from owners and occupiers in
-the parishes of Harmondsworth, Harlington, Cranford, Heston, Isleworth,
-Twickenham, Teddington, Hampton, Hanworth, Feltham, and East Bedfont in
-Middlesex, setting forth that the Commons and Waste Lands in the parish
-of Stanwell were part of Hounslow Heath, over which the petitioners had
-right of pasture, and stating that if the part of the Heath in Stanwell
-parish were inclosed it would be very injurious to all the owners and
-occupiers in the parish of Stanwell, except to the Lord of the Manor,
-and would also be prejudicial to the petitioners.
-
-All these petitions were ordered to lie on the table till the second
-reading, which took place on February 26. Counsel was heard for and
-against the Bill; the motion that the Bill should be committed was
-defeated by 34 to 17 votes, and thus the farmers were able to parade
-along Pall Mall with cockades in their hats.[500]
-
-_Second Attempt, February 20, 1789._--Petition from the Lord of the
-Manor (Sir William Gibbons), the Vicar and others for enclosure. Leave
-given. Bill read twice.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_March 30, 1789._--Sir William
-Lemon reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders had been
-complied with; that the allegations were true, and that the parties
-concerned had given their consent ‘(except the Proprietors of Estates
-of the Annual Value of £164, 14s. or thereabouts who refused to sign
-the Bill, and also except the Proprietors of £220, 5s. 8d. per Annum or
-thereabouts who did not chuse to sign the Bill, but made no Objection
-to the Inclosure, and also except some small Proprietors of about £76
-per Annum who could not be found, and that the whole Property belonging
-to Persons interested in the Inclosure amounts to £2,929, 5s. 4d. per
-annum or thereabouts).’ Bill passed both Houses. Royal Assent, May 19,
-1789.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 29 George III. c. 15.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Edward Hare of Castor, Northampton, Gentleman;
-William Young of Chancery Lane, Gentleman; Richard Davis of Lewknor,
-Oxford, Gentleman. Two a quorum. Vacancies to be filled by remaining
-Commissioners from persons not interested in the Inclosure.
-
-
-SURVEYOR.--One named. Vacancy to be filled by Commissioners.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS.--£2, 2s. for each working day. Nothing about
-Surveyor’s pay.
-
-Special clause that certain Surveys already made may be used.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims about Right of Common ‘and all Differences and
-Disputes which shall arise between the Parties interested, or claiming
-to be interested in the said intended Division and Inclosure, or any of
-them concerning their respective Rights, Shares, and Interests in the
-said open Fields, arable and meadow Grounds, and Lammas Lands, Commons,
-Moors, and Waste Grounds, or their respective Allotments, Shares and
-Proportions which they, or any of them ought to have’ in the division,
-are to be heard and determined by the Commissioners. This determination
-is to be binding and conclusive on all parties; except with regard to
-matters of Title which can be tried at law.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-(1) _Lords of the Manor_ (Sir William Gibbons, Thomas Somers Cocks,
-Esq., and Thomas Graham, Esq.).--One sixteenth part of the residue of
-the Moors and Waste Lands, when roads and allotment for gravel have
-been deducted.
-
-(2) _Tithe Owners._--Not to be prejudiced by the Act. Land still to be
-liable to tithes as before.
-
-(3) _Gravel Pits._--For roads and for use of inhabitants; not more than
-3 acres.
-
-(4) _Provision for Poor._--Such parcel as the Commissioners think
-proper (‘not exceeding in the whole 30 Acres’). To be vested in the
-Lords of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens, and Overseers, and to be
-let out, and the rents and profits thereof to be given for the benefit
-of such occupiers and inhabitants as do not receive parish relief,
-or occupy lands and tenements of more than £5 a year, or receive any
-allotment under the Act.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--The land to be divided among the various
-persons interested ‘in proportion and according (Quantity, Quality and
-Situation considered) to their several and respective Shares, Rights,
-and Interests therein.’ If the Commissioners think that any of the
-allotments in the common fields are too small to be worth enclosing
-they may lay such proprietors’ allotments together.
-
-_Certain principles to be followed._--Owners of cottage commons who
-are also proprietors of lands in the open fields are to have their
-allotment in virtue of their Right of Common added to the other
-allotment to which they are entitled.
-
-Owners of cottage commons who do not possess land in the open fields as
-well, are to have their allotments put all together for a cow common,
-with such stint as the Commissioners decide. But if they wish for
-separate allotments they may have them.
-
-Allotments must be accepted within six months after award. Failure to
-accept excludes allottee from all ‘Benefit Advantage’ by this Act, and
-also from all estate right or interest in any other allotment. (Saving
-clause for infants, etc.)
-
-The award is to be drawn up; ‘and the Award, and all Orders,
-Directions, Regulations, and Determinations therein contained, and
-thereby declared, shall be binding and conclusive to and upon all
-Persons whomsoever.’ Tenure of allotments to be that of estates
-in virtue of which they are granted. Copyhold allotments can be
-enfranchised if wished, the Commissioners deducting a certain amount as
-compensation for Lord of the Manor. Allottees lose all Right of Common
-on any common in adjoining parishes.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Not mentioned in Act.
-
-
-EXCHANGES.--Allowed (as always). Also former exchanges can be confirmed
-by the Commissioners ‘notwithstanding any legal or natural Incapacity
-of any Proprietor or Owner having made any such Exchanges.’
-
-
-FENCING.--To be done by allottees. If any person has an undue
-proportion Commissioners have power to equalise.
-
-_Exceptions._--(1) Fences of cow common allotment for those who have
-Cottage Common only (see above), which are to be made and kept in
-repair by the other proprietors; but if these allottees choose to have
-separate allotments they must fence them themselves.
-
-(2) Allotment for the Poor (30 acres).--To be fenced by other
-proprietors.
-
-(3) Allotments to charities, ditto.
-
-If any allottee refuses to fence or keep fences in repair his neighbour
-can complain to a J.P. ‘not interested’ in the inclosure, and the J.P.
-can either make an order, or else empower the complainant to enter and
-carry the work out at the charge of the owner.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--Part of the Commons and Wastes to be sold by auction to
-cover expenses. Any surplus to be laid out by Commissioners on some
-lasting improvements; any deficit to be made up by proprietors as
-Commissioners direct.
-
-Commissioners are to keep accounts which must be open to inspection.
-
-To meet expenses allotments may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--Leases at rack or extended rents of any of
-the land to be inclosed by this Act to be void, owners paying tenants
-such compensation as Commissioners direct. Satisfaction is also to be
-given for standing crops, for ploughing, manuring, and tilling.
-
-
-ARRANGEMENTS BETWEEN THE ACT AND AWARD.--The Commissioners are to
-direct the course of husbandry ‘as well with respect to the Stocking as
-to the Plowing, Tilling, Cropping, Sowing, and Laying down the same.’
-
-
-ROADS.--Full power to set out roads and footpaths and to shut up
-others. Turnpike roads excluded.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--None.
-
-
-AWARD.--Record Office.
-
-From the Award we learn as follows:--
-
-14 parcels of land, containing in all over 123 acres were sold to cover
-expenses for £2512.
-
-31-1/2 acres are allotted to the Lords of the Manor (Sir William
-Gibbons, Thomas Somers Cocks, and Thomas Graham) in lieu of their
-rights as Lords of the Soil.
-
-490 acres to Sir William Gibbons in trust for himself and the other
-Lords of the Manor in lieu of all other claims (freehold lands, rights
-of common, etc.).
-
-69 acres to the mortgagees of the late Sir J. Gibbons.
-
-6 acres to the Trustees of the late Sir J. Gibbons.
-
-400 acres to Edmund Hill, Esq. (who also bought 117 acres of the land
-sold to defray costs).
-
-100 acres to Henry Bullock, Esq.
-
-72 acres to Thomas Hankey, Esq.
-
-45 acres to Jervoise Clark Jervoise, Esq.
-
-Allotments of from 20 to 40 acres to eleven other allottees.
-
-Allotments of from 10 to 20 acres to twelve allottees.
-
-Allotments of from 12 perches to 9 acres to seventy-nine allottees.
-
-Twenty-four of these smaller allotments (including six of less than
-2 acres) are given in lieu of open field property; the remaining
-fifty-five are given in compensation for common rights of some sort or
-other.
-
-Sixty-six cottages appear as entitling their owners to
-compensation.[501] Of these 66, 16 belong to Henry Bullock and 8 to
-Sir William Gibbons, and the remaining 42 to 38 different owners. The
-allotments to cottages vary from a quarter of an acre (John Merrick) to
-over an acre (Anne Higgs). The owners of cottage commons only had their
-allotments separately and not in common.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (11)
-
-WAKEFIELD, YORKS.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1793
-
-
-AREA.--2300 acres ‘or thereabouts.’
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Open Common Fields, Ings, Commons, Waste Grounds,
-within the townships of Wakefield, Stanley, Wrenthorpe, Alverthorpe,
-and Thornes.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_January 23, 1793._--Petition from several
-owners and proprietors for enclosure. Leave given to prepare bill.
-January 28, Wilberforce presented it; February 18, it was committed to
-Wilberforce, Duncombe and others.
-
-_February 28._--Petition against the bill from the Earl of Strafford,
-stating that the bill will greatly affect and prejudice his property.
-Petition referred to Committee.
-
-Same day, Petition against the bill from several Persons, being Owners
-of Estates and Occupiers of Houses in the Town and Parish of Wakefield.
-‘Setting forth, That, if the said Bill should pass into a Law, as it
-now stands, the same will greatly affect and prejudice the Estates
-and Property of the Petitioners, (viz.), their being deprived of the
-Benefit they now receive from the Pasturage of the Ings, from the
-12th of August to the 5th of April, and for which they cannot receive
-any Compensation adequate thereto, as well as the Restrictions which
-exclude the Inhabitants from erecting Buildings on Land that may be
-allotted to them for Twenty, Forty, and Sixty Years, on different Parts
-of Westgate Common, as specified in the said Bill.’ This petition also
-was referred to the Committee.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_March 12._--Wilberforce reported
-from the Committee that the Standing Orders had been complied with,
-that they had considered the first Petition (Lord Strafford’s), (no
-one had appeared to be heard on behalf of the second Petition),
-that they found the allegations of the Bill true, that ‘the Parties
-concerned’ had given their consent to the Bill, and also to adding
-one Commissioner to the three named in the Bill ‘(except the Owners
-of Estates whose Property in the Lands and Grounds to be divided and
-inclosed is assessed to the Land Tax at £5 per Annum or thereabouts,
-who refused to sign the Bill; and also, except the Owners of Estates
-whose Property in the said Lands and Grounds is assessed to the Land
-Tax at about £51 per Annum, who have either declared themselves
-perfectly indifferent about the Inclosure, or not given any Answer to
-the Application made to them respecting it; and that the whole Property
-belonging to Persons interested in the Inclosure is assessed to the
-Land Tax at £432 per Annum, or thereabouts ...).’
-
-Bill passed Commons and Lords. March 28, Royal Assent.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 33 George III. c. 11.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Four appointed. (1) Richard Clark of Rothwell Haigh,
-Gentleman; (2) John Renshaw of Owthorp, Notts, Gentleman; (3) John
-Sharp of Gildersome, Yorks, Gentleman; (4) William Whitelock of
-Brotherton, Yorks, Gentleman; the first representing the Duke of Leeds,
-the second the Earl of Strafford (no doubt this was the Commissioner
-added in Committee), and the other two representing the Majority in
-Value of the Persons interested. Any vacancy to be filled up by the
-party represented, and new Commissioners to be ‘not interested in the
-said Inclosure.’ Three to be a quorum. In case of dispute and equal
-division of opinion amongst the Commissioners, an Umpire is appointed
-(Isaac Leatham of Barton, Gentleman); the decision of Commissioners and
-Umpire to be final and conclusive.
-
-
-PAYMENT TO COMMISSIONERS.--2 guineas each for each working day. The
-Surveyors (2 appointed) to be paid as Commissioners think fit.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--All claims with full particulars of the nature and tenure of
-the property on behalf of which the claim is made are to be handed
-in at the 1st or 2nd meeting of the Commissioners; no claim is to be
-received later except for some special cause; and the determination of
-the Commissioners as to the various claims is to be binding and final.
-There are, however, three exceptions to the above, (1) Persons claiming
-in virtue of Messuages and Tofts need not prove usage of common; (2)
-Any Person who is dissatisfied with regard to his own or some one
-else’s claim, may give notice in writing, and the Commissioners are
-then to take Counsel’s opinion on the matter. The Commissioners are
-to choose the Counsel, who is to be ‘not interested in the Premises.’
-The Commissioners may also on their own responsibility take Counsel’s
-opinion at any time they think proper; Counsel’s opinion is to be
-final. The costs are to be paid by the party against whom the dispute
-is determined, or otherwise as the Commissioners decide; (3) The Earl
-of Strafford is exempted from specifying particulars of Tenure in
-making his claim, for there are disputes on this subject between the
-Duke and the Earl, ‘which Matters in Difference the said Duke and Earl
-have not agreed to submit to the Consideration or Determination of the
-said Commissioners.’ The Commissioners need not specify the tenure of
-the Earl’s share in making their award, and if the Duke and Earl go to
-law about their dispute and the matter is settled in a Court of Equity,
-then the Commissioners are to make a second special Award for them.
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Provisions for the Lord of the Manor_--‘the Most Noble Francis, Duke
-of Leeds.’--
-
-(1) Such part of the Commons and Waste Grounds as is ‘equal in Value
-to One full Sixteenth Part thereof in lieu of and as a sufficient
-Recompence for his Right to the Soil of the said Commons and Waste
-Grounds, and for his Consent to the Division and Inclosure thereof;
-
-(2) An allotment of the Commons and Waste Grounds to be (in the
-judgment of the Commissioners) a fair compensation for his Coney
-Warrens which are to be destroyed;
-
-(3) An allotment equal in value (in the judgment of the Commissioners)
-to £40 a year as compensation for the reserved Rents he has been
-receiving from persons who have made incroachments during the last 20
-years;
-
-(4) An allotment or allotments of not more than 5 acres in the whole,
-to be awarded in such place as the Duke or his Agents appoint, close
-to one of his stone quarries, as compensation for the right given by
-the Act to other allottees of the Common of getting stone on their
-allotments;
-
-(5) The value of all the timber on allotments from the common is to be
-assessed by the Commissioners, and paid by the respective allottees to
-the Duke. If they refuse to pay, the Duke may come and cut down the
-timber ‘without making any Allowance or Satisfaction whatsoever to the
-Person or Persons to whom any such Allotment shall belong, for any
-Injury to be done thereby’;
-
-(6) The Duke’s power to work Mines and to get all Minerals is not to be
-interfered with by anything in this Act but the ‘Owners or Proprietors
-of the Ground wherein such Pits or Soughs shall be made, driven, or
-worked, or such Engines, Machines or Buildings erected, or such Coals
-or Rubbish laid, or such Ways, Roads or Passages made and used,’ are
-to have a ‘reasonable Satisfaction for Damages.’ The payment of the
-reasonable Satisfaction however is not to fall on the Duke, but on all
-the allottees of the Commons and Waste Grounds who are to meet together
-in the Moot Hall and appoint a salaried officer to settle the damages
-and collect the money by a rate raised according to the Poor Rate
-of the previous year. If the claimant and the officer fail to agree,
-arbitrators, and ultimately an umpire, can be appointed.
-
-_Provisions for Tithe Owners._--A fair allotment is to be given to
-the Vicar in compensation for his small Tythes. In cases where the
-allottees have not enough land to contribute their due share to the
-tithe allotment, they have to pay a yearly sum instead.
-
-_For Stone and Gravel_, _etc._--Suitable allotments for stone and
-gravel, etc., to be made ‘for the Use and Benefit’ of all allottees
-‘for the Purpose of getting Stone, Sand, Gravel, or other Materials
-for making and repairing of the public Roads and Drains’; but these
-allotments are not to include any of the Duke’s or of his tenants’
-stone quarries.
-
-_Provision for the Poor._--None.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--(1) The open fields are to be divided out
-amongst the present proprietors in proportion to their present value
-and with regard to convenience; unless any owner of open-field land
-specially asks for an allotment elsewhere; (2) The owners of Ings are
-to have Ings allotted to them, unless they wish for land elsewhere; (3)
-The Commons and Waste grounds are first to have the various allotments
-to the Lord of the Manor and the Vicar specified above, and also the
-allotment for Stone and Gravel for roads deducted from them, and then
-the residue is to be allotted ‘among the several Persons (considering
-the said Duke of Leeds as one) having Right of Common in or upon the
-said Commons and Waste Grounds’ in the following fashion; one half is
-to be divided among the Owners or Proprietors of Messuages, Cottages
-or Tofts with Right of Common, according to their several Rights and
-Interests; the other half, together with the rest and residue of Land
-to be divided, is to be allotted among the Owners or Proprietors of
-open common fields, Ings, and old inclosed Lands according to their
-several rights and interests ‘without any undue Preference whatsoever.’
-The Commissioners are also directed to pay due regard to situation
-and to putting the different allotments of the same person together.
-Allotments are to be of the same tenure, _i.e._ freehold or copyhold,
-as the holdings in respect of which they are claimed, but no fines are
-to be taken on account of the allotment.
-
-With respect to the allottees of allotments on Westgate Moor, a special
-clause (see petition on January 23) is inserted. They are forbidden to
-put up any House, Building or Erection of any kind on one part for 20,
-on another for 40, on another for 60, years, unless the Duke consents,
-the object being ‘thereby the more advantageously to enable the said
-Duke, his Heirs and Assigns, to work his Colliery in and upon the same
-Moor.’
-
-The award, with full particulars of allotments, etc., is to be drawn
-up and is to be ‘final, binding, and conclusive upon all Parties and
-Persons interested therein.’
-
-If any person (being Guardian, etc., tenant in tail or for life of
-lessee, etc.) fails to accept and fence, then Commissioners can do
-it for him and charge; if he still refuses, Commissioners can lease
-allotment out and take rent till Expenses are paid.
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Incroachments 20 years old are to stand; those made
-within 20 years are to be treated as part of the Commons to be divided,
-but they are, if the Commissioners think it fit and convenient, to be
-allotted to the person in possession without considering the value of
-erections and improvements. Three contingencies for allotment to the
-person in possession are provided for;--(1) if he is entitled to an
-allotment, his incroachment is to be treated as part or the whole of
-his allotment;
-
-(2) If his incroachment is of greater value than the allotment he
-is entitled to, then he is to pay whatever extra sum of money the
-Commissioners judge right;
-
-(3) If he is not entitled to any allotment at all, then he has to pay
-the price set on his incroachment by the Commissioners.
-
-If the Commissioners do not allot an incroachment to the person in
-possession, they may sell it at public auction and apply the money
-to the purposes of the Act, or they may allot it to someone not in
-possession, in which case a ‘reasonable’ sum of money is to be given to
-the dispossessed owner, the new allottee paying the whole or part of it.
-
-The above provisions apply to the ordinary incroachers; the Duke has
-special arrangements. If he has made any new incroachments during
-the last 20 years in addition to any older incroachments, these new
-incroachments are to be valued by the Commissioners, and the Duke is
-to have them either as part of his allotment or for a money payment,
-as he chooses; also ‘whereas the Tenants of the said Duke of Leeds of
-the Collieries on the said Commons and Waste Lands ... have from Time
-to Time erected Fire Engines, Messuages, Dwelling Houses, Cottages and
-other Buildings upon the said Commons and Waste Lands, and made several
-other Conveniences thereon for the Use and Accommodation of the said
-Collieries, and the Persons managing and working the same, a great Part
-of which have been erected and made within the last Twenty Years, these
-are not to be treated like other incroachments, but are to ‘be and
-continue the absolute Property of the said Duke of Leeds, his Heirs and
-Assigns, in as full and ample Manner’ as if the erections had been made
-more than 20 years before.
-
-
-FENCING.--All allotments are to be fenced at the expense of their
-several proprietors ‘in such Manner, Shares and Proportions as the said
-Commissioners shall ... direct’ with the following exceptions--(1)
-the Vicar’s allotment for small Tithes is to be fenced by the other
-proprietors; (2) the allotments to Hospitals, Schools, and other public
-Charities are to have a certain proportion deducted from them to cover
-the cost of fencing. Allottees who refuse to fence can be summoned
-before a J.P. by their neighbours, and the J.P. (who is not to be
-interested in the Enclosure) can make an order compelling them to fence.
-
-To protect the new hedges, it is ordered that no sheep or lambs are to
-be turned out in any allotment for 7 years, unless the allottee makes
-special provision to protect his neighbour’s young quickset, and no
-beasts, cattle or horses are to be turned into any roads or lanes where
-there is a new-growing fence.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--Part of the Commons and Waste Grounds is to be sold to
-cover the expences; if the proceeds do not cover the costs the residue
-is to be paid by the allottees in proportion to their shares, and
-any surplus is to be divided among them, But Hospitals, Schools, and
-Public Charities are exempted from this payment, a portion of their
-allotments, in fact, having been already deducted in order to pay
-their share of Expenses. The Commissioners are to keep an account of
-Expenses, which is to be open to inspection. The owners of Ings are to
-pay a sum of money in return for the extinction of the right of Eatage
-(referred to by the Petitioners) on their land from August 12 to April
-5; and this money is to be applied for the purposes of the Act.
-
-If allottees find the expenses of the Act and of fencing more than they
-can meet, they are allowed (with the consent of the Commissioners)
-to mortgage their allotments up to 40s. an acre. If they dislike
-this prospect, they are empowered by the Act, at any time before the
-execution of the Award, to sell their rights to allotment in respect of
-any common right.
-
-
-COMPENSATION TO OCCUPIERS.--Occupiers are to pay a higher rent in
-return for the loss of the use of common rights. The clause runs
-as follows:--‘That the several Persons who hold any Lands or other
-Estates, to which a Right of Common upon the said Commons and Waste
-Grounds is appurtenant or belonging, or any Part of the said Open
-Common Fields or Inclosures, by virtue of any Lease, of which a longer
-Term than One Year is unexpired, shall and are hereby required to
-pay to their respective Landlords such Increase of Rent towards the
-Expences such Landlords will be respectively put to in Consequence of
-this Act, as the said Commissioners shall judge reasonable, and shall
-by Writing under their Hands direct or appoint, having Regard to the
-Duration of such respective Leases, and to the probable Benefit which
-will accrue to such respective Lessees by Reason of the said Inclosure.’
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners to have full power to set out and shut up roads
-and footpaths (turnpike roads excepted).
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not in any cases where
-the Commissioners’ decisions are final, binding, or conclusive, as
-they are, _e.g._ on claims (except the Earl of Strafford’s) and on
-allotments.
-
-
-AWARD.--Not with Clerks of Peace or of County Council, or in Record
-Office.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (12)
-
-WINFRITH NEWBURGH, DORSET.--ENCLOSURE ACT, 1768
-
-
-AREA.--2254 Acres or thereabouts.
-
-
-NATURE OF GROUND.--Common Fields, Meadow Grounds, Sheep Downs, Commons,
-Common Heaths, and other Waste Grounds.
-
-(In Report, Common Arable Fields and Common Meadows = 1218 acres.)
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_December 1, 1767._--Petition for enclosure
-from Edward Weld, Esq., George Clavell, Esq., Benjamin Thornton, Clerk,
-William Weston, Clerk, John Felton, Gentleman, and others. Leave
-given; bill read twice and committed on December 11 to a Committee of
-42 members in addition to the members for Dorset, Somerset, Devon and
-Cornwall. All to have Voices. January 25, 1768, Petition from persons
-being Freeholders, Proprietors of Estates or otherwise interested,
-against the bill stating ‘that if the said Bill should pass into a
-Law the Estates of the Petitioners and others in the said Parish
-will be greatly injured, and several of them must be totally ruined
-thereby; and that some of the Petitioners, by Threats and Menaces,
-were prevailed upon to sign the Petition for the said Bill; but upon
-Recollection, and considering the impending Ruin they shall be subject
-to by the Inclosure, beg Leave now to have Liberty to retract from
-their seeming Acquiescence in the said Petition,’ and ask to be heard
-by Counsel against the Bill. Petition referred to the Committee.
-
-_January 29, 1768._--Mr. Bond reported from the Committee that there
-was an erasure in the prayer of the said Petition and asked for
-instructions. A fresh Committee of 36 members (many of whom were also
-members of the other Committee) was appointed to examine into the
-question of how the erasure was made, and whether it was previous or
-subsequent to the signing. This Committee was ordered to report to the
-House, but there is no record of its report.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_February 2, 1768._--Mr. Bond
-reported from the Committee that the allegations were true, and that
-the ‘Parties concerned’ had given their consent ‘(except Four Persons
-who could not be found whose Property in the Common Meadows to be
-inclosed amounts to Five Acres, Three Roods, Twenty Three Perches
-and a half; and also except Four other Persons who, when applied to
-for their Consent to the Bill, refused to sign, though they declared
-they had no Objection, and whose Property in the Common Meadows to be
-inclosed amounts to Four Acres, One Rood, Thirty Eight Perches; and
-also except Six Persons whose Property in the Common Arable Fields
-and Common Meadows to be inclosed mounts to One hundred and twenty
-two Acres, Thirty Three Perches, who refused to sign the Bill; and
-also, except Three Persons, whose Property in the Common Arable Fields
-and Common Meadows, to be inclosed, amounts to One hundred and seven
-Acres, Twenty Three Perches, who hold under Copies of Court Roll,
-granted on Condition that they would join in any Act or Deed for the
-dividing and inclosing the said Common Fields, and Meadows, and other
-Commonable Lands within the said Manor, when thereto requested by the
-Lord of the said Manor; and that the whole Number of Acres in the said
-Common Arable Fields and Common Meadows is One thousand, Two hundred
-and eighteen, Twenty Eight Perches and a half, and that the Rector of
-Winfrith Newburgh and Vicar of Campden, who are intitled to all the
-Great and Small Tithes arising out of the said Common Arable Fields and
-Common Meadows have consented thereto).’
-
-_February 2, 1768_ (same day).--Another Petition against the bill from
-Freeholders, Proprietors and Persons otherwise interested stating
-that the Inclosure is ‘contrary to the general Sense of the Persons
-interested therein,’ and will be ‘injurious to the Property of the
-Petitioners and others, the smaller Landholders within the said Parish,
-some of whom must, in the Petitioners’ Judgment, be totally ruined
-thereby.’ Petitioners to be heard when Report considered.
-
-_February 3, 1768._--Report considered. House informed that no Counsel
-attended. Report read. Clause added settling the expenses to be paid
-by Copyholders and Lessees for Lives. Bill sent to Lords. February
-9, Committed. Same day, Petition against it from various persons as
-‘contrary to the general Sense of the Persons interested therein.’
-Referred to Committee. February 12, Lord Delamer reported from the
-Committee without amendment. February 24, Royal Assent.
-
-
-MAIN FEATURES OF ACT.--(Private, 8 George III. c. 18.)
-
-
-COMMISSIONERS.--Seven appointed. (1) John Bond, Esq., of Grange; (2)
-David Robert Mitchell, Esq., of Dewlish; (3) Nathaniel Bond, Esq., of
-West Lulworth; (4) Thomas Williams, Esq., of Herringstone; (5) William
-Churchill, Esq., of Dorchester; (6) George Lillington of Burngate,
-Gentleman; (7) Joseph Garland of Chaldon, Gentleman; all of Dorset.
-
-Sometimes 3, sometimes 4 a quorum. Vacancies to be filled up by
-remaining Commissioners from persons not interested in the land to be
-inclosed.
-
-Survey to be made if Commissioners ‘shall think the same necessary.’
-
-
-PAYMENT.--Nothing stated.
-
-
-CLAIMS.--Commissioners to examine into and determine on all claims;
-and ‘in case any Difference or Dispute shall arise between all or
-any of the Parties interested in the said Division and Inclosure,
-with respect to the Premises, or any Matter or Thing herein contained
-or consequent thereon, or in relation thereunto, the same shall be
-adjusted and finally determined between the said Parties, and every
-of them, by the said Commissioners, or any Three or more of them.’
-Commissioners can examine witnesses on oath, ‘and the Determinations of
-the said Commissioners, or any Three or more of them therein, shall be
-binding and conclusive to all and every the said Parties....’
-
-
-SYSTEM OF DIVISION--SPECIAL PROVISIONS:
-
-_Lords of the Manor_ (Edward Weld, Esq., of Winfrith Newburgh; George
-Clavell, Esq., of Langcotts and East Fossell).--No special provision
-for allotment. Their Manorial Rights are not to be prejudiced by Act
-except as regards ‘the Mines, Delves, and Quarries lying within and
-under such Parts, Shares, and Proportions of the said Common Fields,
-Meadow Grounds, Sheep Downs, Commons, Common Heaths and other Waste
-Grounds, as shall or may be allotted and assigned to the several other
-Freeholders and Owners of Lands’ within these Manors ‘or to any Person
-or Persons not having any Lands within the said In-Parish or Manors,
-or within the Precincts thereof as aforesaid, in Lieu of or as an
-Equivalent for such Right or Claim as aforesaid; and other than and
-except such Common of Pasture and other Common Rights as can or may be
-claimed by or belonging to the Lord or Lords of the said Manors in and
-upon the Premises so intended to be divided and inclosed as aforesaid.’
-
-_Tithe Owners._--Tithe owners to have the same rights to Tithes over
-the land about to be inclosed as they have over the lands already
-inclosed.
-
-If arable land is converted to pasture on inclosure (for Dairy Cows or
-Black Cattle) then allottees shall pay an annual 3s. an acre to tithe
-owners as compensation for corn tithes. Allotments given in virtue of
-estates which are Cistertian Lands, are to be deemed Cistertian Lands
-too, _i.e._ to have same exemption from tithes, but any Cistertian
-Lands which are allotted are to be under the same obligations for
-tithes as the estates in virtue of which they are allotted.
-
-_Provision for the Poor._--None.
-
-_Provision for Fuel Allotment._--Commissioners are to ascertain and
-determine all Rights of Common over the land to be enclosed, and are
-then to set out such part or parts ‘as shall appear to them to be
-sufficient, and to be conveniently situate for the preserving and
-raising Furze, Turf, or other Fuel, for the Use of the several Persons’
-who shall appear to the Commissioners to be intitled to a Right of
-Common.
-
-_Allotment of Residue._--Amongst all persons who appear to the
-Commissioners to be intitled to a Right of Common, or to have or be
-intitled to any other Property in the said Common Fields, etc., in such
-proportions as the Commissioners judge right ‘without giving any undue
-Preference,’ and with due regard to Quality, Quantity, and Situation.
-
-But the following Rules are to be observed with regard to proportions:--
-
-(1) Common Fields and Sheep Downs are to be divided ‘by and according
-to the Parts and Proportions of the Arable Lands lying in the said
-Common Fields, where the said Parties respectively now are, or, at the
-Time of such Allotments so as aforesaid to be made shall be intitled
-to.’
-
-(2) Meadow Grounds, Commons, Common Heaths, and other Waste Grounds
-to be divided ‘according to the Sum or Sums of money which the said
-Parties and each of them now stand charged with towards the Relief of
-the Poor of the said Parish’ in respect of their lands which have right
-of common.
-
-_Special Clause._--In case it appears to the Commissioners that any
-persons who have no land, nevertheless have a right of common, then
-the Commissioners can allot such person such part of the land to be
-inclosed as they think an equivalent for such right of common. In order
-to prevent all Differences and Disputes, the Commissioners are to draw
-up an Award, and this Award shall be binding and conclusive to all and
-every Person and Persons interested. Failure to accept within 6 months
-excludes allottee from all benefit and advantage of this Act, and
-also ‘from any Estate, Interest or Right of Common, or other Property
-whatsoever’ in any other allotment. (Saving clause for infants, etc.)
-
-
-INCROACHMENTS.--Not mentioned.
-
-
-FENCING, etc.--To be done by allottees in such proportions as
-Commissioners direct. Such directions to be put in award, and to be
-final and binding. Fences to be made within 12 months, or some other
-convenient space of time.
-
-If an allottee fails to fence, his neighbour can complain to a J.P.
-(not interested in the inclosure), who can authorise complainant to do
-it, and either charge defaulter or to enter on premises and receive
-rents till expenses paid. _Exception._--Allotment of Copyholders and
-leaseholders for one or more lives are to be fenced partly by the Lord
-of the Manor and partly by the allottees in such proportion as the
-Commissioners (or 4 of them) direct.
-
-
-EXPENSES.--(1) Expenses of obtaining and passing the Act to be borne by
-the Lords of the Manor.
-
-(2) Expenses of carrying out the Act (survey, allotment, Commissioners’
-charges, etc.) to be borne by the several allottees in proportion to
-the Quantity of Land allotted to them, or otherwise as Commissioners
-direct. _Exception._--Tithe owners’ share to be borne by the Lords of
-the Manor. Commissioners can distrain for payment.
-
-Trustees, Tenants in Tail or for Life may mortgage up to 40s. an acre.
-
-
-COMPENSATION.--Leases and agreements at Rack Rent to be void, owners
-making such compensation to Lessees as Commissioners judge right.
-
-
-ROADS.--Commissioners have power to set out and shut up roads and
-footpaths.
-
-
-POWER OF APPEAL.--To Quarter Sessions only, and not when Commissioners’
-determination said to be final.
-
-
-AWARD.--August 17, 1771. With Dorset Clerk of Peace or of County
-Council.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (13)
-
-QUAINTON.--ATTEMPTED ENCLOSURE, 1801
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_March 20, 1801._--Petition for enclosures
-from ‘several persons.’ Leave given. Earl Temple, Sir William Young,
-and Mr. Praed to prepare bill.
-
-_April 2._--Bill read first time.
-
-_April 13._--Petition from various proprietors of Lands, Common Rights,
-and other Hereditaments against the bill, stating that enclosure ‘would
-be attended with an Expence to the Proprietors far exceeding any
-Improvement to be derived therefrom.’ Ordered to be heard on second
-reading.
-
-_April 15._--Bill read second time. Petitioners declined to be heard.
-Bill committed to Mr. Praed, Earl Temple, etc.
-
-_April 21._--Petition against the bill from various proprietors stating
-‘that the Proprietors of the said Commonable Lands are very numerous,
-and the Shares or Properties belonging to most of them are so small
-that the proposed Division and Inclosure would be attended with an
-Expence far exceeding any Improvement to be derived therefrom; and
-that a great Majority in Number of the said Proprietors dissent to the
-said Bill, and the Proprietors of more than One-third, and very nearly
-One-half Part in Value, of the Lands to be inclosed, also dissent
-thereto; and that many of the Clauses and Provisions in the said Bill
-are also highly injurious’ to the petitioners.
-
-Referred to the Committee. All to have voices.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_June 12._--Mr. Praed reported
-from the Committee that the Standing Orders had been complied with,
-that the allegations were true, and that the Parties concerned had
-given their consent (except the owners of Estates assessed to the Land
-Tax at £39, 12s. 6-1/4d. who refused to sign the bill, and the owners
-of Estates assessed at £3, 10s. 0d. who were neuter; and that the whole
-of the Estates ‘interested’ were assessed at £246, 8s. 6d.).
-
-Same day.--Petition against the bill from Richard Wood on behalf of
-himself and other proprietors who were parties to the former petition,
-Richard Wood being the only one left in London, setting forth ‘that
-the said Bill proposes to inclose only a Part of the said Parish of
-Quainton, consisting of 3 open Arable Fields, and about 280 Acres of
-Commonable Land, lying dispersedly in, or adjoining to the said Open
-Fields, the rest of the said Parish being Old inclosed Lands’; that the
-agent for the bill had given the Committee a statement (1) of the names
-of the persons interested; (2) of the amount at which these persons
-were assessed to the Land Tax for their property throughout the parish,
-according to which statement it appeared, first, that of the 34 persons
-interested, ‘not being Cottagers,’ 8 assented, 4 were neuter, and 22
-dissented; but that, second, as stated in terms of Land Tax Assessment,
-£203, 5s. 11-3/4d. assented, and £39, 12s. 6-1/4d. dissented; that
-this statement was wrong inasmuch as the proprietors of old inclosed
-lands had in respect of old inclosures no rights over the commonable
-lands, and that therefore no old inclosed land could rank as property
-‘interested’ in the inclosure. The petitioners gave the following
-enumeration of Consents as the correct one; whole quantity of land in
-the Open Fields, ‘in respect of which only a Right of Common could be
-claimed,’ 42-1/4 yard lands:--
-
- Land belonging to those who assented, 21-3/4 yard lands
- „ „ dissented, 19-1/2 „
- „ „ were neutral, 1 yard land
-
-or in terms of annual value--
-
- Assenting, £406 10 0
- Dissenting, 370 0 0
- Neutral, 37 0 0
-
-The petitioners further stated that their Counsel had offered to call
-witnesses before the Committee to prove the above facts; that the agent
-for the bill had retorted that old inclosed lands had a right in the
-Commons, although he did not pretend that such right had ever been
-enjoyed, or produce any witness to show that it had ever been claimed,
-but supported his claim by quoting a clause in the bill by which it
-was proposed that the Rector’s Tithes for the old inclosures as well
-as the new should be commuted for an allotment of land; and that the
-Committee refused to hear the evidence tendered by the petitioners’
-Counsel. This Petition was referred to the Committee to whom the bill
-was recommitted, and the bill was dropped.
-
-
-APPENDIX A (14)
-
-
-SUBSEQUENT HISTORY OF KING’S SEDGMOOR
-
-In 1775, Mr. Allen, Member of Parliament for Bridgwater, tried to
-get an enclosure bill passed. ‘Sanguine of success, and highly
-impressed with the idea of its importance, he purchased a large
-number of rights, and having obtained a signature of consents, went to
-Parliament; but not having interest enough in the House to stem the
-torrent of opposition, all his delusive prospects of profit vanished,
-and he found himself left in a small but respectable minority.’[502]
-No further attempt was made till 1788, when a meeting to consider
-the propriety of draining and dividing the moor, was held at Wells.
-‘At this meeting Sir Philip Hales presided; and after much abuse and
-opposition from the lower order of commoners, who openly threatened
-destruction to those who supported such a measure, the meeting was
-dissolved without coming to any final determination.
-
-‘The leading idea was, however, afterwards pursued, with great
-assiduity, by Sir Philip, and his agent Mr. Symes of Stowey; and by
-their persevering industry, and good management,’[503] application was
-again made to Parliament in 1791.
-
-
-PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.--_February 18, 1791._--Petition from several
-Owners and Proprietors for a bill to drain and divide the tract of
-waste ground of about 18,000 acres called King’s Sedgmoor. Petitioners
-point out that the moor is liable to be overflowed, ‘and thereby the
-same is not only less serviceable and useful to the Commoners, but
-also, by reason of the Vapours and Exhalations which arise from thence,
-the Air of the circumjacent Country is rendered less salubrious’; also
-that it would be ‘beneficial, as well to the wholesomeness of the
-neighbouring Country as also to the Profitableness of the Pasturage of
-the said Moor’ if it were drained and divided into Parochial or other
-large allotments. The House was also informed that the expense of the
-undertaking was not proposed to be levied by Tolls or Duties upon the
-Parties interested.
-
-Leave given. Mr. Philips and Sir John Trevelyan to prepare. February
-28. Bill committed to Mr. Philips, Mr. Templar, etc.
-
-
-REPORT AND ENUMERATION OF CONSENTS.--_March 7._--Mr. Philips reported
-that the Standing Orders had been complied with, that the allegations
-were true, and that the parties concerned had consented ‘(except the
-Owners of 107 Rights on the said Moor, who declared themselves neuter
-in respect to the Bill; and also except the Owners of 84 Rights, who
-declared themselves against the Bill; and that the whole of the Rights
-on the said Moor consist of 1740, or thereabouts; and that no Person
-appeared before the Committee to oppose the Bill).’
-
-The Bill passed Commons, March 9; Lords, April 15. Royal Assent, May 13.
-
-Billingsley, after describing the attempts to enclose Sedgmoor, remarks
-(p. 192): ‘I have been thus particular in stating the progress of this
-business merely to show the impropriety of calling public meetings with
-a view of gaining signatures of consent or taking the sense of the
-proprietors in that way. At all publick meetings of this nature which I
-ever attended noise and clamour have silenced sound sense and argument.
-A party generally attends with a professed desire to oppose, and truth
-and propriety have a host of foes to combat. Whoever therefore has
-an object of this kind in view let him acquire consent by _private
-application_; for I have frequently seen the good effects thereof
-manifested by the irresistible influence of truth when coolly and
-quietly administered; and it has frequently happened that men hostile
-to your scheme have by dispassionate argument not only changed their
-sentiment but become warm partisans in that cause which at first they
-meant to oppose.’
-
-The task of Sir Philip and Mr. Symes in acquiring consents by the
-cool and quiet administration of truth must have been considerably
-lightened by the fact that Parliament anticipated the Commissioners
-with extraordinary accuracy in disregarding 55% of the claims. The
-Commissioners, says Billingsley, investigated 4063 claims, of which
-only 1798 were allowed. The Parliamentary Committee had asserted that
-there were 1740 rights, ‘or thereabouts.’
-
-The Act for draining and dividing King’s Sedgmoor is not, so far as we
-have been able to discover, amongst the printed Statutes.
-
-Particulars of the expenses are given by Billingsley (p. 196), who
-estimates the area at 12,000 acres:--
-
- £ _s._ _d._
- To act of parliament and all other incidental expenses, 1,628 15 0
- Interest of money borrowed, 3,239 4 11
- Commissioners, 4,314 7 8
- Clerk, 1,215 19 0
- Surveyor, 908 12 6
- Printers, 362 6 3
- Petty expenses, 575 11 1
- Land purchased, 2,801 4 11
- Drains, sluices, bridges and roads, 15,418 2 8
- Awards and incidentals, 1,160 0 8
- ------------
- £31,624 4 8
- -------------
-
-About 700 acres were sold to discharge the expenses.
-
-The drainage and division into parochial allotments was a preliminary
-to enclosure of the different parochial shares, which was of course
-made easier by the fact that 55% of the claims had already been
-disallowed. In the years 1796, ’97, and ’98, fourteen Enclosure Acts
-for the different parishes were passed.
-
-(Butleigh and Woollavington, 1796. Aller, Ashcott, Compton Dundon,
-Higham, Othery, Moorlinch, Somerton, Street, and Weston Zoyland, 1797.
-Bridgwater, Chedjoy, and Midellzoy, 1798.)
-
-Billingsley estimated that the total cost of subdividing parochial
-allotments would be £28,000.
-
-He also estimated that the value of the land rose from 10s. to 35s. an
-acre.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[490] Referred to below as ‘A’.
-
-[491] Referred to below as ‘B’.
-
-[492] Note that the compensation to the Lords of the Manor added
-together comes to less than one ninety-first part of the soil.
-
-[493] _I.e._ lands over which there is right of common for half the
-year between Michaelmas and Lady Day or Lammas and Lady Day.
-
-[494] This referred to roads only, see Act.
-
-[495] It took twenty-nine years.
-
-[496] Sir James Lowther, afterwards Lord Lowther, who had originally
-petitioned for enclosure, had died in 1802. He was succeeded by his
-cousin, Wordsworth’s patron.
-
-[497] These allotments were fenced by the other proprietors and did not
-bear any of the expenses of the Act.
-
-[498] Including 8 acres 1 rood 5 perches for rights of soil.
-
-[499] Nine of them women.
-
-[500] See p. 55.
-
-[501] See Petition, p. 379, where nearly a hundred are said to do so.
-
-[502] Billingsley’s _Somerset_, p. 191.
-
-[503] _Ibid._, pp. 191-2.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B
-
-BEDFORDSHIRE.--CLOPSHILL, 1795.[504]
-
-
-FAMILY OF SIX PERSONS.
-
- _Expences by the Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread, flour, or oatmeal, 0 7 6
- Yeast and salt, 0 0 3
- Thread and worsted, 0 0 2
- Bacon or other meat, 0 1 6
- Tea, sugar, and butter, 0 0 10-1/2
- Soap, 0 0 5
- Candles, 0 0 5
- Beer, 0 0 7
- ------------
- Total of the Week, £0 11 8-1/2
- ------------
- Amount per Annum, £30 8 10
- Rent, 1 10 0
- Wood, 1 12 6
- Cloaths, 2 2 0
- Sickness, 0 5 0
- ---------
- Total Expences per Annum, £35 18 4
- ---------
- _Earning per Week_--
- The man, £0 7 6
- The woman, 0 1 6
- The children, 0 4 0
- ---------
- Total of the Week, £0 13 0
- ---------
- Total Earnings per Annum, £33 16 0
- ---------
- _N.B._--‘The Harvest earnings not included: they go a great
- way towards making up the deficiency.’
-
-
-DORSET.--SHERBORNE, 1789.[505]
-
-
-FAMILY OF FIVE PERSONS.
-
- _Expences per Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread, 0 3 0
- Salt, 0 0 1-1/2
- Meat, 0 0 8
- Tea, etc., 0 0 2[506]
- Cheese, 0 0 7
- Milk, 0 0 4
- Soap, 0 0 2-1/2
- Candles, 0 0 6
- Thread, etc., 0 0 1
- ---------
- Total, £0 5 8
- =========
- Amount per Annum, £14 14 8
- Rent, 2 0 0
- Fuel, 3 18 0
- Clothes, etc., 1 0 0
- ---------
- Total Expences per Annum, £21 12 8
- =========
- _Earnings per Week_--
- The man, £0 6 0
- The woman, 0 2 6
- ---------
- Total, £0 8 6
- =========
- Total Earnings per Annum, £22 2 0
- =========
-
-
-HAMPSHIRE.--LONG PARISH, 1789.[507]
-
-FAMILY OF SIX PERSONS.
-
- _Expences per Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread or Flour, 0 5 0
- Yeast and Salt, 0 0 3
- Bacon or other Meat, 0 1 0
- Tea, Sugar, and Butter, 0 0 6
- Cheese, 0 0 5
- Soap, Starch, and Blue, 0 0 2
- Candles, 0 0 2
- Thread, Thrum, and Worsted, 0 0 3
- ---------
- Total, £0 7 9
- =========
- Amount per Annum, £20 3 0
-
- Rent, Fuel (‘both very high and
- scarce’), Clothes,
- Lying-in, etc., 7 0 0
- ---------
- Total Expences per Annum, £27 3 0
- =========
- _Earnings per Week_--
- The man, £0 8 0
- The woman, 0 1 0
- ---------
- Total, £0 9 0
- =========
- Total Earnings per Annum, £23 8 0
- =========
-
-
-HERTS.--HINKSWORTH, 1795.[508]
-
-FAMILY OF SIX PERSONS.
-
- _Expences by the Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread, flour, or oatmeal, 0 10 5
- Heating the oven, 0 0 4
- Yeast and salt, 0 0 4
- Bacon or pork, 0 3 4
- Tea, sugar, and butter, 0 1 9-1/2
- Soap, 0 0 5
- Cheese, 0 0 7-1/2
- Candles, 0 0 4
- Small beer, 0 0 6-3/4
- Milk, 0 0 4
- Potatoes, 0 1 3
- Thread and worsted, 0 0 4
- ------------
- Total of the Week, £1 0 0-1/2
- ============
- Amount per Annum, £52 2 2
- Rent, 2 0 0
- Cloaths, 6 5 10
- Fuel, coal, wood, etc., 3 15 3
- Births and burials, 1 3 6
- ---------
- Total Expences per Annum, £65 6 9
- =========
- _Earnings per Week_--
- The man, £0 9 2-3/4
- The woman, 0 1 6
- The children, 0 4 8
- ------------
- Total of the Week, £0 15 4-3/4
- ============
- Total Earnings per Annum, £40 0 7
-
- ============
-
-
-NORTHAMPTONSHIRE.--CASTOR, 1794.[509]
-
-FAMILY OF SIX PERSONS.
-
- _Expences per Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread and Flour, 0 4 3
- Salt, 0 0 1
- Meat, 0 1 6
- Tea, Sugar, and Butter, 0 1 1
- Cheese (sometimes), 0 0 5
- Soap 1/4 lb., Starch, etc., 0 0 2-1/2
- Candles 1/2 lb., Thread, etc., 0 0 6
- ------------
- Total, £0 8 0-1/2
- ============
-
- Amount per Annum, 20 18 2
- Rent, 1 15 0
- Fuel and coals, 1 10 0
- Clothing, 2 15 0
- Lying-in, loss of time, etc., 1 10 0
- ---------
- Total Expenses per Annum, £28 8 2
- =========
- _Earnings per Week_--
- The man, £0 7 6
- The woman, 0 0 10
- The children, 0 0 4
- ---------
- Total, £0 8 8
- =========
- Total Earnings per Annum, £22 10 8
- =========
-
- _N.B._--To the earnings may be added what is got by gleaning.
-
-
-NORFOLK.--DISS, 1793.[510]
-
-FAMILY OF SIX PERSONS.
-
- _Expences by the Week_-- £ _s._ _d._
- Bread, flour or oatmeal, 0 4 7-1/2
- Yeast and salt, 0 0 2
- Bacon or other meat, 0 0 3
- Tea, sugar, and butter, 0 0 9-1/4
- Soap, 0 0 2-1/4
- Candles, 0 0 3
- Cheese, 0 0 5-1/2
- Milk, 0 0 6
- Potatoes, 0 0 6
- Thread and worsted, 0 0 2
- ------------
- Total per Week, £0 7 10-1/2
- ============
- Total per Annum, £20 9 6
- Rent, 3 3 0
- Fuel, 1 4 0
- Cloaths, 2 3 0
- Births, burials, sickness, 0 10 0
- ---------
- Total Expenses per Annum, £27 9 6
- =========
- _Earnings per Week_--
- The Man, £0 9 0
- The Woman, 0 1 0
- The Children, 0 1 6
- ---------
- Total, £0 11 6
- =========
- Total Earnings per Annum, £29 18 0
- =========
-
- _N.B._--In 1795 the earnings of this family were the same but
- their expenses had risen to £36, 11s. 4d. On bread they spent
- 8s. a week instead of 4s. 7-1/2d.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[504] Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxxxix.
-
-[505] Davies, p. 152.
-
-[506] Davies puts 1-1/2d., but this is probably a slip.
-
-[507] Davies, p. 166.
-
-[508] Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxlii.
-
-[509] Davies, p. 176.
-
-[510] Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxlvi.
-
-
-
-
-CHIEF AUTHORITIES
-
-
- _Journals of House of Commons_ for period.
-
- _Journals of House of Lords_ for period.
-
- Reports of Parliamentary Debates for period in _Parliamentary
- Register_, _Parliamentary History_, _Senator_ and _Parliamentary
- Debates_.
-
- _Statutes, Public and Private_ for period.
-
- _Enclosure Awards_ in Record Office or Duchy of Lancaster.
-
- _Home Office Papers_ in Record Office.
-
- _Parliamentary Papers_ for period; specially--
-
- FOR ENCLOSURES--
-
-Report from Select Committee on Standing Orders relating to Private
-Bills, 1775.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Waste Lands. Ordered to be printed
-December 23, 1795.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Waste Lands, 1797.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Means of Facilitating Inclosure, 1800.
-(Deals specially with Expense).
-
-Report from Select Committee on Constitution of Select Committees on
-Private Bills, 1825.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Commons Inclosure, 1844.
-
- FOR POOR LAWS--
-
-Report from Select Committee on Poor Laws, 1817.
-
-Report from Lords Committee on Poor Laws, 1818.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Poor Laws, 1819.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Relief of Able-Bodied from the Poor
-Rate, 1828.
-
-Report from Lords on Poor Law, 1828.
-
-Documents in possession of Poor Law Commissioners, 1833.
-
-Report of Poor Laws Commissioners, 1834
-
- FOR GAME LAWS, CRIME, AND PUNISHMENT--
-
-Report from Select Committee on Game Laws, 1823.
-
-Report from Lords Committee on Game Laws, 1828.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions,
-1827.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions,
-1828.
-
-Return of Convictions under the Game Laws from 1827-30.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Secondary Punishments, 1831.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Secondary Punishments, 1832.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Transportation, 1838.
-
- FOR OTHER SOCIAL QUESTIONS--
-
-Report from Select Committee on Agricultural Distress, 1821.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Labourers’ Wages, 1824.
-
-Reports from Select Committee on Emigration, 1826-7.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Agriculture, 1833.
-
-Report from Select Committee on Allotment System, 1843.
-
-Publications of Board of Agriculture.
-
-_General Report on Enclosures_, 1808.
-
-_Report on the Agricultural State of the Kingdom_, 1816.
-
-_Agricultural Surveys_ of different Counties, by various writers,
-alluded to in text as _Bedford Report_, _Middlesex Report_, etc.
-
-
-_Annual Register_ for period.
-
-_Annals of Agriculture_, 1784-1815 (46 vols.).
-
-Cobbett’s _Political Register_, 1802-35.
-
-_The Tribune_ (mainly Thelwall’s lectures), 1795-6.
-
-Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition and Improving the
-Comforts of the Poor, (5 vols.), 1795-1808.
-
-Ruggles, Thomas, _History of the Poor_, 1793 (published first in
-_Annals of Agriculture_).
-
-Davies, David, _The Case of Labourers in Husbandry stated and
-considered_, 1795.
-
-Eden, Sir Frederic Morton, _The State of the Poor or An History of the
-Labouring Classes in England_, 1797.
-
-The Works of Arthur Young, William Marshall, and other contemporary
-writers on agriculture and enclosures; see list in Hasbach, _History of
-the English Agricultural Labourer_.
-
-Cobbett’s _Works_.
-
-Dunkin’s _History of Oxfordshire_.
-
-_Carlisle Papers, Historical MSS. Commission._
-
-_Memoir of Lord Suffield_, by R. M. Bacon, 1838.
-
-_Life of Sir Samuel Romilly_, 1842.
-
-
-MODERN AUTHORITIES
-
- Babeau, A., _Le Village sous l’ancien Régime_.
-
- Curtler, W. H. R., _A Short History of English Agriculture_.
-
- Eversley, Lord, _Commons, Forests, and Footpaths_.
-
- Hasbach, Wilhelm, _History of the English Agricultural Labourer_.
-
- Hirst, F. W., and Redlich, J., _Local Government in England_.
-
- Hobson, J. A., _The Industrial System_.
-
- Hudson, W. H., _A Shepherd’s Life_.
-
- Jenks, E., _Outlines of Local Government_.
-
- Johnson, A. H., _The Disappearance of the Small Landowner_.
-
- Kovalewsky, M., _La France Économique et Sociale à la Veille de la
- Révolution_.
-
- Levy, H., _Large and Small Holdings_.
-
- Mantoux, P., _La Révolution Industrielle_.
-
- Porritt, E., _The Unreformed House of Commons_.
-
- Scrutton, T. E., _Commons and Common Fields_.
-
- Slater, G., _The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common Fields_.
-
- Smart, W., _Economic Annals of the Nineteenth Century_.
-
- De Tocqueville, _L’ancien Régime_.
-
- Vinogradoff, P., _The Growth of the Manor_.
-
- Webb, S. and B., _English Local Government_.--_The Parish and the
- County._
-
- ---- _English Local Government_.--_The Manor and the Borough._
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abel, Mr., 248. f.
-
- Abingdon, 267;
- Special Commission at, 305 f.
-
- Abingdon, Lord, and Otmoor, 88, 91;
- on Special Commission, 302.
-
- Abree, Margaret and Thomas, 109 _n._
-
- Adam, the brothers, 327.
-
- Addington, H. _See_ Sidmouth.
-
- ---- Stephen, 31, 44.
-
- Addington Hills, 48.
-
- Addison, 325.
-
- Aglionby, Mr., M.P., 53.
-
- Agriculture, and enclosure, 36;
- during French war, 166 ff.;
- Brougham on, 171.
-
- Aix, Archbishop of, 217.
-
- Albemarle, Lord, 321.
-
- Aldborough, 9.
-
- Alderson, Justice, on Special Commissions, 272, 275, 277, 278, 281,
- 290, 293, 295, 298, 300;
- and Looker case, 295 f.
-
- Allotments, and enclosure, 84 ff.;
- experiments, 154 ff.;
- hostility of farmers to, 159 f.;
- M. Chateauvieux on, 232 f.;
- Suffield’s scheme in 1830, 322 ff.
-
- Almack’s, 68, 70.
-
- Althorp, Lord, 190, 202, 288;
- Cobbett on, 313.
-
- America, farmers in, 212;
- Cobbett in, 235.
-
- Amnesty Debate, 314.
-
- Andover, 260, 280, 285.
-
- Appeal, against enclosure award, 59 f.
-
- Arbuthnot, J., 37, 81.
-
- Aristocracy, contrast between English and French, 1 ff.;
- control over all English institutions, 7 ff.;
- Burke on, 24 f.;
- characteristics, Chapter xiii.
-
- Armley (enclosure), 51, 59, 60, and Appendix A (1).
-
- Arson, in 1830, 243 ff., 268 f.;
- penalties for, 273;
- trials for, 309 f.
-
- Artaxerxes, 70.
-
- Arthur, Sir George (Governor of Van Diemen’s Land), 205, 324.
-
- Arundel, 256.
-
- Arundel, Lord, 261, 293.
-
- Ash, 183.
-
- Ashbury (enclosure), 43 _n._
-
- Ashelworth (enclosure), 46, 50, 59, 98, and Appendix A (2).
-
- Astley, Sir E., 71.
-
- Aston, Tirrold, 263.
-
- Atkins, Elizabeth, 102.
-
- Attorney-General. _See_ Denman.
-
- Aunalls, James, 285.
-
- Austen, Jane, 214.
-
- Avington, 258, 265.
-
- Award, enclosure, 60.
-
- Aylesbury, 132;
- riots in 1795, 121;
- Special Commission, 275, 306 f.
-
- Azay le Rideau, 3.
-
-
- Babeau, M., 1, 215, 223.
-
- Bacon, R. M., 321.
-
- Bagehot, W., 36.
-
- Bagshot Heath, 40.
-
- Bailiffs, 160, 213.
-
- Baily, Mr., 97 _n._
-
- Baker, Mr., M.P., and Settlement, 153.
-
- Bakewell, 36.
-
- Bamford, S., 213, 238.
-
- Bampfylde, Copleston Warre, 65.
-
- Barett, 293.
-
- Baring, Bingham, 292, 304;
- and Cook 286;
- and Deacle case, 278, 287.
-
- ---- Sir Thomas, 187, 192, 284.
-
- Barings, the, 243, 288, 302, 317.
-
- Barkham, 82.
-
- Barnes, 277.
-
- ---- Common, 31.
-
- Barré, Colonel, 219.
-
- Barton Stacey, 284, 285.
-
- Basingstoke, 162 _n._, 289.
-
- Baskerville, Mr., J.P., 297.
-
- Bath, 121, 127, 130 _n._, 190 _n._
-
- Bathurst, Lord, 56.
-
- Batten, Matthew, 303.
-
- Battersea, 30.
-
- Battle, 248, 250, 253, 255, 256.
-
- Beaconsfield, 135.
-
- Beckett (the gaoler), 277.
-
- Beckley, 88 f., 91.
-
- Bedford, 152.
-
- ---- Gaol, account of prisoners in, 193.
-
- Belgrave, Lord, 143.
-
- Benett, John, M. P., and 1830 rising, 261, 291, 292, 315;
- at Cobbett’s trial, 317.
-
- Bennett, 263.
-
- ---- Cornelius, 303 f.
-
- Benson or Bensington, 268.
-
- Bentham, 203, 312;
- on enclosure, 40;
- on Pitt’s Bill, 150.
-
- Bentley, 218.
-
- Berkeley, Bishop, 175.
-
- Berkshire, 30;
- 1830 rising in, 258 ff.;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- ---- Bread Act. _See_ Speenhamland.
-
- Bernard, Scrope, 132.
-
- ---- Sir Thomas, on Lord Winchilsea’s allotments, 128, 155, 158 f.;
- on minimum wage, 143;
- on removals, 154 _n._
-
- Betts, John, 102.
-
- Bicester, 99 _n._
-
- Billingsley, J., 37, 61 _n._, 98 _n._
-
- Birdingbury, 100.
-
- Birmingham, 115.
-
- Bishop, Daniel, on poaching, 192, 196;
- on 1830 rising, 248.
-
- Bishop, 310 f.
-
- Bishops, the, comparison of French and English, 217;
- reforming, 218, 219.
-
- Bishopstone (Wilts), (enclosure), 51.
-
- Bishops Walthams, 159.
-
- Bishton, Mr., 38.
-
- Blackstone, 187, 203, 219;
- on common rights, 29, 31;
- on gleaning, 108.
-
- Blake, Mr., of Idmiston, 295.
-
- ---- William, 326.
-
- Blean, 310.
-
- Blizzard, Thomas, 307.
-
- Blomfield, Bishop, 219.
-
- Blow, Charles, 246.
-
- Board of Agriculture, and enclosures, 74 ff., 84;
- questions to correspondents, 135, 176.
-
- Bocking, 118.
-
- Bolingbroke, Lord (author of _Patriot King_), 207.
-
- ---- ---- and Sedgmoor, 65.
-
- Bolland, Mr. Justice, 302.
-
- Bolnhurst (enclosure), 32.
-
- Bologna, 326.
-
- Booby, Lady, 18.
-
- Borderers. _See_ Squatters.
-
- Boroughs, disputes about franchise, 8;
- Scot and lot, 8;
- potwalloper, 9;
- burgage, 9;
- corporation, 10;
- freemen, 11.
-
- Bosanquet, Mr. Justice, 95, 274.
-
- Boston, 10.
-
- Boswell, Will, 102.
-
- Botany Bay, 239.
-
- Bourton, Charles, 294.
-
- Boys, John (agriculturist), 160.
-
- ---- ---- (farmer, in 1830 rising), 282 f.
-
- Bradley, 116 _n._
-
- Bragge, Mr., M.P., 44 _n._
-
- Bramshott, 260.
-
- Brandon, 177.
-
- Braunston (enclosure), 43 _n._
-
- Bread, wheaten and mixed, 124, 126.
- _See also_ Diet.
-
- Brede, parish rising at, 248 ff.
-
- Brighton, 223, 247, 284.
-
- Brimpton, 304.
-
- Bristol, 12, 121, 152, 243.
-
- Bristowe, Squire, 293.
-
- Brittany, 224.
-
- Broad Somerford, 85.
-
- Brocklehurst, Mr., 38.
-
- Brooks’s, 68 _n._, 69, 222, 332.
-
- Brotherton, Colonel, 259.
-
- Brougham, Henry, 302, 322;
- on agriculture, 171;
- on J.P.’s, 191;
- on increase of commitments, 200;
- on criminal courts, 202;
- on 1830 rising, 270;
- Cobbett on, 313;
- at Cobbett’s trial, 317 f.
-
- Broughton, 267.
-
- Brown, Rev. Mr., 43 _n._
-
- ---- Thomas, 310.
-
- Bryan, Elizabeth, 102.
-
- Bryant, Joseph, 249.
-
- Buckingham, 183;
- and 1830 rising, 268;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- ---- Duke of, 18;
- and rising of 1830, 243, 258, 265, 306.
-
- Buckland Newton, 301.
-
- Budgets, 111, 120, Appendix B.
-
- Bulcamp, House of Industry, 147 _n._
-
- Bull-baiting, 57.
-
- Bullen, Robert, 301.
-
- Bullington, 284.
-
- Bully. _See_ Bolingbroke.
-
- Bunce, Henry, 277.
-
- Buns, parish, 268.
-
- Burbage, George, 295.
-
- Burdett, Sir F., 313.
-
- Burdon, Mr., M.P., 142.
-
- Burgage boroughs, 9.
-
- Burgundy, Duke of, 4.
-
- Burke, 7, 14, 103, 203, 329, 330;
- on the aristocracy, 24;
- on Parliamentary representation, 75;
- on regulating wages, 135;
- philosophy of social life, 208, 210;
- on French Assembly, 215.
-
- Burkhead, Charles, 102.
-
- Burley on the Hill, 155.
-
- Burn, Dr., 115, 117.
-
- Burnet, 40.
-
- Burnham, 214.
-
- Burwash, 250.
-
- Bury St. Edmunds, 177, 192.
-
- Buxton, Mr., M.P., 142, 143, 153, 210.
-
- Byron, 313.
-
-
- Cabinet System established, 6.
-
- Cade, Jack, 13.
-
- Cæsar, 170, 330.
-
- Cambridge, 269.
-
- _Cambridge Modern History_, 87 _n._
-
- Cambridgeshire, 177, 184, 269.
-
- Camden, 202.
-
- Camden, Lord, 246, 255, 309.
-
- Canning, 202, 210, 241, 331, 332.
-
- Canterbury, 244, 255, 256.
-
- Canterbury, Archbishop of, 190 _n._, 204;
- prayer in 1830, 270.
-
- Capes, W. W., 159 _n._
-
- Capital offences, and Private Bill Committees, 64.
-
- Carbery, Lord, 43 _n._
-
- Carlile, Richard, prosecution in 1831, 315.
-
- Carlisle, 11, 121, 269.
-
- Carlisle, Lord, and Sedgmoor, 66 ff.
-
- Carlyle, 216.
-
- Carmarthen, 152.
-
- Carnarvon, Lord, 240.
-
- Carr, Elizabeth, 102.
-
- Carrington, Lord, 84, 155, 156, 250.
-
- Carter, James, 86.
-
- ---- John, 86, 102.
-
- Cartmel (enclosure), 50.
-
- Carus Wilson, Mr., 38, 42 _n._
-
- Case, 275.
-
- Castlereagh, 238, 299, 314, 332.
-
- Cavan, Lord and Lady, 279 f.
-
- Certificates (under Settlement Laws), 113, 115 ff., 158.
-
- Chancellor, Lord. _See_ Brougham.
-
- Charles I., and enclosures, 34.
-
- ---- V., 319.
-
- ---- VIII., 235.
-
- ---- X., 311.
-
- Charlton (Otmoor), 89, 93.
-
- ---- (Wilts), 287.
-
- Chateauvieux, M., 233 f.
-
- Chatham, Lord, 329, 330.
-
- Cheese, dearness of, 129 _n._
-
- Chenonceaux, 3.
-
- Cherry, Mr., J.P., 265.
-
- Cheshunt (enclosure), 58 _n._, 59, 86, 98 _n._, and Appendix A (3).
-
- Chester, 152.
-
- Chester, Charles, 43 _n._
-
- Children, employment of, 141 f.;
- punishment of, 200 f.
-
- Chinon, 3.
-
- Chippendale, 327.
-
- Christian, Mr., 178.
-
- Chudleigh, 121.
-
- Church, the (_see also_ Clergy), 326;
- and enclosure, 56, 76 f., 168;
- and tithes, 167 f.;
- and the poor, 216 ff.
-
- Churchill, Lord, 94 f.
-
- Cicero, 238, 331.
-
- Cinque Ports, 12.
-
- Claims, presentation of, under enclosure Acts, 63.
-
- Clare, Lord, 321.
-
- ---- John, 331, 332 _n._
-
- Clarke, Marcus, 199, 205.
-
- ---- Tom, 216.
-
- Clergy, non-residence of the, 214, 220;
- and the poor, 216 ff.;
- association with governing class, 219;
- salaries of curates, 221;
- and tithes, 222.
-
- Clerk, George, 281.
-
- Clive, 206.
-
- Clough, John and Thomas, 200.
-
- Cobbett, William, 40, 127, 184 _n._, 189 _n._, 191, 228, 278 _n._,
- 284, 285, 291, 309;
- on enclosures, 35;
- on unpaid magistrates, 62;
- on tea, 128;
- on allotments, 154, 159, 173;
- on Whitbread’s 1807 scheme, 180 f.;
- description of labourers, 185;
- on relations of rich to poor, 211;
- on change in farming, 212 f.;
- on parsons, 220;
- George IV. on, 223;
- and village sports, 223;
- description of, 234 f.;
- and 1830 rising, 244, 248, 259, 264, 287;
- on Whig ministers, 313;
- trial in 1831, 315 ff.
-
- Cobbold, Rev. Mr., 260, 282.
-
- Cockerton, Rev. Mr., 285.
-
- Codrington, O. C., 297.
-
- Coke, Lord, 21.
-
- ---- of Norfolk, 36;
- and spring guns, 196;
- and Game Laws, 196 _n._, 198.
-
- Colchester, 10, 15.
-
- Coleman, Mr., 249 f.
-
- Collingwood, Mr., J.P., 253, 256.
-
- Collins, A., 218.
-
- ---- (in Deacle case), 277.
-
- Combination Laws, 234, 238, 272.
-
- Commissioners, Enclosure, 43;
- power of, 58 f.;
- appointment of, 60 ff., 73.
-
- Commissioners. _See_ Poor Law Commission.
-
- Commoners, character of, 37 ff.;
- at Otmoor, 88 f.;
- theory of rights of, 92.
-
- Common fields, extent of, in 1688, 26;
- system of cultivation, 28;
- managed by manor courts, 30;
- varieties in system, 30, 31 _n._;
- Sir R. Sutton’s Act, 31;
- ownership of, 32;
- subdivision of property in, 33;
- position of labourers under system, 33 f., 159;
- disadvantages of, 36 f.;
- relation to old enclosures, 42.
-
- Common land, three uses of term, 28.
-
- Commons, relation to village economy, 27, 103;
- alleged deleterious effects of, on commoners, 37 f.;
- commoners’ own views on subject, 39;
- aesthetic objections to, 40.
-
- Common rights, 29, 31, 32;
- legal decision about inhabitants, 32;
- claims for, on enclosure, 63;
- at Otmoor, 92.
-
- Consents, proportion required for enclosure, 49 ff.;
- how assessed, 50 ff.;
- how obtained, 51 f.;
- _see also_ King’s Sedgmoor, 66 ff.
-
- Cook, Henry, 286 f., 290, 317, 319.
-
- Cooper, 259, 285, 290.
-
- ---- and others, 95.
-
- Coote, Eyre, 280, 285.
-
- Copenhagen, 178 _n._
-
- Copyholders, position of, 22, 23, 28 f., 51.
-
- Corn Laws, 321.
-
- Cornwall, 28 _n._
-
- Corporation boroughs, 10.
-
- Corsley (Wilts), 220.
-
- Cottagers, 28 ff.;
- position before enclosure, 31;
- and enclosure, 52 f.;
- presentment of claims by, 63;
- results of enclosure on, 97, 100 ff.;
- and allotments, 155 ff.
-
- Cotswolds, 40.
-
- Coulson, Mr., 97 _n._
-
- Councils, French, under Regency, 2.
-
- Cove, Rev. Mr., J. P., 304.
-
- Coventry, 78, 119.
-
- Coventry, Lord, 56.
-
- Cows, loss of, on enclosure, 100 f., 127;
- Raunds commoners on benefit of, 39;
- and allotments, 155 ff.;
- and settlement, 178 f.
-
- Cox, William, 102.
-
- Coxe, Mr., M.P., 65.
-
- Coxhead, Mr., M.P., 142.
-
- Crabbe, 223;
- on workhouse, 147;
- on roundsmen, 165;
- on poachers, 194;
- on poor, 212.
-
- Cranbrook, 255 f.
-
- Craven, Lord, 43 _n._
-
- Creevey, 139, 209.
-
- Cricklade, 185.
-
- Croke, Sir Alex., 89 f., 92, 94, 96.
-
- Croker, 10.
-
- Cromwell, Oliver, 22;
- and enclosures, 35.
-
- Crook, John, 306.
-
- Croxton, 43 _n._
-
- Croydon (enclosure), 48, 59, 63, 199 _n._, and Appendix A (4).
-
- Curtler, W. H. R., 172, 175 _n._
-
- Curwen, Mr., M.P., 130, 158 _n._, 195, 198, 213.
-
-
- Dalbiac, General, 256.
-
- Darling, Alfred, 305.
-
- Davenant, 26 _n._
-
- Davies, Rev. David, his book, 82, 85;
- on fuel, 107, 131 f.;
- on rise in prices, 110;
- his budgets, 111, 120, 122, and Appendix B;
- on mixed bread, 126;
- on milk, 127;
- on tea, 128 f.;
- on minimum wage, 136 f.;
- on land for labourers, 82, 154.
-
- ---- Miss M. F., 220 _n._
-
- Dawson, Hannah, 121.
-
- Deacle, Mr., and the Deacle case, 277 f., 287 f.
-
- Deal, 248.
-
- Debates in Parliament, on Private Enclosure Bills, 55 f.;
- on General Enclosure Bills, 77;
- on Whitbread’s Bill, 140 ff.;
- on Pitt’s Poor Law Bill, 149;
- on Settlement, 153;
- on rising of 1830, 314 f., 320.
-
- Deddington, 119, 122.
-
- Deerhurst, Lord, 197.
-
- Defoe, Daniel, 6.
-
- De Grey, Mr., 71 f.
-
- Demainbray, Rev. S., 85.
-
- Denman, Lord, on J.P.’s, 19;
- and 1830 rising, 278, 282, 288, 290, 291, 302;
- and Cook, 287, 319;
- and Lush, 292;
- and amnesty debate, 315;
- and Cobbett’s trial, 317 ff.
-
- De Quincey, 218, 242, 332.
-
- Derby, 117 _n._
-
- Derby, Brooker, 102.
-
- _Deserted Village, The_, 331.
-
- D’Este, Isabella, 326.
-
- De Tocqueville, 1, 5, 14, 24, 222.
-
- Devon, 28 _n._, 269.
-
- Dicketts, Henry, 295.
-
- Diderot, 4.
-
- Diet, of labourer, 111, 123 ff.;
- attempt to introduce cheap cereals, 124;
- soup, 125;
- tea, 128 f.
-
- Dillon, Archbishop, 217.
-
- Disraeli, 103.
-
- Domestic industries, 107.
-
- _Doomsday Book_, 91.
-
- Dorchester, Special Commission at, 275, 300 f.
-
- Dorset, 185;
- 1830 rising, 268;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Dover, 245.
-
- Dowden, W., 285 f.
-
- Downton, 9.
-
- Drake, Sir F., 68.
-
- Drummond, Mr., 230.
-
- Dryden, 169, 264.
-
- Dubois, 2.
-
- Dudley, Lord, 327 _n._
-
- Dundas, Charles, 141;
- and Speenhamland, 161 f.;
- on Special Commission, 302.
-
- ---- Henry, 141, 299, 329.
-
- Dunkin, on Otmoor, 88 ff.;
- on Merton, 99.
-
- Dunmow, 135 f.
-
- Dunn, Ann, 102.
-
- Dunwich, 11 f.
-
- Durham, 11.
-
- Durham, Lord, 209, 313, 317, 318.
-
- Dyott, Sir W., 201.
-
-
- Ealing, 124.
-
- East Grimstead, 260.
-
- ---- Grinstead, 11.
-
- ---- Retford, 12.
-
- ---- Stretton, 284.
-
- Easton, Rev. Mr., and family, 263, 277.
-
- Eaves, 256.
-
- Ebrington, Lord, 269.
-
- Eden, Sir F. M., 31;
- and enclosure, 49, 78, 82, 117;
- his book, 82, 210;
- and gleaning, 107;
- budgets, 111 and Appendix B;
- on Settlement Laws, 113 f., 116, 118 _n._ ff.;
- and food riots, 122;
- on diet, 123-132 _passim_;
- on workhouses, 147;
- on roundsmen, 148 _n._ and 164;
- on Speenhamland meeting, 162;
- his ideal poor woman, 208 f.;
- on rich and poor, 210.
-
- _Edinburgh Review_, 185, 197.
-
- Egleton, 155.
-
- Egremont, Lord, 155.
-
- Eldon, Lord, 20, 204, 309.
-
- _Eleanor_, the, 308 _n._
-
- Eliot, 10.
-
- _Eliza_, the, 324.
-
- Elizabeth, Queen, 8, 21.
-
- Ellenborough, Lord, 189, 196, 202, 204, 273.
-
- Ellison, Mr., M.P., 143, 153.
-
- Ely, 178.
-
- Enclosures, and productivity, 26, 40;
- by voluntary agreement, 28 _n._;
- extent of, before eighteenth century, 34;
- motives for, 35;
- extent of Parliamentary enclosure, 41 f.;
- Parliamentary procedure, 43 ff.;
- consents required, 49 ff.;
- Lord Thurlow on Parliamentary procedure, 53 f.;
- local procedure, 58 ff.;
- General Enclosure Bills, 74 ff.;
- Act of 1801, 77, 84;
- hostility of poor to, 78 f.;
- criticism of methods, 81 ff.;
- provision for poor, 85 f.;
- results on village, Chap. v.;
- effects on relationship of classes, 211.
-
- Encroachments, by squatters, 31;
- treatment of, under enclosure, 103.
-
- Engrossing of farms, 32, 81, 211.
-
- Entail. _See_ Family Settlements.
-
- Epsom, 147.
-
- Erskine, 139.
-
- Essex, 184, 269;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Estcourt, Thomas, 156.
-
- ---- T. G. B., 198, 200 _n._, 291.
-
- _Evelina_, 211.
-
- Eversley, Lord, 32 _n._
-
- Ewbanks, 104.
-
- Expenses of enclosure, 97 f.
- _See also_ Fees.
-
- Eycon, Elizabeth, 102.
-
-
- Falkland, 312.
-
- Fane, Mr., M.P., 90.
-
- Farmers implicated in 1830 rising, 248 f., 265, 282.
-
- ---- large, gained by enclosure, 97;
- and milk, 127;
- and allotments, 159;
- divided from labourers, 212;
- Cobbett on, 212 f.
-
- ---- small, ruined by enclosure, 97 ff.;
- and milk, 127 f.;
- and other classes, 211;
- Cobbett on, 212 f.
-
- Farmer, William, 281.
-
- Farm servants, 28, 31.
-
- Farnham, 185, 235, 264.
-
- Fawley, 242 _n._, 278 ff.
-
- Fees for Enclosure Bills, 76.
-
- Felony, counsel in cases of, 201.
-
- Fencing, cost of, 97, 98 _n._, 101;
- penalties for breaking, 199 _n._
-
- Fencott, 89.
-
- Fénelon, 3.
-
- Fielding, 187, 327;
- on village life, 18 f., 33;
- on lawyers, 63, 216;
- his scheme for the poor, 151;
- on solidarity of poor, 237.
-
- Finch, Mr., 252.
-
- Firth, Mr., 35.
-
- Fitzwilliam, Lord, 101, 330.
-
- Fitzwilliams, 13.
-
- Flackwell Heath, 307.
-
- Flanders, 2.
-
- Ford, John, 261.
-
- Fordingbridge, 121, 259, 280, 285.
-
- Forster, Mr., of Norwich, 83.
-
- Fox, C. J., 53 _n._, 139, 140, 311, 314, 328, 329;
- on M.P.’s and patrons, 13 f.;
- and Sedgmoor, 68 f.;
- and Horne Tooke, 72 f.;
- on mixed bread, 126;
- on minimum wage, 134, 141 f.;
- on charity, 210;
- despair of Parliamentary government, 330.
-
- Fox-hunting, change in, 214.
-
- France, position of aristocracy in, 1 ff.;
- monarchy in, 2 ff.;
- division of common land in, 87;
- peasants compared with English labourers, 105, 111, 168, 240.
-
- Franchise, Parliamentary, 7 ff.;
- in boroughs, 8 ff.;
- county, 13.
-
- Francis I., 22.
-
- ---- Philip, 78.
-
- Freeholders, 28 f.
-
- Freemen boroughs, 11 f.
-
- French, Colonel, M.P., 196.
-
- French Convention, 168.
-
- ---- war, agriculture during, 171.
-
- Friends of the People, 13 f.
-
- Frome, 127.
-
- Fryer, Mr., 306.
-
- Fuel rights, 31, 100, 106;
- allotments, 76;
- cost of, to labourer, 107;
- scarcity after enclosure, 130 ff.;
- taken from hedges, 131.
-
- Fussell, J., 283.
-
-
- Gage, Lord, 251.
-
- Gaiter, John, 303.
-
- Galloway, Lord, 57.
-
- Galsworthy, J., 35.
-
- Game Laws, 187 ff., 321;
- convictions under, 191 f.;
- supply of game to London, 196 f.
-
- Gardens for labourers, 157, 175.
-
- Gateward’s case, 32.
-
- Gatton, 8.
-
- Geese on Otmoor, 88.
-
- George III., 6, 80, 312.
-
- ---- IV., 168, 312;
- on Cobbett, 223.
-
- German legion, 173.
-
- Gibbon, 24, 217, 222, 325, 326.
-
- Gibbons, Sir W., 86, 102.
-
- Gibbs, Sir Vicary, 317.
-
- Gilbert, 108.
-
- Gilbert’s Act, 146, 148, 164, 179 _n._
-
- Gillray, 329.
-
- Gilmore, 260, 285.
-
- Glasse, Rev. Dr., 132 _n._
-
- Gleaning, 107 ff., 117;
- controversy on, 108 f.
-
- Gloucester, 144;
- trials at, 301.
-
- Gloucestershire, 1830 rising, 268;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Godalming, 152.
-
- Goderich, Lord, 317 f., 324.
-
- Godmanchester, 17.
-
- Goldsmith, Oliver, 24, 201, 203, 212, 223, 331.
-
- Gooch, Mr., 212.
-
- Goodenough, Dr., 218.
-
- Goodfellow, Thomas, 303 f.
-
- Goodman, Thomas, 309, 318.
-
- Gordon riots, 288.
-
- Gosport, 289;
- jurors, 283.
-
- Goudhurst, 256.
-
- Gould, Sir Henry, 109.
-
- Graham, Sir James, 187, 317.
-
- Gray, Thomas, 104, 214.
-
- Great Tew, 17, 30.
-
- Greenaway, 268.
-
- Greenford, 132 _n._
-
- Greetham, 155.
-
- Gregory, 284.
-
- Grenville, Lord, 77.
-
- Grey, Lord, 14 _n._, 19, 76, 140, 233, 314, 328, 329, 330;
- Prime Minister, 311 ff., 320;
- Cobbett on, 313;
- at Cobbett’s trial, 317 f.;
- on Corn Laws, 321;
- and Suffield, 322 ff.
-
- Guercino, 326.
-
- Guernsey, Lord, 218.
-
- Guildford, 121.
-
- Guildford, Lord, 220.
- _See also_ North, Francis.
-
- Gulliver, Mary, 102.
-
- Gurney, J., in 1830 trials, 302 ff.
-
-
- Hale, 108.
-
- Halifax, 116, 216 _n._
-
- Hambledon, 155.
-
- Hampden, 10.
-
- Hampshire, 128, 184;
- 1830 rising in, 258 ff.;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- ---- and Wiltshire labourers compared, 298.
-
- Harbord Harbord, Sir, 80, 203 f., 321.
-
- Harding, John, 262.
-
- Hardres, 244.
-
- Hardy, J., 227.
-
- Harewoods, the, 13.
-
- Hasbach, Professor, 7, 26 _n._, 33.
-
- Haslemere, 9.
-
- Hastings, Warren, 206.
-
- Hastings, 12.
-
- Hatch, 293.
-
- Haute Huntre (enclosure), 44, 55, 59, 61 _n._, 78, 101, 199 _n._,
- and Appendix A (5).
-
- Hawker, W., 65.
-
- Hay, Mr., M.P., 115.
-
- Hazlitt, William, 235.
-
- Heacham, 137, 139.
-
- Headley Workhouse, 243 f., 260, 280, 282, 285.
-
- Healey, Dr., 238.
-
- Heathfield, 250, 255.
-
- Heckingham, 147 _n._
-
- Hele, Rev. Mr., 250.
-
- Helpstone, 332 _n._
-
- Henley, 305.
-
- Henley, Thomas, 249 f.
-
- Henry IV. (of France), 7, 19.
-
- Henstead, 227.
-
- Hereford, 269.
-
- Hetherington, 102.
-
- Hickson, Mr., 226.
-
- Higgs, Ann, 102.
-
- Highlands, the, 40.
-
- Hill, Edmund, 102.
-
- ---- G. S., 249 _n._
-
- ---- Isaac, 276.
-
- Hinchcliffe, J. _See_ Bishop of Peterborough.
-
- Hindhead, 40.
-
- Hindon, 184, 276.
-
- Hirst. _See_ Redlich.
-
- Histon and Impington (enclosure), 51.
-
- Hobhouse, H., 254.
-
- ---- John Cam, 312 f.
-
- ---- Lord, 22 _n._
-
- Hobson, J. A., 166.
-
- Hodges, Mr., M.P., 253 f.
-
- Hodgson, Naomi, 102.
-
- Holdaway, Robert, 260, 285.
-
- Holdsworth, W., 23 _n._
-
- Holkham, 328.
-
- Holland, Lady, 250.
-
- ---- Lord, 140, 314, 320, 321, 327;
- on spring guns, 195;
- on penal code, 204, 330.
-
- Holy Island (enclosure), 48 f.
-
- Homage. _See_ Juries.
-
- Homer, 238.
-
- ---- Rev. H., 100.
-
- Hone, 315.
-
- Horace, 238.
-
- Horsham, 257 f.
-
- Horsley, Bishop, 218.
-
- Horton, 89.
-
- Hothfield, 118.
-
- Howlett, Rev. J., 115, 147 _n._, 151;
- on minimum wage, 135 f.
-
- Hubbard, Ann, 102.
-
- Hudson, W. H., 199, 262 _n._, 298 _n._, 308.
-
- Hume, J., 315.
-
- Hungerford riots, 264, 303, 305.
-
- Hunt, Henry, 190, 262, 266, 276, 282;
- and Lush, 291;
- and amnesty debate, 314 f.
-
- ---- Rev. Dr., 189 _n._
-
- Huntingdon, 177;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Hurst, Ann. _See_ Strudwick.
-
- ---- Mr., 257 f.
-
- Hurstbourne, 284.
-
- Hythe, 247.
-
-
- Idmiston, 295.
-
- Ilchester, Lord, 67.
-
- Ilmington, 53.
-
- Ipswich, 15, 121.
-
- _Ipswich Journal_, 121 _n._, 164 _n._
-
- Isherwood, H., 102.
-
- Isle of Wight, 169.
-
- Islip, 94.
-
-
- James I., 8.
-
- ---- II., 5.
-
- Jenks, E., 20.
-
- Jennings, John, 261.
-
- Jerome, St., 219.
-
- Johnson, A. H., 41, 42.
-
- ---- Mary Ann, 246.
-
- ---- (overseer), 254.
-
- ---- Samuel, 24, 40, 80, 129, 203, 328, 331.
-
- Joliffe, Mr., M.P., 149.
-
- ---- Rev. J., 285.
-
- _Jones, Tom_, 194.
-
- Jordan, Edmund, 102.
-
- Judd, Mr., 293.
-
- Judges, discretion in sentences, 202 f.;
- salaries advanced, 241;
- addresses at Special Commissions, 274, 275, 300, 303.
-
- Juries, presentments by, 17;
- of Manor Courts, 30.
-
- Justices of the Peace, growth of power, 16 ff.;
- autocratic character, 18 ff.;
- unpaid, 20;
- and regulation of wages, 140, 144;
- and workhouses, 148;
- Brougham on, 191.
-
- Juvenal, 204.
-
-
- Keene, Mr., 68.
-
- Kelvedon, 230.
-
- Kempster, Richard, 305.
-
- Kemys Tynte, Sir C., 65, 68.
-
- Kendal, 127.
-
- Kent, 144, 183;
- 1830 rising in, 244 ff.;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Kent, Nathaniel, 80, 81, 110, 111, 127, 135, 154, 155, 160.
-
- ---- William, 102.
-
- Kenton, 118.
-
- Kew, 235.
-
- Kibworth-Beauchamp, 117, 164.
-
- King, Gregory, 26 _n._, 28.
-
- ---- Captain, 256.
-
- ---- Lord, 320.
-
- ---- Thomas, 102.
-
- Kingsley, 260.
-
- King’s Lynn, 11.
-
- ---- Sedgmoor (enclosure), 52, 64 ff., 98 _n._, Appendix A (14).
-
- Kington, 56.
-
- Kintbury mob, 264;
- anecdotes of, 265.
-
- Kirton, 100 _n._
-
- Knaresborough (enclosure), 55, 59 f., 64, 86, 98 _n._, Appendix A (6).
-
- Knatchbull, Sir Edward, 245 f.
-
- Kosciusko, 173.
-
-
- ‘Labour Rate’ system, 230.
-
- Laleham (enclosure), 50, 51 _n._, 59, 86, Appendix A (7).
-
- Lamb, George, 315.
-
- Lambton. _See_ Durham, Lord.
-
- Lampsacus, 70.
-
- Lancashire, 133.
-
- Lane, 277.
-
- Lansdowne, Lord, 273, 291, 314, 322.
-
- Lauderdale, Lord, 202.
-
- Launceston, 12.
-
- Lawyers, French and English, compared, 215 f.
-
- Laxton, 43 _n._
-
- Lechmere, Mr., M.P., 77, 141, 233.
-
- Lecky, W. E. H., 111 _n._, 129 _n._
-
- Leeds, 59, 60, 116.
-
- Leeds, Duke of, 47 f.
-
- Legg, the brothers, 294.
-
- ---- George, 301.
-
- Leicestershire, 186.
-
- Leigh, Lord, 100.
-
- Leo X., 22.
-
- Lespinasse, Mlle. de, 4.
-
- Levy, Professor, 26 _n._, 41, 100 _n._, 111.
-
- Lewes Assizes, 274;
- Gaol, 246.
-
- Light, 294.
-
- Lilley, the brothers, 193.
-
- Limoges, 4.
-
- Lincoln, 152.
-
- Lincoln, Bishop of, 57.
-
- ---- Lord, 53.
-
- Lincolnshire, 155, 269.
-
- Litchfield, 119 _n._
-
- Little Marlow, 307.
-
- Littleport, 178.
-
- Liverpool, 11.
-
- Liverpool, Lord, 256.
-
- Llandaff, Bishop of. _See_ Watson.
-
- Loches, 3.
-
- Locke, 150.
-
- Loes and Wilford, 118, 120.
-
- Lofft, Capel, 108.
-
- London, City of, 12.
-
- Londonderry, Lord, 197.
-
- Long, Walter, J.P., 278.
-
- Long Crendon, 306.
-
- ---- Newnton, 156.
-
- Longparish, 284.
-
- Lonsdale, Lord, 9.
-
- Looker case, the, 295, 296, 315.
-
- Lord of the Manor, position under common-field system, 28 f., 32 f.;
- position on enclosure, 58, 61, 73, 97.
-
- Louis XIII., 5, 19.
-
- ---- XIV., 2, 3, 19, 34.
-
- ---- XV., 2, 4, 219.
-
- ---- XVI., 3, 4, 5, 218, 311.
-
- Louth (enclosure), 51, 58 _n._, 59, 86, 98 _n._, 102, Appendix A (8).
-
- Lowell, Professor, 17.
-
- Lower Winchendon, 132.
-
- Lucan, 206.
-
- Lucretius, 125.
-
- Ludlow, 12.
-
- Lush, James, 277, 291, 292, 298.
-
- Lyminge, 245.
-
- Lynn, 139.
-
-
- Macaulay, 23;
- on _Deserted Village_, 331.
-
- Macclesfield, Lord, 96.
-
- Machinery, judges on benefits of, 275;
- destruction of, in 1830, 259 ff., 268, 303, 306;
- penalties for destruction, 273.
- _See also_ Threshing Machines.
-
- Mackarness, John, 89.
-
- Mackrell, Thomas, 306.
-
- Macquarie Harbour, 206.
-
- Magnesia, 70.
-
- Maidenhead, 268.
-
- Maids Morton, 164.
-
- Maidstone, 246 f., 255 f.;
- Assizes, 274.
-
- Maine, 23.
-
- Mair, Colonel, 259.
-
- Maldon, 12.
-
- Malicious Trespass Act, 199 f.
-
- Malthus, 165, 204, 207, 322, 323;
- on Whitbread’s scheme, 180 ff.
-
- Manchester, 115.
-
- Manor, the, connection with common field system, 27.
-
- ---- Courts, 16 f.;
- and common field system, 30.
-
- ---- Lord of the. _See_ Lord.
-
- March Phillipps, L., 327 _n._
-
- Marengo, 188.
-
- Margate, 183.
-
- Mariner, 187.
-
- Market Lavington, 265.
-
- Marlborough, 265, 297.
-
- Marlborough, Duke of, 43 _n._, 89.
-
- Marshall, William, 36, 80, 97 _n._, 110 _n._, 158 _n._;
- on methods of enclosure, 81.
-
- Martin, Rev. Mr., 43 _n._
-
- Mason, Joseph and Robert, 284 f.
-
- Maulden (enclosure), 78, 100, 101 _n._
-
- Maurice of Saxony, 319.
-
- Mayfield, 250 f.
-
- Mazarin, 6.
-
- M‘Culloch, 185, 240.
-
- Melbourne, Lord, 96, 302, 310 _n._;
- and transportation, 205;
- and 1830 rising, 259, 264, 309, 312, 314;
- circular of Nov. 24, 267;
- of Dec. 8, 266 _n._, 270;
- and Special Commissions, 307;
- at Cobbett’s trial, 317 f.;
- and spring guns, 319;
- on Corn Laws, 321;
- and Suffield’s proposals, 322 f.
-
- Meredith, Sir William, 64.
-
- Merton, 99, 183.
-
- Metcalf, Ann, 102.
-
- Methodist movement, 220, 326.
-
- Micheldever, 276, 287.
-
- Middleton, Mr., 38, 86.
-
- Middlesex, 21.
-
- Midlands, 34, 101.
-
- Milan, 131.
-
- Millet, 332.
-
- Military tenures, abolition of, 22.
-
- Milk, and enclosure, 39, 110, 127 ff.;
- attempts to provide, 129 f.
-
- Minimum wage, 133 ff.;
- Whitbread’s proposals, 86, 139 ff.;
- probable effects of, 233 f.
-
- Mirabeau, Marquis de, 4.
-
- Mollington, 119.
-
- Monck, J. B., 305.
-
- Monoux, Sir P., 101.
-
- Montesquieu, 4.
-
- Montgomery, Mrs., 294.
-
- Moorcott, 89.
-
- Moore, Adam, 139.
-
- ---- F., 100 _n._
-
- ---- Robert (in _Shirley_), 35.
-
- Moreton Corbet (enclosure), 47, 60.
-
- Morey, Farmer C., 301.
-
- Morgan, 275.
-
- Mould of Hatch, 293.
-
- Mount, W., 303.
-
- Muir, Thomas, 299.
-
- Municipal government, 15.
-
- Myus, 70.
-
-
- Napoleon, 140, 173, 188, 241, 328, 329.
-
- Nash, Thomas, 102.
-
- Neale, Jane, 281.
-
- Newbolt, Rev. Dr., 265 f.
-
- Newbury, 161, 267, 305.
-
- New England, 82.
-
- ---- Forest, 57.
-
- Newington, 218.
-
- Newport, 201 _n._
-
- ---- Pagnell, 157.
-
- New Sarum, 109 _n._
-
- ---- South Wales, 261 _n._, 263 _n._, 277 _n._, 308 _n._
-
- Newton, Mr., 268.
-
- Newton Toney, 293.
-
- Nicholls, Sir George, 146 _n._
-
- Ninfield, 250.
-
- Noakes, David and Thomas, 249 f.
-
- Noke, 89.
-
- Norfolk, 122, 177, 269;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- North, Francis, 22.
-
- ---- Lord, 68, 71, 73.
-
- ---- Roger, 23.
-
- Northampton, 8.
-
- Northamptonshire, 184, 269.
-
- Northesk, Lord, 282.
-
- Norton, Sir Fletcher, 72.
-
- Norwich, 177.
-
- _Norwich Mercury_, 321.
-
- Nottingham, 11, 116, 118;
- castle, 243.
-
- Nottinghamshire, 156.
-
- Nutbean, E. C., 281.
-
- Nylands, 43 _n._
-
-
- Oakley, William, 264, 303, 305.
-
- O’Connell, 239.
-
- Oddington, 89.
-
- Officials, salaries raised, 241.
- _See also_ Parliamentary _and_ Village.
-
- Old Age Pensions, 169.
-
- Oldfield, 11.
-
- Old Sarum, 9.
-
- Orleans, Duke of, 2.
-
- Ormonde, Duke of, 23.
-
- Orpington, 244.
-
- Orridge, Mr., 192.
-
- Oswestry, 152.
-
- Otmoor (enclosure), 45 _n._, 60, 88 ff.
-
- Oundle, 269.
-
- Overseers, and relief, 145 f.;
- salaried, 182;
- hostility to, in 1830 rising, 247, 249, 250, 252, 254, 278.
-
- Overton, 266.
-
- Owslebury, 282.
-
- Oxford, 23, 95, 132, 147 _n._, 163, 218.
-
- _Oxford Journal_, Jackson’s, 88 _n._, 92 _n._, 93 _n._, 96 _n._
-
- _Oxford University and City Herald_, 89 _n._, 93 _n._, 95 _n._,
- 269 _n._
-
- Oxfordshire, 128, 131, 268;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
-
- Page, Mr., 264.
-
- Paine, Thomas, 169, 217, 315.
-
- Pakeman, the brothers, 309 f.
-
- Palmer, G., 254.
-
- ---- T. F., 299.
-
- Palmerston, Lord, 317, 318.
-
- Parham, Farmer, 294.
-
- Parish carts, 182, 242, 278 f.
-
- Park, Mr. Justice, on Special Commissions, 275, 302, 304 ff.
-
- Parke, Mr. Justice, and Otmoor, 94;
- on Special Commissions, 275, 278, 283, 300.
-
- Parliament, qualifications for members, 14.
-
- Parliamentary Committees, on Private Enclosure Bills, 45 ff.;
- how constituted, 46.
-
- ---- government, established, 5.
-
- ---- officials and enclosure, 76, 103.
-
- ---- Reform, 8;
- Cobbett and, 236;
- Grey’s Government and, 311 f.
-
- ---- representation, analysis of, 12, 13, 14.
- _See also_ Franchise.
-
- Parr, Dr. 203.
-
- Patience, Ambrose, 292, 294.
-
- Patrons, control of boroughs by, 10 f., 15;
- relations to M.P.’s, 13.
-
- Patteson, Sir John, 95, 302.
-
- Pearse, Mr., M.P., 265.
-
- Peel, Sir Robert, 191 _n._, 195, 202, 288;
- and 1830 rising, 246, 247, 256, 258, 311;
- and prosecution of Cobbett, 316.
-
- Penal Code, 203.
-
- ---- Settlements, 205, 206.
-
- Peninsular War, 139, 327.
-
- Pennells, Richard, 310.
-
- Perceval, Spencer, 143, 317.
-
- Perry, E., 109 _n._
-
- ---- John, 294.
-
- Peterborough, 31 _n._, 269.
-
- Peterborough, Bishop of, 56.
-
- Peterloo, 330.
-
- Petersfield, 10.
-
- Petitions, for enclosure, 43 f.;
- against enclosure, 47;
- how treated, 48;
- about New Forest, 57;
- about Tollington, 71 f.
-
- Pinniger, Mr., 277.
-
- Pitt, William, the younger, 14, 15, 60, 103, 139, 174, 212, 241, 299;
- on mixed bread, 124;
- on minimum wage, 134 f., 141 f.;
- his Poor Law Bill, 86, 145, 149 ff., 210;
- and settlement, 152 f.;
- and Sinking Fund, 173;
- and French War, 328 f.
-
- Plymouth, 15.
-
- Plympton, 12.
-
- Poachers, in Bedford Gaol, 193;
- loss to village, 238.
- _See also_ Game Laws.
-
- Polhill, Mr., 267.
-
- Political economy, in fashion, 207;
- judges on, 275.
-
- ---- Unions, 290, 316.
-
- Pollen, R., J.P., 275 _n._, 278, 283 _n._
-
- Pompey, 2.
-
- Poor Law, system of relief, 145 ff.;
- of employment, 148;
- Pitt’s Bill of 1796, 149 ff.;
- Whitbread’s Bill of 1807, 143, 179 ff.;
- litigation, 178.
- _See also_ Settlement _and_ Speenhamland system.
-
- ---- ---- Commission of 1834, 125, 160, 167 _n._, 170, 184, 225 ff.
-
- Pope, 326.
-
- Popham, 21.
-
- Population and Speenhamland system, 170, 174 f., 228.
-
- Porritt, E., 8 ff., 11, 13.
-
- Port Arthur, 206.
-
- Porter, Thomas, 295.
-
- ---- William, 102.
-
- Porteus, Bishop, charge to clergy, 220 f.
-
- Portland, Duke of, 108.
-
- Portsmouth, 289.
-
- Potato ground, 160.
-
- Potter, Richard, 200.
-
- ---- Macqueen, 192, 308 _n._
-
- Pottern, 85.
-
- Potwalloper boroughs, 9.
-
- Powis, Mr., M.P., 76.
-
- Pretymans, the, 220.
-
- Price, William, and others, 95.
-
- ---- Rev. Mr., 245.
-
- Prices, growth of, 109.
-
- Priestley, Dr., 218.
-
- Privileges, Committee of, 10.
-
- _Proteus_, the, 308 _n._
-
- Prothero, R. E., 42.
-
- Public schools, 23.
-
- Pulteney, Sir William, 153.
-
- Punishment, discretion of judges, 202;
- penal code, 203;
- fears of its mildness, 204.
- _See also_ Transportation.
-
- Purley, 71.
-
- Pym, Mr., 101.
-
- ---- Mr., J.P., 192.
-
- Pyt House affray, 261 f., 292 f.
-
-
- Quainton (enclosure), 51, Appendix A (13).
-
- Quarrier, Dr., 283.
-
- Quarter Sessions, change in procedure, 17 f.
-
- Quesnai, 4.
-
- Quidhampton, 261.
-
-
- Radicals, the, 169, 236, 312.
-
- Radnor, Lord, 9, 291, 313.
-
- Rastall, Rev. Mr., 43 _n._
-
- Raunds (enclosure), 39, 51.
-
- Ray, river, 93 f.
-
- Reading, 231, 267;
- Special Commission at, 302 ff.
-
- _Reading Mercury_, 121 _n._ f., 161 _n._ ff.
-
- Redlich and Hirst, 7, 20.
-
- Redlinch, 67.
-
- Reed, Mr., 249.
-
- Reform Bill, riots, 243;
- agitation for, 324.
- _See also_ Parliamentary Reform.
-
- ---- Government, and 1830 rising, 311 ff.;
- prosecution of Carlile and Cobbett, 315 ff.;
- incapacity for social legislation, 324.
-
- Reni, Guido, 326.
-
- Revolution of 1688, 5, 26.
-
- Reynolds, Sir J., 24, 326, 332.
-
- Ricardo, 207.
-
- Richardson, Samuel, 18, 19, 33, 45.
-
- Richelieu, 1 ff., 5 f.
-
- Richmond, 9, 214.
-
- Richmond, Duke of, 24, 191, 309.
-
- Rick-burning. _See_ Arson.
-
- Ride, J. and F., and R., 102.
-
- Ringmer, 251.
-
- Riots, enclosure, 78 (_see also_ Otmoor);
- food riots of 1795, 120 ff.;
- of 1816, 175, 177 ff.;
- law about riot, 272 f.;
- in 1830, Chaps. xi. and xii. _passim_.
-
- Rising in 1830, 240 ff.;
- origin in Kent, 244;
- spread to Sussex, 247;
- to Berks, Hants, and Wilts, 258;
- alarm of authorities, 266 ff.;
- spread West and North, 268;
- wholesale arrests, 267, 270;
- trials, 272 ff.
-
- Robertsbridge, 249, 253 f.
-
- Robespierre, 217.
-
- Robinson, Mr., M.P., 68.
-
- ---- William, 102.
-
- Rochefoucault, Duc de la, 217.
-
- Rockingham, Lord, 13.
-
- Rockley, 297.
-
- Rode, 107.
-
- Rogers, Sarah, 121.
-
- ---- T. L., 102.
-
- Rome, comparison between English and Roman social history, 330 f.
-
- Romilly, S., 202 ff.;
- on Game Laws, 189, 198.
-
- Romsey, 289.
-
- Roundsman system, 148, 159, 164 f.
-
- Rous, Sir John, 141.
-
- Rousseau, 4, 226, 232.
-
- Rowland, John, 295.
-
- Rowlandson, 329.
-
- Ruggles, Thomas, 108, 112 _n._, 115, 133, 147 _n._
-
- Run-rig system, 28 _n._
-
- Russell, Lord John, 140, 183, 308 _n._
-
- ---- Lord William, 48.
-
- ---- 273 _n._
-
- Rutland, 155, 159.
-
- Rutland, Duke of, 43 _n._
-
- Rye, 12.
-
-
- Sagnac, P., 87 _n._
-
- St. Davids, Bishop of, 42, 55 f.
-
- St. Denis, 2.
-
- St. Germain, 219.
-
- St. John, H., and Sedgmoor, 65 ff.
-
- St. Lawrence Wootten, 281.
-
- St. Mary Bourne, 263.
-
- St. Neots, 102 _n._
-
- Salehurst, 253.
-
- Salisbury, Special Commission at, 275, 290 ff.;
- gaol rules at, 276, 291 f.;
- scene in court, 298 f.
-
- Salisbury, Bishop of, 85.
-
- ---- Lord, 85 _n._, 323.
-
- Sanctuary, Mr., 257.
-
- Sandwich, Lord, 58.
-
- Sandy (enclosure), 101.
-
- Sarney, John, 307.
-
- Savile, Sir George, 54 f., 57.
-
- Scarborough, Lord, 155.
-
- Schools of Industry, 149 f.
-
- Sclater, W. L., 281.
-
- Scot and lot boroughs, 8.
-
- Scotland, 129, 195 _n._
-
- Scotsmen, Cobbett on, 213.
-
- Scott, Sir William, 214, 221.
-
- Seaford, 121.
-
- Sedgefield, 129.
-
- Sedgford, 137.
-
- Sedgmoor. _See_ King’s Sedgmoor.
-
- Selborne Workhouse, 243, 260.
-
- Select Committees. _See_ List of Authorities.
-
- ---- Vestry. _See_ Vestry Reform.
-
- Selwyn, George, 103, 223;
- and Sedgmoor, 65 ff., 103.
-
- Settlement, Laws of, 112 ff., 141, 178 f., 261;
- effect of, 114 ff.;
- reforms made and proposed, 152 f.;
- Whitbread’s proposals in 1807, 179;
- litigation, 215.
-
- Settlements, family, 21 f.
-
- Sevenoaks, 244.
-
- Sheffield, 115 f.
-
- Sheffield, Lord, 37, 123 _n._, 124, 153, 310.
-
- Shelley, Sir Timothy, 257.
-
- ---- P. B., 257, 326.
-
- Shepherd, Aaron, 295.
-
- Sheppard, Joseph, 301.
-
- Sheraton, 327.
-
- Sheridan, 14, 24, 139, 161 _n._, 223, 314, 326, 328, 329;
- on enclosure Bills, 57;
- and minimum wage, 140, 233;
- and Pitt’s Poor Law Bill, 149;
- and Game Laws, 198.
-
- Shooting, change in character, 187.
-
- Shopkeepers and allotments, 159.
-
- Shore, Mrs., 125 _n._
-
- Shottesbrook, 268.
-
- Shrewsbury, 147 _n._, 152.
-
- Sidlesham, 107.
-
- Sidmouth, Lord, 218, 299, 314.
-
- Sidney, Sir Philip, 312.
-
- Silcock, 286.
-
- Simms, the brothers, 263, 277.
-
- Simond, M., 242.
-
- Simpson (enclosure), 50, 51, 58 _n._, 59, Appendix A (9).
-
- Simpson, Rev. Mr., 257.
-
- Sinclair, Sir John, 74;
- on common-field system, 36;
- and enclosure, 59 ff., 83 ff., 157.
-
- Sinecures, 173.
-
- Sinking Fund, 173.
-
- Sittingbourne, 246 f.
-
- Skipton, 116.
-
- Slade, Mrs. Charlotte, 263, 305.
-
- Slater, Dr., 7, 28 _n._, 30 _n._, 32 _n._, 41, 42 _n._, 85.
-
- Slaugham, 229.
-
- Slinn, John, 194.
-
- Smart, Professor, 173 _n._
-
- Smith, Abel, 156.
-
- ---- Adam, 29, 36, 40, 110, 143, 152, 181, 207, 312;
- on settlement, 114 f.;
- on clergy, 216 f.
-
- ---- General, 142.
-
- ---- Sydney, 190 _n._, 198, 201.
-
- Smollett, 18, 63, 214, 216.
-
- Snettisham, 137.
-
- Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor, 85.
-
- ---- for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, 318.
-
- ---- for the Reformation of Manners, 222.
-
- Soldiers and food riots, 121 f.
-
- Somerset, 98 _n._
-
- Soup for the poor, 125 and _n._
-
- Southampton, 267.
-
- Southey, 14 _n._
-
- South Sea Bubble, 175.
-
- Special Commissions, in 1816, 172;
- in 1830, 272 ff.;
- at Winchester, 278 ff.;
- Salisbury, 290 ff.;
- Dorchester, 300 ff.;
- Reading, 302 ff.;
- Abingdon, 305 ff.;
- Aylesbury, 306 f.;
- conduct of prosecutions, 291.
-
- Speenhamland, 19, 161 ff.
-
- ---- system, 19, 83, 302, 331;
- introduction of, 161 ff.;
- scale, 163;
- effects of, Chaps. viii. and x. _passim_;
- introduction into Warwickshire, 170;
- reduction in scale, 184 ff.
-
- Spenser, 5.
-
- Spring guns, 195 f.;
- Melbourne’s suggested reintroduction, 319.
-
- Squatters, 28;
- described, 31;
- ignored in enclosure consents, 52;
- results of enclosure on, 97, 102 f.
-
- Standing Orders, about enclosures, 43 f., 60, 62;
- origin of, 73 f.
-
- Stanhope, Lord, 320.
-
- Stanwell (enclosure), 33, 55, 58 _n._, 59, 86, 102, Appendix A (10).
-
- Star Chamber and enclosures, 34.
-
- States-General, 5.
-
- Stavordale, Lord, and Sedgmoor, 67 ff.
-
- Steel, George, 281.
-
- Sterne, 24.
-
- Stevens, James, 295.
-
- ---- Jane, 279.
-
- Steyning, 9.
-
- Stirling, Mrs., 196 _n._
-
- Stixswold, 32.
-
- Stockbury, 247.
-
- Stockton, 130.
-
- Stoke, 154 _n._
-
- ---- Cheriton, 285.
-
- Stokes, 277.
-
- Stone, Thomas, 81, 85.
-
- Stotfold, 269.
-
- Strafford, Lord, 48, 60.
-
- Strudwick, Dame, 208 ff.
-
- Stubbes, 34.
-
- Studley, 89.
-
- Sturges Bourne, 278, 322.
-
- Suffield, Lord, 238;
- and spring guns, 195 f., 319;
- scheme in 1830, 320 ff.;
- interviews with ministers, 322 ff.
- _See also_ Harbord Harbord.
-
- Suffolk, 122, 135, 177, 269;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Sumner, Bishop, 159, 264.
-
- Surplus profits, 167 ff.
-
- Surrey, 258.
-
- Sussex, 1830 rising in, 247;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Sutterton (enclosure), 100 _n._
-
- Sutton, Sir Richard, 30.
-
- ---- William, 281.
-
- Swabey, Maurice, 306.
-
- Swaffham, 99.
-
- Swift, 235.
-
- Swing, Captain, 245.
-
-
- Taltarum’s Case, 21.
-
- Taunton, Mr. Justice, 274, 310 f.
-
- Taxation, 171 ff.
-
- Tea-drinking, 128 f.
-
- Tenant farmers, 28 f.
-
- Tennyson, Mr., M.P., 196.
-
- Tenterden, Chief Justice, 317.
-
- Thanet, Lord, 321.
-
- Thelwall, 136, 169, 241.
-
- Themistocles, 70.
-
- Thompson, Mr., 156.
-
- ---- Captain, 284.
-
- Threshing machines, destruction of, Chap. xi. _passim_;
- reason of hostility to, 245;
- penalty for destruction, 273, 275.
-
- Thurlow, Lord, on enclosure procedure, 53, 56 f., 61.
-
- Ticehurst, 250.
-
- Tilsworth, 43 _n._
-
- _Times_, the, 177 _n._, 178 _n._, 193 _n._, and Chapters xi. and
- xii. _passim_, including articles quoted, 269, 274, 302,
- and Special Correspondent, 269, 274, 302.
-
- Tisbury, 261 f.
-
- Tithes, 217 f., 222;
- origin, 167 f.;
- demand for abatement in 1830, Chap. xi. _passim_.
-
- Tithe-owners, and enclosure, 56, 61 f., 97, 168.
-
- Tollington, 71.
-
- Tonbridge, 255.
-
- Tonga Islands, 187.
-
- Tooke, J. Horne, 72.
-
- ---- William, 71 f.
-
- Toomer, James, 277.
-
- Transportation, dreaded by labourers, 198 f.;
- described, 205 f.;
- effect on village life, 239.
-
- Treason and Sedition Acts, 139, 329.
-
- Trecothick, James, 48.
-
- Trevelyan, Sir George, 71.
-
- Trout, J., 102.
-
- Tunbridge Wells, 255 f.
-
- Turgot, 4 f.
-
- Turner, Mr., M.P., 198.
-
- ---- Mr. (Pyt House affray), 262.
-
-
- Ullathorne, Dr., 206 _n._
-
- Universities, the, 23.
-
- Upper Clatford, 285.
-
-
- Vachel, Rev. Mr., 178.
-
- Van Diemen’s Land, 205, 283 _n._, 308 _n._, 310 _n._, 324.
-
- Vansittart, 134.
-
- ---- Rev. Dr., 268.
-
- Vaughan, Baron, on Special Commissions, 273 f., 278 ff., 300 f.
-
- Vavasour, Sir Henry, 157.
-
- Venice, 173.
-
- Versailles, 2, 4, 327, 328.
-
- Vestry Reform, Whitbread’s proposals, 179 ff.;
- Acts of 1818 and 1819, 182 f.
-
- Village officials, 103.
-
- Vine Hall, 249.
-
- Vinogradoff, Professor, 17, 27.
-
- Virgil, 122, 206, 238.
-
- Voltaire, 4, 24.
-
-
- Wages, and prices, 111;
- regulation of, 133 ff.;
- assessment in 1725, 133;
- in 1732, 144 f.;
- proposals to assess at Speenhamland, 162;
- wages in 1824, 183;
- demand for living wage in 1830, Chaps. xi. and xii. _passim_;
- wages in Berks, Hants, and Wilts, 259.
-
- Wakefield (enclosure), 47 f., 55, 59 f., Appendix A (11).
-
- Walden, 268.
-
- Waller, William, 65.
-
- Walpole, 6, 214.
-
- ---- Sir Spencer, 238.
-
- Walsingham, Lord, 220.
-
- Waltham (enclosure), 43 _n._
-
- Wanstead, 132 _n._
-
- Warbleton, 250.
-
- Warburton, Mr., M.P., 187
-
- Ward, Mr., 304.
-
- Warde Fowler, Mr., 331.
-
- Warren, John. _See_ St. Davids, Bishop of.
-
- Warwick, 10.
-
- Warwickshire, 169, 194.
-
- Wasing, 303.
-
- Waterloo, 332.
-
- Watson, Bishop, 217.
-
- Webb, Mr. and Mrs., 7, 16, 19, 30 _n._, 191 _n._, 234 _n._
-
- Webster, Sir Godfrey, 250, 254.
-
- Wellingborough, 269.
-
- Wellington, Duke of, 140, 214, 221, 240, 252, 320;
- as Prime Minister, 253, 311, 316;
- and 1830 rising, 258, 278, 302, 309.
-
- Wensleydale, Lord. _See_ Mr. Justice Parke.
-
- Westcote (enclosure), 43 _n._
-
- Western, C. C., 176.
-
- ---- Squire, 50, 187, 222, 328.
-
- ---- Sophia, 211.
-
- West Grimstead, 294.
-
- Westminster, 8.
-
- Wetherall, 127.
-
- Wharncliffe, Lord, 190.
-
- Wheble, Mr., 305.
-
- Wherwell, 284.
-
- Whitaker, Sergeant, 203.
-
- Whitbread, Samuel, and minimum wage proposals, 86, 134, 139 ff.,
- 149, 210, 233;
- scheme of 1807, 20, 179 ff.
-
- ---- Mr., J.P., 269.
-
- Whitchurch, 289.
-
- Whitecross Green, 89.
-
- Whiteparish, 293.
-
- White’s, 69, 332.
-
- Wickham, Mr., 266 _n._
-
- Wigtoft (enclosure), 100 _n._
-
- Wilbarston (enclosure), 78.
-
- Wilberforce, William, 124 _n._;
- and minimum wage, 143;
- and Protestant Church in Copenhagen, 178 _n._;
- and the reform of manners, 222;
- and Prince of Wales on Cobbett, 223;
- on blessings of England, 332.
-
- Wilde, Mr. Serjeant, 278, 282.
-
- Wilford, 118, 120.
-
- Wilkes, 72.
-
- Wilkinson, Dr., 79.
-
- Wilkinson, Mr. John, 116 _n._
-
- Willet, Mr., the banker, 177.
-
- ---- ---- the butcher, 177.
-
- William III., 5.
-
- ---- IV., 312.
-
- Williams, Mr., 221.
-
- ---- Mr., J. P., 265.
-
- ---- George, 305.
-
- ---- William, 226.
-
- Wilton, 261, 292.
-
- Wiltshire, 122;
- 1830 rising in, 258 ff.;
- labourers compared with Hampshire, 298;
- prisoners, 308 _n._
-
- Winchester, 15, 121, 219;
- and 1830 rising, 265;
- Special Commission at, 274, 276, 278 ff.;
- scenes outside gaol, 289.
-
- Winchester, Bishop of. _See_ Sumner.
-
- ---- Lord, 284.
-
- ---- Mayor of, 265.
-
- Winchilsea, Lord, 101, 130, 242;
- his allotments, 155, 157 ff., 160.
-
- Windermere, 217.
-
- Windham, W., 57, 224.
-
- Windsor, 80.
-
- Winfrith Newburgh, (enclosure), 51, 59, Appendix A (12).
-
- Winkworth, William, 285.
-
- Winslow, 164.
-
- Winter, Captain, 310.
-
- Winterbourne, 305.
-
- Withers, Peter, 297.
-
- Witley, 208.
-
- Wonston, 284.
-
- Woolridge, Henry, 306.
-
- Worcester, 152.
-
- Worcestershire, 169.
-
- Workhouses, 147;
- destroyed in 1830, 260.
-
- Wraisbury, 50 _n._
-
- Wycombe, 306.
-
- Wynne, Squire, 293.
-
-
- Xenophon, 197.
-
-
- Yardley Goben, 164.
-
- Yorkshire, 13, 155, 269.
-
- Young, Arthur, 31, 33 _n._, 74, 80, 102 _n._, 160;
- on France and England, 3, 105, 111, 224;
- on common-field system, 37;
- on enclosure and its methods, 44, 58, 60, 62, 79, 81;
- protest against methods, 82 ff., 154;
- scheme for allotments, 84, 173, 321;
- and Otmoor, 89, 93;
- on wheaten bread, 126;
- and minimum wage, 135, 143;
- and Speenhamland system, 165;
- and bailiffs, 213;
- and curates, 221.
-
- ---- Sir William, 141, 143, 148.
-
-
- Printed by T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty
- at the Edinburgh University Press
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Note
-
-
-The following apparent errors have been corrected:
-
-p. 3 "Gobereau" changed to "Hobereau"
-
-p. 22 "eighteeenth-century" changed to "eighteenth-century"
-
-p. 31 (note) "consent (p. 339)" changed to "consent’ (p. 339)"
-
-p. 51 "of 721 neuter.’" changed to "of 721 neuter."
-
-p. 58 "of canvassing,’" changed to "of canvassing.’"
-
-p. 62 "his award was made," changed to "his award was made."
-
-p. 69 "irregularity the Bill" changed to "irregularity: the Bill"
-
-p. 76 "no less that" changed to "no less than"
-
-p. 78 "ask for permisson" changed to "ask for permission"
-
-p. 79 "inariably" changed to "invariably"
-
-p. 105 "ses vaissaux" changed to "ses vassaux"
-
-p. 107 "As Sidlesham in Surrey" changed to "At Sidlesham in Surrey"
-
-p. 113 "till be became" changed to "till he became"
-
-p. 119 "a parishoner" changed to "a parishioner"
-
-p. 121 "As Ipswich" changed to "At Ipswich"
-
-p. 121 "severe sentence." changed to "severe sentence.’"
-
-p. 146 (note) "p. 91." changed to "p. 91.)"
-
-p. 148 (note) "vol. i. p. 397" changed to "vol. i. p. 397."
-
-p. 160 "saying ‘The more" changed to "saying "The more"
-
-p. 160 "for us.’" changed to "for us."’"
-
-p. 217 "demander a leur" changed to "demander à leur"
-
-p. 228 "p. 66" changed to "p. 66."
-
-p. 274 (note) "Vaughan (1769-1839" changed to "Vaughan (1769-1839)."
-
-p. 278 "Sergeant Wild" changed to "Sergeant Wilde"
-
-p. 304 "years’ transportation," changed to "years’ transportation."
-
-p. 342 "(Lord of the Manor)" changed to "(Lord of the Manor),"
-
-p. 343 "Clarks, Darey’s" changed to "Clarks, Dareys"
-
-p. 357 "asking for leave." changed to "asking for leave"
-
-p. 365 "‘A Clause was offered" changed to "A Clause was offered"
-
-p. 380 "Cocks, Esq" changed to "Cocks, Esq."
-
-p. 395 "p, 191." changed to "p. 191."
-
-p. 397 "oatmeal" changed to "oatmeal,"
-
-p. 398 "scarce’) Clothes," changed to "scarce’), Clothes,"
-
-p. 402 "_History of the English Agricultural Labourer_" changed to
-"_History of the English Agricultural Labourer_."
-
-p. 405 "Aldeborough" changed to "Aldborough"
-
-p. 405 "43 _n_" changed to "43 _n._"
-
-p. 405 "50 59" changed to "50, 59"
-
-p. 405 "1795, 121" changed to "1795, 121;"
-
-p. 405 "J.P, 297" changed to "J.P., 297."
-
-p. 409 "Charles, 141," changed to "Charles, 141;"
-
-p. 409 "148 _n_" changed to "148 _n._"
-
-p. 411 "Isle of Wight, 169" changed to "Isle of Wight, 169."
-
-p. 411 "Holdsworth, W., 23 _n._" was printed out of order
-
-p. 414 "Prothero, R. E" changed to "Prothero, R. E."
-
-p. 414 "against enclosure 47" changed to "against enclosure, 47"
-
-p. 417 "Mr. Serjeant" changed to "Mr. Sergeant"
-
-
-Inconsistent or archaic spelling and punctuation have otherwise been
-kept as printed.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VILLAGE LABOURER
-1760-1832 ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
- restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
- under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
- eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the
- United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/69002-0.zip b/old/69002-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index c2160f4..0000000
--- a/old/69002-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69002-h.zip b/old/69002-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 429b63d..0000000
--- a/old/69002-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69002-h/69002-h.htm b/old/69002-h/69002-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index ef91bb1..0000000
--- a/old/69002-h/69002-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,27136 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
- <title>
- The Village Labourer 1760-1832, by J. L. Hammond and Barbara Hammond&mdash;A Project Gutenberg eBook
- </title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
- <style type="text/css">
-
-body {
- margin-left: 10%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
- h1,h2,h3,h4 {
- text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
- clear: both;
- margin-top: 4em;
-}
-
-p {
- margin-top: .51em;
- text-align: justify;
- margin-bottom: .49em;
-}
-
-.p2 {margin-top: 2em;}
-.p4 {margin-top: 4em;}
-
-.toc {text-align: left; max-width: 40em;}
-
-.sig {margin-left: 4em;}
-
-.small {font-size: small;}
-.smaller {font-size: smaller;}
-.larger {font-size: larger;}
-.large {font-size: large;}
-.x-large {font-size: x-large;}
-
-.nobreak
-{
- page-break-before: avoid;
-}
-
-.lock {white-space: nowrap;}
-
-.left {text-align: left;}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.titlepage {text-align: center;}
-
-hr {
- width: 33%;
- margin-top: 2em;
- margin-bottom: 2em;
- margin-left: 33.5%;
- margin-right: 33.5%;
- clear: both;
-}
-
-hr.tb {width: 45%; margin-left: 27.5%; margin-right: 27.5%; visibility: hidden;}
-
-hr.full {width: 95%; margin-left: 2.5%; margin-right: 2.5%;}
-
-hr.r65 {width: 65%; margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 3em; margin-left: 17.5%; margin-right: 17.5%;}
-
-div.chapter {page-break-before: always;}
-
-break {page-break-before: always;}
-
-h2.nobreak {page-break-before: avoid;}
-
-ul.index { list-style-type: none; }
-li.ifrst {
- margin-top: 1em;
- text-indent: -2em;
- padding-left: 1em;
-}
-li.indx {
- margin-top: .5em;
- text-indent: -2em;
- padding-left: 1em;
-}
-li.isub1 {
- text-indent: -2em;
- padding-left: 2em;
-}
-
-table {
- margin-left: auto;
- margin-right: auto;
-}
-table.autotable { border-collapse: collapse; }
-table.autotable td,
-table.autotable th { padding: 4px; }
-
-.widecol {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;}
-
-.i2 {margin-left: 2em;}
-
-.i4 {margin-left: 4em;}
-
-.tdl {text-align: left;}
-.tdr {text-align: right;}
-.tdc {text-align: center;}
-
-.appspace {margin-top: 2em;}
-
-.borderheader th {border: thin solid;}
-
-.borderl {border-left: thin solid;}
-
-.total {border-top: thin solid;border-bottom: thin solid;}
-
-.totalbottom {border-bottom: thin solid;}
-
-.colvisible td {border-left: thin solid; border-right: thin solid;}
-
-.pagenum {
- position: absolute;
- right: 1%;
- font-size: x-small;
- font-weight: normal;
- font-variant: normal;
- font-style: normal;
- letter-spacing: normal;
- text-indent: 0em;
- text-align: right;
- color: #999999;
- background-color: #ffffff;
-}
-
-
-
-.blockquot {
- margin-left: 5%;
- margin-right: 10%;
-}
-
-.center {text-align: center;}
-
-.right {text-align: right;}
-
-.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
-
-.allsmcap {font-variant: small-caps; text-transform: lowercase;}
-
-.centerhead th {text-align: center;}
-
-th {font-weight: normal;}
-
-
-
-/* Footnotes */
-.footnotes {border: 1px dashed;}
-
-.footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;}
-
-.footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;}
-
-.fnanchor {
- vertical-align: super;
- font-size: .8em;
- text-decoration:
- none;
-}
-
-/* Poetry */
-.poetry-container {text-align: center;}
-.poetry {text-align: left; margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;}
-/* uncomment the next line for centered poetry in browsers */
-/* .poetry {display: inline-block;} */
-.poetry .stanza {margin: 1em auto;}
-.poetry .verse {text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em;}
-/* large inline blocks don't split well on paged devices */
-@media print { .poetry {display: block;} }
-.x-ebookmaker .poetry {display: block;}
-
-/* Transcriber's notes */
-.transnote {background-color: #E6E6FA;
- color: black;
- font-size:smaller;
- padding:0.5em;
- margin-bottom:5em;
- font-family:sans-serif, serif; }
-
-/* Poetry indents */
-.poetry .indent0 {text-indent: -3em;}
-.poetry .indent2 {text-indent: -2em;}
-
-
- </style>
- </head>
-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The village labourer 1760-1832, by J. L. Hammond</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The village labourer 1760-1832</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A study in the government of England before the Reform Bill</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Authors: J. L. Hammond</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em;'>Barbara Hammond</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: September 17, 2022 [eBook #69002]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Henry Flower and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VILLAGE LABOURER 1760-1832 ***</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">[i]</span></p>
-<h1>
-THE VILLAGE LABOURER<br />
-1760&ndash;1832
-</h1>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[iii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">
-<span class="x-large">THE VILLAGE LABOURER</span><br />
-
-<span class="large">1760&ndash;1832</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">
-A Study in the Government of England<br />
-before the Reform Bill</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">
-BY<br />
-J. L. HAMMOND <span class="allsmcap">AND</span> BARBARA HAMMOND
-</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot p2">
-
-<p>... The men who pay wages ought not to be the political
-masters of those who earn them (because laws should be
-adapted to those who have the heaviest stake in the
-country, for whom misgovernment means not mortified
-pride or stinted luxury, but want and pain, and degradation
-and risk to their own lives and to their children’s souls)....</p>
-
-
-<p class="sig">
-<span class="smcap">Lord Acton.</span></p>
-</div>
-<p class="titlepage small p2">
-SECOND IMPRESSION</p>
-
-
-<p class="titlepage p2">
-<span class="large">LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.</span><br />
-39 PATERNOSTER ROW, LONDON<br />
-<span class="small">NEW YORK, BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA</span><br />
-1912
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage p4 break">
-TO<br />
-GILBERT <span class="allsmcap">AND</span> MARY MURRAY
-</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Many histories have been written of the governing class that
-ruled England with such absolute power during the last century
-of the old régime. Those histories have shown how that class
-conducted war, how it governed its colonies, how it behaved
-to the continental Powers, how it managed the first critical
-chapters of our relations with India, how it treated Ireland,
-how it developed the Parliamentary system, how it saved
-Europe from Napoleon. One history has only been sketched
-in outline: it is the history of the way in which this class
-governed England. The writers of this book have here attempted
-to describe the life of the poor during this period.
-It is their object to show what was in fact happening to the
-working classes under a government in which they had no
-share. They found, on searching through the material for such
-a study, that the subject was too large for a single book; they
-have accordingly confined themselves in this volume to the
-treatment of the village poor, leaving the town worker for
-separate treatment. It is necessary to mention this, for it
-helps to explain certain omissions that may strike the reader.
-The growth and direction of economic opinion, for example,
-are an important part of any examination of this question,
-but the writers have been obliged to reserve the consideration
-of that subject for their later volume, to which it seems more
-appropriate. The writers have also found it necessary to
-leave entirely on one side for the present the movement for
-Parliamentary Reform which was alive throughout this period,
-and very active, of course, during its later stages.</p>
-
-<p>Two subjects are discussed fully in this volume, they believe,
-for the first time. One is the actual method and procedure of
-Parliamentary Enclosure; the other the labourers’ rising of
-1830. More than one important book has been written on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">[viii]</span>
-enclosures during the last few years, but nowhere can the
-student find a full analysis of the procedure and stages by
-which the old village was destroyed. The rising of 1830 has
-only been mentioned incidentally in general histories: it has
-nowhere been treated as a definite demand for better conditions,
-and its course, scope, significance, and punishment
-have received little attention. The writers of this book have
-treated it fully, using for that purpose the Home Office Papers
-lately made accessible to students in the Record Office. They
-wish to express their gratitude to Mr. Hubert Hall for his help
-and guidance in this part of their work.</p>
-
-<p>The obligations of the writers to the important books
-published in recent years on eighteenth-century local government
-are manifest, and they are acknowledged in the text,
-but the writers desire to mention specially their great debt to
-Mr. Hobson’s <i>Industrial System</i>, a work that seems to them
-to throw a new and most illuminating light on the economic
-significance of the history of the early years of the last century.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ponsonby and Miss M. K. Bradby have
-done the writers the great service of reading the entire book
-and suggesting many important improvements. Mr. and Mrs.
-C. R. Buxton, Mr. A. Clutton Brock, Professor L. T. Hobhouse,
-and Mr. H. W. Massingham have given them valuable help
-and advice on various parts of the work.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="sig"><span class="smcap">Hampstead</span>, <i>August 1911</i></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">[ix]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table class="toc" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td><span class="small">CHAP.</span></td>
-<td> </td>
-<td><span class="small">PAGE</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">I. </td><td><span class="smcap">The Concentration of Power</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Comparison between English and French Aristocracy&mdash;Control of English Aristocracy over (1) Parliament; (2) Local Government&mdash;The Justices&mdash;Family Settlements&mdash;Feudal Dues.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">The Village before Enclosure</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>The Common-field System&mdash;Classes in the Village&mdash;Motives for Enclosure&mdash;Agricultural Considerations&mdash;Moral Considerations&mdash;Extent of Parliamentary Enclosure.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">III. </td><td> <span class="smcap">Enclosure</span> (I),</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_43">43</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Procedure in Parliament&mdash;Composition of Private Bill Committees&mdash;Proportion of Consents required&mdash;Helplessness of Small Men&mdash;Indifference of Parliament to Local Opinion&mdash;Appointment and Powers of Enclosure Commissioners&mdash;Story of Sedgmoor.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IV. </td><td> <span class="smcap">Enclosure</span> (II),</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Standing Orders&mdash;General Enclosure Bills&mdash;Consolidating Act of 1801&mdash;Popular Feeling against Enclosure&mdash;Proposals for Amending Procedure&mdash;Arthur Young’s Protest&mdash;Story of Otmoor.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">V.</td><td><span class="smcap">The Village after Enclosure</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Effects of Enclosure on (1) Small Farmers; (2) Cottagers; (3) Squatters&mdash;Expenses&mdash;Loss of Common Rights&mdash;Village Officials&mdash;Changed Outlook of Labourer.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VI. </td><td> <span class="smcap">The Labourer in 1795</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_106">106</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Loss of Auxiliary Resources&mdash;Fuel&mdash;Gleaning&mdash;Rise in Prices&mdash;Effect of Settlement Laws&mdash;Food Riots of 1795.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VII. </td><td> <span class="smcap">The Remedies of 1795</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_123">123</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>The Remedies proposed but not adopted: (1) <i>Change of Diet</i>&mdash;Cheap Cereals&mdash;Soup; (2) <i>Minimum Wage</i>&mdash;Demand from Norfolk Labourers&mdash;Whitbread’s Bills, 1795 and 1800;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">[x]</span> (3) <i>Poor Law Reform</i>&mdash;Pitt’s Poor Law Bill&mdash;-Amendments of Settlement Laws; (4) <i>Allotments</i>&mdash;Success of Experiments&mdash;Hostility of Farmers&mdash;The Remedy adopted: Speenhamland System of supplementing Wages from Rates&mdash;Account of Speenhamland Meeting&mdash;Scale of Relief drawn up.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">After Speenhamland</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_166">166</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Prosperity of Agriculture during French War&mdash;Labourers not benefited&mdash;Heavy Taxation&mdash;Agricultural Depression at Peace&mdash;Labourers’ Rising in 1816&mdash;Poor Law Legislation of 1818, 1819 to relieve Ratepayers, compared with Whitbread’s Scheme in 1807&mdash;Salaried Overseers&mdash;Parish Carts&mdash;Drop in Scale of Relief for Labourers after Waterloo&mdash;New Auxiliary Resources&mdash;Poaching&mdash;Game Laws&mdash;Distress and Crime&mdash;Criminal Justice&mdash;Transportation.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">IX. </td><td> <span class="smcap">The Isolation of the Poor</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Attitude of Governing Class towards the Poor&mdash;An Ideal Poor Woman&mdash;Gulf between Farmers and Labourers due to Large Farms&mdash;Bailiffs&mdash;Lawyers and the Poor&mdash;The Church and the Poor&mdash;Gloom of the Village.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">X. </td><td> <span class="smcap">The Village in 1830</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Poor Law Commission Report of 1834&mdash;Effects of Speenhamland System: Degradation of Labourer; Demoralisation of Middle Classes&mdash;Possible Success of Alternative Policies&mdash;Minimum Wage&mdash;Cobbett’s Position.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XI. </td><td> <span class="smcap">The Last Labourers’ Revolt</span> (I),</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Rising in Kent&mdash;Threshing Machines&mdash;Sussex Rising: Brede&mdash;Spread of Rising Westwards&mdash;Description of Outbreak in Hampshire, Wiltshire, Berkshire&mdash;Alarm of Upper Classes&mdash;Melbourne’s Circular&mdash;Repressive Measures&mdash;Archbishop’s Prayer.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XII. </td><td><span class="smcap">The Last Labourers’ Revolt</span> (II),</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_272">272</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td>Special Commissions&mdash;Temper of Judges&mdash;Treatment of Prisoners&mdash;Trials at Winchester, Salisbury, Dorchester, Reading, Abingdon, Aylesbury&mdash;Cases of Arson&mdash;Position of Whig Government&mdash;Trials of Carlile and Cobbett&mdash;Proposals for helping Labourers&mdash;Lord King&mdash;Lord Suffield&mdash;Collapse of Proposals.</td>
-<td> </td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdr">XIII. </td><td><span class="smcap">Conclusion</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td> </td>
-<td><span class="smcap">Index</span>,</td>
-<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<span class="smaller">THE CONCENTRATION OF POWER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Là l’aristocratie a pris pour elle les charges publiques les plus
-lourdes afin qu’on lui permît de gouverner; ici elle a retenu
-jusqu’à la fin l’immunité d’impôt pour se consoler d’avoir perdu
-le gouvernement.’</p>
-
-<p>De Tocqueville has set out in this antithesis the main argument
-that runs through his analysis of the institutions of
-ancient France. In England the aristocracy had power and
-no privileges: in France the aristocracy had privileges and
-no power. The one condition produced, as he read history,
-the blending of classes, a strong and vigorous public spirit,
-the calm of liberty and order: the other a society lacking
-vitality and leadership, classes estranged and isolated, a concentration
-of power and responsibility that impoverished
-private effort and initiative without creating public energy or
-public wealth.</p>
-
-<p>De Tocqueville’s description of the actual state of France
-during the eighteenth century has, of course, been disputed
-by later French writers, and notably by Babeau. Their
-differences are important, but for the moment we are concerned
-to note that in one particular they are in complete
-agreement. Neither Babeau, nor any other historian, has
-questioned the accuracy of De Tocqueville’s description of
-the position of the French nobles, from the day when the great
-cardinals crushed their conspiracies to the day when the
-Revolution destroyed the monarchy, whose heart and pulse
-had almost ceased to beat. The great scheme of unity and
-discipline in which Richelieu had stitched together the discords
-of France left no place for aristocracy. From that danger, at
-any rate, the French monarchy was safe. Other dangers were
-to overwhelm it, for Richelieu, in giving to it its final form, had
-secured it from the aggressions of nobles but not from the
-follies of kings. <i>Tout marche, et le hasard corrige le hasard.</i>
-The soliloquy of Don Carlos in <i>Hernani</i> contains an element<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-of truth and hope for democracy which is wanting in all systems
-of personal government, where the chances of recovery all
-depend on a single caprice. It was the single caprice that
-Versailles represented. It was the single caprice that destroyed
-Richelieu’s great creation. When Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span> took to piety
-and to Madame de Maintenon, he rescinded in one hour of
-fatal zeal the religious settlement that had given her prosperity
-to France. Her finance and her resources foundered in his
-hurricanes of temper and of arrogance. Louis <span class="allsmcap">XV.</span> was known
-in boyhood as ‘the beloved.’ When he fell ill in the campaign
-of 1744 in Flanders, all France wept and prayed for him. It
-would have been not less happy for him than it would have
-been for Pompey if the intercessions of the world had died on
-the breeze and never ascended to the ear of Heaven. When
-thirty years later his scarred body passed to the royal peace
-of St. Denis, amid the brutal jeers and jests of Paris, the history
-of the French monarchy was the richer for a career as sensual
-and selfish and gross as that of a Commodus, and the throne
-which Richelieu had placed absolute and omnipotent above
-the tempests of faction and civil war had begun to rock in the
-tempests of two sovereigns’ passions.</p>
-
-<p>One half-hearted attempt had indeed been made to change
-the form and character of the monarchy. When he became
-regent in 1715, Orleans played with the ideas of St. Simon
-and substituted for the government of secretaries a series of
-councils, on which the great nobles sat, with a supreme Council
-of Regency. As a departure from the Versailles system, the experiment
-at first excited enthusiasm, but it soon perished of
-indifference. The bureaucrats, whom Orleans could not afford
-to put on one side, quarrelled with the nobles: the nobles found
-the business tedious and uninteresting: the public soon tired of
-a scheme that left all the abuses untouched: and the regent,
-at the best a lukewarm friend to his own innovation, had his
-mind poisoned against it by the artful imagination of Dubois.
-One by one the councils flickered out; the Council of the
-Regency itself disappeared in 1728, and the monarchy fell
-back into its old ways and habits.</p>
-
-<p>As at Versailles, so in France. If the noble had been reduced
-to a trifling but expensive cypher at the Court, the
-position of seigneur in the village was not very different. In
-the sixteenth century he had been a little king. His relations
-with the peasants, with whom his boyhood was often spent in
-the village school, were close and not seldom affectionate.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-But though he was in many cases a gentle ruler, a ruler he undoubtedly
-was, and royal ordinances had been found necessary
-to curb his power. By the eighteenth century his situation
-had been changed. There were survivals of feudal justice
-and feudal administration that had escaped the searching eye
-of Richelieu, but the seigneur had been pushed from the helm,
-and the government of the village had passed into other hands.
-It was the middle-class intendant and not the seigneur who
-was the master. The seigneur who still resided was become
-a mere rent receiver, and the people called him the ‘<i>Hobereau</i>.’
-But the seigneur rarely lived in the village, for the Court, which
-had destroyed his local power, had drawn him to Paris to
-keep him out of mischief, and when later the Court wished
-to change its policy, the seigneur refused to change his habits.
-The new character of the French nobility found its expression
-in its new homes. Just as the tedious splendour of Versailles,
-built out of the lives and substance of an exhausted nation,
-recorded the decadence and the isolation of the French
-monarchy, so in the countryside the new palaces of the nobles
-revealed the tastes and the life of a class that was allowed no
-duties and forbidden no pleasures. The class that had once
-found its warlike energy reflected in the castles of Chinon and
-Loches was now only at home in the agreeable indolence of
-Azay le Rideau or the delicious extravagance of Chenonceaux.
-The nobles, unable to feed their pride on an authority no
-longer theirs, refused no stimulant to their vanity and no sop
-to their avarice. Their powers had passed to the intendant;
-their land was passing to the bourgeois or the peasant; but
-their privileges increased. Distinctions of rank were sharper
-edged. It was harder for a plebeian to become an officer under
-Louis <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span> than it had been under Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIV</span>., and the exemptions
-from taxation became a more considerable and invidious
-privilege as the general burdens grew steadily more oppressive.
-Nature had made the French nobleman less, but circumstances
-made him more haughty than the English. Arthur Young,
-accustomed to the bearing of English landlords, was struck by
-the very distant condescension with which the French seigneur
-treated the farmer. The seigneur was thus on the eve of the
-Revolution a privileged member of the community, very jealous
-of his precedence, quarrelsome about trifles, with none of the
-responsibilities of a ruler, and with few of the obligations of a
-citizen. It was an unenviable and an uninspiring position. It
-is not surprising that Fénelon, living in the frivolous prison of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-Versailles, should have inspired the young Duke of Burgundy
-with his dream of a governing aristocracy, or that Mademoiselle
-de Lespinasse should have described the public-spirited members
-of this class as caged lions, or that a nobleman of the fierce
-energy of the Marquis de Mirabeau should have been driven
-to divide his time between the public prosecution of his noisy
-and interminable quarrels with his wife and his sons, and the
-composition of his feeling treatise on <i>L’Ami des Hommes</i>.</p>
-
-<p>For in the France whose king had no thought save for hunting,
-women and morbid disease, there was endless energy and
-intellectual life. France sparkled with ideas. The enthusiasms
-of the economists and philosophers filled the minds
-of nobles who in England would have been immersed in the
-practical duties of administration. The atmosphere of social
-sensibility melted the dry language of official reports, and the
-intendants themselves dropped a graceful tear over the
-miseries of the peasants. Amid the decadence of the monarchy
-and the uncivilised and untamed license of Louis <span class="allsmcap">XV.</span>, there
-flourished the emancipating minds of Voltaire, Montesquieu,
-Diderot and Quesnai, as well as Rousseau, the passion and
-the spirit of the Revolution. On the one side is Versailles,
-abandoned to gross and shameless pleasures, on the other a
-society pursuing here a warm light of reason and science
-with a noble rage for progress and improvement, bewitched
-there by the Nouvelle Héloïse and Clarissa, delighting in
-those storms of the senses that were sweeping over France.
-The memoirs, the art, the literature of the time are full of these
-worlds, ruled, one by philosophy and illumination, the other
-by the gospel of sensibility and tender feeling, the two mingling
-in a single atmosphere in such a salon as that of Julie de
-Lespinasse, or in such a mind as that of Diderot. A kind of
-public life tries, too, to break out of its prison in the zealous, if
-somewhat mistaken exertions of agricultural societies and benevolent
-landowners. But amid all this vitality and inspiration
-and energy of mind and taste, the government and the
-fortunes of the race depend ultimately on Versailles, who lives
-apart, her voluptuous sleep undisturbed by the play of thought
-and hope and eager curiosity, wrapt and isolated in her scarlet
-sins.</p>
-
-<p>When Louis <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span> called to office Turgot, fresh from his reforms
-at Limoges, it looked as if the intellect of France might be
-harnessed to the monarchy. The philosophers believed that
-their radiant dreams were about to come gloriously true.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Richelieu had planned his system for an energetic minister
-and a docile king; Turgot had not less energy than Richelieu,
-and Turgot’s master was not more ambitious than Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIII.</span>
-But the new régime lasted less than two years, for Louis <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span>,
-cowed by courtiers and ruled by a queen who could not sacrifice
-her pleasures to the peace of France, dismissed his minister,
-the hopes of the reformers were destroyed, and France settled
-down to the unrolling of events. The monarchy was almost
-dead. It went out in a splendid catastrophe, but it was
-already spent and exhausted before the States-General were
-summoned. This vast, centralised scheme was run down,
-exhausted by the extravagance of the Court, unable to
-discharge its functions, causing widespread misery by its
-portentous failure. The monarchy that the Revolution destroyed
-was anarchy. Spenser talks in the <i>Faerie Queene</i> of a
-little sucking-fish called the remora, which collects on the
-bottom of a ship and slowly and invisibly, but surely,
-arrests its progress. The last kings were like the remora,
-fastening themselves on Richelieu’s creation and steadily and
-gradually depriving it of power and life.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural that De Tocqueville, surveying these two
-centuries of national life, so full of mischief, misdirection and
-waste, seeing, too, in the new régime the survival of many
-features that he condemned in the old, should have traced all
-the calamities of France to the absence of a ruling aristocracy.
-It was natural that in such a temper and with such preoccupations
-he should have turned wistfully and not critically to
-England, for if France was the State in which the nobles had
-least power, England was the State in which they had most. The
-Revolution of 1688 established Parliamentary Government. The
-manners and the blunders of James <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> had stripped the Crown
-of the power that his predecessor had gained by his seductive
-and unscrupulous politics, and when the great families settled
-with the sovereign of their choice, their memories of James
-were too recent and vivid to allow them to concede more than
-they could help to William. The Revolution put the law of the
-land over the will of the sovereign: it abolished his suspending
-and dispensing powers, and it obliged him to summon Parliament
-every year. It set up a limited monarchy with Parliament
-controlling the Crown. But though the Revolution gave England
-a constitutional Parliamentary government, that government
-had no homogeneous leadership, and it looked as if its effective
-force might be dissipated in the chaos and confusion of ministries.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-In such a situation one observer at least turned his eyes to
-France. There exists in the British Museum a paper by Daniel
-Defoe, written apparently for the guidance of Harley, who
-was Secretary of State in 1704. In this paper Defoe dwelt
-on the evils of divided and dilatory government, and sketched
-a scheme by which his patron might contrive to build up for
-himself a position like that once enjoyed by Richelieu and
-Mazarin. Defoe saw that the experiment meant a breach
-with English tradition, but he does not seem to have seen,
-what was equally true, that success was forbidden by the
-conditions of Parliamentary government and the strength of
-the aristocracy. The scheme demanded among other things the
-destruction of the new Cabinet system. As it happened, this
-mischievous condition of heterogeneous administration, in
-which one minister counterworked and counteracted another,
-came to an end in Defoe’s lifetime, and it came to an end
-by the consolidation of the system which he wished to see
-destroyed.</p>
-
-<p>This was the work of Walpole, whose career, so uninviting
-to those who ask for the sublime or the heroic in politics, for
-it is as unromantic a story as can be desired of perseverance,
-and coarse method, and art without grace, and fruits without
-flowers, is one of the capital facts of English history. Walpole
-took advantage of the fortunate accident that had placed on
-the throne a foreigner, who took no interest in England and
-did not speak her language, and laid the foundations of
-Cabinet government. Walpole saw that if Parliamentary
-supremacy was to be a reality, it was essential that ministers
-should be collectively responsible, and that they should severally
-recognise a common aim and interest; otherwise, by choosing
-incompatible ministers, the king could make himself stronger
-than the Cabinet and stronger than Parliament. It is true that
-George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, disdaining the docility of his predecessors, disputed
-later the Parliamentary supremacy which Walpole had thus
-established, and disputed it by Walpole’s own methods of corruption
-and intrigue. But George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, though he assailed the
-liberal ideas of his time, and assailed them with an unhappy
-success, did not threaten the power of the aristocracy. He
-wanted ministers to be eclectic and incoherent, because he
-wanted them to obey him rather than Parliament, but his
-impulse was mere love of authority and not any sense or feeling
-for a State released from this monopoly of class. Self-willed
-without originality, ambitious without imagination, he wanted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-to cut the knot that tethered the Crown to the Cabinet, but
-he had neither the will nor the power to put a knife in the
-system of aristocracy itself. He wished to set back the clock,
-but only by half a century, to the days when kings could play
-minister against minister, and party against party, and not to
-the days of the more resolute and daring dreams of the Stuart
-fancy. The large ideas of a sovereign like Henry of Navarre
-were still further from his petty and dusty vision. He was so
-far successful in his intrigues as to check and defeat the better
-mind of his generation, but if he had won outright, England
-would have been ruled less wisely indeed, but not less deliberately
-in the interests of the governing families. Thus it comes
-that though his interventions are an important and demoralising
-chapter in the history of the century, they do not disturb
-or qualify the general progress of aristocratic power.</p>
-
-<p>In France there was no institution, central or local, in which
-the aristocracy held power: in England there was no institution,
-central or local, which the aristocracy did not control.
-This is clear from a slight survey of Parliament and of local
-administration.</p>
-
-<p>The extent to which this is true had probably not been
-generally grasped before the publication of the studies of
-Messrs. Redlich and Hirst, and Mr. and Mrs. Webb, on the
-history of local government or the recent works of Dr. Slater
-and Professor Hasbach on the great enclosures. Most persons
-were aware of the enormous power of the aristocracy, but many
-did not know that that power was greater at the end than at
-the beginning of the century. England was, in fact, less like a
-democracy, and more remote from the promise of democracy
-when the French Revolution broke out, than it had been when
-the governing families and the governing Church, whose cautions
-and compromises and restraint Burke solemnly commended to
-the impatient idealists of 1789, settled their account with the
-Crown in the Revolution of 1688.</p>
-
-<p>The corruptions that turned Parliamentary representation
-into the web of picturesque paradoxes that fascinated Burke,
-were not new in the eighteenth century. As soon as a seat
-in the House of Commons came to be considered a prize,
-which was at least as early as the beginning of the sixteenth
-century, the avarice and ambition of powerful interests began
-to eat away the democratic simplicity of the old English franchise.
-Thus, by the time of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, England had travelled
-far from the days when there was a uniform franchise, when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>
-every householder who did watch and ward could vote at a
-Parliamentary election, and when the practice of throwing
-the provision of the Members’ wages upon the electorate discouraged
-the attempt to restrict the franchise, and thereby
-increase the burden of the voters. Indeed, when the Whig
-families took over the government of England, the case for
-Parliamentary Reform was already pressing. It had been
-admitted by sovereigns like Elizabeth and James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, and it
-had been temporarily and partially achieved by Cromwell.
-But the monopolies which had been created and the abuses
-which had been introduced had nothing to fear from the great
-governing families, and the first acts of the Revolution Parliament,
-so far from threatening them, tended to give them sanction
-and permanence. Down to this time there had been a
-constant conflict within the boroughs between those who had
-been excluded from the franchise and the minorities, consisting
-of burgage-holders or corrupt corporations or freemen, who
-had appropriated it. These conflicts, which were carried to
-Parliament, were extinguished by two Acts, one of 1696, the
-other of 1729, which declared that the last determination in
-each case was final and irrevocable. No borough whose fate
-had been so decided by a Parliamentary committee could ever
-hope to recover its stolen franchise, and all these local reform
-movements settled down to their undisturbed euthanasia.
-These Acts were modified by a later Act of 1784, which allowed
-a determination to be disputed within twelve months, but by
-that time 127 boroughs had already received their final verdict:
-in the others, where the franchise was determined after 1784,
-there was some revival of local agitation.</p>
-
-<p>The boroughs that were represented in Parliament in the
-eighteenth century have been classified by Mr. Porritt, in
-his learned work, in four categories. They were (1) Scot and
-lot and potwalloper boroughs, (2) Burgage boroughs, (3) Corporation
-boroughs, and (4) Freemen boroughs.</p>
-
-<p>The Scot and lot boroughs, of which there were 59, ranged
-from Gatton, with 135 inhabitants, to Westminster and
-Northampton. On paper they approached most nearly to
-the old conditions as to the franchise. A uniform qualification
-of six months residence was established in 1786. In
-other respects the qualifications in these boroughs varied.
-In some the franchise depended on the payment of poor rate
-or church rate: in others the only condition was that the
-voter had not been a charge on the poor rate. The boroughs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-of the second of these classes were called potwalloper, because
-the voter had to prove that he was an inhabitant in the borough,
-had a family, and boiled a pot there. This potwalloper franchise
-was a survival from the days when freemen took their
-meals in public to prove that they did not depend on the table
-of a lord. In the eighteenth century the potwalloper sometimes
-put his table in the street to show that he had a vote.
-But these boroughs, in spite of their wide franchise, fell under
-the control of the aristocracy almost as completely as the
-others, for the reason that when the borough itself developed,
-the Parliamentary borough stood still, and in many cases
-the inhabitant householders who had the right to vote were
-the inhabitants of a small and ancient area of the town. All
-that was necessary in such circumstances in order to acquire
-the representation of the borough, was to buy the larger part
-of the property within this area. This was done, for example,
-at Aldborough and at Steyning.</p>
-
-<p>The Burgage boroughs were 39. They were Parliamentary
-boroughs in which the right to vote attached exclusively to the
-possession of burgage properties. The burgage tenants were the
-owners of land, houses, shops or gardens in certain ancient
-boroughs. The holders of these sites were originally tenants
-who discharged their feudal obligations by a money payment,
-corresponding to the freeholder in the country, who held
-by soccage. They thus became the men of the township
-who met in the churchyard or town hall. In many cases
-residence was unnecessary to the enjoyment of the franchise.
-The only qualification was the possession of title-deeds to
-particular parcels of land, or registration in the records of a
-manor. These title-deeds were called ‘snatch papers,’ from
-the celerity with which they were transferred at times of election.
-The burgage property that enfranchised the elector of
-Old Sarum was a ploughed field. Lord Radnor explained
-that at Downton he held 99 out of the 100 burgage tenures,
-and that one of the properties was in the middle of a watercourse.
-At Richmond, pigeon-lofts and pig-styes conferred
-the franchise. In some cases, on the other hand, residence
-was required; at Haslemere, for example, Lord Lonsdale
-settled a colony of Cumberland miners in order to satisfy
-this condition. Sometimes the owner of a burgage property
-had to show that the house was occupied, and one proof of
-this was the existence of a chimney. In all of these boroughs
-the aristocracy and other controllers of boroughs worked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-hard, through the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, to
-restrict the number of properties that carried the right to
-vote. The holder of burgage property and the borough patron
-had a common interest in these restrictions. The burgage
-boroughs provided a great many cases for the decision of Parliamentary
-committees, and the borough owners mortgaged their
-estates under the strain of litigation of this kind. Parliamentary
-committees had to determine for example whether the Widows’
-Row at Petersfield really stood on the foundation of the house
-which conferred the franchise in the reign of William <span class="allsmcap">III</span>. The
-most successful borough-monger was the patron who had
-contrived to exclude first the non-burgage owners, and then
-the majority of the burgage owners, thus reducing his expenses
-within the narrowest compass.</p>
-
-<p>The Corporation boroughs, or boroughs in which the corporation
-had acquired by custom the right to elect, independently
-of the burgesses, were 43. In days when Parliamentary
-elections were frequent, the inhabitants of many boroughs
-waived their right of election and delegated it to the corporations.
-When seats in the House of Commons became more
-valuable, the corporations were tenacious of this customary
-monopoly, and frequently sought to have it established by
-charter. These claims were contested in the seventeenth
-century, but without much success, and the charters bestowed
-at this time restricted the franchise to the corporations in
-order to prevent ‘popular tumult, and to render the elections
-and other things and the public business of the said borough
-into certainty and constant order.’ It is easy to trace in these
-transactions, besides the rapacity of the corporations themselves,
-the influence of the landed aristocracy who were already beginning
-to finger these boroughs. There was, indeed, an interval
-during which the popular attacks met with some success.
-When Eliot and Hampden were on the Committee of Privileges,
-some towns, including Warwick, Colchester, and Boston,
-regained their rights. But the Restoration was fatal to the
-movement for open boroughs, and though it was hoped that
-the Revolution, which had been in part provoked by the tricks
-the Stuarts had played with the boroughs, would bring a more
-favourable atmosphere, this expectation was defeated. All
-of these boroughs fell under the rule of a patron, who bribed
-the members of the corporation with money, with livings or
-clerkships in the state departments, cadetships in the navy
-and in India. Croker complained that he had further to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-dance with the wives and daughters of the corporation at
-‘tiresome and foolish’ balls. There was no disguise or mistake
-about the position. The patron spoke not of ‘my constituents’
-but of ‘my corporation.’ The inhabitants outside
-this little group had no share at all in Parliamentary representation,
-and neither the patron nor his nominee gave them a single
-thought. The members of the corporation themselves were
-often non-resident, and the mayor sometimes never went near
-the borough from the first day of his magistracy to the last.
-His office was important, not because it made him responsible
-for municipal government, but because it made him returning
-officer. He had to manage the formalities of an election
-for his patron.</p>
-
-<p>The Freemen boroughs, of which there were 62, represent
-in Mr. Porritt’s opinion the extreme divergence from
-the old franchise. In these boroughs restrictions of different
-kinds had crept in, a common restriction being that in force
-at Carlisle, which limited the franchise to the inhabitants
-who belonged to the trade guild. For some time these restrictions,
-though they destroyed the ancient significance
-of ‘freeman’ as a person to be distinguished from the ‘villein,’
-did not really destroy the representative character of the
-electorate. But these boroughs suffered like the others, and even
-more than the others, from the demoralising effects of the appreciation
-of the value of seats in Parliament, and as soon as votes
-commanded money, the corporations had every inducement to
-keep down the number of voters. In many boroughs there
-set in a further development that was fatal to the elementary
-principles of representation: the practice of selling the freedom
-of the borough to non-residents. There were three classes
-of buyers: men who wanted to become patrons, men who
-wanted to become members, and men who wanted to become
-voters. The making of honorary freemen became a favourite
-process for securing the control of a borough to the corporation
-or to a patron. Dunwich, which was a wealthy and
-famous seaport in the time of Henry II., gradually crumbled
-into the German Ocean, and in 1816 it was described by Oldfield
-as consisting of forty-two houses and half a church. This
-little borough contained in 1670 forty resident freemen, and in
-that year it largessed its freedom on four hundred non-residents.
-The same methods were applied at Carlisle, King’s Lynn, East
-Grinstead, Nottingham, Liverpool, and in many other places.
-A particularly flagrant case at Durham in 1762, when 215<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-freemen were made in order to turn an election, after the
-issue of the writ, led to a petition which resulted in the unseating
-of the member and the passing of an Act of Parliament
-in the following year. This Act excluded from the franchise
-honorary freemen who had been admitted within twelve
-months of the first day of an election, but it did not touch
-the rights of ordinary freemen admitted by the corporation.
-Consequently, when a Parliamentary election was impending
-or proceeding, new freemen used to swarm into the electorate
-whenever the corporation or the patron had need of them.
-At Bristol in 1812 seventeen hundred and twenty freemen, and
-at Maldon in 1826 a thousand freemen, were so admitted and
-enfranchised. Generally speaking, corporations seem to have
-preferred the method of exclusion to that of flooding the electorate
-with outside creations. On the eve of the Reform Bill,
-there were six electors at Rye and fourteen at Dunwich. At
-Launceston, early in the eighteenth century, the members of the
-corporation systematically refused freedom to all but members
-of their own party, and the same practices were adopted at East
-Retford, Ludlow, Plympton, Hastings, and other places. Legal
-remedies were generally out of reach of the excluded freemen.
-There were some exceptions to the abuses which prevailed in
-most of these boroughs, notably the case of the City of London.
-A special Act of Parliament (1774) made it a condition of the
-enjoyment of the freemen’s franchise there, that the freeman
-had not received alms, and that he had been a freeman for twelve
-calendar months. But in most of these boroughs, by the end
-of the eighteenth century, the electorate was entirely under the
-influence of the corporations. Nor was the device of withholding
-freedom from those qualified by custom, and of bestowing
-it on those who were only qualified by subservience, the
-only resource at the command of the borough-mongers.
-Charities were administered in an electioneering spirit, and
-recalcitrant voters were sometimes threatened with impressment.</p>
-
-<p>Of the 513 members representing England and Wales
-in 1832, 415 sat for cities and boroughs. Fifty members
-were returned by 24 cities, 332 by 166 English boroughs,
-5 by single-member boroughs, 16 by the Cinque Ports, and
-12 by as many Welsh boroughs. The twelve Welsh counties
-returned 12 members, and the forty English counties 82,
-the remaining 4 members being representatives of the Universities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span></p>
-
-<p>The county franchise had a much less chequered history
-than the various franchises in boroughs. Before the reign
-of Henry <span class="allsmcap">VI.</span>, every free inhabitant householder, freeholder
-or non-freeholder, could vote at elections of Knights of the
-Shire. The Act of 1430 limited the franchise to forty-shilling
-freeholders. Many controversies raged round this definition,
-and by the eighteenth century, men were voting in respect
-of annuities, rent-charges, the dowries of their wives and
-pews in church. Mr. Porritt traces the faggot voter to the
-early days of Charles <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> Two changes were made in the county
-franchise between 1430 and 1832. The residential qualification
-disappears by 1620: in 1702 a tax-paying qualification
-was introduced under which a property did not carry a
-vote unless it had been taxed for a year. In 1781 the
-year was cut down to six months. Great difficulties and
-irregularities occurred with regard to registration, and a Bill
-was passed into law in 1784 to establish a public system of
-registration. The Act, however, was repealed in the next year,
-in consequence of the agitation against the expense. The
-county franchise had a democratic appearance but the county
-constituencies were very largely under territorial sway, and
-by the middle of the fifteenth century Jack Cade had complained
-of the pressure of the great families on their
-tenants. Fox declared that down to 1780 one of the members
-for Yorkshire had always been elected in Lord
-Rockingham’s dining-room, and from that time onwards
-the representation of that county seems to have been a
-battle of bribes between the Rockinghams, the Fitzwilliams
-and the Harewoods.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to see from this sketch of the manner in which the
-Parliamentary franchise had been drawn into the hands of
-patrons and corporations, that the aristocracy had supreme command
-of Parliament. Control by patrons was growing steadily
-throughout the eighteenth century. The Society of Friends
-of the People presented a petition to the House of Commons
-in 1793, in which it was stated that 157 members were sent
-to Parliament by 84 individuals, and 150 other members
-were returned by the recommendation of 70 powerful individuals.
-The relations of such members to their patrons
-were described by Fox in 1797, ‘When Gentlemen represent
-populous towns and cities, then it is a disputed point whether
-they ought to obey their voice or follow the dictates of their
-own conscience. But if they represent a noble lord or a noble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-duke then it becomes no longer a question of doubt, and he
-is not considered a man of honour who does not implicitly
-obey the orders of a single constituent.’<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> The petition of the
-Society of Friends of the People contained some interesting
-information as to the number of electors in certain constituencies:
-90 members were returned by 46 places, in none
-of which the number of voters exceeded 50, 37 ‘by 19
-places in none of which the number of voters exceeds 100,
-and 52 by 26 in none of which the number of voters exceeded
-200. Seventy-five members were returned for 35 places in
-which it would be to trifle with the patience of your Honourable
-House to mention any number of voters at all,’ the elections
-at the places alluded to being notoriously a matter of
-form.</p>
-
-<p>If the qualifications of voters had changed, so had the
-qualifications of members. A power that reposed on this
-basis would have seemed reasonably complete, but the aristocracy
-took further measures to consolidate its monopoly.
-In 1710 Parliament passed an Act, to which it gave the prepossessing
-title ‘An Act for securing the freedom of Parliament,
-by further qualifying the Members to sit in the House
-of Commons,’ to exclude all persons who had not a certain
-estate of land, worth in the case of knights of the shire, £500,
-and in the case of burgesses, £300. This Act was often evaded
-by various devices, and the most famous of the statesmen
-of the eighteenth century sat in Parliament by means of
-fictitious qualifications, among others Pitt, Burke, Fox and
-Sheridan. But the Act gave a tone to Parliament, and it
-was not a dead letter.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> It had, too, the effect of throwing
-the ambitious merchant into the landlord class, and of enveloping
-him in the landlord atmosphere. Selection and assimilation,
-as De Tocqueville saw, and not exclusion, are the true
-means of preserving a class monopoly of power. We might,
-indeed, sum up the contrast between the English and French
-aristocracy by saying that the English aristocracy understood
-the advantages of a scientific social frontier, whereas the French
-were tenacious of a traditional frontier. More effectual in practice
-than this imposition of a property qualification was the
-growing practice of throwing on candidates the official expenses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>
-of elections. During the eighteenth century these expenses
-grew rapidly, and various Acts of Parliament, in particular
-that of 1745, fixed these charges on candidates.</p>
-
-<p>It followed naturally, from a system which made all municipal
-government merely one aspect of Parliamentary electioneering,
-that the English towns fell absolutely into the hands of
-corrupt oligarchies and the patrons on whom they lived.
-The Tudor kings had conceived the policy of extinguishing
-their independent life and energies by committing their
-government to select bodies with power to perpetuate themselves
-by co-opting new members. The English aristocracy
-found in the boroughs&mdash;with the mass of inhabitants disinherited
-and all government and power vested in a small
-body&mdash;a state of things not less convenient and accommodating
-to the new masters of the machine than it had been to the
-old. The English towns, which three centuries earlier had
-enjoyed a brisk and vigorous public life, were now in a state
-of stagnant misgovernment: as the century advanced, they
-only sank deeper into the slough, and the Report of the Commission
-of 1835 showed that the number of inhabitants who
-were allowed any share in public life or government was infinitesimal.
-In Plymouth, for example, with a population
-of 75,000, the number of resident freemen was under 300:
-in Ipswich, with more than 20,000 inhabitants, there were
-350 freemen of whom more than 100 were not rated, and
-some forty were paupers. Municipal government throughout
-the century was a system not of government but of property.
-It did not matter to the patron whether Winchester
-or Colchester had any drains or constables: the patron had
-to humour the corporation or the freemen, the corporation
-or the freemen had to keep their bargain with the patron.
-The patron gave the corporation money and other considerations:
-the corporation gave the patron control over a seat
-in Parliament. Neither had to consider the interests or the
-property of the mass of burgesses. Pitt so far recognised
-the ownership of Parliamentary boroughs as property, that
-he proposed in 1785 to compensate the patrons of the boroughs
-he wished to disenfranchise. Every municipal office was regarded
-in the same spirit. The endowments and the charities
-that belonged to the town belonged to a small oligarchy
-which acknowledged no responsibility to the citizens for its
-proceedings, and conducted its business in secret. The whole
-system depended on the patron, who for his part represented<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-the absolute supremacy of the territorial aristocracy to which
-he belonged. Civic life there was none.</p>
-
-<p>If we turn to local government outside the towns there is
-the same decay of self-government.</p>
-
-<p>One way of describing the changes that came over English
-society after the break-up of feudalism would be to say that
-as in France everything drifted into the hands of the intendant,
-in England everything drifted into the hands of the Justice
-of the Peace. This office, created in the first year of Edward <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>,
-had grown during his reign to very great importance and
-power. Originally the Justices of the Peace were appointed
-by the state to carry out certain of its precepts, and generally
-to keep the peace in the counties in which they served. In
-their quarterly sittings they had the assistance of a jury, and
-exercised a criminal jurisdiction concurrent with that which the
-king’s judges exercised when on circuit. But from early days
-they developed an administrative power which gradually drew to
-itself almost all the functions and properties of government.
-Its quasi-judicial origin is seen in the judicial form under
-which it conducted such business as the supervision of roads
-and bridges. Delinquencies and deficiencies were ‘presented’
-to the magistrates in court. It became the habit, very early
-in the history of the Justices of the Peace, to entrust to them
-duties that were new, or duties to which existing authorities
-were conspicuously inadequate. In the social convulsions
-that followed the Black Death, it was the Justice of the Peace
-who was called in to administer the elaborate legislation by
-which the capitalist classes sought to cage the new ambitions
-of the labourer. Under the Elizabethan Poor Law, it was the
-Justice of the Peace who appointed the parish overseers and
-approved their poor rate, and it was the Justice of the Peace
-who held in his hand the meshes of the law of Settlement.
-In other words, the social order that emerged from mediæval
-feudalism centred round the Justice of the Peace in England
-as conspicuously as it centred round the bureaucracy in
-France. During the eighteenth century, the power of the
-Justice of the Peace reached its zenith, whilst his government
-acquired certain attributes that gave it a special significance.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of the eighteenth century there were still
-many small men taking some part in the affairs of the village.
-The old manorial civilisation was disappearing, but Mr. and
-Mrs. Webb have shown that manor courts of one kind or
-another were far more numerous and had far more to do at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-the beginning of the eighteenth century than has been commonly
-supposed. Such records as survive, those, <i>e.g.</i> of
-Godmanchester and Great Tew, prove that the conduct and
-arrangement of the business of the common fields&mdash;and England
-was still, at the beginning of this period, very largely a country
-of common fields&mdash;required and received very full and careful
-attention. Those courts crumble away as the common
-fields vanish, and with them there disappears an institution
-in which, as Professor Vinogradoff has shown, the small man
-counted and had recognised rights. By the time of the Reform
-Bill, a manor court was more or less of a local curiosity. The
-village vestries again, which represented another successor
-to the manorial organisation, democratic in form, were losing
-their vitality and functions, and coming more and more under
-the shadow of the Justices of the Peace. Parochial government
-was declining throughout the century, and though Professor
-Lowell in his recent book speaks of village government
-as still democratic in 1832, few of those who have examined
-the history of the vestry believe that much was left of its
-democratic character. By the end of the eighteenth century,
-the entire administration of county affairs, as well as the
-ultimate authority in parish business, was in the hands of the
-Justice of the Peace, the High Sheriff, and the Lord-Lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>The significance of this development was increased by the
-manner in which the administration of the justices was conducted.
-The transactions of business fell, as the century
-advanced, into fewer and fewer hands, and became less and
-less public in form and method. The great administrative
-court, Quarter Sessions, remained open as a court of justice,
-but it ceased to conduct its county business in public. Its
-procedure, too, was gradually transformed. Originally the
-court received ‘presentments’ or complaints from many
-different sources&mdash;the grand juries, the juries from the Hundreds,
-the liberties and the boroughs, and from constable juries.
-The grand juries presented county bridges, highways or gaols
-that needed repair: the Hundred juries presented delinquencies
-in their divisions: constable juries presented such minor anti-social
-practices as the keeping of pigs. Each of these juries
-represented some area of public opinion. The Grand Jury,
-besides giving its verdict on all these presentments, was in
-other ways a very formidable body, and acted as a kind of
-consultative committee, and perhaps as a finance committee.
-Now all this elaborate machinery was simplified in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-eighteenth century, and it was simplified by the abandonment
-of all the quasi-democratic characteristics and
-methods. Presentments by individual justices gradually
-superseded presentments by juries. By 1835 the Hundred
-Jury and Jury of Constables had disappeared: the Grand
-Jury had almost ceased to concern itself with local government,
-and the administrative business of Quarter Sessions
-was no longer discussed in open court.</p>
-
-<p>Even more significant in some respects was the delegation
-of a great part of county business, including the protection
-of footpaths, from Quarter Sessions to Petty Sessions or to
-single justices out of sessions. Magistrates could administer
-in this uncontrolled capacity a drastic code for the punishment
-of vagrants and poachers without jury or publicity.
-The single justice himself determined all questions of law and
-of fact, and could please himself as to the evidence he chose
-to hear. In 1822 the Duke of Buckingham tried and convicted
-a man of coursing on his estate. The trial took place in the
-duke’s kitchen: the witnesses were the duke’s keepers. The
-defendant was in this case not a poacher, who was <i>fera naturæ</i>,
-but a farmer, who was in comparison a person of substance
-and standing. The office of magistrate possessed a special
-importance for the class that preserved game, and readers
-of <i>Rob Roy</i> will remember that Mr. Justice Inglewood had to
-swallow his prejudices against the Hanoverian succession
-and take the oaths as a Justice of the Peace, because the
-refusal of most of the Northumberland magistrates, being
-Jacobites, to serve on the bench, had endangered the strict
-administration of the Game Laws. We know from the novels
-of Richardson and Fielding and Smollett how this power
-enveloped village life. Richardson has no venom against
-the justices. In <i>Pamela</i> he merely records the fact that Mr.
-B. was a magistrate for two counties, and that therefore it was
-hopeless for Pamela, whom he wished to seduce, to elude
-his pursuit, even if she escaped from her duress in his country
-house.</p>
-
-<p>Fielding, who saw the servitude of the poor with less patience
-and composure, wrote of country life with knowledge and
-experience. In <i>Joseph Andrews</i> he describes the young squire
-who forbids the villagers to keep dogs, and kills any dog that
-he finds, and the lawyer who assures Lady Booby that ‘the
-laws of the land are not so vulgar to permit a mean fellow
-to contend with one of your ladyship’s fortune. We have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-one sure card, which is to carry him before Justice Frolic, who
-upon hearing your ladyship’s name, will commit him without
-any further question.’ Mr. Justice Frolic was as good as his
-reputation, and at the moment of their rescue Joseph and
-Fanny were on the point of being sent to Bridewell on the
-charge of taking a twig from a hedge. Fielding and Richardson
-wrote in the middle of the eighteenth century. In 1831 Denman,
-the Attorney-General in Grey’s Government, commented
-on the difference between the punishments administered by
-judges at Assize and those administered by justices at Quarter
-Sessions, in the defence of their game preserves, observing
-that the contrast ‘had a very material effect in confusing in
-the minds of the people the notions of right and wrong.’ This
-territorial power was in fact absolute. In France the peasant
-was in some cases shielded from the caprice of the seigneur
-by the Crown, the Parlements and the intendants. Both
-Henry <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> and Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIII.</span> intervened to protect the communities
-in the possession of their goods from the encroachments of
-seigneurs, while Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span> published an edict in 1667 restoring
-to the communities all the property they had alienated since
-1620. In England he was at the landlord’s mercy: he stood
-unprotected beneath the canopy of this universal power.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was the actual authority, administrative or judicial,
-of the magistrates and their surveillance of the village the
-full measure of their influence. They became, as Mr. and
-Mrs. Webb have shown, the domestic legislature. The most
-striking example of their legislation was the Berkshire Bread
-Act. In 1795 the Berkshire Court of Quarter Sessions summoned
-justices and ‘several discreet persons’ to meet at Speenhamland
-for the purpose of rating husbandry wages. This
-meeting passed the famous resolution providing for the supplementing
-of wages out of the rates, on a certain fixed scale,
-according to the price of flour. The example of these seven
-clergymen and eleven squires was quickly followed in other
-counties, and Quarter Sessions used to have tables drawn up and
-printed, giving the justices’ scale, to be issued by the Clerk of
-the Peace to every acting magistrate and to the churchwardens
-and overseers of every parish. It was a handful of magistrates
-in the different counties, acting on their own initiative,
-without any direction from Parliament, that set loose this social
-avalanche in England. Parliament, indeed, had developed
-the habit of taking the opinion of the magistrates as conclusive
-on all social questions, and whereas a modern elected local<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-authority has to submit to the control of a department subject
-to Parliament, in the eighteenth century a non-elected local
-authority, not content with its own unchecked authority,
-virtually controlled the decisions of Parliament as well. The
-opposition of the magistrates to Whitbread’s Bill in 1807,
-for example, was accepted as fatal and final.</p>
-
-<p>Now if the Crown had been more powerful or had followed
-a different policy, the Justices of the Peace, instead of developing
-into autonomous local oligarchies, might have become its
-representatives. When feudal rights disappeared with the
-Wars of the Roses, the authority of the Justice of the Peace,
-an officer of the Crown, superseded that of the local lord.
-Mr. Jenks<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> is therefore justified in saying that ‘the governing
-caste in English country life since the Reformation has not
-been a feudal but an official caste.’ But this official caste
-is, so to speak, only another aspect of the feudal caste, for
-though on paper the representatives of the central power,
-the county magistrates were in practice, by the end of the
-eighteenth century, simply the local squires putting into force
-their own ideas and policy. Down to the Rebellion, the Privy
-Council expected judges of assize to choose suitable persons
-for appointment as magistrates. Magistrates were made and
-unmade until the reign of George <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, according to the political
-prepossessions of governments. But by the end of the eighteenth
-century the Lord Lieutenant’s recommendations were
-virtually decisive for appointment, and dismissal from the bench
-became unknown. Thus though the system of the magistracy,
-as Redlich and Hirst pointed out, enabled the English constitution
-to rid itself of feudalism a century earlier than the
-continent, it ultimately gave back to the landlords in another
-form the power that they lost when feudalism disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Another distinctive feature of the English magistracy contributed
-to this result. The Justice of the Peace was unpaid.
-The statutes of Edward <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> and Richard <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> prescribed wages
-at the handsome rate of four shillings a day, but it seems to
-be clear, though the actual practice of benches is not very
-easy to ascertain, that the wages in the rare instances when
-they were claimed were spent on hospitality, and did not go
-into the pockets of the individual justices. Lord Eldon gave
-this as a reason for refusing to strike magistrates off the list
-in cases of private misconduct. ‘As the magistrates gave
-their services gratis they ought to be protected.’ When it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-was first proposed in 1785 to establish salaried police commissioners
-for Middlesex, many Whigs drew a contrast between
-the magistrates who were under no particular obligation to
-the executive power and the officials proposed to be appointed
-who would receive salaries, and might be expected to take
-their orders from the Government.</p>
-
-<p>The aristocracy was thus paramount both in local government
-and in Parliament. But to understand the full significance
-of its absolutism we must notice two important social
-events&mdash;the introduction of family settlements and the abolition
-of military tenures.</p>
-
-<p>A class that wishes to preserve its special powers and privileges
-has to discover some way of protecting its corporate
-interests from the misdemeanours and follies of individual
-members. The great landlords found such a device in the
-system of entail which gave to each successive generation
-merely a life interest in the estates, and kept the estates
-themselves as the permanent possession of the family. But
-the lawyers managed to elude this device of the landowners
-by the invention of sham law-suits, an arrangement by which
-a stranger brought a claim for the estate against the limited
-owner in possession, and got a judgment by his connivance.
-The stranger was in truth the agent of the limited owner,
-who was converted by this procedure into an absolute owner.
-The famous case known as Taltarums case in 1472, established
-the validity of these lawsuits, and for the next two hundred
-years ‘Family Law’ no longer controlled the actions of the
-landowners and the market for their estates. During this
-time Courts of Law and Parliament set their faces against all
-attempts to reintroduce the system of entails. As a consequence
-estates were sometimes melted down, and the inheritances
-of ancient families passed into the possession of yeomen
-and merchants. The landowners had never accepted their
-defeat. In the reign of Elizabeth they tried to devise family
-settlements that would answer their purpose as effectually
-as the old law of entail, but they were foiled by the great
-judges, Popham and Coke. After the Restoration, unhappily,
-conditions were more propitious. In the first place, the risks
-of the Civil War had made it specially important for rich men
-to save their estates from forfeiture by means of such settlements,
-and in the second place the landowning class was
-now all-powerful. Consequently the attempt which Coke
-had crushed now succeeded, and rich families were enabled<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>
-to tie up their wealth.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> Family settlements have ever
-since been a very important part of our social system.
-The merchants who became landowners bought up the
-estates of yeomen, whereas in eighteenth-century France
-it was the land of noblemen that passed to the <i>nouveaux
-riches</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The second point to be noticed in the history of this landlord
-class is the abolition of the military tenures in 1660.
-The form and the method of this abolition are both significant.
-The military dues were the last remaining feudal liability of
-the landlords to the Crown. They were money payments
-that had taken the place of old feudal services. The landlords,
-who found them vexatious and capricious, had been trying
-to get rid of them ever since the reign of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> In 1660
-they succeeded, and the Restoration Parliament revived the
-Act of Cromwell’s Parliament four years earlier which abolished
-military tenures. The bargain which the landlords made with
-the Crown on this occasion was ingenious and characteristic;
-it was something like the Concordat between Francis <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> and
-Leo <span class="allsmcap">X.</span>, which abolished the Pragmatic sanction at the expense
-of the Gallican Church; for the landowners simply transferred
-their liability to the general taxpayer. The Crown forgave
-the landlords their dues in consideration of receiving a grant
-from the taxation of the food of the nation. An Excise tax
-was the substitute.</p>
-
-<p>Now the logical corollary of the abolition of the feudal dues
-that vexed the large landowners would have been the abolition
-of the feudal dues that vexed the small landowners. If
-the great landlords were no longer to be subject to their
-dues in their relation to the Crown, why should the small
-copyholder continue to owe feudal dues to the lord? The
-injustice of abolishing the one set of liabilities and retaining
-the other struck one observer very forcibly, and he was
-an observer who knew something, unlike most of the governing
-class, from intimate experience of the grievances of the
-small landowner under this feudal survival. This was Francis
-North (1637&ndash;1685), the first Lord Guildford, the famous lawyer
-and Lord Chancellor. North had begun his career by acting
-as the steward of various manors, thinking that he would
-gain an insight into human nature which would be of great
-value to him in his practice at the bar. His experience in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-this capacity, as we know from Roger North’s book <i>The Lives
-of the Norths</i>, disclosed to him an aspect of feudalism which
-escaped the large landowners&mdash;the hardships of their dependants.
-He used to describe the copyhold exactions, and to say that
-in many cases that came under his notice small tenements
-and pieces of land which had been in a poor family for generations
-were swallowed up in the monstrous fines imposed on
-copyholders. He said he had often found himself the executioner
-of the cruelty of the lords and ladies of manors upon
-poor men, and he remarked the inconsistency that left all
-these oppressions untouched in emancipating the large landowners.
-Maine, in discussing this system, pointed out that
-these signorial dues were of the kind that provoked the French
-Revolution. There were two reasons why a state of things
-which produced a revolution in France remained disregarded
-in England. One was that the English copyholders were a
-much smaller class: the other that, as small proprietors were
-disappearing in England, the English copyholder was apt to
-contrast his position with the status of the landless labourer,
-and to congratulate himself on the possession of a property,
-whereas in France the copyholder contrasted his position with
-the status of the freeholder and complained of his services.
-The copyholders were thus not in a condition to raise a violent
-or dangerous discontent, and their grievances were left unredressed.
-It is sometimes said that England got rid of feudalism
-a century earlier than the continent. That is true
-of the English State, but to understand the agrarian history
-of the eighteenth century we must remember that, as it has
-been well said, ‘whereas the English State is less feudal, the
-English land law is more feudal than that of any other country
-in Europe.’<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<p>Lastly, the class that is armed with all these social and political
-powers dominates the universities and the public schools.
-The story of how the colleges changed from communities of poor
-men into societies of rich men, and then gradually swallowed
-up the university, has been told in the Reports of University
-Commissions. By the eighteenth century the transformation
-was complete, and both the ancient universities were the
-universities of the rich. There is a passage in Macaulay
-describing the state and pomp of Oxford at the end of the
-seventeenth century, ‘when her Chancellor, the venerable
-Duke of Ormonde, sat in his embroidered mantle on his throne<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>
-under the painted ceiling of the Sheldonian theatre, surrounded
-by hundreds of graduates robed according to their
-rank, while the noblest youths of England were solemnly
-presented to him as candidates for academical honours.’ The
-university was a power, not in the sense in which that could
-be said of a university like the old university of Paris,
-whose learning could make popes tremble, but in the sense
-that the university was part of the recognised machinery
-of aristocracy. What was true of the universities was
-true of the public schools. Education was the nursery not
-of a society, but of an order; not of a state, but of a race
-of rulers.</p>
-
-<p>Thus on every side this class is omnipotent. In Parliament
-with its ludicrous representation, in the towns with their
-decayed government, in the country, sleeping under the absolute
-rule of the Justice of the Peace, there is no rival power. The
-Crown is for all purposes its accomplice rather than its competitor.
-It controls the universities, the Church, the law,
-and all the springs of life and discussion. Its own influence
-is consolidated by the strong social discipline embodied
-in the family settlements. Its supremacy is complete and
-unquestioned. Whereas in France the fermentation of ideas
-was an intellectual revolt against the governing system and
-all literature spoke treason, in England the existing régime
-was accepted, we might say assumed, by the world of letters
-and art, by the England that admired Reynolds and Gibbon,
-or listened to Johnson and Goldsmith, or laughed with
-Sheridan and Sterne. To the reason of France, the government
-under which France lived was an expensive paradox: to the
-reason of England, any other government than the government
-under which England lived was unthinkable. Hence
-De Tocqueville saw only a homogeneous society, a society
-revering its institutions in the spirit of Burke in contrast with
-a society that mocked at its institutions in the spirit of
-Voltaire.</p>
-
-<p>‘You people of great families and hereditary trusts and
-fortunes,’ wrote Burke to the Duke of Richmond in 1772,
-‘are not like such as I am, who, whatever we may be by
-the rapidity of our growth and even by the fruit we bear,
-flatter ourselves that, while we creep on the ground, we belly
-into melons that are exquisite for size and flavour, yet still
-we are but annual plants that perish with our season, and
-leave no sort of traces behind us. You, if you are what you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-ought to be, are in my eye the great oaks that shade a country,
-and perpetuate your benefits from generation to generation.’
-We propose in this book to examine the social history of
-England in the days when the great oaks were in the fulness
-of their vigour and strength, and to see what happened to
-some of the classes that found shelter in their shade.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE VILLAGE BEFORE ENCLOSURE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>To elucidate these chapters, and to supply further information for
-those who are interested in the subject, we publish an Appendix containing
-the history, and tolerably full particulars, of twelve separate
-enclosures. These instances have not been chosen on any plan. They
-are taken from different parts of the country, and are of various dates;
-some are enclosures of common fields, some enclosures of commons and
-waste, and some include enclosures of both kinds.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>At the time of the great Whig Revolution, England was in
-the main a country of commons and of common fields<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>; at the
-time of the Reform Bill, England was in the main a country of
-individualist agriculture and of large enclosed farms. There
-has probably been no change in Europe in the last two centuries
-comparable to this in importance of which so little is
-known to-day, or of which so little is to be learnt from the
-general histories of the time. The accepted view is that this
-change marks a great national advance, and that the hardships
-which incidentally followed could not have been avoided:
-that it meant a vast increase in the food resources of England
-in comparison with which the sufferings of individuals counted
-for little: and that the great estates which then came into
-existence were rather the gift of economic forces than the
-deliberate acquisitions of powerful men. We are not concerned
-to corroborate or to dispute the contention that enclosure
-made England more productive,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> or to discuss the merits of
-enclosure itself as a public policy or a means to agricultural
-progress in the eighteenth century. Our business is with the
-changes that the enclosures caused in the social structure of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-England, from the manner in which they were in practice
-carried out. We propose, therefore, to describe the actual
-operations by which society passed through this revolution,
-the old village vanished, and rural life assumed its modern
-form and character.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult for us, who think of a common as a wild sweep
-of heather and beauty and freedom, saved for the enjoyment
-of the world in the midst of guarded parks and forbidden
-meadows, to realise that the commons that disappeared from
-so many an English village in the eighteenth century belonged
-to a very elaborate, complex, and ancient economy. The
-antiquity of that elaborate economy has been the subject of
-fierce contention, and the controversies that rage round the
-nursery of the English village recall the controversies that
-raged round the nursery of Homer. The main subject of
-contention has been this. Was the manor or the township,
-or whatever name we like to give to the primitive unit of
-agricultural life, an organisation imposed by a despotic landowner
-on his dependents, or was it created by the co-operation
-of a group of free tribesmen, afterwards dominated by a military
-overlord? Did it owe more to Roman tradition or to Teutonic
-tendencies? Professor Vinogradoff, the latest historian, inclines
-to a compromise between these conflicting theories. He thinks
-that it is impossible to trace the open-field system of cultivation
-to any exclusive right of ownership or to the power of coercion,
-and that the communal organisation of the peasantry, a
-village community of shareholders who cultivated the land
-on the open-field system and treated the other requisites
-of rural life as appendant to it, is more ancient than the
-manorial order. It derives, in his view, from the old English
-society. The manor itself, an institution which partakes
-at once of the character of an estate and of a unit of local
-government, was produced by the needs of government and
-the development of individualist husbandry, side by side
-with this communal village. These conditions lead to the
-creation of lordships, and after the Conquest they take form
-in the manor. The manorial element, in fact, is superimposed
-on the communal, and is not the foundation of it: the mediæval
-village is a free village gradually feudalised. Fortunately
-it is not incumbent on us to do more than touch on this fascinating
-study, as it is enough for our purposes to note that the
-greater part of England in cultivation at the beginning of the
-eighteenth century was cultivated on a system which, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-certain local variations, belonged to a common type, representing
-this common ancestry.</p>
-
-<p>The term ‘common’ was used of three kinds of land in the
-eighteenth-century village, and the three were intimately
-connected with each other. There were (1) the arable fields,
-(2) the common meadowland, and (3) the common or waste.
-The arable fields were divided into strips, with different owners,
-some of whom owned few strips, and some many. The various
-strips that belonged to a particular owner were scattered
-among the fields. Strips were divided from each other, sometimes
-by a grass band called a balk, sometimes by a furrow.
-They were cultivated on a uniform system by agreement,
-and after harvest they were thrown open to pasturage. The
-common meadow land was divided up by lot, pegged out,
-and distributed among the owners of the strips; after the
-hay was carried, these meadows, like the arable fields, were
-used for pasture. The common or waste, which was used as
-a common pasture at all times of the year, consisted sometimes
-of woodland, sometimes of roadside strips, and sometimes of
-commons in the modern sense.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p>Such, roughly, was the map of the old English village. What
-were the classes that lived in it, and what were their several
-rights? In a normal village there would be (1) a Lord of the
-Manor, (2) Freeholders, some of whom might be large proprietors,
-and many small, both classes going by the general name of
-Yeomanry, (3) Copyholders, (4) Tenant Farmers, holding by
-various sorts of tenure, from tenants at will to farmers with
-leases for three lives, (5) Cottagers, (6) Squatters, and (7) Farm
-Servants, living in their employers’ houses. The proportions
-of these classes varied greatly, no doubt, in different villages,
-but we have an estimate of the total agricultural population
-in the table prepared by Gregory King in 1688, from which
-it appears that in addition to the Esquires and Gentlemen,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-there were 40,000 families of freeholders of the better sort,
-120,000 families of freeholders of the lesser sort, and 150,000
-farmers. Adam Smith, it will be remembered, writing nearly
-a century later, said that the large number of yeomen was at
-once the strength and the distinction of English agriculture.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now describe rather more fully the different people
-represented in these different categories, and the different
-rights that they enjoyed. We have seen in the first chapter
-that the manorial courts had lost many of their powers by
-this time, and that part of the jurisdiction that the Lord of
-the Manor had originally exercised had passed to the Justice
-of the Peace. No such change had taken place in his relation
-to the economic life of the village. He might or he might
-not still own a demesne land. So far as the common arable
-or common meadow was concerned, he was in the same position
-as any other proprietor: he might own many strips or
-few strips or no strips at all. His position with regard to the
-waste was different, the difference being expressed by Blackstone
-‘in those waste grounds, which are usually called commons,
-the property of the soil is generally in the Lord of the Manor,
-as in the common fields it is in the particular tenant.’ The
-feudal lawyers had developed a doctrine that the soil of the
-waste was vested in the Lord of the Manor, and that originally
-it had all belonged to him. But feudal law acknowledged
-certain definite limitations to his rights over the waste. The
-Statute of Merton, 1235, allowed him to make enclosures on
-the waste, but only on certain terms; he was obliged to leave
-enough of the waste for the needs of his tenants. Moreover,
-his powers were limited, not only by the concurrent rights of
-freeholders and copyholders thus recognised by this ancient
-law, but also by certain common rights of pasture and turbary
-enjoyed by persons who were neither freeholders nor copyholders,
-namely cottagers. These rights were explained by
-the lawyers of the time as being concessions made by the Lord
-of the Manor in remote antiquity. The Lord of the Manor
-was regarded as the owner of the waste, subject to these
-common rights: that is, he was regarded as owning the minerals
-and the surface rights (sand and gravel) as well as sporting
-rights.</p>
-
-<p>Every grade of property and status was represented in the
-ranks of the freeholders, the copyholders and the tenant
-farmers, from the man who employed others to work for him
-to the man who was sometimes employed in working for others.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-No distinct line, in fact, can be drawn between the small
-farmer, whether freeholder, copyholder or tenant, and the
-cottager, for the cottager might either own or rent a few strips;
-the best dividing-line can be drawn between those who made
-their living mainly as farmers, and those who made their living
-mainly as labourers.</p>
-
-<p>It is important to remember that no farmer, however large
-his holdings or property, or however important his social position,
-was at liberty to cultivate his strips as he pleased. The
-system of cultivation would be settled for him by the Jury of
-the Manor Court, a court that had different names in different
-places. By the eighteenth century the various courts of the
-manorial jurisdiction had been merged in a single court, called
-indifferently the View of Frankpledge, the Court Leet, the
-Court Baron, the Great Court or the Little Court, which transacted
-so much of the business hitherto confided to various
-courts as had not been assigned to the Justices of the Peace.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-Most of the men of the village, freeholders, copyholders,
-leaseholders, or cottagers, attended the court, but the constitution
-of the Jury or Homage seems to have varied in different
-manors. Sometimes the tenants of the manor were taken
-haphazard in rotation: sometimes the steward controlled
-the choice, sometimes a nominee of the steward or a nominee
-of the tenants selected the Jury: sometimes the steward took
-no part in the selection at all. The chief part of the business
-of these courts in the eighteenth century was the management
-of the common fields and common pastures, and the appointment
-of the village officers. These courts decided which seed
-should be sown in the different fields, and the dates at which
-they were to be opened and closed to common pasture. Under
-the most primitive system of rotation the arable land was
-divided into three fields, of which one was sown with wheat,
-another with spring corn, and the third lay fallow: but by
-the end of the eighteenth century there was a great variety
-of cultivation, and we find a nine years’ course at Great Tew
-in Oxfordshire, a six years’ course in Berkshire, while the
-Battersea common fields were sown with one uniform round
-of grain without intermission, and consequently without
-fallowing.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p>
-
-<p>By Sir Richard Sutton’s Act<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> for the cultivation of common<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-fields, passed in 1773, a majority of three-fourths in number
-and value of the occupiers, with the consent of the owner and
-titheholder, was empowered to decide on the course of husbandry,
-to regulate stinted commons, and, with the consent
-of the Lord of the Manor, to let off a twelfth of the common,
-applying the rent to draining or improving the rest of it.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-Before this Act, a universal consent to any change of system
-was necessary.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> The cultivation of strips in the arable fields
-carried with it rights of common over the waste and also over
-the common fields when they were thrown open. These
-rights were known as ‘common appendant’ and they are
-thus defined by Blackstone: ‘Common appendant is a right
-belonging to the owners or occupiers of arable land to put
-commonable beasts upon the Lord’s waste and upon the lands
-of other persons within the same manor.’</p>
-
-<p>The classes making their living mainly as labourers were
-the cottagers, farm servants, and squatters. The cottagers
-either owned or occupied cottages and had rights of common
-on the waste, and in some cases over the common
-fields. These rights were of various kinds: they generally
-included the right to pasture certain animals, to cut turf and
-to get fuel. The cottagers, as we have already said, often
-owned or rented land. This is spoken of as a common practice
-by Addington, who knew the Midland counties well;
-Arthur Young gives instances from Lincolnshire and Oxfordshire,
-and Eden from Leicestershire and Surrey. The squatters
-or borderers were, by origin, a separate class, though in time they
-merged into the cottagers. They were settlers who built themselves
-huts and cleared a piece of land in the commons or
-woods, at some distance from the village. These encroachments
-were generally sanctioned. A common rule in one part
-of the country was that the right was established if the settler
-could build his cottage in the night and send out smoke from
-his chimney in the morning.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> The squatters also often went out
-as day labourers. The farm servants were usually the children<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>
-of the small farmers or cottagers; they lived in their masters’
-houses until they had saved enough money to marry and take
-a cottage of their own.</p>
-
-<p>Were there any day labourers without either land or common
-rights in the old village? It is difficult to suppose that there
-were many.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> Blackstone said of common appurtenant that
-it was not a general right ‘but can only be claimed by special
-grant or by prescription, which the law esteems sufficient
-proof of a special grant or agreement for this purpose.’ Prescription
-covers a multitude of encroachments. Indeed, it
-was only by the ingenuity of the feudal lawyers that these
-rights did not attach to the inhabitants of the village at large.
-These lawyers had decided in Gateward’s case, 1603, that
-‘inhabitants’ were too vague a body to enjoy a right, and on
-this ground they had deprived the inhabitants of the village
-of Stixswold in Lincolnshire of their customary right of
-turning out cattle on the waste.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> From that time a charter
-of incorporation was necessary to enable the inhabitants at
-large to prove a legal claim to common rights. But rights
-that were enjoyed by the occupiers of small holdings or of
-cottages by long prescription, or by encroachments tacitly
-sanctioned, must have been very widely scattered.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the classes inhabiting the eighteenth-century
-village. As the holdings in the common fields could be sold,
-the property might change hands, though it remained subject
-to common rights and to the general regulations of the manor
-court. Consequently the villages exhibited great varieties of
-character. In one village it might happen that strip after
-strip had been bought up by the Lord of the Manor or some
-proprietor, until the greater part of the arable fields had come
-into the possession of a single owner. In such cases, however,
-the land so purchased was still let out as a rule to a number
-of small men, for the engrossing of farms as a practice comes
-into fashion after enclosure. Sometimes such purchase was
-a preliminary to enclosure. The Bedfordshire reporter gives
-an example in the village of Bolnhurst, in that county. Three
-land speculators bought up as much of the land as they could
-with a view to enclosing the common fields and then selling
-at a large profit. But the land turned out to be much less
-valuable than they had supposed, and they could not get it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-off their hands: all improvements were at a standstill, for
-the speculators only let from year to year, hoping still to find
-a market.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> In other villages, land might have changed hands
-in just the opposite direction. The Lord of the Manor might
-sell his property in the common fields, and sell it not to some
-capitalist or merchant, but to a number of small farmers.
-We learn from the evidence of the Committee of 1844 on enclosures
-that sometimes the Lord of the Manor sold his property
-in the waste to the commoners. Thus there were
-villages with few owners, as there were villages with many
-owners. The writer of the <i>Report on Middlesex</i>, which was
-published in 1798 says, ‘I have known thirty landlords in a
-field of 200 acres, and the property of each so divided as to
-lie in ten or twenty places, containing from an acre or two
-downwards to fifteen perches; and in a field of 300 acres
-I have met with patches of arable land, containing eight
-perches each. In this instance the average size of all the
-pieces in the field was under an acre. In all cases they lie
-in long, narrow, winding or worm-like slips.’<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
-
-<p>The same writer states that at the time his book was written
-(1798) 20,000 out of the 23,000 arable acres in Middlesex
-were cultivated on the common-field system.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> Perhaps the
-parish of Stanwell, of which we describe the enclosure in detail
-elsewhere, may be taken as a fair example of an eighteenth-century
-village. In this parish there were, according to the
-enclosure award, four large proprietors, twenty-four moderate
-proprietors, twenty-four small proprietors, and sixty-six
-cottagers with common rights.</p>
-
-<p>The most important social fact about this system is that it
-provided opportunities for the humblest and poorest labourer
-to rise in the village. Population seems to have moved slowly,
-and thus there was no feverish competition for land. The
-farm servant could save up his wages and begin his married
-life by hiring a cottage which carried rights of common, and
-gradually buy or hire strips of land. Every village, as Hasbach
-has put it, had its ladder, and nobody was doomed to stay
-on the lowest rung. This is the distinguishing mark of the old
-village. It would be easy, looking only at this feature, to idealise
-the society that we have described, and to paint this age as an
-age of gold. But no reader of Fielding or of Richardson would
-fall into this mistake, or persuade himself that this community<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-was a society of free and equal men, in which tyranny was
-impossible. The old village was under the shadow of the
-squire and the parson, and there were many ways in which
-these powers controlled and hampered its pleasures and habits:
-there were quarrels, too, between farmers and cottagers, and
-there are many complaints that the farmers tried to take the
-lion’s share of the commons: but, whatever the pressure
-outside and whatever the bickerings within, it remains true
-that the common-field system formed a world in which the
-villagers lived their own lives and cultivated the soil on a
-basis of independence.</p>
-
-<p>It was this community that now passed under the unqualified
-rule of the oligarchy. Under that rule it was to disappear.
-Enclosure was no new menace to the poor. English literature
-before the eighteenth century echoes the dismay and
-lamentations of preachers and prophets who witnessed the
-havoc that it spread. Stubbes had written in 1553 his bitter
-protest against the enclosures which enabled rich men to
-eat up poor men, and twenty years later a writer had given a
-sombre landscape of the new farming: ‘We may see many
-of their houses built alone like ravens’ nests, no birds building
-near them.’ The Midlands had been the chief scene of these
-changes, and there the conversion of arable land into pasture
-had swallowed up great tracts of common agriculture, provoking
-in some cases an armed resistance. The enclosures of
-this century were the second and the greater of two waves.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>
-In one respect enclosure was in form more difficult now
-than in earlier periods, for it was generally understood at this
-time that an Act of Parliament was necessary. In reality
-there was less check on the process. For hitherto the enclosing
-class had had to reckon with the occasional panic or ill-temper
-of the Crown. No English king, it is true, had intervened
-in the interests of the poor so dramatically as did the
-earlier and unspoilt Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span>, who restored to the French
-village assemblies the public lands they had alienated within
-a certain period. But the Crown had not altogether overlooked
-the interests of the classes who were ruined by enclosure,
-and in different ways it had tried to modify the worst consequences
-of this policy. From 1490 to 1601 there were various
-Acts and proclamations designed for this purpose. Charles <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-had actually annulled the enclosures of two years in certain
-midland counties, several Commissions had been issued, and
-the Star Chamber had instituted proceedings against enclosures<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-on the ground that depopulation was an offence against the
-Common Law. Mr. Firth holds that Cromwell’s influence in
-the eastern counties was due to his championship of the
-commoners in the fens. Throughout this time, however
-ineffectual the intervention of the Crown, the interests of
-the classes to whom enclosures brought wealth and power
-were not allowed to obliterate all other considerations.</p>
-
-<p>From the beginning of the eighteenth century the reins
-are thrown to the enclosure movement, and the policy of
-enclosure is emancipated from all these checks and afterthoughts.
-One interest is supreme throughout England,
-supreme in Parliament, supreme in the country; the Crown
-follows, the nation obeys.</p>
-
-<p>The agricultural community which was taken to pieces in
-the eighteenth century and reconstructed in the manner in
-which a dictator reconstructs a free government, was threatened
-from many points. It was not killed by avarice alone. Cobbett
-used to attribute the enclosure movement entirely to the
-greed of the landowners, but, if greed was a sufficient motive,
-greed was in this case clothed and almost enveloped in public
-spirit. Let us remember what this community looked like
-to men with the mind of the landlord class. The English
-landowners have always believed that order would be resolved
-into its original chaos, if they ceased to control the lives and
-destinies of their neighbours. ‘A great responsibility rests
-on us landlords; if we go, the whole thing goes.’ So says the
-landlord in Mr. Galsworthy’s novel, and so said the landlords
-in the eighteenth century. The English aristocracy always
-thinking of this class as the pillars of society, as the Atlas that
-bears the burden of the world, very naturally concluded that
-this old peasant community, with its troublesome rights, was
-a public encumbrance. This view received a special impetus
-from all the circumstances of the age. The landlord class
-was constantly being recruited from the ranks of the manufacturers,
-and the new landlords, bringing into this charmed
-circle an energy of their own, caught at once its taste for power,
-for direction, for authority, for imposing its will. Readers of
-<i>Shirley</i> will remember that when Robert Moore pictures to
-himself a future of usefulness and success, he says that he will
-obtain an Act for enclosing Nunnely Common, that his brother
-will be put on the bench, and that between them they will
-dominate the parish. The book ends in this dream of triumph.
-Signorial position owes its special lustre for English minds to
-the association of social distinction with power over the life<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>
-and ways of groups of men and women. When Bagehot
-sneered at the sudden millionaires of his day, who hoped to
-disguise their social defects by buying old places and hiding
-among aristocratic furniture, he was remarking on a feature
-of English life that was very far from being peculiar to his
-time. Did not Adam Smith observe that merchants were
-very commonly ambitious of becoming country gentlemen?
-This kind of ambition was the form that public spirit often
-took in successful Englishmen, and it was a very powerful
-menace to the old village and its traditions of collective
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Now this passion received at this time a special momentum
-from the condition of agriculture. A dictatorship lends itself
-more readily than any other form of government to the quick
-introduction of revolutionary ideas, and new ideas were in
-the air. Thus, in addition to the desire for social power,
-there was behind the enclosure movement a zeal for economic
-progress seconding and almost concealing the direct inspiration
-of self-interest. Many an enclosing landlord thought
-only of the satisfaction of doubling or trebling his rent: that
-is unquestionable. If we are to trust so warm a champion
-of enclosure as William Marshall, this was the state of mind
-of the great majority. But there were many whose eyes
-glistened as they thought of the prosperity they were to bring
-to English agriculture, applying to a wider and wider domain
-the lessons that were to be learnt from the processes of scientific
-farming. A man who had caught the large ideas of a Coke,
-or mastered the discoveries of a Bakewell, chafed under the
-restraints that the system of common agriculture placed on
-improvement and experiment. It was maddening to have
-to set your pace by the slow bucolic temperament of small
-farmers, nursed in a simple and old-fashioned routine, who
-looked with suspicion on any proposal that was strange to them.
-In this tiresome partnership the swift were put between the
-shafts with the slow, and the temptation to think that what was
-wanted was to get rid of the partnership altogether, was almost
-irresistible. From such a state the mind passed rapidly and
-naturally to the conclusion that the wider the sphere brought
-into the absolute possession of the enlightened class, the greater
-would be the public gain. The spirit in which the Board of Agriculture
-approached the subject found appropriate expression in
-Sir John Sinclair’s high-sounding language. ‘The idea of having
-lands in common, it has been justly remarked, is to be derived
-from that barbarous state of society, when men were strangers to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-any higher occupation than those of hunters or shepherds, or had
-only just tasted the advantages to be reaped from the cultivation
-of the earth.’<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> Arthur Young<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> compared the open-field system,
-with its inconveniences ‘which the barbarity of their ancestors
-had neither knowledge to discover nor government to remedy’
-to the Tartar policy of the shepherd state.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that men under the influence of these
-set ideas could find no virtue at all in the old system, and that
-they soon began to persuade themselves that that system was
-at the bottom of all the evils of society. It was harmful to
-the morals and useless to the pockets of the poor. ‘The
-benefit,’ wrote Arbuthnot,<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> ‘which they are supposed to reap
-from commons, in their present state, I know to be merely
-nominal; nay, indeed, what is worse, I know, that, in many
-instances, it is an essential injury to them, by being made a
-plea for their idleness; for, some few excepted, if you offer
-them work, they will tell you, that they must go to look up
-their sheep, cut furzes, get their cow out of the pound, or,
-perhaps, say they must take their horse to be shod, that he
-may carry them to a horse-race or cricket-match.’ Lord
-Sheffield, in the course of one of the debates in Parliament,
-described the commoners as a ‘nuisance,’ and most people
-of his class thought of them as something worse. Mr.
-John Billingsley, who wrote the <i>Report on Somerset</i> for the
-Board of Agriculture in 1795, describes in some detail the
-enervating atmosphere of the commoners’ life. ‘Besides,
-moral effects of an injurious tendency accrue to the cottager,
-from a reliance on the imaginary benefits of stocking a common.
-The possession of a cow or two, with a hog, and a few geese,
-naturally exalts the peasant, in his own conception, above
-his brethren in the same rank of society. It inspires some
-degree of confidence in a property, inadequate to his support.
-In sauntering after his cattle, he acquires a habit of indolence.
-Quarter, half, and occasionally whole days are imperceptibly
-lost. Day labour becomes disgusting; the aversion increases
-by indulgence; and at length the sale of a half-fed calf, or
-hog, furnishes the means of adding intemperance to idleness.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span><a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a>
-Mr. Bishton, who wrote the <i>Report on Shropshire</i> in 1794,
-gives a still more interesting glimpse into the mind of the
-enclosing class: ‘The use of common land by labourers operates
-upon the mind as a sort of independence.’ When the commons
-are enclosed ‘the labourers will work every day in the year, their
-children will be put out to labour early,’ and ‘that subordination
-of the lower ranks of society which in the present times
-is so much wanted, would be thereby considerably secured.’</p>
-
-<p>A similar view was taken of the moral effects of commons
-by Middleton, the writer of the <i>Report on Middlesex</i>.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> ‘On
-the other hand, they are, in many instances, of real injury
-to the public; by holding out a lure to the poor man&mdash;I mean of
-materials wherewith to build his cottage, and ground to erect it
-upon: together with firing and the run of his poultry and pigs
-for nothing. This is of course temptation sufficient to induce a
-great number of poor persons to settle upon the borders of such
-commons. But the mischief does not end here: for having gained
-these trifling advantages, through the neglect or connivance of
-the lord of the manor, it unfortunately gives their minds an
-improper bias, and inculcates a desire to live, from that time
-forward, without labour, or at least with as little as possible.’</p>
-
-<p>One of the witnesses before the Select Committee on Commons
-Inclosure in 1844 was Mr. Carus Wilson, who is interesting as
-the original of the character of Mr. Brocklehurst in <i>Jane Eyre</i>.
-We know how that zealous Christian would regard the commoners
-from the speech in which he reproved Miss Temple
-for giving the pupils at Lowood a lunch of bread and cheese
-on one occasion when their meagre breakfast had been uneatable.
-‘Oh, madam, when you put bread and cheese,
-instead of burnt porridge, into these children’s mouths, you
-may indeed feed their vile bodies, but you little think how
-you starve their immortal souls!’ We are not surprised to
-learn that Mr. Carus Wilson found the commoners ‘hardened
-and unpromising,’ and that he was obliged to inform the
-committee that the misconduct which the system encouraged
-‘hardens the heart, and causes a good deal of mischief, and at
-the same time puts the person in an unfavourable position for
-the approach of what might be serviceable to him in a moral
-and religious point of view.’<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is interesting, after reading all these confident generalisations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-about the influence of this kind of life upon the
-character of the poor, to learn what the commoners themselves
-thought of its moral atmosphere. This we can do
-from such a petition as that sent by the small proprietors
-and persons entitled to rights of common at Raunds, in
-Northamptonshire. These unfortunate people lost their rights
-by an Enclosure Act in 1797, and during the progress of the
-Bill they petitioned Parliament against it, in these terms:
-‘That the Petitioners beg Leave to represent to the House
-that, under Pretence of improving Lands in the said Parish,
-the Cottagers and other Persons entitled to Right of Common
-on the Lands intended to be inclosed, will be deprived of an
-inestimable Privilege, which they now enjoy, of turning a
-certain Number of their Cows, Calves, and Sheep, on and over
-the said Lands; a Privilege that enables them not only to
-maintain themselves and their Families in the Depth of Winter,
-when they cannot, even for their Money, obtain from the
-Occupiers of other Lands the smallest Portion of Milk or Whey
-for such necessary Purpose, but, in addition to this, they can
-now supply the Grazier with young or lean Stock at a reasonable
-Price, to fatten and bring to Market at a more moderate
-Rate for general Consumption, which they conceive to be the
-most rational and effectual Way of establishing Public Plenty
-and Cheapness of Provision; and they further conceive, that
-a more ruinous Effect of this Inclosure will be the almost total
-Depopulation of their Town, now filled with bold and hardy
-Husbandmen, from among whom, and the Inhabitants of
-other open Parishes, the Nation has hitherto derived its greatest
-Strength and Glory, in the Supply of its Fleets and Armies,
-and driving them, from Necessity and Want of Employ, in
-vast Crowds, into manufacturing Towns, where the very
-Nature of their Employment, over the Loom or the Forge,
-soon may waste their Strength, and consequently debilitate
-their Posterity, and by imperceptible Degrees obliterate that
-great Principle of Obedience to the Laws of God and their
-Country, which forms the Character of the simple and artless
-Villagers, more equally distributed through the Open Countries,
-and on which so much depends the good Order and Government
-of the State: These are some of the Injuries to themselves
-as Individuals, and of the ill Consequences to the Public,
-which the Petitioners conceive will follow from this, as they
-have already done from many Inclosures, but which they
-did not think they were entitled to lay before the House (the
-Constitutional Patron and Protector of the Poor) until it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-unhappily came to their own Lot to be exposed to them through
-the Bill now pending.’<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<p>When we remember that the enterprise of the age was under
-the spell of the most seductive economic teaching of the time,
-and that the old peasant society, wearing as it did the look of
-confusion and weakness, had to fear not only the simplifying
-appetites of the landlords, but the simplifying philosophy, in
-England of an Adam Smith, in France of the Physiocrats,
-we can realise that a ruling class has seldom found so plausible
-an atmosphere for the free play of its interests and ideas.
-<i>Des crimes sont flattés d’être présidés d’une vertu.</i> Bentham
-himself thought the spectacle of an enclosure one of the most
-reassuring of all the evidences of improvement and happiness.
-Indeed, all the elements seemed to have conspired against the
-peasant, for æsthetic taste, which might at other times have
-restrained, in the eighteenth century encouraged the destruction
-of the commons and their rough beauty. The rage for
-order and symmetry and neat cultivation was universal. It
-found expression in Burnet, who said of the Alps and Appenines
-that they had neither form nor beauty, neither shape
-nor order, any more than the clouds of the air: in Johnson,
-who said of the Highlands that ‘the uniformity of barrenness
-can afford very little amusement to the traveller’: and in
-Cobbett, who said of the Cotswolds, ‘this is a sort of country
-having less to please the eye than any other that I have ever
-seen, always save and except the heaths like those of Bagshot
-and Hindhead.’ The enjoyment of wild nature was a lost
-sense, to be rediscovered one day by the Romanticists and
-the Revolution, but too late to help the English village. In
-France, owing to various causes, part economic, part political,
-on which we shall touch later, the peasant persisted in his
-ancient and ridiculous tenure, and survived to become the
-envy of English observers: it was only in England that he
-lost his footing, and that his ancient patrimony slipped away
-from him.</p>
-
-<p>We are not concerned at this juncture to inquire into the
-truth of the view that the sweeping policy of enclosure increased
-the productivity and resources of the State: we are
-concerned only to inquire into the way in which the aristocracy
-gave shape and effect to it. This movement, assumed
-by the enlightened opinion of the day to be beneficent and
-progressive, was none the less a gigantic disturbance; it broke
-up the old village life; it transferred a great body of property;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-it touched a vast mass of interests at a hundred points. A
-governing class that cared for its reputation for justice would
-clearly regard it as of sovereign importance that this delicate
-network of rights and claims should not be roughly disentangled
-by the sheer power of the stronger: a governing class
-that recognised its responsibility for the happiness and order
-of the State would clearly regard it as of sovereign importance
-that this ancient community should not be dissolved in such
-a manner as to plunge great numbers of contented men into
-permanent poverty and despair. To decide how far the aristocracy
-that presided over these changes displayed insight or
-foresight, sympathy or imagination, and how far it acted with
-a controlling sense of integrity and public spirit, we must
-analyse the methods and procedure of Parliamentary enclosure.</p>
-
-<p>Before entering on a discussion of the methods by which
-Parliamentary enclosure was effected, it is necessary to realise
-the extent of its operations. Precise statistics, of course, are
-not to be had, but there are various estimates based on careful
-study of such evidence as we possess. Mr. Levy says that
-between 1702 and 1760 there were only 246 Acts, affecting
-about 400,000 acres, and that in the next fifty years the Acts
-had reached a total of 2438, affecting almost five million acres.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a>
-Mr. Johnson gives the following table for the years 1700&ndash;1844,
-founded on Dr. Slater’s detailed <span class="lock">estimate<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a>&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right colvisible borderheader centerhead" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th rowspan="2">Years.</th><th colspan="2">Common Field and some Waste. </th><th colspan="2">Waste only.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<th>Acts. </th><th>Acreage. </th><th>Acts. </th><th>Acreage.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>1700&ndash;1760</td>
-<td> 152</td>
-<td> 237,845</td>
-<td> 56</td>
-<td> 74,518</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>1761&ndash;1801</td>
-<td> 1,479</td>
-<td> 2,428,721</td>
-<td> 521</td>
-<td> 752,150</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>1802&ndash;1844</td>
-<td> 1,075</td>
-<td> 1,610,302</td>
-<td> 808</td>
-<td> 939,043</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left total">Total,</td>
-<td class="total"> 2,706</td>
-<td class="total"> 4,276,868</td>
-<td class="total"> 1,385</td>
-<td class="total"> 1,765,711</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>This roughly corresponds with the estimate given before the
-Select Committee on Enclosures in 1844, that there were
-some one thousand seven hundred private Acts before 1800,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-and some two thousand between 1800 and 1844. The
-General Report of the Board of Agriculture on Enclosures
-gives the acreage enclosed from the time of Queen Anne
-down to 1805 as 4,187,056. Mr. Johnson’s conclusion is
-that nearly 20 per cent. of the total acreage of England
-has been enclosed during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
-though Mr. Prothero puts the percentage still higher.
-But we should miss the significance of these proportions if
-we were to look at England at the beginning of the eighteenth
-century as a map of which a large block was already shaded,
-and of which another block, say a fifth or a sixth part, was to
-be shaded by the enclosure of this period. The truth is that
-the life of the common-field system was still the normal village
-life of England, and that the land which was already enclosed
-consisted largely of old enclosures or the lord’s demesne land
-lying side by side with the open fields. This was put quite
-clearly by the Bishop of St. Davids in the House of Lords in
-1781. ‘Parishes of any considerable extent consisted partly
-of old inclosures and partly of common fields.’<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> If a village
-living on the common-field system contained old enclosures,
-effected some time or other without Act of Parliament, it
-suffered just as violent a catastrophe when the common fields
-or the waste were enclosed, as if there had been no previous
-enclosure in the parish. The number of Acts passed in this
-period varies of course with the different counties,<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> but speaking
-generally, we may say that the events described in the
-next two chapters are not confined to any one part of the
-country, and that they mark a national revolution, making
-sweeping and profound changes in the form and the character
-of agricultural society throughout England.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">ENCLOSURE (1)</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>An enclosure, like most Parliamentary operations, began with
-a petition from a local person or persons, setting forth the inconveniencies
-of the present system and the advantages of
-such a measure. Parliament, having received the petition,
-would give leave for a Bill to be introduced. The Bill would
-be read a first and a second time, and would then be referred
-to a Committee, which, after considering such petitions
-against the enclosure as the House of Commons referred to
-it, would present its report. The Bill would then be passed,
-sent to the Lords, and receive the Royal Assent. Finally, the
-Commissioners named in the Bill would descend on the district
-and distribute the land. That is, in brief, the history of a
-successful enclosure agitation. We will now proceed to explore
-its different stages in detail.</p>
-
-<p>The original petition was often the act of a big landowner,
-whose solitary signature was enough to set an enclosure process
-in train.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> Before 1774 it was not even incumbent on
-this single individual to let his neighbours know that he was
-asking Parliament for leave to redistribute their property.
-In that year the House of Commons made a Standing Order
-providing that notice of any such petition should be affixed
-to the church door in each of the parishes affected, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-three Sundays in the month of August or the month of
-September. This provision was laid down, as we learn from
-the Report of the Committee that considered the Standing
-Orders in 1775, because it had often happened that those
-whose land was to be enclosed knew nothing whatever of
-transactions in which they were rather intimately concerned,
-until they were virtually completed.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p>But the publicity that was secured by this Standing Order,
-though it prevented the process of enclosure from being completed
-in the dark, did not in practice give the village any
-kind of voice in its own destiny. The promoters laid all their
-plans before they took their neighbours into the secret. When
-their arrangements were mature, they gave notice to the parish
-in accordance with the requirements of the Standing Order,
-or they first took their petition to the various proprietors for
-signature, or in some cases they called a public meeting.
-The facts set out in the petition against the Enclosure Bill
-for Haute Huntre, show that the promoters did not think
-that they were bound to accept the opinion of a meeting.
-In that case ‘the great majority’ were hostile, but the promoters
-proceeded with their petition notwithstanding.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> Whatever
-the precise method, unless some large proprietor stood out
-against the scheme, the promoters were masters of the situation.
-This we know from the evidence of witnesses favourable
-to enclosure. ‘The proprietors of large estates,’ said
-Arthur Young, ‘generally agree upon the measure, adjust
-the principal points among themselves, and fix upon their
-attorney before they appoint any general meeting of the proprietors.’<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-Addington, in his <i>Inquiry into the Reasons for and
-against Inclosing</i>, quoting another writer, says, ‘the whole
-plan is generally settled between the solicitor and two or three
-principal proprietors without ever letting the rest of them
-into the secret till they are called upon to sign the petition.’<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a>
-What stand could the small proprietor hope to make against
-such forces? The matter was a <i>chose jugée</i>, and his assent
-a mere formality. If he tried to resist, he could be warned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-that the success of the enclosure petition was certain, and that
-those who obstructed it would suffer, as those who assisted
-it would gain, in the final award. His only prospect of successful
-opposition to the lord of the manor, the magistrate,
-the impropriator of the tithes, the powers that enveloped
-his life, the powers that appointed the commissioner who
-was to make the ultimate award, lay in his ability to move a
-dim and distant Parliament of great landlords to come to
-his rescue. It needs no very penetrating imagination to
-picture what would have happened in a village in which a
-landowner of the type of Richardson’s hero in <i>Pamela</i> was
-bent on an enclosure, and the inhabitants, being men like
-Goodman Andrews, knew that enclosure meant their ruin.
-What, in point of fact, could the poor do to declare their opposition?
-They could tear down the notices from the church
-doors:<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> they could break up a public meeting, if one were
-held: but the only way in which they could protest was by
-violent and disorderly proceedings, which made no impression
-at all upon Parliament, and which the forces of law and
-order could, if necessary, be summoned to quell.</p>
-
-<p>The scene now shifts to Parliament, the High Court of
-Justice, the stronghold of the liberties of Englishmen. Parliament
-hears the petition, and, almost as a matter of course,
-grants it, giving leave for the introduction of a Bill, and
-instructing the member who presents the petition to prepare
-it. This is not a very long business, for the promoters have
-generally taken the trouble to prepare their Bill in advance.
-The Bill is submitted, read a first and second time, and then
-referred to a Committee. Now a modern Parliamentary
-Private Bill Committee is regarded as a tribunal whose integrity
-and impartiality are beyond question, and justly, for
-the most elaborate precautions are taken to secure that it
-shall deserve this character. The eighteenth-century Parliament
-treated its Committee with just as much respect,
-but took no precautions at all to obtain a disinterested court.
-Indeed, the committee that considered an enclosure was chosen
-on the very contrary principle. This we know, not from the
-evidence of unkind and prejudiced outsiders, but from the
-Report of the Committee of the House of Commons, which
-inquired in 1825 into the constitution of Committees on
-Private Bills. ‘Under the present system each Bill is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-committed to the Member who is charged with its management
-and such other Members as he may choose to name in
-the House, and the Members serving for a particular County
-(usually the County immediately connected with the object
-of the Bill) <i>and the adjoining Counties</i>, and consequently it
-has been practically found that the Members to whom Bills
-have been committed have been generally those who have
-been most interested in the result.’</p>
-
-<p>During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there
-developed the practice of opening the committees. This was
-the system of applying to Private Bills the procedure followed
-in the case of Public Bills, and proposing a resolution in the
-House of Commons that ‘all who attend shall have voices,’
-<i>i.e.</i> that any member of the House who cared to attend the
-committee should be able to vote. We can see how this
-arrangement acted. It might happen that some of the county
-members were hostile to a particular enclosure scheme; in
-that case the promoters could call for an open committee and
-mass their friends upon it. It might happen, on the other
-hand, that the committee was solid in supporting an enclosure,
-and that some powerful person in the House considered that
-his interests, or the interests of his friend, had not been duly
-consulted in the division of the spoil. In such a case he would
-call for all to ‘have voices’ and so compel the promoters to
-satisfy his claims. This system then secured some sort of
-rough justice as between the powerful interests represented
-in Parliament, but it left the small proprietors and the
-cottagers, who were unrepresented in this mêlée, absolutely
-at the mercy of these conflicting forces.</p>
-
-<p>It is difficult, for example, to imagine that a committee in
-which the small men were represented would have sanctioned
-the amazing clause in the Ashelworth Act<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> which provided ‘that
-all fields or inclosures containing the Property of Two or more
-Persons within one fence, and also all inclosures containing the
-property of one Person only, if the same be held by or under
-different Tenures or Interests, shall be considered as commonable
-land and be divided and allotted accordingly.’ This clause,
-taken with the clause that follows, simply meant that some
-big landowner had his eye on some particular piece of enclosed
-property, which in the ordinary way would not have
-gone into the melting-pot at all. The arrangements of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>
-Wakefield Act would hardly have survived the scrutiny of a
-committee on which the Duke of Leeds’ class was not paramount.
-Under that Act<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> the duke was to have full power to
-work mines and get minerals, and those proprietors whose
-premises suffered in consequence were to have reasonable
-satisfaction, not from the duke who was enriched by the disturbing
-cause, but from all the allottees, including presumably
-those whose property was damaged. Further, to save himself
-inconvenience, the duke could forbid allottees on Westgate
-Moor to build a house for sixty years. A different kind of
-House of Commons would have looked closely at the Act at
-Moreton Corbet which gave the lord of the manor all enclosures
-and encroachments more than twenty years old, and
-also at the not uncommon provision which exempted the
-tithe-owner from paying for his own fencing.</p>
-
-<p>The Report of the 1825 Committee describes the system
-as ‘inviting all the interested parties in the House to take
-part in the business of the committee, which necessarily
-terminates in the prevalence of the strongest part, for they
-who have no interest of their own to serve will not be
-prevailed upon to take part in a struggle in which their unbiassed
-judgment can have no effect.’ The chairman of the
-committee was generally the member who had moved to
-introduce the Bill. The unreformed Parliament of landowners
-that passed the excellent Act of 1782, forbidding
-Members of Parliament to have an interest in Government
-contracts, never thought until the eve of the Reform Bill
-that there was anything remarkable in this habit of referring
-Enclosure Bills to the judgment of the very landowners who
-were to profit by them. And in 1825 it was not the Enclosure
-Bills, in which the rich took and the poor suffered, but the
-Railway Bills, in which rich men were pitted against rich
-men, that drew the attention of the House of Commons to the
-disadvantages and risks of this procedure.</p>
-
-<p>The committee so composed sets to work on the Bill, and
-meanwhile, perhaps, some of the persons affected by the
-enclosure send petitions against it to the House of Commons.
-Difficulties of time and space would as a rule deter all but the
-rich dissentients, unless the enclosure was near London. These
-petitions are differently treated according to their origin.
-If they emanate from a lord of the manor, or from a tithe-owner,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-who for some reason or other is dissatisfied with the
-contemplated arrangements, they receive some attention.
-In such a case the petitioner probably has some friend in Parliament,
-and his point of view is understood. He can, if necessary,
-get this friend to attend the committee and introduce amendments.
-He is therefore a force to be reckoned with; the Bill
-is perhaps altered to suit him; the petition is at any rate referred
-to the committee. On the other hand, if the petition
-comes from cottagers or small proprietors, it is safe, as a rule,
-to neglect it.</p>
-
-<p>The enclosure histories set out in the Appendix supply
-some good examples of this differential treatment. Lord
-Strafford sends a petition against the Bill for enclosing
-Wakefield with the result that he is allowed to appoint a commissioner,
-and also that his dispute with the Duke of Leeds
-is exempted from the jurisdiction of the Enclosure Commissioners.
-On the other hand, the unfortunate persons who
-petition against the monstrous provision that forbade them
-to erect any building for twenty, forty or sixty years, get no
-kind of redress. In the case of Croydon, James Trecothick,
-Esq., who is dissatisfied with the Bill, is strong enough to
-demand special consideration. Accordingly a special provision
-is made that the commissioners are obliged to sell
-Mr. Trecothick, by private contract, part of Addington Hills,
-if he so wishes. But when the various freeholders, copyholders,
-leaseholders and inhabitant householders of Croydon, who
-complain that the promoters of the Bill have named commissioners
-without consulting the persons interested, ask
-leave to nominate a third commissioner, only four members
-of the House of Commons support Lord William Russell’s
-proposal to consider this petition, and fifty-one vote the other
-way. Another example of the spirit in which Parliament
-received petitions from unimportant persons is furnished by
-the case of the enclosure of Holy Island. In 1791 (Feb. 23)<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a>
-a petition was presented to Parliament for the enclosure of
-Holy Island, asking for the division of a stinted pasture, and
-the extinction of the rights of common or ‘eatage’ over certain
-infield lands. Leave was given, and the Bill was prepared
-and read a first time on 28th February. The same day Parliament
-received a petition from freeholders and stallingers,
-who ask to be heard by themselves or by counsel against the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-Bill. From Eden<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> we learn that there were 26 freeholders
-and 31 stallingers, and that the latter were in the strict sense
-of the term as much freeholders as the former. Whilst, however,
-a freeholder had the right to put 30 sheep, 4 black cattle
-and 3 horses on the stinted common, a stallinger had a right
-of common for one horse and one cow only. The House
-ordered that this petition should lie on the table till the second
-reading, and that the petitioners should then be heard. The
-second reading, which had been fixed for 2nd April, was deferred
-till 20th April, a change which probably put the petitioners
-to considerable expense. On 20th April the Bill was read a
-second time, and the House was informed that Counsel attended,
-and a motion was made that Counsel be now called in. But
-the motion was opposed, and on a division was defeated by
-47 votes to 12. The Bill passed the House of Commons
-on 10th May, and received the Royal Assent on 9th June.<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a>
-In this case the House of Commons broke faith with the
-petitioners, and refused the hearing it had promised. Such
-experience was not likely to encourage dissentients to waste
-their money on an appeal to Parliament against a Bill that
-was promoted by powerful politicians. It will be observed
-that at Armley and Ashelworth the petitioners did not think
-that it was worth the trouble and expense to be heard on
-Second Reading.</p>
-
-<p>The Report of the Committee followed a stereotyped formula:
-‘That the Standing Orders had been complied with:
-and that the Committee had examined the Allegations of the
-Bill and found the same to be true; and that the Parties concerned
-had given their Consent to the Bill, to the Satisfaction
-of the Committee, except....’</p>
-
-<p>Now what did this mean? What consents were necessary
-to satisfy the committee? The Parliamentary Committee
-that reported on the cost of enclosures in 1800<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> said that there
-was no fixed rule, that in some cases the consent of three-fourths
-was required, in others the consent of four-fifths.
-This proportion has a look of fairness until we discover that
-we are dealing in terms, not of persons, but of property, and
-that the suffrages were not counted but weighed. The method<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-by which the proportions were reckoned varied, as a glance
-at the cases described in the Appendix will show. Value is
-calculated sometimes in acres, sometimes in annual value,
-sometimes in assessment to the land tax, sometimes in assessment
-to the poor rate. It is important to remember that
-it was the property interested that counted, and that in a case
-where there was common or waste to be divided as well as
-open fields, one large proprietor, who owned a considerable
-property in old enclosures, could swamp the entire community
-of smaller proprietors and cottagers. If Squire Western
-owned an enclosed estate with parks, gardens and farms of
-800 acres, and the rest of the parish consisted of a common or
-waste of 1000 acres and open fields of 200 acres, and the village
-population consisted of 100 cottagers and small farmers, each
-with a strip of land in the common fields, and a right of
-common on the waste, Squire Western would have a four-fifths
-majority in determining whether the open fields and the waste
-should be enclosed or not, and the whole matter would be
-in his hands. This is an extreme example of the way in which
-the system worked. The case of Ashelworth shows that a
-common might be cut up, on the votes of persons holding
-enclosed property, against the wishes of the great majority
-of the commoners. At Laleham the petitioners against the Bill
-claimed that they were ‘a great majority of the real Owners
-and Proprietors of or Persons interested in, the Lands and
-Grounds intended to be enclosed.’ At Simpson, where common
-fields were to be enclosed, the Major Part of the Owners and Proprietors
-petitioned against the Bill, stating that they were ‘very
-well satisfied with the Situation and Convenience of their respective
-Lands and Properties in their present uninclosed State.’<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a></p>
-
-<p>Even a majority of three-fourths in value was not always
-required; for example, the Report of the Committee on the
-enclosure of Cartmel in Lancashire in 1796 gave particulars
-showing that the whole property belonging to persons interested
-in the enclosure was assessed at £150, and that
-the property of those actually consenting to the enclosure
-was just under £110.<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> Yet the enclosure was recommended<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-and carried. Another illustration is supplied by the Report
-of the Committee on the enclosure of Histon and Impington
-in 1801, where the parties concerned are reported to have
-consented except the proprietors of 1020 acres, out of a total
-acreage of 3680.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> In this case the Bill was recommitted, and on
-its next appearance the committee gave the consents in terms
-of assessment to the Land Tax instead, putting the total
-figure at £304, and the assessment of the consenting parties at
-£188. This seems to have satisfied the House of Commons.<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a>
-Further, the particulars given in the case of the enclosure
-of Bishopstone in Wilts (enclosed in 1809) show that the
-votes of copyholders were heavily discounted. In this case
-the copyholders who dissented held 1079 acres, the copyholders
-who were neuter 81 acres, and the total area to be divided
-was 2602 acres. But by some ingenious actuarial calculation
-of the reversionary interest of the lord of the manor
-and the interest of the tithe-owner, the 1079 acres held by
-copyholders are written down to 474 acres.<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a> In the cases of
-Simpson and Louth, as readers who consult the Appendix will
-see, the committees were satisfied with majorities just above
-three-fifths in value. At Raunds (see p. 39), where 4963 acres
-were ‘interested,’ the owners of 570 are stated to be against, and
-of 721 neuter.<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> An interesting illustration of the lax practice
-of the committees is provided in the history of an attempted
-enclosure at Quainton (1801).<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> In any case the signatures were
-a doubtful evidence of consent. ‘It is easy,’ wrote an acute
-observer, ‘for the large proprietors to overcome opposition.
-Coaxing, bribing, threatening, together with many other acts
-which superiors will make use of, often induce the inferiors to
-consent to things which they think will be to their future
-disadvantage.’<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> We hear echoes of such proceedings in the
-petition from various owners and proprietors at Armley, who ‘at
-the instance of several other owners of land,’ signed a petition for
-enclosure and wish to be heard against it, and also in the unavailing
-petition of some of the proprietors and freeholders of
-Winfrith Newburgh in Dorsetshire, in 1768,<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> who declared that
-if the Bill passed into law, their ‘Estates must be totally ruined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-thereby, and that some of the Petitioners by Threats and
-Menaces were prevailed upon to sign the Petition for the said
-Bill: but upon Recollection, and considering the impending
-Ruin,’ they prayed to ‘have Liberty to retract from their
-seeming Acquiescence.’ From the same case we learn that
-it was the practice sometimes to grant copyholds on the condition
-that the tenant would undertake not to oppose enclosure.
-Sometimes, as in the case of the Sedgmoor Enclosure,
-which we shall discuss later, actual fraud was employed. But
-even if the promoters employed no unfair methods they had
-one argument powerful enough to be a deterrent in many
-minds. For an opposed Enclosure Bill was much more
-expensive than an unopposed Bill, and as the small men felt
-the burden of the costs much more than the large proprietors,
-they would naturally be shy of adding to the very heavy
-expenses unless they stood a very good chance of defeating
-the scheme.</p>
-
-<p>It is of capital importance to remember in this connection
-that the enumeration of ‘consents’ took account only of
-proprietors. It ignored entirely two large classes to whom
-enclosure meant, not a greater or less degree of wealth, but
-actual ruin. These were such cottagers as enjoyed their
-rights of common in virtue of renting cottages to which such
-rights were attached, and those cottagers and squatters who
-either had no strict legal right, or whose rights were difficult
-of proof. Neither of these classes was treated even outwardly
-and formally as having any claim to be consulted before an
-enclosure was sanctioned.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear, then, that it was only the pressure of the powerful
-interests that decided whether a committee should approve or
-disapprove of an Enclosure Bill. It was the same pressure that
-determined the form in which a Bill became law. For a
-procedure that enabled rich men to fight out their rival claims
-at Westminster left the classes that could not send counsel to
-Parliament without a weapon or a voice. And if there was
-no lawyer there to put his case, what prospect was there
-that the obscure cottager, who was to be turned adrift with
-his family by an Enclosure Bill promoted by a Member or
-group of Members, would ever trouble the conscience of a
-committee of landowners? We have seen already how this
-class was regarded by the landowners and the champions of
-enclosure. No cottagers had votes or the means of influencing
-a single vote at a single election. To Parliament, if they had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-any existence at all, they were merely dim shadows in the
-very background of the enclosure scheme. It would require
-a considerable effort of the imagination to suppose that the
-Parliamentary Committee spent very much time or energy
-on the attempt to give body and form to this hazy and remote
-society, and to treat these shadows as living men and women,
-about to be tossed by this revolution from their ancestral homes.
-As it happens, we need not put ourselves to the trouble of such
-speculation, for we have the evidence of a witness who will
-not be suspected of injustice to his class. ‘This I know,’
-said Lord Lincoln<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> introducing the General Enclosure Bill of
-1845, ‘that in nineteen cases out of twenty, Committees of
-this House sitting on private Bills neglected the rights of the
-poor. I do not say that they wilfully neglected those rights&mdash;far
-from it: but this I affirm, that they were neglected
-in consequence of the Committees being permitted to remain
-in ignorance of the claims of the poor man, because by reason
-of his very poverty he is unable to come up to London for
-counsel, to produce witnesses, and to urge his claims before
-a Committee of this House.’ Another Member<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> had described
-a year earlier the character of this private Bill procedure.
-‘Inclosure Bills had been introduced heretofore and passed
-without discussion, and no one could tell how many persons
-had suffered in their interests and rights by the interference
-of these Bills. Certainly these Bills had been referred to
-Committees upstairs, but everyone knew how these Committees
-were generally conducted. They were attended only
-by honourable Members who were interested in them, being
-Lords of Manor, and the rights of the poor, though they might
-be talked about, had frequently been taken away under that
-system.’</p>
-
-<p>These statements were made by politicians who remembered
-well the system they were describing. There is
-another witness whose authority is even greater. In 1781
-Lord Thurlow, then at the beginning of his long life of office as
-Lord Chancellor,<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> spoke for an hour and three quarters in favour
-of recommitting the Bill for enclosing Ilmington in Warwickshire.
-If the speech had been fully reported it would be a
-contribution of infinite value to students of the social history<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-of eighteenth-century England, for we are told that ‘he proceeded
-to examine, paragraph by paragraph, every provision
-of the Bill, animadverting and pointing out some acts of
-injustice, partiality, obscurity or cause of confusion in each.’<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-Unfortunately this part of his speech was omitted in the
-report as being ‘irrelative to the debate,’ which was concerned
-with the question of the propriety of commuting
-tithes. But the report, incomplete as it is, contains an illuminating
-passage on the conduct of Private Bill Committees.
-‘His Lordship ... next turned his attention to the mode in which
-private bills were permitted to make their way through both
-Houses, and that in matters in which property was concerned,
-to the great injury of many, if not the total ruin of some
-private families: many proofs of this evil had come to his
-knowledge as a member of the other House, not a few in his
-professional character, before he had the honour of a seat in
-that House, nor had he been a total stranger to such evils
-since he was called upon to preside in another place.’
-Going on to speak of the committees of the House of Commons
-and ‘the rapidity with which private Bills were hurried
-through,’ he declared that ‘it was not unfrequent to decide
-upon the merits of a Bill which would affect the property and
-interests of persons inhabiting a district of several miles in
-extent, in less time than it took him to determine upon the
-propriety of issuing an order for a few pounds, by which no
-man’s property could be injured.’ He concluded by telling
-the House of Lords a story of how Sir George Savile once
-noticed a man ‘rather meanly habited’ watching the proceedings
-of a committee with anxious interest. When the
-committee had agreed on its report, the agitated spectator
-was seen to be in great distress. Sir George Savile asked
-him what was the matter, and he found that the man would
-be ruined by a clause that had been passed by the committee,
-and that, having heard that the Bill was to be introduced, he
-had made his way to London on foot, too poor to come in any
-other way or to fee counsel. Savile then made inquiries
-and learnt that these statements were correct, whereupon he
-secured the amendment of the Bill, ‘by which means an
-innocent, indigent man and his family were rescued from
-destruction.’ It would not have been very easy for a
-‘meanly habited man’ to make the journey to London from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-Wakefield or Knaresborough or Haute Huntre, even if he
-knew when a Bill was coming on, and to stay in London
-until it went into committee; and if he did, he would not
-always be so lucky as to find a Sir George Savile on the
-committee&mdash;the public man who was regarded by his contemporaries,
-to whatever party they belonged, as the Bayard
-of politics.<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a></p>
-
-<p>We get very few glimpses into the underworld of the common
-and obscure people, whose homes and fortunes trembled on the
-chance that a quarrel over tithes and the conflicting claims
-of squire and parson might disturb the unanimity of a score
-of gentlemen sitting round a table. London was far away,
-and the Olympian peace of Parliament was rarely broken by
-the protests of its victims. But we get one such glimpse in a
-passage in the <i>Annual Register</i> for 1767.</p>
-
-<p>‘On Tuesday evening a great number of farmers were
-observed going along Pall Mall with cockades in their hats.
-On enquiring the reason, it appeared they all lived in or near
-the parish of Stanwell in the county of Middlesex, and they
-were returning to their wives and families to carry them the
-agreeable news of a Bill being rejected for inclosing the said
-common, which if carried into execution, might have been the
-ruin of a great number of families.’<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a></p>
-
-<p>When the Committee on the Enclosure Bill had reported
-to the House of Commons, the rest of the proceedings
-were generally formal. The Bill was read a third time,
-engrossed, sent up to the Lords, where petitions might be
-presented as in the Commons, and received the Royal
-Assent.</p>
-
-<p>A study of the pages of Hansard and Debrett tells us little
-about transactions that fill the <i>Journals</i> of the Houses of
-Parliament. Three debates in the House of Lords are fully reported,<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a>
-and they illustrate the play of forces at Westminster.
-The Bishop of St. Davids<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> moved to recommit an Enclosure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-Bill in 1781 on the ground that, like many other Enclosure
-Bills, it provided for the commutation of tithes&mdash;an arrangement
-which he thought open to many objections. Here was
-an issue that was vital, for it concerned the interests of the
-classes represented in Parliament. Did the Church stand
-to gain or to lose by taking land instead of tithe? Was it a
-bad thing or a good thing that the parson should be put into
-the position of a farmer, that he should be under the temptation
-to enter into an arrangement with the landlord which
-might prejudice his successor, that he should be relieved from
-a system which often caused bad blood between him and
-his parishioners? Would it ‘make him neglect the sacred
-functions of his ministry’ as the Bishop of St. Davids feared,
-or would it improve his usefulness by rescuing him from a
-situation in which ‘the pastor was totally sunk in the tithe-collector’
-as the Bishop of Peterborough<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> hoped, and was a man
-a better parson on the Sunday for being a farmer the rest of
-the week as Lord Coventry believed? The bishops and the
-peers had in this discussion a subject that touched very nearly
-the lives and interests of themselves and their friends, and there
-was a considerable and animated debate,<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> at the end of which
-the House of Lords approved the principle of commuting tithes
-in Enclosure Bills. This debate was followed by another on
-6th April, when Lord Bathurst (President of the Council) as a
-counterblast to his colleague on the Woolsack, moved, but
-afterwards withdrew, a series of resolutions on the same subject.
-In the course of this debate Thurlow, who thought perhaps that
-his zeal for the Church had surprised and irritated his fellow-peers,
-among whom he was not conspicuous in life as a practising
-Christian, explained that though he was zealous for the
-Church, ‘his zeal was not partial or confined to the Church,
-further than it was connected with the other great national
-establishments, of which it formed a part, and no inconsiderable
-one.’ The Bishop of St. Davids returned to the subject
-on the 14th June, moving to recommit the Bill for enclosing
-Kington in Worcestershire. He read a string of resolutions
-which he wished to see applied to all future Enclosure Bills, in
-order to defend the interests of the clergy from ‘the oppressions
-of the Lord of the Manor, landowners, etc.’ Thurlow
-spoke for him, but he was defeated by 24 votes to 4, his only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>
-other supporters being Lord Galloway and the Bishop of
-Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>Thurlow’s story of Sir George Savile’s ‘meanly habited
-man’ did not disturb the confidence of the House of Lords
-in the justice of the existing procedure towards the poor: the
-enclosure debates revolve solely round the question of the relative
-claims of the lord of the manor and the tithe-owner. The
-House of Commons was equally free from scruple or misgiving.
-One petitioner in 1800 commented on the extraordinary haste
-with which a New Forest Bill was pushed through Parliament,
-and suggested that if it were passed into law in this
-rapid manner at the end of a session, some injustice might
-unconsciously be done. The Speaker replied with a grave
-and dignified rebuke: ‘The House was always competent to
-give every subject the consideration due to its importance,
-and could not therefore be truly said to be incapable at any
-time of discussing any question gravely, dispassionately, and
-with strict regard to justice.’<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> He recommended that the
-petition should be passed over as if it had never been presented.
-The member who had presented the petition pleaded
-that he had not read it. Such were the plausibilities and decorum
-in which the House of Commons wrapped up its abuses.
-We can imagine that some of the members must have smiled
-to each other like the Roman augurs, when they exchanged
-these solemn hypocrisies.</p>
-
-<p>We have a sidelight on the vigilance of the House of
-Commons, when an Enclosure Bill came down from a committee,
-in a speech of Windham’s in defence of bull-baiting.
-Windham attacked the politicians who had introduced the Bill
-to abolish bull-baiting, for raising such a question at a time of
-national crisis when Parliament ought to be thinking of other
-things. He then went on to compare the subject to local
-subjects that ‘contained nothing of public or general interest.
-To procure the discussion of such subjects it was necessary
-to resort to canvass and intrigue. Members whose attendance
-was induced by local considerations in most cases of this description,
-were present: the discussion, if any took place, was
-managed by the friends of the measure: and the decision of
-the House was ultimately, perhaps, a matter of mere chance.’
-From Sheridan’s speech in answer, we learn that this is a description
-of the passing of Enclosure Bills. ‘Another honourable
-gentleman who had opposed this Bill with peculiar vehemence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-considered it as one of those light and trivial subjects,
-which was not worthy to occupy the deliberations of Parliament:
-and he compared it to certain other subjects of Bills:
-that is to say, bills of a local nature, respecting inclosures and
-other disposal of property, which merely passed by chance, as
-Members could not be got to attend their progress by dint
-of canvassing.’<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> Doubtless most Members of the House of
-Commons shared the sentiments of Lord Sandwich, who told
-the House of Lords that he was so satisfied ‘that the more inclosures
-the better, that as far as his poor abilities would
-enable him, he would support every inclosure bill that should
-be brought into the House.’<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a></p>
-
-<p>For the last act of an enclosure drama the scene shifts back
-to the parish. The commissioners arrive, receive and determine
-claims, and publish an award, mapping out the new
-village. The life and business of the village are now in suspense,
-and the commissioners are often authorised to prescribe the
-course of husbandry during the transition.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> The Act which
-they administer provides that a certain proportion of the land is
-to be assigned to the lord of the manor, in virtue of his rights,
-and a certain proportion to the owner of the tithes. An occasional
-Act provides that some small allotment shall be made
-to the poor: otherwise the commissioners have a free hand:
-their powers are virtually absolute. This is the impression
-left by all contemporary writers. Arthur Young, for example,
-writes emphatically in this sense. ‘Thus is the property of
-proprietors, and especially of the poor ones, entirely at their
-mercy: every passion of resentment and prejudice may be
-gratified without control, for they are vested with a despotic
-power known in no other branch of business in this free
-country.’<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> Similar testimony is found in the Report of the
-Select Committee (1800) on the Expense and Mode of Obtaining
-Bills of Enclosure: ‘the expediency of despatch, without
-the additional expense of multiplied litigation, has suggested
-the necessity of investing them with a summary, and in most
-cases uncontrollable jurisdiction.’<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> In the General Report of
-the Board of Agriculture on Enclosures, published in 1808,
-though any more careful procedure is deprecated as likely to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-cause delay, it is stated that the adjusting of property worth
-£50,000 was left to the arbitration of a majority of five, ‘often
-persons of mean education.’ The author of <i>An Inquiry into
-the Advantages and Disadvantages resulting from Bills of
-Inclosure</i>, published in 1781, writes as if it was the practice
-to allow an appeal to Quarter Sessions; such an appeal he
-characterised as useless to a poor man, and we can well believe
-that most of the squires who sat on such a tribunal to punish
-vagrants or poachers had had a hand in an enclosure in the
-past or had their eyes on an enclosure in the future. Thurlow
-considered such an appeal quite inadequate, giving the more
-polite reason that Quarter Sessions had not the necessary
-time.<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> The Act of 1801 is silent on the subject, but Sinclair’s
-draft of a General Inclosure Bill, published in the <i>Annals of
-Agriculture</i> in 1796,<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> provided for an appeal to Quarter Sessions.
-It will be seen that in five of the cases analysed in the Appendix
-(Haute Huntre, Simpson, Stanwell, Wakefield and Winfrith
-Newburgh), the decision of the commissioners on claims was
-final, except that at Wakefield an objector might oblige the
-commissioners to take the opinion of a counsel chosen by themselves.
-In five cases (Ashelworth, Croydon, Cheshunt, Laleham
-and Louth), a disappointed claimant might bring a suit
-on a feigned issue against a proprietor. At Armley and Knaresborough
-the final decision was left to arbitrators, but whereas
-at Armley the arbitrator was to be chosen by a neutral authority,
-the Recorder of Leeds, the arbitrators at Knaresborough were
-named in the Act, and were presumably as much the nominees
-of the promoters as the commissioners themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The statements of contemporaries already quoted go to
-show that none of these arrangements were regarded as seriously
-fettering the power of the commissioners, and it is easy
-to understand that a lawsuit, which might of course overwhelm
-him, was not a remedy for the use of a small proprietor or a
-cottager, though it might be of some advantage to a large
-proprietor who had not been fortunate enough to secure
-adequate representation of his interests on the Board of Commissioners.
-But the decision as to claims was only part of the
-business. A man’s claim might be allowed, and yet gross injustice
-might be done him in the redistribution. He might be
-given inferior land, or land in an inconvenient position. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-ten of the cases in the Appendix the award of the commissioners
-is stated to be final, and there is no appeal from it. The two
-exceptions are Knaresborough and Armley. The Knaresborough
-Act is silent on the point, and the Armley Act allows
-an appeal to the Recorder of Leeds. So far therefore as the
-claims and allotments of the poor were concerned, the commissioners
-were in no danger of being overruled. Their
-freedom in other ways was restricted by the Standing Orders
-of 1774, which obliged them to give an account of their
-expenses.</p>
-
-<p>It would seem to be obvious that any society which had an
-elementary notion of the meaning and importance of justice
-would have taken the utmost pains to see that the men appointed
-to this extraordinary office had no motive for showing
-partiality. This might not unreasonably have been expected
-of the society about which Pitt declared in the House of
-Commons, that it was the boast of the law of England that
-it afforded equal security and protection to the high and low,
-the rich and poor.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> How were these commissioners appointed
-at the time that Pitt was Prime Minister? They were
-appointed in each case before the Bill was presented to Parliament,
-and generally, as Young tells us, they were appointed
-by the promoters of the enclosure before the petition was submitted
-for local signatures, so that in fact they were nominated
-by the persons of influence who agreed on the measure. In
-one case (Moreton Corbet in Shropshire; 1950 acres enclosed in
-1797) the Act appointed one commissioner only, and he was
-to name his successor. Sometimes, as in the case of Otmoor,<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>
-it might happen that the commissioners were changed while
-the Bill was passing through Committee, if some powerful
-persons were able to secure better representation of their own
-interests. In the case of Wakefield again, the House of Commons
-Committee placated Lord Strafford by giving him a commissioner.</p>
-
-<p>Now, who was supposed to have a voice in the appointment
-of the commissioners? There is to be found in the <i>Annals of
-Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> an extremely interesting paper by Sir John Sinclair,
-preliminary to a memorandum of the General Enclosure Bill
-which he promoted in 1796. Sinclair explains that he had had
-eighteen hundred Enclosure Acts (taken indiscriminately) examined
-in order to ascertain what was the usual procedure and
-what stipulations were made with regard to particular interests;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-this with the intention of incorporating the recognised practice
-in his General Bill. In the course of these remarks he says, ‘the
-probable result will be the appointment of one Commissioner by
-the Lord of the Manor, of another by the tithe-owner, and of a
-third by the major part in value of the proprietors.’<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> It will
-be observed that the third commissioner is not appointed by
-a majority of the commoners, nor even by the majority of the
-proprietors, but by the votes of those who own the greater
-part of the village. This enables us to assess the value of
-what might have seemed a safeguard to the poor&mdash;the provision
-that the names of the commissioners should appear in
-the Bill presented to Parliament. The lord of the manor,
-the impropriator of tithes, and the majority in value of the
-owners are a small minority of the persons affected by an
-enclosure, and all that they have to do is to meet round a
-table and name the commissioners who are to represent them.<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
-Thus we find that the powerful persons who carried an enclosure
-against the will of the poor nominated the tribunal
-before which the poor had to make good their several claims.
-This was the way in which the constitution that Pitt was
-defending afforded equal security and protection to the rich
-and to the poor.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed further that two interests are chosen
-out for special representation. They are the lord of the
-manor and the impropriator of tithes: in other words, the
-very persons who are formally assigned a certain minimum
-in the distribution by the Act of Parliament. Every Act
-after 1774 declares that the lord of the manor is to have a
-certain proportion, and the tithe-owner a certain proportion of
-the land divided: scarcely any Act stipulates that any share
-at all is to go to the cottager or the small proprietor. Yet
-in the appointment of commissioners the interests that are
-protected by the Act have a preponderating voice, and the
-interests that are left to the caprice of the commissioners have
-no voice at all. Thurlow, speaking in the House of Lords in
-1781,<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> said that it was grossly unjust to the parson that his
-property should be at the disposal of these commissioners,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-of whom he only nominated one. ‘He thanked God that the
-property of an Englishman depended not on so loose a tribunal
-in any other instance whatever.’ What, then, was the position of
-the poor and the small farmers who were not represented at all
-among the commissioners? In the paper already quoted, Sinclair
-mentions that in some cases the commissioners were peers,
-gentlemen and clergymen, residing in the neighbourhood,
-who acted without fees or emolument. He spoke of this as
-undertaking a useful duty, and it does not seem to have occurred
-to him that there was any objection to such a practice. ‘To
-lay down the principle that men are to serve for nothing,’ said
-Cobbett, in criticising the system of unpaid magistrates, ‘puts
-me in mind of the servant who went on hire, who being asked
-what wages he demanded, said he wanted no wages: for that
-he always found about the house little things to pick up.’</p>
-
-<p>There is a curious passage in the General Report of the Board
-of Agriculture<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> on the subject of the appointment of commissioners.
-The writer, after dwelling on the unexampled
-powers that the commissioners enjoy, remarks that they are
-not likely to be abused, because a commissioner’s prospect
-of future employment in this profitable capacity depends on
-his character for integrity and justice. This is a reassuring
-reflection for the classes that promoted enclosures and appointed
-commissioners, but it rings with a very different sound in
-other ears. It would clearly have been much better for the
-poor if the commissioners had not had any prospect of future
-employment at all. We can obtain some idea of the kind of
-men whom the landowners considered to be competent and
-satisfactory commissioners from the Standing Orders of 1801,
-which forbade the employment in this capacity of the bailiff
-of the lord of the manor. It would be interesting to know
-how much of England was appropriated on the initiative of
-the lord of the manor, by his bailiff, acting under the authority
-given to him by the High Court of Parliament. It is significant,
-too, that down to 1801 a commissioner was only debarred
-from buying land in a parish in which he had acted in this
-capacity, until his award was made. The Act of 1801 debarred
-him from buying land under such circumstances for the following
-five years.</p>
-
-<p>The share of the small man in these transactions from first
-to last can be estimated from the language of Arthur Young
-in 1770. ‘The small proprietor whose property in the township<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-is perhaps his all, has little or no weight in regulating the
-clauses of the Act of Parliament, has seldom, if ever, an opportunity
-of putting a single one in the Bill favourable to his
-rights, and has as little influence in the choice of Commissioners.’<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a>
-But even this description does less than justice to
-his helplessness. There remains to be considered the procedure
-before the commissioners themselves. Most Enclosure
-Acts specified a date before which all claims had to be presented.
-It is obvious that there must have been very many
-small proprietors who had neither the courage nor the knowledge
-necessary to put and defend their case, and that vast
-numbers of claims must have been disregarded because they
-were not presented, or because they were presented too late,
-or because they were irregular in form. The Croydon Act,
-for example, prescribes that claimants must send in their
-claims ‘in Writing under their Hands, or the Hands of their
-Agents, distinguishing in such Claims the Tenure of the Estates
-in respect whereof such Claims are made, and stating therein
-such further Particulars as shall be necessary to describe such
-Claims with Precision.’ And if this was a difficult fence for
-the small proprietor, unaccustomed to legal forms and documents,
-or to forms and documents of any kind, what was the
-plight of the cottager? Let us imagine the cottager, unable
-to read or write, enjoying certain customary rights of common
-without any idea of their origin or history or legal basis:
-knowing only that as long as he can remember he has kept a
-cow, driven geese across the waste, pulled his fuel out of the
-neighbouring brushwood, and cut turf from the common, and
-that his father did all these things before him. The cottager
-learns that before a certain day he has to present to his landlord’s
-bailiff, or to the parson, or to one of the magistrates into
-whose hands perhaps he has fallen before now over a little
-matter of a hare or a partridge, or to some solicitor from the
-country town, a clear and correct statement of his rights and
-his claim to a share in the award. Let us remember at the
-same time all that we know from Fielding and Smollett of
-the reputation of lawyers for cruelty to the poor. Is a cottager
-to be trusted to face the ordeal, or to be in time with his statement,
-or to have that statement in proper legal form? The
-commissioners can reject his claim on the ground of any
-technical irregularity, as we learn from a petition presented
-to Parliament in 1774 by several persons interested in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-enclosure of Knaresborough Forest, whose claims had been
-disallowed by the commissioners because of certain ‘mistakes
-made in the description of such tenements ... notwithstanding
-the said errors were merely from inadvertency, and
-in no way altered the merits of the petitioners’ claims.’ A
-Bill was before Parliament to amend the previous Act for
-enclosing Knaresborough Forest, in respect of the method of
-payment of expenses, and hence these petitioners had an
-opportunity of making their treatment public.<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> It is easy
-to guess what was the fate of many a small proprietor or
-cottager, who had to describe his tenement or common right
-to an unsympathetic tribunal. We are not surprised that
-one of the witnesses told the Enclosure Committee of 1844
-that the poor often did not know what their claims were, or
-how to present them. It is significant that in the case of
-Sedgmoor, out of 4063 claims sent in, only 1798 were allowed.<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We have now given an account of the procedure by which
-Parliamentary enclosures were carried out. We give elsewhere
-a detailed analysis, disentangled from the <i>Journals</i> of
-Parliament and other sources, of particular enclosures. We
-propose to give here two illustrations of the temper of the
-Parliamentary Committees. One illustration is provided
-by a speech made by Sir William Meredith, one of the Rockingham
-Whigs, in 1772, a speech that needs no comment.
-‘Sir William Meredith moved, That it might be a general
-order, that no Bill, or clause in a Bill, making any offence
-capital, should be agreed to but in a Committee of the whole
-House. He observed, that at present the facility of passing
-such clauses was shameful: that he once passing a Committee-room,
-when only one Member was holding a Committee,
-with a clerk’s boy, he happened to hear something of hanging;
-he immediately had the curiosity to ask what was going
-forward in that small Committee that could merit such a
-punishment? He was answered, that it was an Inclosing
-Bill, in which a great many poor people were concerned, who
-opposed the Bill; that they feared those people would obstruct
-the execution of the Act, and therefore this clause was to make
-it capital felony in anyone who did so. This resolution was
-unanimously agreed to.’<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a></p>
-
-<p>The other illustration is provided by the history of an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-attempted enclosure in which we can watch the minds of
-the chief actors without screen or disguise of any kind: in
-this case we have very fortunately a vivid revelation of the
-spirit and manner in which Committees conducted their business,
-from the pen of the chairman himself. George Selwyn
-gives us in his letters, published in the <i>Carlisle Papers</i>, a view
-of the proceedings from the inside. It is worth while to set
-out in some detail the passages from these letters published in
-the <i>Carlisle Papers</i>, by way of supplementing and explaining
-the official records of the House of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>We learn from the <i>Journals</i> of the House of Commons that,
-on 10th November, 1775, a petition was presented to the
-House of Commons for the enclosure of King’s Sedgmoor, in
-the County of Somerset, the petitioners urging that this land
-was of very little value in its present state, and that it was
-capable of great improvement by enclosure and drainage.
-Leave was given to bring in a Bill, to be prepared by Mr.
-St. John and Mr. Coxe. Mr. St. John was brother of Lord
-Bolingbroke. On 13th November, the Bill was presented
-and read a first time. Four days later it received a second
-reading, and was sent to a Committee of Mr. St. John and
-others. At this point, those who objected to the enclosure
-began to take action. First of all there is a petition from
-William Waller, Esq., who says that under a grant of Charles <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-he is entitled to the soil of the moor: it is agreed that he shall
-be heard by counsel before the Committee. The next day
-there arrives a petition from owners and occupiers in thirty-five
-‘parishes, hamlets and places,’ who state that all these parishes
-have enjoyed rights of common without discrimination over
-the 18,000 acres of pasture on Sedgmoor: that these rights
-of pasture and cutting turf and rushes and sedges have existed
-from time immemorial, and that no Enclosure Act is wanted
-for the draining of Sedgmoor, because an Act of the reign of
-William <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> had conferred all the necessary powers for this
-purpose on the Justices of the Peace. The petitioners prayed
-to be heard by themselves and counsel against the application
-for enclosure on Committee and on Report. The House
-of Commons ordered that the petition should lie on the Table,
-and that the petitioners should be heard when the Report
-had been received from Committee. Five days later three
-lords of manors (Sir Charles Kemys Tynte, Baronet, Copleston
-Warre Bampfylde, Esq., and William Hawker, Esq.) petition
-against the Bill and complain of the haste with which the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-promoters are pushing the Bill through Parliament. This
-petition is taken more seriously: a motion is made and defeated
-to defer the Bill for two months, but the House orders
-that the petitioners shall be heard before the Committee.
-Two of these three lords of manor present a further petition
-early in December, stating that they and their tenants are
-more than a majority in number and value of the persons
-interested, and a second petition is also presented by the
-thirty-seven parishes and hamlets already mentioned, in
-which it is contended that, in spite of the difficulties of collecting
-signatures in a scattered district in a very short time,
-749 persons interested had already signed the petition against
-the Bill, that the effect of the Bill had been misrepresented
-to many of the tenants, that the facts as to the different
-interests affected had been misrepresented to the Committee,
-that the number and rights of the persons supporting the Bill
-had been exaggerated (only 213 having signed their names
-as consenting), and that if justice was to be done to the various
-parties concerned, it was essential that time should be given
-for the hearing of complaints and the circulation of the Bill
-in the district. This petition was presented on 11th December,
-and the House of Commons ordered that the petitioners should
-be heard when the Report was received. Next day Mr.
-Selwyn, as Chairman of the Committee, presented a Report in
-favour of the Bill, mentioning among other things that the
-number of tenements concerned was 1269, and that 303 refused
-to sign; but attention was drawn to the fact that there
-were several variations between the Bill as it was presented
-to the House, and the Bill as it was presented to the parties
-concerned for their consent, and on this ground the Bill was
-defeated by 59 to 35 votes.</p>
-
-<p>This is the cold impersonal account of the proceedings
-given in the official journals, but the letters of Selwyn take
-us behind the scenes and supply a far livelier picture.<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> His
-account begins with a letter to Lord Carlisle in November:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Bully has a scheme of enclosure, which, if it succeeds, I am
-told will free him from all his difficulties. It is to come into our
-House immediately. If I had this from a better judgment than
-that of our sanguine counsellors, I should have more hopes from
-it. I am ready to allow that he has been very faulty, but I cannot
-help wishing to see him once more on his legs....’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>(Bully, of course, is Bolingbroke, brother of St. John, called<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-the counsellor, author of the Bill.) We learn from this letter
-that there are other motives than a passion to drain Sedgmoor
-in the promotion of this great improvement scheme. We
-learn from the next letter that it is not only Bully’s friends
-and creditors who have some reason for wishing it well:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Stavordale is returning to Redlinch; I believe that he sets
-out to-morrow. He is also deeply engaged in this Sedgmoor
-Bill, and it is supposed that he or Lord Ilchester, which you
-please, will get 2000<i>l.</i> a year by it. He will get more, or save
-more at least, by going away and leaving the Moor in my hands,
-for he told me himself the other night that this last trip to town
-had cost him 4000<i>l.</i>’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another letter warns Lord Carlisle that the only way to
-get his creditors to pay their debts to him, when they come
-into their money through the enclosure, is to press for payment,
-and goes on to describe the unexpected opposition the Bill
-had encountered. Selwyn had been made chairman of the
-Committee.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘... My dear Lord, if your delicacy is such that you will not
-be pressing with him about it, you may be assured that you will
-never receive a farthing. I have spoke to Hare about it, who
-[was] kept in it till half an hour after 4; as I was also to-day, and
-shall be to-morrow. I thought that it was a matter of form only,
-but had no sooner begun to read the preamble to the Bill,
-but I found myself in a nest of hornets. The room was full, and
-an opposition made to it, and disputes upon every word, which
-kept me in the Chair, as I have told you. I have gained it seems
-great reputation, and am at this minute reputed one of the best
-Chairmen upon this stand. Bully and Harry came home and
-dined with me....’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The next letter, written on 9th December, shows that
-Selwyn is afraid that Stavordale may not get his money out
-of his father, and also that he is becoming still more anxious
-about the fate of the Enclosure Bill, on which of course the
-whole pack of cards depends:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘... I have taken the liberty to talk a good deal to Lord
-Stavordale, partly for his own sake and partly for yours, and
-pressed him much to get out of town as soon as possible, and not
-quit Lord I. [Ilchester] any more. His attention there cannot be
-of long duration, and his absence may be fatal to us all. I
-painted it in very strong colours, and he has promised me to go,
-as soon as this Sedgmoor Bill is reported. I moved to have
-Tuesday fixed for it. We had a debate and division upon my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-motion, and this Bill will at last not go down so glibly as Bully
-hoped that it would. It will meet with more opposition in the
-H. of Lords, and Lord North being adverse to it, does us no
-good. Lord Ilchester gets, it is said, £5000 a year by it, and
-amongst others Sir C. Tynte something, who, for what reason I
-cannot yet comprehend, opposes it....’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The next letter describes the final catastrophe:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘December 12. Tuesday night.... Bully has lost his Bill.
-I reported it to-day, and the Question was to withdraw it. There
-were 59 against us, and we were 35. It was worse managed by
-the agents, supposing no treachery, than ever business was. Lord
-North, Robinson, and Keene divided against. Charles<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> said all
-that could be said on our side. But as the business was managed,
-it was the worst Question that I ever voted for. We were a
-Committee absolutely of Almack’s,<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> so if the Bill is not resumed,
-and better conducted and supported, this phantom of 30,000<i>l.</i>
-clear in Bully’s pocket to pay off his annuities vanishes.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is surprising what a fatality attends some people’s proceedings.
-I begged last night as for alms, that they would meet me
-to settle the Votes. I have, since I have been in Parliament,
-been of twenty at least of these meetings, and always brought
-numbers down by those means. But my advice was slighted, and
-twenty people were walking about the streets who could have
-carried this point.</p>
-
-<p>‘The cause was not bad, but the Question was totally indigestible.
-The most conscientious man in the House in Questions of
-this nature, Sir F. Drake, a very old acquaintance of mine, told
-me that nothing could be so right as the enclosure. But they
-sent one Bill into the country for the assent of the people interested,
-and brought me another, differing in twenty particulars, to
-carry through the Committee, without once mentioning to me
-that the two Bills differed. This they thought was cunning, and
-I believe a happy composition of Bully’s cunning and John’s idea
-of his own parts. I had no idea, or could have, of this difference.
-The adverse party said nothing of it, <i>comme de raison</i>, reserving
-the objection till the Report, and it was insurmountable. If one
-of the Clerks only had hinted it to me, inexperienced as I am in
-these sort of Bills, I would have stopped it, and by that means have
-given them a better chance by a new Bill than they can have
-now, that people will have a pretence for not altering their
-opinion....’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>These letters compensate for the silence of Hansard, so real
-and instructive a picture do they present of the methods and
-motives of enclosure. ‘Bully has a scheme of enclosure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-which, if it succeeds, I am told will free him from all his difficulties.’
-The journals may talk of the undrained fertility
-of Sedgmoor, but we have in this sentence the aspect of the
-enclosure that interests Selwyn, the Chairman of the Committee,
-and from beginning to end of the proceedings no other
-aspect ever enters his head. And it interests a great many
-other people besides Selwyn, for Bully owes money; so too
-does Stavordale, another prospective beneficiary: he owes
-money to Fox, and Fox owes money to Carlisle. Now Bully
-and Stavordale are not the only eighteenth-century aristocrats
-who are in difficulties; the waiters at Brooks’s and at White’s
-know that well enough, as Selwyn felt when, on hearing that
-one of them had been arrested for felony, he exclaimed, ‘What
-an idea of us he will give in Newgate.’ Nor is Bully the only
-aristocrat in difficulties whose thoughts turn to enclosure;
-Selwyn’s letters alone, with their reference to previous successes,
-would make that clear. It is here that we begin to
-appreciate the effect of our system of family settlements in
-keeping the aristocracy together. These young men, whose
-fortunes come and go in the hurricanes of the faro table, would
-soon have dissipated their estates if they had been free to
-do it; as they were restrained by settlements, they could
-only mortgage them. But there is a limit to this process,
-and after a time their debts begin to overwhelm them; perhaps
-also too many of their fellow gamblers are their creditors
-to make Brooks’s or White’s quite as comfortable a place as
-it used to be, for we may doubt whether all of these creditors
-were troubled with Lord Carlisle’s morbid delicacy of feeling.
-Happily there is an escape from this painful situation: a
-scheme of enclosure which will put him ‘once more on his
-legs.’ The other parties concerned are generally poor men,
-and there is not much danger of failure. Thus if we trace
-the adventures of the gaming table to their bitter end, we
-begin to understand that these wild revellers are gambling
-not with their own estates but with the estates of their neighbours.
-This is the only property they can realise. <i>Quidquid
-delirant reges plectuntur Achivi.</i></p>
-
-<p>The particular obstacle on which the scheme split was a
-fraudulent irregularity: the Bill submitted for signature to
-the inhabitants differing seriously (in twenty particulars)
-from the Bill presented to Parliament. Selwyn clearly attached
-no importance at all to the Petitions that were received against
-the Bill, or to the evidence of its local unpopularity. It is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-clear too, that it was very rare for a scheme like this to
-miscarry, for, speaking of his becoming Chairman of the Committee,
-he adds, ‘I thought it was a matter of form only.’
-Further with a little care this project would have weathered
-the discovery of the fraud of which the authors were guilty.
-‘I begged last night as for alms that they would meet us to
-settle the Votes. I have, since I have been in Parliament, been
-of twenty at least of these meetings, and always brought
-numbers down by these means. But my advice was slighted,
-and twenty people were walking about the streets who could
-have carried this point.’ In other words, the Bill would have
-been carried, all its iniquities notwithstanding, if only Bully’s
-friends had taken Selwyn’s advice and put themselves out to
-go down to Westminster. So little impression did this piece
-of trickery make on the mind of the Chairman of the Committee,
-that he intended to the last, by collecting his friends,
-to carry the Bill, for the fairness and good order of which he
-was responsible, through the House of Commons. This
-glimpse into the operations of the Committee enables us to
-picture the groups of comrades who sauntered down from
-Almack’s of an afternoon to carve up a manor in Committee
-of the House of Commons. We can see Bully’s friends meeting
-round the table in their solemn character of judges and
-legislators, to give a score of villages to Bully, and a dozen
-to Stavordale, much as Artaxerxes gave Magnesia to Themistocles
-for his bread, Myus for his meat and Lampsacus for
-his wine. And if those friends happened to be Bully’s creditors
-as well, it would perhaps not be unjust to suppose that their
-action was not altogether free from the kind of gratitude that
-inspired the bounty of the great king.<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">ENCLOSURE (2)</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>In the year 1774, Lord North’s Government, which had already
-received a bad bruise or two in the course of its quarrels with
-printers and authors, got very much the worst of it in an
-encounter that a little prudence would have sufficed to avert
-altogether. The affair has become famous on account of the
-actors, and because it was the turning point in a very important
-career. The cause of the quarrel has passed into the background,
-but students of the enclosure movement will find
-more to interest them in its beginning than in its circumstances
-and development.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. De Grey, Member for Norfolk, and Lord of the Manor
-of Tollington in that county, had a dispute of long standing
-with Mr. William Tooke of Purley, a landowner in Tollington,
-who had resisted Mr. De Grey’s encroachments on the common.
-An action on this subject was impending, but Mr. De Grey,
-who held, as Sir George Trevelyan puts it, ‘that the law’s
-delay was not intended for Members of Parliament’ got another
-Member of Parliament to introduce a petition for a Bill for
-the enclosure of Tollington. As it happened, Mr. Tooke
-was a friend of one of the clerks in the House of Commons,
-and this friend told him on 6th January that a petition from
-De Grey was about to be presented. A fortnight later Mr.
-Tooke received from this clerk a copy of Mr. De Grey’s petition,
-in which the Lord Chief Justice, brother of Mr. De Grey
-was included. Mr. Tooke hurried to London and prepared
-a counter petition, and Sir Edward Astley, the member for
-the constituency, undertook to present that petition together
-with the petition from Mr. De Grey. There were some further
-negotiations, with the result that both sides revised their respective
-petitions, and it was arranged that they should be
-presented on 4th February. On that day the Speaker said
-the House was not full enough, and the petitions must be
-presented on the 7th. Accordingly Sir Edward Astley brought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-up both petitions on the 7th, but the Speaker said it was very
-extraordinary to present two contrary petitions at the same
-time. ‘Bring the first petition first.’ When members began
-to say ‘Hear, hear,’ the Speaker remarked, ‘It is only a
-common petition for a common enclosure,’ and the Members
-fell into general conversation, paying no heed to the proceedings
-at the Table. In the midst of this the petition was read,
-and the Speaker asked for ‘Ayes and Noes,’ and declared that
-the Ayes had it. The petition asking for the Bill had thus
-been surreptitiously carried without the House being made
-aware that there was a contrary petition to be presented, the
-contrary petition asking for delay. The second petition was
-then read and ordered to lie on the Table.</p>
-
-<p>In ordinary circumstances nothing more would have been
-heard of the opposition to Mr. De Grey’s Bill. Hundreds of
-petitions may have been so stifled without the world being
-any the wiser. But Mr. Tooke, who would never have known
-of Mr. De Grey’s intention if he had not had a friend among
-the clerks of the House of Commons, happened to have another
-friend who was able to help him in a very different way in his
-predicament. This was Horne, who was now living in a
-cottage at Purley, reading law, on the desperate chance that
-a man, who was a clergyman against his will, would be admitted
-to the bar. Flushed rather than spent by his public quarrel
-with Wilkes, which was just dying down, Horne saw in Mr.
-Tooke’s wrongs an admirable opportunity for a champion of
-freedom, whose earlier exploits had been a little tarnished
-by his subsequent feuds with his comrades. Accordingly he
-responded very promptly, and published in the <i>Public Advertiser</i>
-of 11th February, an anonymous indictment of the Speaker,
-Sir Fletcher Norton, based on his unjust treatment of these
-petitions. This letter scandalised the House of Commons and
-drew the unwary Government into a quarrel from which
-Horne emerged triumphant; for the Government, having been
-led on to proceed against Horne, was unable to prove his
-authorship of the letter. The incident had consequences of
-great importance for many persons. It was the making of
-Horne, for he became Horne Tooke, with £8000 from his
-friend and a reputation as an intrepid and vigilant champion
-of popular liberty that he retained to the day of his death.
-It was also the making of Fox, for it was this youth of twenty-five
-who had led the Government into its scrape, and the king
-could not forgive him. His temerity on this occasion provoked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-the famous letter from North. ‘Sir, His Majesty has
-thought proper to order a new Commission of the Treasury
-to be made out, in which I do not see your name.’ Fox left
-the court party to lend his impetuous courage henceforth
-to very different causes. But for social students the incident
-is chiefly interesting because it was the cause of the introduction
-of Standing Orders on Enclosure Bills. It had shown
-what might happen to rich men under the present system.
-Accordingly the House of Commons set to work to construct
-a series of Standing Orders to regulate the proceedings on
-Enclosure Bills.</p>
-
-<p>Most of these Standing Orders have already been mentioned
-in the previous chapter, but we propose to recapitulate their
-main provisions in order to show that the gross unfairness
-of the procedure, described in the last chapter, as between
-the rich and the poor, made no impression at all upon
-Parliament. The first Standing Orders dealing with Enclosure
-Bills were passed in 1774, and they were revised in 1775,
-1781, 1799, 1800 and 1801. These Standing Orders prevented
-a secret application to Parliament by obliging promoters
-to publish a notice on the church door; they introduced
-some control over the extortions of commissioners, and laid
-down that the Bill presented to Parliament should contain
-the names of the commissioners and a description of the compensation
-to be given to the lord of the manor and the impropriator
-of tithes. But they contained no safeguard at all
-against robbery of the small proprietors or the commoners.
-Until 1801 there was no restriction on the choice of a commissioner,
-and it was only in that year that Parliament adopted
-the Standing Order providing that no lord of the manor, or
-steward, or bailiff of any lord or lady or proprietor should be
-allowed to act as commissioner in an enclosure in which he
-was an interested party.<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> In one respect Parliament deliberately
-withdrew a rule introduced to give greater regularity and
-publicity to the proceedings of committees. Under the Standing
-Orders of 1774, the Chairman of a Committee had to report
-not only whether the Standing Orders had been complied with,
-but also what evidence had been submitted to show that all
-the necessary formalities had been observed; but in the
-following year the House of Commons struck out this second
-provision. A Committee of the House of Commons suggested in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>
-1799 that no petition should be admitted for a Parliamentary
-Bill unless a fourth part of the proprietors in number and
-value signed the application, but this suggestion was rejected.</p>
-
-<p>The poor then found no kind of shelter in the Standing
-Orders. The legislation of this period, from first to last,
-shows just as great an indifference to the injustice to which
-they were exposed. The first public Act of the time deals
-not with enclosures for growing corn, but with enclosures for
-growing wood. The Act of 1756 states in its preamble that
-the Acts of Henry <span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span>, Charles <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> and William <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> for encouraging
-the growth of timber had been obstructed by the resistance
-of the commoners, and Parliament therefore found it
-necessary to enact that any owner of waste could enclose for
-the purpose of growing timber with the approval of the majority
-in number and value of those who had common rights, and
-any majority of those who had common rights could enclose
-with the approval of the owner of the waste. Any person
-or persons who thought themselves aggrieved could appeal
-to Quarter Sessions, within six months after the agreement
-had been registered. We hear very little of this Act, and the
-enclosures that concern us are enclosures of a different kind. In
-the final years of the century there was a succession of General
-Enclosure Bills introduced and debated in Parliament, under
-the stimulus of the fear of famine. These Bills were promoted
-by the Board of Agriculture, established in 1793 with
-Sir John Sinclair as President, and Arthur Young as secretary.
-This Board of Agriculture was not a State department in the
-modern sense, but a kind of Royal Society receiving, not too
-regularly, a subsidy from Parliament.<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> As a result of its efforts
-two Parliamentary Committees were appointed to report on the
-enclosure of waste lands, and the Reports of these Committees,
-which agreed in recommending a General Enclosure Bill, were
-presented in 1795 and 1799. Bills were introduced in 1795,
-1796, 1797 and 1800, but it was not until 1801 that any Act
-was passed.</p>
-
-<p>The first Bills presented to Parliament were General Enclosure
-Bills, that is to say, they were Bills for prescribing conditions
-on which enclosure could be carried out without application
-to Parliament. The Board of Agriculture was set on this policy
-partly, as we have seen, in the interest of agricultural expansion,
-partly as the only way of guaranteeing a supply of food<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-during the French war. But these were not the only considerations
-in the mind of Parliament, and we are able in this case to
-see what happened to a disinterested proposal when it had to
-pass through the sieve of a Parliament of owners of land and
-tithes. For we have in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> the form of
-the General Enclosure Bill of 1796 as it was presented to the
-Government by that expert body, the Board of Agriculture, and
-we have among the Parliamentary Bills in the British Museum
-(1) the form in which this Bill left a Select Committee, and (2)
-the form in which it left a second Select Committee of Knights
-of the Shire and Gentlemen of the Long Robe. We are thus
-able to see in what spirit the lords of the manor who sat in
-Parliament regarded, in a moment of great national urgency,
-the policy put before it by the Board of Agriculture. We
-come at once upon a fact of great importance. In the first
-version it is recognised that Parliament has to consider the
-future as well as the present, that it is dealing not only with
-the claims of a certain number of living cottagers, whose
-rights and property may be valued by the commissioners
-at a five pound note, but with the necessities of generations
-still to be born, and that the most liberal recognition of the
-right to pasture a cow, in the form of a cash payment to an
-individual, cannot compensate for the calamities that a society
-suffers in the permanent alienation of all its soil. The Bill
-as drafted in the Board of Agriculture enacted that in view
-of the probable increase of population, a portion of the waste
-should be set aside, and vested in a corporate body (composed
-of the lord of the manor, the rector, the vicar, the churchwardens
-and the overseers), for allotments for ever. Any
-labourer over twenty-one, with a settlement in the parish, could
-claim a portion and hold it for fifty years, rent free, on condition
-of building a cottage and fencing it. When the fifty years
-were over, the cottages, with their parcels of land, were to
-be let on leases of twenty-one years and over at reasonable
-rents, half the rent to go to the owner of the soil, and half to
-the poor rates. The land was never to be alienated from the
-cottage. All these far-sighted clauses vanish absolutely under
-the sifting statesmanship of the Parliament, of which Burke
-said in all sincerity, in his <i>Reflections on the Revolution in
-France</i>, that ‘our representation has been found perfectly
-adequate to all the purposes for which a representation of
-the people can be desired or devised.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span></p>
-<p>There was another respect in which the Board of Agriculture
-was considered to be too generous to the poor by the
-lords of the manor, who made the laws of England. In
-version 1 of the Bill, not only those entitled to such right but
-also those who have enjoyed or exercised the right of getting
-fuel are to have special and inalienable fuel allotments made
-to them: in version 2 only those who are entitled to such
-rights are to have a fuel allotment, and in version 3, this compensation
-is restricted to those who have possessed fuel rights
-for ten years. Again in version 1, the cost of enclosing and
-fencing small allotments, where the owners are unable to pay,
-is to be borne by the other owners: in version 2, the small
-owners are to be allowed to mortgage their allotments in order
-to cover the cost. The importance of the proposal thus
-rejected by the Parliamentary Committee will appear when
-we come to consider the practical effects of Enclosure Acts.
-The only people who got their fencing done for them under
-most Acts were the tithe-owners, a class neither so poor nor
-so powerless in Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>However this Bill shared the fate of all other General Enclosure
-Bills at this time. There were many obstacles to a
-General Enclosure Bill. Certain Members of Parliament
-resisted them on the ground that if it were made legal for a
-majority to coerce a minority into enclosure without coming
-to Parliament, such protection as the smaller commoners
-derived from the possibility of Parliamentary discussion would
-disappear. Powis quarrelled with the Bill of 1796 on this
-ground, and he was supported by Fox and Grey, but his
-objections were overruled. However a more formidable
-opposition came from other quarters. Enclosure Acts furnished
-Parliamentary officials with a harvest of fees,<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> and
-the Church thought it dangerous that enclosure, affecting
-tithe-owners, should be carried through without the bishops
-being given an opportunity of interfering. These and other
-forces were powerful enough to destroy this and all General<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>
-Enclosure Bills, intended to make application to Parliament
-unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p>The Board of Agriculture accordingly changed its plans.
-In 1800 the Board abandoned its design of a General
-Enclosure Bill, and presented instead a consolidating Bill,
-which was to cheapen procedure. Hitherto there had been
-great diversities of form and every Bill was an expensive little
-work of art of its own. The Act of 1801 was designed to save
-promoters of enclosure some of this trouble and expense. It
-took some forty clauses that were commonly found in Enclosure
-Bills and provided that they could be incorporated
-by reference in private Bills, thus cheapening legal procedure.
-Further, it allowed affidavits to be accepted as
-evidence, thus relieving the promoters from the obligation
-of bringing witnesses before the Committee to swear to every
-signature. All the recognition that was given to the difficulties
-and the claims of the poor was comprised in sections
-12 and 13, which allow small allotments to be laid together
-and depastured in common, and instruct the commissioners
-to have particular regard to the convenience of the owners or
-proprietors of the smallest estates. In 1813, the idea of a
-General Bill was revived once more, and a Bill passed the
-House of Commons which gave a majority of three-fifths in
-value the right to petition Quarter Sessions for an enclosure.
-The Bill was rejected in the Lords. In 1836 a General Enclosure
-Bill was passed, permitting enclosure when two-thirds
-in number and value desired it, and in 1845 Parliament
-appointed central Commissioners with a view to preventing
-local injustice.</p>
-
-<p>It is unfortunate that the Parliamentary Reports of the
-debates on General Enclosure Bills in the unreformed Parliament
-are almost as meagre as the debates on particular Enclosure
-Bills. We can gather from various indications that
-the rights of the clergy received a good deal of notice, and
-Lord Grenville made an indignant speech to vindicate his zeal
-in the cause of the Church, which had been questioned by
-opponents. The cause of the poor does not often ruffle the
-surface of discussion. This we can collect not only from
-negative evidence but also from a statement by Mr. Lechmere,
-Member for Worcester. Lechmere, whose loss of his seat
-in 1796 deprived the poor of one of their very few champions in
-Parliament, drew attention more than once during the discussions
-on scarcity and the high price of corn to the lamentable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>
-consequences of the disappearances of the small farms, and recommended
-drastic steps to arrest the process. Philip Francis
-gave him some support. The general temper of Parliament
-can be divined from his complaint that when these subjects
-were under discussion it was very difficult to make a House.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that the apathy of the aristocracy
-was part of a universal blindness or anæsthesia, and that the
-method and procedure of enclosure were accepted as just and
-inevitable, without challenge or protest from any quarter.
-The poor were of course bitterly hostile. This appears not
-only from the petitions presented to Parliament, but from the
-echoes that have reached us of actual violence. It was naturally
-easier for the threatened commoners to riot in places where a
-single enclosure scheme affected a wide district, and most of
-the records of popular disturbances that have come down to
-us are connected with attempts to enclose moors that were
-common to several parishes. An interesting example is
-afforded by the history of the enclosure of Haute Huntre Fen
-in Lincolnshire. This enclosure, which affected eleven parishes,
-was sanctioned by Parliament in 1767, but three years later
-the Enclosure Commissioners had to come to Parliament to
-explain that the posts and rails that they had set up had been
-destroyed ‘by malicious persons, in order to hinder the execution
-of the said Act,’ and to ask for permission to make ditches
-instead of fences.<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> An example of disturbances in a single
-village is given by the Bedfordshire reporter for the Board
-of Agriculture, who says that when Maulden was enclosed
-it was found necessary to send for troops from Coventry to
-quell the riots:<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> and another in the <i>Annual Register</i> for 1799<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a>
-describing the resistance of the commoners at Wilbarston in
-Northamptonshire, and the employment of two troops of
-yeomanry to coerce them. The general hatred of the poor
-for enclosures is evident from the language of Eden, and from
-statements of contributors to the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>. Eden
-had included a question about commons and enclosures in
-the questions he put to his correspondents, and he says in his
-preface that he had been disappointed that so few of his correspondents
-had given an answer to this question. He then
-proceeds to give this explanation: ‘This question, like most
-others, that can now be touched upon, has its popular and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-its unpopular sides: and where no immediate self-interest,
-or other partial leaning, interferes to bias the judgment, a
-good-natured man cannot but wish to think with the multitudes;
-stunned as his ears must daily be, with the oft-repeated
-assertion, that, to condemn commons, is to determine on
-depopulating the country.’<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> The writer of the <i>Bedfordshire
-Report</i> in 1808 says that ‘it appears that the poor have invariably
-been inimical to enclosures, as they certainly remain
-to the present day.’<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> Dr. Wilkinson, writing in the <i>Annals
-of Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> in favour of a General Enclosure Bill says,
-‘the grand objection to the inclosure of commons arises from
-the unpopularity which gentlemen who are active in the cause
-expose themselves to in their own neighbourhood, from the
-discontent of the poor when any such question is agitated.’
-Arthur Young makes a similar statement.<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> ‘A general inclosure
-has been long ago proposed to administration, but particular
-ones have been so unpopular in some cases that government
-were afraid of the measure.’</p>
-
-<p>The popular feeling, though quite unrepresented in Parliament,
-was not unrepresented in contemporary literature.
-During the last years of the eighteenth century there was a
-sharp war of pamphlets on the merits of enclosure, and it is
-noticeable that both supporters and opponents denounced
-the methods on which the governing class acted. There is,
-among others, a very interesting anonymous pamphlet, published
-in 1781 under the title of <i>An Inquiry into the Advantages
-and Disadvantages resulting from Bills of Inclosure</i>, in
-which the existing practice is reviewed and some excellent
-suggestions are made for reform. The writer proposed that
-the preliminary to a Bill should be not the fixing of a notice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-to the church door, but the holding of a public meeting, that
-there should be six commissioners, that they should be elected
-by the commoners by ballot, that no decision should be valid
-that was not unanimous, and that an appeal from that decision
-should lie not to Quarter Sessions, but to Judges of Assize.
-The same writer proposed that no enclosure should be sanctioned
-which did not allot one acre to each cottage.</p>
-
-<p>These proposals came from an opponent of enclosure, but
-the most distinguished supporters of enclosure were also discontented
-with the procedure. Who are the writers on
-eighteenth-century agriculture whose names and publications
-are known and remembered? They are, first of all, Arthur
-Young (1741&ndash;1820), who, though he failed as a merchant and
-failed as a farmer, and never ceased to regret his father’s
-mistake in neglecting to put him into the soft lap of a living in
-the Church, made for himself, by the simple process of observing
-and recording, a European reputation as an expert adviser
-in the art which he had practised with so little success. A
-scarcely less important authority was William Marshall (1745&ndash;1818),
-who began by trading in the West Indies, afterwards
-farmed in Surrey, and then became agent in Norfolk to Sir
-Harbord Harbord. It was Marshall who suggested the creation
-of a Board of Rural Affairs, and the preparation of Surveys and
-Minutes. Though he never held an official position, it was
-from his own choice, for he preferred to publish his own Minutes
-and Surveys rather than to write them for the Board. He
-was interested in philology as well as in agriculture; he published
-a vocabulary of the Yorkshire dialect and he was a friend
-of Johnson, whom he rather scandalised by condoning Sunday
-labour in agriculture under special circumstances. Nathaniel
-Kent (1737&ndash;1810) studied husbandry in the Austrian Netherlands,
-where he had been secretary to an ambassador, and on
-his return to England in 1766 he was employed as an estate
-agent and land valuer. He wrote a well-known book <i>Hints
-to Gentlemen of Landed Property</i>, and he had considerable
-influence in improving the management of various estates.
-He was, for a short time, bailiff of George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>’s farm at Windsor.</p>
-
-<p>All of these writers, though they are very far from taking
-the view which found expression in the riots in the Lincolnshire
-fens, or in the anonymous pamphlet already mentioned,
-addressed some very important criticisms and recommendations
-to the class that was enclosing the English commons.
-Both Marshall and Young complained of the injustice of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-method of choosing commissioners. Marshall, ardent champion
-of enclosure as he was, and no sentimentalist on the subject of
-the commoners, wrote a most bitter account of the motives
-of the enclosers. ‘At this juncture, it is true, the owners of
-manors and tithes, whether clergy or laity, men of ministry or
-men of opposition, are equally on the alert: not however
-pressing forward with offerings and sacrifices to relieve the
-present distresses of the country, but searching for vantage
-ground to aid them in the scramble.’<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> Holding this view, he
-was not unnaturally ill-content with the plan of letting the
-big landlords nominate the commissioners, and proposed that
-the lord of the soil and the owner or owners of tithes should
-choose one commissioner each, that the owner or owners of
-pasturage should choose two, and that the four should choose
-a fifth. Arthur Young proposed that the small proprietors
-should have a share in the nomination of commissioners either
-by a union of votes or otherwise, as might be determined.</p>
-
-<p>The general engrossing of farms was arraigned by Thomas
-Stone, the author of an important pamphlet, <i>Suggestions for
-rendering the inclosure of common fields and waste lands a
-source of population and of riches</i>, 1787, who proposed that in
-future enclosures farms should be let out in different sizes from
-£40 to £200 a year. He thought further that Parliament
-should consider the advisability of forbidding the alienation
-of cottagers’ property, in order to stop the frittering away of
-cottagers’ estates which was general under enclosure. Kent,
-a passionate enthusiast for enclosing, was not less critical of
-the practice of throwing farms together, a practice which had
-raised the price of provisions to the labourer, and he appealed
-to landlords to aid the distressed poor by reducing the size of
-their farms, as well as by raising wages. Arbuthnot, the
-author of a pamphlet on <i>An Inquiry into the Connection between
-the present Price of Provisions and the Size of Farms</i>, by a Farmer,
-1773, who had defended the large-farm system against Dr.
-Price, wrote, ‘My plan is to allot to each cottage three or four
-acres which should be annexed to it without power or alienation
-and without rent while under the covenant of being kept
-in grass.’</p>
-
-<p>So much for writers on agriculture. But the eighteenth
-century produced two authoritative writers on social conditions.
-Any student of social history who wishes to understand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-this period would first turn to the three great volumes of Eden’s
-<i>State of the Poor</i>, published in 1797, as a storehouse of cold facts.
-Davies, who wrote <i>The Case of Labourers in Husbandry</i>, published
-in 1795, is less famous than he deserves to be, if we are to
-judge from the fact that the <i>Dictionary of National Biography</i>
-only knows about him that he was Rector of Barkham in Berkshire,
-and a graduate of Jesus College, Oxford, that he received
-a D.D. degree in 1800, that he is the author of this book, and
-that he died, perhaps, in the year 1809. But Davies’ book,
-which contains the result of most careful and patient investigation,
-made a profound impression on contemporary observers.
-Howlett called it ‘incomparable,’ and it is impossible for the
-modern reader to resist its atmosphere of reality and truth.
-This country parson gives us a simple, faithful and sincere
-picture of the facts, seen without illusion or prejudice, and
-free from all the conventional affectations of the time: a
-priceless legacy to those who are impatient of the generalisations
-with which the rich dismiss the poor. Now both of
-these writers warned their contemporaries of the danger of the
-uncontrolled tendencies of the age. Eden proposed that in
-every enclosure a certain quantity of land should be reserved
-for cottagers and labourers, to be vested in the whole district.
-He spoke in favour of the crofters in Scotland, and declared
-that provision of this kind was made for the labouring classes
-in the first settled townships of New England. Davies was
-still more emphatic in calling upon England to settle cottagers
-and to arrest the process of engrossing farms.<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a></p>
-
-<p>Thus of all the remembered writers of the period who had
-any practical knowledge of agriculture or of the poor, there is
-not one who did not try to teach the governing class the need
-for reform, and the dangers of the state into which they were
-allowing rural society to drift. Parliament was assailed on
-all sides with criticisms and recommendations, and its refusal
-to alter its ways was deliberate.</p>
-
-<p>Of the protests of the time the most important and significant
-came from Arthur Young. No man had been so
-impatient of objections to enclosure: no man had taken so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-severe and disciplinary a view of the labourer: no man had
-dismissed so lightly the appeals for the preservation of the
-fragmentary possessions of the poor. He had taught a very
-simple philosophy, that the more the landowner pressed the
-farmer, and the more the farmer pressed the labourer, the
-better it was for agriculture. He had believed as implicitly
-as Sinclair himself, and with apparently as little effort to master
-the facts, that the cottagers were certain to benefit by enclosure.
-All this gives pathos, as well as force, to his remarkable
-paper, published under the title <i>An Inquiry into the
-Propriety of applying Wastes to the better Maintenance and
-Support of the Poor</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The origin of this document is interesting. It was written
-in 1801, a few years after the Speenhamland system had begun
-to fix itself on the villages. The growth of the poor rates was
-troubling the minds of the upper and middle classes. Arthur
-Young, in the course of his travels at this time, stumbled on the
-discovery that in those parishes where the cottagers had been
-able to keep together a tiny patch of property, they had shown
-a Spartan determination to refuse the refuge of the Poor Law.
-When once he had observed this, he made further investigations
-which only confirmed his first impressions. This opened
-his eyes to the consequences of enclosure as it had been carried
-out, and he began to examine the history of these operations
-in a new spirit. He then found that enclosure had destroyed
-with the property of the poor one of the great incentives to
-industry and self-respect, and that his view that the benefit of
-the commons to the poor was ‘perfectly contemptible,’ and
-‘when it tempts them to become owners of cattle or sheep usually
-ruinous,’<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> was fundamentally wrong. Before the enclosures, the
-despised commons had enabled the cottager to keep a cow, and
-this, so far from bringing ruin, had meant in very many cases all
-the difference between independence and pauperism. His scrutiny
-of the Acts convinced him that in respect of this they had been
-unjust. ‘By nineteen out of twenty Inclosure Bills the poor are
-injured, and some grossly injured.... Mr. Forster of Norwich,
-after giving me an account of twenty inclosures in which he
-had acted as Commissioner, stated his opinion on their general
-effect on the poor, and lamented that he had been accessory
-to the injuring of 2000 poor people, at the rate of twenty
-families per parish.... The poor in these parishes may say,
-and with truth, “Parliament may be tender of property: all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-I know is that I had a cow and an Act of Parliament has taken
-it from me.”’</p>
-
-<p>This paper appeared on the eve of the Enclosure Act of
-1801, the Act to facilitate and cheapen procedure, which
-Young and Sinclair had worked hard to secure. It was therefore
-an opportune moment for trying to temper enclosure
-to the difficulties of the poor. Arthur Young made a passionate
-appeal to the upper classes to remember these difficulties.
-‘To pass Acts beneficial to every other class in the State and
-hurtful to the lowest class only, when the smallest alteration
-would prevent it, is a conduct against which reason, justice
-and humanity equally plead.’ He then proceeded to outline
-a constructive scheme. He proposed that twenty millions
-should be spent in setting up half a million families with allotments
-and cottages: the fee-simple of the cottage and land
-to be vested in the parish, and possession granted under an
-Act of Parliament, on condition that if the father or his family
-became chargeable to the rates, the cottage and land should
-revert to the parish. The parishes were to carry out the
-scheme, borrowing the necessary money on the security of
-the rates.<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> ‘A man,’ he told the landlords, in a passage
-touched perhaps with remorse as well as with compassion, ‘will
-love his country the better even for a pig.’ ‘At a moment,’
-so he concludes, ‘when a General Inclosure of Wastes is before
-Parliament, to allow such a measure to be carried into execution
-in conformity with the practice hitherto, without entering
-one voice, however feeble, in defence of the interests of the
-poor, would have been a wound to the feelings of any man not
-lost to humanity who had viewed the scenes which I have
-visited.’</p>
-
-<p>The appeal broke against a dense mass of class prejudice,
-and so far as any effect on the Consolidating Act of 1801 is
-concerned, Arthur Young might never have written a line.
-This is perhaps not surprising, for we know from Young’s
-autobiography (p. 350) that he did not even carry the Board
-of Agriculture with him, and that Lord Carrington, who was
-then President, only allowed him to print his appeal on the
-understanding that it was not published as an official document,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-and that the Board was in no way identified with it.
-Sinclair, who shared Young’s conversion, had ceased to be
-President in 1798. The compunction he tried to awaken did
-affect an Act here and there. A witness before the Allotments
-Committee of 1843 described the arrangements he
-contrived to introduce into an Enclosure Act. The witness
-was Mr. Demainbray, an admirable and most public-spirited
-parson, Rector of Broad Somerford in Wiltshire. Mr. Demainbray
-explained that when the Enclosure Act for his parish
-was prepared in 1806, he had been pressed to accept land in
-lieu of tithes, and that he took the opportunity to stipulate
-for some provision for the poor. As a consequence of his
-efforts, half an acre was attached to each cottage on the waste,
-the land being vested in the rector, churchwardens and overseers
-for the time being, and eight acres were reserved for the
-villagers for allotment and reallotment every Easter. This
-arrangement, which had excellent results, ‘every man looking
-forward to becoming a man of property,’ was copied in several
-of the neighbouring parishes. Dr. Slater has collected some
-other examples. One Act, passed in 1824 for Pottern in
-Wiltshire, vested the ownership of the enclosed common in
-the Bishop of Salisbury, who was lord of the manor, the
-vicar, and the churchwardens, in trust for the parish. The
-trustees were required to lease it in small holdings to poor,
-honest and industrious persons, who had not, except in cases
-of accident or sickness, availed themselves of Poor Law Relief.<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a>
-Thomas Stone’s proposal for making inalienable allotments to
-cottagers was adopted in two or three Acts in the eastern
-counties, but the Acts that made some provision for the poor
-do not amount, in Dr. Slater’s opinion, to more than one per
-cent. of the Enclosure Acts passed before 1845,<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> and this view
-is corroborated by the great stress laid in the Reports of the
-Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor, upon a few
-cases where the poor were considered, and by a statement
-made by Mr. Demainbray in a pamphlet published in 1831.<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a>
-In this pamphlet Mr. Demainbray quotes what Davies had
-said nearly forty years earlier about the effect of enclosures
-in robbing the poor, and then adds: ‘Since that time many
-hundred enclosures have taken place, but in how few of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-has any reserve been made for the privileges which the poor
-man and his ancestors had for centuries enjoyed?’</p>
-
-<p>Some interesting provisions are contained in certain of
-the Acts analysed in the Appendix. At Stanwell the commissioners
-were to set aside such parcel as they thought
-proper not exceeding thirty acres, to be let out and the
-rents and profits were to be given for the benefit of such
-occupiers and inhabitants as did not receive parochial relief
-or occupy lands and tenements of more than £5 a year, and
-had not received any allotment under the Act. Middleton,
-the writer of the <i>Report on Middlesex</i>, says that the land produced
-£30 a year,<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> and he remarks that this is a much better
-way of helping the poor than leaving them land for their use.
-We may doubt whether the arrangement seemed equally
-attractive to the poor. It could not have been much compensation
-to John Carter, who owned a cottage, to receive
-three roods, twenty-six perches in lieu of his rights of common,
-which is his allotment in the award, for three-quarters of an
-acre is obviously insufficient for the pasture of a cow, but it
-was perhaps still less satisfactory for James Carter to know
-that one acre and seven perches were allotted to the ‘lawful
-owner or owners’ of the cottage and land which he occupied,
-and that his own compensation for the loss of his cow or sheep
-or geese was the cold hope that if he kept off the rates, Sir
-William Gibbons, the vicar, and the parish officers might give
-him a dole. The Laleham Commissioners were evidently
-men of a rather grim humour, for, in setting aside thirteen acres
-for the poor, they authorised the churchwardens and overseers
-to encourage the poor, if they were so minded, by letting this
-plot for sixty years and using the money so received to build a
-workhouse. A much more liberal provision was made at
-Cheshunt, where the poor were allowed 100 acres. At Knaresborough
-and Louth, the poor got nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p>Before we proceed to describe the results of enclosure on
-village life, we may remark one curious fact. In 1795 and
-1796 there was some discussion in the House of Commons
-of the condition of the agricultural labourers, arising out of
-the proposal of Whitbread’s to enable the magistrates to fix
-a minimum wage. Pitt made a long speech in reply, and
-promised to introduce a scheme of his own for correcting evils
-that were too conspicuous to be ignored. This promise he
-kept next year in the ill-fated Poor Law Bill, which died,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-almost at its birth, of general hostility. That Bill will be
-considered elsewhere. All that we are concerned to notice
-here is that neither speech nor Bill, though they cover a wide
-range of topics, and though Pitt said that they represented
-the results of long and careful inquiry, hint at this cause of
-social disturbance, or at the importance of safe-guarding the
-interests of the poor in future enclosure schemes: this in spite
-of the fact that, as we have seen, there was scarcely any contemporary
-writer or observer who had not pointed out that
-the way in which the governing class was conducting these
-revolutions was not only unjust to the poor but perilous to
-the State.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting, in the light of the failure to grasp and
-retrieve an error in national policy which marks the progress
-of these transactions, to glance at the contemporary history
-of France. The Legislative Assembly, under the influence
-of the ideas of the economists, decreed the division of the land
-of the communes in 1792. The following year this decree
-was modified. Certain provincial assemblies had asked for
-division, but many of the villages were inexorably hostile.
-The new decree of June 1793 tried to do justice to these
-conflicting wishes by making division optional. At the same
-time it insisted on an equitable division in cases where partition
-took place. But this policy of division was found to
-have done such damage to the interests of the poor that there
-was strenuous opposition, with the result that in 1796 the
-process was suspended, and in the following year it was forbidden.<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a>
-Can any one suppose that if the English legislature
-had had as swift and ready a sense for things going wrong, the
-policy of enclosure would have been pursued after 1801 with
-the same reckless disregard for its social consequences?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We have given in the last chapter the history of an enclosure
-project for the light it throws on the play of motive in the
-enclosing class. We propose now to give in some detail the
-history of an enclosure project that succeeded for the light it
-throws on the attention which Parliament paid to local opinion,
-and on the generally received views as to the rights of the
-small commoners. Our readers will observe that this enclosure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-took place after the criticisms and appeals which we have
-described had all been published.</p>
-
-<p>Otmoor is described in Dunkin’s <i>History of Oxfordshire</i>,<a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a>
-as a ‘dreary and extensive common.’ Tradition said that the
-tract of land was the gift of some mysterious lady ‘who gave
-as much ground as she could ride round while an oat-sheaf
-was burning, to the inhabitants of its vicinity for a public
-common,’ and hence came its name of Oatmoor, corrupted into
-Otmoor. Whatever the real origin of the name, which more
-prosaic persons connected with ‘<i>Oc</i>’, a Celtic word for ‘water,’
-this tract of land had been used as a ‘public common without
-stint ... from remote antiquity.’ Lord Abingdon, indeed,
-as Lord of the Manor of Beckley, claimed and exercised the
-right of appointing a moor-driver, who at certain seasons
-drove all the cattle into Beckley, where those which were
-unidentified became Lord Abingdon’s property. Lord
-Abingdon also claimed rights of soil and of sport: these, like
-his other claim, were founded on prescription only, as there
-was no trace of any grant from the Crown.</p>
-
-<p>The use to which Otmoor, in its original state, was put, is
-thus described by Dunkin. ‘Whilst this extensive piece of
-land remained unenclosed, the farmers of the several adjoining
-townships estimated the profits of a summer’s pasturage
-at 20s. per head, subject to the occasional loss of a beast by
-a peculiar distemper called the moor-evil. But the greatest
-benefit was reaped by the cottagers, many of whom turned
-out large numbers of geese, to which the coarse aquatic
-sward was well suited, and thereby brought up their families
-in comparative plenty.<a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a></p>
-
-<p>‘Of late years, however, this dreary waste was surveyed
-with longing eyes by the surrounding landowners, most of
-whom wished to annex a portion of it to their estates, and in
-consequence spared no pains to recommend the enclosure as
-a measure beneficial to the country.’</p>
-
-<p>The promoters of the enclosure credited themselves with
-far loftier motives: prominent among them being a desire
-to improve the morals of the poor. An advocate of the
-enclosure afterwards described the pitiable state of the poor
-in pre-enclosure days in these words: ‘In looking after a
-brood of goslings, a few rotten sheep, a skeleton of a cow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-or a mangy horse, they lost more than they might have
-gained by their day’s work, and acquired habits of idleness
-and dissipation and a dislike to honest labour, which has
-rendered them the riotous and lawless set of men which they
-have now shown themselves to be.’ A pious wish to second
-the intention of Providence was also a strong incentive:
-‘God did not create the earth to lie waste for feeding a few
-geese, but to be cultivated by man, in the sweat of his brow.’<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a></p>
-
-<p>The first proposal for enclosure came to Parliament from
-George, Duke of Marlborough, and others on 11th March, 1801.
-The duke petitioned for the drainage and the allotment of the
-4000 acres of Otmoor among the parishes concerned, namely
-Beckley (with Horton and Studley), Noke, Oddington, and
-Charlton (with Fencott and Moorcott). This petition was
-referred to a Committee, to consider amongst other things,
-whether the Standing Orders with reference to Drainage
-Bills had been duly complied with. The Committee reported
-in favour of allowing the introduction of the Bill, but made
-this remarkable admission, that though the Standing Orders
-with respect to the affixing of notices on church doors had
-been complied with on Sunday, 3rd August, ‘it appeared to
-the Committee that on the following Sunday, the 10th of
-August, the Person employed to affix the like Notices was
-prevented from so doing at Beckley, Oddington and Charlton,
-by a Mob at each Place, but that he read the Notices to the
-Persons assembled, and afterwards threw them amongst them
-into the Church Yards of those Parishes.’ Notice was duly
-affixed that Sunday at Noke. The next Sunday matters were
-even worse, for no notices were allowed to be fixed in any parish.</p>
-
-<p>The Bill that was introduced in spite of this local protest,
-was shipwrecked during its Committee stage by a petition
-from Alexander Croke, LL.D., Lord of the Manor of Studley
-with Whitecross Green, and from John Mackarness, Esq.,
-who stated that as proprietors in the parish of Beckley, their
-interests had not been sufficiently considered.</p>
-
-<p>The next application to Parliament was not made till 1814.
-In the interval various plans were propounded, and Arthur
-Young, in his <i>Survey of Oxfordshire for the Board of Agriculture</i>,
-published in 1809 (a work which Dunkin describes as supported
-by the farmers and their landlords and as having caught their
-strain), lamented the wretched state of the land. ‘I made
-various inquiries into the present value of it by rights of commonage;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-but could ascertain no more than the general fact,
-of its being to a very beggarly amount.... Upon the
-whole, the present produce must be quite contemptible, when
-compared with the benefit which would result from enclosing
-it. And I cannot but remark, that such a tract of waste land
-in summer, and covered the winter through with water, to
-remain in such a state, within five miles of Oxford and the
-Thames, in a kingdom that regularly imports to the amount
-of a million sterling in corn, and is almost periodically visited
-with apprehensions of want&mdash;is a scandal to the national
-policy.... If drained and enclosed, it is said that no difficulty
-would occur in letting it at 30s. per acre, and some assert
-even 40s.’ (p. 228).</p>
-
-<p>When the new application was made in November 1814, it
-was again referred to a Committee, who again had to report
-turbulent behaviour in the district concerned. Notices had
-been fixed on all the church doors on 7th August, and on three
-doors on 14th August, ‘but it was found impracticable to affix
-the Notices on the Church doors of the other two Parishes on
-that day, owing to large Mobs, armed with every description
-of offensive weapons, having assembled for the purpose of
-obstructing the persons who went to affix the Notices, and
-who were prevented by violence, and threats of immediate
-death, from approaching the Churches.’<a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> From the same
-cause no notices could be affixed on these two church doors
-on 21st or 28th August.</p>
-
-<p>These local disturbances were not allowed to check the
-career of the Bill. It was read a first time on 21st February,
-and a second time on 7th March. But meanwhile some
-serious flaws had been discovered. The Duke of Marlborough
-and the Earl of Abingdon both petitioned against it. The
-Committee, however, were able to introduce amendments
-that satisfied both these powerful personages, and on 1st May
-Mr. Fane reported from the Committee that no persons had
-appeared for the said petitions, and that the parties concerned
-had consented to the satisfaction of the Committee, and had
-also consented ‘to the changing the Commissioners therein
-named.’ Before the Report had been passed, however, a
-petition was received on behalf of Alexander Croke,<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> Esq.,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-who was now in Nova Scotia, which made further amendments
-necessary, and the Committee was empowered to send
-for persons, papers and records. Meanwhile the humbler
-individuals whose future was imperilled were also bestirring
-themselves. They applied to the Keeper of the Records in
-the Augmentation Office for a report on the history of Otmoor.
-This Report, which is published at length by Dunkin,<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> states
-that in spite of laborious research no mention of Otmoor
-could be found in any single record from the time of William
-the Conqueror to the present day. Even <i>Doomsday Book</i> contained
-no reference to it. Nowhere did it appear in what
-manor Otmoor was comprehended, nor was there any record
-that any of the lords of neighbouring manors had ever been
-made capable of enjoying any rights of common upon it.
-The custom of usage without stint, in fact, pointed to some
-grant before the memory of man, and made it unlikely that
-any lord of the manor had ever had absolute right of soil.
-Armed, no doubt, with this learned report, some ‘Freeholders,
-Landholders, Cottagers and Persons’ residing in four parishes
-sent up a petition asking to be heard against the Bill. But
-they were too late: their petition was ordered to lie on the
-Table, and the Bill passed the Commons the same day (26th
-June) and received the Royal Assent on 12th July.</p>
-
-<p>The Act directed that one-sixteenth of the whole (which
-was stated to be over 4000 acres) should be given to the
-Lord of the Manor of Beckley, Lord Abingdon, in compensation
-of his rights of soil, and one-eighth as composition for all
-tithes. Thus Lord Abingdon received, to start with, about
-750 acres. The residue was to be allotted among the various
-parishes, townships and hamlets, each allotment to be held
-as a common pasture for the township. So far, beyond the
-fact that Lord Abingdon had taken off more than a sixth
-part of their common pasture, and that the pasture was now
-divided up into different parts, it did not seem that the ordinary
-inhabitants were much affected. The sting lay in the arrangements
-for the future of these divided common pastures.
-‘And if at any future time the major part in value of the
-several persons interested in such plot or parcels of land,
-should require a separate division of the said land, he (the
-commissioner) is directed to divide and allot the same among
-the several proprietors, in proportion to their individual rights
-and interests therein.’<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span></p>
-
-<p>We have, fortunately, a very clear statement of the way in
-which the ‘rights and interests’ of the poorer inhabitants of
-the Otmoor towns were regarded in the enclosure. These
-inhabitants, it must be remembered, had enjoyed rights of
-common without any stint from time immemorial, simply
-by virtue of living in the district. In a letter from ‘An Otmoor
-Proprietor’ to the Oxford papers in 1830, the writer (Sir
-Alexander Croke himself?), who was evidently a man of some
-local importance, explains that by the general rule of law a
-commoner is not entitled to turn on to the common more
-cattle than are sufficient to manure and stock the land to which
-the right of common is annexed. Accordingly, houses without
-land attached to them cannot, strictly speaking, claim a
-right of common. How then explain the state of affairs at
-Otmoor, where all the inhabitants, landed or landless, enjoyed
-the same rights? By prescription, he answers, mere houses
-do in point of fact sometimes acquire a right of common, but
-this right, though it may be said to be without stint, is in
-reality always liable to be stinted by law. Hence, when a
-common like Otmoor is enclosed, the allotments are made as
-elsewhere in proportion to the amount of land possessed by
-each commoner, whilst a ‘proportionable share’ is thrown
-in to those who own mere houses. But even this share, he
-points out, does not necessarily belong to the person who has
-been exercising the right of common, unless he happens to
-own his own house. It belongs to his landlord, who alone is
-entitled to compensation. A superficial observer might
-perhaps think this a hardship, but in point of fact it is quite
-just. The tenants, occupying the houses, must have been
-paying a higher rent in consideration of the right attached
-to the houses, and they have always been liable to be turned
-out by the landlord at will. ‘They had no permanent interest,
-and it has been decided by the law that <i>no man can have any
-right in any common, as belonging to a house, wherein he has
-no interest but only habitation</i>: so that the poor, as such, had
-no right to the common whatever.’<a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a></p>
-
-<p>The results of the Act, framed and administered on these
-lines, were described by Dunkin,<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> writing in 1823, as follows:
-‘It now only remains to notice the effect of the operation
-of this act. On the division of the land allotted to the
-respective townships, a certain portion was assigned to each
-cottager in lieu of his accustomed commonage, but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-delivery of the allotment did not take place, unless the party
-to whom it was assigned paid his share of the expenses
-incurred in draining and dividing the waste: and he was also
-further directed to enclose the same with a fence. The poverty
-of the cottager in general prevented his compliance with
-these conditions, and he was necessitated to sell his share for
-any paltry sum that was offered. In the spring of 1819,
-several persons at Charlton and elsewhere made profitable
-speculations by purchasing these commons for £5 each, and
-afterwards prevailing on the commissioners to throw them
-into one lot, thus forming a valuable estate. In this way
-was Otmoor lost to the poor man, and awarded to the rich,
-under the specious idea of benefitting the public.’ The
-expenses of the Act, it may be mentioned, came to something
-between £20,000 and £30,000, or more than the fee-simple
-of the soil.<a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
-
-<p>Enclosed Otmoor did not fulfil Arthur Young’s hopes:
-‘... instead of the expected improvement in the quality
-of the soil, it has been rendered almost totally worthless;
-a great proportion being at this moment over-rated at 5s. an
-acre yearly rent, few crops yielding any more than barely
-sufficient to pay for labour and seed.’<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> This excess of
-expenses over profits was adduced by the ‘Otmoor proprietor,’
-to whom we have already referred, as an illustration of the
-public-spirited self-sacrifice of the enclosers, who were paying
-out of their own pockets for a national benefit, and by making
-some, at any rate, of the land capable of cultivation, were
-enabling the poor to have ‘an honest employment, instead of
-losing their time in idleness and waste.’<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> But fifteen years
-of this ‘honest employment’ failed to reconcile the poor
-to their new position, and in 1830 they were able to express
-their feelings in a striking manner.<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the course of his drainage operations, the commissioner
-had made a new channel for the river Ray, at a higher level,
-with the disastrous result that the Ray overflowed into a
-valuable tract of low land above Otmoor. For two years
-the farmers of this tract suffered severe losses (one farmer was
-said to have lost £400 in that time), then they took the law<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-into their own hands, and in June 1829 cut the embankments,
-so that the waters of the Ray again flowed over Otmoor and
-left their valuable land unharmed. Twenty-two farmers
-were indicted for felony for this act, but they were acquitted
-at the Assizes, under the direction of Mr. Justice Parke, on the
-grounds that the farmers had a right to abate the nuisance,
-and that the commissioner had exceeded his powers in making
-this new channel and embankment.</p>
-
-<p>This judgment produced a profound impression on the
-Otmoor farmers and cottagers. They misread it to mean
-that all proceedings under the Enclosure Act were illegal
-and therefore null and void, and they determined to regain
-their lost privileges. Disturbances began at the end of August
-(28th August). For about a week, straggling parties of
-enthusiasts paraded the moor, cutting down fences here and
-there. A son of Sir Alexander Croke came out to one of
-these parties and ordered them to desist. He had a loaded
-pistol with him, and the moor-men, thinking, rightly or
-wrongly, that he was going to fire, wrested it from him and
-gave him a severe thrashing. Matters began to look serious:
-local sympathy with the rioters was so strong that special
-constables refused to be sworn in; the High Sheriff accordingly
-summoned the Oxfordshire Militia, and Lord Churchill’s
-troop of Yeomanry Cavalry was sent to Islip. But the
-inhabitants were not overawed. They determined to perambulate
-the bounds of Otmoor in full force, in accordance with
-the old custom. On Monday, 6th September, five hundred
-men, women and children assembled from the Otmoor towns,
-and they were joined by five hundred more from elsewhere.
-Armed with reap-hooks, hatchets, bill-hooks and duckets, they
-marched in order round the seven-mile-long boundary of
-Otmoor, destroying all the fences on their way. By noon
-their work of destruction was finished. ‘A farmer in the
-neighbourhood who witnessed the scene gives a ludicrous
-description of the zeal and perseverance of the women and
-children as well as the men, and the ease and composure with
-which they waded through depths of mud and water and
-overcame every obstacle in their march. He adds that he did
-not hear any threatening expressions against any person or
-his property, and he does not believe any individuals present
-entertained any feeling or wish beyond the assertion of what
-they conceived (whether correctly or erroneously) to be their
-prescriptive and inalienable right, and of which they speak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-precisely as the freemen of Oxford would describe their right
-to Port Meadow.’<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
-
-<p>By the time the destruction of fences was complete, Lord
-Churchill’s troop of yeomanry came up to the destroying
-band: the Riot Act was read, but the moormen refused to
-disperse. Sixty or seventy of them were thereupon seized
-and examined, with the result that forty-four were sent
-off to Oxford Gaol in wagons, under an escort of yeomanry.
-Now it happened to be the day of St. Giles’ Fair, and the
-street of St. Giles, along which the yeomanry brought their
-prisoners, was crowded with countryfolk and townsfolk, most
-of whom held strong views on the Otmoor question. The
-men in the wagons raised the cry ‘Otmoor for ever,’ the
-crowd took it up, and attacked the yeomen with great
-violence, hurling brickbats, stones and sticks at them from
-every side. The yeomen managed to get their prisoners as
-far as the turning down Beaumont Street, but there they
-were overpowered, and all forty-four prisoners escaped.
-At Otmoor itself peace now reigned. Through the broken
-fences cattle were turned in to graze on all the enclosures,
-and the villagers even appointed a herdsman to look after
-them. The inhabitants of the seven Otmoor towns formed
-an association called ‘the Otmoor Association,’ which boldly
-declared that ‘the Right of Common on Otmoor was always
-in the inhabitants, and that a non-resident proprietor had no
-Right of Common thereon,’ and determined to raise subscriptions
-for legal expenses in defence of their right, calling upon
-‘the pecuniary aid of a liberal and benevolent public ...
-to assist them in attempting to restore Otmoor once more to
-its original state.’<a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the authorities who had lost their prisoners once,
-sent down a stronger force to take them next time, and although
-at the Oxford City Sessions a bill of indictment against William
-Price and others for riot in St. Giles and rescue of the prisoners
-was thrown out, at the County Sessions the Grand Jury found
-a true Bill against the same William Price and others for the
-same offence, and also against Cooper and others for riot at
-Otmoor. The prisoners were tried at the Oxford Assizes next
-month, before Mr. Justice Bosanquet and Sir John Patteson.
-The jury returned a verdict which shows the strength of public
-opinion. ‘We find the defendants guilty of having been present
-at an unlawful assembly on the 6th September at Otmoor, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-it is the unanimous wish of the Jury to recommend all the
-parties to the merciful consideration of the Court.’ The judges
-responded to this appeal and the longest sentence inflicted
-was four months’ imprisonment.<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a></p>
-
-<p>The original enclosure was now fifteen years old, but
-Otmoor was still in rebellion, and the Home Office Papers
-of the next two years contain frequent applications for troops
-from Lord Macclesfield, Lord-Lieutenant, Sir Alexander Croke
-and other magistrates. Whenever there was a full moon,
-the patriots of the moor turned out and pulled down the
-fences. How strong was the local resentment of the overriding
-of all the rights and traditions of the commoners may be
-seen not only from the language of one magistrate writing
-to Lord Melbourne in January 1832: ‘all the towns in
-the neighbourhood of Otmoor are more or less infected
-with the feelings of the most violent, and cannot at all
-be depended on’: but also from a resolution passed by the
-magistrates at Oxford in February of that year, declaring that
-no constabulary force that the magistrates could raise would
-be equal to suppressing the Otmoor outrages, and asking for
-soldiers. The appeal ended with this significant warning: ‘Any
-force which Government may send down should not remain
-for a length of time together, but that to avoid the possibility
-of an undue connexion between the people and the Military,
-a succession of troops should be observed.’ So long and so
-bitter was the civil war roused by an enclosure which Parliament
-had sanctioned in absolute disregard of the opinions or the
-traditions or the circumstances of the mass of the people it
-affected.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE VILLAGE AFTER ENCLOSURE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>THE governing class continued its policy of extinguishing
-the old village life and all the relationships and interests
-attached to it, with unsparing and unhesitating hand; and
-as its policy progressed there were displayed all the consequences
-predicted by its critics. Agriculture was revolutionised:
-rents leapt up: England seemed to be triumphing
-over the difficulties of a war with half the world. But it had
-one great permanent result which the rulers of England
-ignored. The anchorage of the poor was gone.</p>
-
-<p>For enclosure was fatal to three classes: the small farmer,
-the cottager, and the squatter. To all of these classes their
-common rights were worth more than anything they received
-in return. Their position was just the opposite of that of
-the lord of the manor. The lord of the manor was given a
-certain quantity of land (the conventional proportion was
-one-sixteenth<a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a>) in lieu of his surface rights, and that compact
-allotment was infinitely more valuable than the rights so compensated.
-Similarly the tithe-owner stood to gain with the
-increased rent. The large farmer’s interests were also in
-enclosure, which gave him a wider field for his capital and
-enterprise. The other classes stood to lose.</p>
-
-<p>For even if the small farmer received strict justice in the
-division of the common fields, his share in the legal costs
-and the additional expense of fencing his own allotments often
-overwhelmed him, and he was obliged to sell his property.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span><a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a>
-The expenses were always very heavy, and in some cases
-amounted to £5 an acre.<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> The lord of the manor and the
-tithe-owner could afford to bear their share, because they
-were enriched by enclosure: the classes that were impoverished
-by enclosure were ruined when they had to pay for the very
-proceeding that had made them the poorer. The promoter
-of the General Enclosure Bill of 1796, it will be remembered,
-had proposed to exempt the poor from the expense of fencing,
-but the Select Committee disapproved, and the only persons
-exempted in the cases we have examined were the lords of the
-manor or tithe-owners.</p>
-
-<p>If these expenses still left the small farmer on his feet, he
-found himself deprived of the use of the fallow and stubble
-pasture, which had been almost as indispensable to him as the
-land he cultivated. ‘Strip the small farms of the benefit
-of the commons,’ said one observer, ‘and they are all at one
-stroke levelled to the ground.’<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> It was a common clause in
-Enclosure Acts that no sheep were to be depastured on allotments
-for seven years.<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> The small farmer either emigrated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>
-to America or to an industrial town, or became a day labourer.
-His fate in the last resort may perhaps be illustrated by the
-account given by the historian of <i>Oxfordshire</i> of the enclosure
-of Merton. ‘About the middle of last century a very considerable
-alteration was produced in the relative situation of different
-classes in the village. The Act of Parliament for the inclosure
-of the fields having annulled all leases, and the inclosure itself
-facilitated the plan of throwing several small farms into a
-few large bargains,<a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> the holders of the farms who had heretofore
-lived in comparative plenty, became suddenly reduced to
-the situation of labourers, and in a few years were necessitated
-to throw themselves and their families upon the parish. The
-overgrown farmers who had fattened upon this alteration,
-feeling the pressure of the new burden, determined if possible
-to free themselves: they accordingly decided upon reducing
-the allowance of these poor to the lowest ratio,<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> and resolved
-to have no more servants so that their parishioners might
-experience no further increase from that source. In a few
-years the numbers of the poor rapidly declined: the more
-aged sank into their graves, and the youth, warned by their
-parents’ sufferings, sought a settlement elsewhere. The
-farmers, rejoicing in the success of their scheme, procured the
-demolition of the cottages, and thus endeavoured to secure
-themselves and their successors from the future expenses of
-supporting an increased population, so that in 1821 the parish
-numbered only thirty houses inhabited by thirty-four families.’<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a>
-Another writer gave an account of the results of a Norfolk
-enclosure. ‘In passing through a village near Swaffham, in
-the County of Norfolk a few years ago, to my great mortification
-I beheld the houses tumbling into ruins, and the
-common fields all enclosed; upon enquiring into the cause
-of this melancholy alteration, I was informed that a gentleman
-of Lynn had bought that township and the next adjoining
-to it: that he had thrown the one into three, and the
-other into four farms; which before the enclosure were in
-about twenty farms: and upon my further enquiring what
-was becoming of the farmers who were turned out, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-answer was that some of them were dead and the rest were
-become labourers.’<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a></p>
-
-<p>The effect on the cottager can best be described by saying
-that before enclosure the cottager was a labourer with land,
-after enclosure he was a labourer without land. The economic
-basis of his independence was destroyed. In the first place,
-he lost a great many rights for which he received no compensation.
-There were, for instance, the cases mentioned
-by Mr. Henry Homer (1719&ndash;1791), Rector of Birdingbury
-and Chaplain to Lord Leigh, in the pamphlet he published
-in 1769,<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> where the cottagers lost the privileges of cutting
-furze and turf on the common land, the proprietor contending
-that they had no right to these privileges, but only enjoyed
-them by his indulgence. In every other case, Mr. Homer
-urged, uninterrupted, immemorial usage gives a legal sanction
-even to encroachments. ‘Why should the poor, as poor, be
-excluded from the benefit of this general Indulgence; or why
-should any set of proprietors avail themselves of the inability
-of the poor to contend with them, to get possession of more
-than they enjoyed?’<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></p>
-
-<p>Another right that was often lost was the prescriptive
-right of keeping a cow. The <i>General Report on Enclosures</i>
-(p. 12) records the results of a careful inquiry made in a
-journey of 1600 miles, which showed that before enclosure
-cottagers often kept cows without a legal right, and that
-nothing was given them for the practice. Other cottagers
-kept cows by right of hiring their cottages and common
-rights, and on enclosure the land was thrown into a farm,
-and the cottager had to sell his cow. Two examples taken
-from the <i>Bedfordshire Report</i> illustrate the consequences of
-enclosure to the small man. One is from Maulden:<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> ‘The
-common was very extensive. I conversed with a farmer,
-and several cottagers. One of them said, enclosing would
-ruin England; it was worse than ten wars. Why, my friend,
-what have you lost by it? <i>I kept four cows before the parish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-was enclosed, and now I don’t keep so much as a goose; and you
-ask me what I lose by it!</i>’<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> The other is from Sandy:<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> ‘This
-parish was very peculiarly circumstanced; it abounds with
-gardeners, many cultivating their little freeholds, so that on
-the enclosure, there were found to be sixty-three proprietors,
-though nine-tenths, perhaps, of the whole belonged to Sir
-P. Monoux and Mr. Pym. These men kept cows on the
-boggy common, and cut fern for litter on the warren, by which
-means they were enabled to raise manure for their gardens,
-besides fuel in plenty: the small allotment of an acre and a
-half, however good the land, has been no compensation for
-what they were deprived of. They complain heavily, and
-know not how they will now manage to raise manure. This
-was no reason to preserve the deserts in their old state, but
-an ample one for giving a full compensation.’</p>
-
-<p>Lord Winchilsea stated in his letter to the Board of Agriculture
-in 1796: ‘Whoever travels through the Midland
-Counties and will take the trouble of inquiring, will generally
-receive for answer that formerly there were a great many
-cottagers who kept cows, but that the land is now thrown to
-the farmers, and if he inquires still further, he will find that
-in those parishes the Poor Rates have increased in an amazing
-degree more than according to the average rise throughout
-England.’</p>
-
-<p>These cottagers often received nothing at all for the right
-they had lost, the compensation going to the owner of the
-cottage only. But even those cottagers who owned their cottage
-received in return for their common right something infinitely
-less valuable. For a tiny allotment was worth much less than
-a common right, especially if the allotment was at a distance
-from their cottage, and though the Haute Huntre Act binds
-the commissioners to give Lord FitzWilliam an allotment near
-his gardens, there was nothing in any Act that we have seen
-to oblige the commissioners to give the cottager an allotment
-at his door. And the cottagers had to fence their allotments
-or forfeit them. Anybody who glances at an award will
-understand what this meant. It is easy, for example, to
-imagine what happened under this provision to the following<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>
-cottagers at Stanwell: Edmund Jordan (1&frac12; acres) J. and F.
-Ride (each 1&frac14; acres) T. L. Rogers (1&frac14; acres) Brooker Derby (1&frac14;)
-Mary Gulliver (1&frac14; acres) Anne Higgs (1&frac14;) H. Isherwood (1&frac14;)
-William Kent (1&frac14;) Elizabeth Carr (1 acre) Thomas Nash
-(1 acre) R. Ride (just under 1 acre) William Robinson (just
-under 1 acre) William Cox (&frac34; acre) John Carter (&frac34; acre)
-William Porter (&frac34; acre) Thomas King (&frac12; acre) John Hetherington
-(under &frac12; an acre) J. Trout (&frac14; acre and 4 perches)
-and Charles Burkhead (12 perches). It would be interesting
-to know how many of these small parcels of land found their
-way into the hands of Sir William Gibbons and Mr. Edmund
-Hill.</p>
-
-<p>The Louth award is still more interesting from this point
-of view. J. Trout and Charles Burkhead passing rich, the one
-on &frac14; acre and 4 perches, the other on 12 perches, had only to
-pay their share of the expenses of the enclosure, and for their
-own fencing. Sir William Gibbons was too magnanimous
-a man to ask them to fence his 500 acres as well. But at
-Louth the tithe-owners, who took more than a third of the
-whole, were excused their share of the costs, and also had their
-fencing done for them by the other proprietors. The prebendary
-and the vicar charged the expenses of fencing their
-600 acres on persons like Elizabeth Bryan who went off
-with 39 perches, Ann Dunn (35 perches), Naomi Hodgson,
-widow (35 perches), John Betts (34 perches), Elizabeth Atkins
-(32 perches), Will Boswell (31 perches), Elizabeth Eycon
-(28 perches), Ann Hubbard, widow (15 perches), and Ann
-Metcalf, whose share of the spoil was 14 perches. The award
-shows that there were 67 persons who received an acre or
-less. Cottagers who received such allotments and had to
-fence them had no alternative but to sell, and little to do
-with the money but to drink it. This is the testimony of the
-<i>General Report on Enclosures</i>.<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a></p>
-
-<p>The squatters, though they are often spoken of as cottagers,
-must be distinguished from the cottager in regard to their
-legal and historical position. They were in a sense outside
-the original village economy. The cottager was, so to speak,
-an aboriginal poor man: the squatter a poor alien. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-settled on a waste, built a cottage, and got together a few
-geese or sheep, perhaps even a horse or a cow, and proceeded to
-cultivate the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment of encroachments seems to have varied very
-greatly, as the cases analysed in the Appendix show, and there
-was no settled rule. Squatters of less than twenty years’
-standing seldom received any consideration beyond the privilege
-of buying their encroachment. Squatters of more than
-twenty or forty years’ standing, as the case might be, were
-often allowed to keep their encroachments, and in some cases
-were treated like cottagers, with a claim to an allotment. But,
-of course, like the cottagers, they lost their common rights.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly, enclosure swept away the bureaucracy of the old
-village: the viewers of fields and letters of the cattle, who
-had general supervision of the arrangements for pasturing
-sheep or cows in the common meadow, the common shepherd,
-the chimney peepers who saw that the chimneys were kept
-properly, the hayward, or pinder, who looked after the pound.
-Most of these little officials of the village court had been paid
-either in land or by fees. When it was proposed to abolish
-Parliamentary Enclosure, and to substitute a General Enclosure
-Bill, the Parliamentary officials, who made large sums
-out of fees from Enclosure Bills, were to receive compensation;
-but there was no talk of compensation for the stolen
-livelihood of a pinder or a chimney peeper, as there had been
-for the lost pickings of the officials of Parliament, or as there
-was whenever an unhappy aristocrat was made to surrender
-one of his sinecures. George Selwyn, who had been Paymaster
-of the Works for twenty-seven years at the time that
-Burke’s Act of 1782 deprived him of that profitable title, was
-not allowed to languish very long on the two sinecures that
-were left to him. In 1784 Pitt consoled him with the lucrative
-name of Surveyor-General of Crown Lands. The pinder and
-the viewer received a different kind of justice. For the rich
-there is compensation, as the weaver said in Disraeli’s <i>Sybil</i>,
-but ‘sympathy is the solace of the poor.’ In this case, if
-the truth be told, even this solace was not administered with
-too liberal a hand.</p>
-
-<p>All these classes and interests were scattered by enclosure,
-but it was not one generation alone that was struck down by
-the blow. For the commons were the patrimony of the poor.
-The commoner’s child, however needy, was born with a spoon
-in his mouth. He came into a world in which he had a share
-and a place. The civilisation which was now submerged had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-spelt a sort of independence for the obscure lineage of the
-village. It had represented, too, the importance of the interest
-of the community in its soil, and in this aspect also the robbery
-of the present was less important than the robbery of the
-future. For one act of confiscation blotted out a principle of
-permanent value to the State.</p>
-
-<p>The immediate consequences of this policy were only partially
-visible to the governing or the cultivated classes. The
-rulers of England took it for granted that the losses of individuals
-were the gains of the State, and that the distresses
-of the poor were the condition of permanent advance.
-Modern apologists have adopted the same view; and the
-popular resistance to enclosure is often compared to the wild
-and passionate fury that broke against the spinning and
-weaving machines, the symbols and engines of the Industrial
-Revolution. History has drawn a curtain over those days of
-exile and suffering, when cottages were pulled down as if by
-an invader’s hand, and families that had lived for centuries
-in their dales or on their small farms and commons were driven
-before the torrent, losing</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Estate and house ... and all their sheep,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A pretty flock, and which for aught I know</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Had clothed the Ewbanks for a thousand years.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Ancient possessions and ancient families disappeared. But
-the first consequence was not the worst consequence: so far
-from compensating for this misery, the ultimate result was
-still more disastrous. The governing class killed by this policy
-the spirit of a race. The petitions that are buried with their
-brief and unavailing pathos in the <i>Journals</i> of the House of
-Commons are the last voice of village independence, and the
-unnamed commoners who braved the dangers of resistance to
-send their doomed protests to the House of Commons that
-obeyed their lords, were the last of the English peasants.
-These were the men, it is not unreasonable to believe, whom
-Gray had in mind when he <span class="lock">wrote:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Some village Hampden that with dauntless breast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The little tyrant of his fields withstood.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>As we read the descriptions of the state of France before the
-Revolution, there is one fact that comforts the imagination
-and braces the heart. We read of the intolerable services of
-the peasant, of his forced labour, his confiscated harvests, his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-crushing burdens, his painful and humiliating tasks, including
-in some cases even the duty of protecting the sleep of the
-seigneur from the croaking of the neighbouring marshes.
-The mind of Arthur Young was filled with this impression of
-unsupportable servitude. But a more discerning eye might
-have perceived a truth that escaped the English traveller.
-It is contained in an entry that often greets us in the official
-reports on the state of the provinces: <i>ce seigneur litige avec
-ses vassaux</i>. Those few words flash like a gleam of the dawn
-across this sombre and melancholy page. The peasant may
-be overwhelmed by the dîme, the taille, the corvée, the hundred
-and one services that knit his tenure to the caprice of a lord:
-he may be wretched, brutal, ignorant, ill-clothed, ill-fed, and
-ill-housed: but he has not lost his status: he is not a casual
-figure in a drifting proletariat: he belongs to a community
-that can withstand the seigneur, dispute his claims at law,
-resume its rights, recover its possessions, and establish, one
-day, its independence.</p>
-
-<p>In England the aristocracy destroyed the promise of such a
-development when it broke the back of the peasant community.
-The enclosures created a new organisation of classes.
-The peasant with rights and a status, with a share in the
-fortunes and government of his village, standing in rags, but
-standing on his feet, makes way for the labourer with no
-corporate rights to defend, no corporate power to invoke, no
-property to cherish, no ambition to pursue, bent beneath the
-fear of his masters, and the weight of a future without hope.
-No class in the world has so beaten and crouching a history,
-and if the blazing ricks in 1830 once threatened his rulers with
-the anguish of his despair, in no chapter of that history could
-it have been written, ‘This parish is at law with its squire.’
-For the parish was no longer the community that offered
-the labourer friendship and sheltered his freedom: it was
-merely the shadow of his poverty, his helplessness, and his
-shame. ‘Go to an ale-house kitchen of an old enclosed
-country, and there you will see the origin of poverty and poor-rates.
-For whom are they to be sober? For whom are they to
-save? For the parish? If I am diligent, shall I have leave
-to build a cottage? If I am sober, shall I have land for a cow?
-If I am frugal, shall I have half an acre of potatoes? You
-offer no motives; you have nothing but a parish officer and
-a workhouse!&mdash;Bring me another pot&mdash;.’<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE LABOURER IN 1795</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>In an unenclosed village, as we have seen, the normal labourer
-did not depend on his wages alone. His livelihood was made
-up from various sources. His firing he took from the waste,
-he had a cow or a pig wandering on the common pasture,
-perhaps he raised a little crop on a strip in the common fields.
-He was not merely a wage earner, receiving so much money a
-week or a day for his labour, and buying all the necessaries
-of life at a shop: he received wages as a labourer, but in part
-he maintained himself as a producer. Further, the actual
-money revenue of the family was not limited to the labourer’s
-earnings, for the domestic industries that flourished in the
-village gave employment to his wife and children.</p>
-
-<p>In an enclosed village at the end of the eighteenth century
-the position of the agricultural labourer was very different.
-All his auxiliary resources had been taken from him, and he
-was now a wage earner and nothing more. Enclosure had
-robbed him of the strip that he tilled, of the cow that he kept
-on the village pasture, of the fuel that he picked up in the
-woods, and of the turf that he tore from the common. And
-while a social revolution had swept away his possessions, an
-industrial revolution had swept away his family’s earnings.
-To families living on the scale of the village poor, each of these
-losses was a crippling blow, and the total effect of the changes
-was to destroy their economic independence.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these auxiliary resources were not valued very
-highly by the upper classes, and many champions of enclosure
-proved to their own satisfaction that the advantage, for
-example, of the right of cutting fuel was quite illusory. Such
-writers had a very superficial knowledge of the lot of the
-cottagers. They argued that it would be more economical for
-the labourer to spend on his ordinary employment the time he
-devoted to cutting fuel and turf, and to buy firing out of his
-wages: an argument from the theory of the division of labour
-that assumed that employment was constant. Fortunately we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-have, thanks to Davies, a very careful calculation that enables
-us to form rather a closer judgment. He estimates<a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> that a
-man could cut nearly enough in a week to serve his family all
-the year, and as the farmers will give the carriage of it in
-return for the ashes, he puts the total cost at 10s. a year, or
-a little more than a week’s wages.<a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> If we compare this with
-his accounts of the cost of fuel elsewhere, we soon see how
-essential common fuel rights were to a labourer’s economy.
-At Sidlesham in Surrey, for instance,<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> in the expenses of
-five families of labourers, the fuel varies from £1, 15s. 0d. up
-to £4, 3s. 0d., with an average of £2, 8s. 0d. per family. It
-must be remembered, too, that the sum of 10s. for fuel from
-the common is calculated on the assumption that the man
-would otherwise be working; whereas, in reality, he could cut
-his turf in slack times and in odd hours, when there was no
-money to be made by working for some one else.</p>
-
-<p>There was another respect in which the resources of a labouring
-family were diminished towards the end of the century,
-and this too was a loss that the rich thought trifling.
-From time immemorial the labourer had sent his wife and
-children into the fields to glean or leaze after the harvest.
-The profits of gleaning, under the old, unimproved system of
-agriculture, were very considerable. Eden says of Rode in
-Northamptonshire, where agriculture was in a ‘wretched
-state, from the land being in common-fields,’ that ‘several
-families will gather as much wheat as will serve them for
-bread the whole year, and as many beans as will keep a pig.’<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a>
-From this point of view enclosure, with its improved methods
-of agriculture, meant a sensible loss to the poor of the parish,
-but even when there was less to be gleaned the privilege was
-by no means unimportant. A correspondent in the <i>Annals
-of Agriculture</i>,<a id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> writing evidently of land under improved
-cultivation in Shropshire, estimates that a wife can glean
-three or four bushels. The consumption of wheat, exclusive
-of other food, by a labourer’s family he puts at half a bushel a
-week at least; the price of wheat at 13s. 6d. a bushel; the
-labourer’s wages at 7s. or 8s. To such a family gleaning
-rights represented the equivalent of some six or seven weeks’
-wages.</p>
-
-<p>With the introduction of large farming these customary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-rights were in danger. It was a nuisance for the farmer to
-have his fenced fields suddenly invaded by bands of women
-and children. The ears to be picked up were now few and
-far between, and there was a risk that the labourers, husbands
-and fathers of the gleaners, might wink at small thefts from
-the sheaves. Thus it was that customary rights, which had
-never been questioned before, and seemed to go back to the
-Bible itself, came to be the subject of dispute. On the whole
-question of gleaning there is an animated controversy in the
-<i>Annals of Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_144" href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> between Capel Lofft,<a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> a romantic
-Suffolk Liberal, who took the side of the gleaners, and Ruggles,<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a>
-the historian, who argued against them. Capel Lofft was a
-humane and chivalrous magistrate who, unfortunately for the
-Suffolk poor, was struck off the Commission of the Peace a
-few years later, apparently at the instance of the Duke of
-Portland, for persuading the Deputy-Sheriff to postpone the
-execution of a girl sentenced to death for stealing, until he
-had presented a memorial to the Crown praying for clemency.
-The chief arguments on the side of the gleaners
-were (1) that immemorial custom gave legal right, according
-to the maxim, <i>consuetudo angliae lex est angliae communis</i>;
-(2) that Blackstone had recognised the right in his <i>Commentaries</i>,
-basing his opinion upon Hale and Gilbert, ‘Also it
-hath been said, that by the common law and customs of
-England the poor are allowed to enter and glean on another’s
-ground after harvest without being guilty of trespass, which
-humane provision seems borrowed from the Mosaic law’
-(iii. 212, 1st edition); (3) that in Ireland the right was recognised
-by statutes of Henry <span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span>’s reign, which modified it;
-(4) that it was a custom that helped to keep the poor free from
-degrading dependence on poor relief. It was argued, on the
-other hand, by those who denied the right to glean, that though
-the custom had existed from time immemorial, it did not rest
-on any basis of actual right, and that no legal sanction to it
-had ever been explicitly given, Blackstone and the authorities
-on whom he relied being too vague to be considered final.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-Further, the custom was demoralising to the poor; it led to
-idleness, ‘how many days during the harvest are lost by the
-mother of a family and all her children, in wandering about
-from field to field, to glean what does not repay them the
-wear of their cloathes in seeking’; it led to pilfering from the
-temptation to take handfuls from the swarth or shock; and
-it was deplorable that on a good-humoured permission should
-be grafted ‘a legal claim, in its use and exercise so nearly
-approaching to licentiousness.’</p>
-
-<p>Whilst this controversy was going on, the legal question
-was decided against the poor by a majority of judges in the
-Court of Common Pleas in 1788. One judge, Sir Henry
-Gould,<a id="FNanchor_147" href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> dissented in a learned judgment; the majority
-based their decision partly on the mischievous consequences
-of the practice to the poor. The poor never lost a right
-without being congratulated by the rich on gaining something
-better. It did not, of course, follow from this decision
-that the practice necessarily ceased altogether, but from
-that time it was a privilege given by the farmer at his own
-discretion, and he could warn off obnoxious or ‘saucy’
-persons from his fields. Moreover, the dearer the corn, and
-the more important the privilege for the poor, the more the
-farmer was disinclined to largess the precious ears. Capel
-Lofft had pleaded that with improved agriculture the gleaners
-could pick up so little that that little should not be grudged, but
-the farmer found that under famine prices this little was worth
-more to him than the careless scatterings of earlier times.<a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a></p>
-
-<p>The loss of his cow and his produce and his common and
-traditional rights was rendered particularly serious to the
-labourer by the general growth of prices. For enclosure which
-had produced the agrarian proletariat, had raised the cost of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-living for him. The accepted opinion that under enclosure
-England became immensely more productive tends to obscure
-the truth that the agricultural labourer suffered in his character
-of consumer, as well as in his character of producer, when the
-small farms and the commons disappeared. Not only had
-he to buy the food that formerly he had produced himself,
-but he had to buy it in a rising market. Adam Smith admitted
-that the rise of price of poultry and pork had been accelerated
-by enclosure, and Nathaniel Kent laid stress on the diminution
-in the supply of these and other small provisions. Kent has
-described the change in the position of the labourers in this
-respect: ‘Formerly they could buy milk, butter, and many
-other small articles in every parish, in whatever quantity
-they are wanted. But since small farms have decreased in
-number, no such articles are to be had; for the great farmers
-have no idea of retailing such small commodities, and those
-who do retail them carry them all to town. A farmer is even
-unwilling to sell the labourer who works for him a bushel of
-wheat, which he might get ground for three or four pence a
-bushel. For want of this advantage he is driven to the mealman
-or baker, who, in the ordinary course of their profit, get
-at least ten per cent. of them, upon this principal article
-of their consumption.’<a id="FNanchor_149" href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a> Davies, the author of <i>The Case of
-Labourers in Husbandry</i>, thus describes the new method of
-distribution: ‘The great farmer deals in a wholesale way
-with the miller: the miller with the mealman: the mealman
-with the shopkeeper, of which last the poor man buys his
-flour by the bushel. For neither the miller nor the mealman
-will sell the labourer a less quantity than a sack of flour, under
-the retail price of shops, and the poor man’s pocket will seldom
-allow of his buying a whole sack at once.’<a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is clear from these facts that it would have needed a very
-large increase of wages to compensate the labourer for his
-losses under enclosure. But real wages, instead of rising,
-had fallen, and fallen far. The writer of the <i>Bedfordshire
-Report</i> (p. 67), comparing the period of 1730&ndash;50 with that of
-1802&ndash;6 in respect of prices of wheat and labour, points out
-that to enable him to purchase equal quantities of bread in
-the second period and in the first, the pay of the day labourer
-in the second period should have been 2s. a day, whereas it
-was 1s. 6d. Nathaniel Kent, writing in 1796,<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> says that in
-the last forty or fifty years the price of provisions had gone
-up by 60 per cent., and wages by 25 per cent., ‘but this is not
-all, for the sources of the market which used to feed him are
-in a great measure cut off since the system of large farms has
-been so much encouraged.’ Professor Levy estimates that
-wages rose between 1760 and 1813 by 60 per cent., and the
-price of wheat by 130 per cent.<a id="FNanchor_152" href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> Thus the labourer who now
-lived on wages alone earned wages of a lower purchasing
-power than the wages which he had formerly supplemented
-by his own produce. Whereas his condition earlier in the
-century had been contrasted with that of Continental peasants
-greatly to his advantage in respect of quantity and variety of
-food, he was suddenly brought down to the barest necessities
-of life. Arthur Young had said a generation earlier that in
-France bread formed nineteen parts in twenty of the food of
-the people, but that in England all ranks consumed an immense
-quantity of meat, butter and cheese.<a id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> We know something
-of the manner of life of the poor in 1789 and 1795 from the
-family budgets collected by Eden and Davies from different
-parts of the country.<a id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> These budgets show that the labourers
-were rapidly sinking in this respect to the condition that
-Young had described as the condition of the poor in France.
-‘Bacon and other kinds of meat form a very small part of
-their diet, and cheese becomes a luxury.’ But even on the
-meagre food that now became the ordinary fare of the cottage,
-the labourers could not make ends meet. All the budgets tell
-the same tale of impoverished diet accompanied by an overwhelming
-strain and an actual deficit. The normal labourer,
-even with constant employment, was no longer solvent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span></p>
-
-<p>If we wish to understand fully the predicament of the
-labourer, we must remember that he was not free to roam over
-England, and try his luck in some strange village or town
-when his circumstances became desperate at home. He
-lived under the capricious tyranny of the old law of settlement,
-and enclosure had made that net a much more serious
-fact for the poor. The destruction of the commons had
-deprived him of any career within his own village; the Settlement
-Laws barred his escape out of it. It is worth while to
-consider what the Settlement Laws were, and how they acted,
-and as the subject is not uncontroversial it will be necessary
-to discuss it in some detail.</p>
-
-<p>Theoretically every person had one parish, and one only,
-in which he or she had a settlement and a right to parish relief.
-In practice it was often difficult to decide which parish had
-the duty of relief, and disputes gave rise to endless litigation.
-From this point of view eighteenth-century England was like
-a chessboard of parishes, on which the poor were moved about
-like pawns. The foundation of the various laws on the subject
-was an Act passed in Charles <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>’s reign (13 and 14 Charles <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-c. 12) in 1662. Before this Act each parish had, it is true, the
-duty of relieving its own impotent poor and of policing its own
-vagrants, and the infirm and aged were enjoined by law to
-betake themselves to their place of settlement, which might
-be their birthplace, or the place where they had lived for three
-years, but, as a rule, ‘a poor family might, without the fear
-of being sent back by the parish officers, go where they choose,
-for better wages, or more certain employment.’<a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> This Act of
-1662 abridged their liberty, and, in place of the old vagueness,
-established a new and elaborate system. The Act was
-declared to be necessary in the preamble, because ‘by reason
-of some defects in the law, poor people are not restrained from
-going from one parish to another, and therefore do endeavour
-to settle themselves in those parishes where there is the best
-stock, the largest commons or wastes to build cottages, and
-the most woods for them to burn and destroy; and when they
-have consumed it, then to another parish; and at last become
-rogues and vagabonds; to the great discouragement of parishes
-to provide stock, when it is liable to be devoured by strangers.’
-By the Act any new-comer, within forty days of arrival, could
-be ejected from a parish by an order from the magistrates,
-upon complaint from the parish officers, and removed to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-parish where he or she was last legally settled. If, however,
-the new-comer settled in a tenement of the yearly value of £10,
-or could give security for the discharge of the parish to the
-magistrates’ satisfaction, he was exempt from this provision.</p>
-
-<p>As this Act carried with it the consequence that forty days’
-residence without complaint from the parish officers gained
-the new-comer a settlement, it was an inevitable temptation to
-Parish A to smuggle its poor into Parish B, where forty days’
-residence without the knowledge of the parish officers would
-gain them a settlement. Fierce quarrels broke out between
-the parishes in consequence. To compose these it was enacted
-(1 James <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> c. 17) that the forty days’ residence were to be
-reckoned only after a written notice had been given to a
-parish officer. Even this was not enough to protect Parish B,
-and by 3 William and Mary, c. 11 (1691) it was provided
-that this notice must be read in church, immediately after
-divine service, and then registered in the book kept for
-poor’s accounts. Such a condition made it practically impossible
-for any poor man to gain a settlement by forty days’
-residence, unless his tenement were of the value of £10 a year,
-but the Act allowed an immigrant to obtain a settlement
-in any one of four ways; (1) by paying the parish taxes;
-(2) by executing a public annual office in the parish; (3) by
-serving an apprenticeship in the parish; (4) by being hired
-for a year’s service in the parish. (This, however, only applied
-to the unmarried.) In 1697 (8 and 9 William <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 30) a further
-important modification of the settlement laws was made.
-To prevent the arbitrary ejection of new-comers by parish
-officers, who feared that the fresh arrival or his children might
-somehow or other gain a settlement, it was enacted that if
-the new-comer brought with him to Parish B a certificate
-from the parish officers of Parish A taking responsibility for
-him, then he could not be removed till he became actually
-chargeable. It was further decided by this and subsequent
-Acts and by legal decisions, that the granting of a certificate
-was to be left to the discretion of the parish officers and
-magistrates, that the cost of removal fell on the certificating
-parish, and that a certificate holder could only gain a settlement
-in a new parish by renting a tenement of £10 annual
-value, or by executing a parish office, and that his apprentice
-or hired servant could not gain a settlement.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to these methods of gaining a settlement there
-were four other ways, ‘through which,’ according to Eden,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-‘it is probable that by far the greater part of the labouring
-Poor ... are actually settled.’<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> (1) Bastards, with some
-exceptions, acquired a settlement by birth<a id="FNanchor_157" href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a>; (2) legitimate
-children also acquired a settlement by birth if their father’s,
-or failing that, their mother’s legal settlement was not known;
-(3) women gained a settlement by marriage; (4) persons with
-an estate of their own were irremovable, if residing on it,
-however small it might be.</p>
-
-<p>Very few important modifications had been made in the
-laws of Settlement during the century after 1697. In 1722
-(9 George <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> c. 7) it was provided that no person was to obtain
-a settlement in any parish by the purchase of any estate or
-interest of less value than £30, to be ‘bona fide paid,’ a provision
-which suggests that parishes had connived at gifts of
-money for the purchase of estates in order to discard their
-paupers: by the same Act the payment of the scavenger
-or highway rate was declared not to confer a settlement. In
-1784 (24 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 6) soldiers, sailors and their families
-were allowed to exercise trades where they liked, and were
-not to be removable till they became actually chargeable;
-and in 1793 (33 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 54) this latter concession was
-extended to members of Friendly Societies. None of these
-concessions affected the normal labourer, and down to 1795 a
-labourer could only make his way to a new village if his own
-village would give him a certificate, or if the other village
-invited him. His liberty was entirely controlled by the
-parish officers.</p>
-
-<p>How far did the Settlement Acts operate? How far did this
-body of law really affect the comfort and liberty of the poor?
-The fiercest criticism comes from Adam Smith, whose fundamental
-instincts rebelled against so crude and brutal an interference
-with human freedom. ‘To remove a man who has
-committed no misdemeanour, from a parish where he chuses to
-reside, is an evident violation of natural liberty and justice.
-The common people of England, however, so jealous of their
-liberty, but, like the common people of most other countries,
-never rightly understanding wherein it consists, have now, for
-more than a century together, suffered themselves to be exposed
-to this oppression without a remedy. Though men of reflexion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-too, have sometimes complained of the law of settlements
-as a public grievance; yet it has never been the object of
-any general popular clamour, such as that against general
-warrants, an abusive practice undoubtedly, but such a one as
-was not likely to occasion any general oppression. There is
-scarce a poor man in England, of forty years of age, I will
-venture to say, who has not, in some part of his life, felt
-himself most cruelly oppressed by this ill-contrived law of
-settlements.’<a id="FNanchor_158" href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a></p>
-
-<p>Adam Smith’s view is supported by two contemporary
-writers on the Poor Law, Dr. Burn and Mr. Hay. Dr. Burn,
-who published a history of the Poor Law in 1764, gives this
-picture of the overseer: ‘The office of an Overseer of the Poor
-seems to be understood to be this, to keep an extraordinary
-look-out to prevent persons coming to inhabit without certificates,
-and to fly to the Justices to remove them: and if a
-man brings a certificate, then to caution the inhabitants not
-to let him a farm of £10 a year, and to take care to keep him
-out of all parish offices.’<a id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> He further says that the parish
-officers will assist a poor man in taking a farm in a neighbouring
-parish, and give him £10 for the rent. Mr. Hay, M.P., protested
-in his remarks on the Poor Laws against the hardships
-inflicted on the poor by the Laws of Settlement. ‘It leaves
-it in the breast of the parish officers whether they will grant
-a poor person a certificate or no.’<a id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> Eden, on the other hand,
-thought Adam Smith’s picture overdrawn, and he contended
-that though there were no doubt cases of vexatious removal,
-the Laws of Settlement were not administered in this way
-everywhere. Howlett also considered the operation of the
-Laws of Settlement to be ‘trifling,’ and instanced the growth
-of Sheffield, Birmingham, and Manchester as proof that there
-was little interference with the mobility of labour.</p>
-
-<p>A careful study of the evidence seems to lead to the conclusion
-that the Laws of Settlement were in practice, as they
-were on paper, a violation of natural liberty; that they did not
-stop the flow of labour, but that they regulated it in the interest
-of the employing class. The answer to Howlett is given
-by Ruggles in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>.<a id="FNanchor_161" href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> He begins by
-saying that the Law of Settlement has made a poor family
-‘of necessity stationary; and obliged them to rest satisfied
-with those wages they can obtain where their legal settlement<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-happens to be; a restraint on them which ought to
-insure to them wages in the parish where they must remain,
-more adequate to their necessities, because it precludes them
-in a manner from bringing their labour, the only marketable
-produce they possess, to the best market; it is this restraint
-which has, in all manufacturing towns, been one cause of
-reducing the poor to such a state of miserable poverty; for,
-among the manufacturers, they have too frequently found
-masters who have taken, and continue to take every advantage,
-which strict law will give; of consequence, the prices of
-labour have been, in manufacturing towns, in an inverse ratio
-of the number of poor settled in the place; and the same cause
-has increased that number, by inviting foreigners, in times
-when large orders required many workmen; the masters
-themselves being the overseers, whose duty as parish officers
-has been opposed by their interest in supplying the demand.’
-In other words, when it suited an employer to let fresh workers
-in, he would, <i>qua</i> overseer, encourage them to come with or
-without certificates; but when they were once in and ‘settled’
-he would refuse them certificates to enable them to go and
-try their fortunes elsewhere, in parishes where a certificate
-was demanded with each poor new-comer.<a id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> Thus it is not surprising
-to find, from Eden’s <i>Reports</i>, that certificates are never
-granted at Leeds and Skipton; seldom granted at Sheffield;
-not willingly granted at Nottingham, and that at Halifax
-certificates are not granted at present, and only three have been
-granted in the last eighteen years.</p>
-
-<p>It has been argued that the figures about removals in different
-parishes given by Eden in his second and third volumes show
-that the Law of Settlement was ‘not so black as it has been
-painted.’<a id="FNanchor_163" href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> But in considering the small number of removals,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-we must also consider the large number of places where there
-is this entry, ‘certificates are never granted.’ It needed
-considerable courage to go to a new parish without a certificate
-and run the risk of an ignominious expulsion, and though all
-overseers were not so strict as the one described by Dr. Burn,
-yet the fame of one vexatious removal would have a far-reaching
-effect in checking migration. It is clear that the
-law must have operated in this way in districts where enclosures
-took away employment within the parish. Suppose
-Hodge to have lived at Kibworth-Beauchamp in Leicestershire.
-About 1780, 3600 acres were enclosed and turned from
-arable to pasture; before enclosure the fields ‘were solely
-applied to the production of corn,’ and ‘the Poor had then
-plenty of employment in weeding, reaping, threshing, etc.,
-and could also collect a great deal of corn by gleaning.’<a id="FNanchor_164" href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a>
-After the change, as Eden admits, a third or perhaps a fourth
-of the number of hands would be sufficient to do all the farming
-work required. Let us say that Hodge was one of the
-superfluous two-thirds, and that the parish authorities refused
-him a certificate. What did he do? He applied to the
-overseer, who sent him out as a roundsman.<a id="FNanchor_165" href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> He would
-prefer to bear the ills he knew rather than face the unknown
-in the shape of a new parish officer, who might demand a
-certificate, and send him back with ignominy if he failed to
-produce one. If he took his wife and family with him there
-was even less chance of the demand for a certificate being
-waived.<a id="FNanchor_166" href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> So at Kibworth-Beauchamp Hodge and his companions
-remained, in a state of chronic discontent. ‘The
-Poor complain of hard treatment from the overseers, and
-the overseers accuse the Poor of being saucy.’<a id="FNanchor_167" href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now, at first sight, it seems obvious that it would be to the
-interest of a parish to give a poor man a certificate, if there
-were no market for his labour at home, in order to enable him
-to go elsewhere and make an independent living. This seems
-the reasonable view, but it is incorrect. In the same way,
-it would seem obvious that a parish would give slight relief
-to a person whose claim was in doubt rather than spend ten<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>
-times the amount in contesting that claim at law. In point
-of fact, in neither case do we find what seems the reasonable
-course adopted. Parishes spent fortunes in lawsuits. And
-to the parish authorities it would seem that they risked more
-in giving Hodge a certificate than in obliging him to stay at
-home, even if he could not make a living in his native place;
-for he might, with his certificate, wander a long way off, and
-then fall into difficulties, and have to be fetched back at great
-expense, and the cost of removing him would fall on the
-certificating parish. There is a significant passage in the
-<i>Annals of Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_168" href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> about the wool trade in 1788. ‘We
-have lately had some hand-bills scattered about Bocking, I
-am told, promising full employ to combers and weavers, that
-would migrate to Nottingham. Even if they chose to try
-this offer; as probably a parish certificate for such a distance
-would be refused; it cannot be attempted.’ Where parishes
-saw an immediate prospect of getting rid of their superfluous
-poor into a neighbouring parish with open fields or a
-common, they were indeed not chary of granting certificates.
-At Hothfield in Kent, for example, ‘full half of the labouring
-poor are certificated persons from other parishes: the
-above-mentioned common, which affords them the means of
-keeping a cow, or poultry, is supposed to draw many Poor
-into the parish; certificated persons are allowed to dig
-peat.’<a id="FNanchor_169" href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the Rules for the government of the Poor in the hundreds
-of Loes and Wilford in Suffolk<a id="FNanchor_170" href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> very explicit directions are
-given about the granting of certificates. In the first place,
-before any certificate is granted the applicant must produce an
-examination taken before a Justice of the Peace, showing that
-he belongs to one of the parishes within the hundred. Granted
-that he has complied with this condition, then, (1) if he be
-a labourer or husbandman no certificate will be granted him
-out of the hundreds unless he belongs to the parish of Kenton,
-and even in that case it is ‘not to exceed the distance of three
-miles’; (2) if he be a tradesman, artificer, or manufacturer
-a certificate may be granted to him out of the hundreds, but
-in no case is it to exceed the distance of twenty miles from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-the parish to which he belongs. The extent of the hundreds
-was roughly fourteen miles by five and a half.</p>
-
-<p>Eden, describing the neighbourhood of Coventry, says:
-‘In a country parish on one side the city, chiefly consisting
-of cottages inhabited by ribbon-weavers, the Rates are as
-high as in Coventry; whilst, in another parish, on the opposite
-side, they do not exceed one-third of the City Rate: this is
-ascribed to the care that is taken to prevent manufacturers
-from settling in the parish.’<a id="FNanchor_171" href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> In the neighbourhood of
-Mollington (Warwickshire and Oxon) the poor rates varied
-from 2s. to 4s. in the pound. ‘The difference in the several
-parishes, it is said, arises, in a great measure, from the facility
-or difficulty of obtaining settlements: in several parishes, a
-fine is imposed on a parishioner, who settles a newcomer by
-hiring, or otherwise, so that a servant is very seldom hired for
-a year. Those parishes which have for a long time been in
-the habit of using these precautions, are now very lightly
-burthened with Poor. This is often the case, where farms are
-large, and of course in few hands; while other parishes, not
-politic enough to observe these rules, are generally burthened
-with an influx of poor neighbours.’<a id="FNanchor_172" href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> Another example of
-this is Deddington (Oxon) which like other parishes that
-possessed common fields suffered from an influx of small
-farmers who had been turned out elsewhere, whereas neighbouring
-parishes, possessed by a few individuals, were cautious in
-permitting newcomers to gain settlements.<a id="FNanchor_173" href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a></p>
-
-<p>This practice of hiring servants for fifty-one weeks only
-was common: Eden thought it fraudulent and an evasion of
-the law that would not be upheld in a court of justice,<a id="FNanchor_174" href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> but he
-was wrong, for the 1817 Report on the Poor Law mentions
-among ‘the measures, justifiable undoubtedly in point of law,
-which are adopted very generally in many parts of the kingdom,
-to defeat the obtaining a settlement, that of hiring labourers
-for a less period than a year; from whence it naturally and
-necessarily follows, that a labourer may spend the season of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-his health and industry in one parish, and be transferred in
-the decline of life to a distant part of the kingdom.’<a id="FNanchor_175" href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> We
-hear little about the feelings of the unhappy labourers who
-were brought home by the overseers when they fell into want
-in a parish which had taken them in with their certificate,
-but it is not difficult to imagine the scene. It is significant
-that the Act of 1795 (to which we shall refer later), contained
-a provision that orders of removal were to be suspended in
-cases where the pauper was dangerously ill.</p>
-
-<p>From the Rules for the Government of the Poor in the
-Hundreds of Loes and Wilford, already alluded to, we learn
-some particulars of the allowance made for the removal of
-paupers. Twenty miles was to be considered a day’s journey;
-2d. was to be allowed for one horse, and so on in proportion
-per mile: but if the distance were over twenty miles, or the
-overseer were obliged to be out all night, then 2s. was to be
-allowed for him, 1s. for his horse, and 6d. for each pauper.<a id="FNanchor_176" href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a>
-It is improbable that such a scale of payment would induce the
-overseer to look kindly on the causes of his trouble: much
-less would a pauper be a <i>persona grata</i> if litigation over his
-settlement had already cost the parish large sums.</p>
-
-<p>It has been necessary to give these particulars of the Law of
-Settlement for two reasons. In the first place, the probability
-of expulsion, ‘exile by administrative order,’ as it has been
-called, threw a shadow over the lives of the poor. In the second
-place, the old Law of Settlement became an immensely more
-important social impediment when enclosure and the great
-industrial inventions began to redistribute population. When
-the normal labourer had common rights and a strip and a cow,
-he would not wish to change his home on account of temporary
-distress: after enclosure he was reduced to a position in which
-his distress, if he stayed on in his own village, was likely to be
-permanent.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The want and suffering revealed in Davies’ and Eden’s
-budgets came to a crisis in 1795, the year of what may be
-called the revolt of the housewives. That year, when exceptional
-scarcity sharpened the edge of the misery caused by the
-changes we have summarised, was marked by a series of food
-riots all over England, in which a conspicuous part was taken
-by women. These disturbances are particularly interesting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>
-from the discipline and good order which characterise the
-conduct of the rioters. The rioters when they found themselves
-masters of the situation did not use their strength to
-plunder the shops: they organised distribution, selling the
-food they seized at what they considered fair rates, and
-handing over the proceeds to the owners. They did not rob:
-they fixed prices, and when the owner of provisions was
-making for a dearer market they stopped his carts and made
-him sell on the spot. At Aylesbury in March ‘a numerous
-mob, consisting chiefly of women, seized on all the wheat
-that came to market, and compelled the farmers to whom it
-belonged to accept of such prices as they thought proper
-to name.’<a id="FNanchor_177" href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> In Devonshire the rioters scoured the country
-round Chudleigh, destroying two mills: ‘from the great
-number of petticoats, it is generally supposed that several
-men were dressed in female attire.’<a id="FNanchor_178" href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> At Carlisle a band of
-women accompanied by boys paraded the streets, and in spite
-of the remonstrances of a magistrate, entered various houses
-and shops, seized all the grain, deposited it in the public hall,
-and then formed a committee to regulate the price at which it
-should be sold.<a id="FNanchor_179" href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> At Ipswich there was a riot over the price
-of butter, and at Fordingbridge, a certain Sarah Rogers, in
-company with other women started a cheap butter campaign.
-Sarah took some butter from Hannah Dawson ‘with a determination
-of keeping it at a reduced price,’ an escapade for
-which she was afterwards sentenced to three months’ hard
-labour at the Winchester Assizes. ‘Nothing but the age of
-the prisoner (being very young) prevented the Court from
-passing a more severe sentence.’<a id="FNanchor_180" href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> At Bath the women actually
-boarded a vessel, laden with wheat and flour, which was lying
-in the river and refused to let her go. When the Riot Act
-was read they retorted that they were not rioting, but were
-resisting the sending of corn abroad, and sang God save the
-King. Although the owner took an oath that the corn was
-destined for Bristol, they were not satisfied, and ultimately
-soldiers were called in, and the corn was relanded and put into
-a warehouse.<a id="FNanchor_181" href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> In some places the soldiers helped the populace
-in their work of fixing prices: at Seaford, for example, they
-seized and sold meat and flour in the churchyard, and at
-Guildford they were the ringleaders in a movement to lower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-the price of meat to 4d. a pound, and were sent out of the
-town by the magistrates in consequence.<a id="FNanchor_182" href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> These spontaneous
-leagues of consumers sprang up in many different parts, for
-in addition to the places already mentioned there were disturbances
-of sufficient importance to be chronicled in the
-newspapers, in Wiltshire, Suffolk, and Norfolk, whilst Eden
-states that at Deddington the populace seized on a boat laden
-with flour, but restored it on the miller’s promising to sell
-it at a reduced price.<a id="FNanchor_183" href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a></p>
-
-<p>These riots are interesting from many points of view. They
-are a rising of the poor against an increasing pressure of want,
-and the forces that were driving down their standard of life.
-They did not amount to a social rebellion, but they mark a
-stage in the history of the poor. To the rich they were a
-signal of danger. Davies declared that if the ruling classes learnt
-from his researches what was the condition of the poor, they
-would intervene to rescue the labourers from ‘the abject state
-into which they are sunk.’ Certainly the misery of which
-his budgets paint the plain surface could not be disregarded.
-If compassion was not a strong enough force to make the
-ruling classes attend to the danger that the poor might starve,
-fear would certainly have made them think of the danger that
-the poor might rebel. Some of them at any rate knew their
-Virgil well enough to remember that in the description of the
-threshold of Orcus, while ‘senectus’ is ‘tristis’ and ‘egestas’
-is ‘turpis,’ ‘fames’ is linked with the more ominous epithet
-‘malesuada.’ If a proletariat were left to starve despair
-might teach bad habits, and this impoverished race might
-begin to look with ravenous eyes on the lot of those who lived
-on the spoils and sinecures of the State. Thus fear and pity
-united to sharpen the wits of the rich, and to turn their minds
-to the distresses of the poor.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE REMEDIES OF 1795</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>The collapse of the economic position of the labourer was the
-result of many causes, and in examining the various remedies
-that were proposed we shall see that they touch in turn on the
-several deficiencies that produced this failure. The governing
-fact of the situation was that the labourer’s wages no longer
-sufficed to provide even a bare and comfortless existence. It
-was necessary then that his wages should be raised, or that the
-effects of the rise in prices should be counteracted by changes
-of diet and manner of life, or that the economic resources which
-formerly supplemented his earnings should in some way be
-restored, unless he was to be thrown headlong on to the Poor
-Law. We shall see what advice was given and what advice
-was taken in these momentous years.</p>
-
-
-<h3>DIET REFORM</h3>
-
-<p>A disparity between income and expenditure may be corrected
-by increasing income or by reducing expenditure. Many of
-the upper classes thought that the second method might
-be tried in this emergency, and that a judicious change of
-diet would enable the labourer to face the fall of wages with
-equanimity. The solution seemed to lie in the simple life.
-Enthusiasts soon began to feel about this proposal the sort
-of excitement that Robinson Crusoe enjoyed when discovering
-new resources on his island: an infinite vista of kitchen reform
-beckoned to their ingenious imaginations: and many of them
-began to persuade themselves that the miseries of the poor
-arose less from the scantiness of their incomes than from their
-own improvidence and unthriftiness.<a id="FNanchor_184" href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> The rich set an example
-in the worst days by cutting off pastry and restricting
-their servants to a quartern loaf a week each.<a id="FNanchor_185" href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> It was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-surely not too much in these circumstances to ask the poor
-to adapt their appetites to the changed conditions of their
-lives, and to shake off what Pitt called ‘groundless prejudices’
-to mixed bread of barley, rye, and wheat.<a id="FNanchor_186" href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> Again oatmeal
-was a common food in the north, why should it not be taken
-in the south? If no horses except post horses and perhaps
-cavalry horses were allowed oats, there would be plenty for
-the poor.<a id="FNanchor_187" href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> A Cumberland labourer with a wife and family
-of five was shown by Eden<a id="FNanchor_188" href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> to have spent £7, 9s. 2d. a year
-on oatmeal and barley, whereas a Berkshire labourer with
-a wife and four children at home spent £36, 8s. a year on
-wheaten bread alone.<a id="FNanchor_189" href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> Clearly the starving south was to be
-saved by the introduction of cheap cereals.</p>
-
-<p>Other proposals of this time were to break against the opposition
-of the rich. This broke against the opposition of the
-poor. All attempts to popularise substitutes failed, and the
-poorer the labourer grew the more stubbornly did he insist
-on wheaten bread. ‘Even household bread is scarcely ever
-used: they buy the finest wheaten bread, and declare (what
-I much doubt), that brown bread disorders their bowels.
-Bakers do not now make, as they formerly did, bread of
-unsifted flour: at some farmers’ houses, however, it is still
-made of flour, as it comes from the mill; but this practice
-is going much into disuse. 20 years ago scarcely any other
-than brown bread was used.’<a id="FNanchor_190" href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> At Ealing, when the charitable
-rich raised a subscription to provide the distressed poor with
-brown bread at a reduced price, many of the labourers thought
-it so coarse and unpalatable that they returned the tickets
-though wheaten bread was at 1s. 3d. the quartern loaf.<a id="FNanchor_191" href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a>
-Correspondent after correspondent to the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>
-notes and generally deplores the fact that the poor,
-as one of them phrases it, are too fine-mouthed to eat any but
-the finest bread.<a id="FNanchor_192" href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> Lord Sheffield, judging from his address
-to Quarter Sessions at the end of 1795, would have had little
-mercy on such grumblers. After explaining that in his parish
-relief was now given partly in potatoes, partly in wheaten
-flour, and partly in oaten or barley flour, he declared: ‘If
-any wretches should be found so lost to all decency, and so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-blind as to revolt against the dispensations of providence,
-and to refuse the food proposed for their relief, the parish
-officers will be justified in refusing other succour, and may
-be assured of support from the magistracy of the county.’<a id="FNanchor_193" href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a></p>
-
-<p>To the rich, the reluctance of the labourer to change his
-food came as a painful surprise. They had thought of him
-as a roughly built and hardy animal, comparatively insensible
-to his surroundings, like the figure Lucretius drew of
-the primeval labourer:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Et majoribus et solidis magis ossibus intus</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fundatum, et validis aptum per viscera nervis;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nec facile ex aestu, nec frigore quod caperetur,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nec novitate cibi, nec labi corporis ulla.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>They did not know that a romantic and adventurous appetite
-is one of the blessings of an easy life, and that the more miserable
-a man’s condition, and the fewer his comforts, the more
-does he shrink from experiments of diet. They were therefore
-surprised and displeased to find that labourers rejected
-soup, even soup served at a rich man’s table, exclaiming,
-‘This is washy stuff, that affords no nourishment: we will
-not be fed on meal, and chopped potatoes like hogs.’<a id="FNanchor_194" href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> The
-dislike of change of food was remarked by the Poor Law
-Commissioners in 1834, who observed that the labourer had
-acquired or retained ‘with the moral helplessness some of the
-other peculiarities of a child. He is often disgusted to a
-degree which other classes scarcely conceive possible, by
-slight differences in diet; and is annoyed by anything that
-seems to him strange and new.’<a id="FNanchor_195" href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a></p>
-
-<p>Apart from the constitutional conservatism of the poor
-there were good reasons for the obstinacy of the labourers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-Davies put one aspect of the case very well. ‘If the working
-people of other countries are content with bread made of
-rye, barley, or oats, have they not milk, cheese, butter, fruits,
-or fish, to eat with that coarser bread? And was not this
-the case of our own people formerly, when these grains were
-the common productions of our land, and when scarcely wheat
-enough was grown for the use of the nobility and principal
-gentry? Flesh-meat, butter, and cheese, were then at such
-moderate prices, compared with the present prices, that
-poor people could afford to use them in common. And with
-a competent quantity of these articles, a coarser kind of
-bread might very well satisfy the common people of any
-country.’<a id="FNanchor_196" href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> He also states that where land had not been so
-highly improved as to produce much wheat, barley, oatmeal,
-or maslin bread were still in common use. Arthur
-Young himself realised that the labourer’s attachment to
-wheaten bread was not a mere superstition of the palate.
-‘In the East of England I have been very generally assured, by
-the labourers who work the hardest, that they prefer the finest
-bread, not because most pleasant, but most contrary to a
-lax habit of body, which at once prevents all <i>strong</i> labour.
-The quality of the bread that is eaten by those who have
-meat, and perhaps porter and port, is of very little consequence
-indeed; but to the hardworking man, who nearly lives on it,
-the case is abundantly different.’<a id="FNanchor_197" href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> Fox put this point in a
-speech in the House of Commons in the debate on the high
-price of corn in November 1795. He urged gentlemen, who
-were talking of mixed bread for the people, ‘not to judge from
-any experiment made with respect to themselves. I have
-myself tasted bread of different sorts, I have found it highly
-pleasant, and I have no doubt it is exceedingly wholesome.
-But it ought to be recollected how very small a part the
-article of bread forms of the provisions consumed by the more
-opulent classes of the community. To the poor it constitutes,
-the chief, if not the sole article of subsistence.’<a id="FNanchor_198" href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> The truth
-is that the labourer living on bread and tea had too delicate
-a digestion to assimilate the coarser cereals, and that there
-was, apart from climate and tradition, a very important
-difference between the labourer in the north and the labourer
-in the south, which the rich entirely overlooked. That difference
-comes out in an analysis of the budgets of the Cumberland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-labourer and the Berkshire labourer. The Cumberland
-labourer who spent only £7, 9s. on his cereals, spent £2, 13s. 7d.
-a year on milk. The Berkshire labourer who spent £36, 8s.
-on wheaten bread spent 8s. 8d. a year on milk. The Cumberland
-family consumed about 1300 quarts in the year, the
-Berkshire family about two quarts a week. The same contrast
-appears in all budget comparisons between north and south.
-A weaver at Kendal (eight in the family) spends £12, 9s. on
-oatmeal and wheat, and £5, 4s. on milk.<a id="FNanchor_199" href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> An agricultural
-labourer at Wetherall in Cumberland (five in family) spends
-£7, 6s. 9d. on cereals and £2, 13s. 4d. on milk.<a id="FNanchor_200" href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> On the other
-side we have a labourer in Shropshire (four in family) spending
-£10, 8s. on bread (of wheat rye), and only 8s. 8d. on milk,<a id="FNanchor_201" href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>
-and a cooper at Frome, Somerset (seven in family) spending
-£45, 10s. on bread, and about 17s. on milk.<a id="FNanchor_202" href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> These figures
-are typical.<a id="FNanchor_203" href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now oatmeal eaten with milk is a very different food
-from oatmeal taken alone, and it is clear from a study of
-the budgets that if oatmeal was to be acclimatised in the
-south, it was essential to increase the consumption of milk.
-But the great difference in consumption represented not a
-difference of demand, but a difference of supply. The
-southern labourer went without milk not from choice but from
-necessity. In the days when he kept cows he drank milk,
-for there was plenty of milk in the village. After enclosure,
-milk was not to be had. It may be that more cows were kept
-under the new system of farming, though this is unlikely,
-seeing that at this time every patch of arable was a gold-mine,
-but it is certainly true that milk became scarce in the
-villages. The new type of farmer did not trouble to sell
-milk at home. ‘Farmers are averse to selling milk; while
-poor persons who have only one cow generally dispose of all
-they can spare.’<a id="FNanchor_204" href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> The new farmer produced for a larger
-market: his produce was carried away, as Cobbett said, to
-be devoured by ‘the idlers, the thieves, the prostitutes who
-are all taxeaters in the wens of Bath and London.’ Davies
-argued, when pleading for the creation of small farms, ‘The
-occupiers of these small farms, as well as the occupiers of
-Mr. <i>Kent’s</i> larger cottages, would not think much of retailing
-to their poorer neighbours a little corn or a little milk, as they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-might want, which the poor can now seldom have at all, and
-never but as a great favour from the rich farmers.’<a id="FNanchor_205" href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> Sir
-Thomas Bernard mentioned among the advantages of the
-Winchilsea system the ‘no inconsiderable convenience to the
-inhabitants of that neighbourhood, that these cottagers are
-enabled to supply them, at a very moderate price, with milk,
-cream, butter, poultry, pig-meat, and veal: articles which,
-in general, are not worth the farmer’s attention, and which,
-therefore, are supplied by speculators, who greatly enhance
-the price on the public.’<a id="FNanchor_206" href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> Eden<a id="FNanchor_207" href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> records that in Oxfordshire
-the labourers bitterly complain that the farmers, instead of
-selling their milk to the poor, give it to their pigs, and a writer
-in the Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition of
-the Poor says that this was a practice not unusual in many
-parts of England.<a id="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></p>
-
-<p>The scarcity of milk must be considered a contributory cause
-of the growth of tea-drinking, a habit that the philanthropists
-and Cobbett agreed in condemning. Cobbett declared in his
-<i>Advice to Young Men</i><a id="FNanchor_209" href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> that ‘if the slops were in fashion
-amongst ploughmen and carters, we must all be starved;
-for the food could never be raised. The mechanics are half
-ruined by them.’ In the Report on the Poor presented to the
-Hants Quarter Sessions in 1795,<a id="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> the use of tea is described as
-‘a vain present attempt to supply to the spirits of the mind
-what is wanting to the strength of the body; but in its lasting
-effects impairing the nerves, and therein equally injuring both
-the body and the mind.’ Davies retorted on the rich who
-found fault with the extravagance of the poor in tea-drinking,
-by pointing out that it was their ‘last resource.’ ‘The topic
-on which the declaimers against the extravagance of the poor
-display their eloquence with most success, is <i>tea-drinking</i>.
-Why should such people, it is asked, indulge in a luxury which
-is only proper for their betters; and not rather content themselves
-with milk, which is in every form wholesome and
-nourishing? Were it true that poor people could every
-where procure so excellent an article as milk, there would
-be then just reason to reproach them for giving the preference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-to the miserable infusion of which they are so fond. But it
-is not so. Wherever the poor can get milk, do they not gladly
-use it? And where they cannot get it, would they not gladly
-exchange their tea for it?<a id="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a>... Still you exclaim, <i>Tea is a
-luxury</i>. If you mean fine hyson tea, sweetened with refined
-sugar, and softened with cream, I readily admit it to be so.
-But <i>this</i> is not the tea of the poor. Spring water, just coloured
-with a few leaves of the lowest-priced tea, and sweetened with
-the brownest sugar, is the luxury for which you reproach
-them. To this they have recourse from mere necessity:
-and were they now to be deprived of this, they would immediately
-be reduced to bread and water. Tea-drinking is not
-the cause, but the consequence, of the distresses of the poor.’<a id="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a>
-We learn from the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i> that at Sedgefield
-in Durham<a id="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> many of the poor declared that they had been
-driven to drinking tea from not being able to procure milk.<a id="FNanchor_214" href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a></p>
-
-<p>No doubt the scarcity of milk helped to encourage a taste
-that was very quickly acquired by all classes in England, and
-not in England only, for, before the middle of the eighteenth
-century, the rapid growth of tea-drinking among the poor in
-the Lowlands of Scotland was affecting the revenue very
-seriously.<a id="FNanchor_215" href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> The English poor liked tea for the same reason
-that Dr. Johnson liked it, as a stimulant, and the fact that
-their food was monotonous and insipid made it particularly
-attractive. Eden shows that by the end of the eighteenth
-century it was in general use among poor families, taking the
-place both of beer and of milk, and excluding the substitutes
-that Eden wished to make popular. It seems perhaps less
-surprising to us than it did to him, that when the rich, who could
-eat or drink what they liked, enjoyed tea, the poor thought
-bread and tea a more interesting diet than bread and barley
-water.</p>
-
-<p>A few isolated attempts were made to remedy the scarcity
-of milk,<a id="FNanchor_216" href="#Footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> which had been caused by enclosure and the consolidation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-of farms. Lord Winchilsea’s projects have already
-been described. In the Reports of the Society for bettering
-the Condition of the Poor, there are two accounts of plans
-for supplying milk cheap, one in Staffordshire, where a respectable
-tradesman undertook to keep a certain number of cows
-for the purpose in a parish where ‘the principal number of
-the poorer inhabitants were destitute of all means of procuring
-milk for their families,’<a id="FNanchor_217" href="#Footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> another at Stockton in Durham,
-where the bishop made it a condition of the lease of a certain
-farm, that the tenant should keep fifteen cows whose milk was
-to be sold at ½d. a pint to the poor.<a id="FNanchor_218" href="#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> Mr. Curwen again, the
-Whig M.P. for Carlisle, had a plan for feeding cows in the
-winter with a view to providing the poor with milk.<a id="FNanchor_219" href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a></p>
-
-<p>There was another way in which the enclosures had created
-an insuperable obstacle to the popularising of ‘cheap and
-agreeable substitutes’ for expensive wheaten bread. The
-Cumberland housewife could bake her own barley bread in
-her oven ‘heated with heath, furze or brush-wood, the expence
-of which is inconsiderable’<a id="FNanchor_220" href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a>; she had stretches of waste land at
-her door where the children could be sent to fetch fuel. ‘There
-is no comparison to the community,’ wrote a contributor to
-the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>,<a id="FNanchor_221" href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> ‘whether good wheat, rye, turnips,
-etc., are not better than brakes, goss, furz, broom, and heath,’
-but as acre after acre in the midlands and south was enclosed,
-the fuel of the poor grew ever scantier. When the common
-where he had gleaned his firing was fenced off, the poor man
-could only trust for his fuel to pilferings from the hedgerows.
-To the spectator, furze from the common might seem ‘gathered
-with more loss of time than it appears to be worth’<a id="FNanchor_222" href="#Footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a>; to the
-labourer whose scanty earnings left little margin over the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-expense of bread alone, the loss of firing was not balanced by
-the economy of time.<a id="FNanchor_223" href="#Footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p>
-
-<p>Insufficient firing added to the miseries caused by insufficient
-clothes and food. An ingenious writer in the <i>Annals
-of Agriculture</i><a id="FNanchor_224" href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> suggested that the poor should resort to the
-stables for warmth, as was the practice in the duchy of Milan.
-Fewer would suffer death from want of fire in winter, he argued,
-and also it would be a cheap way of helping them, as it cost
-no fuel, for cattle were so obliging as to dispense warmth from
-their persons for nothing. But even this plan (which was
-not adopted) would not have solved the problem of cooking.
-The labourer might be blamed for his diet of fine wheaten
-bread and for having his meat (when he had any) roasted
-instead of made into soup, but how could cooking be
-done at home without fuel? ‘No doubt, a labourer,’ says
-Eden,<a id="FNanchor_225" href="#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> ‘whose income was only £20 a year, would, in general,
-act wisely in substituting hasty-pudding, barley bread, boiled
-milk, and potatoes, for bread and beer; but in most parts
-of this county, he is debarred not more by prejudice, than
-by local difficulties, from using a diet that requires cooking
-at home. The extreme dearness of fuel in Oxfordshire,
-compels him to purchase his dinner at the baker’s; and,
-from his unavoidable consumption of bread, he has little left
-for cloaths, in a country where warm cloathing is most essentially
-wanted.’ In Davies’ more racy and direct language,
-‘it is but little that in the present state of things the belly
-can spare for the back.’<a id="FNanchor_226" href="#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> Davies also pointed out the connection
-between dear fuel and the baker. ‘Where fuel is
-scarce and dear, poor people find it cheaper to buy their bread
-of the baker than to bake for themselves.... But where fuel
-abounds, and costs only the trouble of cutting and carrying
-home, there they may save something by baking their own
-bread.’<a id="FNanchor_227" href="#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> Complaints of the pilfering of hedgerows were very
-common. ‘Falstaff says “his soldiers found linen on every
-hedge”; and I fear it is but too often the case, that labourers’
-children procure fuel from the same quarter.’<a id="FNanchor_228" href="#Footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> There were
-probably many families like the two described in Davies<a id="FNanchor_229" href="#Footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-spent nothing on fuel, which they procured by gathering
-cow-dung, and breaking their neighbours’ hedges.’<a id="FNanchor_230" href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a></p>
-
-<p>In some few cases, the benevolent rich did not content
-themselves with attempting to enforce the eighth commandment,
-but went to the root of the matter, helping to provide
-a substitute for their hedgerows. An interesting account of
-such an experiment is given in the <i>Reports on the Poor</i>,<a id="FNanchor_231" href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a>
-by Scrope Bernard. ‘There having been several prosecutions
-at the Aylesbury Quarter Sessions, for stealing fuel last
-winter, I was led to make particular inquiries, respecting the
-means which the poor at Lower Winchendon had of providing
-fuel. I found that there was no fuel then to be sold within
-several miles of the place; and that, amid the distress occasioned
-by the long frost, a party of cottagers had joined in
-hiring a person, to fetch a load of pit-coal from Oxford, for
-their supply. In order to encourage this disposition to acquire
-fuel in an honest manner,’ a present was made to all this party
-of as much coal again as they had already purchased carriage
-free. Next year the vestry determined to help, and with the
-aid of private donations coal was distributed at 1s. 4d. the
-cwt. (its cost at the Oxford wharf), and kindling faggots at
-1d. each. ‘It had been said that the poor would not find
-money to purchase them, when they were brought: instead
-of which out of 35 poor families belonging to the parish, 29
-came with ready money, husbanded out of their scanty means,
-to profit with eagerness of this attention to their wants; and
-among them a person who had been lately imprisoned by his
-master for stealing wood from his hedges.’ Mr. Bernard concludes
-his account with some apt remarks on the difficulties
-of combining honesty with grinding poverty.<a id="FNanchor_232" href="#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span></p>
-<h3>MINIMUM WAGE</h3>
-
-<p>The attempts to reduce cottage expenditure were thus a
-failure. We must now describe the attempts to increase the
-cottage income. There were two ways in which the wages
-of the labourers might have been raised. One way, the way
-of combination, was forbidden by law. The other way was
-the fixing of a legal minimum wage in relation to the price
-of food. This was no new idea, for the regulation of wages by
-law was a venerable English institution, as old as the Statute
-of Edward <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> The most recent laws on the subject were the
-famous Act of Elizabeth, an Act of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, and an Act of
-George <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> (1747). The Act of Elizabeth provided that the
-Justices of the Peace should meet annually and assess the
-wages of labourers in husbandry and of certain other workmen.
-Penalties were imposed on all who gave or took a wage in
-excess of this assessment. The Act of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> was passed
-to remove certain ambiguities that were believed to have
-embarrassed the operation of the Act of Elizabeth, and among
-other provisions imposed a penalty on all who gave a wage
-below the wage fixed by the magistrates. The Act of 1747<a id="FNanchor_233" href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a>
-was passed because the existing laws were ‘insufficient and
-defective,’ and it provided that disputes between masters and
-men could be referred to the magistrates, ‘although no rate
-or assessment of wages has been made that year by the Justices
-of the shire where such complaint shall be made.’</p>
-
-<p>Two questions arise on the subject of this legislation, Was it
-operative? In whose interests was it administered, the interests
-of the employers or the interests of the employed? As to
-the first question there is a good deal of negative evidence to
-show that during the eighteenth century these laws were rarely
-applied. An example of an assessment (an assessment declaring
-a maximum) made by the Lancashire magistrates in
-1725, was published in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i> in 1795<a id="FNanchor_234" href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> as
-an interesting curiosity, and the writer remarks: ‘It appears
-from Mr. Ruggles’ excellent <i>History of the Poor</i> that such
-orders must in general be searched for in earlier periods, and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-friend of ours was much surprised to hear that any magistrates
-in the present century would venture on so bold a measure.’<a id="FNanchor_235" href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a></p>
-
-<p>As to the second question, at the time we are discussing
-it was certainly taken for granted that this legislation was
-designed to keep wages down. So implicitly was this believed
-that the Act of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> which provided penalties in cases
-where wages were given below the fixed rate was generally
-ignored, and speakers and writers mentioned only the Act of
-Elizabeth, treating it as an Act for fixing a maximum. Whitbread,
-for example, when introducing a Bill in 1795 to fix a
-minimum wage, with which we deal later, argued that the
-Elizabethan Act ought to be repealed because it fixed a
-maximum. This view of the earlier legislation was taken by
-Fox, who supported Whitbread’s Bill, and by Pitt who opposed
-it. Fox said of the Act of Elizabeth that ‘it secured the master
-from a risk which could but seldom occur, of being charged
-exorbitantly for the quantity of service; but it did not
-authorise the magistrate to protect the poor from the injustice
-of a grinding and avaricious master, who might be disposed to
-take advantage of their necessities, and undervalue the rate of
-their services.’<a id="FNanchor_236" href="#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> Pitt said that Whitbread ‘imagined that
-he had on his side of the question the support of experience
-in this country, and appealed to certain laws upon the statute-book
-in confirmation of his proposition. He did not find
-himself called upon to defend the principle of these statutes,
-but they were certainly introduced for purposes widely different
-from the object of the present bill. They were enacted to
-guard the industry of the country from being checked by a
-general combination among labourers; and the bill now under
-consideration was introduced solely for the purpose of remedying
-the inconveniences which labourers sustain from the disproportion
-existing between the price of labour and the price
-of living.’<a id="FNanchor_237" href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> Only one speaker in the debates, Vansittart,
-afterwards Chancellor of the Exchequer, took the view that
-legislation was not needed because the Act of James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> gave
-the magistrates the powers with which Whitbread sought to
-arm them.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural that many minds searching after a way of
-escape from the growing distress of the labourers, at a time
-when wages had not kept pace with prices, should have
-turned to the device of assessing wages by law in accordance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-with the price of provisions. If prices could not be assimilated
-to wages, could not wages be assimilated to prices?
-Nathaniel Kent, no wild visionary, had urged employers to
-raise wages in proportion to the increase of their profits, but
-his appeal had been without effect. But the policy of regulating
-wages according to the price of food was recommended in
-several quarters, and it provoked a great deal of discussion.
-Burke, whose days were closing in, was tempted to take part
-in it, and he put an advertisement into the papers announcing
-that he was about to publish a series of letters on the subject.
-The letters never appeared, but Arthur Young has described
-the visit he paid to Beaconsfield at this time and Burke’s
-rambling thunder about ‘the absurdity of regulating labour
-and the mischief of our poor laws,’ and Burke’s published works
-include a paper <i>Thoughts and Details on Scarcity</i>, presented
-to Pitt in November 1795. In this paper Burke argued that
-the farmer was the true guardian of the labourer’s interest,
-in that it would never be profitable to him to underpay the
-labourer: an uncompromising application of the theory of
-the economic man, which was not less superficial than the
-Jacobins’ application of the theory of the natural man.</p>
-
-<p>In October 1795 Arthur Young sent out to the various
-correspondents of the Board of Agriculture a circular letter
-containing this question among others: ‘It having been
-recommended by various quarter-sessions, that the price of
-labour should be regulated by that of bread corn, have the
-goodness to state what you conceive to be the advantages
-or disadvantages of such a system?’<a id="FNanchor_238" href="#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> Arthur Young was
-himself in favour of the proposal, and the Suffolk magistrates,
-at a meeting which he attended on the 12th of October, ordered:
-‘That the Members for this county be requested by the chairman
-to bring a bill into parliament, so to regulate the price
-of labour, that it may fluctuate with the average price of bread
-corn.’<a id="FNanchor_239" href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> Most of the replies were adverse, but the proposal
-found a warm friend in Mr. Howlett, the Vicar of Dunmow,
-who put into his answer some of the arguments which he
-afterwards developed in a pamphlet published in reply to
-Pitt’s criticisms of Whitbread’s Bill.<a id="FNanchor_240" href="#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> Howlett argued that
-Parliament had legislated with success to prevent combinations
-of workmen, and as an example he quoted the Acts of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-8 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, which had made the wages of tailors and silk-weavers
-subject to the regulations of the magistrates. It
-was just as necessary and just as practicable to prevent a
-combination of a different kind, that of masters. ‘Not a
-combination indeed formally drawn up in writing and
-sanctioned under hand and seal, a combination, however, as
-certain (the result of contingencies or providential events)
-and as fatally efficacious as if in writing it had filled five
-hundred skins of parchment: a combination which has operated
-for many years with a force rapidly increasing, a combination
-which has kept back the hire of our labourers who have reaped
-down our fields, and has at length torn the clothes from their
-backs, snatched the food from their mouths, and ground the
-flesh from their bones.’ Howlett, it will be seen, took the same
-view as Thelwall, that the position of the labourers was deteriorating
-absolutely and relatively. He estimated from a survey
-taken at Dunmow that the average family should be taken
-as five; if wages had been regulated on this basis, and the
-labourer had been given per head no more than the cost of a
-pauper’s keep in the workhouse sixty years ago, he would have
-been very much better off in 1795. He would himself take a
-higher standard. In reply to the argument that the policy of
-the minimum wage would deprive the labourers of all spur and
-incentive he pointed to the case of the London tailors; they
-at any rate displayed plenty of life and ingenuity, and nobody
-could say that the London fashions did not change fast enough.
-Employers would no more raise wages without compulsion
-than they would make good roads without the aid of turnpikes
-or the prescription of statutes enforced by the magistrates.
-His most original contribution to the discussion was the
-argument that the legal regulation should not be left to the
-unassisted judgment of the magistrates: ‘it should be the
-result of the clearest, fullest, and most accurate information,
-and at length be judiciously adapted to each county, hundred,
-or district in every quarter of the kingdom.’ Howlett differed
-from some of the supporters of a minimum wage, in thinking
-that wages should be regulated by the prices of the necessaries
-of life, not merely by that of bread corn.</p>
-
-<p>The same policy was advocated by Davies in <i>The Case of
-Labourers in Husbandry</i>.<a id="FNanchor_241" href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> Davies argued that if the minimum
-only were fixed, emulation would not be discouraged, for
-better workmen would both be more sure of employment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-and also obtain higher wages. He suggested that the minimum
-wage should be fixed by calculating the sum necessary
-to maintain a family of five, or by settling the scale of day
-wages by the price of bread alone, treating the other expenses
-as tolerably steady. He did not propose to regulate the
-wages of any but day labourers, nor did he propose to deal
-with piecework, although piecework had been included in the
-Act of Elizabeth. He further suggested that the regulation
-should be in force only for half the year, from November to
-May, when the labourers’ difficulties pressed hardest upon
-them. Unfortunately he coupled with his minimum wage
-policy a proposal to give help from the rates to families with
-more than five members, if the children were unable to earn.</p>
-
-<p>But the most interesting of all the declarations in favour
-of a minimum wage was a declaration from labourers. A
-correspondent sent the following advertisement to the <i>Annals
-of Agriculture</i>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The following is an advertisement which I cut out of a
-Norwich <span class="lock">newspaper:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">“DAY LABOURERS</p>
-
-<p>“At a numerous meeting of the day labourers of the little
-parishes of Heacham, Snettisham, and Sedgford, this day,
-5th November, in the parish church of Heacham, in the county
-of Norfolk, in order to take into consideration the best and
-most peaceable mode of obtaining a redress of all the severe
-and peculiar hardships under which they have for many years
-so patiently suffered, the following resolutions were unanimously
-agreed to:&mdash;1st, That&mdash;<i>The labourer is worthy of his
-hire</i>, and that the mode of lessening his distresses, as hath
-been lately the fashion, by selling him flour under the market
-price, and thereby rendering him an object of a parish rate,
-is not only an indecent insult on his lowly and humble situation
-(in itself sufficiently mortifying from his degrading dependence
-on the caprice of his employer) but a fallacious mode
-of relief, and every way inadequate to a radical redress of
-the manifold distresses of his calamitous state. 2nd, That the
-price of labour should, at all times, be proportioned to the
-price of wheat, which should invariably be regulated by
-the average price of that necessary article of life; and that
-the price of labour, as specified in the annexed plan, is not
-only well calculated to make the labourer happy without being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-injurious to the farmer, but it appears to us the only rational
-means of securing the permanent happiness of this valuable
-and useful class of men, and, if adopted in its full extent, will
-have an immediate and powerful effect in reducing, if it does
-not entirely annihilate, that disgraceful and enormous tax on
-the public&mdash;the <span class="smcap">Poor Rate</span>.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Plan of the Price of Labour proportionate to the Price of Wheat</i></p>
-
-<table class="autotable center" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"></td>
-<td>per last.</td><td colspan="3"></td>
-<td>per day.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2">When wheat shall be </td><td>14l. </td><td colspan="3">the price of labour shall be</td>
-<td class="left">1s. 2d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>16</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">1s. 4d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>18</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">1s. 6d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>20</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">1s. 8d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>22</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">1s. 10d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>24</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 0d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>26</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 2d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>28</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 4d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>30</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 6d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>32</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 8d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>34</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">2s. 10d.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>36</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">3s. 0d.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>And so on, according to this proportion.</p>
-
-<p>“3rd, That a petition to parliament to regulate the price
-of labour, conformable to the above plan, be immediately
-adopted; and that the day labourers throughout the county
-be invited to associate and co-operate in this necessary application
-to parliament, as a peaceable, legal, and probable mode
-of obtaining relief; and, in doing this, no time should be lost,
-as the petition must be presented before the 29th January
-1796.</p>
-
-<p>“4th, That one shilling shall be paid into the hands of
-the treasurer by every labourer, in order to defray the expences
-of advertising, attending on meetings, and paying counsel to
-support their petition in parliament.</p>
-
-<p>“5th, That as soon as the sense of the day labourers of
-this county, or a majority of them, shall be made known to
-the clerk of the meeting, a general meeting shall be appointed,
-in some central town, in order to agree upon the best and easiest
-mode of getting the petition signed: when it will be requested
-that one labourer, properly instructed, may be deputed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>
-represent two or three contiguous parishes, and to attend the
-above intended meeting with a list of all the labourers in the
-parishes he shall represent, and pay their respective subscriptions;
-and that the labourer, so deputed, shall be allowed
-two shillings and six pence a day for his time, and two shillings
-and six pence a day for his expences.</p>
-
-<p>“6th, That Adam Moore, clerk of the meeting, be directed
-to have the above resolutions, with the names of the farmers
-and labourers who have subscribed to and approved them,
-advertised in one Norwich and one London paper; when it
-is hoped that the above plan of a petition to parliament will
-not only be approved and immediately adopted by the day
-labourers of this county, but by the day labourers of every
-county in the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>“7th, That all letters, <i>post paid</i>, addressed to Adam
-Moore, labourer, at Heacham, near Lynn, Norfolk, will be
-duly noticed.”<a id="FNanchor_242" href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This is one of the most interesting and instructive documents
-of the time. It shows that the labourers, whose steady
-decline during the next thirty years we are about to trace,
-were animated by a sense of dignity and independence. Something
-of the old spirit of the commoners still survived. But
-there is no sequel to this incident. This great scheme of a
-labourers’ organisation vanishes: it passes like a flash of
-summer lightning. What is the explanation? The answer is
-to be found, we suspect, in the Treason and Sedition Acts
-that Pitt was carrying through Parliament in this very month.
-Under those Acts no language of criticism was safe, and fifty
-persons could not meet except in the presence of a magistrate,
-who had power to extinguish the meeting and arrest the
-speaker. Those measures inflicted even wider injury upon the
-nation than Fox and Sheridan and Erskine themselves believed.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The policy of a minimum wage was brought before Parliament
-in the winter of 1795, in a Bill introduced by Samuel
-Whitbread, one of the small band of brave Liberals who
-had stood by Fox through the revolutionary panic. Whitbread
-is a politician to whom history has done less than
-justice, and he is generally known only as an implacable
-opponent of the Peninsular War. That opposition he contrived
-to conduct, as we know from the <i>Creevey Papers</i>, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-such a way as to win and keep the respect of Wellington.
-Whitbread’s disapproval of that war, of which Liberals like
-Holland and Lord John Russell, who took Fox’s view of the
-difference of fighting revolutions by the aid of kings and
-fighting Napoleon by the aid of peoples, were strong supporters,
-sprang from his compassion for the miseries of the English
-poor. His most notable quality was his vivid and energetic
-sympathy; he spent his life in hopeless battles, and he died
-by his own hand of public despair. The Bill he now introduced
-was the first of a series of proposals designed for the rescue of
-the agricultural labourers. It was backed by Sheridan and
-Grey,<a id="FNanchor_243" href="#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> and the members for Suffolk.</p>
-
-<p>The object of the Bill<a id="FNanchor_244" href="#Footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> was to explain and amend the Act
-of Elizabeth, which empowered Justices of the Peace at or
-within six weeks of every General Quarter Sessions held at
-Easter to regulate the wages of labourers in husbandry. The
-provisions of the Bill were briefly as follows. At any Quarter
-Sessions the justices could agree, if they thought fit, to hold a
-General Sessions for carrying into execution the powers given
-them by the Act. If they thought good to hold such a General
-Sessions, the majority of them could ‘rate and appoint the
-wages and fix and declare the hours of working of all labourers
-in husbandry, by the day, week, month or year, and with beer
-or cyder or without, respect being had to the value of money
-and the plenty or scarcity of the time.’ This rate was to be
-printed and posted on the church doors, and was to hold good
-till superseded by another made in the same way. The rate
-was not to apply to any tradesman or artificer, nor to any
-labourer whose diet was wholly provided by his employer, nor
-to any labourer <i>bona fide</i> employed on piecework, nor to any
-labourer employed by the parish. The young, the old, and the
-infirm were also exempted from the provisions of the Act. It
-was to be lawful ‘to contract with and pay to any male person,
-under the age of &mdash;&mdash;<a id="FNanchor_245" href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> years, or to any man who from age or
-infirmity or any other incapacity shall be unable to do the
-ordinary work of a labouring man, so much as he shall reasonably
-deserve for the work which he shall be able to do and shall
-do.’ In case of complaint the decision as to the ability of the
-labourer rested with the justices.</p>
-
-<p>With the above exceptions no labourer was to be hired under
-the appointed rates, and any contract for lower wages was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-void. If convicted of breaking the law, an employer was to
-be fined; if he refused to pay the fine, his goods were to be
-distrained on, and if this failed to produce enough to pay the
-expenses, he could be committed to the common gaol or House
-of Correction. A labourer with whom an illegal contract was
-made was to be a competent witness.</p>
-
-<p>The first discussions of the Bill were friendly in tone. On
-25th November Whitbread asked for leave to bring it in.
-Sir William Young, Lechmere, Charles Dundas, and Sir John
-Rous all spoke with sympathy and approval. The first
-reading debate took place on 9th December, and though
-Whitbread had on that occasion the powerful support of Fox,
-who, while not concealing his misgivings about the Bill, thought
-the alternative of leaving the great body of the people to depend
-on the charity of the rich intolerable, an ominous note
-was struck by Pitt and Henry Dundas on the other side. The
-Bill came up for second reading on 12th February 1796.<a id="FNanchor_246" href="#Footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a>
-Whitbread’s opening speech showed that he was well aware
-that he would have to face a formidable opposition. Pitt rose
-at once after the motion had been formally seconded by
-one of the Suffolk members, and assailed the Bill in a speech
-that made an immediate and overwhelming impression. He
-challenged Whitbread’s argument that wages had not kept
-pace with prices; he admitted the hardships of the poor, but
-he thought the picture overdrawn, for their hardships had been
-relieved by ‘a display of beneficence never surpassed at any
-period,’ and he argued that it was a false remedy to use legislative
-interference, and to give the justices the power to
-regulate the price of labour, and to endeavour ‘to establish
-by authority what would be much better accomplished by the
-unassisted operation of principles.’ This led naturally to an
-attack on the restrictions on labour imposed by the Law of
-Settlement, and a discussion of the operation of the Poor Laws,
-and the speech ended, after a glance at the great possibilities
-of child employment, with the promise of measures which
-should restore the original purity of the Poor Laws, and make
-them a blessing instead of the curse they had become. The
-speech seems to have dazzled the House of Commons, and
-few stood up against the general opinion that Whitbread’s
-proposal was dangerous, and that the whole question had better
-be left to Pitt. Lechmere, a Worcestershire member, was one
-of them, and he made an admirable little speech in which he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>
-tried to destroy the general illusion that the poor could not be
-unhappy in a country where the rich were so kind. Whitbread
-himself defended his Bill with spirit and ability, showing that
-Pitt had not really found any substantial argument against it,
-and that Pitt’s own remedies were all hypothetical and distant.
-Fox reaffirmed his dislike of compulsion, but restated at the
-same time his opinion that Whitbread’s Bill, though not an
-ideal solution, was the best solution available of evils which
-pressed very hardly on the poor and demanded attention.
-General Smith pointed out that one of Pitt’s remedies was the
-employment of children, and warned him that he had himself
-seen some of the consequences of the unregulated labour of
-children ‘whose wan and pale complexions bespoke that their
-constitutions were already undermined, and afforded but little
-promise of a robust manhood, or of future usefulness to the
-community.’ But the general sense of the House was reflected
-in the speeches of Buxton, Coxhead and Burdon, whose main
-argument was that the poor were not in so desperate a plight
-as Whitbread supposed, and that whatever their condition
-might be, Pitt was the most likely person to find such remedies
-as were practicable and effective. The motion for second
-reading was negatived without a division. The verdict of the
-House was a verdict of confidence in Pitt.</p>
-
-<p>Four years later (11th February 1800) Whitbread repeated
-his attempt.<a id="FNanchor_247" href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> He asked for leave to bring in a Bill to explain
-and amend the Act of Elizabeth, and said that he had waited
-for Pitt to carry out his promises. He was aware of the
-danger of overpaying the poor, but artificers and labourers
-should be so paid as to be able to keep themselves and their
-families in comfort. He saw no way of securing this result in
-a time of distress except the way he had suggested. Pitt rose
-at once to reply. He had in the interval brought in and abandoned
-his scheme of Poor Law Reform. He had spent his only
-idea, and he was now confessedly without any policy at all. All
-that he could contribute was a general criticism of legislative
-interference, and another discourse on the importance of letting
-labour find its own level. He admitted the fact of scarcity,
-but he believed the labouring class seldom felt fewer privations.
-History scarcely provides a more striking spectacle of a statesman
-paying himself with soothing phrases in the midst of a
-social cyclone. The House was more than ever on his side.
-All the interests and instincts of class were disguised under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-the gold dust of Adam Smith’s philosophy. Sir William
-Young, Buxton, Wilberforce, Ellison, and Perceval attacked
-the Bill. Whitbread replied that charity as a substitute for
-adequate wages had mischievous effects, for it took away the
-independence of the poor, ‘a consideration as valuable to the
-labourer as to the man of high rank,’ and as for the argument
-that labour should be left to find its own level, the truth
-surely was that labour found its level by combinations, and
-that this had been found to be so great an evil that Acts of
-Parliament had been passed against it.</p>
-
-<p>The date of the second reading of the Bill was hotly disputed:<a id="FNanchor_248" href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a>
-the friends of the measure wanted it to be fixed for
-28th April, so that Quarter Sessions might have time to
-deliberate on the proposals; the opponents of the measure
-suggested 25th February, on the grounds that it was dangerous
-to keep the Bill in suspense so long: ‘the eyes of all the
-labouring poor,’ said Mr. Ellison, ‘must in that interval be
-turned upon it.’ The opponents won their point, and when
-the Bill came up for second reading its fate was a foregone
-conclusion. Whitbread made one last appeal, pleading the
-cause of the labourers bound to practical serfdom in parishes
-where the landowner was an absentee, employed at starvation
-wages by farmers, living in cottages let to them by farmers.
-But his appeal was unheeded: Lord Belgrave retorted with
-the argument that legislative interference with agriculture
-could not be needed, seeing that five hundred Enclosure Bills
-had passed the House during a period of war, and the Bill
-was rejected.</p>
-
-<p>So died the policy of the minimum wage. Even later it had
-its adherents, for, in 1805, Sir Thomas Bernard criticised it<a id="FNanchor_249" href="#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> as
-the ‘favourite idea of some very intelligent and benevolent
-men.’ He mentioned as a <i>reductio ad absurdum</i> of the scheme,
-that had the rate of wages been fixed by the standard of 1780
-when the quartern loaf was 6d. and the labourer’s pay 9s.
-a week, the result in 1800 when the quartern loaf cost 1s. 9d.
-would have been a wage of £1, 11s. 6d.</p>
-
-<p>When Whitbread introduced his large and comprehensive
-Poor Law Bill in 1807,<a id="FNanchor_250" href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> the proposal for a minimum wage was
-not included.</p>
-
-<p>From an examination of the speeches of the time and of the
-answers to Arthur Young’s circular printed in the <i>Annals of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-Agriculture</i>, it is evident that there was a genuine fear among
-the opponents of the measure that if once wages were raised
-to meet the rise in prices it would not be easy to reduce them
-when the famine was over. This was put candidly by one of
-Arthur Young’s correspondents: ‘it is here judged more
-prudent to indulge the poor with bread corn at a reduced
-price than to raise the price of wages.’<a id="FNanchor_251" href="#Footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a>
-The policy of a minimum wage was revived later by a society
-called ‘The General Association established for the Purpose of
-bettering the Condition of the Agricultural and Manufacturing
-Labourers.’ Three representatives of this society gave evidence
-before the Select Committee on Emigration in 1827, and one
-of them pointed out as an illustration of the injustice with
-which the labourers were treated, that in 1825 the wages of
-agricultural labourers were generally 9s. a week, and the
-price of wheat 9s. a bushel, whereas in 1732 the wages of
-agricultural labour were fixed by the magistrates at 6s. a
-week, and the price of wheat was 2s. 9d. the bushel. In
-support of this comparison he produced a table from <i>The
-Gentleman’s Magazine</i> of <span class="lock">1732:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>
-Wheat in February 1732, 23s. to 25s. per quarter.<br />
-Wheat in March 1732, 20s. to 22s. per quarter.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Yearly wages appointed by the Justices to be taken by the
-servants in the county of Kent, not exceeding the following
-sums:</p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Head ploughman waggoner or seedsman</td>
-<td>£8</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">His mate</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Best woman</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Second sort of woman</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Second ploughman</td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">His mate</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Labourers by day in summer</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">In winter</span></td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Justices of Gloucester</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Head servant in husbandry</td>
-<td>5</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Second servant in husbandry</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Driving boy under fourteen</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Head maid servant or dairy servant</td>
-<td>2 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Mower in harvest without drink per day</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">With drink</span></td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Other day labourers with drink</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">From corn to hay harvest with drink</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Mowers and reapers in corn harvest with drink</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Labourers with diet</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Without diet or drink</span></td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>0 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Carpenter wheelwright or mason without drink</td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">With drink</span></td>
-<td> </td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>One of the witnesses pointed out that there were five millions
-of labourers making with their families eight millions, and that
-if the effect of raising their wages was to increase their expenditure
-by a penny a day, there would be an increase of consumption
-amounting to twelve millions a year. These arguments
-made little impression on the Committee, and the representations
-of the society were dismissed with contempt:
-‘It is from an entire ignorance of the universal operation of
-the principle of Supply and Demand regulating the rate of
-wages that all these extravagant propositions are advanced,
-and recommendations spread over the country which are so
-calculated to excite false hopes, and consequently discontent,
-in the minds of the labouring classes. Among the most
-extravagant are those brought forward by the Society established
-for the purpose of bettering the condition of the manufacturing
-and agricultural labourers.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>POOR LAW REFORM</h3>
-
-<p>Pitt, having secured the rejection of Whitbread’s Minimum
-Wage Bill in 1796, produced his own alternative: Poor Law
-Reform. It is necessary to state briefly what were the Poor
-Law arrangements at the time of his proposals.</p>
-
-<p>The Poor Law system reposed on the great Act of Elizabeth
-(1601), by which the State had acknowledged and organised
-the duty to the poor which it had taken over from the Church.
-The parish was constituted the unit, and overseers, unsalaried
-and nominated by the J.P.’s, were appointed for administering
-relief, the necessary funds being obtained by a poor rate.
-Before 1722 a candidate for relief could apply either to the
-overseers or to the magistrate. By an Act passed in that year,
-designed to make the administration stricter, application was
-to be made first to the overseer. If the overseer rejected the
-application the claimant could submit his case to a magistrate,
-and the magistrate, after hearing the overseer’s objection,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-could order that relief should be given. There were, however,
-a number of parishes in which applications for relief were made
-to salaried guardians. These were the parishes that had
-adopted an Act known as Gilbert’s Act, passed in 1782.<a id="FNanchor_252" href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> In
-these parishes,<a id="FNanchor_253" href="#Footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> joined in incorporations, the parish overseers
-were not abolished, for they still had the duty of collecting
-and accounting for the rates, but the distribution was in the
-hands of paid guardians, one for each parish, appointed by
-the justices out of a list of names submitted by the parishioners.
-In each set of incorporated parishes there was a ‘Visitor’ appointed
-by the justices, who had practically absolute power
-over the guardians. If the guardians refused relief, the
-claimant could still appeal, as in the case of the overseers,
-to the justices.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the parish machinery. The method of giving relief
-varied greatly, but the main distinction to be drawn is between
-(1) out relief, or a weekly pension of a shilling or two at home;
-and (2) indoor relief, or relief in a workhouse, or poorhouse, or
-house of industry. Out relief was the earlier institution, and
-it held its own throughout the century, being the only form of
-relief in many parishes. Down to 1722 parishes that wished
-to build a workhouse had to get a special Act of Parliament.
-In that year a great impetus was given to the workhouse movement
-by an Act<a id="FNanchor_254" href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> which authorised overseers, with the consent
-of the vestry, to start workhouses, or to farm out the poor, and
-also authorised parishes to join together for this purpose. If
-applicants for relief refused to go into the workhouse, they
-forfeited their title to any relief at all. A great many workhouses
-were built in consequence of this Act: in 1732 there
-were stated to be sixty in the country, and about fifty in the
-metropolis.<a id="FNanchor_255" href="#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a></p>
-
-<p>Even if the applicant for relief lived in a parish which had
-built or shared in a workhouse, it did not follow that he was
-forced into it. He lost his title to receive relief outside, but
-his fate would depend on the parish officers. In the parishes
-which had adopted Gilbert’s Act the workhouse was reserved
-for the aged, for the infirm, and for young children. In most
-parishes there was out relief as well as indoor relief: in some
-parishes outdoor relief being allowed to applicants of a certain
-age or in special circumstances. In some parishes all outdoor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-relief had stopped by 1795.<a id="FNanchor_256" href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> There is no doubt that in most
-parishes the workhouse accommodation would have been quite
-inadequate for the needs of the parish in times of distress. It
-was quite common to put four persons into a single bed.</p>
-
-<p>The workhouses were dreaded by the poor,<a id="FNanchor_257" href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> not only for the
-dirt and disease and the devastating fevers that swept through
-them,<a id="FNanchor_258" href="#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> but for reasons that are intelligible enough to any one
-who has read Eden’s descriptions. Those descriptions show
-that Crabbe’s picture is no <span class="lock">exaggeration:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Theirs is yon House that holds the Parish-Poor,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose walls of mud scarce bear the broken door;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There, where the putrid vapours, flagging, play,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the dull wheel hums doleful through the day;&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">There Children dwell who know no Parents’ care;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Parents, who know no Children’s love, dwell there!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Heart-broken Matrons on their joyless bed,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Forsaken Wives and Mothers never wed;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Dejected Widows with unheeded tears,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And crippled Age with more than childhood fears;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Lame, the Blind, and, far the happiest they!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The moping Idiot and the Madman gay.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here too the Sick their final doom receive,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here brought, amid the scenes of grief, to grieve,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Where the loud groans from some sad chamber flow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Mixt with the clamours of the crowd below;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Here sorrowing, they each kindred sorrow scan,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And the cold charities of man to man:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose laws indeed for ruin’d Age provide,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And strong compulsion plucks the scrap from pride;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But still that scrap is bought with many a sigh,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And pride embitters what it can’t deny.’<a id="FNanchor_259" href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A good example of this mixture of young and old, virtuous
-and vicious, whole and sick, sane and mad, is given in Eden’s
-catalogue of the inmates of Epsom Workhouse in January
-1796.<a id="FNanchor_260" href="#Footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> There were eleven men, sixteen women, and twenty-three
-children. We read of J. H., aged forty-three, ‘always ...<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>
-somewhat of an idiot, he is now become quite a driveller’;
-of E. E., aged sixty-two, ‘of a sluggish, stupid character’;
-of A. M., aged twenty-six, ‘afflicted with a leprosy’; of R. M.,
-aged seventy-seven, ‘worn out and paralytic’; of J. R., aged
-seventeen, who has contracted so many disorderly habits that
-decent people will not employ him. It is interesting to notice
-that it was not till 1790 that the Justices of the Peace were
-given any power of inspecting workhouses.</p>
-
-<p>In 1796, before Pitt’s scheme was brought in, the Act of
-1722, which had been introduced to stiffen the administration
-of the Poor Laws, was relaxed. An Act,<a id="FNanchor_261" href="#Footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> of which Sir William
-Young was the author, abolished the restriction of right to
-relief to persons willing to enter the workhouse, and provided
-that claimants could apply for relief directly to a magistrate.
-The Act declares that the restrictions had been found ‘inconvenient
-and oppressive.’ It is evidence, of course, of the
-increasing pressure of poverty.</p>
-
-<p>But to understand the arrangements in force at this time,
-and also the later developments, we must glance at another
-feature of the Poor Law system. The Poor Laws were a
-system of employment as well as a system of relief. The
-Acts before 1722 are all called Acts for the Relief of the Poor:
-the Act of 1722 speaks of ‘the Settlement, Employment and
-Relief.’ That Act empowered parishes to farm out the poor
-to an employer. Gilbert’s Act of 1782 provided that in the
-parishes incorporated under that Act the guardians were not
-to send able-bodied poor to the poorhouse, but to find work
-for them or maintain them until work was found: the guardian
-was to take the wage and provide the labourer with a maintenance.
-Thus there grew up a variety of systems of public
-employment: direct employment of paupers on parish work:
-the labour rate system, or the sharing out of the paupers
-among the ratepayers: the roundsman system by which pauper
-labour was sold to the farmers.<a id="FNanchor_262" href="#Footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>This was the state of things that Pitt proposed to reform.
-His general ideas on Poor Law reform were put before the
-House of Commons in the debate on the second reading of
-Whitbread’s Bill.<a id="FNanchor_263" href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> He thought that persons with large families
-should be treated as entitled to relief, that persons without a
-settlement, falling into want, should not be liable to removal
-at the caprice of the parish officer, that Friendly Societies
-should be encouraged, and that Schools of Industry should be
-established. ‘If any one would take the trouble to compute
-the amount of all the earnings of the children who are already
-educated in this manner, he would be surprised, when he came
-to consider the weight which their support by their own
-labours took off the country, and the addition which, by the
-fruits of their toil, and the habits to which they were formed,
-was made to its internal opulence.’ On 22nd December of
-that year, in a new Parliament, he asked for leave to bring in a
-Bill for the better Support and Maintenance of the Poor. He
-said the subject was too extensive to be discussed at that
-stage, that he only proposed that the Bill should be read a
-first and second time and sent to a committee where the blanks
-could be filled up, and the Bill printed before the holidays, ‘in
-order that during the interval of Parliament it might be circulated
-in the country and undergo the most serious investigation.’<a id="FNanchor_264" href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>
-Sheridan hinted that it was unfortunate for the poor
-that Pitt had taken the question out of Whitbread’s hands,
-to which Pitt replied that any delay in bringing forward his
-Bill was due to the time spent on taking advice. On
-28th February of the next year (1797), while strangers were
-excluded from the Gallery, there occurred what the <i>Parliamentary
-Register</i> calls ‘a conversation upon the farther
-consideration of the report of the Poor’s Bill,’ in which nobody
-but Pitt defended the Bill, and Sheridan and Joliffe attacked
-it. With this its Parliamentary history ends.</p>
-
-<p>The main features of the Bill were these.<a id="FNanchor_265" href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> Schools of
-Industry were to be established in every parish or group of
-parishes. These schools were to serve two purposes. First,
-the young were to be trained there (this idea came, of course,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>
-from Locke). Every poor man with more than two children
-who were not self-supporting, and every widow with more
-than one such child, was to be entitled to a weekly allowance
-in respect of each extra child. Every allowance child who
-was five years or over was to be sent to the School of Industry,
-unless his parent could instruct and employ him, and the proceeds
-of his work was to go towards the upkeep of the school.
-Secondly, grown-up people were to be employed there. The
-authorities were to provide ‘a proper stock of hemp, flax, silk,
-cotton, wool, iron, leather or other materials, and also proper
-tools and implements for the employment of the poor,’ and
-they were empowered to carry on all trades under this Act,
-‘any law or custom to the contrary notwithstanding.’ Any
-person lawfully settled in a parish was entitled to be employed
-in the school; any person residing in a parish, able and willing
-to be employed at the usual rates, was entitled to be employed
-there when out of work. Poor persons refusing to be employed
-there were not to be entitled to relief. The authorities might
-either pay wages at a rate fixed by the magistrates, or they
-might let the employed sell their products and merely repay
-the school for the material, or they might contract to feed them
-and take a proportion of their receipts. If the wages paid in
-the school were insufficient, they were to be supplemented out
-of the rates.</p>
-
-<p>The proposals for outside relief were briefly and chiefly these.
-A person unable to earn the full rate of wages usually given
-might contract with his employer to work at an inferior rate, and
-have the balance between his earnings and an adequate maintenance
-made up by the parish. Money might be advanced
-under certain circumstances for the purchase of a cow or other
-animal, if it seemed likely that such a course would enable
-the recipient to maintain himself without the help of the
-parish. The possession of property up to thirty pounds was
-not to disqualify a person for relief. A parochial insurance
-fund was to be created, partly from private subscriptions
-and partly from the rates. No person was to be removed
-from a parish on account of relief for temporary disability or
-sickness.</p>
-
-<p>The most celebrated and deadly criticism came from Bentham,
-who is often supposed to have killed the Bill. Some of his
-objections are captious and eristical, and he is a good deal less
-than just to the good elements of the scheme. Pitt deserves
-credit for one statesmanlike discovery, the discovery that it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-is bad policy to refuse to help a man until he is ruined. His
-cow-money proposal was also conceived in the right spirit if
-its form was impracticable. But the scheme as a whole was
-confused and incoherent, and it deserved the treatment it
-received. It was in truth a huge patchwork, on which the
-ideas of living and dead reformers were thrown together
-without order or plan. As a consequence, its various parts
-did not agree. It is surprising that the politician who had
-attacked Whitbread’s Bill as an interference with wages
-could have included in his scheme the proposal to pay wages
-in part out of rates. The whole scheme, though it would
-have involved a great expenditure, would have produced
-very much the same result as the Speenhamland system, by
-virtue of this clause. Pitt showed no more judgment or foresight
-than the least enlightened of County Justices in introducing
-into a scheme for providing relief, and dealing with
-unemployment, a proposal that could only have the effect
-of reducing wages. The organisation of Schools of Industry
-as a means of dealing with unemployment has sometimes been
-represented as quite a new proposal, but it was probably
-based on the suggestion made by Fielding in 1753 in his paper,
-‘A proposal for making an effectual provision for the poor,
-for amending their morals, and for rendering them useful
-members of society.’ Fielding proposed the erection of a
-county workhouse, which was to include a house of correction.
-He drew up a sharp and drastic code which would have
-authorised the committal to his County House, not only of
-vagrants, but of persons of low degree found harbouring in
-an ale-house after ten o’clock at night. But the workhouse
-was not merely to be used as a penal settlement, it was to find
-work for the unemployed. Any person who was unable to
-find employment in his parish could apply to the minister or
-churchwardens for a pass, and this pass was to give him the
-right to claim admission to the County House where he was to
-be employed. The County House was also to be provided
-with instructors who could teach native and foreign manufactures
-to the inmates. Howlett, one of Pitt’s critics,
-was probably right in thinking that Pitt was reviving this
-scheme.</p>
-
-<p>The Bill excited general opposition. Bentham’s analysis
-is the most famous of the criticisms that have survived,
-but in some senses his opposition was less serious than the
-dismay of magistrates and ratepayers. Hostile petitions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-poured into the House of Commons from London and from
-all parts of the country; among others there were petitions
-from Shrewsbury, Oswestry, Worcester, Bristol, Lincoln,
-Carmarthen, Bedford, Chester and Godalming.<a id="FNanchor_266" href="#Footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Howlett
-attacked the scheme on the ground of the danger of parish
-jobbery and corruption. Pitt apparently made no attempt
-to defend his plan, and he surrendered it without a murmur.
-We are thus left in the curious and disappointing position of
-having before us a Bill on the most important subject of the
-day, introduced and abandoned by the Prime Minister without
-a word or syllable in its defence. Whitbread observed<a id="FNanchor_267" href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> four
-years later that the Bill was brought in and printed, but never
-brought under the discussion of the House. Pitt’s excuse is
-significant: ‘He was, as formerly, convinced of its propriety;
-but many objections had been started to it by those whose
-opinion he was bound to respect. Inexperienced himself in
-country affairs, and in the condition of the poor, he was
-diffident of his own opinion, and would not press the measure
-upon the attention of the House.’</p>
-
-<p>Poor Law Reform was thus abandoned, but two attempts
-were made, at the instance of Pitt, one of them with success,
-to soften the brutalities of the Law of Settlement. Neither
-proposal made it any easier to gain a settlement, and Pitt
-very properly declared that they did not go nearly far enough.
-Pitt had all Adam Smith’s just hatred of these restrictions,
-and in opposing Whitbread’s Bill for a minimum wage he
-pointed to ‘a radical amendment’ of the Law of Settlement
-as the true remedy. He was not the formal author of the
-Act of 1795, but it may safely be assumed that he was the
-chief power behind it. This Act<a id="FNanchor_268" href="#Footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> provided that nobody was
-to be removeable until he or she became actually chargeable
-to the parish. The preamble throws light on the working of
-the Settlement laws. It declares that ‘Many industrious
-poor persons, chargeable to the parish, township, or place
-where they live, merely from want of work there, would in
-any other place where sufficient employment is to be had,
-maintain themselves and families without being burthensome
-to any parish, township, or place; and such poor persons
-are for the most part compelled to live in their own parishes,
-townships, or places, and are not permitted to inhabit elsewhere,
-under pretence that they are likely to become chargeable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-to the parish, township, or place into which they go for
-the purpose of getting employment, although the labour of
-such poor persons might, in many instances, be very beneficial
-to such parish, township, or place.’ The granting of certificates
-is thus admitted to have been ineffectual. The same
-Act provided that orders of removal were to be suspended
-in cases where the pauper was dangerously ill, a provision that
-throws some light on the manner in which these orders had
-been executed, and that no person should gain a settlement
-by paying levies or taxes, in respect of any tenement of a
-yearly value of less than ten pounds.<a id="FNanchor_269" href="#Footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a></p>
-
-<p>From this time certificates were unnecessary, and if a
-labourer moved from Parish A to Parish B he was no longer
-liable to be sent back at the caprice of Parish B’s officers until
-he became actually chargeable, but, of course, if from any
-cause he fell into temporary distress, for example, if he were
-out of work for a few weeks, unless he could get private aid
-from ‘the opulent,’ he had to return to his old parish. An
-attempt was made to remedy this state of things by Mr. Baker
-who, in March 1800, introduced a Bill<a id="FNanchor_270" href="#Footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> to enable overseers to
-assist the deserving but unsettled poor in cases of temporary
-distress. He explained that the provisions of the Bill would
-apply only to men who could usually keep themselves, but
-from the high cost of provisions had to depend on parochial
-aid. He found a powerful supporter in Pitt, who argued
-that if people had enriched a parish with their industry, it
-was unfair that owing to temporary pressure they should
-be removed to a place where they were not wanted, and that
-it was better for a parish to suffer temporary inconvenience
-than for numbers of industrious men to be rendered unhappy
-and useless. But in spite of Pitt’s unanswerable case, the
-Bill, which was denounced by Mr. Buxton as oppressive to
-the landed interest, by Lord Sheffield as ‘subversive of the
-whole economy of the country,’ by Mr. Ellison as submerging
-the middle ranks, and by Sir William Pulteney as being a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-‘premium for idleness and extravagance,’ was rejected by
-thirty votes to twenty-three.<a id="FNanchor_271" href="#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Allotments</span></h3>
-
-<p>Another policy that was pressed upon the governing class
-was the policy of restoring to the labourer some of the resources
-he had lost with enclosure, of putting him in such a position
-that he was not obliged to depend entirely on the purchasing
-power of his wages at the shop. This was the aim of the allotment
-movement. The propaganda failed, but it did not fail
-for the want of vigorous and authoritative support. We have
-seen in a previous chapter that Arthur Young awoke in 1801 to
-the social mischief of depriving the poor of their land and their
-cows, and that he wanted future Enclosure Acts to be juster
-and more humane. Cobbett suggested a large scheme of
-agrarian settlement to Windham in 1806. These proposals
-had been anticipated by Davies, whose knowledge of the
-actual life of the poor made him understand the important
-difference between a total and a partial dependence on wages.
-‘Hope is a cordial, of which the poor man has especially
-much need, to cheer his heart in the toilsome journey through
-life. And the fatal consequence of that policy, which deprives
-labouring people of the expectation of possessing any property
-in the soil, must be the extinction of every generous principle
-in their minds.... No gentleman should be permitted to
-pull down a cottage, until he had first erected another, upon
-one of Mr. Kent’s plans, either on some convenient part of the
-waste, or on his own estate, with a certain quantity of land
-annexed.’ He praised the Act of Elizabeth which forbade the
-erection of cottages with less than four acres of land around
-them, ‘that poor people might secure for themselves a maintenance,
-and not be obliged on the loss of a few days labour to
-come to the parish,’<a id="FNanchor_272" href="#Footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> and urged that this prohibition, which
-had been repealed in 1775,<a id="FNanchor_273" href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> should be set up again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span></p>
-
-<p>The general policy of providing allotments was never tried,
-but we know something of individual experiments from the
-Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition and Increasing
-the Comforts of the Poor. This society took up the cause
-of allotments very zealously, and most of the examples of
-private benevolence seem to have found their way into the
-pages of its reports.</p>
-
-<p>These experiments were not very numerous. Indeed, the
-name of Lord Winchilsea recurs so inevitably in every allusion
-to the subject as to create a suspicion that the movement and
-his estates were coextensive. This is not the truth, but it is
-not very wide of the truth, for though Lord Winchilsea had
-imitators, those imitators were few. The fullest account of
-his estate in Rutlandshire is given by Sir Thomas Bernard.<a id="FNanchor_274" href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a>
-The estate embraced four parishes&mdash;Hambledon, Egleton,
-Greetham, and Burley on the Hill. The tenants included eighty
-cottagers possessing one hundred and seventy-four cows.
-‘About a third part have all their land in severalty; the rest
-of them have the use of a cow-pasture in common with others;
-most of them possessing a small homestead, adjoining to their
-cottage; every one of them having a good garden, and keeping
-one pig at least, if not more.... Of all the rents of the estate,
-none are more punctually paid than those for the cottagers’
-land.’ In this happy district if a man seemed likely to become
-a burden on the parish his landlord and neighbours saved the
-man’s self-respect and their own pockets as ratepayers, by setting
-him up with land and a cow instead. So far from neglecting
-their work as labourers, these proprietors of cows are described
-as ‘most steady and trusty.’ We have a picture of this little
-community leading a hard but energetic and independent life,
-the men going out to daily work, but busy in their spare hours
-with their cows, sheep, pigs, and gardens; the women and
-children looking after the live stock, spinning, or working in
-the gardens: a very different picture from that of the landless
-and ill-fed labourers elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Other landlords, who, acting on their own initiative, or at the
-instance of their agents, helped their cottagers by letting them
-land on which to keep cows were Lord Carrington and Lord
-Scarborough in Lincolnshire, and Lord Egremont on his Yorkshire
-estates (Kent was his agent). Some who were friendly to
-the allotments movement thought it a mistake to give allotments
-of arable land in districts where pasture land was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-available. Mr. Thompson, who writes the account of Lord
-Carrington’s cottagers with cows, thought that ‘where cottagers
-occupy arable land, it is very rarely of advantage to them, and
-generally a prejudice to the estate.’<a id="FNanchor_275" href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> He seems, however, to
-have been thinking more of small holdings than of allotments.
-‘The late Abel Smith, Esq., from motives of kindness to several
-cottagers on his estates in Nottinghamshire, let to each of them
-a small piece of arable land. I have rode over that estate with
-Lord Carrington several times since it descended to him, and
-I have invariably observed that the tenants upon it, who
-occupy only eight or ten acres of arable land, are poor, and their
-land in bad condition. They would thrive more and enjoy
-greater comfort with the means of keeping two or three cows
-each than with three times their present quantity of arable
-land; but it would be a greater mortification to them to be
-deprived of it than their landlord is disposed to inflict.’<a id="FNanchor_276" href="#Footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> On
-the other hand, a striking instance of successful arable allotments
-is described by a Mr. Estcourt in the Reports of the Society
-for Bettering the Condition of the Poor.<a id="FNanchor_277" href="#Footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> The scene was the
-parish of Long Newnton in Wilts, which contained one hundred
-and forty poor persons, chiefly agricultural labourers, distributed
-in thirty-two families, and the year was 1800. The price of provisions
-was very high, and ‘though all had a very liberal allowance
-from the poor rate’ the whole village was plunged in debt and
-misery. From this hopeless plight the parish was rescued by
-an allotment scheme that Mr. Estcourt established and
-described. Each cottager who applied was allowed to rent a
-small quantity of land at the rate of £1, 12s. an acre<a id="FNanchor_278" href="#Footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> on a
-fourteen years’ lease: the quantity of land let to an applicant
-depended on the number in his family, with a maximum of
-one and a half acres: the tenant was to forfeit his holding if
-he received poor relief other than medical relief. The offer
-was greedily accepted, two widows with large families and four
-very old and infirm persons being the only persons who did not
-apply for a lease. A loan of £44 was divided among the
-tenants to free them from their debts and give them a fresh
-start. They were allowed a third of their plot on Lady Day
-1801, a second third on Lady Day 1802, and the remainder
-on Lady Day 1803. The results as recorded in 1805 were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-astonishing. None of the tenants had received any poor relief:
-all the conditions had been observed: the loan of £44 had
-long been repaid and the poor rate had fallen from £212, 16s.
-to £12, 6s. ‘They are so much beforehand with the world
-that it is supposed that it must be some calamity still more
-severe than any they have ever been afflicted with that could
-put them under the necessity of ever applying for relief to the
-parish again.... The farmers of this parish allow that they
-never had their work better done, their servants more able,
-willing, civil, and sober, and that their property was never so
-free from depredation as at present.’<a id="FNanchor_279" href="#Footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a></p>
-
-<p>Some philanthropists, full of the advantages to the poor of
-possessing live-stock, argued that it was a good thing for
-cottagers to keep cows even in arable districts. Sir Henry
-Vavasour wrote an account in 1801<a id="FNanchor_280" href="#Footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> of one of his cottagers who
-managed to keep two cows and two pigs and make a profit of
-£30 a year on three acres three perches of arable with a
-summer’s gait for one of his cows. The man, his wife, and his
-daughter of twelve worked on the land in their spare hours.
-The Board of Agriculture offered gold medals in 1801 for the
-best report of how to keep one or two cows on arable land, and
-Sir John Sinclair wrote an essay on the subject, reproduced in
-the account of ‘Useful Projects’ in the <i>Annual Register</i>.<a id="FNanchor_281" href="#Footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a>
-Sir John Sinclair urged that if the system was generally adopted
-it would remove the popular objections to enclosure.</p>
-
-<p>Other advocates of the policy of giving the labourers land
-pleaded only for gardens in arable districts; ‘a garden,’ wrote
-Lord Winchilsea, ‘may be allotted to them in almost every
-situation, and will be found of infinite use to them. In countries,
-where it has never been the custom for labourers to keep cows,
-it may be difficult to introduce it; but where no gardens have
-been annexed to the cottages, it is sufficient to give the ground,
-and the labourer is sure to know what to do with it, and will
-reap an immediate benefit from it. Of this I have had experience
-in several places, particularly in two parishes near Newport
-Pagnell, Bucks, where there never have been any gardens
-annexed to the labourers’ houses, and where, upon land being
-allotted to them, they all, without a single exception, have
-cultivated their gardens extremely well, and profess receiving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-the greatest benefits from them.’<a id="FNanchor_282" href="#Footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> ‘A few roods of land, at a
-fair rent,’ wrote a correspondent in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>
-in 1796,<a id="FNanchor_283" href="#Footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> ‘would do a labourer as much good as wages almost
-doubled: there would not, then, be an idle hand in his family,
-and the man himself would often go to work in his root
-yard instead of going to the ale house.’<a id="FNanchor_284" href="#Footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> The interesting
-report on the ‘Inquiry into the General State of the
-Poor’ presented at the Epiphany General Quarter Sessions
-for Hampshire and published in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>,<a id="FNanchor_285" href="#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a>
-a document which does not display too much indulgence to
-the shortcomings of labourers, recommends the multiplication
-of cottages with small pieces of ground annexed, so that
-labourers might live nearer their work, and spend the time
-often wasted in going to and from their work, in cultivating
-their plot of ground at home. ‘As it is chiefly this practice
-which renders even the state of slavery in the West Indies
-tolerable, what an advantage would it be to the state of free
-service here!’<a id="FNanchor_286" href="#Footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a></p>
-
-<p>The experiments in the provision of allotments of any kind
-were few, and they are chiefly interesting for the light they
-reflect on the character of the labourer of the period. They
-show of what those men and women were capable whose
-degradation in the morass of the Speenhamland system is the
-last and blackest page in the history of the eighteenth century.
-Their rulers put a stone round their necks, and it was not their
-character but their circumstances that dragged them into the
-mire. In villages where allotments were tried the agricultural
-labourer is an upright and self-respecting figure. The immediate
-moral effects were visible enough at the time. Sir
-Thomas Bernard’s account of the cottagers on Lord Winchilsea’s
-estate contains the following reflections: ‘I do not mean
-to assert that the English cottager, narrowed as he now is in
-the means and habits of life, may be immediately capable of
-taking that active and useful station in society, that is filled
-by those who are the subject of this paper. To produce so
-great an improvement in character and circumstances of life,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-will require time and attention. The cottager, however, of
-this part of the county of Rutland, <i>is not of a different species
-from other English cottagers</i>; and if he had not been protected
-and encouraged by his landlord, he would have been the same
-hopeless and comfortless creature that we see in some other
-parts of England. The farmer (with the assistance of the
-steward) would have taken his land; the creditor, his cow and
-pig; and the workhouse, his family.’<a id="FNanchor_287" href="#Footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a></p>
-
-<p>We have seen, in discussing enclosures, that the policy of
-securing allotments to the labourers in enclosure Acts was
-defeated by the class interests of the landlords. Why, it may
-be asked, were schemes such as those of Lord Winchilsea’s
-adopted so rarely in villages already enclosed? These arrangements
-benefited all parties. There was no doubt about the
-demand; ‘in the greatest part of this kingdom,’ wrote one
-correspondent, ‘the cottager would rejoice at being permitted
-to pay the utmost value given by the farmers, for as much
-land as would keep a cow, if he could obtain it at that price.’<a id="FNanchor_288" href="#Footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a>
-The steadiness and industry of the labourers, stimulated by
-this incentive, were an advantage both to the landlords and
-to the farmers. Further, it was well known that in the villages
-where the labourers had land, poor rates were light.<a id="FNanchor_289" href="#Footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a> Why
-was it that a policy with so many recommendations never
-took root? Perhaps the best answer is given in the following
-story. Cobbett proposed to the vestry of Bishops Walthams
-that they should ‘ask the Bishop of Winchester to grant an
-acre of waste land to every married labourer. All, however,
-but the village schoolmaster voted against it, on the ground
-... that it would make the men “too saucy,” that they
-would “breed more children” and “want higher wages.”’<a id="FNanchor_290" href="#Footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a></p>
-
-<p>The truth is that enclosures and the new system of farming
-had set up two classes in antagonism to allotments, the large
-farmer, who disliked saucy labourers, and the shopkeeper, who
-knew that the more food the labourer raised on his little estate
-the less would he buy at the village store. It had been to the
-interest of a small farmer in the old common-field village to
-have a number of semi-labourers, semi-owners who could help
-at the harvest: the large farmer wanted a permanent supply
-of labour which was absolutely at his command. Moreover,
-the roundsman system maintained his labourers for him when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-he did not want them. The strength of the hostility of the
-farmers to allotments is seen in the language of those few
-landlords who were interested in this policy. Lord Winchilsea
-and his friends were always urging philanthropists to proceed
-with caution, and to try to reason the farmers out of their
-prejudices. The Report of the Poor Law Commission in 1834
-showed that these prejudices were as strong as ever. ‘We can
-do little or nothing to prevent pauperism; the farmers will
-have it: they prefer that the labourers should be slaves;
-they object to their having gardens, saying “The more they
-work for themselves, the less they work for us.”’<a id="FNanchor_291" href="#Footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> This was
-the view of Boys, the writer in agricultural subjects, who,
-criticising Kent’s declaration in favour of allotments, remarks:
-‘If farmers in general were to accommodate their labourers
-with two acres of land, a cow and two or three pigs, they would
-probably have more difficulty in getting their hard work done&mdash;as
-the cow, land, etc., would enable them to live with less
-earnings.’<a id="FNanchor_292" href="#Footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> Arthur Young and Nathaniel Kent made a great
-appeal to landlords and to landlords’ wives to interest themselves
-in their estates and the people who lived on them, but
-landlords’ bailiffs did not like the trouble of collecting a
-number of small rents, and most landlords preferred to leave
-their labourers to the mercy of the farmers. There was,
-however, one form of allotment that the farmers themselves
-liked: they would let strips of potato ground to labourers,
-sometimes at four times the rent they paid themselves, getting
-the land manured and dug into the bargain.<a id="FNanchor_293" href="#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Select Vestry Act of 1819<a id="FNanchor_294" href="#Footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a> empowered parishes to buy
-or lease twenty acres of land, and to set the indigent poor to
-work on it, or to lease it out to any poor and industrious
-inhabitant. A later Act of 1831<a id="FNanchor_295" href="#Footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> raised the limit from twenty
-to fifty acres, and empowered parishes to enclose fifty acres
-of waste (with the consent of those who had rights on it) and
-to lease it out for the same purposes. Little use was made of
-these Acts, and perhaps the clearest light is thrown on the
-extent of the allotment movement by a significant sentence
-that occurs in the Report of the Select Committee on Allotments
-in 1843. ‘It was not until 1830, when discontent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-had been so painfully exhibited amongst the peasantry of the
-southern counties that this method of alleviating their situation
-was much resorted to.’ In other words, little was done till
-labourers desperate with hunger had set the farmers’ ricks
-blazing.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE REMEDY ADOPTED. SPEENHAMLAND</h3>
-
-<p>The history has now been given of the several proposals
-made at this time that for one reason or another fell to the
-ground. A minimum wage was not fixed, allotments were
-only sprinkled with a sparing hand on an estate here and
-there, there was no revolution in diet, the problems of local
-supply and distribution were left untouched, the reconstruction
-of the Poor Law was abandoned. What means then did
-the governing class take to tranquillise a population made
-dangerous by hunger? The answer is, of course, the Speenhamland
-Act. The Berkshire J.P.’s and some discreet persons
-met at the Pelican Inn at Speenhamland<a id="FNanchor_296" href="#Footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> on 6th May 1795,
-and there resolved on a momentous policy which was gradually
-adopted in almost every part of England.</p>
-
-<p>There is a strange irony in the story of this meeting which
-gave such a fatal impetus to the reduction of wages. It was
-summoned in order to raise wages, and so make the labourer
-independent of parish relief. At the General Quarter Sessions
-for Berkshire held at Newbury on the 14th April, Charles
-Dundas, M.P.,<a id="FNanchor_297" href="#Footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a> in his charge to the Grand Jury<a id="FNanchor_298" href="#Footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> dwelt on the
-miserable state of the labourers and the necessity of increasing
-their wages to subsistence level, instead of leaving them to
-resort to the parish officers for support for their families, as
-was the case when they worked for a shilling a day. He
-quoted the Acts of Elizabeth and James with reference to the
-fixing of wages. The Court, impressed by his speech, decided
-to convene a meeting for the rating of wages. The advertisement
-of the meeting shows that this was the only object in
-view. ‘At the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace for
-this county held at Newbury, on Tuesday, the 14th instant,
-the Court, having taken into consideration the great Inequality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-of Labourers’ Wages, and the insufficiency of the same
-for the necessary support of an industrious man and his family;
-and it being the opinion of the Gentlemen assembled on the
-Grand Jury, that many parishes have not advanced their
-labourers’ weekly pay in proportion to the high price of corn
-and provisions, do (in pursuance of the Acts of Parliament,
-enabling and requiring them so to do, either at the Easter
-Sessions, yearly, or within six weeks next after) earnestly
-request the attendance of the Sheriff, and all the Magistrates
-of this County, at a Meeting intended to be held at the Pelican
-Inn in Speenhamland, on Wednesday, the sixth day of May
-next, at ten o’clock in the forenoon, for the purpose of consulting
-together with such discreet persons as they shall think
-meet, and they will then, having respect to the plenty and
-scarcity of the time, and other circumstances (if approved of)
-proceed to limit, direct, and appoint the wages of day
-labourers.’<a id="FNanchor_299" href="#Footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></p>
-
-<p>The meeting was duly held on 6th May.<a id="FNanchor_300" href="#Footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a> Mr. Charles
-Dundas was in the chair, and there were seventeen other
-magistrates and discreet persons present, of whom seven were
-clergymen. It was resolved unanimously ‘that the present
-state of the poor does require further assistance than has
-been generally given them.’ Of the details of the discussion
-no records have come down to us, nor do we know by what
-majority the second and fatal resolution rejecting the rating
-of wages and substituting an allowance policy was adopted.
-According to Eden, the arguments in favour of adopting the
-rating of wages were ‘that by enforcing a payment for labour,
-from the employers, in proportion to the price of bread, some
-encouragement would have been held out to the labourer,
-as what he would have received, would have been payment
-for labour. He would have considered it as his right, and not
-as charity.’<a id="FNanchor_301" href="#Footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> But these arguments were rejected, and a
-pious recommendation to employers to raise wages, coupled
-with detailed directions for supplementing those wages from
-parish funds, adopted instead.<a id="FNanchor_302" href="#Footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> The text of the second resolution
-runs thus: ‘Resolved, that it is not expedient for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-Magistrates to grant that assistance by regulating the wages
-of Day Labourers according to the directions of the Statutes
-of the 5th Elizabeth and 1st James: But the Magistrates
-very earnestly recommend to the Farmers and others throughout
-the county to increase the Pay of their Labourers in
-proportion to the present Price of Provisions; and agreeable
-thereto the Magistrates now present have unanimously
-Resolved, That they will in their several divisions, make the
-following calculations and allowances for the relief of all poor
-and industrious men and their families, who, to the satisfaction
-of the Justices of their parish, shall endeavour (as far as they
-can), for their own support and maintenance, that is to say,
-when the gallon loaf of second flour, weighing 8 lbs. 11 oz.
-shall cost one shilling, then every poor and industrious man
-shall have for his own support 3s. weekly, either produced by
-his own or his family’s labour or an allowance from the poor rates,
-and for the support of his wife and every other of his family
-1s. 6d. When the gallon loaf shall cost 1s. 4d., then every
-poor and industrious man shall have 4s. weekly for his own,
-and 1s. 10d. for the support of every other of his family.</p>
-
-<p>‘And so in proportion as the price of bread rises or falls
-(that is to say), 3d. to the man and 1d. to every other of the
-family, on every penny which the loaf rises above a shilling.’</p>
-
-<p>In other words, it was estimated that the man must have
-three gallon loaves a week, and his wife and each child one and
-a half.</p>
-
-<p>It is interesting to notice that at this same famous Speenhamland
-meeting the justices ‘wishing, as much as possible, to
-alleviate the Distresses of the Poor with as little burthen on
-the occupiers of the Land as possible’ recommended overseers
-to cultivate land for potatoes and to give the workers a quarter
-of the crop, selling the rest at one shilling a bushel; overseers
-were also recommended to purchase fuel and to retail it at a loss.</p>
-
-<p>The Speenhamland policy was not a full-blown invention
-of that unhappy May morning in the Pelican Inn. The
-principle had already been adopted elsewhere. At the Oxford
-Quarter Sessions on 13th January 1795, the justices had
-resolved that the following incomes were ‘absolutely necessary
-for the support of the poor, industrious labourer, and that when
-the utmost industry of a family cannot produce the undermentioned
-sums, it must be made up by the overseer, exclusive
-of rent, <span class="lock">viz.:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A single Man according to his labour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A Man and his Wife not less than 6s. a week.</p>
-
-<p>‘A Man and his Wife with one or two Small Children, not
-less than 7s. a week.</p>
-
-<p>‘And for every additional Child not less than 1s. a week.’
-This regulation was to be sent to all overseers within the
-county.<a id="FNanchor_303" href="#Footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a></p>
-
-<p>But the Speenhamland magistrates had drawn up a table
-which became a convenient standard, and other magistrates
-found it the simplest course to accept the table as it stood.
-The tables passed rapidly from county to county. The allowance
-system spread like a fever, for while it is true to say that
-the northern counties took it much later and in a milder form,
-there were only two counties still free from it in 1834&mdash;Northumberland
-and Durham.</p>
-
-<p>To complete our picture of the new system we must remember
-the results of Gilbert’s Act. It had been the practice in those
-parishes that adopted the Act to reserve the workhouse for the
-infirm and to find work outside for the unemployed, the parish
-receiving the wages of such employment and providing maintenance.
-This outside employment had spread to other
-parishes, and the way in which it had been worked may be
-illustrated by cases mentioned by Eden, writing in the summer
-and autumn of 1795. At Kibworth-Beauchamp in Leicestershire,
-‘in the winter, and at other times, when a man is out of
-work, he applies to the overseer, who sends him from house to
-house to get employ: the housekeeper, who employs him, is
-obliged to give him victuals, and 6d. a day; and the parish
-adds 4d.; (total 10d. a day;) for the support of his family: persons
-working in this manner are called rounds-men, from their going
-round the village or township for employ.’<a id="FNanchor_304" href="#Footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> At Yardley
-Goben, in Northamptonshire, every person who paid more than
-£20 rent was bound in his turn to employ a man for a day and
-to pay him a shilling.<a id="FNanchor_305" href="#Footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> At Maids Morton the roundsman got
-6d. from the employer and 6d. or 9d. from the parish.<a id="FNanchor_306" href="#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a>
-At Winslow in Bucks the system was more fully developed.
-‘There seems to be here a great want of employment: most
-labourers are (as it is termed,) <i>on the Rounds</i>; that is, they go
-to work from one house to another <i>round</i> the parish. In winter,
-sometimes 40 persons are on the rounds. They are wholly
-paid by the parish, unless the householders choose to employ
-them; and from these circumstances, labourers often become
-very lazy, and imperious. Children, about ten years old, are put<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-on the rounds, and receive from the parish from 1s. 6d. to 3s.
-a week.’<a id="FNanchor_307" href="#Footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> The Speenhamland systematised scale was easily
-grafted on to these arrangements. ‘During the late dear
-season, the Poor of the parish went in a body to the Justices,
-to complain of their want of bread. The Magistrates sent orders
-to the parish officers to raise the earnings of labourers, to
-certain weekly sums, according to the number of their children;
-a circumstance that should invariably be attended to in
-apportioning parochial relief. These sums were from 7s. to
-19s.; and were to be reduced, proportionably with the price
-of bread.’<a id="FNanchor_308" href="#Footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Speenhamland system did not then spring Athene-like
-out of the heads of the justices and other discreet persons whose
-place of meeting has given the system its name. Neither was
-the unemployment policy thereafter adopted a sudden inspiration
-of the Parliament of 1796. The importance of these years
-is that though the governing classes did not then introduce a
-new principle, they applied to the normal case methods of relief
-and treatment that had hitherto been reserved for the exceptions.
-The Poor Law which had once been the hospital became
-now the prison of the poor. Designed to relieve his necessities,
-it was now his bondage. If a labourer was in private employment,
-the difference between the wage his master chose to give
-him and the recognised minimum was made up by the parish.
-Those labourers who could not find private employment were
-either shared out among the ratepayers, or else their labour
-was sold by the parish to employers, at a low rate, the parish
-contributing what was needed to bring the labourers’ receipts
-up to scale. Crabbe has described the roundsman system:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Alternate Masters now their Slave command,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Urge the weak efforts of his feeble hand,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And when his age attempts its task in vain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">With ruthless taunts, of lazy poor complain.’<a id="FNanchor_309" href="#Footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The meshes of the Poor Law were spread over the entire
-labour system. The labourers, stripped of their ancient
-rights and their ancient possessions, refused a minimum wage
-and allotments, were given instead a universal system of
-pauperism. This was the basis on which the governing class
-rebuilt the English village. Many critics, Arthur Young and
-Malthus among them, assailed it, but it endured for forty years,
-and it was not disestablished until Parliament itself had passed
-through a revolution.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">AFTER SPEENHAMLAND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>The Speenhamland system is often spoken of as a piece of
-pardonable but disastrous sentimentalism on the part of the
-upper classes. This view overlooks the predicament in which
-these classes found themselves at the end of the eighteenth
-century. We will try to reconstruct the situation and to
-reproduce their state of mind. Agriculture, which had hitherto
-provided most people with a livelihood, but few people with
-vast fortunes, had become by the end of the century a great
-capitalist and specialised industry. During the French war its
-profits were fabulous, and they were due partly to enclosures,
-partly to the introduction of scientific methods, partly to the
-huge prices caused by the war. It was producing thus a vast
-surplus over and above the product necessary for maintenance
-and for wear and tear. Consequently, as students of
-Mr. Hobson’s <i>Industrial System</i> will perceive, there arose an
-important social problem of distribution, and the Poor Law
-was closely involved with it.</p>
-
-<p>This industry maintained, or helped to maintain, four
-principal interests: the landlords, the tithe-owners, the farmers,
-and the labourers. Of these interests the first two were represented
-in the governing class, and in considering the mind of
-that class we may merge them into one. The sympathies of
-the farmers were rather with the landlords than with the
-labourers, but their interests were not identical. The labourers
-were unrepresented either in the Government or in the voting
-power of the nation. If the forces had been more equally
-matched, or if Parliament had represented all classes, the surplus
-income of agriculture would have gone to increase rents, tithes,
-profits, and wages. It might, besides turning the landlords
-into great magnates like the cotton lords of Lancashire, and
-throwing up a race of farmers with scarlet coats and jack boots,
-have raised permanently the standard and character of the
-labouring class, have given them a decent wage and decent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-cottages. The village population whose condition, as Whitbread
-said, was compared by supporters of the slave trade with
-that of the negroes in the West Indies, to its disadvantage,
-might have been rehoused on its share of this tremendous
-revenue. In fact, the revenue went solely to increase rent,
-tithes, and to some extent profits. The labourers alone had
-made no advance when the halcyon days of the industry
-clouded over and prices fell. The rent receiver received more
-rent than was needed to induce him to let his land, the farmer
-made larger profits than were necessary to induce him to apply
-his capital and ability to farming, but the labourer received
-less than was necessary to maintain him, the balance being
-made up out of the rates. Thus not only did the labourer receive
-no share of this surplus; he did not even get his subsistence
-directly from the product of his labour. Now let us suppose
-that instead of having his wages made up out of the rates he
-had been paid a maintenance wage by the farmer. The extra
-cost would have come out of rent to the same extent as did
-the subsidy from the rates. The landlord therefore made no
-sacrifice in introducing the Speenhamland system, for though
-the farmers thought that they could obtain a reduction of rent
-more easily if they could plead high rates than if they pleaded
-the high price of labour,<a id="FNanchor_310" href="#Footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> it is obvious that the same conditions
-which produced a reduction of rents in the one case must
-ultimately have produced a reduction in the other. As it
-was, none of this surplus went to labour, and the proportion
-in which it was divided between landlord and farmer was not
-affected by the fact that the labourer was kept alive partly
-from the rates and not wholly from wages.<a id="FNanchor_311" href="#Footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a></p>
-
-<p>Now the governing class which was confronted with the
-situation that we have described in a previous chapter consisted
-of two classes who had both contrived to slip off their obligations
-to the State. They were both essentially privileged
-classes. The landlords were not in the eye of history absolute
-owners; they had held their land on several conditions, one of
-which was the liability to provide military services for the
-Crown, and this obligation they had commuted into a tax on
-the nation. The tithe-owners had for centuries appropriated
-to their own use a revenue that was designed in part for
-the poor. Tithes were originally taxation for four objects:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-(1) the bishop; (2) the maintenance of the fabric of the Church;
-(3) the relief of the poor; (4) the incumbent. After the
-endowment of the bishopricks the first of these objects dropped
-out. The poor had not a very much longer life. It is true
-that the clergy were bidden much later to use tithes, <i>non quasi
-suis sed quasi commendatis</i>, and Dryden in his character of the
-Good Parson had described their historical obligations:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘True priests, he said, and preachers of the Word</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were only stewards of their sovereign Lord:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nothing was theirs but all the public store,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Intrusted riches to relieve the poor.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The right of the poor to an allowance from the tithes was
-declared in an Act of Richard <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> and an Act of Henry <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-After that it disappears from view. Of course, great masses
-of tithe property had passed, by the time we are considering,
-into secular hands. The monasteries appropriated about a
-third of the livings of England, and the tithes in these parishes
-passed at the Reformation to the Crown, whence they passed
-in grants to private persons. No responsibility for the poor
-troubled either the lay or spiritual owners of tithes, and though
-they used the name of God freely in defending their claims,
-they were stewards of God in much the same sense as George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-was the defender of the faith. The landowners and tithe-owners
-had their differences when it came to an Enclosure
-Bill, but these classes had the same interests in the disposal
-of the surplus profits of agriculture; and both alike were in
-a vulnerable position if the origin and history of their property
-came under too fierce a discussion.</p>
-
-<p>There was a special reason why the classes that had suddenly
-become very much richer should dread too searching a discontent
-at this moment. They had seen tithes, and all
-seignorial dues abolished almost at a single stroke across the
-Channel, and they were at this time associating constantly
-with the emigrant nobility of France, whose prospect of recovering
-their estates seemed to fade into a more doubtful
-distance with every battle that was fought between the
-France who had given the poor peasant such a position as the
-peasant enjoyed nowhere else, and her powerful neighbour
-who had made her landlords the richest and proudest class
-in Europe. The French Convention had passed a decree
-(November 1792), declaring that ‘wherever French armies
-shall come, all taxes, tithes, and privileges of rank are to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-abolished, all existing authorities cancelled, and provisional
-administrations elected by universal suffrage. The property
-of the fallen Government, of the privileged classes and their
-adherents to be placed under French protection.’ This last
-sentence had an unpleasant ring about it; it sounded like
-a terse paraphrase of <i>non quasi suis sed quasi commendatis</i>.
-In point of fact there was not yet any violent criticism of the
-basis of the social position of the privileged classes in England.
-Even Paine, when he suggested a scheme of Old Age Pensions
-for all over fifty, and a dowry for every one on reaching the
-age of twenty-one, had proposed to finance it by death duties.
-Thelwall, who wrote with a not unnatural bitterness about
-the great growth of ostentatious wealth at a time when the
-poor were becoming steadily poorer, told a story which illustrated
-very well the significance of the philanthropy of the
-rich. ‘I remember I was once talking to a friend of the
-charity and benevolence exhibited in this country, when
-stopping me with a sarcastic sneer, “Yes,” says he, “we steal
-the goose, and we give back the giblets.” “No,” said a third
-person who was standing by, “giblets are much too dainty for
-the common herd, we give them only the pen feathers.”’<a id="FNanchor_312" href="#Footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a>
-But the literature of Radicalism was not inflammatory, and
-the demands of the dispossessed were for something a good
-deal less than their strict due. The richer classes, however,
-were naturally anxious to soothe and pacify the poor before
-discontent spread any further, and the Speenhamland system
-turned out, from their point of view, a very admirable means
-to that end, for it provided a maintenance for the poor by a
-method which sapped their spirit and disarmed their independence.
-They were anxious that the labourers should not
-get into the way of expecting a larger share in the profits of
-agriculture, and at the same time they wanted to make them
-contented. Thelwall<a id="FNanchor_313" href="#Footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> stated that when he was in the Isle
-of Wight, the farmers came to a resolution to raise the price
-of labour, and that they were dissuaded by one of the greatest
-proprietors in the island, who called a meeting and warned
-the farmers that they would make the common people insolent
-and would never be able to reduce their wages again.</p>
-
-<p>An account of the introduction of the system into Warwickshire
-and Worcestershire illustrates very well the state of mind
-in which this policy had its origin. ‘In Warwickshire, the year
-1797 was mentioned as the date of its commencement in that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-county, and the scales of relief giving it authority were published
-in each of these counties previously to the year 1800. It was
-apprehended by many at that time, that either the wages of
-labour would rise to a height from which it would be difficult to
-reduce them when the cause for it had ceased, or that during
-the high prices the labourers might have had to endure privations
-to which it would be unsafe to expose them. To meet the
-emergency of the time, various schemes are said to have been
-adopted, such as weekly distributions of flour, providing
-families with clothes, or maintaining entirely a portion of
-their families, until at length the practice became general,
-and a right distinctly admitted by the magistrates was claimed
-by the labourer to parish relief, on the ground of inadequate
-wages and number in family. I was informed that the consequences
-of the system were not wholly unforeseen at the time,
-as affording a probable inducement to early marriages and
-large families; but at this period there was but little apprehension
-on that ground. A prevalent opinion, supported by
-high authority, that population was in itself a source of wealth,
-precluded all alarm. The demands for the public service were
-thought to endure a sufficient draught for any surplus people;
-and it was deemed wise by many persons at this time to present
-the Poor Laws to the lower classes, as an institution for their
-advantage, peculiar to this country; and to encourage an
-opinion among them, that by this means their own share in
-the property of the kingdom was recognised.’<a id="FNanchor_314" href="#Footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> To the landlords
-the Speenhamland system was a safety-valve in two
-ways. The farmers got cheap labour, and the labourers got
-a maintenance, and it was hoped thus to reconcile both classes
-to high rents and the great social splendour of their rulers.
-There was no encroachment on the surplus profits of agriculture,
-and landlords and tithe-owners basked in the sunshine
-of prosperity. It would be a mistake to represent the
-landlords as deliberately treating the farmers and the labourers
-on the principle which Cæsar boasted that he had applied
-with such success, when he borrowed money from his officers
-to give it to his soldiers, and thus contrived to attach both
-classes to his interest; but that was in effect the result and
-the significance of the Speenhamland system.</p>
-
-<p>This wrong application of those surplus profits was one
-element in the violent oscillations of trade during the generation
-after the war. A long war adding enormously to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-expenditure of Government must disorganise industry seriously
-in any case, and in this case the demoralisation was increased
-by a bad currency system. The governing class, which was
-continually meditating on the subject of agricultural distress,
-holding inquiries, and appointing committees, never conceived
-the problem as one of distribution. The Select Committee of
-1833 on Agriculture, for example, expressly disclaims any
-interest in the question of rents and wages, treating these as
-determined by a law of Nature, and assuming that the only question
-for a Government was the question of steadying prices by
-protection. What they did not realise was that a bad distribution
-of profits was itself a cause of disturbance. The most
-instructive speech on the course of agriculture during the
-French war was that in which Brougham showed in the House
-of Commons, on 9th April 1816, how the country had suffered
-from over-production during the wild elation of high prices, and
-how a tremendous system of speculative farming had been built
-up, entangling a variety of interests in this gamble. If those
-days had been employed to raise the standard of life among
-the labourers and to increase their powers of consumption, the
-subsequent fall would have been broken. The economists of
-the time looked on the millions of labourers as an item of cost,
-to be regarded like the price of raw material, whereas it is clear
-that they ought to have been regarded also as affording the
-best and most stable of markets. The landlord or the banker
-who put his surplus profits into the improvement and cultivation
-of land, only productive under conditions that could not
-last and could not return, was increasing unemployment in
-the future, whereas if the same profits had been distributed
-in wages among the labourers, they would have permanently
-increased consumption and steadied the vicissitudes of trade.
-Further, employment would have been more regular in another
-respect, for the landowner spent his surplus on luxuries, and
-the labourer spent his wages on necessaries.</p>
-
-<p>Now labour might have received its share of these profits
-either in an increase of wages, or in the expenditure of part of
-the revenue in a way that was specially beneficial to it. Wages
-did not rise, and it was a felony to use any pressure to raise
-them. What was the case of the poor in regard to taxation
-and expenditure? Taxation was overwhelming. A Herefordshire
-farmer stated that in 1815 the rates and taxes on
-a farm of three hundred acres in that county <span class="lock">were:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th></th>
-<th>£</th>
-<th><i>s.</i></th>
-<th><i>d.</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Property tax, landlord and tenant</td>
-<td>95</td>
-<td>16</td>
-<td>10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Great tithes</td>
-<td>64</td>
-<td>17</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Lesser tithes</td>
-<td>29</td>
-<td>15</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Land tax</td>
-<td>14</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Window lights</td>
-<td>24</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Poor rates, landlord</td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Poor rates, tenant</td>
-<td>40</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Cart-horse duty, landlord, 3 horses</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>11</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Two saddle horses, landlord</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Gig</td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Cart-horse duty, tenant</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">One saddle horse, tenant</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>13</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Landlord’s malt duty on 60 bushels of barley</td>
-<td>21</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Tenant’s duty for making 120 bushels of barley into malt</td>
-<td>42</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">New rate for building shire hall, paid by landlord</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">New rate for building shire hall, paid by tenant</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Surcharge</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>8</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="total">£383</td>
-<td class="total">11</td>
-<td class="total">4<a id="FNanchor_315" href="#Footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The <i>Agricultural and Industrial Magazine</i>, a periodical
-published by a philanthropical society in 1833, gave the
-following analysis of the taxation of a labourer earning £22, 10s.
-a <span class="lock">year:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th></th>
-<th>£</th>
-<th><i>s.</i></th>
-<th><i>d.</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">1. Malt</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>11</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">2. Sugar</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>17</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">3. Tea and Coffee</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">4. Soap</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>13</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">5. Housing</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>12</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">6. Food</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">7. Clothes</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="total">£11</td>
-<td class="total">7</td>
-<td class="total">7</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>But in the expenditure from this taxation was there a single
-item in which the poor had a special interest? The great mass
-of the expenditure was war expenditure, and that was not
-expenditure in which the poor were more interested than the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-rest. Indeed, much of it was expenditure which could not be
-associated directly or indirectly with their interests, such as
-the huge subsidies to the courts of Europe. Nearly fifty
-millions went in these subventions, and if some of them were
-strategical others were purely political. Did the English
-labourer receive any profit from the two and a half millions
-that Pitt threw to the King of Prussia, a subsidy that was
-employed for crushing Kosciusko and Poland, or from the
-millions that he gave to Austria, in return for which Austria
-ceded Venice to Napoleon? Did he receive any benefit from
-the million spent every year on the German legion, which
-helped to keep him in order in his own country? Did he
-receive any benefit from the million and a half which, on
-the confession of the Finance Committee of the House of
-Commons in 1810, went every year in absolute sinecures?
-Did he receive any benefit from the interest on the loans to the
-great bankers and contractors, who made huge profits out of
-the war and were patriotic enough to lend money to the
-Government to keep it going? Did he receive any benefit
-from the expenditure on crimping boys or pressing seamen, or
-transporting and imprisoning poachers and throwing their
-families by thousands on the rates? Pitt’s brilliant idea of
-buying up a cheap debt out of money raised by a dear one cost
-the nation twenty millions, and though Pitt considered the
-Sinking Fund his best title to honour, nobody will pretend that
-the poor of England gained anything from this display of his
-originality.<a id="FNanchor_316" href="#Footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> In these years Government was raising by taxation
-or loans over a hundred millions, but not a single penny
-went to the education of the labourer’s children, or to any purpose
-that made the perils and difficulties of his life more easy to
-be borne. If the sinecures had been reduced by a half, or if
-the great money-lenders had been treated as if their claims to
-the last penny were not sacrosanct, and had been made to take
-their share of the losses of the time, it would have been possible
-to set up the English cottager with allotments on the modest
-plan proposed by Young or Cobbett, side by side with the great
-estates with which that expenditure endowed the bankers and
-the dealers in scrip.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Now, so long as prices kept up, the condition of the labourer
-was masked by the general prosperity of the times. The governing
-class had found a method which checked the demand for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-higher wages and the danger that the labourer might claim a
-share in the bounding wealth of the time. The wolf was at
-the door, it is true, but he was chained, and the chain was the
-Speenhamland system. Consequently, though we hear complaints
-from the labourers, who contended that they were
-receiving in a patronising and degrading form what they were
-entitled to have as their direct wages, the note of rebellion was
-smothered for the moment. At this time it was a profitable
-proceeding to grow corn on almost any soil, and it is still
-possible to trace on the unharvested downs of Dartmoor the
-print of the harrow that turned even that wild moorland into
-gold, in the days when Napoleon was massing his armies for
-invasion. During these years parishes did not mind giving aid
-from the rates on the Speenhamland scale, and, though under
-this mischievous system population was advancing wildly,
-there was such a demand for labour that this abundance did
-not seem, as it seemed later, a plague of locusts, but a source of
-strength and wealth. The opinion of the day was all in favour
-of a heavy birth rate, and it was generally agreed, as we have
-seen, that Pitt’s escapades in the West Indies and elsewhere
-would draw off the surplus population fast enough to remove all
-difficulties. But although the large farmers prayed incessantly
-to heaven to preserve Pitt and to keep up religion and prices,
-the day came when it did not pay to plough the downs or the
-sands, and tumbling prices brought ruin to the farmers whose
-rents and whole manner of living were fixed on the assumption
-that there was no serious danger of peace, and that England
-was to live in a perpetual heyday of famine prices.</p>
-
-<p>With the fall in prices, the facts of the labourer’s condition
-were disclosed. Doctors tell us that in some cases of heart
-disease there is a state described as compensation, which may
-postpone failure for many years. With the fall in 1814 compensation
-ceased, and the disease which it obscured declared itself.
-For it was now no longer possible to absorb the redundant population
-in the wasteful roundsman system, and the maintenance
-standard tended to fall with the growing pressure on the resources
-from which the labourer was kept. By this time all
-labour had been swamped in the system. The ordinary village
-did not contain a mass of decently paid labourers and a surplus
-of labourers, from time to time redundant, for whom the parish
-had to provide as best it could. It contained a mass of
-labourers, all of them underpaid, whom the parish had to keep
-alive in the way most convenient to the farmers. Bishop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-Berkeley once said that it was doubtful whether the prosperity
-that preceded, or the calamities that succeeded, the South Sea
-Bubble had been the more disastrous to Great Britain: that
-saying would very well apply to the position of the agricultural
-labourer in regard to the rise and the fall of prices. With the
-rise of prices the last patch of common agriculture had been
-seized by the landlords, and the labourer had been robbed even
-of his garden;<a id="FNanchor_317" href="#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> with the fall, the great mass of labourers were
-thrown into destitution and misery. We may add that if
-that prosperity had been briefer, the superstition that an
-artificial encouragement of population was needed&mdash;the
-superstition of the rich for which the poor paid the penalty&mdash;would
-have had a shorter life. As it was, at the end of the
-great prosperity the landlords were enormously rich; rents
-had in some cases increased five-fold between 1790 and 1812:<a id="FNanchor_318" href="#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a>
-the large farmers had in many cases climbed into a style of
-life which meant a crash as soon as prices fell; the financiers
-had made great and sudden fortunes; the only class for whom
-a rise in the standard of existence was essential to the nation,
-had merely become more dependent on the pleasure of other
-classes and the accidents of the markets. The purchasing
-power of the labourer’s wages had gone down.</p>
-
-<p>The first sign of the strain is the rioting of 1816. In that
-year the spirit which the governing class had tried to send to
-sleep by the Speenhamland system, burst out in the first of two
-peasants’ revolts. Let us remember what their position was.
-They were not the only people overwhelmed by the fall in
-prices. Some landlords, who had been so reckless and extravagant
-as to live up to the enormous revenue they were receiving,
-had to surrender their estates to the new class of bankers and
-money-lenders that had been made powerful by the war.
-Many farmers, who had taken to keeping liveried servants and
-to copying the pomp of their landlords, and who had staked
-everything on the permanence of prices, were now submerged.
-Small farmers too, as the answers sent to the questions issued
-this year by the Board of Agriculture show, became paupers.
-The labourer was not the only sufferer. But he differed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-from the other victims of distress in that he had not benefited,
-but, as we have seen, had lost, by the prosperity of the
-days when the plough turned a golden furrow. His housing
-had not been improved; his dependence had not been made
-less abject or less absolute; his wages had not risen; and in
-many cases his garden had disappeared. When the storm
-broke over agriculture his condition became desperate. In
-February 1816 the Board of Agriculture sent out a series of
-questions, one of which asked for an account of the state of
-the poor, and out of 273 replies 237 reported want of employment
-and distress, and 25 reported that there was not
-unemployment or distress.<a id="FNanchor_319" href="#Footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> One of the correspondents
-explained that in his district the overseer called a meeting
-every Saturday, when he put up each labourer by name to
-auction, and they were let generally at from 1s. 6d. to 2s. per
-week and their provisions, their families being supported by
-the parish.<a id="FNanchor_320" href="#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1816 the labourers were suffering both from unemployment
-and from high prices. In 1815, as the <i>Annual Register</i><a id="FNanchor_321" href="#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a>
-puts it, ‘much distress was undergone in the latter part of the
-year by the trading portion of the community. This source of
-private calamity was unfortunately coincident with an extraordinary
-decline in agricultural prosperity, immediately
-proceeding from the greatly reduced price of corn and other
-products, which bore no adequate proportion to the exorbitant
-rents and other heavy burdens pressing upon the farmer.’ At
-the beginning of 1816 there were gloomy anticipations of a fall
-in prices, and Western<a id="FNanchor_322" href="#Footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a> moved a series of resolutions designed
-to prevent the importation of corn. But as the year advanced
-it became evident that the danger that threatened England
-was not the danger of abundance but the danger of scarcity.
-A bitterly cold summer was followed by so meagre a harvest
-that the price of corn rose rapidly beyond the point at which
-the ports were open for importation. But high prices which
-brought bidders at once for farms that had been unlet made
-bread and meat dear to the agricultural labourer, without
-bringing him more employment or an advance of wages, and
-the riots of 1816 were the result of the misery due to this
-combination of misfortunes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span></p>
-
-<p>The riots broke out in May of that year, and the counties
-affected were Norfolk, Suffolk, Huntingdon and Cambridgeshire.
-Nightly assemblies were held, threatening letters were
-sent, and houses, barns and ricks were set on fire. These
-fires were a prelude to a more determined agitation, which had
-such an effect on the authorities that the Sheriff of Suffolk and
-Mr. Willet, a banker of Brandon near Bury, hastened to
-London to inform the Home Secretary and to ask for the help
-of the Government in restoring tranquillity. Mr. Willet’s
-special interest in the proceedings is explained in a naïve
-sentence in the <i>Annual Register</i>: ‘A reduction in the price of
-bread and meat was the avowed object of the rioters. They
-had fixed a maximum for the price of both. They insisted
-that the lowest price of wheat must be half a crown a bushel,
-and that of prime joints of beef fourpence per pound. Mr.
-Willet, a butcher at Brandon, was a marked object of their
-ill-will, in which Mr. Willet, the banker, was, from the similarity
-of his name, in danger of sharing. This circumstance,
-and a laudable anxiety to preserve the public peace, induced
-him to take an active part and exert all his influence for that
-purpose.’<a id="FNanchor_323" href="#Footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> The rioters numbered some fifteen hundred, and
-they broke up into separate parties, scattering into different
-towns and villages. In the course of their depredations the
-house of the right Mr. Willet was levelled to the ground, after
-which the wrong Mr. Willet, it is to be hoped, was less restless.<a id="FNanchor_324" href="#Footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a>
-‘They were armed with long, heavy sticks, the ends of which,
-to the extent of several inches, were studded with short iron
-spikes, sharp at the sides and point. Their flag was inscribed
-“<i>Bread or Blood!</i>” and they threatened to march to
-London.’<a id="FNanchor_325" href="#Footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a></p>
-
-<p>During the next few days there were encounters between
-insurgent mobs in Norwich and Bury and the yeomanry, the
-dragoons, and the West Norfolk Militia. No lives seem to
-have been lost, but a good deal of property was destroyed, and
-a number of rioters were taken into custody. The <i>Times</i> of
-25th May says, in an article on these riots, that wages had
-been reduced to a rate lower than the magistrates thought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-reasonable, for the magistrates, after suppressing a riot near
-Downham, acquiesced in the propriety of raising wages, and
-released the offenders who had been arrested with a suitable
-remonstrance. There was a much more serious battle at
-Littleport in the Isle of Ely, when the old fighting spirit of
-the fens seems to have inspired the rioters. They began by
-driving from his house a clergyman magistrate of the name
-of Vachel, after which they attacked several houses and
-extorted money. They then made for Ely, where they carried
-out the same programme. This state of anarchy, after two or
-three days, ended in a battle in Littleport in which two rioters
-were killed, and seventy-five taken prisoners. The prisoners
-were tried next month by a Special Commission: twenty-four
-were capitally convicted; of these five were hung, five were
-transported for life, one was transported for fourteen years,
-three for seven years, and ten were imprisoned for twelve
-months in Ely gaol.<a id="FNanchor_326" href="#Footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> The spirit in which one of the judges,
-Mr. Christian, the Chief Justice of the Isle of Ely, conducted
-the proceedings may be gathered from his closing speech, in
-which he said that the rioters were receiving ‘great wages’
-and that ‘any change in the price of provisions could only
-lessen that superfluity, which, I fear, they too frequently
-wasted in drunkenness.’<a id="FNanchor_327" href="#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The pressure of the changed conditions of the nation on this
-system of maintenance out of the rates is seen, not only in the
-behaviour of the labourers, but also in the growing anxiety of
-the upper classes to control the system, and in the tenacity
-with which the parishes contested settlement claims. This is
-the great period of Poor Law litigation. Parish authorities
-kept a stricter watch than ever on immigrants. In 1816,
-for example, the Board of Agriculture reported that according
-to a correspondent ‘a late legal decision, determining that
-keeping a cow gained a settlement, has deprived many cottagers
-of that comfort, as it is properly called.’<a id="FNanchor_328" href="#Footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> This decision was
-remedied by the 1819 Act<a id="FNanchor_329" href="#Footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> to amend the Settlement Laws<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-as regards renting tenements, and the Report on the Poor
-Law in 1819 states that in consequence there ‘will no longer
-be an obstacle to the accommodation which may be afforded
-in some instances to a poor family, by renting the pasturage
-of a cow, or some other temporary profit from the occupation
-of land.’<a id="FNanchor_330" href="#Footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> Lawsuits between parishes were incessant,
-and in 1815 the money spent on litigation and the removal of
-paupers reached the gigantic figure of £287,000.</p>
-
-<p>In Parliament, too, the question of Poor Law Reform was seen
-to be urgent, but the problem assumed a particular and very
-limited shape. The significance of this development can be
-illustrated by comparing the character and the fate of a
-measure Whitbread had introduced in 1807 with the character
-and the fate of the legislation after Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p>Whitbread’s scheme had aimed at (1) improving and humanising
-the Law of Settlement; (2) reforming the administration
-of the Poor Law as such in such a way as to give greater
-encouragement to economy and a fairer distribution of burdens;
-(3) stimulating thrift and penalising idleness in the labourers;
-(4) reforming unemployment policy.</p>
-
-<p>The proposals under the first head provided that settlement
-might be gained by five years’ residence as a householder, if
-the householder had not become chargeable or been convicted
-of crime, or been absent for more than six weeks in a year.
-Two Justices of the Peace were to have power on complaint of
-the parish authorities to adjudicate on the settlement of any
-person likely to become chargeable, subject to an appeal to
-Quarter Sessions.</p>
-
-<p>The proposals under the second head aimed partly at vestry
-reform and partly at rating reform. In those parishes where
-there was an open vestry, all ratepayers were still equal as
-voters, but Whitbread proposed to give extra voting power
-at vestry meetings in proportion to assessment.<a id="FNanchor_331" href="#Footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> He wished
-to reform rating, by making stock in trade and personal property
-(except farming stock), which produced profit liable to assessment,
-by authorising the vestry to exempt such occupiers
-of cottages as they should think fit, and by giving power to
-the Justices of the Peace to strike out of the rate any person<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-occupying a cottage not exceeding five pounds in yearly value,
-who should make application to them, such exemptions not to
-be considered parochial relief. He also proposed that the county
-rate should be charged in every parish in proportion to the
-assessed property in the parish, and that any parish whose
-poor rate was for three years more than double the average
-of the parish rate in the county, should have power to apply to
-Quarter Sessions for relief out of county stock.</p>
-
-<p>Whitbread’s proposals for stimulating thrift and penalising
-idleness were a strange medley of enlightenment and childishness.
-He proposed to give the parish officers power to build
-cottages which were to be let at the best rents that were to be
-obtained: but the parish officers might with the consent of the
-vestry allow persons who could not pay rent to occupy them rent
-free, or at a reduced rent. He proposed also to create a
-National Bank, something of the nature of a Post Office Savings
-Bank, to be employed both as a savings bank and an insurance
-system for the poor. With these two excellent schemes he
-combined a ridiculous system of prizes and punishments for
-the thrifty and the irresponsible. Magistrates were to be
-empowered to give rewards (up to a maximum of £20) with
-a badge of good conduct, to labourers who had brought up
-large families without parish help, and to punish any man
-who appeared to have become chargeable from idleness or
-misconduct, and to brand him with the words, ‘criminal Poor.’</p>
-
-<p>In his unemployment policy Whitbread committed the fatal
-mistake, common to almost all the proposals of the time, of
-mixing up poor relief with wages in a way to depress and
-demoralise the labour market. The able-bodied unemployed,
-men, youths, or single women, were to be hired out by parish
-officers at the best price to be obtained. The wages were to
-be paid to the worker. If the worker was a single man or
-woman, or a widower with no children dependent on him, his
-or her earnings were to be made up by the parish to a sum
-necessary to his or her subsistence. If he or she had
-children, they were to be made up to three-quarters, or four-fifths,
-or the full average rate, according to the number of
-children. No single man or woman was to be hired out for
-more than a year, and no man or woman with dependent
-children for more than a month.</p>
-
-<p>The proposals were attacked vigorously by two critics who
-were not often found in company, Cobbett and Malthus.
-Cobbett criticised the introduction of plural voting at vestry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-meetings in an excellent passage in the <i>Political Register</i>.<a id="FNanchor_332" href="#Footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a>
-‘Many of those who pay rates are but a step or two from
-pauperism themselves; and they are the most likely persons
-to consider duly the important duty of doing, in case of relief,
-what they would be done unto. “But,” Mr. Whitbread will
-say, “is it right for these persons to <i>give away the money of
-others</i>.” It is <i>not</i> the money of others, any more than the
-amount of tithes is the farmer’s money. The maintenance
-of the poor is a charge upon the land, a charge duly considered
-in every purchase and in every lease. Besides, as the law
-now stands, though every parishioner has a vote in vestry,
-must it not be evident, to every man who reflects, that a man
-of large property and superior understanding will have weight
-in proportion? That he will, in fact, have <i>many votes</i>? If
-he play the tyrant, even little men will rise against him, and
-it is right they should have the power of so doing; but, while
-he conducts himself with moderation and humanity, while
-he behaves as he ought to do to those who are beneath him
-in point of property, there is no fear but he will have a
-sufficiency of weight at every vestry. The votes of the inferior
-persons in the parish are, in reality, dormant, unless in cases
-where some innovation, or some act of tyranny, is attempted.
-They are, like the sting of the bee, weapons merely of defence.’</p>
-
-<p>Malthus’ criticisms were of a very different nature.<a id="FNanchor_333" href="#Footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> He
-objected particularly to the public building of cottages, and
-the assessment of personal property to the rates. He argued
-that the scarcity of houses was the chief reason ‘why the
-Poor Laws had not been so extensive and prejudicial in their
-effects as might have been expected.’ If a stimulus was
-given to the building of cottages there would be no check on
-the increase of population. A similar tendency he ascribed
-to the rating of personal property. The employers of labour
-had an interest in the increase of population, and therefore
-in the building of cottages. This instinct was at present held
-in check by consideration of the burden of the rates. If,
-however, they could distribute that burden more widely,
-this consideration would have much less weight. Population
-would increase and wages would consequently go down.
-‘It has been observed by Dr. Adam Smith that no efforts of
-the legislature had been able to raise the salary of curates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-to that price which seemed necessary for their decent maintenance:
-and the reason which he justly assigns is that the
-bounties held out to the profession by the scholarships and
-fellowships of the universities always occasioned a redundant
-supply. In the same manner, if a more than usual supply
-of labour were encouraged by the premiums of small tenements,
-nothing could prevent a great and general fall in its price.’</p>
-
-<p>The Bill was introduced in 1807, before the fall of the Whig
-Ministry, and it went to a Committee. But the Tory Parliament
-elected that year to support Portland and his anti-Catholic
-Government was unfriendly, and the county magistrates
-to whom the draft of the Bill was sent for criticisms
-were also hostile. Whitbread accordingly proceeded no
-further. At this time the Speenhamland system seemed to be
-working without serious inconvenience, and there was therefore
-no driving power behind such proposals. But after 1815
-the conditions had changed, and the apathy of 1807 had
-melted away. The ruling class was no longer passive and
-indifferent about the growth of the Speenhamland system:
-both Houses of Parliament set inquiries on foot, schemes of
-emigration were invited and discussed, and measures of Vestry
-Reform were carried. But the problem was no longer the
-problem that Whitbread had set out to solve. Whitbread had
-proposed to increase the share of property in the control of
-the poor rates, but he had also brought forward a constructive
-scheme of social improvement. The Vestry Reformers of
-this period were merely interested in reducing the rates; the
-rest of Whitbread’s programme was forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>In 1818 an Act<a id="FNanchor_334" href="#Footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> was passed which established plural voting
-in vestries, every ratepayer whose rateable value was £50 and
-over being allowed a vote for every £25 of rateable property.
-In the following year an Act<a id="FNanchor_335" href="#Footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> was passed which allowed
-parishes to set up a select vestry, and ordained that in these
-parishes the overseers should give such relief as was ordered
-by the Select Vestry, and further allowed the appointment
-of salaried assistant overseers. These changes affected the
-administration of the Speenhamland system very considerably:
-and the salaried overseers made themselves hated in
-many parishes by the Draconian regime which they introduced.
-The parish cart, or the cart to which in some parishes
-men and women who asked for relief were harnessed, was one
-of the innovations of this period. The administrative methods<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-that were adopted in these parishes are illustrated by a fact
-mentioned by a clerk to the magistrates in Kent, in October
-1880.<a id="FNanchor_336" href="#Footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> The writer says that there was a severe overseer at
-Ash, who had among other applicants for relief an unemployed
-shepherd, with a wife and five children living at Margate,
-thirteen miles away. The shepherd was given 9s. a week,
-but the overseer made him walk to Ash every day except
-Sunday for his eighteenpence. The shepherd walked his
-twenty-six miles a day on such food as he could obtain out of
-his share of the 9s. for nine weeks, and then his strength could
-hold out no longer. The writer remarked that the shepherd
-was an industrious and honest man, out of work through no
-fault of his own. It was by such methods that the salaried
-overseers tried to break the poor of the habit of asking for
-relief, and it is not surprising that such methods rankled in
-the memories of the labourers. In this neighbourhood the
-writer attributed the fires of 1830 more to this cause than to
-any other.</p>
-
-<p>These attempts to relieve the ratepayer did nothing to
-relieve the labourer from the incubus of the system. His
-plight grew steadily worse. A Committee on Agricultural
-Wages, of which Lord John Russell was chairman, reported
-in 1824 that whereas in certain northern counties, where the
-Speenhamland system had not yet taken root, wages were 12s.
-to 15s., in the south they varied from 8s. or 9s. a week to 3s.
-for a single man and 4s. 6d. for a married man.<a id="FNanchor_337" href="#Footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> In one part
-of Kent the lowest wages in one parish were 6d. a day, and
-in the majority of parishes 1s. a day. The wages of an
-unmarried man in Buckinghamshire in 1828, according to a
-clergyman who gave evidence before the Committee of that
-year on the Poor Laws, were 3s. a week, and the wages of a
-married man were 6s. a week. In one parish in his neighbourhood
-the farmers had lately reduced the wages of able-bodied
-married men to 4s. a week. Thus the Speenhamland
-system had been effective enough in keeping wages low, but
-as a means of preserving a minimum livelihood it was breaking
-down by this time on all sides. We have seen from the
-history of Merton in Oxfordshire<a id="FNanchor_338" href="#Footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> what happened in one
-parish long before the adversities of agriculture had become
-acute. It is easy from this case to imagine what happened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-when the decline in employment and agriculture threw a
-steadily increasing burden on the system of maintenance from
-the rates. In some places, as the Commissioners of 1834 reported,
-the labourers were able by intimidation to keep the system in
-force, but though parishes did not as a rule dare to abandon
-or reform the system, they steadily reduced their scale.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The most direct and graphic demonstration of this fact,
-which has not apparently ever been noticed in any of the
-voluminous discussions of the old Poor Law system, is to be
-seen in the comparison of the standards of life adopted at the
-time the system was introduced with the standards that were
-adopted later. In 1795, as we have seen, the magistrates at
-Speenhamland recommended an allowance of three gallon
-loaves for each labourer, and a gallon loaf and a half for his
-wife and for each additional member of his family. This
-scale, it must be remembered, was not peculiar to Berkshire.
-It was the authoritative standard in many counties. We are
-able to compare this with some later scales, and the comparison
-yields some startling results. In Northamptonshire in 1816 the
-magistrates fixed a single man’s allowance at 5s., and the
-allowance for a man and his wife at 6s., the price of wheat
-the quartern loaf being 11½d.<a id="FNanchor_339" href="#Footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> On this scale a man is supposed
-to need a little over two and a half gallon loaves, and a man
-and his wife a little more than three gallon loaves, or barely
-more than a single man was supposed to need in 1795. This
-is a grave reduction, but the maintenance standard fell very
-much lower before 1832. For though we have scales for
-Cambridgeshire and Essex for 1821 published in the Report
-of the Poor Law Commission of 1834,<a id="FNanchor_340" href="#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> which agree roughly
-with the Northamptonshire scale (two gallon loaves for a
-man, and one and a half for a woman), in Wiltshire, according
-to the complicated scale adopted at Hindon in 1817, a
-man was allowed one and three-fifths gallon loaves, and a
-woman one and one-tenth.<a id="FNanchor_341" href="#Footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> A Hampshire scale, drawn up in
-1822 by eight magistrates, of whom five were parsons, allowed
-only one gallon loaf a head, with 4d. a week per head in addition
-to a family of four persons, the extra allowance being reduced
-by a penny in cases where there were six in the family, and by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>
-twopence in cases where there were more than six.<a id="FNanchor_342" href="#Footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a> The
-Dorsetshire magistrates in 1826 allowed a man the equivalent
-of one and a half gallon loaves and a penny over, and a
-woman or child over fourteen one and one-sixth.<a id="FNanchor_343" href="#Footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a> We have a
-general statement as to the scales in force towards the end
-of our period in a passage in M‘Culloch’s <i>Political Economy</i>
-quoted in the <i>Edinburgh Review</i> for January 1831 (p. 353):
-‘The allowance scales now issued from time to time by the
-magistrates are usually framed on the principle that every
-labourer should have a gallon loaf of standard wheaten bread
-weekly for every member of his family and one over: that is
-four loaves for three persons, five for four, six for five, and
-so on.’ That is, a family of four persons would have had seven
-and a half gallon loaves in 1795, and only five gallon loaves
-in 1831.</p>
-
-<p>Now the Speenhamland scale did not represent some easy
-and luxurious standard of living; it represented the minimum
-on which it was supposed that a man employed in agriculture
-could support life. In thirty-five years the standard had
-dropped, according to M‘Culloch’s statement, as much as a third,
-and this not because of war or famine, for in 1826 England
-had had eleven years of peace, but in the ordinary course of
-the life of the nation. Is such a decline in the standard of
-life recorded anywhere else in history?</p>
-
-<p>How did the labourers live at all under these conditions?
-Their life was, of course, wretched and squalid in the extreme.
-Cobbett describes a group of women labourers whom he met
-by the roadside in Hampshire as ‘such an assemblage of rags
-as I never saw before even amongst the hoppers at Farnham.’
-Of the labourers near Cricklade he said: ‘Their dwellings are
-little better than pig-beds, and their looks indicate that their
-food is not nearly equal to that of a pig. These wretched
-hovels are stuck upon little beds of ground on the <i>roadside</i>
-where the space has been wider than the road demanded. In
-many places they have not two rods to a hovel. It seems as
-if they had been swept off the fields by a hurricane, and had
-dropped and found shelter under the banks on the roadside.
-Yesterday morning was a sharp frost, and this had set the poor
-creatures to digging up their little plots of potatoes. In my<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-whole life I never saw human wretchedness equal to this;
-no, not even amongst the free negroes in America who, on an
-average, do not work one day out of four.’<a id="FNanchor_344" href="#Footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> The labourers’
-cottages in Leicestershire he found were ‘hovels made of
-mud and straw, bits of glass or of old cast-off windows,
-without frames or hinges frequently, and merely stuck in
-the mud wall. Enter them and look at the bits of chairs
-or stools, the wretched boards tacked together to serve for
-a table, the floor of pebble broken or of the bare ground;
-look at the thing called a bed, and survey the rags on the
-backs of the inhabitants.’<a id="FNanchor_345" href="#Footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> A Dorsetshire clergyman, a
-witness before the Committee on Wages in 1824, said that the
-labourers lived almost entirely on tea and potatoes; a Bedfordshire
-labourer said that he and his family lived mainly on bread
-and cheese and water, and that sometimes for a month together
-he never tasted meat; a Suffolk magistrate described how a
-labourer out of work, convicted of stealing wood, begged to be
-sent at once to a House of Correction, where he hoped to find
-food and employment. If Davies had written an account of
-the labouring classes in 1820 or 1830, the picture he drew in
-1795 would have seemed bright in comparison. But even this
-kind of life could not be supported on such provision as was
-made by the parish. How, then, did the labourers maintain
-any kind of existence when society ceased to piece together a
-minimum livelihood out of rates and wages?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>For the answer to this question we must turn to the history
-of crime and punishment; to the Reports of the Parliamentary
-Committees on Labourers’ Wages (1824), on the Game Laws
-(1823 and 1828), on Emigration (1826 and 1827), on Criminal
-Commitments and Convictions and Secondary Punishments
-(1827, 1828, 1831, and 1832), and the evidence of those who
-were in touch with this side of village life. From these sources
-we learn that, rate aid not being sufficient to bring wages to
-the maintenance level, poaching, smuggling, and ultimately
-thieving were called in to rehabilitate the labourer’s economic
-position.<a id="FNanchor_346" href="#Footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> He was driven to the wages of crime. The history
-of the agricultural labourer in this generation is written in
-the code of the Game Laws, the growing brutality of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-Criminal Law, and the preoccupation of the rich with the
-efficacy of punishment.</p>
-
-<p>We know from Fielding with what sort of justice the magistrates
-treated persons accused of poaching in the reign of George
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span>’s grandfather, but when he wrote his account of Squire
-Western, and when Blackstone wrote that the Game Laws had
-raised up a little Nimrod in every manor, the blood of men and
-boys had not yet been spilt for the pleasures of the rich. It
-is only after Fielding and Blackstone were both in their graves
-that this page of history became crimson, and that the gentlemen
-of England took to guarding their special amusements
-by methods of which a Member of Parliament declared that
-the nobles of France had not ventured on their like in the days
-of their most splendid arrogance. The little Nimrods who
-made and applied their code were a small and select class.
-They were the persons qualified under the law of Charles <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-to shoot game, <i>i.e.</i> persons who possessed a freehold estate of
-at least £100 a year, or a leasehold estate of at least £150 a
-year, or the son or heir-apparent of an esquire or person of
-higher degree. The legislation that occupies so much of English
-history during a period of misery and famine is devoted to
-the protection of the monopoly of this class, comprising less
-than one in ten thousand of the people of England. A Member
-of Parliament named Warburton said in the House of Commons
-that the only parallel to this monopoly was to be found in
-Mariner’s account of the Tonga Islands, where rats were
-preserved as game. Anybody might eat rats there, but
-nobody was allowed to kill them except persons descended
-from gods or kings.</p>
-
-<p>With the general growth of upper-class riches and luxury
-there came over shooting a change corresponding with the
-change that turned hunting into a magnificent and extravagant
-spectacle. The habit set in of preserving game in great masses,
-of organising the battue, of maintaining armies of keepers. In
-many parts of the country, pheasants were now introduced for
-the first time. Whereas game had hitherto kept something of
-the wildness, and vagrancy, and careless freedom of Nature,
-the woods were now packed with tame and docile birds, whose
-gay feathers sparkled among the trees, before the eyes of the
-half-starved labourers breaking stones on the road at half a
-crown a week. The change is described by witnesses such as
-Sir James Graham and Sir Thomas Baring, magistrates
-respectively in Cumberland and Hampshire, before the Select<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions in 1827.
-England was, in fact, passing through a process precisely
-opposite to that which had taken place in France: the sport
-of the rich was becoming more and more of an elaborate
-system, and more of a vested interest. This development was
-marked by the growth of an offensive combination among
-game preservers; in some parts of the country game associations
-were formed, for the express purpose of paying the costs
-of prosecutions, so that the poacher had against him not merely
-a bench of game preservers, but a ring of squires, a sort of
-Holy Alliance for the punishment of social rebels, which drew
-its meshes not round a parish but round a county. Simultaneously,
-as we have seen, a general change was coming over the
-circumstances and position of the poor. The mass of the people
-were losing their rights and independence; they were being
-forced into an absolute dependence on wages, and were living
-on the brink of famine. These two developments must be
-kept in mind in watching the building up of the game code in
-the last phase of the ancient régime.</p>
-
-<p>The Acts for protecting game passed after the accession of
-George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> are in a crescendo of fierceness. The first important
-Act was passed In 1770. Under this Act any one who killed
-game of any kind between sunsetting and sunrising, or used any
-gun, or dog, snare, net, or other engine for destroying game at
-night, was, on conviction by one witness before one Justice of
-the Peace, to be punished with imprisonment for not less than
-three months or more than six. For a subsequent offence he
-was to be imprisoned for not more than twelve months or less
-than six, and to be whipped publicly between the hours of
-twelve and one o’clock. This was light punishment compared
-with the measures that were to follow. In the year 1800, the
-year of Marengo, when all England was braced up for its great
-duel with the common enemy of freedom and order, and
-the labourers were told every day that they would be the
-first to suffer if Napoleon landed in England, the English
-Parliament found time to pass another Act to punish poachers,
-and to teach justice to mend her slow pace. By this Act
-when two or more persons were found in any forest, chase, park,
-wood, plantation, paddock, field, meadow, or other open or
-enclosed ground, having any gun, net, engine, or other instrument,
-with the intent to destroy, take, or kill game, they were
-to be seized by keepers or servants, and on conviction before
-a J.P., they were to be treated as rogues and vagabonds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-under the Act of 1744, <i>i.e.</i> they were to be punished by imprisonment
-with hard labour; an incorrigible rogue, <i>i.e.</i> a
-second offender, was to be imprisoned for two years with
-whipping. Further, if the offender was over twelve years
-of age, the magistrates might sentence him to serve in the
-army or navy. If an incorrigible rogue escaped from the
-House of Correction he was to be liable to transportation for
-seven years.</p>
-
-<p>Two consequences followed from this Act. Now that punishment
-was made so severe, the poacher had a strong reason for
-violence: surrender meant service in a condemned regiment,
-and he therefore took the risks of resistance. The second
-consequence was the practice of poaching in large groups.
-The organisation of poaching gangs was not a natural development
-of the industry; it was adopted in self-defence.<a id="FNanchor_347" href="#Footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> This
-Act led inevitably to those battles between gamekeepers and
-labourers that became so conspicuous a feature of English life
-at this time, and in 1803 Lord Ellenborough passed an Act
-which provided that any persons who presented a gun or tried
-to stab or cut ‘with intent to obstruct, resist, or prevent the
-lawful apprehension or detainer of the person or persons so
-stabbing or cutting, or the lawful apprehension or detainer of
-any of his, her, or their accomplices for any offences for which
-he, she, or they may respectively be liable by law to be apprehended,
-imprisoned, or detained,’ should suffer death as a
-felon. In 1816, when peace and the fall of prices were bringing
-new problems in their train, there went through Parliament,
-without a syllable of debate, a Bill of which Romilly said
-that no parallel to it could be found in the laws of any country
-in the world. By that Act a person who was found at night
-unarmed, but with a net for poaching, in any forest, chase, or
-park was to be punished by transportation for seven years.
-This Act Romilly induced Parliament to repeal in the following
-year, but the Act that took its place only softened the law to
-the extent of withdrawing this punishment from persons found
-with nets, but without guns or bludgeons: it enacted that any
-person so found, armed with gun, crossbow, firearms, bludgeon,
-or any other offensive weapon, was to be tried at Quarter
-Sessions, and if convicted, to be sentenced to transportation for
-seven years: if such offender were to return to Great Britain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>
-before his time was over, he was to be transported for the rest
-of his life.<a id="FNanchor_348" href="#Footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a></p>
-
-<p>This savage Act, though by no means a dead letter, as
-Parliamentary Returns show, seems to have defeated its
-own end, for in 1828 it was repealed, because, as Lord Wharncliffe
-told the House of Lords, there was a certain reluctance
-on the part of juries to convict a prisoner, when they knew
-that conviction would be followed by transportation. The
-new Act of 1828, which allowed a person to be convicted
-before two magistrates, reserved transportation for the third
-offence, punishing the first offence by three months’, and the
-second by six months’ imprisonment. But the convicted
-person had to find sureties after his release, or else go back
-to hard labour for another six months if it was a first offence,
-or another twelve months if it was his second. Further, if
-three men were found in a wood and one of them carried a
-gun or bludgeon, all three were liable to be transported for
-fourteen years.<a id="FNanchor_349" href="#Footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> Althorp’s Bill of 1831 which abolished the
-qualifications of the Act of Charles <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>, gave the right to
-shoot to every landowner who took out a certificate, and
-made the sale of game legal, proposed in its original form
-to alter these punishments, making that for the first and
-second offences rather more severe (four and eight months),
-and that for the third, two years’ imprisonment. In Committee
-in the House of Commons the two years were
-reduced to one year on the proposal of Orator Hunt. The
-House of Lords, however, restored the punishments of the
-Act of 1828.</p>
-
-<p>These were the main Acts for punishing poachers that were
-passed during the last phase of the ancient régime. How
-large a part they played in English life may be imagined from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>
-a fact mentioned by the Duke of Richmond in 1831.<a id="FNanchor_350" href="#Footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> In the
-three years between 1827 and 1830 one in seven of all the
-criminal convictions in the country were convictions under
-the Game Code. The number of persons so convicted was
-8502, many of them being under eighteen. Some of them
-had been transported for life, and some for seven or fourteen
-years. In some years the proportion was still higher.<a id="FNanchor_351" href="#Footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> We
-must remember, too, what kind of judges had tried many
-of these men and boys. ‘There is not a worse-constituted
-tribunal on the face of the earth,’ said Brougham in 1828, ‘not
-even that of the Turkish Cadi, than that at which summary
-convictions on the Game Laws constantly take place; I
-mean a bench or a brace of sporting justices. I am far from
-saying that, on such subjects, they are actuated by corrupt
-motives; but they are undoubtedly instigated by their
-abhorrence of that <i>caput lupinum</i>, that <i>hostis humani generis</i>,
-as an Honourable Friend of mine once called him in his place,
-that <i>fera naturæ</i>&mdash;a poacher. From their decisions on those
-points, where their passions are the most likely to mislead
-them, no appeal in reality lies to a more calm and unprejudiced
-tribunal; for, unless they set out any matter illegal on the
-face of the conviction, you remove the record in vain.’<a id="FNanchor_352" href="#Footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a></p>
-
-<p>The close relation of this great increase of crime to the
-general distress was universally recognised. Cobbett tells
-us that a gentleman in Surrey asked a young man, who was
-cracking stones on the roadside, how he could live upon half
-a crown a week. ‘I don’t live upon it,’ said he. ‘How do
-you live then?’ ‘Why,’ said he, ‘I <i>poach</i>: it is better to be
-hanged than to be starved to death.’<a id="FNanchor_353" href="#Footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> This story receives
-illustration after illustration in the evidence taken by Parliamentary
-Committees. The visiting Justices of the Prisons
-in Bedfordshire reported in 1827 that the great increase in
-commitments, and particularly the number of commitments
-for offences against the Game Laws, called for an inquiry.
-More than a third of the commitments during the last quarter
-had been for such offences. The Report <span class="lock">continues:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>‘In many parishes in this county the wages given to young<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-unmarried agricultural labourers, in the full strength and
-vigour of life, seldom exceed 3s. or 3s. 6d. a week, paid to
-them, generally, under the description of roundsmen, by the
-overseers out of the poor rates; and often in the immediate
-vicinity of the dwellings of such half-starved labourers there
-are abundantly-stocked preserves of game, in which, during
-a single night, these dissatisfied young men can obtain a rich
-booty by snaring hares and taking or killing pheasants ...
-offences which they cannot be brought to acknowledge to be
-any violation of private property. Detection generally leads
-to their imprisonment, and imprisonment introduces these
-youths to familiarity with criminals of other descriptions,
-and thus they become rapidly abandoned to unlawful pursuits
-and a life of crime.’<a id="FNanchor_354" href="#Footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a> Mr. Orridge, Governor of the Gaol of
-Bury St. Edmunds, gave to the Committee on Commitments
-and Convictions<a id="FNanchor_355" href="#Footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a> the following figures of prisoners committed
-to the House of Correction for certain <span class="lock">years:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td>1805, 221</td>
-<td><span class="widecol">1815, 387</span></td>
-<td>1824, 457</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>1806, 192</td>
-<td><span class="widecol">1816, 476</span></td>
-<td>1825, 439</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>1807, 173</td>
-<td><span class="widecol">1817, 430</span></td>
-<td>1826, 573.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>He stated that the great increase in the number of commitments
-began in the year 1815 with the depression of agriculture
-and the great dearth of employment: that men were
-employed on the roads at very low rates: that the commitments
-under the Game Laws which in 1810 were five, in 1811
-four, and in 1812 two, were seventy-five in 1822, a year of great
-agricultural distress, sixty in 1823, sixty-one in 1824, and
-seventy-one in 1825. Some men were poachers from the
-love of sport, but the majority from distress. Mr. Pym, a
-magistrate in Cambridgeshire, and Sir Thomas Baring, a
-magistrate for Hampshire, gave similar evidence as to the
-cause of the increase of crime, and particularly of poaching,
-in these counties. Mr. Bishop, a Bow Street officer, whose
-business it was to mix with the poachers in public-houses and
-learn their secrets, told the Committee on the Game Laws
-in 1823 that there had not been employment for the labouring
-poor in most of the places he had visited. Perhaps the most
-graphic picture of the relation of distress to crime is given
-in a pamphlet, <i>Thoughts and Suggestions on the Present Condition
-of the Country</i>, published in 1830 by Mr. Potter
-Macqueen, late M.P. for Bedford.</p>
-
-<p>‘In January 1829, there were ninety-six prisoners for trial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-in Bedford Gaol, of whom seventy-six were able-bodied men,
-in the prime of life, and, chiefly, of general good character, who
-were driven to crime by sheer want, and who would have been
-valuable subjects had they been placed in a situation, where,
-by the exercise of their health and strength, they could have
-earned a subsistence. There were in this number eighteen
-poachers, awaiting trial for the capital offence of using arms
-in self-defence when attacked by game-keepers; of these
-eighteen men, one only was not a parish pauper, and he was
-the agent of the London poulterers, who, passing under the
-apparent vocation of a rat-catcher, paid these poor creatures
-more in one night than they could obtain from the overseer
-for a week’s labour. I conversed with each of these men
-singly, and made minutes of their mode of life. The two
-first I will mention are the two brothers, the Lilleys, in custody
-under a charge of firing on and wounding a keeper, who endeavoured
-to apprehend them whilst poaching. They were two
-remarkably fine young men, and very respectably connected.
-The elder, twenty-eight years of age, married, with two small
-children. When I inquired how he could lend himself to such
-a wretched course of life, the poor fellow replied: ‘Sir, I had
-a pregnant wife, with one infant at her knee, and another at
-her breast; I was anxious to obtain work, I offered myself
-in all directions, but without success; if I went to a distance,
-I was told to go back to my parish, and when I did so, I was
-allowed ... What? Why, for myself, my babes, and my
-wife, in a condition requiring more than common support,
-and unable to labour, I was allowed 7s. a week for all; for
-which I was expected to work on the roads from light to
-dark, and to pay three guineas a year for the hovel which
-sheltered us.’ The other brother, aged twenty-two, unmarried,
-received 6d. a day. These men were hanged at the spring
-assizes. Of the others, ten were single men, their ages varying
-from seventeen to twenty-seven. Many had never been in
-gaol before, and were considered of good character. Six of
-them were on the roads at 6d. per day. Two could not obtain
-even this pittance. One had been refused relief on the ground
-that he had shortly previous obtained a profitable piece of job-work,
-and one had existed on 1s. 6d. during the fortnight
-before he joined the gang in question. Of five married men,
-two with wife and two children received 7s., two with wife and
-one child 6s., and one with wife and four small children 11s.’<a id="FNanchor_356" href="#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span></p>
-<p>If we wish to obtain a complete picture of the social life of
-the time, it is not enough to study the construction of this
-vindictive code. We must remember that a sort of civil war
-was going on between the labourers and the gamekeepers.
-The woods in which Tom Jones fought his great fight with
-Thwackum and Blifil to cover the flight of Molly Seagrim now
-echoed on a still and moonless night with the din of a different
-sort of battle: the noise of gunshots and blows from bludgeons,
-and broken curses from men who knew that, if they were taken,
-they would never see the English dawn rise over their homes
-again: a battle which ended perhaps in the death or wounding
-of a keeper or poacher, and the hanging or transportation
-of some of the favourite Don Quixotes of the village. A
-witness before the Committee on the Game Laws said that the
-poachers preferred a quiet night. Crabbe, in the poacher
-poem (Book <span class="allsmcap">XXI.</span> of <i>Tales of the Hall</i>) which he wrote at the
-suggestion of Romilly, takes what would seem to be the more
-probable view that poachers liked a noisy night:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘It was a night such bold desires to move</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Strong winds and wintry torrents filled the grove;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The crackling boughs that in the forest fell,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The cawing rooks, the cur’s affrighted yell;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The scenes above the wood, the floods below,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were mix’d, and none the single sound could know;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">“Loud blow the blasts,” they cried, “and call us as they blow.”’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such an encounter is put into cold arithmetic in an official
-return like <span class="lock">this<a id="FNanchor_357" href="#Footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>‘An account of the nineteen persons committed to Warwick
-Gaol for trial at the Lent Assizes 1829 for shooting and wounding
-John Slinn at Combe Fields in the County of Warwick
-whilst endeavouring to apprehend them for destroying game
-in the night with the result <span class="lock">thereof:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable center" border="1" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th rowspan="2">Above 14 and under 20 years of age.</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Above 20 years of age.</th>
-<th colspan="3">Capitally convicted and reprieved with&mdash;</th>
-<th rowspan="2">Admitted to Evidence.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<th>Transportation for life.</th>
-<th>Transportation for 14 years.</th>
-<th>Imprisonment with hard labour in House of Correction for 2 years.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>11</td>
-<td>8</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span></p>
-
-<p>Seven peasants exiled for life, nine exiled for fourteen years,
-and two condemned to the worst exile of all. In that village
-at any rate there were many homes that had reason to remember
-the day when the pleasures of the rich became the most sacred
-thing in England.</p>
-
-<p>But the warfare was not conducted only by these methods.
-For the gentlemen of England, as for the genius who fought
-Michael and Gabriel in the great battle in the sixth book of
-<i>Paradise Lost</i>, science did not spread her light in vain. There
-was a certain joy of adventure in a night skirmish, and a man
-who saw his wife and children slowly starving, to whom one
-of those golden birds that was sleeping on its perch the other
-side of the hedge, night after night, till the day when it should
-please the squire to send a shot through its purple head,
-meant comfort and even riches for a week, was not very much
-afraid of trusting his life and his freedom to his quick ear, his
-light foot, or at the worst his powerful arm. So the game
-preservers invented a cold and terrible demon: they strewed
-their woods with spring guns, that dealt death without warning,
-death without the excitement of battle, death that could
-catch the nimblest as he slipped and scrambled through
-the hiding bracken. The man who fell in an affray fell
-fighting, his comrades by his side; it was a grim and uncomforted
-fate to go out slowly and alone, lying desolate in
-the stained bushes, beneath the unheeding sky. It is not clear
-when these diabolical engines, as Lord Holland called them,
-were first introduced, but they were evidently common by
-1817, when Curwen made a passionate protest in the House
-of Commons, and declared, ‘Better the whole race of game
-was extinct than that it should owe its preservation to such
-cruel expedients.’<a id="FNanchor_358" href="#Footnote_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a> Fortunately for England the spring guns,
-though they scattered murder and wounds freely enough (Peel
-spoke in 1827 of ‘daily accidents and misfortunes’), did not
-choose their victims with so nice an eye as a Justice of the
-Peace, and it was often a gamekeeper or a farm servant
-who was suddenly tripped up by this lurking death. By 1827
-this state of things had become such a scandal that Parliament
-intervened and passed an Act, introduced in the Lords by Lord
-Suffield, who had made a previous attempt in 1825, to make
-the setting of spring guns a misdemeanor.<a id="FNanchor_359" href="#Footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Bill did not pass without considerable opposition.
-Tennyson, who introduced it in the Commons, declared that
-the feudal nobility in ancient France had never possessed a
-privilege comparable with this right of killing and maiming,
-and he said that the fact that Coke of Norfolk<a id="FNanchor_360" href="#Footnote_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a> and Lord
-Suffield, both large game preservers, refused to employ them
-showed that they were not necessary. Members of both
-Houses of Parliament complained bitterly of the ‘morbid
-sensibility’ that inspired the proposal, and some of them
-defended spring guns as a labour-saving machine, speaking of
-them with the enthusiasm that a manufacturer might bestow
-on the invention of an Arkwright or a Crompton. One member
-of the House of Commons, a Colonel French, opposed the Bill
-with the argument that the honest English country gentleman
-formed ‘the very subject and essence of the English character,’
-while Lord Ellenborough opposed it in the other House on the
-ground that it was contrary to the principles of the English law,
-which gave a man protection for his property in proportion to the
-difficulty with which it could be defended by ordinary means.</p>
-
-<p>The crime for which men were maimed or killed by these
-engines or torn from their homes by summary and heartless
-justice was, it must be remembered, no crime at all in the eyes
-of the great majority of their countrymen. At this time the
-sale of game was prohibited under stern penalties, and yet
-every rich man in London, from the Lord Mayor downwards,
-entertained his guests with game that he had bought from a
-poulterer. How had the poulterer bought it? There was
-no secret about the business. It was explained to two Select
-Committees, the first of the House of Commons in 1823, and the
-second of the House of Lords in 1828, by poulterers who lived
-by these transactions, and by police officers who did nothing
-to interfere with them. Daniel Bishop, for example, one of the
-chief Bow Street officers, described the arrangements to the
-Committee in 1823.<a id="FNanchor_361" href="#Footnote_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a></p>
-
-<p>‘Can you state to the Committee, how the Game is brought
-from the poachers up to London, or other market?... The
-poachers generally meet the coachman or guards of the mails
-or vans, and deliver it to them after they are out of a town,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-they do not deliver it in a town; then it is brought up to
-London, sometimes to their agents; but the coachmen and
-guards mostly have their friends in London where they know
-how to dispose of it, and they have their contracts made at so
-much a brace.... There is no intermediate person between
-the poacher and the coachman or guard that conveys it to
-town?... Very seldom; generally the head of the gang pays
-the rest of the men, and he sends off the Game.... When
-the game arrives in London, how is it disposed of?... They
-have their agents, the bookkeepers at most of the inns, the
-porters who go out with the carts; any persons they know
-may go and get what quantity they like, by sending an order
-a day or two before; there are great quantities come up to
-Leadenhall and Newgate markets.’</p>
-
-<p>Nobody in London thought the worse of a poulterer for buying
-poached game; and nobody in the country thought any the
-worse of the poacher who supplied it. A witness before the
-Committee in 1823 said that in one village the whole of the
-village were poachers, ‘the constable of the village, the shoemaker
-and other inhabitants of the village.’ Another witness
-before the Lords in 1828 said that occupiers and unqualified
-proprietors agreed with the labourers in thinking that poaching
-was an innocent practice.</p>
-
-<p>Those who wished to reform the Game Laws argued that if
-the sale of game were legalised, and if the anomalous qualifications
-were abolished, the poacher’s prize would become much
-less valuable, and the temptation would be correspondingly
-diminished. This view was corroborated by the evidence given
-to the Select Committees. But all such proposals were bitterly
-attacked by the great majority of game preservers. Lord
-Londonderry urged against this reform in 1827 ‘that it would
-deprive the sportsman of his highest gratification ... the
-pleasure of furnishing his friends with presents of game:
-nobody would care for a present which everybody could give’!<a id="FNanchor_362" href="#Footnote_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a>
-Other game preservers argued that it was sport that made the
-English gentlemen such good officers, on which the <i>Edinburgh
-Review</i> remarked: ‘The hunting which Xenophon and Cicero
-praise as the best discipline for forming great generals from
-its being war in miniature must have been very unlike pheasant
-shooting.’<a id="FNanchor_363" href="#Footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a> Lord Deerhurst declared, when the proposal was
-made fourteen years earlier, that this was not the time to disgust
-resident gentlemen. The English aristocracy, like the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-French, would only consent to live in the country on their own
-terms. When the squires threatened to turn <i>émigrés</i> if anybody
-else was allowed to kill a rabbit, or if a poacher was not put to
-risk of life and limb, Sydney Smith gave an answer that would
-have scandalised the House of Commons, ‘If gentlemen cannot
-breathe fresh air without injustice, let them putrefy in Cranbourne
-Court.’</p>
-
-<p>But what about the justice of the laws against poachers?
-To most members of Parliament there would have been an
-element of paradox in such a question. From the discussions
-on the subject of the Game Laws a modern reader might suppose
-that poachers were not men of flesh and blood, but some
-kind of vermin. There were a few exceptions. In 1782,
-when Coke of Norfolk, acting at the instance of the magistrates
-of that county, proposed to make the Game Laws more stringent,
-Turner, the member for York, made a spirited reply; he
-‘exclaimed against those laws as cruel and oppressive on the
-poor: he said it was a shame that the House should always be
-enacting laws for the safety of gentlemen; he wished they
-would make a few for the good of the poor.... For his own
-part, he was convinced, that if he had been a common man,
-he would have been a poacher, in spite of all the laws; and he
-was equally sure that the too great severity of the laws was
-the cause that the number of poachers had increased so much.’<a id="FNanchor_364" href="#Footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a>
-Fox (29th April 1796) protested with vigour against the morality
-that condemned poachers without mercy, and condoned all
-the vices of the rich, but he, with Sheridan, Curwen, Romilly,
-and a few others were an infinitesimal minority.</p>
-
-<p>The aristocracy had set up a code, under which a man or
-boy who had offended against the laws, but had done nothing
-for which any of his fellows imputed discredit to him, was
-snatched from his home, thrown into gaol with thieves and
-criminals, and perhaps flung to the other side of the world,
-leaving his family either to go upon the rates or to pick up
-a living by such dishonesties as they could contrive. This
-last penalty probably meant final separation. Mr. T. G. B.
-Estcourt, M.P., stated in evidence before the Select Committee
-on Secondary Punishments in 1831<a id="FNanchor_365" href="#Footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> that as men who had
-been transported were not brought back at the public expense,
-they scarcely ever returned,<a id="FNanchor_366" href="#Footnote_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a> that agricultural labourers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-specially dreaded transportation, because it meant ‘entire
-separation’ from ‘former associates, relations, and friends,’
-and that since he and his brother magistrates in Wiltshire
-had taken to transporting more freely, committals had decreased.
-The special misery that transportation inflicted on men of this
-class is illustrated in Marcus Clarke’s famous novel, <i>For the
-Term of His Natural Life</i>. In the passage describing the barracoon
-on the transport ship, Clarke throws on the screen all
-the different types of character&mdash;forgers, housebreakers, cracksmen,
-footpads&mdash;penned up in that poisonous prison. ‘The
-poacher grimly thinking of his sick wife and children would
-start as the night-house ruffian clapped him on the shoulder
-and bade him with a curse to take good heart and be a man.’
-Readers of Mr. Hudson’s character sketches of the modern
-Wiltshire labourer can imagine the scene. To the lad who had
-never been outside his own village such a society must have
-been unspeakably alien and terrible: a ring of callous and
-mocking faces, hardened, by crime and wrong and base punishment,
-to make bitter ridicule of all the memories of home and
-boyhood and innocence that were surging and breaking round
-his simple heart.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The growing brutality of the Game Laws, if it is the chief,
-is not the only illustration of the extent to which the pressure
-of poverty was driving the labourers to press upon law and
-order, and the kind of measures that the ruling class took to
-protect its property. Another illustration is the Malicious
-Trespass Act.</p>
-
-<p>In 1820 Parliament passed an Act which provided that any
-person convicted before a single J.P. within four months of
-the act of doing any malicious injury to any building, hedge,
-fence, tree, wood, or underwood was to pay damage not
-exceeding £5, and if he was unable to pay these damages he
-was to be sent to hard labour in a common gaol or House of
-Correction for three months. The law before the passing of
-this Act was as it is to-day, <i>i.e.</i> the remedy lay in an action at
-law against the trespasser, and the trespasser under the Act
-of William and Mary had to pay damages. The Act of 1820
-was passed without any debate that is reported in <i>Hansard</i>,
-but it is not unreasonable to assume that it was demanded for
-the protection of enclosures and game preserves.<a id="FNanchor_367" href="#Footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a> This Act<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-exempted one set of persons entirely, ‘persons engaged in
-hunting, and qualified persons in pursuit of game.’ These
-privileged gentlemen could do as much injury as they pleased.</p>
-
-<p>One clause provided that every male offender under sixteen
-who did not pay damages, and all costs and charges and
-expenses forthwith, might be sent by the magistrate to hard
-labour in the House of Correction for six weeks. Thus a child
-who broke a bough from a tree by the roadside might be sent
-by the magistrate, who would in many cases be the owner of
-the tree, to the House of Correction, there to learn the ways of
-criminals at an age when the magistrate’s own children were
-about half-way through their luxurious education. This
-was no <i>brutum fulmen</i>. Children were sent to prison in great
-numbers.<a id="FNanchor_368" href="#Footnote_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a> Brougham said in 1828: ‘There was a Bill introduced
-by the Rt. Hon. Gentleman opposite for extending the
-payment of expenses of witnesses and prosecutors out of the
-county rates. It is not to be doubted that it has greatly
-increased the number of Commitments, and has been the cause
-of many persons being brought to trial, who ought to have
-been discharged by the Magistrates. The habit of committing,
-from this and other causes, has grievously increased everywhere
-of late, and especially of boys. Eighteen hundred and odd,
-many of them mere children, have been committed in the
-Warwick district during the last seven years.’<a id="FNanchor_369" href="#Footnote_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a> The Governor
-of the House of Correction in Coldbath Fields, giving evidence
-before the Committee on Secondary Punishments in 1831, said
-that he had under his charge a boy of ten years old who had
-been in prison eight times. Capper, the Superintendent of the
-Convict Establishment, told the same Committee that some of
-the boy convicts were so young that they could scarcely put on
-their clothes, and that they had to be dressed. Richard Potter’s
-diary for 1813 contains this entry: ‘Oct. 13.&mdash;I was attending
-to give evidence against a man. Afterwards, two boys, John
-and Thomas Clough, aged 12 and 10 years, were tried and
-found guilty of stealing some Irish linen out of Joseph Thorley’s
-warehouse during the dinner hour. The Chairman sentenced
-them to seven years’ transportation. On its being pronounced,
-the Mother of those unfortunate boys came to the Bar to her
-children, and with them was in great agony, imploring mercy
-of the Bench. With difficulty the children were removed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-The scene was so horrifying I could remain no longer in court.’<a id="FNanchor_370" href="#Footnote_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a>
-Parliament put these tremendous weapons into the hands of
-men who believed in using them, who administered the law
-on the principle by which Sir William Dyott regulated his
-conduct as a magistrate, that ‘nothing but the terror of human
-suffering can avail to prevent crime.’</p>
-
-<p>The class that had, in Goldsmith’s words, hung round ‘our
-paltriest possessions with gibbetts’ never doubted its power
-to do full justice to the helpless creatures who tumbled into
-the net of the law. Until 1836 a man accused of a felony was
-not allowed to employ counsel to make his defence in the Court.
-His counsel (if he could afford to have one) could examine and
-cross-examine witnesses, and that was all; the prisoner,
-whatever his condition of mind, or his condition of body, had
-to answer the speech of the prosecuting counsel himself. In
-nine cases out of ten he was quite an unlearned man; he was
-swept into the glare of the Court blinking from long months of
-imprisonment in dark cells; the case against him was woven
-into a complete and perfect story by the skilled fingers of a
-lawyer, and it was left to this rude and illiterate man, by the
-aid of his own memory and his own imagination, his life on the
-razor’s edge, his mind bewildered by his strange and terrible
-surroundings, to pick that story to pieces, to expose what was
-mere and doubtful inference, to put a different complexion on
-a long and tangled set of events, to show how a turn here or
-a turn there in the narrative would change black into white
-and apparent guilt into manifest innocence. Sydney Smith,
-whose opinions on the importance of giving the poor a fair trial
-were as enlightened as his opinions on their proper treatment
-in prison were backward, has described the scene.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘It is a most affecting moment in a Court of Justice, when the
-evidence has all been heard, and the Judge asks the prisoner
-what he has to say in his defence. The prisoner who has (by
-great exertions, perhaps of his friends) saved up money enough
-to procure Counsel, says to the Judge “that he leaves his defence
-to his Counsel.” We have often blushed for English humanity
-to hear the reply. “Your Counsel cannot speak for you, you
-must speak for yourself”; and this is the reply given to a poor
-girl of eighteen&mdash;to a foreigner&mdash;to a deaf man&mdash;to a stammerer&mdash;to
-the sick&mdash;to the feeble&mdash;to the old&mdash;to the most abject and
-ignorant of human beings!... How often have we seen a poor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>
-wretch, struggling against the agonies of his spirit, and the rudeness
-of his conceptions, and his awe of better-dressed men and
-better-taught men, and the shame which the accusation has
-brought upon his head, and the sight of his parents and children
-gazing at him in the Court, for the last time perhaps, and after
-a long absence!’<a id="FNanchor_371" href="#Footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Brougham said in the House of Commons that there was
-no man who visited the Criminal Courts who did not see the
-fearful odds against the prisoner. This anomaly was peculiar
-to England, and in England it was peculiar to cases of felony.
-Men tried for misdemeanours, or for treason, or before the
-House of Lords could answer by the mouth of counsel. It was
-only in those cases where the prisoners were almost always poor
-and uneducated men and women, as Lord Althorp pointed out
-in an admirable speech in the House of Commons, that the
-accused was left to shift for himself. Twice, in 1824 and in
-1826, the House of Commons refused leave to bring in a Bill
-to redress this flagrant injustice, encouraged in that refusal not
-only by Canning, but, what is much more surprising, by Peel.</p>
-
-<p>The favourite argument against this reform, taking precedence
-of the arguments that to allow persons the aid of counsel in
-putting their statement of fact would make justice slower, more
-expensive, and more theatrical, was the contention that the
-judge did, in point of fact, represent the interest of the prisoner:
-a confused plea which it did not require any very highly developed
-gift of penetration to dissect. But how far, in point
-of fact, were the judges able to enter into the poor prisoner’s
-mind? They had the power of sentencing to death for
-hundreds of trivial offences. It was the custom to pass the
-brutal sentence which the law allowed to be inflicted for
-felonies, and then to commute it in all except a few cases. By
-what considerations did judges decide when to be severe?
-Lord Ellenborough told Lauderdale that he had left a man to
-be hanged at the Worcester Assizes because he lolled out his
-tongue and pretended to be an idiot, on which Lauderdale asked
-the Chief Justice what law there was to punish that particular
-offence with death. We learn from Romilly’s <i>Memoirs</i><a id="FNanchor_372" href="#Footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a>
-that one judge left three men to be hanged for thefts at the
-Maidstone Assizes because none of them could bring a witness
-to his character.</p>
-
-<p>The same disposition to trust to the discretion of the judge,
-which Camden described as the law of tyrants, explains the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-vitality of the system of prescribing death as the punishment
-for hundreds of paltry offences. During the last fifty years
-the energy of Parliament in passing Enclosure Acts had been
-only rivalled by its energy in creating capital offences. The
-result was a penal code which had been condemned by almost
-every Englishman of repute of the most various opinions,
-from Blackstone, Johnson, and Goldsmith to Burke and
-Bentham. This system made the poor man the prey of his
-rich neighbours. The most furious punishments were held
-<i>in terrorem</i> over the heads of prisoners, and the wretched man
-who was caught in the net was exposed to all the animosities
-that he might have provoked in his ordinary life. Dr. Parr
-put this point writing to Romilly in 1811.</p>
-
-<p>‘There is, indeed, one consideration in the case of bad men
-which ought to have a greater weight than it usually has in
-the minds of the Judges. Dislike from party, quarrels with
-servants or neighbours, offence justly or unjustly taken in a
-quarrel, jealousy about game, and twenty other matters of
-the same sort, frequently induce men to wish to get rid of
-a convicted person: and well does it behove every Judge to
-be sure that the person who recommends the execution of
-the sentence is a man of veracity, of sense, of impartiality
-and kindness of nature in the habitual character of his mind.
-I remember hearing from Sergeant Whitaker that, while he
-was trying a man for a capital offence at Norwich, a person
-brought him a message from the late Lord Suffield, “that the
-prisoner was a good-for-nothing fellow, and he hoped the
-Judge would look to him”; and the Sergeant kindled with
-indignation, and exclaimed in the hearing of the Court,
-“Zounds! would Sir Harbord Harbord have me condemn the
-man before I have tried him?” What Sir Harbord did
-during the trial, many squires and justices of the peace,
-upon other occasions, do after it; and were I a Judge,
-I should listen with great caution to all unfavourable representations.
-The rich, the proud, the irascible, and the
-vindictive are very unfit to estimate the value of life to
-their inferiors.’<a id="FNanchor_373" href="#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a></p>
-
-<p>We can see how the squires and the justices would close
-in round a man of whom they wanted, with the best intentions
-in the world, to rid their parish, woods, and warrens, when
-the punishment he was to receive turned on his reputation
-as it was estimated by the gentlemen of his neighbourhood.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-Was Sir Harbord Harbord very far removed from the state
-of mind described in the Sixth Satire of Juvenal?</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘“Pone crucem servo.” “Meruit quo crimine servus</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Supplicium? quis testis adest? quis detulit? Audi:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nulla unquam de morte hominis cunctatio longa est.”</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">“O demens, ita servus homo est? nil fecerit, esto:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Hoc volo, sic jubeo, sit pro ratione voluntas.”’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And Sir Harbord Harbord had in hundreds of cases what he
-had not in this case, the power to wreak his anger on ‘a
-good-for-nothing fellow.’</p>
-
-<p>When Romilly entered on his noble crusade and tried
-very cautiously to persuade Parliament to repeal the death
-penalty in cases in which it was rarely carried out, he found
-the chief obstacle in his way was the fear that became common
-among the governing class at this time, the fear that existing
-methods of punishment were ceasing to be deterrent. In
-1810 he carried his Bill, for abolishing this penalty for the
-crime of stealing privately to the amount of five shillings in a
-shop, through the House of Commons, and the Bill was introduced
-in the House of Lords by Lord Holland. There it was
-rejected by twenty-one to eleven, the majority including the
-Archbishop of Canterbury and six other bishops.<a id="FNanchor_374" href="#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> The chief
-speeches against the Bill were made by Eldon and Ellenborough.
-Ellenborough argued that transportation was regarded, and
-justly regarded, by those who violated the law as ‘a summer
-airing by an easy migration to a milder climate.’</p>
-
-<p>The nightmare that punishment was growing gentle and
-attractive to the poor came to haunt the mind of the governing
-class. It was founded on the belief that as human wretchedness
-was increasing, there was a sort of law of Malthus, by
-which human endurance tended to outgrow the resources of
-repression. The agricultural labourers were sinking into such
-a deplorable plight that some of them found it a relief to be
-committed to the House of Correction, where, at least, they
-obtained food and employment, and the magistrates began to
-fear in consequence that ordinary punishments could no
-longer be regarded as deterrent, and to reason that some
-condition had yet to be discovered which would be more
-miserable than the general existence of the poor. The justices
-who punished Wiltshire poachers found such an El Dorado
-of unhappiness in transportation. But disturbing rumours<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-came to the ears of the authorities that transportation was
-not thought a very terrible punishment after all, and the
-Government sent out to Sir George Arthur, the Governor of
-Van Diemen’s Land, certain complaints of this kind. The
-answer which the Governor returned is published with the
-Report of the Committee on Secondary Punishments, and the
-complete correspondence forms a very remarkable set of
-Parliamentary Papers. The Governor pointed out that these
-complaints, which made such an impression on Lord Melbourne,
-came from employers in Australia, who wanted to have
-greater control over their servants. Arthur was no sentimentalist;
-his sympathies had been drilled in two hard schools,
-the army and the government of prisoners; his account of
-his own methods shows that in describing the life of a convict
-he was in no danger of falling into the exaggerations or the
-rhetoric of pity. In these letters he made it very clear that
-nobody who knew what transportation meant could ever make
-the mistake of thinking it a light punishment. The ordinary
-convict was assigned to a settler. ‘Deprived of liberty, exposed
-to all the caprice of the family to whose service he may happen
-to be assigned, and subject to the most summary laws, the
-condition of a convict in no respect differs from that of a slave,
-except that his master cannot apply corporal punishment by
-his own hands or those of his overseer, and has a property in
-him for a limited period only.’ Further, ‘idleness and insolence
-of expression, or even of looks, anything betraying the insurgent
-spirit, subjects him to the chain-gang, or the triangle, or to
-hard labour on the roads.’<a id="FNanchor_375" href="#Footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a> We can imagine what the life
-of an ordinary convict might become. In earlier days every
-convict who went out began as an assigned servant, and it
-was only for misconduct in the colony or on the way thither
-that he was sent to a Penal Settlement, but the growing alarm
-of the ruling class on the subject of punishment led to a
-demand for more drastic sentences, and shortly after the close
-of our period Lord Melbourne introduced a new system, under
-which convicts might be sentenced from home to the Penal
-Settlement, and any judge who thought badly of a prisoner
-might add this hideous punishment to transportation.</p>
-
-<p>The life of these Settlements has been described in one
-of the most vivid and terrible books ever written. Nobody
-can read Marcus Clarke’s great novel without feeling that
-the methods of barbarism had done their worst and most<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-devilish in Macquarie Harbour and Port Arthur. The lot of
-the prisoners in <i>Resurrection</i> is by comparison a paradise.
-Not a single feature that can revolt and stupefy the imagination
-is wanting to the picture. Children of ten committing
-suicide, men murdering each other by compact as
-an escape from a hell they could no longer bear, prisoners
-receiving a death sentence with ecstasies of delight, punishments
-inflicted that are indistinguishable from torture, men
-stealing into the parched bush in groups, in the horrible
-hope that one or two of them might make their way to freedom
-by devouring their comrades&mdash;an atmosphere in which the
-last faint glimmer of self-respect and human feeling was extinguished
-by incessant and degrading cruelty. Few books
-have been written in any language more terrible to read.
-Yet not a single incident or feature is imaginary: the whole
-picture is drawn from the cold facts of the official reports.<a id="FNanchor_376" href="#Footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a>
-And this system was not the invention of some Nero or
-Caligula; it was the system imposed by men of gentle and
-refined manners, who talked to each other in Virgil and Lucan
-of liberty and justice, who would have died without a murmur
-to save a French princess from an hour’s pain or shame, who
-put down the abominations of the Slave Trade, and allowed
-Clive and Warren Hastings to be indicted at the bar of public
-opinion as monsters of inhumanity; and it was imposed by
-them from the belief that as the poor were becoming poorer,
-only a system of punishment that was becoming more brutal
-could deter them from crime.</p>
-
-<p>If we want to understand how completely all their natural
-feelings were lost in this absorbing fear, we must turn to the
-picture given by an observer who was outside their world;
-an observer who could enter into the misery of the punished,
-and could describe what transportation meant to boys of nine
-and ten, exposed to the most brutal appetites of savage men;
-to chained convicts, packed for the night in boxes so narrow
-that they could only lie on one side; to crushed and broken men,
-whose only prayer it was to die. From him we learn how these
-scenes and surroundings impressed a mind that could look
-upon a convict settlement as a society of living men and boys,
-and not merely as the Cloaca Maxima of property and order.<a id="FNanchor_377" href="#Footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a></p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE ISOLATION OF THE POOR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>The upper classes, to whom the fact that the labourers were
-more wretched in 1830 than they had been in 1795 was a reason
-for making punishment more severe, were not deliberately
-callous and cruel in their neglect of all this growing misery
-and hunger. Most of those who thought seriously about it
-had learnt a reasoned insensibility from the stern Sibyl of
-the political economy in fashion, that strange and partial
-interpretation of Adam Smith, Malthus and Ricardo which
-was then in full power. This political economy had robbed
-poverty of its sting for the rich by representing it as Nature’s
-medicine, bitter indeed, but less bitter than any medicine that
-man could prescribe. If poverty was sharper at one time
-than another, this only meant that society was more than
-ever in need of this medicine. But the governing class as a
-whole did not think out any such scheme or order of society,
-or master the new science of misery and vice. They thought of
-the poor not in relation to the mysterious forces of Nature,
-but in relation to the privileges of their own class in which
-they saw no mystery at all. Their state of mind is presented
-in a passage in Bolingbroke’s <i>Idea of a Patriot King</i>. ‘As
-men are apt to make themselves the measure of all being, so
-they make themselves the final cause of all creation. Thus
-the reputed orthodox philosophers in all ages have taught
-that the world was made for man, the earth for him to inhabit,
-and all the luminous bodies in the immense expanse around us
-for him to gaze at. Kings do no more, nay not so much, when
-they imagine themselves the final cause for which societies
-were formed and governments instituted.’ If we read ‘the
-aristocracy’ for ‘kings’ we shall have a complete analysis of the
-social philosophy of the ruling class. It was from this centre
-that they looked out upon the world. When the misery of the
-poor reacted on their own comfort, as in the case of poaching
-or crime or the pressure on the rates, they were aware of it and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-took measures to protect their property, but of any social
-problem outside these relations they were entirely unconscious.
-Their philosophy and their religion taught them that it was
-the duty of the rich to be benevolent, and of the poor to be
-patient and industrious. The rich were ready to do their part,
-and all they asked of the poor was that they should learn to
-bear their lot with resignation. Burke had laid down the true
-and full philosophy of social life once and for all. ‘Good order
-is the foundation of all good things. To be enabled to acquire,
-the people, without being servile, must be tractable and
-obedient. The magistrate must have his reverence, the laws
-their authority. The body of the people must not find the
-principles of natural subordination by art rooted out of their
-minds. They must respect that property of which they cannot
-partake. They must labour to obtain what by labour can be
-obtained; and when they find, as they commonly do, the success
-disproportioned to the endeavour, they must be taught their
-consolation in the final proportions of eternal justice.’<a id="FNanchor_378" href="#Footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a></p>
-
-<p>The upper classes, looking upon the world in this way, considered
-that it was the duty of the poor man to adapt himself,
-his tastes, his habits, and his ambitions, to the arrangements
-of a society which it had pleased Providence to organise on
-this interesting plan. We have in the pages of Eden the portrait
-of the ideal poor woman, whose life showed what could be
-done if poverty were faced in the proper spirit. ‘Anne Hurst
-was born at Witley in Surrey; there she lived the whole period
-of a long life, and there she died. As soon as she was thought
-able to work, she went to service: there, before she was twenty,
-she married James Strudwick, who, like her own father, was
-a day labourer. With this husband she lived, a prolific, hard-working,
-contented wife, somewhat more than fifty years.
-He worked more than threescore years on one farm, and his
-wages, summer and winter, were regularly a shilling a day.
-He never asked more nor was never offered less. They had
-between them seven children: and lived to see six daughters
-married and three the mothers of sixteen children: all of whom
-were brought up, or are bringing up, to be day labourers.
-Strudwick continued to work till within seven weeks of the day
-of his death, and at the age of four score, in 1787, he closed,
-in peace, a not inglorious life; for, to the day of his death, he
-never received a farthing in the way of parochial aid. His
-wife survived him about seven years, and though bent with age<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-and infirmities, and little able to work, excepting as a weeder in
-a gentleman’s garden, she also was too proud to ask or receive
-any relief from the parish. For six or seven of the last years of
-her life, she received twenty shillings a year from the person
-who favoured me with this account, which he drew up from
-her own mouth. With all her virtue, and all her merit, she
-yet was not much liked in her neighbourhood; people in
-affluence thought her haughty, and the Paupers of the parish,
-seeing, as they could not help seeing, that her life was a reproach
-to theirs, aggravated all her little failings. Yet, the worst
-thing they had to say of her was, that she was proud; which,
-they said, was manifested by the way in which she buried her
-husband. Resolute, as she owned she was, to have the funeral,
-and everything that related to it, what she called decent, nothing
-could dissuade her from having handles to his coffin and a plate
-on it, mentioning his age. She was also charged with having
-behaved herself crossly and peevishly towards one of her
-sons-in-law, who was a mason and went regularly every
-Saturday evening to the ale house as he said just to drink a
-pot of beer. James Strudwick in all his life, as she often told
-this ungracious son-in-law, never spent five shillings in any
-idleness: luckily (as she was sure to add) he had it not to spend.
-A more serious charge against her was that, living to a great
-age, and but little able to work, she grew to be seriously afraid,
-that, at last, she might become chargeable to the parish (the
-heaviest, in her estimation, of all human calamities), and that
-thus alarmed she did suffer herself more than once, during the
-exacerbations of a fit of distempered despondency, peevishly
-(and perhaps petulantly) to exclaim that God Almighty, by
-suffering her to remain so long upon earth, seemed actually to
-have forgotten her.’ ‘Such,’ concludes Eden, ‘are the simple
-annals of Dame Strudwick: and her historian, partial to his
-subject, closes it with lamenting that such village memoirs
-have not oftener been sought for and recorded.’<a id="FNanchor_379" href="#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a> This was the
-ideal character for the cottage. How Eden or anybody else
-would have hated this poor woman in whom every kindly
-feeling had been starved to death if she had been in his own
-class! We know from Creevey what his friends thought of
-‘the stingy kip’ Lambton when they found themselves under
-his roof, where ‘a round of beef at a side table was run at with
-as much keenness as a banker’s shop before a stoppage.’ A
-little peevishness or even petulance with God Almighty would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-not have seemed the most serious charge that could be brought
-against such a neighbour. But if every villager had had
-Dame Strudwick’s hard and narrow virtues, and had crushed all
-other tastes and interests in the passion for living on a shilling
-a day in a cold and bitter independence, the problem of preserving
-the monopolies of the few without disorder or trouble
-would have been greatly simplified. There would have been
-little danger, as Burke would have said, that the fruits of
-successful industry and the accumulations of fortune would be
-exposed to ‘the plunder of the negligent, the disappointed, and
-the unprosperous.’</p>
-
-<p>The way in which the ruling class regarded the poor is
-illustrated in the tone of the discussions when the problem
-of poverty had become acute at the end of the eighteenth
-century. When Pitt, who had been pestered by Eden to read
-his book, handed a volume to Canning, then his secretary, that
-brilliant young politician spent his time writing a parody on
-the grotesque names to be found in the Appendix, and it will be
-recollected that Pitt excused himself for abandoning his scheme
-for reforming the Poor Law, on the ground that he was inexperienced
-in the condition of the poor. It was no shame to a
-politician to be ignorant of such subjects. The poor were happy
-or unhappy in the view of the ruling class according to the
-sympathy the rich bestowed on them. If there were occasional
-misgivings they were easily dispelled. Thus one philosopher
-pointed out that though the position of the poor man might
-seem wanting in dignity or independence, it should be remembered
-by way of consolation that he could play the tyrant
-over his wife and children as much as he liked.<a id="FNanchor_380" href="#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a> Another train
-of soothing reflections was started by such papers as that
-published in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i> in 1797, under the title
-‘On the Comforts enjoyed by the Cottagers compared to those
-of the ancient Barons.’ In such a society a sentiment like
-that expressed by Fox when supporting Whitbread’s Bill in
-1795, that ‘it was not fitting in a free country that the great
-body of the people should depend on the charity of the rich,’
-seemed a challenging paradox. Eden thought this an extraordinary
-way of looking at the problem, and retorted that it was
-gratifying to see how ready the rich were to bestow their
-benevolent attentions. This was the point of view of Pitt and
-of almost all the speakers in the debate that followed Fox’s
-outburst, Buxton going so far as to say that owing to those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-attentions the condition of the poor had never been ‘so eligible.’
-Just as the boisterous captain in <i>Evelina</i> thought it was an
-honour to a wretched Frenchwoman to be rolled in British
-mud, so the English House of Commons thought that poverty
-was turned into a positive blessing by the kindness of the
-rich.</p>
-
-<p>Writing towards the end of the ancient régime, Cobbett
-maintained that in his own lifetime the tone and language of
-society about the poor had changed very greatly for the worse,
-that the old name of ‘the commons of England’ had given way
-to such names as ‘the lower orders,’ ‘the peasantry,’ and ‘the
-population,’ and that when the poor met together to demand
-their rights they were invariably spoken of by such contumelious
-terms as ‘the populace’ or ‘the mob.’ ‘In short, by degrees
-beginning about fifty years ago the industrious part of the
-community, particularly those who create every useful thing
-by their labour, have been spoken of by everyone possessing
-the power to oppress them in any degree in just the same
-manner in which we speak of the animals which compose the
-stock upon a farm. This is not the manner in which the forefathers
-of us, the common people, were treated.’<a id="FNanchor_381" href="#Footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a> Such
-language, Cobbett said, was to be heard not only from ‘tax-devourers,
-bankers, brewers, monopolists of every sort, but
-also from their clerks, from the very shopkeepers and waiters,
-and from the fribbles stuck up behind the counter to do the
-business that ought to be done by a girl.’ This is perhaps
-only another way of saying that the isolation of the poor
-was becoming a more and more conspicuous feature of English
-society.</p>
-
-<p>Many causes combined to destroy the companionship of
-classes, and most of all the break-up of the old village which
-followed on the enclosures and the consolidation of farms. In
-the old village, labourers and cottagers and small farmers were
-neighbours. They knew each other and lived much the same
-kind of life. The small farmer was a farmer one day of the week
-and a labourer another; he married, according to Cobbett, the
-domestic servant of the gentry, a fact that explains the remark
-of Sophia Western’s maid to the landlady of the inn, ‘and let
-me have the bacon cut very nice and thin, for I can’t endure
-anything that’s gross. Prythee try if you can’t do a little
-tolerably for once; and don’t think you have a farmer’s
-wife or some of those creatures in the house.’ The new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-farmer lived in a different latitude. He married a young
-lady from the boarding school. He often occupied the old
-manor house.<a id="FNanchor_382" href="#Footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a> He was divided from the labourer by his
-tastes, his interests, his ambitions, his display and whole
-manner of life. The change that came over the English
-village in consequence was apparent to all observers with social
-insight. When Goldsmith wanted to describe a happy village
-he was careful to choose a village of the old kind, with the
-farmers ‘strangers alike to opulence and to poverty,’ and
-Crabbe, to whose sincere and realist pen we owe much of our
-knowledge of the social life of the time, gives a particularly
-poignant impression of the cold and friendless atmosphere
-that surrounded the poor:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Where Plenty smiles, alas! she smiles for few,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And those who taste not, yet behold her store,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are as the slaves that dig the golden ore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The wealth around them makes them doubly poor.’<a id="FNanchor_383" href="#Footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps the most vivid account of the change is given in a
-letter from Cobbett in the <i>Political Register</i> for 17th March
-1821,<a id="FNanchor_384" href="#Footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a> addressed to Mr. <span class="lock">Gooch:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘I hold a return to <i>small farms</i> to be <i>absolutely necessary</i> to a
-restoration to anything like an English community; and I am
-quite sure, that the ruin of the present race of farmers, generally,
-is a necessary preliminary to this.... The life of the husbandman
-cannot be that of <i>a gentleman</i> without injury to society at
-large. When farmers become <i>gentlemen</i> their labourers become
-<i>slaves</i>. A <i>Virginian</i> farmer, as he is called, very much resembles
-a <i>great farmer</i> in England; but then, the Virginian’s work is done
-by slaves. It is in those States of America, where the farmer is
-only the <i>first labourer</i> that all the domestic virtues are to be found,
-and all that public-spirit and that valour, which are the safeguards
-of American independence, freedom, and happiness. You,
-Sir, with others, complain of the increase of the <i>poor-rates</i>. But,
-you seem to forget, that, in the destruction of the small farms, as
-separate farms, small-farmers have become mere hired labourers....
-Take England throughout <i>three farms have been turned into
-one within fifty years</i>, and the far greater part of the change has
-taken place within the last <i>thirty years</i>; that is to say, since the
-commencement of the deadly system of PITT. Instead of families
-of small farmers with all their exertions, all their decency of
-dress and of manners, and all their scrupulousness as to character,
-we have <i>families of paupers</i>, with all the improvidence and
-wrecklessness belonging to an irrevocable sentence of poverty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-for life. Mr. CURWEN in his <i>Hints on Agriculture</i>, observes that
-he saw some where in Norfolk, I believe it was, <i>two hundred</i>
-farmers worth from <i>five to ten thousand pounds each</i>; and exclaims
-“What a <i>glorious</i> sight!” In commenting on this passage in the
-Register, in the year 1810, I observed “Mr. CURWEN only saw the
-<i>outside</i> of the sepulchre; if he had seen the <i>two or three thousand</i>
-half-starved labourers of these two hundred farmers, and the <i>five
-or six thousand</i> ragged wives and children of those labourers; if
-the farmers had brought those with them, the sight would not
-have been so <i>glorious</i>.”’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A practice referred to in the same letter of Cobbett’s that
-tended to widen the gulf between the farmer and the labourer
-was the introduction of bailiffs: ‘Along with enormous prices
-for corn came in the employment of <i>Bailiffs</i> by farmers, a natural
-consequence of large farms; and to what a degree of insolent
-folly the system was leading, may be guessed from an
-observation of Mr. ARTHUR YOUNG, who recommended,
-that the Bailiff should have a good horse to ride, and a <i>bottle
-of port wine every day at his dinner</i>: while in the same work,
-Mr. YOUNG gives great numbers of rules for saving labour
-upon a farm. A pretty sort of farm where the bailiff was to
-have a bottle of port wine at his dinner! The custom was,
-too, to bring bailiffs from some <i>distant part</i>, in order to prevent
-them from having any feeling of compassion for the labourers.
-<i>Scotch</i> bailiffs above all, were preferred, as being thought
-harder than any others that could be obtained; and thus
-(with shame I write the words!) the farms of <i>England</i>, like
-those of <i>Jamaica</i>, were supplied with drivers from Scotland!...
-Never was a truer saying, than that of the common
-people, that a Scotchman makes a “good <i>sole</i>, but a d&mdash;&mdash;d
-bad <i>upper leather</i>.”’<a id="FNanchor_385" href="#Footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a> Bamford, speaking of 1745, says:
-‘Gentlemen then lived as they ought to live: as real gentlemen
-will ever be found living: in kindliness with their neighbours;
-in openhanded charity towards the poor, and in hospitality
-towards all friendly comers. There were no grinding bailiffs
-and land stewards in those days to stand betwixt the gentleman
-and his labourer or his tenant: to screw up rents and
-screw down livings, and to invent and transact all little meannesses
-for so much per annum.’<a id="FNanchor_386" href="#Footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a> Cobbett’s prejudice against
-Scotsmen, the race of ‘feelosofers,’ blinded him to virtues
-which were notoriously theirs, as in his round declaration that
-all the hard work of agriculture was done by Englishmen and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-Irishmen, and that the Scotsmen chose such tasks as ‘peeping
-into melon frames.’ But that his remarks upon the subject of
-the introduction of Scottish bailiffs reflected a general feeling
-may be seen from a passage in Miss Austen’s <i>Emma</i>, ‘Mr.
-Graham intends to have a Scotch bailiff for his new estate.
-Will it answer? Will not the old prejudice be too strong?’</p>
-
-<p>The change in the status of the farmer came at a time of a
-general growth of luxury. All classes above the poor adopted
-a more extravagant and ostentatious style and scale of living.
-This was true, for example, of sporting England. Fox-hunting
-dates from this century. Before the eighteenth century the
-amusement of the aristocracy was hunting the stag, and that
-of the country squire was hunting the hare. It was because
-Walpole kept beagles at Richmond and used to hunt once a
-week that the House of Commons has always made Saturday a
-holiday. In the Peninsular War, Wellington kept a pack of
-hounds at headquarters, but they were fox-hounds. In its
-early days fox-hunting had continued the simpler traditions
-of hare-hunting, and each small squire kept a few couple of
-hounds and brought them to the meet. Gray has described
-his uncle’s establishment at Burnham, where every chair
-in the house was taken up by a dog. But as the century
-advanced the sport was organised on a grander scale: the old
-buck-hounds and slow horses were superseded by more expensive
-breeds, and far greater distances were covered. Fox-hunting
-became the amusement both of the aristocracy and of
-the squires, and it resembled rather the pomp and state of
-stag-hunting than the modest pleasures of Walpole and his
-friends. In all other directions there was a general increase
-of magnificence in life. The eighteenth century was the
-century of great mansions, and some of the most splendid
-palaces of the aristocracy were built during the distress and
-famine of the French war. The ambitions of the aristocracy
-became the ambitions of the classes that admired them, as we
-know from Smollett, and Sir William Scott in 1802, speaking
-in favour of the non-residence of the clergy, ‘expressly said
-that they and their families ought to appear at watering-places,
-and that this was amongst the means of making them respected
-by their flocks!’<a id="FNanchor_387" href="#Footnote_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The rich and the poor were thus growing further and further
-apart, and there was nobody in the English village to interpret<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-these two worlds to each other. M. Babeau has pointed
-out that in France, under the ancient régime, the lawyers
-represented and defended in some degree the rights of
-the peasants. This was one consequence of the constant
-litigation between peasants and seigneurs over communal
-property. The lawyers who took the side of the peasants
-lived at their expense it is true, but they rendered public
-services, they presented the peasants’ case before public
-opinion, and they understood their ideas and difficulties. This
-explains a striking feature of the French Revolution, the large
-number of local lawyers who became prominent as champions
-of revolutionary ideas. One of Burke’s chief complaints of the
-Constituent Assembly was that it contained so many country
-attorneys and notaries, ‘the fomenters and conductors of the
-petty war of village vexation.’<a id="FNanchor_388" href="#Footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a> In England the lawyers never
-occupied this position, and it is impossible to imagine such a
-development taking place there. The lawyers who interested
-themselves in the poor were enlisted not in the defence of
-the rights of the commoners but in the defence of the purses
-of the parishes. For them the all-important question was not
-what rights the peasant had against his lord, but on which
-parish he had a claim for maintenance.</p>
-
-<p>The causes of litigation were endless: if a man rented a
-tenement of the annual value of £10 he acquired a settlement.
-But his rental might not have represented the annual value, and
-so the further question would come up, Was the annual value
-actually £10? ‘If it may be really not far from that sum, and
-the family of the pauper be numerous, the interests of the contending
-parishes, supported by the conflicting opinions of their
-respective surveyors, leads to the utmost expense and extremity
-of litigation.’<a id="FNanchor_389" href="#Footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a> If the annual value were not in dispute there
-might be nice and intricate questions about the kind of tenement
-and the nature of the tenure: if the settlement was
-claimed in virtue of a contract of hiring, was the contract
-‘general, special, customary, retrospective, conditional,
-personal’ or what not?<a id="FNanchor_390" href="#Footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a> If the settlement was claimed in
-virtue of apprenticeship,<a id="FNanchor_391" href="#Footnote_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a> what was the nature of the indentures
-and so on. If claimed for an estate of £30, was the estate
-really worth £30, and how was it acquired? These are a few
-of the questions in dispute, and to add to the confusion ‘on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-no branch of the law have the judgments of the superior court
-been so contradictory.’<a id="FNanchor_392" href="#Footnote_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a></p>
-
-<p>Thus the principal occupation of those lawyers whose business
-brought them into the world of the poor was of a nature to
-draw their sympathies and interests to the side of the possessing
-classes, and whereas peasants’ ideas were acclimatised outside
-their own class in France as a consequence of the character of
-rural litigation and of rural lawyers, the English villager came
-before the lawyer, not as a client, but as a danger; not as a
-person whose rights and interests had to be explored and
-studied, but as a person whose claims on the parish had to be
-parried or evaded. It is not surprising, therefore, to find that
-both Fielding and Smollett lay great stress on the reputation of
-lawyers for harshness and extortion in their treatment of the
-poor, regarding them, like Carlyle, as ‘attorneys and law beagles
-who hunt ravenous on the earth.’ Readers of the adventures
-of Sir Launcelot Greaves will remember Tom Clarke ‘whose
-goodness of heart even the exercise of his profession had not
-been able to corrupt. Before strangers he never owned
-himself an attorney without blushing, though he had no reason
-to blush for his own practice, for he constantly refused to
-engage in the cause of any client whose character was equivocal,
-and was never known to act with such industry as when
-concerned for the widow and orphan or any other object that
-sued <i>in forma pauperis</i>.’ Fielding speaks in a foot-note to
-<i>Tom Jones</i> of the oppression of the poor by attorneys, as a
-scandal to the law, the nation, Christianity, and even human
-nature itself.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There was another class that might, under different circumstances,
-have helped to soothe and soften the isolation of the
-poor, but the position and the sympathies of the English
-Church made this impossible. This was seen very clearly by
-Adam Smith, who was troubled by the fear that ‘enthusiasm,’
-the religious force so dreaded by the men of science and reason,
-would spread among the poor, because the clergy who should
-have controlled and counteracted it were so little in touch
-with the mass of the people. Under the government of the
-Anglican Church, as set up by the Reformation, he pointed out,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-‘the clergy naturally endeavour to recommend themselves to
-the sovereign, to the court, and to the nobility and gentry of
-the country, by whose influence they chiefly expect to obtain
-preferment.’<a id="FNanchor_393" href="#Footnote_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a> He added that such a clergy are very apt to
-neglect altogether the means of maintaining their influence and
-authority with the lower ranks of life. The association of the
-Anglican Church with the governing class has never been more
-intimate and binding than it was during the eighteenth century.
-This was true alike of bishops and of clergy. The English
-bishop was not a gay Voltairean like the French, but he was
-just as zealous a member of the privileged orders, and the
-system over which he presided and which he defended was a
-faint copy of the gloriously coloured scandals of the French
-Church. The prelates who lived upon those scandals were
-described by Robespierre, with a humour that he did not often
-indulge, as treating the deity in the same way as the mayor
-of the palace used to treat the French kings. ‘Ils l’ont traité
-comme jadis les maires du palais traitèrent les descendants de
-Clovis pour régner sous son nom et se mettre à sa place. Ils
-l’ont relégué dans le ciel comme dans un palais, et ne l’ont
-appelé sur la terre que pour demander à leur profit des dîmes,
-des richesses, des honneurs, des plaisirs et de la puissance.’
-When Archbishop Dillon declared against the civil constitution
-he said that he and his colleagues acted as gentlemen and
-not as theologians. The Archbishop of Aix spoke of tithes
-as a voluntary offering from the piety of the faithful. ‘As to
-that,’ said the Duke de la Rochefoucault, ‘there are now forty
-thousand cases in the Courts.’ Both these archbishops would
-have found themselves quite at home among the spiritual peers
-in the House of Lords, where the same decorous hypocrisies
-mingled with the same class atmosphere. For the English
-bishops, though they were not libertines like the French, never
-learnt so to be Christians as to forget to be aristocrats, and
-their religious duties were never allowed to interfere with the
-demands of scholarship or of pleasure. Perhaps the most
-distinguished product of this régime was Bishop Watson of
-Llandaff, who invented an improved gunpowder and defended
-Christianity against Paine and Gibbon. These were his
-diversions; his main business was carried on at his magnificent
-country seat on the banks of Windermere. He was bishop for
-thirty-four years, and during the whole of that time he never
-lived within his diocese, preferring to play the part of the grand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-seigneur planting trees in Westmorland. He has left a sympathetic
-and charming account of what he modestly calls his
-retirement from public life, an event not to be confused with
-abdication of his see, and of how he built the palace where he
-spent the emoluments of Llandaff and the long autumn of his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural to men who lived in this atmosphere to
-see politics through the spectacles of the aristocracy. To
-understand how strongly the view that the Church existed to
-serve the aristocracy, and the rest of the State through the
-aristocracy, was fixed in the minds of the higher clergy, we have
-only to look at the case of a reformer like Bishop Horsley.
-The bishop is chiefly known as a preacher, a controversialist,
-and the author of the celebrated dictum that the poor had
-nothing to do with the laws except to obey them. His battle
-with Priestley has been compared to the encounter of Bentley
-and Collins, a comparison that may not give Horsley more,
-but certainly gives Priestley less than his due. When he
-preached before the House of Lords on the death of Louis <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span>
-his audience rose and stood in silent reverence during his
-peroration. The cynical may feel that it was not difficult to
-inspire emotion and awe in such a congregation on such a
-subject at such a time, but we know from De Quincey that
-Horsley’s reputation as a preacher stood remarkably high. He
-was one of the leaders of the Church in politics; for our
-purposes it is more important to note that he was one of the
-reforming bishops. Among other scandals he attacked the
-scandal of non-residence, and he may be taken as setting in
-this regard the strictest standard of his time; yet he did not
-scruple to go and live in Oxford for some years as tutor to
-Lord Guernsey, during the time that he was Rector of Newington,
-as plain a confession as we could want that in the estimation
-of the most public-spirited of the clergy the nobility had the
-first claims on the Church. These social sympathies were
-confirmed by common political interests. The privileges of
-the aristocracy and of the bishops were in fact bound up
-together, and both bishops and aristocracy had good reason to
-shrink from breaking a thread anywhere. Perhaps the malicious
-would find the most complete and piquant illustration of the
-relations of the Church and the governing class in the letter
-written by Dr. Goodenough to Addington, who had just made
-him Dean of Rochester, when the clerkship of the Pells, worth
-£3000 a year, was about to become vacant. ‘I understand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-that Colonel Barré is in a very precarious state. I hope you
-will have the fortitude to nominate Harry to be his successor.’
-Harry, Addington’s son, was a boy at Winchester. The father’s
-fortitude rose to the emergency: the dean blossomed a little
-later into a bishop.</p>
-
-<p>But if the French and the English bishops both belonged
-to the aristocracy in feelings and in habits, a great difference
-distinguishes the rank and file of the clergy in the two
-countries. The French priest belonged by circumstances and
-by sympathy to the peasant class. The bishop regarded the
-country curé as <i>un vilain sentant le fumier</i>, and treated him
-with about as much consideration as the seigneur showed
-to his dependants. The priest’s quarrel with the bishop was
-like the peasant’s quarrel with the seigneur: for both priest
-and peasant smarted under the arrogant airs of their respective
-superiors, and the bishop swallowed up the tithes as the seigneur
-swallowed up the feudal dues. Sometimes the curé put himself
-at the head of a local rebellion. In the reign of Louis <span class="allsmcap">XV.</span>
-the priests round Saint-Germain led out their flocks to destroy
-the game which devoured their crops, the campaign being
-announced and sanctified from the pulpit. In the Revolution
-the common clergy were largely on the side of the peasants.
-Such a development was inconceivable in England. As the
-curé’s windows looked to the village, the parson’s windows
-looked to the hall. When the parson’s circumstances enabled
-him to live like the squire, he rode to hounds, for though,
-as Blackstone tells us, Roman Canon Law, under the influence
-of the tradition that St. Jerome had once observed that
-the saints had eschewed such diversions, had interdicted
-<i>venationes et sylvaticas vagationes cum canibus et accipitribus</i>
-to all clergymen, this early severity of life had vanished long
-before the eighteenth century. He treated the calls of his
-profession as trifling accidents interrupting his normal life
-of vigorous pleasure. On becoming Bishop of Chester, Dr.
-Blomfield astonished the diocese by refusing to license a
-curate until he had promised to abstain from hunting, and
-by the pain and surprise with which he saw one of his clergy
-carried away drunk from a visitation dinner. One rector,
-whom he rebuked for drunkenness, replied with an injured
-manner that he was never drunk on duty.</p>
-
-<p>There were, it is true, clergymen of great public spirit and
-devoted lives, and such men figure in these pages, but the
-Church, as a whole, was an easy-going society, careful of its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-pleasures and comforts, living with the moral ideas and as far as
-possible in the manner of the rich. The rivalry of the Methodist
-movement had given a certain stimulus to zeal, and the Vicar
-of Corsley in Wilts,<a id="FNanchor_394" href="#Footnote_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a> for example, added a second service to the
-duties of the Sunday, though guarding himself expressly against
-the admission of any obligation to make it permanent. But
-it was found impossible to eradicate from the system certain
-of the vices that belong to a society which is primarily a class.
-Some of the bishops set themselves to reduce the practice of
-non-residence. Porteus, Bishop of London, devoted a great
-part of his charge to his clergy in 1790 to this subject, and
-though he pleaded passionately for reform he cannot be said
-to have shut his eyes to the difficulties of the clergy. ‘There
-are, indeed, two impediments to constant residence which
-cannot easily be surmounted; the first is (what unfortunately
-prevails in some parts of this diocese) unwholesomeness of
-situation; the other is the possession of a second benefice.
-Yet even these will not justify <i>a total and perpetual</i> absence
-from your cures. The unhealthiness of many places is of late
-years by various improvements greatly abated, and there are
-now few so circumstanced as not to admit of residence there
-in <i>some</i> part of the year without any danger to the constitution.’
-Thus even Bishop Porteus, who in this very charge reminded
-the clergy that they were called by the titles of stewards,
-watchmen, shepherds, and labourers, never went the length of
-thinking that the Church was to be expected to minister to
-the poor in all weathers and in all climates.</p>
-
-<p>The exertions of the reforming bishops did not achieve a
-conspicuous success, for the second of the difficulties touched
-on by Porteus was insurmountable. In his <i>Legacy to Parsons</i>,
-Cobbett, quoting from the <i>Clerical Guide</i>, showed that 332
-parsons shared the revenues of 1496 parishes, and 500 more
-shared those of 1524. Among the pluralists were Lord
-Walsingham, who besides enjoying a pension of £700 a year,
-was Archdeacon of Surrey, Prebendary of Winchester, Rector
-of Calbourne, Rector of Fawley, perpetual Curate of Exbury,
-and Rector of Merton; the Earl of Guildford, Rector of Old
-Alresford, Rector of New Alresford, perpetual Curate of
-Medsted, Rector of St. Mary, Southampton, including the
-great parish of South Stoneham, Master of St. Cross Hospital,
-with the revenue of the parish of St. Faith along with it.
-There were three Pretymans dividing fifteen benefices, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-Wellington’s brother was Prebendary of Durham, Rector of
-Bishopwearmouth, Rector of Chelsea, and Rector of Therfield.
-This method of treating the parson’s profession as a comfortable
-career was so closely entangled in the system
-of aristocracy, that no Government which represented those
-interests would ever dream of touching it. Parliament intervened
-indeed, but intervened to protect those who lived on
-these abuses. For before 1801 there were Acts of Parliament
-on the Statute Book (21 Henry <span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span> c. 13, and 13 Elizabeth
-c. 20), which provided certain penalties for non-residence.
-In 1799 a certain Mr. Williams laid informations against
-hundreds of the clergy for offences against these Acts. Parliament
-replied by passing a series of Acts to stay proceedings,
-and finally in 1803 Sir William Scott, member for the
-University of Oxford, passed an Act which allowed the bishops
-to authorise parsons to reside out of their parishes. It is not
-surprising to find that in 1812, out of ten thousand incumbents,
-nearly six thousand were non-resident.</p>
-
-<p>In the parishes where the incumbent was non-resident,
-if there was a clergyman at all in the place, it was generally
-a curate on a miserable pittance. Bishop Porteus, in the
-charge already mentioned, gives some interesting information
-about the salaries of curates: ‘It is also highly to the honour
-of this Diocese that in general the stipends allowed to the
-curates are more liberal than in many other parts of the
-kingdom. In several instances I find that the stipend for
-one church only is £50 a year; for two £60 and the use of
-a parsonage; and in the unwholesome parts of the Diocese
-£70 and even £80 (that is £40 for each church), with the
-same indulgence of a house to reside in.’ Many of the
-parishes did not see much of the curate assigned to them.
-‘A man must have travelled very little in the kingdom,’ said
-Arthur Young in 1798, ‘who does not know that country
-towns abound with curates who never see the parishes they
-serve, but when they are absolutely forced to it by duty.’<a id="FNanchor_395" href="#Footnote_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a>
-But the ill-paid curate, even when he was resident and conscientious,
-as he often was, moved like the pluralist rector in
-the orbit of the rich. He was in that world though not of it.
-All his hopes hung on the squire. To have taken the side of
-the poor against him would have meant ruin, and the English
-Church was not a nursery of this kind of heroism. It is
-significant that almost every eighteenth-century novelist puts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>
-at least one sycophantic parson in his or her gallery of
-portraits.<a id="FNanchor_396" href="#Footnote_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a></p>
-
-<p>In addition to the social ties that drew the clergy to the
-aristocracy, there was a powerful economic hindrance to their
-friendship with the poor. De Tocqueville thought that the
-tithe system brought the French priest into interesting and
-touching relations with the peasant: a view that has
-seemed fanciful to later historians, who are more impressed
-by the quarrels that resulted. But De Tocqueville himself
-could scarcely argue that the tithe system helped to warm
-the heart of the labourer to the Church of England in cases
-such as those recorded in the Parliamentary Paper issued in
-1833, in which parson magistrates sent working men to prison
-for refusing to pay tithes to their rector. Day labouring
-men had originally been exempted from liability to pay
-tithes, but just as the French Church brought more and more
-of the property and industry of the State within her confiscating
-grasp, so the English Parliament, from the reign of William
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, had been drawing the parson’s net more closely round
-the labourer. Moreover, as we shall see in a later chapter,
-the question of tithes was in the very centre of the social
-agitations that ended in the rising of 1830 and its terrible
-punishment. In this particular quarrel the farmers and
-labourers were on the same side, and the parsons as a body
-stood out for their own property with as much determination
-as the landlords.</p>
-
-<p>In one respect the Church took an active part in oppressing
-the village poor, for Wilberforce and his friends started, just
-before the French Revolution, a Society for the Reformation of
-Manners, which aimed at enforcing the observance of Sunday,
-forbidding any kind of social dissipation, and repressing freedom
-of speech and of thought whenever they refused to conform to
-the superstitions of the morose religion that was then in fashion.
-This campaign was directed against the license of the poor
-alone. There were no stocks for the Sabbath-breakers of
-Brooks’s: a Gibbon might take what liberties he pleased with
-religion: the wildest Methodist never tried to shackle the
-loose tongues or the loose lives of the gay rich. The attitude
-of the Church to the excesses of this class is well depicted in
-Fielding’s account of Parson Supple, who never remonstrated
-with Squire Western for swearing, but preached so vigorously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-in the pulpit against the habit that the authorities put the
-laws very severely in execution against others, ‘and the
-magistrate was the only person in the parish who could swear
-with impunity.’ This description might seem to border on
-burlesque, but there is an entry in Wilberforce’s diary that
-reveals a state of mind which even Fielding would have found
-it impossible to caricature. Wilberforce was staying at
-Brighton, and this is his description of an evening he spent at
-the Pavilion with the first gentleman of Europe: ‘The Prince
-and Duke of Clarence too very civil. Prince showed he had
-read Cobbett. Spoke strongly of the blasphemy of his late
-papers and most justly.’<a id="FNanchor_397" href="#Footnote_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a> We can only hope that Sheridan
-was there to enjoy the scene, and that the Prince was able
-for once to do justice to his strong feelings in language that
-would not shock Wilberforce’s ears.</p>
-
-<p>Men like Wilberforce and the magistrates whom he inspired
-did not punish the rich for their dissolute behaviour; they only
-found in that behaviour another argument for coercing the poor.
-As they watched the dishevelled lives of men like George
-Selwyn, their one idea of action was to punish a village labourer
-for neglecting church on Sunday morning. We have seen how
-the cottagers paid in Enclosure Bills for their lords’ adventures
-at play. They paid also for their lords’ dissipations in the loss
-of innocent pleasures that might have brought some colour into
-their grey lives. The more boisterous the fun at Almack’s,
-the deeper the gloom thrown over the village. The Select
-Committee on Allotments that reported in 1843 found one of
-the chief causes of crime in the lack of recreations. Sheridan
-at one time and Cobbett at another tried to revive village
-sports, but social circumstances were too strong for them.
-In this respect the French peasant had the advantage.
-Babeau’s picture of his gay and sociable Sunday may be
-overdrawn, but a comparison of Crabbe’s description of the
-English Sunday with contemporary descriptions of Sunday
-as it was spent in a French village, shows that the spirit of
-common gaiety, killed in England by Puritanism and by the
-destruction of the natural and easy-going relations of the
-village community, survived in France through all the tribulations
-of poverty and famine. The eighteenth-century French
-village still bore a resemblance in fact to the mediæval English
-village, and Goldsmith has recorded in <i>The Traveller</i> his
-impressions of ‘mirth and social ease.’ Babeau gives an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-account of a great variety of village games, from the violent
-contests in Brittany for the ‘choule,’ in one of which fourteen
-players were drowned, to the gentler dances and the children’s
-romps that were general in other parts of France, and Arthur
-Young was very much struck by the agility and the grace that
-the heavy peasants displayed in dancing on the village green.
-Windham, speaking in a bad cause, the defence of bull-baiting
-in 1800, laid stress on the contrast: ‘In the south of France
-and in Spain, at the end of the day’s labour, and in the cool of
-the evening’s shade, the poor dance in mirthful festivity on
-the green, to the sound of the guitar. But in this country no
-such source of amusement presents itself. If they dance, it
-must be often in a marsh, or in the rain, for the pleasure of
-catching cold. But there is a substitute in this country well
-known by the name of <i>Hops</i>. We all know the alarm which the
-very word inspires, and the sound of the fiddle calls forth the
-magistrate to dissolve the meeting. Men bred in ignorance
-of the world, and having no opportunity of mixing in its scenes
-or observing its manners, may be much worse employed than
-in learning something of its customs from theatrical representations;
-but if a company of strolling players make their appearance
-in a village, they are hunted immediately from it as a
-nuisance, except, perhaps, there be a few people of greater
-wealth in the neighbourhood, whose wives and daughters
-patronize them.’<a id="FNanchor_398" href="#Footnote_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a> Thus all the influences of the time conspired
-to isolate the poor, and the changes, destructive of their freedom
-and happiness, that were taking place in their social and
-economic surroundings, were aggravated by a revival of Puritanism
-which helped to rob village life of all its natural melody
-and colour.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE VILLAGE IN 1830</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>We have described the growing misery of the labourer, the
-increasing rigours of the criminal law, and the insensibility of
-the upper classes, due to the isolation of the poor. What
-kind of a community was created by the Speenhamland
-system after it had been in force for a generation? We have,
-fortunately, a very full picture given in a Parliamentary Report
-that is generally regarded as one of the landmarks of English
-history. We cannot do better than set out the main features
-of the Report of the Poor Law Commissioners of 1834, and the
-several effects they traced to this system.</p>
-
-<p>The first effect is one that everybody could have anticipated:
-the destruction of all motives for effort and ambition. Under
-this system ‘the most worthless were sure of <i>something</i>, while
-the prudent, the industrious, and the sober, with all their care
-and pains, obtained <i>only something</i>; and even that scanty
-pittance was doled out to them by the overseer.’<a id="FNanchor_399" href="#Footnote_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a> All
-labourers were condemned to live on the brink of starvation,
-for no effort of will or character could improve their position.
-The effect on the imagination was well summed up in a
-rhetorical question from a labourer who gave evidence to a
-Commissioner. ‘When a man has his spirit broken what is he
-good for?’<a id="FNanchor_400" href="#Footnote_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a> The Poor Law Commissioners looked at it from
-a different point of view: ‘The labourer feels that the existing
-system, though it generally gives him low wages, always gives
-him work. It gives him also, strange as it may appear, what
-he values more, a sort of independence. He need not bestir
-himself to seek work; he need not study to please his master;
-he need not put any restraint upon his temper; he need not
-ask relief as a favour. He has all a slave’s security for subsistence,
-without his liability to punishment.... All the other
-classes of society are exposed to the vicissitudes of hope and
-fear; he alone has nothing to lose or to gain.’<a id="FNanchor_401" href="#Footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span></p>
-
-<p>But it is understating the result of the system on individual
-enterprise to say that it destroyed incentives to ambition; for in
-some parishes it actually proscribed independence and punished
-the labourer who owned some small property. Wages under
-these conditions were so low that a man with a little property
-or a few savings could not keep himself alive without help
-from the parish, but if a man was convicted of possessing
-anything he was refused parish help. It was dangerous even
-to look tidy or neat, ‘ragged clothes are kept by the poor, for
-the express purpose of coming to the vestry in them.’<a id="FNanchor_402" href="#Footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a> The
-Report of the Commissioners on this subject recalls Rousseau’s
-description of the French peasant with whom he stayed in
-the course of his travels, who, when his suspicions had been
-soothed, and his hospitable instincts had been warmed by
-friendly conversation, produced stores of food from the secret
-place where they had been hidden to escape the eye of the tax-collector.
-A man who had saved anything was ruined. A
-Mr. Hickson, a Northampton manufacturer and landowner in
-Kent, gave an illustration of this.</p>
-
-<p>‘The case of a man who has worked for me will show the
-effect of the parish system in preventing frugal habits. This
-is a hard-working, industrious man, named William Williams.
-He is married, and had saved some money, to the amount of
-about £70, and had two cows; he had also a sow and ten pigs.
-He had got a cottage well furnished; he was a member of a
-benefit club at Meopham, from which he received 8s. a week
-when he was ill. He was beginning to learn to read and write,
-and sent his children to the Sunday School. He had a legacy
-of about £46, but he got his other money together by saving
-from his fair wages as a waggoner. Some circumstances
-occurred which obliged me to part with him. The consequence
-of this labouring man having been frugal and saved money,
-and got the cows, was that no one would employ him, although
-his superior character as a workman was well known in the
-parish. He told me at the time I was obliged to part with
-him: “Whilst I have these things I shall get no work; I
-must part with them all; I must be reduced to a state of
-beggary before any one will employ me.” I was compelled
-to part with him at Michaelmas; he has not yet got work,
-and he has no chance of getting any until he has become a
-pauper; for until then the paupers will be preferred to him.
-He cannot get work in his own parish, and he will not be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-allowed to get any in other parishes. Another instance of the
-same kind occurred amongst my workmen. Thomas Hardy,
-the brother-in-law of the same man, was an excellent workman,
-discharged under similar circumstances; he has a very
-industrious wife. They have got two cows, a well-furnished
-cottage, and a pig and fowls. Now he cannot get work,
-because he has property. The pauper will be preferred to him,
-and he can qualify himself for it only by becoming a pauper.
-If he attempts to get work elsewhere, he is told that they do
-not want to fix him on the parish. Both these are fine young
-men, and as excellent labourers as I could wish to have. The
-latter labouring man mentioned another instance of a labouring
-man in another parish (Henstead), who had once had more
-property than he, but was obliged to consume it all, and is now
-working on the roads.’<a id="FNanchor_403" href="#Footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a> This effect of the Speenhamland
-arrangements was dwelt on in the evidence before the Committee
-on Agricultural Labourers’ Wages in 1824. Labourers
-had to give up their cottages in a Dorsetshire village because
-they could not become pensioners if they possessed a cottage,
-and farmers would only give employment to village pensioners.
-Thus these cottagers who had not been evicted by enclosure
-were evicted by the Speenhamland system.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that in the case of another man of
-independent nature in Cambridgeshire, who had saved money
-and so could get no work, we are told that the young men
-pointed at him, and called him a fool for not spending his money
-at the public-house, ‘adding that then he would get work.’<a id="FNanchor_404" href="#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a>
-The statesmen who condemned the labourer to this fate had
-rejected the proposal for a minimum wage, on the ground
-that it would destroy emulation.</p>
-
-<p>There was one slight alleviation of this vicious system,
-which the Poor Law Commissioners considered in the very
-different light of an aggravation. If society was to be reorganised
-on such a basis as this, it was at any rate better that
-the men who were made to live on public money should not be
-grateful to the ratepayers. The Commissioners were pained
-by the insolence of the paupers. ‘The parish money,’ said a
-Sussex labourer, ‘is now chucked to us like as to a dog,’<a id="FNanchor_405" href="#Footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a>
-but the labourers did not lick the hand that threw it. All
-through the Report we read complaints of the ‘insolent, discontented,
-surly pauper,’ who talks of ‘right’ and ‘income,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-and who will soon fight for these supposed rights and income
-‘unless some step is taken to arrest his progress to open
-violence.’ The poor emphasised this view by the terms they
-applied to their rate subsidies, which they sometimes called
-‘their reglars,’ sometimes ‘the county allowance,’ and sometimes
-‘The Act of Parliament allowance.’ Old dusty rentbooks
-of receipts and old dirty indentures of apprenticeship
-were handed down from father to son with as much care as
-if they had been deeds of freehold property, as documentary
-evidence to their right to a share in the rates of a particular
-parish.<a id="FNanchor_406" href="#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a> Of course there was not a uniform administration,
-and the Commissioners reported that whilst in some districts
-men were disqualified for relief if they had any wages, in others
-there was no inquiry into circumstances, and non-necessitous
-persons dipped like the rest into the till. In many cases only
-the wages received during the last week or fortnight were taken
-into account, and thus the allowance would be paid to some
-persons who at particular periods received wages in excess of
-the scale. This accounts for the fact stated by Thorold
-Rogers from his own experience that there were labourers
-who actually saved considerable sums out of the system.</p>
-
-<p>The most obvious and immediate effect was the effect
-which had been foreseen without misgiving in Warwickshire
-and Worcestershire. The married man was employed in
-preference to the bachelor, and his income rose with the birth
-of each child. But there was one thing better than to marry
-and have a family, and that was to marry a mother of
-bastards, for bastards were more profitable than legitimate
-children, since the parish guaranteed the contribution for
-which the putative father was legally liable. It was easier to
-manage with a family than with a single child. As one young
-woman of twenty-four with four bastard children put it, ‘If
-she had one more she should be very comfortable.’<a id="FNanchor_407" href="#Footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a> Women
-with bastard children were thus very eligible wives. The effect
-of the whole system on village morals was striking and widespread,
-and a witness from a parish which was overwhelmed
-with this sudden deluge of population said to the Commission,
-‘the eighteen-penny children will eat up this parish in ten
-years more, unless some relief be afforded us.’<a id="FNanchor_408" href="#Footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a> Before this
-period, if we are to believe Cobbett, it had been rare for a
-woman to be with child at the time of her marriage; in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>
-these days of demoralisation and distress it became the
-habit.</p>
-
-<p>The effects produced by this system on the recipients of
-relief were all of them such as might have been anticipated,
-and in this respect the Report of the Commissioners contained
-no surprises. It merely illustrated the generalisations that
-had been made by all Poor Law Reformers during the last
-fifteen years. But the discovery of the extent of the corruption
-which the system had bred in local government and administration
-was probably a revelation to most people. It demoralised
-not only those who received but those who gave. A network
-of tangled interests spread over local life, and employers
-and tradesmen were faced with innumerable temptations and
-opportunities for fraud. To take the case of the overseer first.
-Suppose him to be a tradesman: he was liable to suffer in his
-custom if he refused to relieve the friends, or it might be the
-workmen of his customers. It would require a man of almost
-superhuman rigidity of principle to be willing not only to lose
-time and money in serving a troublesome and unprofitable
-office, but to lose custom as well.<a id="FNanchor_409" href="#Footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a> From the resolve not to
-lose custom he might gradually slip down to the determination
-to reimburse himself for ‘the vexatious demands’ on his
-time, till a state of affairs like that in Slaugham came
-about.</p>
-
-<p>‘Population, 740. Expenditure, £1706. The above large
-sum of money is expended principally in orders on the village
-shops for flour, clothes, butter, cheese, etc.: the tradesmen
-serve the office of overseer by turns; the two last could neither
-read nor write.’<a id="FNanchor_410" href="#Footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a></p>
-
-<p>If the overseer were a farmer there were temptations to
-pay part of the wages of his own and his friends’ labourers out
-of parish money, or to supply the workhouse with his own
-produce. The same temptations beset the members of vestries,
-whether they were open or select. ‘Each vestryman, so
-far as he is an immediate employer of labour, is interested
-in keeping down the rate of wages, and in throwing part of
-their payment on others, and, above all, on the principal
-object of parochial fraud, the tithe-owner: if he is the owner
-of cottages, he endeavours to get their rent paid by the parish;
-if he keeps a shop, he struggles to get allowance for his
-customers or debtors; if he deals in articles used in the workhouse,
-he tries to increase the workhouse consumption; if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-he is in humble circumstances, his own relations or friends may
-be among the applicants.’<a id="FNanchor_411" href="#Footnote_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a> Mr. Drummond, a magistrate
-for Hants and Surrey, said to the Committee on Labourers’
-Wages in 1824, that part of the poor-rate expenditure was
-returned to farmers and landowners in exorbitant cottage
-rents, and that the farmers always opposed a poor man who
-wished to build himself a cottage on the waste.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of what was known as the ‘labour rate’ system,
-the members of one class combined together to impose the
-burden of maintaining the poor on the shoulders of the other
-classes. By this system, instead of the labourer’s wages
-being made up to a fixed amount by the parish, each ratepayer
-was bound to employ, and to pay at a certain rate, a
-certain number of labourers, whether he wanted them or not.
-The number depended sometimes on his assessment to the
-poor rate, sometimes on the amount of acres he occupied
-(of the use to which the land was put no notice was taken, a
-sheep-walk counting for as much as arable fields): when the
-occupiers of land had employed a fixed number of labourers,
-the surplus labourers were divided amongst all the ratepayers
-according to their rental. This plan was superficially
-fair, but as a matter of fact it worked out to the advantage of
-the big farmers with much arable land, and pressed hard on
-the small ones who cultivated their holdings by their own
-and their children’s labour, and, in cases where they were
-liable to the rate, on the tradesmen who had no employment
-at which to set an agricultural labourer. After 1832 (2 and 3
-William <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 96) the agreement of three-fourths of the ratepayers
-to such a system was binding on all, and the large
-farmers often banded together to impose it on their fellow
-ratepayers by intimidation or other equally unscrupulous
-means: thus at Kelvedon in Essex we read: ‘There was no
-occasion in this parish, nor would it have been done but for
-a junto of powerful landholders, putting down opposition by
-exempting a sufficient number, to give themselves the means
-of a majority.’<a id="FNanchor_412" href="#Footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a></p>
-
-<p>Landlords in some cases resorted to Machiavellian tactics
-in order to escape their burdens.</p>
-
-<p>‘Several instances have been mentioned to us, of parishes
-nearly depopulated, in which almost all the labour is performed
-by persons settled in the neighbouring villages or towns;
-drawing from them, as allowance, the greater part of their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-subsistence.’<a id="FNanchor_413" href="#Footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a> This method is described more at length in
-the following <span class="lock">passage:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>‘When a parish is in the hands of only one proprietor,
-or of proprietors so few in number as to be able to act, and to
-compel their tenants to act, in unison, and adjoins to parishes
-in which property is much divided, they may pull down every
-cottage as it becomes vacant, and prevent the building of new
-ones. By a small immediate outlay they may enable and
-induce a considerable portion of those who have settlements
-in their parish to obtain settlements in the adjoining parishes:
-by hiring their labourers for periods less than a year, they
-may prevent the acquisition of new settlements in their own.
-They may thus depopulate their own estates, and cultivate
-them by means of the surplus population of the surrounding
-district.’<a id="FNanchor_414" href="#Footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a> A clergyman in Reading<a id="FNanchor_415" href="#Footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a> said that he had between
-ten and twenty families living in his parish and working for
-the farmers in their original parish, whose cottages had been
-pulled down over their heads. Occasionally a big proprietor
-of parish A, in order to lessen the poor rates, would, with unscrupulous
-ingenuity, take a farm in parish B, and there hire
-for the year a batch of labourers from A: these at the end
-of their term he would turn off on to the mercies of parish B
-which was now responsible for them, whilst he sent for a fresh
-consignment from parish A.<a id="FNanchor_416" href="#Footnote_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Report of the Commission is a remarkable and searching
-picture of the general demoralisation produced by the Speenhamland
-system, and from that point of view it is most graphic
-and instructive. But nobody who has followed the history of
-the agricultural labourer can fail to be struck by its capital
-omission. The Commissioners, in their simple analysis of that
-system, could not take their eyes off the Speenhamland goblin,
-and instead of dealing with that system as a wrong and disastrous
-answer to certain difficult questions, they treated the
-system itself as the one and original source of all evils. They
-sighed for the days when ‘the paupers were a small disreputable
-minority, whose resentment was not to be feared, and whose
-favour was of no value,’ and ‘all other classes were anxious
-to diminish the number of applicants, and to reduce the expenses
-of their maintenance.’<a id="FNanchor_417" href="#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a> They did not realise that the
-governing class had not created a Frankenstein monster for
-the mere pleasure of its creation; that they had not set out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-to draw up an ideal constitution, as Rousseau had done for
-the Poles. In 1795 there was a fear of revolution, and the
-upper classes threw the Speenhamland system over the villages
-as a wet blanket over sparks. The Commissioners merely
-isolated the consequences of Speenhamland and treated them
-as if they were the entire problem, and consequently, though
-their report served to extinguish that system, it did nothing
-to rehabilitate the position of the labourer, or to restore the
-rights and status he had lost. The new Poor Law was the only
-gift of the Reformed Parliament to the agricultural labourer;
-it was an improvement on the old, but only in the sense that
-the east wind is better than the sirocco.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>What would have happened if either of the other two
-remedies had been adopted for the problem to which the
-Speenhamland system was applied, it is impossible to say.
-But it is easy to see that the position of the agricultural labourer,
-which could not have been worse, might have been very much
-better, and that the nation, as apart from the landlords and
-money-lords, would have come out of this whirlpool much
-stronger and much richer. This was clear to one correspondent
-of the Poor Law Commission, whose memorandum, printed in
-an Appendix,<a id="FNanchor_418" href="#Footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a> is more interesting and profound than any
-contribution to the subject made by the Commissioners themselves.
-M. Chateauvieux set out an alternative policy to
-Speenhamland, which, if the governing class of 1795 or the
-governing class of 1834 had been enlightened enough to follow
-it, would have set up a very different labouring class in the
-villages from the helpless proletariat that was created by the
-enclosures.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mais si au lieu d’opérer le partage des biens communaux,
-l’administration de la commune s’était bornée à louer pour
-quelques années des parcelles des terres qu’elle possède en
-vaine pâture, et cela à très bas prix, aux journaliers domiciliés
-sur son territoire, il en serait resulté:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘(1) Que le capital de ces terres n’aurait point été aliéné et
-absorbé dans la propriété particulière.</p>
-
-<p>‘(2) Que ce capital aurait été néanmoins utilisé pour la
-reproduction.</p>
-
-<p>‘(3) Qu’il aurait servi à l’amélioration du sort des pauvres
-qui l’auraient défriché, de toute la différence entre le prix du<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-loyer qu’ils en auraient payé, et le montant du revenu qu’ils
-auraient obtenu de sa recolte.</p>
-
-<p>‘(4) Que la commune aurait encaissé le montant de ses
-loyers, et aurait augmenté d’autant les moyens dont elle dispose
-pour le soulagement de ces pauvres.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>M. Chateauvieux understood better than any of the Commissioners,
-dominated as they were by the extreme individualist
-economy of the time, the meaning of Bolingbroke’s maxim
-that a wise minister considers his administration as a single day
-in the great year of Government; but as a day that is affected
-by those which went before and must affect those which are to
-come after. A Government of enclosing landowners was perhaps
-not to be expected to understand all that the State was in
-danger of losing in the reckless alienation of common property.</p>
-
-<p>What of the prospects of the other remedy that was proposed?
-At first sight it seems natural to argue that had
-Whitbread’s Minimum Wage Bill become an Act of Parliament
-it would have remained a dead letter. The administration
-depended on the magistrates and the magistrates represented
-the rent-receiving and employing classes. A closer scrutiny
-warrants a different conclusion. At the time that the Speenhamland
-plan was adopted there were many magistrates in
-favour of setting a minimum scale. The Suffolk magistrates,
-for example, put pressure on the county members to vote for
-Whitbread’s Bill, and those members, together with Grey and
-Sheridan, were its backers. The Parliamentary support for
-the Bill was enough to show that it was not only in Suffolk
-that it would have been adopted; there were men like Lechmere
-and Whitbread scattered about the country, and though
-they were men of far more enlightened views than the average
-J.P., they were not without influence in their own neighbourhoods.
-It is pretty certain, therefore, that if the Bill had been
-carried, it would have been administered in some parts of the
-country. The public opinion in support of the Act would
-have been powerfully reinforced by the pressure of the labourers,
-and this would have meant a more considerable stimulus than
-might at first be supposed, for the Report of the Poor Law
-Commissioners shows that the pressure of the labourers was a
-very important factor in the retention of the allowance system
-in parishes where the overseers wished to abandon it, and if the
-labourers could coerce the local authorities into continuing the
-Speenhamland system, they could have coerced the magistrates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-into making an assessment of wages. The labourers were able
-by a show of violence to raise wages and to reduce prices
-temporarily, as is clear from the history of 1816 and 1830. It
-is not too much to suppose that they could have exercised
-enough influence in 1795 to induce magistrates in many places
-to carry out a law that was on the Statute Book. Further, it
-is not unreasonable to suppose that agricultural labourers’
-unions to enforce the execution of the law would have escaped
-the monstrous Combination Law of 1799 and 1800, for even
-in 1808 the Glasgow and Lancashire cotton-weavers were
-permitted openly to combine for the purpose of seeking a legal
-fixing of wages.<a id="FNanchor_419" href="#Footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a></p>
-
-<p>If assessment had once become the practice, the real struggle
-would have arisen when the great prosperity of agriculture
-began to decline; at the time, that is, when the Speenhamland
-system began to show those symptoms of strain that we have
-described. Would the customary wage, established under the
-more favourable conditions of 1795, have stood against that
-pressure? Would the labourers have been able to keep up
-wages, as critics of the Whitbread Bill had feared that they
-would? In considering the answers to that question, we have
-to reckon with a force that the debaters of 1795 could not
-have foreseen. In 1795 Cobbett was engaged in the politics
-and polemics of America, and if any member of the House of
-Commons knew his name, he knew it as the name of a fierce
-champion of English institutions, and a fierce enemy of revolutionary
-ideas; a hero of the <i>Anti-Jacobin</i> itself. In 1810
-Cobbett was rapidly making himself the most powerful tribune
-that the English poor have ever known. Cobbett’s faults are
-plain enough, for they are all on the surface. His egotism
-sometimes seduced his judgment; he had a strongly perverse
-element in his nature; his opinion of any proposals not his
-own was apt to be petulant and peevish, and it might perhaps
-be said of him that he generally had a wasp in his bonnet.
-These qualities earned for him his title of the Contentious
-Man. They would have been seriously disabling in a Cabinet
-Minister, but they did not affect his power of collecting and
-mobilising and leading the spasmodic forces of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>Let us recall his career in order to understand what his
-influence would have been if the labourers had won their
-customary wage in 1795, and had been fighting to maintain it
-fifteen or twenty years later. His adventures began early.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-When he was thirteen his imagination was fired by stories
-the gardener at Farnham told him of the glories of Kew. He
-ran away from home, and made so good an impression on
-the Kew gardener that he was given work there. His last
-coppers on that journey were spent in buying Swift’s <i>Tale of
-a Tub</i>. He returned home, but his restless dreams drove
-him again into the world. He tried to become a sailor, and
-ultimately became a soldier. He left the army, where he had
-made his mark and received rapid promotion, in order to
-expose a financial scandal in his regiment, but on discovering
-that the interests involved in the countenance of military
-abuses were far more powerful than he had supposed, he
-abandoned his attempt and fled to France. A few months
-later he crossed to America, and settled down to earn a living
-by teaching English to French refugees. This peaceful
-occupation he relinquished for the congenial excitements of
-polemical journalism, and he was soon the fiercest pamphleteer
-on the side of the Federals, who took the part of England, in
-their controversies with the Democrats, who took the part of
-the Revolution. So far as the warfare of pamphlets went,
-Cobbett turned the scale. The Democrats could not match
-his wit, his sarcasm, his graphic and pointed invectives, his
-power of clever and sparkling analysis and ridicule. This
-warfare occupied him for nearly ten years, and he returned to
-England in time to have his windows broken for refusing to
-illuminate his house in celebration of the Peace of Amiens.
-In 1802 he started the <i>Political Register</i>. At that time he was
-still a Tory, but a closer study of English life changed his
-opinions, and four years later he threw himself into the Radical
-movement. The effect of his descent on English politics can
-only be compared to the shock that was given to the mind of
-Italy by the French methods of warfare, when Charles <span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span>
-led his armies into her plains to fight pitched battles without
-any of the etiquette or polite conventions that had graced the
-combats of the condottieri. He gave to the Reform agitation
-an uncompromising reality and daring, and a movement which
-had become the dying echo of a smothered struggle broke into
-storm and thunder. Hazlitt scarcely exaggerated his dæmonic
-powers when he said of him that he formed a fourth estate
-of himself.</p>
-
-<p>Now Cobbett may be said to have spent twenty years
-of his life in the effort to save the labourers from degradation
-and ruin. He was the only man of his generation who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-regarded politics from this standpoint. This motive is the
-key to his career. He saw in 1816 that the nation had to
-choose between its sinecures, its extravagant army, its rulers’
-mad scheme of borrowing at a higher rate to extinguish debt,
-for which it was paying interest at a low rate, its huge Civil
-List and privileged establishments, the interests of the fund-holders
-and contractors on the one hand, and its labourers
-on the other. In that conflict of forces the labourer could not
-hold his own. Later, Cobbett saw that there were other
-interests, the interests of landowners and of tithe-holders,
-which the State would have to subordinate to national claims
-if the labourer was to be saved. In that conflict, too, the
-labourer was beaten. He was unrepresented in Parliament,
-whereas the opposing interests were massed there. Cobbett
-wanted Parliamentary Reform, not like the traditional Radicals
-as a philosophy of rights, but as an avalanche of social
-power. Parliamentary Reform was never an end to him,
-nor the means to anything short of the emancipation of the
-labourer. In this, his main mission, Cobbett failed. The
-upper classes winced under his ruthless manners, and they
-trembled before his Berserker rage, but it is the sad truth of
-English history that they beat him. Now if, instead of
-throwing himself against this world of privilege and vested
-interests in the hopes of wringing a pittance of justice for a
-sinking class, it had been his task to maintain a position
-already held, he would have fought under very different
-conditions. If, when prices began to fall, there had been
-a customary wage in most English villages, the question would
-not have been whether the ruling class was to maintain its
-privileges and surplus profits by letting the labourer sink
-deeper into the morass, but whether it was to maintain
-these privileges and profits by taking something openly from
-him. It is easier to prevent a dog from stealing a bone than
-to take the bone out of his mouth. Cobbett was not strong
-enough to break the power of the governing class, but he
-might have been strong enough to defend the customary
-rights of the labouring class. As it was, the governing class
-was on the defensive at every point. The rent receivers, the
-tithe owners, the mortgagers, the lenders to the Government
-and the contractors all clung to their gains, and the food
-allowance of the labourer slowly and steadily declined.</p>
-
-<p>There was this great difference between the Speenhamland
-system and a fixed standard of wages. The Speenhamland<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-system after 1812 was not applied so as to maintain an equilibrium
-between the income and expenditure of the labourer: it
-was applied to maintain an equilibrium between social forces.
-The scale fell not with the fall of prices to the labourer, but with
-the fall of profits to the possessing classes. The minimum was
-not the minimum on which the labourer could live, but the
-minimum below which rebellion was certain. This was the
-way in which wages found their own level. They gravitated
-lower and lower with the growing weakness of the wage-earner.
-If Cobbett had been at the head of a movement for preserving
-to the labourer a right bestowed on him by Act of Parliament,
-either he would have succeeded, or the disease would have
-come to a crisis in 1816, instead of taking the form of a lingering
-and wasting illness. Either, that is, other classes would have
-had to make the economies necessary to keep the labourers’
-wages at the customary point, or the labourers would have
-made their last throw before they had been desolated and
-weakened by another fifteen years of famine.</p>
-
-<p>There is another respect in which the minimum wage policy
-would have profoundly altered the character of village society.
-It would have given the village labourers a bond of union
-before they had lost the memories and the habits of their more
-independent life; it would have made them an organised force,
-something like the organised forces that have built up a standard
-of life for industrial workmen. An important passage in
-Fielding’s <i>Tom Jones</i> shows that there was material for such
-combination in the commoners of the old village. Fielding is
-talking of his borrowings from the classics and he defends himself
-with this analogy: ‘The ancients may be considered as a rich
-common, where every person who hath the smallest tenement
-in Parnassus hath a free right to batten his muse: or, to place
-it in a clearer light, we moderns are to the ancients what the
-poor are to the rich. By the poor here I mean that large and
-venerable body which in English we call the mob. Now
-whoever hath had the honour to be admitted to any degree of
-intimacy with this mob must well know, that it is one of
-their established maxims to plunder and pillage their rich
-neighbours without any reluctance: and that this is held to
-be neither sin nor crime among them. And so constantly
-do they abide and act by this maxim, that in every parish
-almost in the kingdom there is a kind of confederacy ever
-carrying on against a certain person of opulence called the
-squire whose property is considered as free booty by all his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-poor neighbours; who, as they conclude that there is no
-manner of guilt in such depredations, look upon it as a point
-of honour and moral obligation to conceal and to preserve
-each other from punishment on all such occasions. In like
-manner are the ancients such as Homer, Virgil, Horace, Cicero
-and the rest to be esteemed among us writers as so many
-wealthy squires from whom we, the poor of Parnassus, claim
-an immemorial custom of taking whatever we can come at.’<a id="FNanchor_420" href="#Footnote_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a></p>
-
-<p>It would not have been possible to create a great labourers’
-union before the Combination Laws were repealed in 1824,
-but if the labourers had been organised to defend their
-standard wage, they would have established a tradition of
-permanent association in each village. The want of this was
-their fatal weakness. All the circumstances make the spirit
-of combination falter in the country. In towns men are face to
-face with the brutal realities of their lives, unsoftened by any
-of the assuaging influences of brook and glade and valley.
-Men and women who work in the fields breathe something
-of the resignation and peace of Nature; they bear trouble
-and wrong with a dangerous patience. Discontent moves,
-but it moves slowly, and whereas storms blow up in the towns,
-they beat up in the country. That is one reason why the
-history of the anguish of the English agricultural labourer so
-rarely breaks into violence. Castlereagh’s Select Committee
-in 1817 rejoiced in the discovery that ‘notwithstanding the
-alarming progress which has been made in extending disaffection,
-its success has been confined to the principal manufacturing
-districts, and that scarcely any of the agricultural population
-have lent themselves to these violent projects.’ There is a
-Russian saying that the peasant must ‘be boiled in the factory
-pot’ before a revolution can succeed. And if it is difficult in the
-nature of things to make rural labourers as formidable to
-their masters as industrial workers, there is another reason
-why the English labourer rebelled so reluctantly and so tardily
-against what Sir Spencer Walpole called, in the true spirit of a
-classical politician, ‘his inevitable and hereditary lot.’ Village
-society was constantly losing its best and bravest blood.
-Bamford’s description of the poacher who nearly killed a
-gamekeeper’s understrapper in a quarrel in a public-house,
-and then hearing from Dr. Healey that his man was only
-stunned, promised the doctor that if there was but one single
-hare on Lord Suffield’s estates, that hare should be in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-doctor’s stew-pot next Sunday, reminds us of the loss a
-village suffered when its poachers were snapped up by a
-game-preserving bench, and tossed to the other side of the
-world. During the years between Waterloo and the Reform
-Bill the governing class was decimating the village populations
-on the principle of the Greek tyrant who flicked off the heads
-of the tallest blades in his field; the Game Laws, summary
-jurisdiction, special commissions, drove men of spirit and enterprise,
-the natural leaders of their fellows, from the villages
-where they might have troubled the peace of their masters.
-The village Hampdens of that generation sleep on the shores
-of Botany Bay. Those who blame the supine character of the
-English labourer forget that his race, before it had quite lost
-the memories and the habits of the days of its independence
-and its share in the commons, was passed through this sieve.
-The scenes we shall describe in the next chapter show that
-the labourers were capable of great mutual fidelity when once
-they were driven into rebellion. If they had had a right to
-defend and a comradeship to foster from the first, Cobbett,
-who spent his superb strength in a magnificent onslaught on
-the governing class, might have made of the race whose wrongs
-he pitied as his own, an army no less resolute and disciplined
-than the army O’Connell made of the broken peasants of the
-West.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Where not otherwise stated the authorities for the two following
-chapters are the Home Office Papers for the time (Municipal and
-Provincial, Criminal, Disturbances, Domestic, etc.), the <i>Times</i> and local
-papers.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">I</p>
-
-<p>A traveller who wished to compare the condition of the
-English and the French rural populations in 1830 would have
-had little else to do than to invert all that had been written
-on the subject by travellers a century earlier. At the beginning
-of the eighteenth century England had the prosperous and
-France the miserable peasantry. But by the beginning of the
-nineteenth century the French peasant had been set free from
-the impoverishing and degrading services which had made his
-lot so intolerable in the eyes of foreign observers; he cultivated
-his own land, and lived a life, spare, arduous, and exacting but
-independent. The work of the Revolution had been done so
-thoroughly in this respect that the Bourbons, when Wellington
-and the allies lifted them back on to their throne, could not
-undo it. It is true that the future of the French peasants
-was a subject of some anxiety to English observers, and that
-M‘Culloch committed himself to the prediction that in half
-a century, owing to her mass of small owners, France would be
-the greatest pauper-warren in Europe. If any French peasant
-was disturbed by this nightmare of the political economy of
-the time, he had the grim satisfaction of knowing that his
-position could hardly become worse than the position that the
-English labourer already occupied. He would have based
-his conclusion, not on the wild language of revolutionaries,
-but on the considered statement of those who were so far from
-meditating revolution that they shrank even from a moderate
-reform of Parliament. Lord Carnarvon said in one House of
-Parliament that the English labourer had been reduced to a
-plight more abject than that of any race in Europe; English<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>
-landlords reproduced in the other that very parallel between
-the English labourer and the West Indian negro which had
-figured so conspicuously in Thelwall’s lectures. Thelwall, as
-Canning reminded him in a savage parody on the Benedicite,
-got pelted for his pains. Since the days of those lectures all
-Europe had been overrun by war, and England alone had
-escaped what Pitt had called the liquid fire of Jacobinism.
-There had followed for England fifteen years of healing peace.
-Yet at the end of all this time the conquerors of Napoleon found
-themselves in a position which they would have done well
-to exchange with the position of his victims. The German
-peasant had been rescued from serfdom; Spain and Italy had
-at least known a brief spell of less unequal government. The
-English labourer alone was the poorer; poorer in money,
-poorer in happiness, poorer in sympathy, and infinitely poorer
-in horizon and in hope. The riches that he had been promised
-by the champions of enclosure had faded into something less
-than a maintenance. The wages he received without land had
-a lower purchasing power than the wages he had received in
-the days when his wages were supplemented by common rights.
-The standard of living which was prescribed for him by the
-governing class was now much lower than it had been in 1795.</p>
-
-<p>This was not part of a general decline. Other classes for
-whom the rulers of England prescribed the standard had
-advanced during the years in which the labourers had lost
-ground. The King’s Civil List had been revised when provisions
-rose. The salaries of the judges had been raised by three several
-Acts of Parliament (1799, 1809, and 1825), a similar course had
-been taken in the case of officials. Those who have a taste for
-the finished and unconscious cynicism of this age will note&mdash;recollecting
-that the upper classes refused to raise wages in
-1795 to meet the extra cost of living, on the ground that it
-would be difficult afterwards to reduce them&mdash;that all the
-upper-class officials, whose salaries were increased because
-living was more expensive, were left to the permanent enjoyment
-of that increase. The lives of the judges, the landlords,
-the parsons, and the rest of the governing class were not
-become more meagre but more spacious in the last fifty years.
-During that period many of the great palaces of the English
-nobility had been built, noble libraries had been collected, and
-famous galleries had grown up, wing upon wing. The agricultural
-labourers whose fathers had eaten meat, bacon, cheese,
-and vegetables were living on bread and potatoes. They had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-lost their gardens, they had ceased to brew their beer in their
-cottages. In their work they had no sense of ownership or
-interest. They no longer ‘sauntered after cattle’ on the open
-common, and at twilight they no longer ‘played down the
-setting sun’; the games had almost disappeared from the English
-village, their wives and children were starving before their
-eyes, their homes were more squalid, and the philosophy of the
-hour taught the upper classes that to mend a window or to put
-in a brick to shield the cottage from damp or wind was to
-increase the ultimate miseries of the poor. The sense of sympathy
-and comradeship, which had been mixed with rude and
-unskilful government, in the old village had been destroyed in
-the bitter days of want and distress. Degrading and repulsive
-work was invented for those whom the farmer would not or
-could not employ. De Quincey, wishing to illustrate the
-manners of eighteenth-century France, used to quote M. Simond’s
-story of how he had seen, not very long before the Revolution,
-a peasant ploughing with a team consisting of a donkey and a
-woman. The English poor could have told him that half a
-century later there were English villages in which it was the
-practice of the overseer to harness men and women to the
-parish cart, and that the sight of an idiot woman between the
-shafts was not unknown within a hundred miles of London.<a id="FNanchor_421" href="#Footnote_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a>
-Men and women were living on roots and sorrel; in the summer
-of the year 1830 four harvest labourers were found under a
-hedge dead of starvation, and Lord Winchilsea, who mentioned
-the fact in the House of Lords, said that this was not an
-exceptional case. The labourer was worse fed and worse
-housed than the prisoner, and he would not have been able to
-keep body and soul together if he had not found in poaching or
-in thieving or in smuggling the means of eking out his doles and
-wages.</p>
-
-<p>The feelings of this sinking class, the anger, dismay, and
-despair with which it watched the going out of all the warm
-comfort and light of life, scarcely stir the surface of history.
-The upper classes have told us what the poor ought to have
-thought of these vicissitudes; religion, philosophy, and political
-economy were ready with alleviations and explanations which
-seemed singularly helpful and convincing to the rich. The
-voice of the poor themselves does not come to our ears. This
-great population seems to resemble nature, and to bear all the
-storms that beat upon it with a strange silence and resignation.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-But just as nature has her power of protest in some sudden
-upheaval, so this world of men and women&mdash;an underground
-world as we trace the distance that its voices have to travel
-to reach us&mdash;has a volcanic character of its own, and it is only
-by some volcanic surprise that it can speak the language of
-remonstrance or menace or prayer, or place on record its
-consciousness of wrong. This world has no member of Parliament,
-no press, it does not make literature or write history;
-no diary or memoirs have kept alive for us the thoughts and
-cares of the passing day. It is for this reason that the events
-of the winter of 1830 have so profound an interest, for in the
-scenes now to be described we have the mind of this class hidden
-from us through all this period of pain, bursting the silence by
-the only power at its command. The demands presented to
-the farmer, the parson, and the squire this winter tell us as
-much about the South of England labourer in 1830 as the
-cahiers tell us of the French peasants in 1789.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We have seen that in 1795 and in 1816 there had been
-serious disturbances in different parts of England. These had
-been suppressed with a firm hand, but during hard winters
-sporadic violence and blazing hay-stacks showed from time to
-time that the fire was still alive under the ashes. The rising
-of 1830 was far more general and more serious; several counties
-in the south of England were in state bordering on insurrection;
-London was in a panic, and to some at least of those who had
-tried to forget the price that had been paid for the splendour
-of the rich, the message of red skies and broken mills and mob
-diplomacy and villages in arms sounded like the summons
-that came to Hernani. The terror of the landowners during
-those weeks is reflected in such language as that of the Duke of
-Buckingham, who talked of the country being in the hands
-of the rebels, or of one of the Barings, who said in the House of
-Commons that if the disorders went on for three or four days
-longer they would be beyond the reach of almost any power
-to control them. This chapter of social history has been
-overshadowed by the riots that followed the rejection of the
-Reform Bill. Every one knows about the destruction of the
-Mansion House at Bristol, and the burning of Nottingham
-Castle; few know of the destruction of the hated workhouses
-at Selborne and Headley. The riots at Nottingham and Bristol
-were a prelude to victory; they were the wild shout of power.
-If the rising of 1830 had succeeded, and won back for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-labourer his lost livelihood, the day when the Headley workhouse
-was thrown down would be remembered by the poor
-as the day of the taking of the Bastille. But this rebellion
-failed, and the men who led that last struggle for the labourer
-passed into the forgetfulness of death and exile.</p>
-
-<p>Kent was the scene of the first disturbances. There had
-been some alarming fires in the west of the county during the
-summer, at Orpington and near Sevenoaks. In one case the
-victim had made himself unpopular by pulling down a cottage
-built on a common adjoining his property, and turning out the
-occupants. How far these fires were connected with later
-events it is impossible to say: the authors were never discovered.
-The first riot occurred at Hardres on Sunday the
-29th of August, when four hundred labourers destroyed some
-threshing machines.<a id="FNanchor_422" href="#Footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a> Next day two magistrates with a hundred
-special constables and some soldiers went to Hardres Court,
-and no more was heard of the rioters. The <i>Spectator</i> early next
-year announced that it had found as a result of inquiries that
-the riots began with a dispute between farmers over a threshing
-machine, in the course of which a magistrate had expressed
-strong views against the introduction of these machines. The
-labourers proceeded to destroy the machine, whereupon, to
-their surprise, the magistrate turned on them and punished
-them; in revenge they fired his ricks. ‘A farmer in another
-village, talking of the distress of the labourers, said, “Ah, I
-should be well pleased if a plague were to break out among
-them, and then I should have their carcases as manure, and
-right good stuff it would make for my hops.” This speech,
-which was perhaps only intended as a brutal jest, was reported;
-it excited rage instead of mirth, and the stacks of the jester
-were soon in a blaze. This act of incendiarism was open and
-deliberate. The incendiary is known, and not only has he not
-been tried, he has not even been charged.’<a id="FNanchor_423" href="#Footnote_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a> Cobbett, on the
-other hand, maintained that the occasion of the first riots was
-the importation of Irish labourers, a practice now some years
-old, that might well inflame resentment, at a time when the
-governing class was continually contending that the sole cause
-of distress was excessive population, and that the true solution
-was the removal of surplus labourers to the colonies.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever the actual origin of the first outbreak may have
-been, the destruction of machinery was to be a prominent
-feature of this social war. This was not merely an instinct<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-of violence, there was method and reason in it. Threshing
-was one of the few kinds of work left that provided the labourer
-with a means of existence above starvation level. A landowner
-and occupier near Canterbury wrote to the <i>Kent Herald</i>,<a id="FNanchor_424" href="#Footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a> that
-in his parish, where no machines had been introduced, there
-were twenty-three barns. He calculated that in these barns
-fifteen men at least would find employment threshing corn up
-till May. If we suppose that each man had a wife and three
-children, this employment would affect seventy-five persons.
-‘An industrious man who has a barn never requires poor
-relief; he can earn from 15s. to 20s. per week; he considers it
-almost as his little freehold, and that in effect it certainly is.’
-It is easy to imagine what the sight of one of these hated
-engines meant to such a parish; the fifteen men, their wives
-and families would have found cold comfort, when they had
-become submerged in the morass of parish relief, in the reflection
-that the new machine extracted for their master’s and the
-public benefit ten per cent. more corn than they could hammer
-out by their free arms. The destruction of threshing machines
-by bands of men in the district round Canterbury continued
-through September practically unchecked. By the end of the
-month three of the most active rioters were in custody, and
-the magistrates were under the pleasant illusion that there
-would be voluntary surrenders. In this they were disappointed,
-and the disturbances spread over a wider area,
-which embraced the Dover district. Early in October there
-was a riot at Lyminge, at which Sir Edward Knatchbull and
-the Rev. Mr. Price succeeded in arresting the ringleaders, and
-bound over about fifty other persons. Sir Edward Knatchbull,
-in writing to the Home Office, stated that the labourers said
-‘they would rather do anything than encounter such a winter
-as the last.’ Mr. Price had to pay the penalty for his active
-part in this affair, and his ricks were fired.</p>
-
-<p>Large rewards were promised from the first to informers,
-these rewards including a wise offer of establishment elsewhere,
-but the prize was refused, and rick-burning spread steadily
-through a second month. Threatening letters signed ‘Swing,’
-a mysterious name that for the next few weeks spread
-terror over England, were received by many farmers and
-landowners. The machine-breakers were reported not to
-take money or plunder, and to refuse it if offered. Their
-programme was extensive and formidable. When the High<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-Sheriff attended one of their meetings to remonstrate with
-them, they listened to his homily with attention, but before
-dispersing one of them said, ‘We will destroy the cornstacks
-and threshing machines this year, next year we will have
-a turn with the parsons, and the third we will make war upon
-the statesmen.’<a id="FNanchor_425" href="#Footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a></p>
-
-<p>On 24th October seven prisoners were tried at the East
-Kent Quarter Sessions, for machine-breaking. They pleaded
-guilty, and were let off with a lenient sentence of three days’
-imprisonment and an harangue from Sir Edward Knatchbull.
-Hitherto all attempts to discover the incendiaries had been
-baffled, but on 21st October a zealous magistrate wrote
-to the Home Office to say that he had found a clue. He had
-apprehended a man called Charles Blow, and since the evidence
-was not sufficient to warrant committal for arson, he had sent
-him to Lewes Jail as a vagrant for three months. ‘In company
-with Blow was a girl of about ten years of age (of the
-name of Mary Ann Johnson), but of intelligence and cunning
-far beyond her age. It having been stated to me that she
-had let fall some expressions which went to show that she
-could if she pleased communicate important information, I
-committed her also for the same period as Blow.’ Now the
-fires in question had taken place in Kent, and the vagrants
-were apprehended in Sussex, consequently the officials of both
-counties meddled with the matter and between them spoilt
-the whole plan, for Mary Ann and her companion were questioned
-by so many different persons that they were put on
-their guard, and failed to give the information that was expected.
-Thus at any rate, Lord Camden, the Lord-Lieutenant,
-explained their silence, but he did not despair, ‘if the Parties
-cannot even be convicted I am apt to think their Committal
-now will do good, though they may be to be liberated afterwards,
-but nothing is so likely to produce alarm and produce
-evidence as a Committal for a Capital Crime.’ However, as
-no more is heard of Mary Ann, it may be assumed that when
-she had served her three months she left Lewes Jail a sadder
-and a wiser child.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of October, after something of a lull in the
-middle of the month, the situation became more serious. Dissatisfaction,
-or, as some called it, ‘frightful anarchy,’ spread
-to the Maidstone and Sittingbourne districts. Sir Robert Peel
-was anxious to take strong measures. ‘I beg to repeat to you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-that I will adopt any measure&mdash;will incur any expense at
-the public charge&mdash;that can promote the suppression of the
-outrages in Kent and the detection of the offenders.’ A troop
-of cavalry was sent to Sittingbourne. In the last days of
-October, mobs scoured the country round Maidstone, demanding
-half a crown a day wages and constant employment,
-forcing all labourers to join them, and levying money, beer,
-and provisions. At Stockbury, between Maidstone and
-Sittingbourne, one of these mobs paraded a tricolour and a
-black flag. On 30th October the Maidstone magistrates
-went out with a body of thirty-four soldiers to meet a mob
-of four hundred people, about four miles from Maidstone, and
-laid hold of the three ringleaders. The arrests were made
-without difficulty or resistance, from which it looks as if these
-bands of men were not very formidable, but the officer in
-command of the soldiers laid stress in his confidential report
-on the dangers of the situation and the necessity for fieldpieces,
-and Peel promptly ordered two pieces of artillery to be
-dispatched.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of November disturbances broke out in
-Sussex, and the movement developed into an organised demand
-for a living wage. By the middle of the month the labourers
-were masters over almost all the triangle on the map, of which
-Maidstone is the apex and Hythe and Brighton are the bases.
-The movement, which was more systematic, thorough, and
-successful in this part of the country than anywhere else, is
-thus described by the special correspondent of the <i>Times</i>,
-17th November: ‘Divested of its objectionable character, as
-a dangerous precedent, the conduct of the peasantry has been
-admirable. There is no ground for concluding that there has
-been any extensive concert amongst them. Each parish,
-generally speaking, has risen <i>per se</i>; in many places their
-proceedings have been managed with astonishing coolness and
-regularity; there has been little of the ordinary effervescence
-displayed on similar occasions. The farmers have notice to
-meet the men: a deputation of two or more of the latter
-produce a written statement, well drawn up, which the farmers
-are required to sign; the spokesman, sometimes a Dissenting
-or Methodist teacher, fulfils his office with great propriety and
-temper. Where disorder has occurred, it has arisen from
-dislike to some obnoxious clergyman, or tithe man, or assistant
-overseer, who has been trundled out of the parish in a wheelbarrow,
-or drawn in triumph in a load of ballast by a dozen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-old women. The farmers universally agreed to the demands
-they made: that is, they were not mad enough to refuse
-requests which they could not demonstrate to be unreasonable
-in themselves, and which were urged by three hundred or
-four hundred men after a barn or two had been fired, and each
-farmer had an incendiary letter addressed to him in his pocket.’</p>
-
-<p>There was another development of the movement which is
-not noted in this account by the correspondent of the <i>Times</i>.
-It often happened that the farmers would agree to pay the wages
-demanded by the labourers, but would add that they could not
-continue to pay those wages unless rents and tithes were
-reduced. The labourers generally took the hint and turned
-their attention to tithes and rents, particularly to tithes.
-Their usual procedure was to go in a body to the rector, often
-accompanied by the farmers, and demand an abatement of
-tithes, or else to attend the tithe audit and put some not
-unwelcome pressure upon the farmers to prevent them from
-paying.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that the agitation for a living
-wage was confined to the triangular district named above,
-though there it took a more systematic shape. Among the
-Home Office Papers is a very interesting letter from Mr. D.
-Bishop, a London police officer, written from Deal on 11th
-November, describing the state of things in that neighbourhood:
-‘I have gone to the different Pot Houses in the Villages,
-disguised among the Labourers, of an evening and all their
-talk is about the wages, some give 1s. 8d. per day some 2s.
-some 2s. 3d.... all they say they want is 2s. 6d. per day
-and then they say they shall be comfortable. I have every
-reason to believe the Farmers will give the 2s. 6d. per day
-after a bit ... they are going to have a meeting and I think
-it will stop all outrages.’</p>
-
-<p>The disturbances in Sussex began with a fire on 3rd
-November at an overseer’s in Battle. The explanation
-suggested by the authorities was that the paupers had been
-‘excited by a lecture lately given here publicly by a person
-named Cobbett.’ Next night there was another fire at Battle;
-but it was at Brede, a village near Rye, that open hostilities
-began. As the rising at Brede set the fashion for the district,
-it is perhaps worth while to describe it in some detail.<a id="FNanchor_426" href="#Footnote_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a></p>
-
-<p>For a long time the poor of Brede had smarted under the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>
-insults of Mr. Abel, the assistant overseer, who, among other
-innovations, had introduced one of the hated parish carts, and
-the labourers were determined to have a reckoning with him.
-After some preliminary discussions on the previous day, the
-labourers held a meeting on 5th November, and deputed four
-men to negotiate with the farmers. At the conference which
-resulted, the following resolutions, drawn up by the labourers,
-were signed by both <span class="lock">parties<a id="FNanchor_427" href="#Footnote_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Nov. 5, 1830. At a meeting held this day at the Red
-Lion, of the farmers, to meet the poor labourers who delegated
-David Noakes Senior, Thomas Henley, Joseph Bryant and
-Th. Noakes, to meet the gentlemen this day to discuss the
-present distress of the poor.... Resolution 1. The gentlemen
-agree to give to every able-bodied labourer with wife and
-two children 2s. 3d. per day, from this day to the 1st of March
-next, and from the 1st of March to the 1st of Oct. 2s. 6d. per
-day, and to have 1s. 6d. per week with three children, and so
-on according to their family. Resolution 2. The poor are
-determined to take the present overseer, Mr. Abell, out
-of the parish to any adjoining parish and to use him with
-civility.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The meeting over, the labourers went to Mr. Abel’s house
-with their wives and children and some of the farmers, and
-placed the parish cart at his door. After some hammering at
-the gates, Mr. Abel was persuaded to come out and get into
-the cart. He was then solemnly drawn along by women
-and children, accompanied by a crowd of five hundred, to the
-place of his choice, Vine Hall, near Robertsbridge, on the
-turnpike road, where he was deposited with all due solemnity.
-Mr. Abel made his way to the nearest magistrate to lodge his
-complaint, while the people of the parish returned home and
-were regaled with beer by the farmers: ‘and Mr. Coleman ...
-he gave every one of us half a pint of Beer, women and men,
-and Mr. Reed of Brede High gave us a Barrel because we had
-done such a great thing in the Parish as to carry that man
-away, and Mr. Coleman said he never was better pleased in
-his life than with the day’s work which had been done.’<a id="FNanchor_428" href="#Footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a></p>
-
-<p>The parish rid of Mr. Abel, the next reform in the new era
-was to be the reduction of tithes, and here the farmers needed
-the help of the labourers. What happened is best told in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-words of one of the chief actors. He describes how, a little
-before the tithe audit, his employer came to him when he was
-working in the fields and suggested that the labourers should
-see if they could ‘get a little of the tithe off’; they were only
-to show themselves and not to take any violent action. Other
-farmers made the same suggestions to their labourers. ‘We
-went to the tithe audit and Mr. Hele came out and spoke to
-us a good while and I and David Noakes and Thomas Noakes
-and Thomas Henley answered him begging as well as we could
-for him to throw something off for us and our poor Children
-and to set up a School for them and Mr. Hele said he would see
-what he could do.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Coleman afterwards came out and said Mr. Hele had
-satisfied them all well and then Mr. Hele came out and we
-made our obedience to him and he to us, and we gave him
-three cheers and went and set the Bells ringing and were all
-as pleased as could be at what we had done.’</p>
-
-<p>The success of the Brede rising had an immediate effect on
-the neighbourhood, and every parish round prepared to deport
-its obnoxious overseer and start a new life on better wages.
-Burwash, Ticehurst, Mayfield, Heathfield, Warbleton and
-Ninfield were among the parishes that adopted the Brede
-programme. Sometimes the assistant overseer thought it
-wise to decamp before the cart was at his door. Sometimes
-the mob was aggressive in its manners. ‘A very considerable
-Mob,’ wrote Sir Godfrey Webster from Battle Abbey on 9th
-November, ‘to the amount of nearly 500, having their Parish
-Officer in custody drawn in a Dung Cart, attempted to enter
-this town at eleven o’clock this Morning.’ The attempt was
-unsuccessful, and twenty of the rioters were arrested. The
-writer of this letter is chiefly famous as Lady Holland’s first
-husband. In this emergency he seems to have displayed
-great zeal and energy. A second letter of his on 12th
-November gives a good description of the state of affairs round
-Mayfield. ‘The Collector of Lord Carrington’s Tithes had
-been driven out of the Parish and the same Proceeding was
-intended to be adopted towards the Parish Officer who fled
-the place, it had been intended by the Rioters to have taken
-by Force this Morning as many Waggons as possible (forcibly)
-carried off the Tithe Corn and distributed it amongst themselves
-in case of interruption they were resolved to burn it. One of
-the most violent and dangerous papers I have yet seen (a copy
-of which I enclose) was carried round the 3 adjoining Parishes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-and unfortunately was assented to by too many Occupiers of
-Land. I arrived in Time to prevent its circulation at Mayfield
-a small Town tho’ populous parish 3000. By apprehending
-the Bearer of the Paper who acted as Chief of the Party and
-instantly in presence of a large Mob committing him for
-Trial I succeeded in repressing the tumultuous action then
-going on, and by subsequently calling together the Occupiers
-of Land, and afterwards the Mob (composed wholly of
-Agricultural Labourers) I had the satisfaction of mediating
-an arrangement between them perfectly to the content of each
-party, and on my leaving Mayfield this afternoon tranquillity
-was perfectly restored at that Place.’ The violent and dangerous
-paper enclosed ran thus: ‘Now gentlemen this is wat we
-intend to have for a maried man to have 2s. and 3d. per Day
-and all over two children 1s. 6d. per head a week and if a Man
-has got any boys or girls over age for to have employ that they
-may live by there Labour and likewise all single men to have
-1s. 9d. a day per head and we intend to have the rents lowered
-likewise and this is what we intend to have before we leave
-the place and if ther is no alteration we shall proceed further
-about it. For we are all at one and we will keep to each
-other.’</p>
-
-<p>At Ringmer in Sussex the proceedings were marked by
-moderation and order. Lord Gage, the principal landowner
-of the neighbourhood, knowing that disturbances were imminent,
-met the labourers by appointment on the village green. There
-were about one hundred and fifty persons present. By this
-time magistrates in many places had taken to arresting
-arbitrarily the ringleaders of the men, and hence when Lord
-Gage, who probably had no such intention, asked for the
-leader or captain nobody came forward, but a letter was
-thrown into the ring with a general shout. The letter which
-Lord Gage picked up and took to the Vestry for consideration
-read as follows: ‘We the labourers of Ringmer and surrounding
-villages, having for a long period suffered the greatest
-privations and endured the most debasing treatment with
-the greatest resignation and forbearance, in the hope that time
-and circumstances would bring about an amelioration of our
-condition, till, worn out by hope deferred and disappointed
-in our fond expectations, we have taken this method of
-assembling ourselves in one general body, for the purpose of
-making known our grievances, and in a peaceable, quiet, and
-orderly manner, to ask redress; and we would rather appeal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-to the good sense of the magistracy, instead of inflaming the
-passions of our fellow labourers, and ask those gentlemen
-who have done us the favour of meeting us this day whether
-7d. a day is sufficient for a working man, hale and hearty, to
-keep up the strength necessary to the execution of the labour
-he has to do? We ask also, is 9s. a week sufficient for a married
-man with a family, to provide the common necessaries of life?
-Have we no reason to complain that we have been obliged for
-so long a period to go to our daily toil with only potatoes in
-our satchels, and the only beverage to assuage our thirst the
-cold spring; and on retiring to our cottages to be welcomed
-by the meagre and half-famished offspring of our toilworn
-bodies? All we ask, then, is that our wages may be advanced
-to such a degree as will enable us to provide for ourselves and
-families without being driven to the overseer, who, by the
-bye, is a stranger amongst us, and as in most instances where
-permanent overseers are appointed, are men callous to the
-ties of nature, lost to every feeling of humanity, and deaf to
-the voice of reason. We say we want wages sufficient to
-support us, without being driven to the overseer to experience
-his petty tyranny and dictation. We therefore ask for
-married men 2s. 3d. per day to the first of March, and from
-that period to the first of October 2s. 6d. a day: for single
-men 1s. 9d. a day to the first of March, and 2s. from that time
-to the first of October. We also request that the permanent
-overseers of the neighbouring parishes may be directly discharged,
-particularly Finch, the governor of Ringmer poorhouse
-and overseer of the parish, that in case we are obliged,
-through misfortune or affliction, to seek parochial relief, we
-may apply to one of our neighbouring farmers or tradesmen,
-who would naturally feel some sympathy for our situation,
-and who would be much better acquainted with our characters
-and claims. This is what we ask at your hands&mdash;this is
-what we expect, and we sincerely trust this is what we shall
-not be under the painful necessity of demanding.’</p>
-
-<p>While the Vestry deliberated the labourers remained quietly
-in the yard of the poorhouse. One of them, a veteran from
-the Peninsular War who had lost a limb, contrasted his situation
-on 9d. a day with that of the Duke of Wellington whose ‘skin
-was whole’ and whose pension was £60,000 a year. After
-they had waited some time, they were informed that their
-demands were granted, and they dispersed to their homes
-with huzzas and tears of joy, and as a sign of the new and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-auspicious era they broke up the parish grindstone, a memory
-of the evil past.<a id="FNanchor_429" href="#Footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a></p>
-
-<p>An important feature of the proceedings in Kent and Sussex
-was the sympathy of other classes with the demands of
-the labourers. The success of the movement in Kent and
-Sussex, and especially of the rising that began at Brede, was
-due partly, no doubt, to the fact that smuggling was still a
-common practice in those counties, and that the agricultural
-labourers thus found their natural leaders among men who had
-learnt audacity, resourcefulness, and a habit of common action
-in that school of danger. But the movement could not have
-made such headway without any serious attempt to suppress
-it if the other classes had been hostile. There was a general
-sense that the risings were due to the neglect of the Government.
-Mr. Hodges, one of the Members for Kent, declared in
-the House of Commons on 10th December that if the Duke of
-Wellington had attended to a petition received from the entire
-Grand Jury of Kent there would have been no disturbances.<a id="FNanchor_430" href="#Footnote_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a></p>
-
-<p>The same spirit is displayed in a letter written by a magistrate
-at Battle, named Collingwood. ‘I have seen three or four of
-our parochial insurrections, and been with the People for hours
-alone and discussing their matters with them which they do
-with a temper and respectful behaviour and an intelligence
-which must interest everyone in their favor. The poor in the
-Parishes in the South of England, and in Sussex and Kent
-greatly, have been ground to the dust in many instances by
-the Poor Laws. Instead of happy peasants they are made
-miserable and sour tempered paupers. Every Parish has its
-own peculiar system, directed more strictly, and executed
-with more or less severity or harshness. A principal tradesman
-in Salehurst (Sussex) in one part of which, Robertsbridge, we
-had our row the other night, said to me these words “You
-attended our meeting the other day and voted with me against
-the two principal Rate payers in this parish, two Millers, paying
-the people in two gallons of bad flour instead of money. You
-heard how saucy they were to their betters, can you wonder if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-they are more violent to their inferiors? They never call a
-man Tom, Dick etc. but you d&mdash;&mdash;d rascal etc., at every
-word, and force them to take their flour. Should you wonder
-that they are dissatisfied?” These words he used to me a
-week before our Robertsbridge Row. Each of these Parochial
-Rows differs in character as the man whom they select as leader
-differs in impudence or courage or audacity or whatever you
-may call it. If they are opposed at the moment, their resistance
-shows itself in more or less violent outrages; personally I
-witnessed but one, that of Robertsbridge putting Mr. Johnson
-into the cart, and that was half an accident. I was a stranger
-to them, went among them and was told by hundreds after
-that most unjustifiable assault that I was safe among them as
-in my bed, and I never thought otherwise. One or two desperate
-characters, and such there are, may at any moment make the
-contest of Parish A differ from that of Parish B, but their
-spirit, as far as regards loyalty and love for the King and Laws,
-is, I believe, on my conscience, sound. I feel convinced that
-all the cavalry in the world, if sent into Sussex, and all the
-spirited acts of Sir Godfrey Webster, who, however, is invaluable
-here will (not?) stop this spirit from running through Hampshire,
-Wiltshire, Somersetshire, where Mr. Hobhouse, your
-predecessor, told me the other day that they have got the
-wages for single men down to 6s. per week (on which they
-<i>cannot live</i>) through many other counties. In a week you
-will have demands for cavalry from Hampshire under the same
-feeling of alarm as I and all here entertained: the next week
-from Wiltshire, Dorsetshire, and all the counties in which the
-poor Rates have been raised for the payment of the poor up
-to Essex and the very neighbourhood of London, where Mr.
-Geo. Palmer, a magistrate, told me lately that the poor single
-man is got down to 6s. I shall be over to-morrow probably at
-Benenden where they are resolved not to let either Mr. Hodges’s
-taxes, the tithes or the King’s taxes be paid. So I hear, and
-so I dare say two or three carter boys may have said. I shall
-go to-morrow and if I see occasion will arrest some man, and
-break his head with my staff. But do you suppose that that
-(though a show of vigor is not without avail) will prevent
-Somersetshire men from crying out, when the train has got to
-them, we will not <i>live</i> on 6s. per week, for living it is not, but
-a long starving, and we will have tithes and taxes, and I know
-not what else done away with. The only way to stop them is
-to run before the evil. Let the Hampshire Magistrates and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-Vestries raise the wages before the Row gets to their County,
-and you will stop the thing from spreading, otherwise you will
-not, I am satisfied. In saying all this, I know that I differ
-with many able and excellent Magistrates, and my opinion
-may be wrong, but I state it to you.’</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising that magistrates holding these opinions
-acted rather less vigorously than the central Government
-wished, and that Lord Camden’s appeals to them not to let
-their political feelings and ‘fanciful Crotchets’<a id="FNanchor_431" href="#Footnote_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a> interfere with
-their activity were unsuccessful. But even had all the magistrates
-been united and eager to crush the risings they could not
-act without support from classes that were reluctant to give it.
-The first thought of the big landed proprietors was to re-establish
-the yeomanry, but they found an unexpected obstacle
-in the temper of the farmers. The High Sheriff, after consultation
-with the Home Secretary, convened a meeting for this
-purpose at Canterbury on 1st November, but proceedings took
-an unexpected turn, the farmers recommending as a preferable
-alternative that public salaries should be reduced, and the
-meeting adjourned without result. There were similar surprises
-at other meetings summoned with this object, and landlords
-who expected to find the farmers rallying to their support were
-met with awkward resolutions calling for reductions in rent and
-tithes. The <i>Kent Herald</i> went so far as to say that only the
-dependents of great landowners will join the yeomanry,
-‘this most unpopular corps.’ The magistrates found it equally
-difficult to enlist special constables, the farmers and tradesmen
-definitely refusing to act in this capacity at Maidstone, at
-Cranbrook, at Tonbridge, and at Tonbridge Wells,<a id="FNanchor_432" href="#Footnote_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a> as well as
-in the smaller villages. The chairman of the Battle magistrates
-wrote to the Home Office to say that he intended to reduce his
-rents in the hope that the farmers would then consent to serve.</p>
-
-<p>Even the Coast Blockade Service was not considered trustworthy.
-‘It is the last force,’ wrote one magistrate, ‘I should
-resort to, on account of the feeling which exists between them
-and the people hereabouts.’<a id="FNanchor_433" href="#Footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a> In the absence of local help, the
-magistrates had to rely on military aid to quell a mob, or to
-execute a warrant. Demands for troops from different quarters
-were incessant, and sometimes querulous. ‘If you cannot
-send a military force,’ wrote one indignant country gentleman
-from Heathfield on 14th November, ‘for God’s sake, say so,
-without delay, in order that we may remove our families to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-place of safety from a district which want of support renders us
-totally unable longer to defend.’<a id="FNanchor_434" href="#Footnote_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a> Troops were despatched to
-Cranbrook, but when the Battle magistrates sent thither for
-help they were told to their great annoyance that no soldiers
-could be spared. The Government indeed found it impossible
-to supply enough troops. ‘My dear Lord Liverpool,’ wrote
-Sir Robert Peel on 15th November, ‘since I last saw you I
-have made arrangements for sending every disposable cavalry
-soldier into Kent and the east part of Sussex. General Dalbiac
-will take the command. He will be at Battel to-day to confer
-with the Magistracy and to attempt to establish some effectual
-plan of operations against the rioters.’</p>
-
-<p>The 7th Dragoon Guards at Canterbury were to provide for
-East Kent; the 2nd Dragoon Guards at Maidstone were to
-provide for Mid-Kent; and the 5th Dragoon Guards at
-Tunbridge Wells for the whole of East Sussex. Sir Robert
-Peel meanwhile thought that the magistrates should themselves
-play a more active part, and he continually expressed the
-hope that they would ‘meet and concert some effectual mode
-of resisting the illegal demands.’<a id="FNanchor_435" href="#Footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a> He deprecated strongly
-the action of certain magistrates in yielding to the mobs.
-Mr. Collingwood, who has been mentioned already, received
-a severe reproof for his behaviour at Goudhurst, where he had
-adopted a conciliatory policy and let off the rioters on their own
-recognisances. ‘We did not think the case a very strong one,’
-he wrote on 18th November, ‘or see any very urgent necessity
-for the apprehension of Eaves, nor after Captain King’s statement
-that he had not felt a blow, could we consider the assault
-of a magistrate proved. The whole parish unanimously
-begged them off, and said that their being discharged on their
-own recognisances would probably contribute to the peace of
-the parish.’</p>
-
-<p>The same weakness, or sympathy, was displayed by magistrates
-in the western part of Sussex, where the rising spread
-after the middle of November. In the Arundel district the
-magistrates anticipated disturbances by holding a meeting
-of the inhabitants to fix the scale of wages. The wages agreed
-on were ‘2s. a day wet and dry and 1s. 6d. a week for every
-child (above 2) under 4,’ during the winter: from Lady
-Day to Michaelmas 14s. a week, wet and dry, with the same
-allowance for children. A scale was also drawn up for lads
-and young men. The mobs were demanding 14s. a week all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-the year round, but they seem to have acquiesced in the
-Arundel scale, and to have given no further trouble. At
-Horsham, the labourers adopted more violent measures and
-met with almost universal sympathy. There was a strong
-Radical party in that town, and one magistrate described it
-later as ‘a hot Bed of Sedition.’ Attempts were made, without
-success, to show that the Radicals were at the bottom of the
-disturbances. The district round Horsham was in an agitated
-state. Among others who received threatening letters was Sir
-Timothy Shelley of Field Place. The letter was couched in
-the general spirit of Shelley’s song to the men of <span class="lock">England:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Men of England, wherefore plough,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For the lords who lay ye low,’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>which his father may, or may not, have read. The writer
-urged him, ‘if you wish to escape the impending danger in
-this world and in that which is to come,’ to go round to the
-miserable beings from whom he exacted tithes, ‘and enquire
-and hear from there own lips what disstres there in.’ Like
-many of these letters, it contained at the end a rough picture
-of a knife, with ‘Beware of the fatel daggar’ inscribed on it.</p>
-
-<p>In Horsham itself the mob, composed of from seven hundred
-to a thousand persons, summoned a vestry meeting in the
-church. Mr. Sanctuary, the High Sheriff for Sussex, described
-the episode in a letter to the Home Office on the same day
-(18th November). The labourers, he said, demanded 2s. 6d.
-a day, and the lowering of rents and tithes: ‘all these
-complaints were attended to&mdash;&mdash;thought reasonable and complied
-with,’ and the meeting dispersed quietly. Anticipating,
-it may be, some censure, he added, ‘I should have found it
-quite impossible to have prevailed upon any person to serve
-as special constable&mdash;&mdash;most of the tradespeople and many
-of the farmers considering the demands of the people but
-just (and) equitable&mdash;&mdash;indeed many of them advocated
-(them)&mdash;&mdash;a doctor spoke about the taxes&mdash;&mdash;but no one
-backed him&mdash;&mdash;that was not the object of the meeting.’ A
-lady living at Horsham wrote a more vivid account of the
-day’s work. She described how the mob made everybody
-come to the church. Mr. Simpson, the vicar, went without
-more ado, but Mr. Hurst, senior, owner of the great tithes,
-held out till the mob seized a chariot from the King’s Arms
-and dragged it to his door. Whilst the chariot was being
-brought he slipped out, and entered the church with his two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-sons. All the gentlemen stood up at the altar, while the
-farmers encouraged the labourers in the body of the church.
-‘Mr. Hurst held out so long that it was feared blood would
-be shed, the Doors were shut till the Demands were granted,
-no lights were allowed, the Iron railing that surrounds the
-Monuments torn up, and the sacred boundary between the
-chancel and Altar overleapt before he would yield.’ Mr.
-Hurst himself wrote to the Home Office to say that it was
-only the promise to reduce rents and tithes that had prevented
-serious riots, but he met with little sympathy at headquarters.
-‘I cannot concur,’ wrote Sir Robert Peel, ‘in the opinion of
-Mr. Hurst that it was expedient or necessary for the Vestry
-to yield to the demands of the Mob. In every case that I
-have seen, in which the mob has been firmly and temperately
-resisted, they have given way without resorting to personal
-violence.’ A neighbouring magistrate, who shared Sir Robert
-Peel’s opinion about the affair, went to Horsham a day or
-two later to swear in special constables. He found that out
-of sixty-three ‘respectable householders’ four only would
-take the oath. Meanwhile the difficulties of providing troops
-increased with the area of disturbances. ‘I have requested
-that every effort may be made to reinforce the troops in the
-western part of Sussex,’ wrote Sir Robert Peel to a Horsham
-magistrate on 18th November, ‘and you may judge of the
-difficulty of doing so, when I mention to you that the most
-expeditious mode of effecting this is to bring from Dorchester
-<i>the only</i> cavalry force that is in the West of England. This,
-however, shall be done, and 100 men (infantry) shall be brought
-from the Garrison of Portsmouth.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Until the middle of November the rising was confined to
-Kent, Sussex and parts of Surrey, with occasional fires and
-threatening letters in neighbouring counties. After that time
-the disturbances became more serious, spreading not only to
-the West of Sussex, but to Berkshire, Hampshire, and Wiltshire.
-On 22nd November the Duke of Buckingham wrote from
-Avington in Hampshire to the Duke of Wellington: ‘Nothing
-can be worse than the state of this neighbourhood. I may say
-that this part of the country is wholly in the hands of the
-rebels ... 1500 rioters are to assemble to-morrow morning,
-and will attack any farmhouses where there are threshing
-machines. They go about levying contributions on every
-gentleman’s house. There are very few magistrates; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-what there are are completely cowed. In short, something
-decisive must instantly be done.’</p>
-
-<p>The risings in these counties differed in some respects from
-the rising in Kent and Sussex. The disturbances were not so
-much like the firing of a train of discontent, they were rather a
-sudden and spontaneous explosion. They lasted only about
-a week, and were well described in a report of Colonel
-Brotherton, one of the two military experts sent by Lord
-Melbourne to Wiltshire to advise the magistrates. He wrote
-on 28th November: ‘The insurrectionary movement seems to
-be directed by no plan or system, but merely actuated by the
-spontaneous feeling of the peasantry and quite at random.’
-The labourers went about in larger numbers, combining with
-the destruction of threshing machines and the demand for
-higher wages a claim for ‘satisfaction’ as they called it in
-the form of ready money. It was their practice to charge £2
-for breaking a threshing machine, but in some cases the mobs
-were satisfied with a few coppers. The demand for ready
-money was not a new feature, for many correspondents of the
-Home Office note in their letters that the mobs levied money
-in Kent and Sussex, but hitherto this ‘sturdy begging,’ as
-Cobbett called it, had been regarded by the magistrates as
-unimportant. The wages demanded in these counties were
-2s. a day, whereas the demands in Kent and usually in Sussex
-had been for 2s. 6d. or 2s. 3d. Wages had fallen to a lower
-level in Hampshire, Berkshire and Wiltshire. The current
-rate in Wiltshire was 7s., and Colonel Mair, the second
-officer sent down by the Home Office, reported that wages
-were sometimes as low as 6s. It is therefore not surprising to
-learn that in two parishes the labourers instead of asking for
-2s. a day, asked only for 8s. or 9s. a week. In Berkshire wages
-varied from 7s. to 9s., and in Hampshire the usual rate seems
-to have been 8s.</p>
-
-<p>The rising in Hampshire was marked by a considerable
-destruction of property. At Fordingbridge, the mob under
-the leadership of a man called Cooper, broke up the machinery
-both at a sacking manufactory and at a manufactory of threshing
-machines. Cooper was soon clothed in innumerable
-legends: he was a gipsy, a mysterious gentleman, possibly the
-renowned ‘Swing’ himself. At the Fordingbridge riots he
-rode on horseback and assumed the title of Captain Hunt.
-His followers addressed him bareheaded. In point of fact he
-was an agricultural labourer of good character, a native of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-East Grimstead in Wilts, who had served in the artillery in
-the French War. Some two months before the riots his wife
-had robbed him, and then eloped with a paramour. This
-unhinged his self-control; he gave himself up to drink and
-despair, and tried to forget his misery in reckless rioting.
-Near Andover again a foundry was destroyed by a mob, after
-the ringleader, Gilmore, had entered the justices’ room at
-Andover, where the justices were sitting, and treated with
-them on behalf of the mob. Gilmore also was a labourer;
-he was twenty-five years old and had been a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>The most interesting event in the Hampshire rising was the
-destruction of the workhouses at Selborne and Headley.
-Little is reported of the demolition of the poorhouse at
-Selborne. The indictment of the persons accused of taking
-part in it fell through on technical grounds, and as the
-defendants were also the persons charged with destroying the
-Headley workhouse, the prosecution in the Selborne case
-was abandoned. The mob first went to Mr. Cobbold, Vicar
-of Selborne, and demanded that he should reduce his tithes,
-telling him with some bluntness ‘we must have a touch of
-your tithes: we think £300 a year quite enough for you ... £4
-a week is quite enough.’ Mr. Cobbold was thoroughly alarmed,
-and consented to sign a paper promising to reduce his tithes,
-which amounted to something over £600, by half that sum.
-The mob were accompanied by a good many farmers who had
-agreed to raise wages if the labourers would undertake to
-obtain a reduction of tithes, and these farmers signed the
-paper also. After Mr. Cobbold’s surrender the mob went on
-to the workhouse at Headley, which served the parishes of
-Bramshott, Headley and Kingsley. Their leader was a certain
-Robert Holdaway, a wheelwright, who had been for a short
-time a publican. He was a widower, with eight small children,
-described by the witnesses at his trial as a man of excellent
-character, quiet, industrious, and inoffensive. The master
-of the workhouse greeted Holdaway with ‘What, Holdy, are
-you here?’ ‘Yes, but I mean you no harm nor your wife
-nor your goods: so get them out as soon as you can, for the
-house must come down.’ The master warned him that there
-were old people and sick children in the house. Holdaway
-promised that they should be protected, asked where they
-were, and said the window would be marked. What followed
-is described in the evidence given by the master of the workhouse:
-‘There was not a room left entire, except that in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-the sick children were. These were removed into the yard on
-two beds, and covered over, and kept from harm all the time.
-This was done by the mob. They were left there because
-there was no room for them in the sick ward. The sick ward
-was full of infirm old paupers. It was not touched, but of all
-the rest of the place not a room was left entire.’ The farmers
-looked on whilst the destruction proceeded, and one at least
-of the labourers in the mob declared afterwards that his master
-had forced him to join.</p>
-
-<p>In Wiltshire also the destruction of property was not confined
-to threshing machines. At Wilton, the mob, under the
-leadership of a certain John Jennings, aged eighteen,<a id="FNanchor_436" href="#Footnote_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a> who
-declared that he ‘was going to break the machinery to make
-more work for the poor people,’ did £500 worth of damage in a
-woollen mill. Another cloth factory at Quidhampton was also
-injured; in this affair an active part was taken by a boy even
-younger than Jennings, John Ford, who was only seventeen
-years old.<a id="FNanchor_437" href="#Footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a></p>
-
-<p>The riot which attracted most attention of all the disturbances
-in Wiltshire took place at Pyt House, the seat of Mr. John
-Benett, M.P. for the county. Mr. Benett was a well-known
-local figure, and had given evidence before several Committees
-on Poor Laws. The depth of his sympathy with the labourers
-may be gauged by the threat that he uttered before the Committee
-of 1817 to pull down his cottages if Parliament should
-make length of residence a legal method of gaining a settlement.
-Some member of the Committee suggested that if there
-were no cottages there would be no labourers, but Mr. Benett
-replied cheerfully enough that it did not matter to a labourer
-how far he walked to his work: ‘I have many labourers
-coming three miles to my farm every morning during the
-winter’ (the hours were six to six) ‘and they are the most
-punctual persons we have.’ At the time he gave this evidence,
-he stated that about three-quarters of the labouring population
-in his parish of Tisbury received relief from the poor rates in aid
-of wages, and he declared that it was useless to let them small
-parcels of land. The condition of the poor had not improved
-in Mr. Benett’s parish between 1817 and 1830, and Lord
-Arundel, who lived in it, described it as ‘a Parish in which the
-Poor have been more oppressed and are in greater misery as a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-whole than any Parish in the Kingdom.’<a id="FNanchor_438" href="#Footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a> It is not surprising
-that when the news of what had been achieved in Kent and
-Sussex spread west to Wiltshire, the labourers of Tisbury rose
-to demand 2s. a day, and to destroy the threshing machines.
-A mob of five hundred persons collected, and their first act was
-to destroy a threshing machine, with the sanction of the owner,
-Mr. Turner, who sat by on horseback, watching them. They
-afterwards proceeded to the Pyt House estate. Mr. Benett
-met them, parleyed and rode with them for some way; they
-behaved politely but firmly, telling him their intentions.
-One incident throws a light on the minds of the actors in these
-scenes. ‘I then,’ said Mr. Benett afterwards, ‘pointed out
-to them that they could not trust each other, for any man, I
-said, by informing against ten of you will obtain at once £500.’
-It was an adroit speech, but as it happened the Wiltshire
-labourers, half starved, degraded and brutalised, as they might
-be, had a different standard of honour from that imagined by
-this magistrate and member of Parliament, and the devilish
-temptation he set before them was rejected. The mob
-destroyed various threshing machines on Mr. Benett’s farms,
-and refused to disperse; at last, after a good deal of sharp
-language from Mr. Benett, they threw stones at him. At
-the same time a troop of yeomanry from Hindon came up and
-received orders to fire blank cartridges above the heads of the
-mob. This only produced laughter; the yeomanry then
-began to charge; the mob took shelter in the plantations round
-Pyt House and stoned the yeomanry, who replied by a fierce
-onslaught, shooting one man dead on the spot,<a id="FNanchor_439" href="#Footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a> wounding six by
-cutting off fingers and opening skulls, and taking a great number
-of prisoners. At the inquest at Tisbury on the man John
-Harding, who was killed, the jury returned a verdict of justifiable
-homicide, and the coroner refused to grant a warrant for burial,
-saying that the man’s action was equivalent to <i>felo de se</i>. Hunt
-stated in the House of Commons that the foreman of the jury
-was the father of one of the yeomen.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that in these counties the magistrates took a
-very grave view of the crime of levying money from householders.
-This was often done by casual bands of men and
-boys, who had little connection with the organised rising.
-An examination of the cases described before the Special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-Commissions gives the impression that in point of fact there was
-very little danger to person or property. A farmer’s wife at
-Aston Tirrold in Berkshire described her own experience to
-the Abingdon Special Commission. A mob came to her house
-and demanded beer. Her husband was out and she went to
-the door. ‘Bennett was spokesman. He said “Now a little
-of your beer if you please.” I answered “Not a drop.” He
-asked “Why?” and I said “I cannot give beer to encourage
-riot.” Bennett said “Why you don’t call this rioting do
-you?” I said “I don’t know what you call it, but it is a
-number of people assembled together to alarm others: but
-don’t think I’m afraid or daunted at it.” Bennett said
-“Suppose your premises should be set on fire?” I said “Then
-I certainly should be alarmed but I don’t suppose either of
-you intends doing that.” Bennett said “No, we do not intend
-any such thing, I don’t wish to alarm you and we are not come
-with the intention of mischief.”’ The result of the dialogue was
-that Bennett and his party went home without beer and
-without giving trouble.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural that when mob-begging of this kind became
-fashionable, unpopular individuals should be singled out for
-rough and threatening visits. Sometimes the assistant overseers
-were the objects of special hatred, sometimes the parson.
-It is worth while to give the facts of a case at St. Mary Bourne
-in Hampshire, because stress was laid upon it in the subsequent
-prosecutions as an instance of extraordinary violence. The
-clergyman, Mr. Easton, was not a favourite in his parish, and he
-preached what the poor regarded as a harsh and a hostile sermon.
-When the parish rose, a mob of two hundred forced their way
-into the vicarage and demanded money, some of them repeating,
-‘Money or blood.’ Mrs. Easton, who was rather an invalid,
-Miss Lucy Easton, and Master Easton were downstairs, and
-Mrs. Easton was so much alarmed that she sent Lucy upstairs
-to fetch 10s. Meanwhile Mr. Easton had come down, and was
-listening to some extremely unsympathetic criticisms of his
-performances in the pulpit. ‘Damn you,’ said Daniel Simms,<a id="FNanchor_440" href="#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a>
-‘where will your text be next Sunday?’ William Simms
-was equally blunt and uncompromising. Meanwhile Lucy
-had brought down the half-sovereign, and Mrs. Easton gave it
-to William Simms,<a id="FNanchor_441" href="#Footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a> who thereupon cried ‘All out,’ and the
-mob left the Eastons at peace.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>One representative of the Church was distinguished from
-most of the country gentlemen and clergymen of the time by
-his treatment of one of these wandering mobs. Cobbett’s
-letter to the Hampshire parsons, published in the <i>Political
-Register</i>, 15th January 1831, contains an account of the conduct
-of Bishop Sumner, the Bishop of Winchester. ‘I have, at last,
-found a Bishop of the <i>Law</i> Church to <i>praise</i>. The facts are
-these: the Bishop, in coming from Winchester to his palace
-at Farnham, was met about a mile before he got to the latter
-place, by a band of sturdy beggars, whom some call robbers.
-They stopped his carriage, and asked for some money, which
-he gave them. But he did not <i>prosecute</i> them: he had not a
-man of them called to account for his conduct, but, the next day,
-set <i>twenty-four labourers to constant work</i>, opened his Castle to
-the distressed of all ages, and supplied all with food and other
-necessaries who stood in need of them. This was becoming a
-Christian teacher.’ Perhaps the bishop remembered the lines
-from Dryden’s <i>Tales from Chaucer</i>, describing the spirit in
-which the good parson regarded the poor:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Who, should they steal for want of his relief,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He judged himself accomplice with the thief.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was an exhibition of free speaking at Hungerford,
-where the magistrates sat in the Town Hall to receive deputations
-from various mobs, in connection with the demand for
-higher wages. The magistrates had made their peace with the
-Hungerford mob, when a deputation from the Kintbury mob
-arrived, led by William Oakley, a young carpenter of twenty-five.
-Oakley addressed the magistrates in language which they
-had never heard before in their lives and were never likely to
-hear again. ‘You have not such d&mdash;&mdash;d flats to deal with
-now, as you had before; we will have 2s. a day till Lady Day,
-and 2s. 6d. afterwards for labourers and 3s. 6d. for tradesmen.
-And as we are here we will have £5 before we leave the place or
-we will smash it.... You gentlemen have been living long
-enough on the good things, now is our time and we will have
-them. You gentlemen would not speak to us now, only you
-are afraid and intimidated.’ The magistrates acceded to the
-demands of the Kintbury mob and also gave them the £5,
-after which they gave the Hungerford mob £5, because they
-had behaved well, and it would be unjust to treat them worse
-than their Kintbury neighbours. Mr. Page, Deputy-Lieutenant
-for Berks, sent Lord Melbourne some tales about this same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-Kintbury mob, which was described by Mr. Pearse, M.P., as a
-set of ‘desperate savages.’ ‘I beg to add some anecdotes of the
-mob yesterday to illustrate the nature of its component parts.
-They took £2 from Mr. Cherry a magistrate and broke his
-Machine. Afterwards another party came and demanded
-One Pound&mdash;&mdash;when the two parties had again formed into
-one, they passed by Mr. Cherry’s door and said they had taken
-one pound too much, which they offered to return to him
-which it is said he refused&mdash;they had before understood that
-Mrs. Cherry was unwell and therefore came only in small parties.
-A poor woman passed them selling rabbitts, some few of the
-mob took some by force, the ringleader ordered them to be
-restored. At a farmer’s where they had been regaled with
-bread cheese and beer one of them stole an umbrella: the
-ringleader hearing of it, as they were passing the canal threw
-him into it and gave him a good ducking.’<a id="FNanchor_442" href="#Footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the early days of the rising in Hampshire, Wiltshire and
-Berkshire, there was a good deal of sympathy with the
-labourers. The farmers in many cases made no objection to
-the destruction of their threshing machines. One gentleman
-of Market Lavington went so far as to say that ‘nearly all the
-Wiltshire Farmers were willing to destroy or set aside their
-machines.’ ‘My Lord,’ wrote Mr. Williams, J.P., from
-Marlborough, ‘you will perhaps be surprised to hear that the
-greatest number of the threshing machines destroyed have
-been put out for the Purpose by the Owners themselves.’
-The Duke of Buckingham complained that in the district
-round Avington ‘the farmers have not the Spirit and in some
-instances not the Wish to put down’ disturbances.<a id="FNanchor_443" href="#Footnote_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a> At a
-meeting in Winchester, convened by the Mayor to preserve
-the peace (reported in the <i>Hampshire Chronicle</i> of 22nd November),
-Dr. Newbolt, a clergyman and magistrate, described his
-own dealings with one of the mobs. The mob said they
-wanted 12s. a week wages: this he said was a reasonable
-demand. He acted as mediator between the labourers and
-farmers, and as a result of his efforts the farmers agreed to
-these terms, and the labourers returned to work, abandoning
-their project of a descent on Winchester. The Mayor of
-Winchester also declared that the wages demanded were not
-unreasonable, and he laid stress on the fact that the object
-of the meeting was not to appoint special constables to come
-into conflict with the people, but merely to preserve the peace.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-Next week Dr. Newbolt put an advertisement into the
-<i>Hampshire Chronicle</i>, acknowledging the vote of thanks that
-had been passed to him, and reaffirming his belief that conciliation
-was the right policy.<a id="FNanchor_444" href="#Footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a> At Overton, in Hampshire,
-Henry Hunt acted as mediator between the farmers and a
-hungry and menacing mob. Such was the fear of the farmers
-that they gave him unlimited power to make promises on their
-behalf: he promised the labourers that their wages should be
-raised from 9s. to 12s., with house rent in addition, and they
-dispersed in delight.</p>
-
-<p>Fortune had so far smiled upon the rising, and there was some
-hope of success. If the spirit that animated the farmers, and
-in Kent many of the landowners, had lasted, the winter of
-1830 might have ended in an improvement of wages and a
-reduction of rents and tithes throughout the south of England.
-In places where the decline of the labourer had been watched
-for years without pity or dismay, magistrates were now calling
-meetings to consider his circumstances, and the Home Office
-Papers show that some, at any rate, of the country gentlemen
-were aware of the desperate condition of the poor. Unhappily
-the day of conciliatory measures was a brief one.
-Two facts frightened the upper classes into brutality: one
-was the spread of the rising, the other the scarcity of troops.<a id="FNanchor_445" href="#Footnote_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a>
-As the movement spread, the alarm of the authorities
-inspired a different policy, and even those landowners who
-recognised that the labourers were miserable, thought that
-they were in the presence of a rising that would sweep them
-away unless they could suppress it at once by drastic means.
-They pictured the labourers as Huns and the mysterious
-Swing as a second Attila, and this panic they contrived to
-communicate to the other classes of society.</p>
-
-<p>Conciliatory methods consequently ceased; the upper classes
-substituted action for diplomacy, and the movement rapidly
-collapsed. Little resistance was offered, and the terrible hosts
-of armed and desperate men melted down into groups of weak<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-and ill-fed labourers, armed with sticks and stones. On 26th
-November the <i>Times</i> could report that seventy persons had been
-apprehended near Newbury, and that ‘about 60 of the most
-forward half-starved fellows’ had been taken into custody
-some two miles from Southampton. Already the housing of
-the Berkshire prisoners was becoming a problem, the gaols
-at Reading and Abingdon being overcrowded: by the end of
-the month the Newbury Mansion House and Workhouse had
-been converted into prisons. This energy had been stimulated
-by a circular letter issued on 24th November, in which Lord
-Melbourne urged the lord-lieutenants and the magistrates to
-use firmness and vigour in quelling disturbances, and virtually
-promised them immunity for illegal acts done in discharge
-of their duty. A village here and there continued to give the
-magistrates some uneasiness, for example, Broughton in
-Hants, ‘an open village in an open country ... where there is
-no Gentleman to overawe them,’<a id="FNanchor_446" href="#Footnote_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a> but these were exceptions.
-The day of risings was over, and from this time forward,
-arson was the only weapon of discontent. At Charlton in
-Wilts, where ‘the magistrates had talked of 12s. and the
-farmers had given 10s.,’ a certain Mr. Polhill, who had lowered
-the wages one Saturday to 9s., found his premises in flame.
-‘The poor,’ remarked a neighbouring magistrate, ‘naturally
-consider that they will be beaten down again to 7s.’<a id="FNanchor_447" href="#Footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a> By
-4th December the <i>Times</i> correspondent in Wiltshire and
-Hampshire could report that quiet was restored, that the
-peasantry were cowed, and that men who had been prominent
-in the mobs were being picked out and arrested every day.
-He gave an amusing account of the trials of a special correspondent,
-and of the difficulties of obtaining information. ‘The
-circular of Lord Melbourne which encourages the magistrates
-to seize suspected persons, and promises them impunity if the
-motives are good (such is the construction of the circular in
-these parts), and which the magistrates are determined to act
-upon, renders inquiries unsafe, and I have received a few good
-natured hints on this head. Gentlemen in gigs and post chaises
-are peculiar objects of jealousy. A cigar, which is no slight
-comfort in this humid atmosphere, is regarded on the road as
-a species of pyrotechnical tube; and even an eye glass is in
-danger of being metamorphosed into a newly invented air
-gun, with which these <i>gentlemen</i> ignite stacks and barns
-as they pass. An innocent enquiry of whose house or farm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-is that? is, under existing circumstances, an overt act of
-incendiarism.’</p>
-
-<p>In such a state of feeling, it was not surprising that labourers
-were bundled into prison for sour looks or discontented conversation.
-A zealous magistrate wrote to the Home Office
-on 13th December after a fire near Maidenhead, to say that he
-had committed a certain Greenaway to prison on the following
-evidence: ‘Dr. Vansittart, Rector of Shottesbrook, gave
-a sermon a short time before the fire took place, recommending
-a quiet conduct to his Parishioners. Greenaway said openly
-in the churchyard, we have been quiet too long. His temper
-is bad, always discontented and churlish, frequently changing
-his Master from finding great difficulty in maintaining a
-large family from the Wages of labour.’</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the rising had spread westward to Dorset and
-Gloucestershire, and northward to Bucks. In Dorsetshire and
-Gloucestershire, the disturbances were much like those in
-Wiltshire. In Bucks, in addition to the usual agricultural
-rising, with the breaking of threshing machines and the demand
-for higher wages, there were riots in High Wycombe, and
-considerable destruction of paper-making machinery by the
-unemployed. Where special grievances existed in a village,
-the labourers took advantage of the rising to seek redress for
-them. Thus at Walden in Bucks, in addition to demanding
-2s. a day wages with 6d. for each child and a reduction of
-tithes, they made a special point of the improper distribution
-of parish gifts. ‘Another person said that buns used to be
-thrown from the church steeple and beer given away in the
-churchyard, and a sermon preached on the bun day. Witness
-(the parson) told them that the custom had ceased before he
-came to the parish, but that he always preached a sermon on
-St. George’s day, and two on Sundays, one of which was a
-volunteer. He told them that he had consulted the Archdeacon
-on the claim set up for the distribution of buns, and
-that the Archdeacon was of opinion that no such claim could
-be maintained.’</p>
-
-<p>At Benson or Bensington, in Oxfordshire, the labourers,
-after destroying some threshing machines, made a demonstration
-against a proposal for enclosure. Mr. Newton, a
-large proprietor, had just made one of many unsuccessful
-attempts to obtain an Enclosure Act for the parish. Some
-thousand persons assembled in the churchyard expecting
-that Mr. Newton would try to fix the notice on the church<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-door, but as he did not venture to appear, they proceeded to
-his house, and made him promise never again to attempt to
-obtain an Enclosure Act.<a id="FNanchor_448" href="#Footnote_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a></p>
-
-<p>The movement for obtaining higher wages by this rude
-collective bargaining was extinguished in the counties already
-mentioned by the beginning of December, but disturbances
-now developed over a larger area. A ‘daring riot’ took place
-at Stotfold in Bedfordshire. The labourers met together to
-demand exemption from taxes, dismissal of the assistant
-overseer, and the raising of wages to 2s. a day. The last
-demand was refused, on which the labourers set some straw
-alight in a field to alarm the farmers. Mr. Whitbread, J.P.,
-brought a hundred special constables, and arrested ten ringleaders,
-after which the riot ceased. There were disturbances
-in Norfolk, Suffolk, and Essex; and in many other counties
-the propertied classes were terrified from time to time by the
-news of fires. In Cambridgeshire there were meetings of
-labourers to demand higher wages, in some places with
-immediate success, and one magistrate was alarmed by
-rumours of a design to march upon Cambridge itself on
-market day. In Devonshire Lord Ebrington reported an
-agitation for higher wages with encouragement from the
-farmers. He was himself impressed by the low wages in
-force, and had raised them in places still quiet; a mistake for
-which he apologised. Even Hereford, ‘this hitherto submissive
-and peaceful county,’ was not unaffected. In Northamptonshire
-there were several fires, and also risings round
-Peterborough, Oundle and Wellingborough, and a general
-outbreak in the Midlands was thought to be imminent. Hayricks
-began to blaze as far north as Carlisle. Swing letters were
-delivered in Yorkshire, and in Lincolnshire the labourer was
-said to be awakening to his own importance. There were in
-fact few counties quite free from infection, and a leading
-article appeared in the <i>Times</i> on 6th December, in which it
-was stated that never had such a dangerous state of things
-existed to such an extent in England, in the period of well-authenticated
-records. ‘Let the rich be taught that Providence
-will not suffer them to oppress their fellow creatures with
-impunity. Here are tens of thousands of Englishmen, industrious,
-kind-hearted, but broken-hearted beings, exasperated
-into madness by insufficient food and clothing, by utter want
-of necessaries for themselves and their unfortunate families.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span></p>
-<p>Unfortunately Providence, to whom the <i>Times</i> attributed
-these revolutionary sentiments, was not so close to the scene as
-Lord Melbourne, whose sentiments on the subject were very
-different. On 8th December he issued a circular, which gave a
-death-blow to the hope that the magistrates would act as
-mediators on behalf of the labourers. After blaming those
-magistrates who, under intimidation, had advised the establishment
-of a uniform rate of wages, the Home Secretary went on,
-‘Reason and experience concur in proving that a compliance
-with demands so unreasonable in themselves, and urged in such
-a manner, can only lead, and probably within a very short
-period of time, to the most disastrous results.’ He added that
-the justices had ‘no general legal authority to settle the
-amount of the wages of labour.’ The circular contained a
-promise on the part of the Government that they would adopt
-‘every practicable and reasonable measure’ for the alleviation
-of the labourers’ privations.</p>
-
-<p>From this time the magistrates were everywhere on the
-alert for the first signs of life and movement among the
-labourers, and they forbade meetings of any kind. In Suffolk
-and Essex the labourers who took up the cry for higher wages
-were promptly thrown into prison, and arbitrary arrests
-became the custom. The movement was crushed, and the time
-for retribution had come. The gaols were full to overflowing,
-and the Government appointed Special Commissions to try the
-rioters in Hampshire, Wiltshire, Dorset, Berks, and Bucks.
-Brougham, who was now enjoying the office in whose pompous
-manner he must have lisped in his cradle, told the House of
-Lords on 2nd December, ‘Within a few days from the time I am
-addressing your Lordships, the sword of justice shall be unsheathed
-to smite, if it be necessary, with a firm and vigorous
-hand, the rebel against the law.’</p>
-
-<p>The disturbances were over, but the panic had been such
-that the upper classes could not persuade themselves that
-England was yet tranquil. As late as Christmas Eve the
-Privy Council gave orders to the archbishop to prepare ‘a
-form of prayer to Almighty God, on account of the troubled
-state of certain parts of the United Kingdom.’ The archbishop’s
-composition, which was published after scores of men
-and boys had been sentenced to transportation for life, must
-have been recited with genuine feeling by those clergymen who
-had either broken, or were about to break, their agreement
-to surrender part of their tithes. One passage ran as follows:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-‘Restore, O Lord, to Thy people the quiet enjoyment of the
-many and great blessings which we have received from Thy
-bounty: defeat and frustrate the malice of wicked and turbulent
-men, and turn their hearts: have pity, O Lord, on the
-simple and ignorant, who have been led astray, and recall them
-to a sense of their duty; and to persons of all ranks and
-conditions in this country vouchsafe such a measure of Thy
-grace, that our hearts being filled with true faith and devotion,
-and cleansed from all evil affections, we may serve Thee with
-one accord, in duty and loyalty to the King, in obedience to
-the laws of the land, and in brotherly love towards each
-other....’</p>
-
-<p>We shall see in the next chapter what happened to ‘the
-simple and ignorant’ who had fallen into the hands of the
-English judges.</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">THE LAST LABOURERS’ REVOLT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center">II</p>
-
-
-<p>The bands of men and boys who had given their rulers one
-moment of excitement and lively interest in the condition of
-the poor had made themselves liable to ferocious penalties.
-For the privileged classes had set up a code under which no
-labourer could take a single step for the improvement of the
-lot of his class without putting his life and liberties in a noose.
-It is true that the savage laws which had been passed against
-combination in 1799 and 1800 had been repealed in 1824, and
-that even under the less liberal Act of the following year,
-which rescinded the Act of 1824, it was no longer a penal
-offence to form a Trades Union. But it is easy to see that the
-labourers who tried to raise their wages were in fact on a
-shelving and most perilous slope. If they used threats or
-intimidation or molested or obstructed, either to get a labourer
-to join with them or to get an employer to make concessions,
-they were guilty of a misdemeanour punishable with three
-months’ imprisonment. They were lucky if they ran no graver
-risk than this. Few of the prosecutions at the Special
-Commissions were under the Act of 1825. A body of men holding
-a meeting in a village where famine and unemployment
-were chronic, and where hardly any one had been taught to
-read or write, might very soon find themselves becoming
-what the Act of 1714 called a riotous assembly, and if a magistrate
-took alarm and read the Riot Act, and they did not
-disperse within one hour, every one of them might be punished
-as a felon. The hour’s interval did not mean an hour’s grace,
-for, as Mr. Justice Alderson told the court at Dorchester,
-within that hour ‘all persons, even private individuals, may do
-anything, using force even to the last extremity to prevent the
-commission of a felony.’</p>
-
-<p>There were at least three ways in which labourers meeting
-together to demonstrate for higher wages ran a risk of losing
-their lives, if any of their fellows got out of hand from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-temper, or from drink, or from hunger and despair. Most
-of the prosecutions before the Special Commissions were prosecutions
-under three Acts of 1827 and 1828, consolidating the
-law on the subject of offences against property and offences
-against the person. Under the eighth section of one Act
-(7 and 8 George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 30), any persons riotously or tumultuously
-assembled together who destroyed any house, stable,
-coach-house, outhouse, barn, granary, or any building or
-erection or machinery used in carrying on any trade or manufacture
-were to suffer death as felons. In this Act there is no
-definition of riot, and therefore ‘the common law definition of
-a riot is resorted to, and in such a case if any one of His Majesty’s
-subjects was terrified there was a sufficient terror and alarm
-to substantiate that part of the charge.’<a id="FNanchor_449" href="#Footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a> Under the sixth
-section of another Act, any person who robbed any other
-person of any chattel, money, or valuable security was to
-suffer death as a felon. Now if a mob presented itself before a
-householder with a demand for money, and the householder
-in fear gave even a few coppers, any person who was in that
-mob, whether he had anything to do with this particular
-transaction or not, whether he was aware or ignorant of it,
-was guilty of robbery, and liable to the capital penalty. Under
-section 12 of the Act of the following year, generally known
-as Lansdowne’s Act, which amended Ellenborough’s Act of
-1803, it was a capital offence to attempt to shoot at a person,
-or to stab, cut, or wound him, with intent to murder, rob, or
-maim. Under this Act, as it was interpreted, if an altercation
-arose and any violence was offered by a single individual in
-the mob, the lives of the whole band were forfeit. This was
-put very clearly by Baron Vaughan: ‘There seems to be some
-impression that unless the attack on an individual is made
-with some deadly weapons, those concerned are not liable
-to capital punishment; but it should be made known to all
-persons that if the same injury were inflicted by a blow of a
-stone, all and every person forming part of a riotous assembly
-is equally guilty as he whose hand may have thrown it, and all
-alike are liable to death.’ Under section 4 of one Act of 1827
-the penalty for destroying a threshing machine was transportation
-for seven years, and under section 17 the penalty
-for firing a rick was death. These were the terrors hanging
-over the village labourers of whom several hundreds were
-now awaiting their trial.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span></p>
-<p>The temper of the judges was revealed in their charges to
-the Grand Juries. In opening the Maidstone Assizes on
-14th December, Mr. Justice Bosanquet<a id="FNanchor_450" href="#Footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a> declared that though
-there might be some distress it was much exaggerated, and
-that he was sure that those whom he had the honour to address
-would find it not only their duty but their pleasure to lend an
-ear to the wants of the poor.<a id="FNanchor_451" href="#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a> Mr. Justice Taunton<a id="FNanchor_452" href="#Footnote_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a> was even
-more reassuring on this subject at the Lewes Assizes: the
-distress was less than it had been twelve months before. ‘I
-regret to say,’ he went on, ‘there are persons who exaggerate
-the distress and raise up barriers between different classes&mdash;who
-use the most inflammatory language&mdash;who represent the
-rich as oppressors of the poor. It would be impertinent in
-me to say anything to you as to your treatment of labourers
-or servants. That man must know little of the gentry of
-England, whether connected with the town or country, who
-represents them as tyrants to the poor, as not sympathising
-in their distress, and as not anxious to relieve their burdens
-and to promote their welfare and happiness.’<a id="FNanchor_453" href="#Footnote_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a> In opening the
-Special Commission at Winchester Baron Vaughan<a id="FNanchor_454" href="#Footnote_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a> alluded
-to the theory that the tumults had arisen from distress and
-admitted that it might be partly true, but, he continued,
-‘every man possessed of the feelings common to our nature
-must deeply lament it, and endeavour to alleviate it (as you
-gentlemen no doubt have done and will continue to do), by
-every means which Providence has put within his power.’
-If individuals were aggrieved by privations and injuries, they
-must apply to the Legislature, which alone could afford them
-relief, ‘but it can never be tolerated in any country which
-professes to acknowledge the obligations of municipal law,
-that any man or body of men should be permitted to sit in
-judgment upon their own wrongs, or to arrogate to themselves
-the power of redressing them. To suffer it would be to relapse
-into the barbarism of savage life and to dissolve the very elements
-by which society is held together.’<a id="FNanchor_455" href="#Footnote_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a> The opinions of
-the Bench on the sections of the Act (7 and 8 George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 30)
-under which men could be hung for assembling riotously and
-breaking machinery were clearly expressed by Mr. Justice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-Parke<a id="FNanchor_456" href="#Footnote_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a> (afterwards Lord Wensleydale) at Salisbury: ‘If
-that law ceases to be administered with due firmness, and men
-look to it in vain for the security of their rights, our wealth
-and power will soon be at an end, and our capital and industry
-would be transferred to some more peaceful country, whose laws
-are more respected or better enforced.’<a id="FNanchor_457" href="#Footnote_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a> By another section of
-that Act seven years was fixed as the maximum penalty for
-breaking a threshing machine. Mr. Justice Alderson<a id="FNanchor_458" href="#Footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a> chafed
-under this restriction, and he told two men, Case and Morgan,
-who were found guilty at the Salisbury Special Commission of
-going into a neighbouring parish and breaking a threshing
-machine, that had the Legislature foreseen such crimes as
-theirs, it would have enabled the court to give them a severer
-sentence.<a id="FNanchor_459" href="#Footnote_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Park<a id="FNanchor_460" href="#Footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a> was equally stern and uncompromising
-in defending the property of the followers of the carpenter of
-Nazareth against the unreasoning misery of the hour. Summing
-up in a case at Aylesbury, in which one of the charges
-was that of attempting to procure a reduction of tithes, he
-remarked with warmth: ‘It was highly insolent in such men to
-require of gentlemen, who had by an expensive education
-qualified themselves to discharge the sacred duties of a Minister
-of the Gospel, to descend from that station and reduce themselves
-to the situation of common labourers.’<a id="FNanchor_461" href="#Footnote_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a></p>
-
-<p>Few judges could resist the temptation to introduce into
-their charges a homily on the economic benefits of machinery.
-Mr. Justice Park was an exception, for he observed at Aylesbury
-that the question of the advantages of machinery was outside
-the province of the judges, ‘and much mischief often resulted
-from persons stepping out of their line of duty.’<a id="FNanchor_462" href="#Footnote_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a> Mr. Justice
-Alderson took a different view, and the very next day he was
-expounding the truths of political economy at Dorchester,
-starting with what he termed the ‘beautiful and simple
-illustration’ of the printing press.<a id="FNanchor_463" href="#Footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a> The illustration must have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>
-seemed singularly intimate and convincing to the labourers in
-the dock who had never been taught their letters.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the temper of the judges. Who and what were the
-prisoners before them? After the suppression of the riots,
-the magistrates could pick out culprits at their leisure, and
-when a riot had involved the whole of the village the temptation
-to get rid by this method of persons who for one reason
-or another were obnoxious to the authorities was irresistible.
-Hunt, speaking in the House of Commons,<a id="FNanchor_464" href="#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a> quoted the case of
-Hindon; seven men had been apprehended for rioting and
-they were all poachers. Many of the prisoners had already
-spent a month in an overcrowded prison; almost all of them
-were poor men; the majority could not read or write.<a id="FNanchor_465" href="#Footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a> Few
-could afford counsel, and it must be remembered that counsel
-could not address the court on behalf of prisoners who were
-being tried for breaking machines, or for belonging to a mob
-that asked for money or destroyed property. By the rules of
-the gaol, the prisoners at Salisbury were not allowed to see
-their attorney except in the presence of the gaoler or his
-servant. The labourers’ ignorance of the law was complete and
-inevitable. Many of them thought that the King or the
-Government or the magistrates had given orders that machines
-were to be broken. Most of them supposed that if a person
-from whom they demanded money threw it down or gave it
-without the application of physical force, there was no question
-of robbery. We have an illustration of this illusion in a trial
-at Winchester when Isaac Hill, junior, who was charged with
-breaking a threshing machine near Micheldever, for which
-the maximum penalty was seven years, pleaded in his defence
-that he had not broken the machine and that all that he did
-‘was to ask the prosecutor civilly for the money, which the
-mob took from him, and the prosecutor gave it to him, and
-that he thanked him very kindly for it,’<a id="FNanchor_466" href="#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a> an admission which
-made him liable to a death penalty. A prisoner at Salisbury,
-when he was asked what he had to say in his defence to the
-jury, replied: ‘Now, my Lord, I ‘se got nothing to say to ’em,
-I doant knaow any on ’em.’<a id="FNanchor_467" href="#Footnote_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a> The prisoners were at this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-further disadvantage that all the witnesses whom they could
-call as to their share in the conduct of a mob had themselves
-been in the mob, and were thus liable to prosecution. Thus
-when James Lush (who was afterwards selected for execution)
-and James Toomer appealed to a man named Lane, who had
-just been acquitted on a previous charge, to give evidence
-that they had not struck Mr. Pinniger in a scuffle, Mr. Justice
-Alderson cautioned Lane that if he acknowledged that he had
-been in the mob he would be committed. Lane chose the safer
-part of silence.<a id="FNanchor_468" href="#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a> In another case a witness had the courage to
-incriminate himself. When the brothers Simms were being tried
-for extorting money from Parson Easton’s wife, a case which we
-have already described, Henry Bunce, called as a witness for
-the defence, voluntarily declared, in spite of a caution from
-the judge (Alderson), that he had been present himself and that
-William Simms did not use the expression ‘blood or money.’
-He was at once ordered into custody. ‘The prisoner immediately
-sprung over the bar into the dock with his former
-comrades, seemingly unaffected by the decision of the learned
-judge.’<a id="FNanchor_469" href="#Footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the darkest side of the business was the temptation
-held out to prisoners awaiting trial to betray their comrades.
-Immunity or a lighter sentence was freely offered to those who
-would give evidence. Stokes, who was found guilty at Dorchester
-of breaking a threshing machine, was sentenced by Mr.
-Justice Alderson to a year’s imprisonment, with the explanation
-that he was not transported because ‘after you were taken
-into custody, you gave very valuable information which tended
-greatly to further the ends of justice.’<a id="FNanchor_470" href="#Footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a> These transactions
-were not often dragged into the daylight, but some negotiations
-of this character were made public in the trial of Mr. Deacle
-next year. Mr. Deacle, a well-to-do gentleman farmer, was
-tried at the Lent Assizes at Winchester for being concerned in
-the riots. One of the witnesses against him, named Collins,
-admitted in cross-examination that he believed he should
-have been prosecuted himself, if he had not promised to give
-evidence against Mr. Deacle; another witness, named Barnes, a
-carpenter, stated in cross-examination that during the trials at
-the Special Commission, ‘he being in the dock, and about to
-be put on his trial, the gaoler Beckett called him out, and took<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-him into a room where there were Walter Long, a magistrate,
-and another person, whom he believed to be Bingham Baring,
-who told him that he should not be put upon his trial if he
-would come and swear against Deacle.’ When the next witness
-was about to be cross-examined, the counsel for the prosecution
-abruptly abandoned the case.<a id="FNanchor_471" href="#Footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The first Special Commission was opened at Winchester with
-suitable pomp on 18th December. Not only the prison but the
-whole town was crowded, and the inhabitants of Winchester
-determined to make the best of the windfall. The jurymen
-and the <i>Times</i> special correspondent complained bitterly of
-the abnormal cost of living, the latter mentioning that in
-addition to extraordinary charges for beds, 5s. a day was
-exacted for firing and tallow candles, bedroom fire not included.
-The three judges sent down as commissioners were Baron
-Vaughan, Mr. Justice Parke, and Mr. Justice Alderson. With
-them were associated two other commissioners, Mr. Sturges
-Bourne, of assistant overseer fame, and Mr. Richard Pollen.
-The Duke of Wellington, as Lord-Lieutenant, sat on the Bench.
-The Attorney-General, Mr. Sergeant Wilde, and others appeared
-to prosecute for the Crown. The County took up every charge,
-the Government only the more serious ones.</p>
-
-<p>There were three hundred prisoners, most of them
-charged with extorting money by threats or with breaking
-machinery. What chance had they of a fair trial? They
-started with the disabilities already described. They were
-thrown by batches into the dock; the pitiless law was explained
-to the jury; extenuating circumstances were ruled out
-as irrelevant. ‘We do not come here,’ said Mr. Justice
-Alderson, ‘to inquire into grievances. We come here to decide
-law.’ But though evidence about wages or distress was not
-admitted, the judges did not scruple to give their own views of
-the social conditions which had produced these disturbances.
-Perhaps the most flagrant example was provided by a trial
-which happily was for a misdemeanour only. Seven men were
-indicted for conspiring together and riotously assembling for
-the purpose of raising wages and for compelling others to join
-them. The labourers of the parish of Fawley had combined
-together for two objects, the first to raise their wages, which
-stood at 9s. a week, the second to get rid of the assistant
-overseer, who had introduced a parish cart, to which he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-harnessed women and boys, amongst others an idiot woman,
-named Jane Stevens. The labourers determined to break up
-the cart, but they desisted on the promise of a farmer that a
-horse should be bought for it. Lord Cavan was the large
-landowner of the parish. He paid his men as a rule 9s. a week,
-but two of them received 10s. The mob came up to his house
-to demand an increase of wages: Lord Cavan was out, quelling
-rioters elsewhere. Lady Cavan came down to see them.
-‘Seeing you are my neighbours and armed,’ said she, ‘yet, as
-I am an unprotected woman, I am sure you will do no harm.’
-The labourers protested that they meant no harm, and they
-did no harm. ‘I asked them,’ said Lady Cavan afterwards, in
-evidence, ‘why they rose then, there was no apparent distress
-round Eaglehurst, and the wages were the same as they had
-been for several years. I have been in several of their cottages
-and never saw any appearance of distress. They said they
-had been oppressed long and would bear it no longer.’ One
-man told her that he had 9s. a week wages and 3s. from the
-parish, he had heard that the 3s. was to be discontinued.
-With the common-sense characteristic of her class Lady Cavan
-assured him that he was not improving his position by idling.
-The labourers impressed the Cavan men, and went on their
-peaceful way round the parish. The farmers who gave
-evidence for the prosecution were allowed to assert that there
-was no distress, but when it came to evidence for the defence
-a stricter standard of relevancy was exacted. One witness for
-the prisoners said of the labourers: ‘The men were in very great
-distress; many of the men had only a few potatoes in their bag
-when they came to work.’ ‘The learned judges objected to
-this course of examination being continued: it might happen
-that through drinking a man might suffer distress.’ The
-Attorney-General, in his closing speech, asserted again that the
-prisoners did not seem to have been in distress. Baron
-Vaughan, in summing up, said that men were not to assemble
-and conspire together for the purpose of determining what their
-wages should be. ‘That which at first might be in itself a
-lawful act, might in the event become illegal.... A respectful
-statement or representation of their grievances was legal, and
-to which no one would object, but the evidence, if they believed
-it, showed that the conduct of this assembly was far from being
-respectful. No one could feel more for the distresses of the
-people than he did, but he would never endure that persons
-should by physical strength compel wages to be raised. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-was no country where charity fell in a purer stream than in
-this. Let the man make his appeal in a proper and respectful
-manner, and he might be assured that appeal would never be
-heard in vain.... His Lordship spoke very highly of the
-conduct of Lady Cavan. She had visited the cottages of all
-those who lived in the neighbourhood, she knew they were not
-distressed, and she also felt confident from her kindness to
-them that they would not offer her any violence.’ All seven
-were found guilty; four were sentenced to six months hard
-labour, and three to three months.</p>
-
-<p>Very few, however, of the cases at Winchester were simple
-misdemeanours, for in most instances, in addition to asking
-for higher wages, the labourers had made themselves liable to a
-prosecution for felony, either by breaking a threshing machine
-or by asking for money. Those prisoners who had taken part
-in the Fordingbridge riots, or in the destruction of machinery
-near Andover, or in the demolition of the Headley Workhouse,
-were sentenced to death or to transportation for life. Case
-after case was tried in which prisoners from different villages
-were indicted for assault and robbery. The features varied
-little, and the spectators began to find the proceedings monotonous.
-Most of the agricultural population of Hampshire
-had made itself liable to the death penalty, if the authorities
-cared to draw the noose. The three hundred who actually
-appeared in Court were like the men on whom the tower of
-Siloam fell.</p>
-
-<p>A case to which the prosecution attached special importance
-arose out of an affair at the house of Mr. Eyre Coote. A
-mob of forty persons, some of whom had iron bars, presented
-themselves before Mr. Coote’s door at two o’clock in the
-morning. Two bands of men had already visited Mr. Coote
-that evening, and he had given them beer: this third band
-was a party of stragglers. Mr. Coote stationed his ten
-servants in the portico, and when the mob arrived he asked
-them, ‘What do you want, my lads?’ ‘Money,’ was the
-answer. ‘Money,’ said Mr. Coote, ‘you shan’t have.’ One
-of the band seemed to Mr. Coote about to strike him. Mr.
-Coote seized him, nine of the mob were knocked down and
-taken, and the rest fled. Six of the men were prosecuted
-for feloniously demanding money. Baron Vaughan remarked
-that outrages like this made one wonder whether one was in a
-civilised country, and he proceeded to raise its moral tone by
-sentencing all the prisoners to transportation for life, except<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-one, Henry Eldridge, who was reserved for execution. He
-had been already capitally convicted of complicity in the
-Fordingbridge riots, and this attempt to ‘enter the sanctuary
-of Mr. Eyre Coote’s home’ following upon that crime, rendered
-him a suitable ‘sacrifice to be made on the altar of the
-offended justice’ of his country.</p>
-
-<p>In many of the so-called robberies punished by the Special
-Commissions the sums taken were trifling. George Steel, aged
-eighteen, was sentenced to transportation for life for obtaining
-a shilling, when he was in liquor, from Jane Neale: William
-Sutton, another boy of eighteen, was found guilty of taking
-4d. in a drunken frolic: Sutton, who was a carter boy receiving
-1s. 6d. a week and his food, was given an excellent character
-by his master, who declared that he had never had a better
-servant. The jury recommended him to mercy, and the
-judges responded by sentencing him to death and banishing
-him for life. George Clerk, aged twenty, and E. C. Nutbean,
-aged eighteen, paid the same price for 3d. down and the
-promise of beer at the Greyhound. Such cases were not
-exceptional, as any one who turns to the reports of the trials
-will see.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence on which prisoners were convicted was often
-of the most shadowy kind. Eight young agricultural labourers,
-of ages varying from eighteen to twenty-five, were found
-guilty of riotously assembling in the parish of St. Lawrence
-Wootten and feloniously stealing £2 from William Lutely
-Sclater of Tangier Park. ‘We want to get a little satisfaction
-from you’ was the phrase they used. Two days later another
-man, named William Farmer, was charged with the same
-offence. Mr. Sclater thought that Farmer was like the man
-in the mob who blew a trumpet or horn, but could not swear
-to his identity. Other witnesses swore that he was with the
-mob elsewhere, and said, ‘Money wa want and money wa will
-hae.’ On this evidence he was found guilty, and though Mr.
-Justice Alderson announced that he felt warranted in
-recommending that he should not lose his life, ‘yet, it was
-his duty,’ he continued, ‘to state that he should for this
-violent and disgraceful outrage be sent out of the country,
-and separated for life from those friends and connections
-which were dear to him here: that he should have to employ
-the rest of his days in labour, at the will and for the profit of
-another, to show the people of the class to which the prisoner
-belonged that they cannot with impunity lend their aid to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-such outrages against the peace and security of person and
-property.’</p>
-
-<p>We have seen that at the time of the riots it was freely
-stated that the farmers incited the labourers to make disturbances.
-Hunt went so far as to say in the House of
-Commons that in nineteen cases out of twenty the farmers
-encouraged the labourers to break the threshing machines.
-The county authorities evidently thought it unwise to
-prosecute the farmers, although it was proved in evidence
-that there were several farmers present at the destruction of
-the Headley Workhouse, and at the demonstration at Mr.
-Cobbold’s house. Occasionally a farmer, in testifying to a
-prisoner’s character, would admit that he had been in a mob
-himself. In such cases the judge administered rebukes, but
-the prosecution took no action. There was, however, one
-exception. A small farmer, John Boys, of the parish of
-Owslebury, had thrown himself heartily into the labourers’
-cause. A number of small farmers met and decided that the
-labourers’ wages ought to be raised. Boys agreed to take a
-paper round for signature. The paper ran as follows: ‘We
-the undersigned are willing to give 2s. per day for able-bodied
-married men, and 9s. per week for single men, on consideration
-of our rents and tithes being abated in proportion.’ In
-similar cases, as a rule, the farmers left it to the labourers to
-collect signatures, and Boys, by undertaking the work himself,
-made himself a marked man. He had been in a mob which
-extorted money from Lord Northesk’s steward at Owslebury,
-and for this he was indicted for felony. But the jury, to the
-chagrin of the prosecution, acquitted him. What followed is
-best described in the report of Sergeant Wilde’s speech in the
-House of Commons (21st July 1831). ‘Boyce was tried and
-acquitted: but he (Mr. Wilde) being unable to account for the
-acquittal, considering the evidence to have been clear against
-him, and feeling that although the jury were most respectable
-men, they might possibly entertain some sympathy for him
-in consequence of his situation in life, thought it his duty to
-send a communication to the Attorney-General, stating that
-Boyce was deeply responsible for the acts which had taken
-place: that he thought he should not be allowed to escape, and
-recommending that he be tried before a different jury in the
-other Court. The Attorney-General sent to him (Mr. Wilde) to
-come into the other Court, and the result was that Boyce was
-then tried and convicted.’ In the other more complaisant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-Court, Farmer Boys and James Fussell, described as a genteel
-young man of about twenty, living with his mother, were found
-guilty of heading a riotous mob for reducing rents and tithes
-and sentenced to seven years’ transportation.<a id="FNanchor_472" href="#Footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a></p>
-
-<p>This was not the only case in which the sympathies of the
-jury created a difficulty. The Home Office Papers contain a
-letter from Dr. Quarrier, a Hampshire magistrate, who had
-been particularly vigorous in suppressing riots, stating that
-Sir James Parke discharged a jury at the Special Commission
-‘under the impression that they were reluctant to convict the
-Prisoners which was more strongly impressed upon the mind
-of the Judge, by its being reported to his Lordship that “some
-of the Gosport Jurors had said, while travelling in the stage
-coach to Winchester, that they would not convict in cases
-where the Labourers had been driven to excess by Poverty
-and low Wages!” It was ascertained that some of those
-empannelled upon the acquitting Jury were from Gosport,
-which confirmed the learned Judge in the determination to
-discharge them.’<a id="FNanchor_473" href="#Footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a></p>
-
-<p>An interesting feature of the trials at Winchester was the
-number of men just above the condition of agricultural
-labourers who threw in their lot with the poor: the village
-mechanics, the wheelwrights, carpenters, joiners, smiths, and
-the bricklayers, shoemakers, shepherds and small holders
-were often prominent in the disturbances. To the judges
-this fact was a riddle. The threshing machines had done
-these men no injury; they had not known the sting of hunger;
-till the time of the riots their characters had been as a rule
-irreproachable. <i>Nemo repente turpissimus fuit</i>, and yet
-apparently these persons had suddenly, without warning,
-turned into the ‘wicked and turbulent men’ of the archbishop’s
-prayer. Such culprits deserved, in the opinions of
-the bench, severer punishment than the labourers, whom their
-example should have kept in the paths of obedience and
-peace.<a id="FNanchor_474" href="#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a> Where the law permitted, they were sentenced to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-transportation for life. One heinous offender of this type,
-Gregory, a carpenter, was actually earning 18s. a week in the
-service of Lord Winchester. But the most interesting instances
-were two brothers, Joseph and Robert Mason, who lived at
-Bullington. They rented three or four acres, kept a cow,
-and worked for the neighbouring farmers as well. Joseph,
-who was thirty-two, had a wife and one child; Robert, who was
-twenty-four, was unmarried. Between them they supported
-a widowed mother. Their characters were exemplary, and
-the most eager malice could detect no blot upon their past.
-But their opinions were dangerous: they regularly took in
-Cobbett’s <i>Register</i> and read it aloud to twenty or thirty of
-the villagers. Further, Joseph had carried on foot a petition
-for reform to the king at Brighton from a hundred and seventy-seven
-‘persons, belonging to the working and labouring
-classes’ of Wonston, Barton Stacey and Bullington, and
-was reported to have given some trouble to the king’s porter
-by an importunate demand for an audience. The recital of
-these facts gave rise to much merriment at his trial, and was
-not considered irrelevant by judges who ruled out all allusions
-to distress.<a id="FNanchor_475" href="#Footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a> An interesting light is thrown on the history of
-this petition by a fragment of a letter, written by Robert
-Mason to a friend, which somehow fell into the hands of a
-Captain Thompson of Longparish, and was forwarded by him
-to the Home Office as a valuable piece of evidence.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘<i>P.S.</i>&mdash;Since I wrote the above I have saw and talked with
-two persons who say “Bullington Barton and Sutton has sent
-a petition and why not Longparish Hursborne and Wherwell
-send another.” I think as much, to be sure if we had all
-signed one, one journey and expense would have served but
-what is expence? Why I would engage to carry a Petition
-and deliver it at St. James for 30 shillings, and to a place
-like Longparish what is that? If you do send one pray do
-not let Church property escape your notice. There is the
-Church which cost Longparish I should think nearly £1500
-yearly: yes and there is an old established Chaple which I will
-be bound does not cost £25 annually. For God sake....’
-(illegible).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first charge brought against the Masons was that of
-robbing Sir Thomas Baring’s steward of £10 at East Stretton.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-The money had been taken by one of the mobs; the Masons
-were acquitted. They were next put on their trial together
-with William Winkworth, a cobbler and a fellow reader of
-Cobbett, and ten others, for a similar offence. This time they
-were accused of demanding £2 or £5 from Mr. W. Dowden of
-Micheldever. The Attorney-General, in opening the case,
-drew attention to the circumstances of the Masons and Winkworth,
-saying that the offence with which they were charged
-was of a deeper dye, because they were men of superior education
-and intelligence. A humane clergyman, Mr. Cockerton,
-curate of Stoke Cheriton, gave evidence to the effect that if
-the men had been met in a conciliatory temper in the morning
-they would have dispersed. Joseph Mason and William
-Winkworth were found guilty, and sentenced, in the words
-of the judge, to ‘be cut off from all communion with
-society’ for the rest of their lives. Robert Mason was still
-unconvicted, but he was not allowed to escape. The next
-charge against him was that of going with a mob which extorted
-five shillings from the Rev. J. Joliffe at Barton Stacey. He
-admitted that he had accompanied the mob, partly because
-the labourers had urged him to do so, partly because he hoped
-that Mr. Joliffe, being accustomed to public speaking, would
-be able to persuade the labourers to disperse before any harm
-was done. There was no evidence to show that he had anything
-to do with the demand for money. He was found guilty
-and sentenced to transportation for life. When asked what
-he had to say for himself, he replied, ‘If the learned Counsel,
-who has so painted my conduct to you, was present at that place
-and wore a smock frock instead of a gown, and a straw hat
-instead of a wig, he would now be standing in this dock instead
-of being seated where he is.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Six men were reserved for execution, and told that they must
-expect no mercy on this side of the grave: Cooper, the leader
-in the Fordingbridge riots; Holdaway, who had headed the
-attack on Headley Workhouse; Gilmore, who had entered the
-justices’ room in Andover ‘in rather a violent manner’ and
-parleyed with the justices, and afterwards, in spite of their
-remonstrances, been a ringleader in the destruction of a foundry
-in the parish of Upper Clatford; Eldridge, who had taken part
-in the Fordingbridge riot and also ‘invaded the sanctuary’ of
-Mr. Eyre Coote’s home; James Aunalls, a lad of nineteen, who
-had extorted money at night with threats of a fire, from a person<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>
-whom he bade look over the hills, where a fire was subsequently
-seen, and Henry Cook. Cook was a ploughboy of nineteen,
-who could neither read nor write. For most of his life, since
-the age of ten, he had been a farm hand. For six months
-before the riots he had been employed at sawing, at 10s. a week,
-but at the time of the rising he was out of work. After the riots
-he got work as a ploughboy at about 5s. a week till his arrest.
-Like the other lads of the neighbourhood he had gone round
-with a mob, and he was found guilty, with Joseph Mason, of
-extorting money from William Dowden. For this he might
-have got off with transportation for life, but another charge
-was preferred against him. Mr. William Bingham Baring, J.P.,
-tried, with the help of some of his servants, to quell a riot at
-Northingdon Down Farm. Silcock, who seemed the leader of
-the rioters, declared that they would break every machine.
-Bingham Baring made Silcock repeat these words several times
-and then seized him. Cook then aimed a blow at Bingham
-Baring with a sledge-hammer and struck his hat. So far there
-was no dispute as to what had happened. One servant of
-the Barings gave evidence to the effect that he had saved his
-master’s life by preventing Cook from striking again; another
-afterwards put in a sworn deposition to the effect that Cook
-never attempted to strike a second blow. All witnesses
-agreed that Bingham Baring’s hat had suffered severely:
-some of them said that he himself had been felled to the ground.
-Whatever his injuries may have been, he was seen out a few
-hours later, apparently in perfect health; next day he was
-walking the streets of Winchester; two days later he was
-presented at Court, and within a week he was strong enough to
-administer a sharp blow himself with his stick to a handcuffed
-and unconvicted prisoner, a display of zeal for which he had to
-pay £50. Cook did not put up any defence. He was sentenced
-to death.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was felt that this victim to justice was in
-some respects ill chosen, for reasons for severity were soon
-invented. He was a heavy, stolid, unattractive boy, and his
-appearance was taken to indicate a brutal and vicious disposition.
-Stories of his cruelties to animals were spread abroad.
-‘The fate of Henry Cook,’ said the <i>Times</i> correspondent
-(3rd January 1831), ‘excites no commiseration. From everything
-I have heard of him, justice has seldom met with a more
-appropriate sacrifice. He shed some tears shortly after hearing
-his doom, but has since relapsed into a brutal insensibility to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-his fate.’ His age was raised to thirty, his wages to 30s. a
-week. Denman described him in the House of Commons, after
-his execution, as a carpenter earning 30s. a week, who had
-struck down one of the family of his benefactor, and had only
-been prevented from killing his victim by the interposition of
-a more faithful individual. This is the epitaph written on
-this obscure ploughboy of nineteen by the upper classes.
-His own fellows, who probably knew him at least as well as
-a Denman or a Baring, regarded his punishment as murder.
-Cobbett tells us that the labourers of Micheldever subscribed
-their pennies to get Denman’s misstatements about Cook
-taken out of the newspapers. When his body was brought
-home after execution, the whole parish went out to meet it,
-and he was buried in Micheldever churchyard in solemn silence.</p>
-
-<p>Bingham Baring himself, as has been mentioned, happened
-to offend against the law by an act of violence at this time.
-He was not like Cook, a starving boy, but the son of a man
-who was reputed to have made seven millions of money, and
-was called by Erskine the first merchant in Europe. He did
-not strike his victim in a riot, but in cold blood. His victim
-could not defend himself, for he was handcuffed, being taken to
-prison on a charge on which he was subsequently acquitted.
-The man struck was a Mr. Deacle, a small farmer who had had
-his own threshing machine broken, and was afterwards arrested
-with his wife, by Bingham Baring and a posse of magistrates,
-on suspicion of encouraging the rioters. Deacle’s story was
-that Baring and the other magistrates concerned in the arrest
-treated his wife with great insolence in the cart in which they
-drove the Deacles to prison, and that Bingham Baring further
-struck him with a stick. For this Deacle got £50 damages
-in an action he brought against Baring. ‘This verdict,’ said
-the <i>Morning Herald</i>, ‘seemed to excite the greatest astonishment;
-for most of the Bar and almost every one in Court said,
-if on the jury, they would have given at least £5000 for so gross
-and wanton an insult and unfeeling conduct towards those who
-had not offered the least resistance; the defendants not addressing
-the slightest evidence in palliation or attempting to
-justify it.’ The judge, in summing up, ‘could not help
-remarking that the handcuffing was, to say the least of it, a
-very harsh proceeding towards a lady and gentleman who had
-been perfectly civil and quiet.’ Meanwhile the case of the
-magistrates against the Deacles had collapsed in the most
-inglorious manner. Though they had handcuffed these two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-unresisting people, they had thought it wiser not to proceed
-against them. Deacle, however, insisted on being tried, and
-by threatening the magistrates with an action, he obliged them
-to prosecute. He was tried at the Assizes, and, as we have
-seen, the trial came to an abrupt conclusion under circumstances
-that threw the gravest suspicion on the methods of the
-authorities.<a id="FNanchor_476" href="#Footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a> Meanwhile the treatment these two persons had
-received (and we can imagine from their story how innocent
-poor people, without friends or position, were handled) had
-excited great indignation, and the newspapers were full of it.
-There were petitions sent up to Parliament for a Committee of
-Inquiry. Now the class to which Cook was unlucky enough to
-belong had never sent a single member to Parliament, but the
-Baring family had five Members in the House of Commons at
-this very moment, one of whom had taken part with Bingham
-Baring in the violent arrest of the Deacles. The five, moreover,
-were very happily distributed, one of them being Junior Lord
-of the Treasury in Grey’s Government and husband of Grey’s
-niece, and another an important member of the Opposition
-and afterwards Chancellor of the Exchequer under Peel.
-The Barings therefore were in less danger of misrepresentation
-or misunderstanding; the motion for a Committee was rejected
-by a great majority on the advice of Althorp and Peel; the
-leader of the House of Commons came forward to testify that
-the Barings were friends of his, and the discussion ended in a
-chorus of praise for the family that had been judged so harshly
-outside the walls of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>When the Special Commission had finished its labours at
-Winchester, 101 prisoners had been capitally convicted; of
-these 6 were left for execution. The remaining 95 were, with
-few exceptions, transported for life. Of the other prisoners
-tried, 36 were sentenced to transportation for various periods,
-65 were imprisoned with hard labour, and 67 were acquitted.
-Not a single life had been taken by the rioters, not a single
-person wounded. Yet the riots in this county alone were
-punished by more than a hundred capital convictions, or
-almost double the number that followed the devilish doings of
-Lord George Gordon’s mob. The spirit in which Denman
-regarded the proceedings is illustrated by his speech in the
-House of Commons on the amnesty debate: ‘No fewer than
-a hundred persons were capitally convicted at Winchester, of
-offences for every one of which their lives might have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-justly taken, and ought to have been taken, if examples to such
-an extent had been necessary.’<a id="FNanchor_477" href="#Footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>These sentences came like a thunderclap on the people of
-Winchester, and all classes, except the magistrates, joined in
-petitions to the Government for mercy. The <i>Times</i> correspondent
-wrote as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="i4">
-
-‘<span class="smcap">Winchester</span>, Friday Morning, <i>7th Jan.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>‘The scenes of distress in and about the jail are most terrible.
-The number of men who are to be torn from their homes and
-connexions is so great that there is scarcely a hamlet in the
-county into which anguish and tribulation have not entered.
-Wives, sisters, mothers, children, beset the gates daily, and the
-governor of the jail informs me that the scenes he is obliged to
-witness at the time of locking up the prison are truly heart-breaking.</p>
-
-<p>‘You will have heard before this of the petitions which have
-been presented to the Home Office from Gosport, Portsmouth,
-Romsey, Whitchurch, and Basingstoke, praying for an extension
-of mercy to all the men who now lie under sentence of death.
-A similar petition has been got up in this city. It is signed by
-the clergy of the Low Church, some of the bankers, and every
-tradesman in the town without exception. Application was made
-to the clergy of the Cathedral for their signatures, but they
-refused to give them, except conditionally, upon reasons which
-I cannot comprehend. They told the petitioners, as I am
-informed, that they would not sign any such petition unless the
-grand jury and the magistracy of the county previously affixed
-their names to it. Now such an answer, as it appears to me, is an
-admission on their part that no mischief would ensue from not
-carrying into effect the dreadful sentence of the law; for I cannot
-conceive that if they were of opinion that mischief would
-ensue from it, they would sign the petition, even though it were
-recommended by all the talent and respectability of the Court of
-Quarter Sessions. I can understand the principles on which
-that man acts, who asserts and laments the necessity of vindicating
-the majesty of the law by the sacrifice of human life; but
-I cannot understand the reasons of those who, admitting that
-there is no necessity for the sword of justice to strike the
-offender, decline to call upon the executive government to stay
-its arm, and make their application for its mercy dependent on
-the judgment, or it may be the caprice, of an influential aristocracy.
-Surely, of all classes of society, the clergy is that which
-ought not to be backward in the remission of offences. They are
-daily preaching mercy to their flocks, and it wears but an ill grace
-when they are seen refusing their consent to a practical application<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-of their own doctrines. Whatever my own opinion may be,
-as a faithful recorder of the opinions of those around me, I am
-bound to inform you, that, except among the magistracy of the
-county, there is a general, I had almost said a universal, opinion
-among all ranks of society, that no good will be effected by
-sacrificing human life.’<a id="FNanchor_478" href="#Footnote_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This outburst of public opinion saved the lives of four of the
-six men who had been left for execution. The two who were
-hung were Cooper and Cook. But the Government and the
-judges were determined that the lessons of civilisation should
-not be wanting in impressiveness or in dignity. They compelled
-all the prisoners who had been condemned by the
-Commission to witness the last agonies of the two men whom
-public opinion had been unable to rescue. The account given
-in the <i>Times</i> of 17th January shows that this piece of refined
-and spectacular discipline was not thrown away, and that the
-wretched comrades of the men who were hanged suffered as
-acutely as Denman or Alderson themselves could have desired.
-‘At this moment I cast my eyes down into the felons’ yard,
-and saw many of the convicts weeping bitterly, some burying
-their faces in their smock frocks, others wringing their hands
-convulsively, and others leaning for support against the wall
-of the yard and unable to cast their eyes upwards.’ This
-was the last vision of English justice that each labourer
-carried to his distant and dreaded servitude, a scene that
-would never fade from his mind. There was much that
-England had not taught him. She had not taught him that
-the rich owed a duty to the poor, that society owed any
-shelter to the freedom or the property of the weak, that the
-mere labourer had a share in the State, or a right to be considered
-in its laws, or that it mattered to his rulers in what
-wretchedness he lived or in what wretchedness he died. But
-one lesson she had taught him with such savage power that
-his simple memory would not forget it, and if ever in an
-exile’s gilding dreams he thought with longing of his boyhood’s
-famine-shadowed home, that inexorable dawn would
-break again before his shrinking eyes and he would thank
-God for the wide wastes of the illimitable sea.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The Special Commission for Wiltshire opened at Salisbury<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-on 2nd January 1831. The judges were the same as those
-at Winchester; the other commissioners were Lord Radnor,
-the friend of Cobbett, and Mr. T. G. B. Estcourt. Lord
-Lansdowne, the Lord-Lieutenant, sat on the bench. The
-foreman of the Grand Jury was Mr. John Benett, who has
-already figured in these pages as the proprietor whose property
-was destroyed and the magistrate who committed the culprits.
-There were three hundred prisoners awaiting trial.</p>
-
-<p>The method in which the prosecutions were conducted in
-Wiltshire, though it did not differ from the procedure followed
-in Hampshire and elsewhere, provoked some criticism from the
-lawyers. The prosecutions were all managed by the county
-authorities. The clerks of the committing magistrates in the
-different districts first took the depositions, and then got up
-all the prosecutions in their capacity of solicitors to the same
-magistrates prosecuting as county authorities, to the exclusion
-of the solicitors of the individual prosecutors. Further, all the
-prosecutions were managed for the county by a single barrister,
-who assisted the Attorney-General and left no opening for other
-members of the Bar. The counsel for one of the prisoners
-objected to this method, not only on the ground of its unfairness
-to the legal profession, but on the wider ground of the interests
-of justice. For it was inconsistent with the impartiality required
-from magistrates who committed prisoners, that they
-should go on to mix themselves up with the management of the
-prosecution; in many cases these magistrates served again as
-grand jurors in the proceedings against the prisoners. Such
-procedure, he argued ‘was calculated to throw at least a strong
-suspicion on the fair administration of justice.’ These protests,
-however, were silenced by the judges, and though the Attorney-General
-announced that he was willing that the counsel for
-the magistrates should retire, no change was made in the
-arrangements.</p>
-
-<p>The Salisbury prisoners were under a further disadvantage
-peculiar, it is to be hoped, to that gaol. They were forbidden
-to see their attorney except in the presence of the gaoler or
-his servants. This rule seems to have been construed by the
-authorities in a manner that simplified considerably the task
-of the prosecution. The facts of the case of James Lush, condemned
-to death on two charges of extorting money in a mob,
-were made public by Hunt in a letter to the <i>Times</i>, 22nd January
-1831. Lush was a very poor man, but when first committed
-he sent for an attorney and made a full confession. ‘This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-confession, so confidentially made to his attorney (by an
-extraordinary rule of the gaol) the legal adviser was compelled
-to submit to the inspection of the gaoler, which paper he kept
-in his hands for several days and in all human probability,
-this document, or a copy of it, was either submitted to the
-inspection of the judge, or placed in the hands of the prosecutor,
-the Crown Solicitor, or the Attorney-General: when this man
-was called up for trial, such was his extreme poverty, that
-he could not raise a guinea to fee counsel, and he was left
-destitute, without legal advice or assistance.’ The Attorney-General
-could only answer this charge in the House of Commons
-by declaring that he had no recollection of any such circumstance
-himself, and that no gentleman of the Bar would avail
-himself of information obtained in such a manner. Lush could
-not distinguish these niceties of honour, or understand why his
-confession should be examined and kept by the gaoler unless it
-was to be used against him, and it is not surprising that he
-thought himself betrayed. It is only fair to Lord Melbourne
-to add that when Hunt drew his attention to this iniquitous
-rule in Salisbury Gaol he had it abolished.</p>
-
-<p>The cases tried were very similar to those at Winchester;
-batch after batch of boys and men in the prime of life were
-brought up to the dock for a brief trial and sentence of exile.
-Such was the haste that in one case at least the prisoners
-appeared with the handcuffs still on their wrists, a circumstance
-which elicited a rebuke from the judge, and an excuse of overwork
-from the gaoler. Amongst the first cases eight prisoners,
-varying in age from seventeen to thirty, were sentenced to
-transportation for life for doing £500 worth of damage at
-Brasher’s cloth mill at Wilton. Thirteen men were transported
-for seven years and one for fourteen years for breaking threshing
-machines on the day of the Pyt House affray. Mr. John Benett
-was satisfied with this tale of victims in addition to the man
-killed by the yeomanry, and refrained from prosecuting for
-the stones thrown at him. For this he took great credit in the
-House of Commons, and no doubt it was open to him to
-imitate Bingham Baring’s friends, and to talk of that kind of
-outrage as ‘murder.’</p>
-
-<p>At Salisbury, as at Winchester, evidence about distress
-and wages was ruled out by the judges whenever possible;
-thus when twelve men, nine of whom were afterwards transported
-for seven years, were being tried for breaking a threshing
-machine on the farm of a man named Ambrose Patience, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-cross-examination of Patience, which aimed at eliciting facts
-about wages and distress, was stopped by the court on the
-ground that in a case of this sort such evidence was scarcely
-regular; it was intimated, however, that the court would hear
-representations of this kind later. But some light was thrown
-incidentally in the course of the trials on the circumstances of
-the prisoners. Thus one of the Pyt House prisoners urged in
-his defence: ‘My Lord, I found work very bad in my own
-parish for the last three years, and having a wife and three
-children to support I was glad to get work wherever I could
-get it. I had some work at a place four miles from my house.’
-He then described how on his way to work he was met by the
-mob and forced to join them. ‘It is a hard case with me, my
-Lord; I was glad to get work though I could earn only seven
-shillings per week, and it cost me a shilling a week for iron, so
-that I had only six shillings a week to support five persons.’
-Another prisoner, Mould of Hatch, was stated by Lord
-Arundel to be very poor: he had a wife and six children,
-of whom one or two had died of typhus since his committal.
-They had nothing to live on but what they got at Lord
-Arundel’s house. The benevolent Lord Arundel, or the parish,
-must have supported the survivors indefinitely, for Mould
-was exiled for seven years. Barett again, another of these
-prisoners, was supporting himself, a wife, and a child on 5s.
-a week. The usual rate of wages in Wiltshire was 7s. a week.</p>
-
-<p>Evidence about the instigation of the labourers by those in
-good circumstances was also ruled out, and much that would
-be interesting in the history of the riots has thus perished.
-When six men were being prosecuted for breaking a threshing
-machine on the farm of Mr. Judd at Newton Toney, counsel
-for the defence started a cross-examination of the prosecutor
-designed to show that certain landowners in the parish had
-instigated the labourers to the outrages, but he was stopped
-by Mr. Justice Alderson, who declared that such an inquiry
-was not material to the issue, which was the guilt or innocence
-of the prisoners. If the prisoners were found guilty these
-circumstances would be laid before the court in mitigation of
-punishment. However strong the mitigating circumstances
-in this case were, the punishment was certainly not mitigated,
-for all six men were sentenced to the maximum penalty of
-seven years’ transportation. In a similar case in Whiteparish
-it came out in the evidence that Squire Bristowe had sent down
-buckets of strong beer, and that Squire Wynne, who was staying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-with Squire Bristowe, was present at the breaking of the machine.
-In the affair at Ambrose Patience’s farm already mentioned,
-the defence of the prisoners was that Farmer Parham had
-offered them half a hogshead of cider if they would come and
-break his machine, whilst in another case three men were
-acquitted because one of the witnesses for the prosecution,
-a young brother of the farmer whose property had been
-destroyed, unexpectedly disclosed the fact that his brother
-had said to the mob: ‘Act like men, go and break the machine,
-but don’t go up to the house.’</p>
-
-<p>The proportion of charges of extorting money was smaller
-at Salisbury than at Winchester: most of the indictments
-were for breaking machines only. In some instances the
-prosecution dropped the charge of robbery, thinking transportation
-for seven years a sufficient punishment for the
-offence. Three brothers were sentenced to death for taking
-half a crown: nobody received this sentence for a few coppers.
-In this case the three brothers, William, Thomas, and John
-Legg, aged twenty-eight, twenty-one, and eighteen, had gone at
-midnight to the kitchen door of the house of Mrs. Montgomery,
-wife of a J.P., and asked the manservant for money or beer.
-The man gave them half a crown, and they thanked him
-civilly and went away. A curious light is thrown on the
-relations between robbers and the robbed in the trial of six
-men for machine-breaking at West Grimstead: the mob of
-fifty persons asked the farmer for a sovereign, he promised
-to pay it next day, whereupon one of the mob, a man named
-Light who was his tenant, offered to pay the sovereign himself
-and to deduct it from the rent.</p>
-
-<p>At Salisbury, as at Winchester, the fate of the victims
-depended largely on the character given to the prisoners by
-the local gentry. This was especially the case towards the
-end when justice began to tire, and a good many charges were
-dropped. Thus Charles Bourton was only imprisoned for
-three months for breaking a threshing machine, whilst John
-Perry was transported for seven years for the same offence.
-But then John Perry had been convicted seven or eight times
-for poaching.</p>
-
-<p>In Wiltshire, as in Hampshire, the judges were particularly
-severe to those prisoners who were not agricultural labourers.
-A striking instance is worth quoting, not only as illustrating
-this special severity, but also because it shows that the judges
-when inflicting the maximum penalty of seven years’ transportation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>
-for machine-breaking were well aware that it was
-tantamount to exile for life. Thomas Porter, aged eighteen,
-a shepherd, Henry Dicketts, aged nineteen, a bricklayer’s
-labourer, Aaron Shepherd, aged forty (occupation not stated),
-James Stevens, aged twenty-five, an agricultural labourer,
-and George Burbage, aged twenty-four, also an agricultural
-labourer, were found guilty of machine-breaking at Mr. Blake’s
-at Idmiston. Stevens and Burbage escaped with two years’
-and one year’s imprisonment with hard labour, respectively,
-and the following homily from Mr. Justice Alderson to think
-over in prison: ‘You are both thrashers and you might in
-the perversion of your understanding think that these machines
-are detrimental to you. Be assured that your labour cannot
-ultimately be hurt by the employment of these machines.
-If they are profitable to the farmer, they will also be profitable
-ultimately to the labourer, though they may for a time injure
-him. If they are not profitable to the farmer he will soon
-cease to employ them.’ The shepherd boy of eighteen, the
-bricklayer’s labourer of nineteen, and their companion of forty
-were reserved for a heavier penalty: ‘As to you, Aaron
-Shepherd, I can give you no hope of remaining in this country.
-You Thomas Porter, are a shepherd, and you Henry Dicketts,
-are a bricklayer’s labourer. You have nothing to do with
-threshing machines. They do not interfere with your labour,
-and you could not, even in the darkness of your ignorance,
-suppose that their destruction would do you any good....
-I hope that your fate will be a warning to others. You will
-leave the country, all of you: you will see your friends and
-relations no more: for though you will be transported for
-seven years only, it is not likely that at the expiration of that
-term you will find yourselves in a situation to return. You
-will be in a distant land at the expiration of your sentence.
-The land which you have disgraced will see you no more:
-the friends with whom you are connected will be parted from
-you for ever in this world.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Justice Alderson’s methods received a good deal of
-attention in one of the Salisbury trials, known as the Looker
-case. Isaac Looker, a well-to-do farmer, was indicted for
-sending a threatening letter to John Rowland: ‘Mr. Rowland,
-Haxford Farm, Hif you goes to sware against or a man in
-prisson, you have here farm burnt down to ground, and thy
-bluddy head chopt off.’ Some evidence was produced to
-show that Isaac Looker had asserted in conversation that it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-was the magistrates and the soldiers, and not the mobs, who
-were the real breakers of the peace. But this did not amount
-to absolute proof that he had written the letter: to establish
-this conclusion the prosecution relied on the evidence of four
-witnesses; the first had quarrelled with Looker, and had not
-seen his writing for four or five years; the second denied that
-there had been any quarrel, but had not been in the habit of
-speaking to the prisoner for five or six years, or seen his
-writing during that time; the third had not had ‘much of a
-quarrel’ with him, but had not seen his writing since 1824;
-the fourth was the special constable who found in Looker’s
-bureau, which was unlocked and stood in the kitchen where
-the family sat, a blank piece of paper that fitted on to the
-piece on which the letter was written. More witnesses were
-called for the defence than for the prosecution, and they
-included the vestry clerk of Wimborne, an ex-schoolmaster;
-all of these witnesses had known Looker’s writing recently,
-and all of them swore that the threatening letter was not in
-his writing. Mr. Justice Alderson summed up against the
-prisoner, the jury returned a verdict of guilty, and sentence
-of transportation for life was passed upon Looker in spite
-of his vehement protestations of innocence. ‘I cannot attend
-to these asseverations,’ said Mr. Justice Alderson, ‘for we
-all know that a man who can be guilty of such an offence
-as that of which you have been convicted, will not hesitate to
-deny it as you now do. I would rather trust to such evidence
-as has been given in your case, than to the most solemn declarations
-even on the scaffold.’</p>
-
-<p>The learned judge and the jury then retired for refreshment,
-when a curious development took place. Edward,
-son of Isaac Looker, aged eighteen years, came forward and
-declared that he had written the letter in question and other
-letters as well. He wrote a copy from memory, and the handwriting
-was precisely similar. He explained that he had
-written the letters without his father’s knowledge and without
-a thought of the consequences, in order to help two cousins
-who were in gaol for machine-breaking. He had heard people
-say that ‘it would get my cousins off if threatening letters
-were written.’ He had let his father know in prison that he
-had written the letters, and had also told his father’s solicitor.
-Edward Looker was subsequently tried and sentenced to seven
-years’ transportation: Isaac’s case was submitted to the Home
-Secretary for pardon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span></p>
-
-<p>Although, as we have said, the Government, or its representatives,
-grew rather more lenient towards the end of the
-proceedings at Salisbury, it was evidently thought essential
-to produce some crime deserving actual death. The
-culprit in this case was Peter Withers, a young man of twenty-three,
-married and with five children. His character till the
-time of the riots was exemplary. He was committed on a
-charge of riot, and briefed a lawyer to defend him for this
-misdemeanour. Just before the trial came on the charge
-was changed, apparently by the Attorney-General, to the
-capital charge of assaulting Oliver Calley Codrington with a
-hammer. His counsel was of course unprepared to defend
-him on this charge, and, as he explained afterwards, ‘it was
-only by the humane kindness of the Attorney-General who
-allowed him to look at his brief that he was aware of all the
-facts to be alleged against his client.’ Withers himself seemed
-equally unprepared; when asked for his defence he said that
-he would leave it to his counsel, as of course he had arranged
-to do when the charge was one of misdemeanour only.</p>
-
-<p>The incident occurred in an affray at Rockley near
-Marlborough. Mr. Baskerville, J.P., rode up with some
-special constables to a mob of forty or fifty men, Withers
-amongst them, and bade them go home. They refused,
-declaring that they did not care a damn for the magistrates.
-Mr. Baskerville ordered Mr. Codrington, who was a special
-constable, to arrest Withers. A general mêlée ensued, blows
-were given and received, and Codrington was hit by a hammer
-thrown by Withers. Withers’ own version of the affair was
-that Codrington attacked him without provocation in a
-ferocious manner with a hunting whip, loaded with iron at
-the end. Baskerville also struck him. He aimed his hammer
-at Codrington and it missed. Codrington’s horse then crushed
-him against the wall, and he threw his hammer a second time
-with better aim. There was nothing in the evidence of the
-prosecution to discredit this version, and both Baskerville and
-Codrington admitted that they might have struck him. Codrington’s
-injuries were apparently more serious than Bingham
-Baring’s; it was stated that he had been confined to bed for
-two or three days, and to the house from Tuesday to Saturday,
-and that he had a scar of one and a half inches on the right
-side of his nose. No surgeon, however, appeared as a witness,
-and the hammer was not produced in court. Withers was
-found guilty and reserved, together with Lush, for execution.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>The special correspondent of the <i>Times</i> who had been present
-at Winchester made an interesting comparison between the
-Hampshire and the Wiltshire labourers on trial (8th January
-1831). The Wiltshire labourers he described as more athletic
-in appearance and more hardy in manner. ‘The prisoners
-here turn to the witnesses against them with a bold and
-confident air: cross-examine them, and contradict their
-answers, with a confidence and a want of common courtesy,
-in terms of which comparatively few instances occurred in the
-neighbouring county.’ In this behaviour the correspondent
-detected the signs of a very low state of moral intelligence.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the time came for the last scene in court there was no
-trace of the bold demeanour which had impressed the <i>Times</i>
-correspondent during the conduct of the trials. For the people
-of Wiltshire, like the people of Hampshire, were stunned by
-the crash and ruin of this catastrophic vengeance. The two
-men sentenced to death were reprieved, but one hundred and
-fifty-four men and boys were sentenced to transportation,
-thirty-three of them for life, the rest for seven or fourteen years,
-with no prospect of ever returning to their homes. And
-Alderson and his brother judges in so punishing this wild fling
-of folly, or hope, or despair, were not passing sentence only on
-the men and boys before them: they were pronouncing a doom
-not less terrible on wives and mothers and children and babes
-in arms in every village on the Wiltshire Downs. One man
-begged to be allowed to take his child, eight months old, into
-exile, for its mother had died in childbirth, and it would be left
-without kith or kin. He was told by the judge that he should
-have remembered this earlier. The sentence of final separation
-on all these families and homes was received with a frenzy of
-consternation and grief, and the judges themselves were affected
-by the spectacle of these broken creatures in the dock and
-round the court, abandoned to the unchecked paroxysms of
-despair.<a id="FNanchor_479" href="#Footnote_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a> ‘Such a total prostration of the mental faculties
-by fear,’ wrote the <i>Times</i> correspondent, ‘and such a terrible
-exhibition of anguish and despair, I never before witnessed in
-a Court of Justice.’ ‘Immediately on the conclusion of this
-sentence a number of women, who were seated in court behind
-the prisoners, set up a dreadful shriek of lamentation. Some
-of them rushed forward to shake hands with the prisoners,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-and more than one voice was heard to exclaim, “Farewell, I
-shall never see you more.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘The whole proceedings of this day in court were of the most
-afflicting and distressing nature. But the laceration of the
-feelings did not end with the proceedings in court. The car
-for the removal of the prisoners was at the back entrance to
-the court-house and was surrounded by a crowd of mothers,
-wives, sisters and children, anxiously waiting for a glance of
-their condemned relatives. The weeping and wailing of the
-different parties, as they pressed the hands of the convicts as
-they stepped into the car, was truly heartrending. We never
-saw so distressing a spectacle before, and trust that the restored
-tranquillity of the country will prevent us from ever seeing
-anything like it again.’</p>
-
-<p>The historian may regret that these men do not pass out
-before him in a cold and splendid defiance. Their blind blow
-had been struck and it had been answered; they had dreamt
-that their lot might be made less intolerable, and the governing
-class had crushed that daring fancy for ever with banishment
-and the breaking of their homes; it only remained for them to
-accept their fate with a look of stone upon their faces and a
-curse of fire in their hearts. So had Muir and Palmer and
-many a political prisoner, victims of the tyrannies of Pitt and
-Dundas, of Castlereagh and Sidmouth, gone to their barbarous
-doom. So had the Lantenacs and the Gauvains alike gone to
-the guillotine. History likes to match such calm and unshaken
-bearing against the distempered justice of power. Here she
-is cheated of her spectacle. Outwardly it might seem a worse
-fate for men of education to be flung to the hulks with the
-coarsest of felons: for men whose lives had been comfortable
-to be thrust into the dirt and disorder of prisons. But political
-prisoners are martyrs, and martyrs are not the stuff for pity.
-However bitter their sufferings, they do not suffer alone: they
-are sustained by a Herculean comradeship of hopes and of
-ideas. The darkest cage is lighted by a ray from Paradise to
-men or women who believe that the night of their sufferings
-will bring a dawn less cold and sombre to mankind than the
-cold and sombre dawn of yesterday. But what ideas befriended
-the ploughboy or the shepherd torn from his rude home?
-What vision had he of a nobler future for humanity? To
-what dawn did he leave his wife or his mother, his child, his
-home, his friends, or his trampled race? What robe of dream
-and hope and fancy was thrown over his exile or their hunger,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span>
-his poignant hour of separation, or their ceaseless ache of
-poverty and cold</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">‘to comfort the human want</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From the bosom of magical skies’?</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The three judges who had restored respect for law and order
-in Wiltshire and Hampshire next proceeded to Dorchester,
-where a Special Commission to try the Dorsetshire rioters was
-opened on 11th January. The rising had been less serious in
-Dorset than in the two other counties, and there were only
-some fifty prisoners awaiting trial on charges of machine-breaking,
-extorting money and riot. The Government took
-no part in the prosecutions; for, as it was explained in a letter
-to Denman, ‘the state of things is quite altered; great effect
-has been produced: the law has been clearly explained, and
-prosecutions go on without the least difficulty.’<a id="FNanchor_480" href="#Footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a> Baron
-Vaughan and Mr. Justice Parke had given the charges at
-Winchester and Salisbury: it was now the turn of Mr. Justice
-Alderson, and in his opening survey of the social conditions of
-the time he covered a wide field. To the usual dissertation on
-the economics of machinery he added a special homily on the
-duties incumbent on the gentry, who were bidden to discourage
-and discountenance, and if necessary to prosecute, the dangerous
-publications that were doing such harm in rural districts.
-But their duties did not end here, and they were urged to go
-home and to educate their poorer neighbours and to improve
-their conditions. The improvement to be aimed at, however,
-was not material but moral. ‘Poverty,’ said Mr. Justice
-Alderson, ‘is indeed, I fear, inseparable from the state of the
-human race, but poverty itself and the misery attendant on it,
-would no doubt be greatly mitigated if a spirit of prudence were
-more generally diffused among the people, and if they understood
-more fully and practised better their civil, moral and
-religious duties.’</p>
-
-<p>The Dorsetshire labourers had unfortunately arrived at the
-precipitate conclusion that a spirit of prudence would not
-transform 7s. a week into a reasonable livelihood. They
-used no violence beyond breaking up the threshing machines.
-‘We don’t intend to hurt the farmer,’ they told the owner of
-one machine, ‘but we are determined that the land shall come
-down, and the tithes, and we will have more wages.’ When<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>
-money was taken it seems to have been demanded and received
-in an amicable spirit. The sums asked for were often
-very small. Sentence of death was pronounced on two men,
-Joseph Sheppard and George Legg, for taking 2s. from Farmer
-Christopher Morey at Buckland Newton. The mob asked for
-money, and the farmer offered them 1s.: they replied that they
-wanted 1s. 6d., and the farmer gave them 2s. Sheppard’s
-character was very good, and it came out that he and the
-prosecutor had had a dispute about money some years before.
-He was transported, but not for life. Legg was declared by
-the prosecutor to have been ‘saucy and impudent,’ and to
-have ‘talked rough and bobbish.’ His character, however,
-was stated by many witnesses, including the clergyman, to be
-exemplary. He had five children whom he supported without
-parish help on 7s. a week: a cottage was given him but no fuel.
-Baron Vaughan was so much impressed by this evidence that
-he declared that he had never heard better testimony to
-character, and that he would recommend a less severe penalty
-than transportation. But Legg showed a lamentable want
-of discretion, for he interrupted the judge with these words:
-‘I would rather that your Lordship would put twenty-one
-years’ transportation upon me than be placed in the condition
-of the prosecutor. I never said a word to him, that I
-declare.’ Baron Vaughan sardonically remarked that he had
-not benefited himself by this observation.</p>
-
-<p>The tendency to give less severe punishment, noticed in the
-closing trials at Salisbury, was more marked at Dorchester.
-Nine men were let off on recognisances and ten were not proceeded
-against: in the case of six of these ten the prosecutor,
-one Robert Bullen, who had been robbed of 4s. and 2s. 6d.,
-refused to come forward. But enough sharp sentences were
-given to keep the labourers in submission for the future. One
-man was transported for life and eleven for seven years: fifteen
-were sentenced to various terms of imprisonment; seven were
-acquitted. It was not surprising that the special correspondent
-of the <i>Times</i> complained that such meagre results scarcely
-justified the pomp and expense of a Special Commission. In
-the neighbouring county of Gloucester, where the country
-gentlemen carried out the work of retribution without help
-from headquarters, seven men were transported for fourteen
-years, twenty for seven years, and twenty-five were sentenced to
-terms of imprisonment ranging from six months to three years.
-All of these sentences were for breaking threshing machines.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span></p>
-
-<p>The disturbances in Berks and Bucks had been considered
-serious enough to demand a Special Commission, and Sir James
-Alan Park, Sir William Bolland and Sir John Patteson were the
-judges appointed. The first of the two Berkshire Commissions
-opened at Reading on 27th December. The Earl of Abingdon,
-Lord-Lieutenant of the County, and Mr. Charles Dundas were
-the two local commissioners. Mr. Dundas has figured already
-in these pages as chairman of the meeting at Speenhamland.
-One hundred and thirty-eight prisoners were awaiting trial at
-Reading: they were most of them young, only eighteen being
-forty or over. The rest, with few exceptions, varied from
-seventeen to thirty-five in age, and must have lived all their
-lives under the Speenhamland system.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to compare the accounts of the Special
-Commissions in Berks and Bucks with those in Hampshire
-and Wiltshire without noticing a difference in the treatment
-of the rioters. The risings had been almost simultaneous,
-the offences were of the same character, and the Commissions
-sat at the same time. The difference was apparent from the
-first, and on 1st January the <i>Times</i> published a leading article
-pleading for uniformity, and pointing out that the Berkshire
-Commission was ‘a merciful contrast’ to that at Winchester.
-The cause is probably to be found in the dispositions and
-characters of the authorities responsible in the two cases. The
-country gentlemen of Berkshire, represented by a man like
-Mr. Dundas, were more humane than the country gentlemen
-of Hampshire, represented by men like the Duke of Wellington
-and the Barings; Mr. Gurney, the public prosecutor at Reading,
-was more lenient than Sir Thomas Denman, and the
-Reading judges were more kindly and considerate than the
-judges at Winchester. Further, there had been in Berkshire
-little of the wild panic that swept over the country houses in
-Hampshire and Wiltshire. The judges at Reading occasionally
-interjected questions on the prisoners’ behalf, and in many
-cases they did not conceal their satisfaction at an acquittal.
-Further, they had a more delicate sense for the proprieties.
-Contrary to custom, they asked neither the Grand Jury nor the
-magistrates to dinner on the first day, being anxious, we are
-told, to free the administration of justice ‘from the slightest
-appearance of partiality in the eyes of the lower classes.’ The
-Lord Chancellor and Lord Melbourne had been consulted and
-had approved.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that Mr. Justice Park’s theories of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span>
-life and social relationships differed from those of his brothers
-at Winchester. In his address to the Grand Jury he repudiated
-with indignation the ‘impudent and base slander ... that
-the upper ranks of society care little for the wants and
-privations of the poor. I deny this positively, upon a very
-extensive means of knowledge upon subjects of this nature.
-But every man can deny it who looks about him and sees the
-vast institutions in every part of the kingdom for the relief
-of the young and the old, the deaf and the lame, the blind,
-the widow, the orphan&mdash;&mdash;and every child of wretchedness
-and woe. There is not a calamity or distress incident to
-humanity, either of body or of mind, that is not humbly
-endeavoured to be mitigated or relieved, by the powerful and
-the affluent, either of high or middling rank, in this our happy
-land, which for its benevolence, charity, and boundless
-humanity, has been the admiration of the world.’ The theory
-that the rich kept the poor in a state of starvation and that
-this was the cause of the disturbances, he declared later to
-be entirely disproved by the conduct of one of the mobs in
-destroying a threshing machine belonging to William Mount,
-Esq., at Wasing, ‘Mr. Mount having given away £100 no
-longer ago than last winter to assist the lower orders during
-that inclement season.’</p>
-
-<p>A feature of the Reading Commission was the difficulty of
-finding jurymen. All farmers were challenged on behalf of
-the prisoners, and matters were at a deadlock until the judges
-ordered the bystanders to be impannelled.</p>
-
-<p>The earlier cases were connected with the riots in Hungerford.
-Property in an iron foundry had been destroyed, and
-fifteen men were found guilty on this capital charge. One
-of the fifteen was William Oakley, who now paid the penalty
-for his £5 and strong language. But when the first cases were
-over, Mr. Gurney began to drop the capital charge, and to
-content himself, as a rule, with convictions for breaking
-threshing machines. One case revealed serious perjury on
-one side or the other. Thomas Goodfellow and Cornelius
-Bennett were charged with breaking a threshing machine at
-Matthew Batten’s farm. The prisoners produced four
-witnesses, two labourers, a woman whose husband was in
-prison for the riots, and John Gaiter, who described himself
-as ‘not quite a master bricklayer,’ to prove that Matthew
-Batten had encouraged the riots. The first three witnesses
-declared that Batten had asked the rioters to come and break<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span>
-his machine in order to serve out his landlord and Mr. Ward,
-and had promised them victuals and £1. Batten and his
-son, on the other hand, swore that these statements were false.
-The prisoners were found guilty, with a recommendation to
-mercy which was disregarded. Goodfellow, who was found
-guilty of breaking other machines as well, was sentenced to
-fourteen, and Cornelius Bennett to seven years’ transportation.
-The judge spoke of their scandalous attempt to blacken the
-character of a respectable farmer: ‘it pleased God however
-that the atrocious attempt had failed.’ It would be interesting
-to know what were the relations between Matthew
-Batten and his landlord.</p>
-
-<p>On the last day of the trials Mr. Gurney announced that
-there would be no more prosecutions for felony, as enough
-had been done in the way of making examples. Some interesting
-cases of riot were tried. The most important riot had
-taken place as early as 19th November, and the hero of the
-proceedings was the Rev. Edward Cove, the venerable Vicar
-of Brimpton, one of the many parson magistrates. A mob
-had assembled in order to demand an increase of wages, and
-it was met by Mr. Cove and his posse of special constables.
-On occasions like this, Mr. Gurney remarked, we become
-sensible of the great advantages of our social order. Mr.
-Cove without more ado read the Riot Act; the mob refused
-to disperse; his special constables thereupon attacked them,
-and a general mêlée followed in which hard blows were given
-and taken. No one attempted to strike Mr. Cove himself,
-but one of his companions received from a rioter, whom he
-identified, a blow rivalling that given to Mr. Bingham Baring,
-which beat the crown of his hat in and drove the rim over his
-eyes: it was followed by other and more serious blows on his
-head and body. The counsel for the defence tried to show
-that it was distress that had caused the rioters to assemble,
-and he quoted a remark of the Chairman of Quarter Sessions
-that the poor were starved almost into insurrection; but all
-evidence about wages was ruled out. The court were deeply
-impressed by this riot, and Mr. Justice Park announced that
-it had alarmed him and his fellow judges more ‘than anything
-that had hitherto transpired in these proceedings.’ ‘Had
-one life been lost,’ he continued, ‘the lives of every individual
-of the mob would have been forfeited, and the law must have
-been carried into effect against those convicted.’ As it was,
-nobody was condemned to death for his share in the affray,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span>
-though the more violent, such as George Williams, alias
-‘Staffordshire Jack,’ a ‘desperate character,’ received heavier
-penalties for machine-breaking in consequence.</p>
-
-<p>Three men were reserved for execution: William Oakley,
-who was told that as a carpenter he had no business to mix
-himself up in these transactions; Alfred Darling, a blacksmith
-by trade, who had been found guilty on several charges
-of demanding money; and Winterbourne, who had taken part
-in the Hungerford affair in the magistrates’ room, and had
-also acted as leader in some cases when a mob asked for money.
-In one instance the mob had been content with £1 instead
-of the £2 for which it had asked for breaking a threshing
-machine, Winterbourne remarking, ‘we will take half price
-because he has stood like a man.’</p>
-
-<p>Public opinion in Berkshire was horrified at the prospect
-of taking life. Petitions for mercy poured in from Reading,
-including one from ladies to the queen, from Newbury, from
-Hungerford, from Henley, and from other places. Two
-country gentlemen, Mr. J. B. Monck and Mr. Wheble, made
-every exertion to save the condemned men. They waited
-with petitions on Lord Melbourne, who heard them patiently
-for an hour. They obtained a reprieve for Oakley and for
-Darling, who were transported for life; Winterbourne they
-could not save: he was hung on 11th January, praying to
-the last that his wife, who was dangerously ill of typhus,
-might die before she knew of his fate.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty-six men were sentenced to transportation from Reading&mdash;twenty-three
-for life, sixteen for fourteen years, seventeen
-for seven years: thirty-six were sent to prison for various terms.</p>
-
-<p>The same commissioners went on to Abingdon where proceedings
-opened on 6th January. Here there were only
-forty-seven prisoners, all but two of whom were agricultural
-labourers, most of them very young. The cases resembled
-those tried at Reading, but it is clear that the evidence of
-Mrs. Charlotte Slade, whose conduct we have already described,
-and her method of dealing with the rioters, made a
-great impression on Mr. Justice Park and his colleagues, and
-opened their eyes to the true perspective of the rhetorical
-language that had assumed such terrifying importance to
-other judges. One young labourer, Richard Kempster by
-name, who was found guilty of breaking a threshing machine,
-had carried a black-and-red flag in the mob, and when arrested
-had exclaimed, ‘be damned if I don’t wish it was a revolution,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span>
-and that all was a fire together’: it is easy to imagine the
-grave homily on the necessity of cutting such a man off for
-ever from his kind that these words would have provoked from
-the judges at Winchester. Mr. Justice Park and his colleagues
-sentenced Kempster to twelve months’ imprisonment. At
-Abingdon only one man was sentenced to be transported;
-Thomas Mackrell, an agricultural labourer of forty-three.
-Another, Henry Woolridge, had sentence of death commuted
-to eighteen months’ imprisonment. Thirty-five others were
-sent to prison for various terms.</p>
-
-<p>The same three judges proceeded to Aylesbury to try the
-Buckinghamshire rioters. The chief event in this county
-had been the destruction of paper-making machinery at
-Wycombe. The Commission opened on 11th January: the
-Duke of Buckingham and Mr. Maurice Swabey were the local
-commissioners. There were one hundred and thirty-six
-prisoners to be tried, almost all young and illiterate: only
-eighteen were forty years of age or over. Forty-four men
-and boys were found guilty of the capital charge of destroying
-paper machinery. Most of the other prisoners who were
-charged with breaking threshing machines were allowed to
-plead guilty and let off on their own recognisances, or else the
-charge was not pressed. An exception was made in a case in
-which some members of a mob had been armed with guns.
-Three men who had carried guns were sent to transportation
-for seven years, and thirteen others involved were sent to prison
-for two years or eighteen months. Several men were tried for
-rioting, and those who had combined a demand for increased
-wages with a request for the restoration of parish buns were
-sent to prison for six weeks.<a id="FNanchor_481" href="#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a> One more trial is worth notice,
-because it suggests that even in Buckinghamshire, where the
-general temper was more lenient, individuals who had made
-themselves obnoxious were singled out for special treatment.
-John Crook, a miller, was indicted with four others for riotously
-assembling and breaking a winnowing machine at Mr. Fryer’s
-at Long Crendon. As Crook was charged with a misdemeanour
-his counsel could address the jury, and we learn from his speech
-that Crook had been kept in prison since 2nd December,
-though £2000 had been offered in bail and many other prisoners
-had been allowed out. The explanation, it was argued, was
-to be found in the fact that Crook had come into some property
-which qualified him to hold a gun licence and to kill game.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span>
-He was sentenced to three months’ imprisonment without hard
-labour, and to pay a fine of £10.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty-two men in all were sent to prison for the agricultural
-disturbances in addition to the three sentenced to transportation.
-Forty-two of those concerned in the breaking of paper-making
-machinery received sentence of death, but their
-punishment was commuted to life transportation for one,
-seven years’ transportation for twenty-two, and imprisonment
-for various terms for the rest. Two men were reserved for
-execution. One, Thomas Blizzard, was thirty years old, with
-a wife and three children. His character was excellent. At
-the time of the riots he was a roundsman, receiving 1s. a day
-from the overseer’s and 1s. 6d. a week from a farmer. He told
-his employer at Little Marlow that he would take a holiday to
-go machine-breaking, for he would endure imprisonment, or
-even transportation, rather than see his wife and children cry
-for bread. John Sarney, the other, was fifty-six years old
-and had a wife and six children: he kept a small beer-shop
-and his character was irreproachable. Petitions on behalf of
-the two men were signed extensively, and the sentence was
-commuted to transportation for life. The Aylesbury sentences
-seem lenient in comparison with those given at Salisbury and
-Winchester, but they did not seem lenient to the people in the
-district. ‘Pen cannot describe,’ wrote a <i>Times</i> correspondent,
-‘the heart-rending scene of despair, misery and want, prevailing
-at Flackwell-Heath, the residence of the families of the
-major part of the misguided men now incarcerated at Aylesbury.’
-The same correspondent tells of a benevolent Quaker,
-who had become rich as a maker of paper, helping these
-families by stealth.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The work of the Special Commissions was now over.
-Melbourne had explained in Parliament that they had been
-set up ‘to expound the law’ and to bring home to the ignorant
-the gravity of their crimes against social order. In spite of
-the daily imposition of ferocious punishments on poachers
-and thieves, the poor apparently did not know in what letters
-of blood the code against rioting and discontent was composed.
-These three weeks had brought a lurid enlightenment into their
-dark homes. In the riots, as we have seen, the only man who
-had been killed was a rioter, killed according to the reports of
-the time by a yeomanry soldier, according to local tradition
-by a farmer, and for that offence he had been refused Christian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-burial. On the other side, not a single person had been
-killed or seriously wounded. For these riots, apart from
-the cases of arson, for which six men or boys were hung,
-aristocratic justice exacted three lives, and the transportation
-of four hundred and fifty-seven men and boys,<a id="FNanchor_482" href="#Footnote_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a> in addition to
-the imprisonment of about four hundred at home. The
-shadow of this vengeance still darkens the minds of old men
-and women in the villages of Wiltshire, and eighty years have
-been too short a time to blot out its train of desolating
-memories.<a id="FNanchor_483" href="#Footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a> Nobody who does not realise what Mr. Hudson
-has described with his intimate touch, the effect on the
-imagination and the character of ‘a life of simple unchanging
-action and of habits that are like instincts, of hard labour in
-sun and rain and wind from day to day,’ can ever understand
-what the breaking of all the ties of life and home and memory
-meant to the exiles and to those from whose companionship
-they were then torn for ever.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>We have said that one feature of the rising was the firing
-of stacks and ricks and barns. This practice was widespread,
-and fires broke out even in counties where the organised
-rising made little progress. Associations for the detection
-of incendiaries were formed at an early stage, and immense
-rewards were offered. Yet not a single case of arson was
-tried before the Special Commissions, and the labourers kept<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span>
-their secret well. Many of the governing class in the early
-days persuaded themselves that the labourers had no secret
-to keep, and that the fires were due to any one except the
-labourers, and to any cause except distress. Perhaps the
-wish was father to the thought, for as the <i>Times</i> observed,
-persons responsible for grinding the faces of their labourers
-preferred to think the outrages the work of strangers. Sometimes
-it was smugglers, suffering from the depression in their
-trade: sometimes it was foreigners: sometimes it was mysterious
-gentlemen in gigs, driving furiously about the country, led
-by Captain Swing, scattering fireballs and devastation. These
-were the fashionable theories in the House of Lords, although
-Richmond reminded his brother peers that there had been a
-flood of petitions representing the sufferings of the labourers
-from the very beginning of the year, and that the House of
-Lords had not thought it necessary to give them the slightest
-attention. Lord Camden ascribed the outrages to the French
-spirit, and argued that the country was enjoying ‘what was
-undeniably a genial autumn.’ The Duke of Wellington took
-the same view, denying that the troubles were due to distress:
-the most influential cause of disturbances was the example,
-‘and I will unhesitatingly say the bad and the mischievous
-example, afforded by the neighbouring States.’ Eldon remarked
-that many of the prisoners taken in the riots were
-foreigners, a point on which Melbourne undeceived him.
-The speakers who regarded the disturbances in the south of
-England as the overflow of the Paris Revolution had no
-positive evidence to produce, but they had a piece of negative
-evidence which they thought conclusive. For if the labourers
-knew who were the incendiaries, they would surely have given
-information. In some cases a reward of £1000 with a free
-pardon for all except the actual author was waiting to be
-claimed, ‘and yet not one of the miserable beings have availed
-themselves of the prospect of becoming rich.’</p>
-
-<p>Some eleven cases of arson were tried at the Assizes in Essex,
-Kent, Sussex, and Surrey: all the prisoners were agricultural
-labourers and most of them were boys. Eight were convicted,
-often on very defective evidence, and six were executed.
-One of the eight, Thomas Goodman, a boy of eighteen, saved
-his life by declaring in prison that the idea had been put into
-his head by a lecture of Cobbett’s. Two brothers of the name
-of Pakeman, nineteen and twenty years old, were convicted
-on the evidence of Bishop, another lad of eighteen, who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span>
-prompted them to set fire to a barn, and later turned king’s
-evidence ‘after a gentleman in the gaol had told him of the big
-reward.’ This fire seems to have been a piece of bravado, as
-no doubt many others were, for Bishop remarked, as the three
-were sitting under a hedge after lighting the barn, ‘who says we
-can’t have a fire too, as well as them at Blean?’ The two boys,
-who had never been taught to read or write, scandalised the
-public by displaying a painful indifference to the ministrations
-of the chaplain, and dying without receiving the sacrament.<a id="FNanchor_484" href="#Footnote_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a>
-A half-witted boy of fourteen, Richard Pennells, was tried at
-Lewes for setting fire to his master’s haystack for a promise of
-sixpence from a man who was not discovered. His master, who
-prosecuted, remarked that he was ‘dull of apprehension, but
-not so much as not to know right from wrong.’ The boy, who
-had no counsel, offered no defence, and stood sobbing in the
-dock. The jury found him guilty, with a recommendation
-to mercy on account of his youth and imperfect understanding.
-Sentence of death was recorded, but he was told that his life
-would be spared.</p>
-
-<p>These same Lewes Assizes, conducted by Mr. Justice Taunton,
-afforded a striking example of the comparative treatment
-of different crimes. Thomas Brown, a lad of seventeen, was
-charged with writing the following letter to Lord Sheffield,
-‘Please, my Lord, I dont wise to hurt you. This is the case
-al the world over. If you dont get rid of your foreign steward
-and farmer and bailiff in a few days time&mdash;less than a month&mdash;we
-will burn him up, and you along with him. My writing
-is bad, but my firing is good my Lord.’ Lord Sheffield gave
-evidence as to the receipt of the letter: the prisoner, who
-had no counsel, was asked by the judge if he would like to put
-any questions, and he only replied that he hoped that his
-lordship would forgive him. The judge answered that his
-lordship had not the power, and sentenced Brown to transportation
-for life.<a id="FNanchor_485" href="#Footnote_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a> Later on in the same Assizes, Captain
-Winter, a man of sixty, captain of a coasting vessel, was tried
-for the murder of his wife, who had been killed in a most
-brutal manner. He had been hacking and wounding her
-for four hours at night, and she was last seen alive at half
-past two in the morning, naked and begging for mercy. Her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span>
-body was covered with wounds. The man’s defence was that
-he came home drunk, that he found his wife drunk, and that he
-had no knowledge of what followed. To the general surprise
-Captain Winter escaped with a verdict of manslaughter.
-‘The prisoner,’ wrote the <i>Times</i> correspondent, ‘is indebted
-for his life to the very merciful way in which Mr. Justice
-Taunton appeared to view the case, and the hint which he
-threw out to the jury, that the parties might have had a
-quarrel, in which case her death by the prisoner would amount
-to manslaughter only.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When the disturbances began, the Duke of Wellington was
-Prime Minister, and Sir Robert Peel Home Secretary. But
-in November 1830 Wellington, who had made a last effort to
-rally the old Tories, sulking over his surrender on Catholic
-Emancipation, by some sudden thunder against Reform,
-had been beaten on the Civil List and resigned. Reform was
-inevitable, and with Reform the Whigs. Thus, towards the
-close of the year of the Revolution that drove Charles <span class="allsmcap">X.</span> from
-France, Lord Grey became Prime Minister, to carry the measure
-which as Charles Grey, lieutenant of Charles Fox, he had proposed
-in the House of Commons in 1793, a few months after
-Louis <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span> had lost his head in the Revolution which had
-maddened and terrified the English aristocracy. Fortune had
-been sparing in her favours to this cold, proud, honourable
-and courageous man. She had shut him out from power for
-twenty-three years, waiting to make him Prime Minister until
-he was verging on seventy, and all the dash and ardour of
-youth had been chilled by disappointment and delay. But
-she had reserved her extreme of malice to the end, for it was
-her chief unkindness that having waited so long she did not
-wait a little longer. Grey, who had been forty-four years in
-public life, and forty-three in opposition, took office at the
-moment that the rising passed into Hampshire and Wiltshire,
-and thus his first act as Prime Minister was to summon his
-colleagues to a Cabinet meeting to discuss, not their plans
-for Parliamentary Reform, but the measures to be taken in
-this alarming emergency. After a lifetime of noble protest
-against war, intolerance, and repression, he found himself in
-the toils and snares of the consequences of a policy in which
-war, intolerance, and repression had been constant and conspicuous
-features. And those consequences were especially
-to be dreaded by such a man at such a time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span></p>
-
-<p>Grey became Prime Minister to carry Reform, and Reform
-was still enveloped to many minds in the wild fancies and
-terrors of a Jacobin past. To those who knew, conscious as
-they were of their own modest purposes and limited aim,
-that their accession to power boded to many violence, confusion,
-and the breaking up of the old ways and life of the
-State, it was maddening that these undiscerning peasants
-should choose this moment of all others for noise and riot.
-The struggle for Reform was certain to lead to strife, and it was
-hard that before they entered upon it England should already
-be in tumult from other causes. Moreover, Grey had to reckon
-with William <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> So long as he could remember, the Court
-had been the refuge of all that was base in English politics,
-and it was a question whether Liberal ideas had suffered more
-from the narrow and darkened mind of George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> or the
-mean and incorrigible perfidy of George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> In comparison
-with his father, the new king had the wisdom of a Bentham
-or an Adam Smith; in comparison with his brother, he had
-the generous and loyal heart of a Philip Sidney or a Falkland.
-But seen in any less flattering mirror, he was a very ordinary
-mortal, and Grey had known this jolly, drinking, sailor prince
-too long and too well to trust either his intellect or his
-character, under too fierce or too continuous a strain.
-These riots tried him severely. No sooner was William on his
-throne than the labourers came out of their dens, looking like
-those sansculottes whose shadows were never far from the
-imagination of the English upper classes. The king’s support
-of Reform was no violent enthusiasm, and the slightest threat
-of disorder might disturb the uneasy equilibrium of his likes
-and fears. In the long run it depended on the will of this
-genial mediocrity&mdash;so strangely had Providence mixed caprice
-and design in this world of politics&mdash;whether or not Reform
-should be carried, and carried without bloodshed. Throughout
-these months then, the king, always at Melbourne’s elbow,
-trying to tempt and push the Government into more drastic
-measures, was a very formidable enemy to the cause of
-moderation and of justice.</p>
-
-<p>These influences were strong, and there was little to
-counteract them. For there was nobody in the world which
-Grey and Melbourne alike inhabited who could enter into
-the minds of the labourers. This is readily seen, if we glance
-at two men who were regarded as extreme Radicals in the
-House of Commons, Hobhouse and Burdett. Each of these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-men had served the cause of Reform in prison as well as in
-Parliament, and each with rather ridiculous associations;
-Hobhouse’s imprisonment being connected with the ballad
-inspired by the malicious and disloyal wit of his friend and
-hero, Byron, and Burdett’s with the ludicrous scene of his
-arrest, with his boy spelling out Magna Charta on his knee.
-It is difficult for those who have read Hobhouse’s <i>Diaries</i>
-to divine what play of reason and feeling ever made him
-a Radical, but a Radical he was, an indefatigable critic of the
-old régime, and in particular of such abuses as flogging in the
-army. Burdett was a leader in the same causes. To these
-men, if to any, the conduct of the labourers might have seemed
-to call for sympathy rather than for violence. But if we turn
-to Hobhouse’s <i>Diary</i> we see that he was never betrayed into
-a solitary expression of pity or concern for the scenes we
-have described, and as for Burdett, he was all for dragooning
-the discontented counties and placing them under martial
-law. And even Radnor, who as a friend of Cobbett was
-much less academic in his Radicalism, sat on the Wiltshire
-Commission without making any protest that has reached
-posterity.</p>
-
-<p>All the circumstances then made it easy for Grey and his
-colleagues to slip into a policy of violence and repression.
-They breathed an atmosphere of panic, and they dreaded the
-recoil of that panic on their own schemes. Yet when all
-allowance is made for this insidious climate, when we remember
-that no man is so dangerous as the kind man haunted by the
-fear of seeming weak, at a moment when he thinks his power
-of doing good depends on his character for strength; when we
-remember, too, the tone of Society caught between scare and
-excitement, the bad inspiration of the Court, the malevolent
-influence of an alarmed Opposition, the absorbing interest
-of making a ministry, the game apart from the business of
-politics, it is still difficult to understand how men like Grey
-and Holland and Durham could ever have lent themselves to
-the cruelties of this savage retribution. When first there were
-rumours of the intention of the Government to put down the
-riots with severe measures, Cobbett wrote a passage in which
-he reviewed the characters of the chief ministers, Grey with
-his ‘humane disposition,’ Holland ‘who never gave his consent
-to an act of cruelty,’ Althorp ‘who has never dipped his
-hand in blood,’ Brougham ‘who with all his half Scotch
-crotchets has at any rate no blood about him,’ to show that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span>
-the new ministers, unlike many of their Tory predecessors,
-might be trusted to be lenient and merciful. Two of these
-men, Grey and Holland, had made a noble stand against all
-the persecutions of which Tory Governments had been guilty,
-defending with passion men whose opinions they regarded
-with horror; if any record could justify confidence it was
-theirs. Unfortunately the politician who was made Home
-Secretary did not share in this past. The common talk at the
-time of Melbourne’s appointment was that he was too lazy for
-his office; the real criticism should have been that he had
-taken the side of Castlereagh and Sidmouth in 1817. As
-Home Secretary he stopped short of the infamous measures
-he had then approved; he refused to employ spies, and the
-Habeas Corpus was not suspended. But nobody can follow
-the history of this rising, and the history of the class that
-made it, without recognising that the punishment which
-exiled these four hundred and fifty labourers is a stain, and
-an indelible stain, on the reputation of the Government that
-lives in history on the fame of the Reform Bill. It is difficult
-to believe that either Fox or Sheridan could have been parties
-to it. The chief shame attaches to Melbourne, who let the
-judges do their worst, and to Lansdowne, who sat beside
-the judges on the Salisbury bench, but the fact that the
-Prime Minister was immersed in the preparation of a reform,
-believed by his contemporaries to be a revolution, does not
-relieve him of his share of the odium, which is the due of
-Governments that are cruel to the weak, and careless of justice
-to the poor.</p>
-
-<p>One effort was made, apart from the intercession of public
-opinion, to induce the Government to relax its rigours. When
-the panic had abated and the last echo of the riots had been
-stilled by this summary retribution, a motion was proposed in
-the House of Commons for a general amnesty. Unhappily the
-cause of the labourers was in the hands of Henry Hunt, a man
-whose wisdom was not equal to his courage, and whose egregious
-vanity demoralised and spoilt his natural eloquence. If those
-who were in close sympathy with his general aims could not
-tolerate his manners, it is not surprising that his advocacy was
-a doubtful recommendation in the unsympathetic atmosphere
-of the House of Commons. He was a man of passionate
-sincerity, and had already been twice in prison for his opinions,
-but the ruling class thinking itself on the brink of a social
-catastrophe, while very conscious of Hunt’s defects, was in no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span>
-mood to take a detached view of this virtue. The debate,
-which took place on the 8th of February 1831, reflects little
-credit on the House of Commons, and the division still less, for
-Hume was Hunt’s only supporter. The chief speakers against
-the motion were Benett of Wiltshire, George Lamb, brother of
-Melbourne and Under-Secretary at the Home Office, and
-Denman, the Attorney-General. Lamb amused himself and
-the House with jests on the illiterate letter for writing which the
-boy Looker was then on the high seas, and Denman threw out
-a suggestion that Looker’s father had had a share in the boy’s
-guilt. Denman closed his speech by pouring scorn on those
-who talked sentimentality, and declaring that he would ever
-look back with pride on his part in the scenes of this memorable
-winter.</p>
-
-<p>So far the Government had had it all their own way. But
-in their anxiety to show a resolute front and to reassure those
-who had suspected that a reform Government would encourage
-social disorder by weakness, Lord Grey and his colleagues
-were drawn into a scrape in which they burnt their fingers
-rather badly. They decided to prosecute two writers for inciting
-the labourers to rebel. The two writers were Richard
-Carlile and William Cobbett. Carlile was the natural prey for
-a Government in search of a victim. He had already spent
-six or seven years of his lion-hearted life in prison for publishing
-the writings of Paine and Hone: his wife, his sister, and his
-shopman had all paid a similar penalty for their association,
-voluntary or involuntary, with his public-spirited adventures.
-The document for which he stood in the dock at the Old Bailey
-early in January 1831 was an address to the agricultural
-labourers, praising them for what they had done, and reviewing
-their misfortunes in this sentence: ‘The more tame you have
-grown, the more you have been oppressed and despised, the
-more you have been trampled on.’ Carlile defended himself in
-a speech that lasted four hours and a half. The jury disagreed,
-but after several hours they united on a verdict of acquittal
-on the charge of bringing the Crown into contempt, and of
-guilty on the charge of addressing inflammatory language to
-the labouring classes. He was sentenced to imprisonment
-for two years, to pay a fine, and to find sureties.</p>
-
-<p>Cobbett’s trial was a more important event, for whereas
-Carlile was the Don Quixote of liberty of mind, Cobbett was
-a great political force, and his acquittal would give a very
-serious shock to the prestige of the Government that attacked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span>
-him. The attention of the authorities had been called to
-Cobbett’s speeches very early in the history of the riots, and
-the Home Office Papers show that appeals to the Government
-to prosecute Cobbett were the most common of all the recommendations
-and requests that poured into Whitehall from the
-country. Some of these letters were addressed to Sir Robert
-Peel, and one of them is endorsed with the draft of a reply:
-‘My dear Sir,&mdash;If you can give me the name of the person who
-heard Cobbett make use of the expression to which you refer
-you would probably enable me to render no small public service
-by the prosecution of Cobbett for sedition.&mdash;Very faithfully
-Yours, Robert Peel.’</p>
-
-<p>In an evil moment for themselves, Peel’s successors decided
-to take action, not indeed on his speeches, but on his articles
-in the <i>Political Register</i>. The character of those articles might
-perhaps be described as militant and uncompromising truth.
-They were inflammatory, because the truth was inflammatory.
-Nobody who knew the condition of the labourers could have
-found in them a single misstatement or exaggeration. The
-only question was whether it was in the public interest to publish
-them in a time of disturbance. From this point of view the
-position of the Government was seriously weakened by the fact
-that the <i>Times</i> had used language on this very subject which
-was not one whit less calculated to excite indignation against
-the rich, and the <i>Times</i>, though it was the organ of wealthy
-men, was in point of fact considerably cheaper to buy than the
-<i>Register</i>, the price of which Cobbett had raised to a shilling in
-the autumn of 1830. But this was not the only reason why
-the Government was in danger of exposing itself to a charge
-of malice in choosing Cobbett for a prosecution. The unrest
-in the southern counties had been due to a special set of
-economic causes, but there was unrest due to other causes in
-other parts of England. It was not the misery of ploughboys
-and labourers in Hampshire and Kent that had made Wellington
-and Peel decide that it was unsafe for the King to dine at the
-Guildhall in the winter of 1830: the Political Unions, which
-struck such terror into the Court and the politicians, were not
-bred in the villages. There was a general and acute discontent
-with extravagant government, with swollen lists and the burden
-of sinecures, with the whole system of the control of the
-boroughs and its mockery of representation. Now in such a
-state of opinion every paper on the side of reform might be
-charged with spreading unrest. Statistics of sinecures, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span>
-pensions, and the fat revenues of bishopricks, were scattered all
-over England, and the facts published in every such sheet were
-like sparks thrown about near a powder magazine. The private
-citizens who wrote to the Home Office in the winter of 1830
-mentioned these papers almost as often as they mentioned
-Cobbett’s lectures. Many of these papers were based on a
-pamphlet written by Sir James Graham, First Lord of the
-Admiralty in the very Government that prosecuted Cobbett.
-One of the Barings complained in the House of Commons in
-December 1830, that the official papers on offices and sinecures
-which the Reform Government had itself presented to Parliament
-to satisfy public opinion of its sincerity in the cause of
-retrenchment were the cause of mischief and danger. At
-such a time no writer, who wished to help the cause of reform,
-could measure the effects of every sentence so nicely as to escape
-the charge of exciting passion, and the Government was guilty
-of an extraordinary piece of folly in attacking Cobbett for
-conduct of which their own chief supporters were guilty every
-time they put a pen to paper.</p>
-
-<p>The trial took place in July 1831 at the Guildhall. It was
-the great triumph of Cobbett’s life, as his earlier trial had been
-his great humiliation. There was very little of the lion in the
-Cobbett who faltered before Vicary Gibbs in 1810; there was
-very little of the lamb in the Cobbett who towered before
-Denman in 1831. And the court that witnessed his triumph
-presented a strange scene. The trial had excited intense
-interest, and Cobbett said that every county in England was
-represented in the company that broke, from time to time, into
-storms of cheering. The judge was Tenterden, the Chief
-Justice, who, as a bitter enemy of reform, hated alike accusers
-and accused. Six members of the Cabinet, the Prime Minister
-himself and the Lord Chancellor, Melbourne and Durham,
-Palmerston and Goderich listened, from no choice of their own,
-to the scathing speech in which Cobbett reviewed their conduct.
-Benett of Pyt House was there, a spectre of vengeance from one
-Commission, and the father of the boy Cook of Micheldever,
-a shadow of death from another. All the memories of those
-terrible weeks seemed to gather together in the suspense of
-that eager crowd watching this momentous encounter.</p>
-
-<p>Denman, who prosecuted, employed a very different tone
-towards Cobbett from the tone that Perceval had used at the
-first of Cobbett’s trials. Perceval, when prosecuting Cobbett
-for some articles on Ireland in the <i>Register</i> in 1803, asked the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-jury with the patrician insolence of a class that held all the
-prizes of life, ‘Gentlemen, who is Mr. Cobbett? Is he a man
-writing purely from motives of patriotism? <i>Quis homo hic est?
-Quo patre natus?</i>’ No counsel prosecuting Cobbett could open
-with this kind of rhetoric in 1831: Denman preferred to describe
-him as ‘one of the greatest masters of the English language.’
-Denman’s speech was brief, and it was confined mainly to a
-paraphrase of certain of Cobbett’s articles and to comments
-upon their effect. It was no difficult task to pick out passages
-which set the riots in a very favourable light, and emphasised
-the undoubted fact that they had brought some improvement
-in the social conditions, and that nothing else had moved the
-heart or the fears of the ruling class. But the speech was not
-long over before it became evident that Cobbett, like another
-great political defendant, though beginning as the accused,
-was to end as the accuser. His reply to the charge of exciting
-the labourers to violence was immediate and annihilating.
-In December 1830, after the publication of the article for
-which he was now being tried, Brougham, as President of the
-Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, had asked and
-obtained Cobbett’s leave to reprint his earlier ‘Letter to the
-Luddites,’ as the most likely means of turning the labourers
-from rioting and the breaking of machines. There stood the
-Lord Chancellor in the witness-box, in answer to Cobbett’s
-subpœna, to admit that crushing fact. This was a thunderclap
-to Denman, who was quite ignorant of what Brougham had
-done, and, as we learn from Greville, he knew at once that his
-case was hopeless. Cobbett passed rapidly from defence to attack.
-Grey, Melbourne, Palmerston, Durham, and Goderich had
-all been subpœna’d in order to answer some very awkward
-questions as to the circumstances under which Thomas Goodman
-had been pardoned. The Lord Chief Justice refused to
-allow the questions to be put, but at least these great Ministers
-had to listen as Cobbett told the story of those strange transactions,
-including a visit from a parson and magistrates to a
-‘man with a rope round his neck,’ which resulted in Goodman’s
-unexplained pardon and the publication of a statement purporting
-to come from him ascribing his conduct to the incitement
-at Cobbett’s ‘lacture.’ Cobbett destroyed any effect that
-Goodman’s charge might have had by producing a declaration
-signed by one hundred and three persons present at the lecture&mdash;farmers,
-tradesmen, labourers, carpenters, and shoemakers&mdash;denying
-that Cobbett had made the statement ascribed to him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-in Goodman’s confession, one of the signatories being the
-farmer whose barn Goodman had burnt. He then proceeded
-to contrast the treatment Goodman had received with the
-treatment received by others convicted of incendiarism, and
-piecing together all the evidence of the machinations of the
-magistrates, constructed a very formidable indictment to which
-Denman could only reply that he knew nothing of the matter,
-and that Cobbett was capable of entertaining the most absurd
-suspicions. On another question Denman found himself
-thrown on the defensive, for he was now confronted with his
-own misstatements in Parliament about Cook, and the affidavits
-of Cook’s father present in court. Denman could only answer
-that till that day no one had contradicted him, though he could
-scarcely have been unaware that the House of Commons was
-not the place in which a Minister’s statement about the age,
-occupation, pay, and conduct of an obscure boy was most
-likely to be challenged. Denman made a chastened reply,
-and the jury, after spending the night at the Guildhall, disagreed,
-six voting each way. Cobbett was a free man, for the
-Whigs, overwhelmed by the invective they had foolishly
-provoked, remembered, when too late, the wise saying of
-Maurice of Saxony about Charles <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>: ‘I have no cage big
-enough for such a bird,’ and resisted all the King’s invitations
-to repeat their rash adventure. To those who have made their
-melancholy way through the trials at Winchester and Salisbury,
-at which rude boys from the Hampshire villages and the
-Wiltshire Downs, about to be tossed across the sea, stood
-shelterless in the unpitying storm of question and insinuation
-and abuse, there is a certain grim satisfaction in reading this
-last chapter and watching Denman face to face, not with the
-broken excuses and appeals of ignorant and helpless peasants,
-but with a volleyed thunder that swept into space all his
-lawyer’s artifice and skill. Justice plays strange tricks upon
-mankind, but who will say that she has not her inspirations?</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>One more incident has to be recorded in the tale of suppression.
-The riots were over, but the fires continued. In the
-autumn of 1831 Melbourne, in a shameful moment, proposed
-a remedy borrowed from the evil practices which a Tory
-Parliament had consented at last to forbid. The setting of
-spring guns and man-traps, the common device of game
-preservers, had been made a misdemeanour in 1826 by an Act
-of which Suffield was the author. Melbourne now proposed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>
-allow persons who obtained a license from two magistrates to
-protect their property by these means. The Bill passed the
-House of Lords, and the <i>Journals</i> record that it was introduced
-in the House of Commons, but there, let us hope from very
-horror at the thought of this moral relapse, silently it disappears.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>When Grey met Parliament as Prime Minister he said that
-the Government recognised two duties: the duty of finding
-a remedy for the distress of the labourers, and the duty of
-repressing the riots with severity and firmness. We have seen
-how the riots were suppressed; we have now to see what was
-done towards providing a remedy. This side of the picture is
-scarcely less melancholy than the other; for when we turn to
-the debates in Parliament we see clearly how hopeless it was to
-expect any solution of an economic problem from the legislators
-of the time. Now, if ever, circumstances had forced the
-problem on the mind of Parliament, and in such an emergency
-as this men might be trusted to say seriously and sincerely
-what they had to suggest. Yet the debates are a mêlée of
-futile generalisations, overshadowed by the doctrine which
-Grey himself laid down that ‘all matters respecting the
-amount of rent and the extent of farms would be much better
-regulated by the individuals who were immediately interested
-than by any Committee of their Lordships.’ One peer got into
-trouble for blurting out the truth that the riots had raised
-wages; another would curse machinery as vigorously as any
-labourer; many blamed the past inattention of the House of
-Lords to the labourers’ misery; and one considered the first
-necessity of the moment was the impeachment of Wellington.
-Two men had actual and serious proposals to make. They
-were Lord King and Lord Suffield.</p>
-
-<p>Both of these men are striking figures. King (1776&ndash;1833) was
-an economist who had startled the Government in 1811 by
-calling for the payments of his rents in the lawful coin of the
-realm. This dramatic manœuvre for discrediting paper money
-had been thwarted by Lord Stanhope, who, though in agreement
-with King on many subjects, strongly approved of paper
-money in England as he had approved of assignats in France.
-Lord Holland tells a story of how he twitted Stanhope with
-wanting to see history repeat itself, and how Stanhope answered
-with a chuckle: ‘And if they take property from the drones
-and give it to the bees, where, my dear Citoyen, is the great
-harm of that?’ King was always in a small minority and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span>
-signature was given, together with those of Albemarle, Thanet,
-and Holland, to the protest against establishing martial law
-in Ireland in 1801, which was written with such wounding
-directness that it was afterwards blackened out of the records
-of the House of Lords, on the motion of the infamous Lord
-Clare. But he was never in a smaller minority than he was
-on this occasion when he told his fellow landlords that the only
-remedy for the public distress was the abolition of the Corn
-Laws. Such a proposal stood no chance in the House of Lords
-or in the House of Commons. Grey declared that the abolition
-of the Corn Laws would lead to the destruction of the country,
-and though there were Free Traders among the Whigs, even
-nine years after this Melbourne described such a policy as
-‘the wildest and maddest scheme that has ever entered into
-the imagination of man to conceive.’</p>
-
-<p>Suffield (1781&ndash;1835), the only other politician with a remedy,
-is an interesting and attractive character. Originally a Tory,
-and the son of Sir Harbord Harbord, who was not a man of
-very tender sensibilities, Suffield gradually felt his way towards
-Liberalism. He was too large-minded a man to be happy and
-at ease in an atmosphere where the ruling class flew instinctively
-in every crisis to measures of tyranny and repression. Peterloo
-completed his conversion. From that time he became a
-champion of the poor, a fierce critic of the Game Laws, and a
-strong advocate of prison reform. He is revealed in his diary
-and all the traditions of his life as a man of independence and
-great sincerity. Suffield’s policy in this crisis was the policy
-of home colonisation, and its fate can best be described by means
-of extracts from a memoir prepared by R. M. Bacon, a Norwich
-journalist and publicist of importance, and printed privately in
-1838, three years after Suffield had been killed by a fall from his
-horse. They give a far more intimate and graphic picture of
-the mind of the Government than the best reported debates in
-the records of Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>We have seen in a previous chapter that there had been
-at this time a revival of the movement for restoring the land
-to the labourers. One of the chief supporters of this policy
-was R. M. Bacon, who, as editor of the <i>Norwich Mercury</i>, was
-in close touch with Suffield. Bacon set out an elaborate
-scheme of home colonisation, resembling in its main ideas
-the plan sketched by Arthur Young thirty years earlier, and
-this scheme Suffield took up with great enthusiasm. Its chief
-recommendation in his eyes was that it applied public money<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span>
-to establishing labourers with a property of their own, so that
-whereas, under the existing system, public money was used,
-in the form of subsidies from the rates, to depress wages, public
-money would be used under this scheme to raise them. For
-it was the object of the plan to make the labourers independent
-of the farmers, and to substitute the competition of employers
-for the competition of employed. No other scheme, Suffield
-used to maintain, promised any real relief. If rents and taxes
-were reduced the farmer would be able, but would not be
-compelled, to give better wages: if taxes on the labourers’
-necessaries were reduced, the labourers would be able to
-live on a smaller wage, and as long as they were scrambling
-for employment they were certain to be ground down to the
-minimum of subsistence. The only way to rescue them from
-this plight was to place them again in such a position that
-they were not absolutely dependent on the farmers. This
-the Government could do by purchasing land, at present waste,
-and compelling parishes, with the help of a public loan, to set
-up labourers upon it, and to build cottages with a fixed
-allotment of land.</p>
-
-<p>Suffield’s efforts to persuade the Government to take up
-this constructive policy began as soon as Grey came into
-office. His first letters to Bacon on the subject are written
-in November. The opposition, he says, is very strong, and
-Sturges Bourne and Lansdowne are both hostile. On 17th
-November he writes that a peer had told him that he had sat
-on an earlier committee on this subject with Sturges Bourne,
-as chairman, and that ‘those who understood the subject
-best agreed with Malthus that vice and misery alone could
-<i>cure</i> the evil.’ On 19th November he writes that he has had
-a conference with Brougham, with about the same success as
-his conference with Lansdowne and Sturges Bourne. On the
-23rd he writes that he has been promised an interview at the
-Home Office; on the 25th ‘no invitation from Lord Melbourne&mdash;&mdash;the
-truth is he cannot find one moment of leisure. The
-Home Office is distracted by the numerous representations of
-imminent danger to property, if not to life, and applications
-for protection.’ Later in the same day he writes that he has
-seen both Grey and Melbourne: ‘I at once attacked Grey.
-I found him disposed to give every possible consideration to
-the matter. He himself has in Northumberland seen upon his
-own property the beneficent effects of my plan, namely of
-apportioning land to cottagers, but he foresaw innumerable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span>
-difficulties.’ A House of Lords Committee had been appointed
-on the Poor Laws at the instance of Lord Salisbury, and
-Suffield hoped to persuade this committee to report in favour
-of his scheme. He therefore pressed Grey to make a public
-statement of sympathy. Grey said ‘he would intimate that
-Government would be disposed to carry into effect any measure
-of relief recommended by the Committee; very pressed but
-would call Cabinet together to-morrow.’ The interview with
-Melbourne was very different. ‘Next I saw Lord Melbourne.
-“Oppressed as you are,” said I, “I am willing to relieve you
-from a conference, but you must say something on Monday
-next and I fear you have not devoted much attention to the
-subject.” “I understand it perfectly,” he replied, “and that
-is the reason for my saying nothing about it.” “How is this
-to be explained?” “Because I consider it hopeless.” “Oh,
-you think with Malthus that vice and misery are the only
-cure?” “No,” said Lord Melbourne, “but the evil is in
-numbers and the sort of competition that ensues.” “Well
-then I have measures to propose which may meet this difficulty.”
-“Of these,” said Lord Melbourne, “I know nothing,”
-and he turned away from me to a friend to enquire respecting
-outrages.’ Suffield concludes on a melancholy note: ‘The
-fact is, with the exception of a few individuals, the subject
-is deemed by the world a bore: every one who touches on it
-is a bore, and nothing but the strongest conviction of its
-importance to the country would induce me to subject myself
-to the indifference that I daily experience when I venture to
-intrude the matter on the attention of legislators.’</p>
-
-<p>A fortnight later Suffield was very sanguine: ‘Most satisfactory
-interview with Melbourne: thinks Lord Grey will do
-the job in the recess.’ But the sky soon darkens again, and on
-the 27th Suffield writes strongly to Melbourne on the necessity
-of action, and he adds: ‘Tranquillity being now restored, all
-the farmers are of course reducing their wages to that miserable
-rate that led to the recent disturbances.’ Unhappily
-the last sentence had a significance which perhaps escaped
-Suffield. Believing as he did in his scheme, he thought that
-its necessity was proved by the relapse of wages on the restoration
-of tranquillity, but vice and misery-ridden politicians
-might regard the restoration of tranquillity as an argument
-for dropping the scheme. After this the first hopes fade away.
-There is strong opposition on the Select Committee to Suffield’s
-views, and he is disappointed of the prompt report in favour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span>
-of action which he had expected from it. The Government
-are indisposed to take action, and Suffield, growing sick and
-impatient of their slow clocks, warns Melbourne in June that
-he cannot defend them. Melbourne replies that such a
-measure could not be maturely considered or passed during
-the agitation over the Reform Bill. Later in the month
-there was a meeting between Suffield and Melbourne, of which
-unfortunately no record is preserved in the Memoir, with the
-result that Suffield declared in Parliament that the Government
-had a plan. In the autumn of 1831 an Act was placed on
-the Statute Book which was the merest mockery of all
-Suffield’s hopes, empowering churchwardens or overseers to
-hire or lease, and under certain conditions to enclose, land up
-to a limit of fifty acres, for the employment of the poor.
-It is difficult to resist the belief that if the riots had lasted
-longer they might have forced the Government to accept the
-scheme, in the efficacy of which it had no faith, as the price
-of peace, and that the change in temperature recorded in
-Suffield’s <i>Diary</i> after the middle of December marks the
-restoration of confidence at Whitehall.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>So perished the last hope of reform and reparation for the
-poor. The labourers’ revolt was ended; and four hundred
-and fifty men had spent their freedom in vain. Of these
-exiles we have one final glimpse; it is in a letter from the
-Governor of Van Diemen’s Land to Lord Goderich: ‘If, my
-Lord, the evidence, or conduct, of particular individuals, can
-be relied on as proof of the efficiency or non-efficiency of
-transportation, I am sure that a strong case indeed could be
-made out in its favour. I might instance the rioters who
-arrived by the <i>Eliza</i>, several of whom died almost immediately
-from disease, induced apparently by despair. A great many
-of them went about dejected and stupefied with care and
-grief, and their situation after assignment was not for a
-long time much less unhappy.’<a id="FNanchor_486" href="#Footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">CONCLUSION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p>A row of eighteenth-century houses, or a room of normal
-eighteenth-century furniture, or a characteristic piece of
-eighteenth-century literature, conveys at once a sense of
-satisfaction and completeness. The secret of this charm is not
-to be found in any special beauty or nobility of design or
-expression, but simply in an exquisite fitness. The eighteenth-century
-mind was a unity, an order; it was finished, and it
-was simple. All literature and art that really belong to the
-eighteenth century are the language of a little society of men
-and women who moved within one set of ideas; who understood
-each other; who were not tormented by any anxious
-or bewildering problems; who lived in comfort, and, above
-all things, in composure. The classics were their freemasonry.
-There was a standard for the mind, for the emotions, for the
-taste: there were no incongruities. When you have a society
-like this, you have what we roughly call a civilisation, and it
-leaves its character and canons in all its surroundings and
-its literature. Its definite ideas lend themselves readily to
-expression. A larger society seems an anarchy in contrast;
-just because of its escape into a greater world it seems powerless
-to stamp itself on wood or stone; it is condemned as an age
-of chaos and mutiny, with nothing to declare. In comparison
-with the dishevelled century that follows, the eighteenth
-century was neat, well dressed and nicely appointed. It had
-a religion, the religion of quiet common sense and contentment
-with a world that it found agreeable and encouraging; it had
-a style, the style of the elegant and polished English of Addison
-or Gibbon. Men who were not conscious of any strain or great
-emotion asked of their writers and their painters that they
-should observe in their art the equanimity and moderation
-that were desirable in life. They did not torture their minds
-with eager questions; there was no piercing curiosity or
-passionate love or hatred in their souls; they all breathed the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span>
-same air of distinguished satisfaction and dignified self-control.
-English institutions suited them admirably; a monarchy so
-reasonable nobody could mind; Parliament was a convenient
-instrument for their wishes, and the English Church was the
-very thing to keep religion in its place. What this atmosphere
-could produce at its best was seen in Gibbon or in Reynolds;
-and neither Gibbon nor Reynolds could lose themselves in a
-transport of the imagination. To pass from the eighteenth
-century to the Revolt, from Pope to Blake, or from Sheridan
-to Shelley, is to burst from this little hothouse of sheltered and
-nurtured elegance into an infinite wild garden of romance
-and mystery. For the eighteenth century such escape was
-impossible, and if any one fell into the fatal crime of enthusiasm,
-his frenzy took the form of Methodism, which was a more
-limited world than the world he had quitted.</p>
-
-<p>The small class that enjoyed the monopoly of political
-power and social luxuries, round whose interests and pleasures
-the State revolved, consisted, down to the French war, of
-persons accustomed to travel, to find amusement and instruction
-in foreign galleries and French salons, and to study the fashions
-and changes of thought, and letters and religion, outside
-England; of persons who liked to surround themselves
-with the refinements and the decorations of life, and to display
-their good taste in collecting old masters, or fine fragments
-of sculpture, or the scattered treasures of an ancient library.
-Perhaps at no time since the days when Isabella d’Este consoled
-herself for the calamities of her friends and relatives
-with the thought of the little Greek statues that were brought
-by these calamities into the market, has there been a class so
-keenly interested in the acquisition of beautiful workmanship,
-for the sake of the acquisition rather than for the sake of the
-renown of acquiring it. The eighteenth-century collectors
-bought with discernment as well as with liberality: they were
-not the slaves of a single rage or passion, and consequently
-they enriched the mansions of England with the achievements
-of various schools. Of course the eighteenth century had its
-own fashion in art, and no admiration is more unintelligible to
-modern taste than the admiration for Guercino and Guido Reni
-and the other seventeenth-century painters of Bologna. But
-the pictures that came across the Channel in such great numbers
-were not the products of one school, or indeed the products of
-one country. Dutch, Flemish, French, Italian, they all
-streamed into England, and the nation suddenly found itself,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span>
-or rather its rulers, very rich in masterpieces. The importance
-of such a school of manners as this, with its knowledge of other
-worlds and other societies, its interest in literature and art, its
-cosmopolitan atmosphere, can only be truly estimated by
-those who remember the boorish habits of the country gentlemen
-of the earlier eighteenth century described by Fielding.
-With the French war this cosmopolitan atmosphere disappeared.
-Thenceforth the aristocracy were as insular in their
-prejudices as any of their countrymen, and Lord Holland,
-who preserved the larger traditions of his class, provoked
-suspicion and resentment by travelling in Spain during the
-Peninsular War.<a id="FNanchor_487" href="#Footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a></p>
-
-<p>But if the art and literature of the eighteenth century show
-the predominance of a class that cultivated its taste outside
-England, and that regarded art and literature as mere ministers
-to the pleasure of a few,<a id="FNanchor_488" href="#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a> they show also that that class had
-political power as well as social privileges. There is no art of
-the time that can be called national either in England or in
-France, but the art of eighteenth-century England bears a less
-distant relation to the English people than the art of eighteenth-century
-France to the people of France, just in proportion
-as the great English houses touched the English people more
-closely than Versailles touched the French. English art is less
-of mere decoration and less of mere imitation, for, though it
-is true that Chippendale, Sheraton, and the Adam brothers
-were all in one sense copying the furniture of other countries&mdash;Holland,
-China, France&mdash;they all preserved a certain English
-strain, and it was the flavour of the vernacular, so to speak,
-that saved their designs from the worst foreign extravagance.
-They were designing, indeed, for a class and not for a nation,
-but it was for a class that had never broken quite away from
-the life of the society that it controlled. The English aristocracy
-remained a race of country gentlemen. They never
-became mere loungers or triflers, kicking their heels about a
-Court and amusing themselves with tedious gallantries and
-intrigues. They threw themselves into country life and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span>
-government, and they were happiest away from London.
-The great swarms of guests that settled on such country seats
-as Holkham were like gay and boisterous schoolboys compared
-with the French nobles who had forgotten how to live in the
-country, and were tired of living at Versailles. If anything
-could exceed Grey’s reluctance to leave his great house in
-Northumberland for the excitements of Parliament, it was
-Fox’s reluctance to leave his little house in Surrey. The
-taste for country pleasures and for country sports was never
-lost, and its persistence explains the physical vitality of the
-aristocracy. This was a social fact of great importance, for it
-is health after all that wins half the battles of classes. No
-quantity of Burgundy and Port could kill off a race that was
-continually restoring its health by life in the open air; it did
-not matter that Squire Western generally spent the night under
-the table if he generally spent the day in the saddle. This
-inheritance of an open-air life is probably the reason that in
-England, in contrast to France and Italy, good looks are more
-often to be found in the aristocracy than in other classes of
-society.</p>
-
-<p>It was due to this physical vigour that the aristocracy,
-corrupt and selfish though it was, never fell into the supreme
-vice of moral decadence. The other European aristocracies
-crumbled at once before Napoleon: the English aristocracy,
-amidst all its blunders and errors, kept its character for
-endurance and fortitude. Throughout that long struggle,
-when Napoleon was strewing Europe with his triumphs and,
-as Sheridan said, making kings the sentinels of his power,
-England alone never broke a treaty or made a surrender at
-his bidding. For ten years Pitt seems the one fixed point
-among the rulers of Europe. It is not, of course, to be argued
-that the ruling class showed more valour and determination
-than any other class of Englishmen would have shown: the
-empire-builders of the century, men of daring and enterprise on
-distant frontiers, were not usually of the ruling class, and
-Dr. Johnson once wrote an essay to explain why it was that
-the English common soldier was the bravest of the common
-soldiers of the world. The comparison is between the English
-aristocracy and the other champions of law and order in the
-great ordeal of this war, and in that comparison the English
-aristocracy stands out in conspicuous eminence in a Europe
-of shifting and melting governments.</p>
-
-<p>The politics of a small class of privileged persons enjoying
-an undisputed power might easily have degenerated into a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span>
-mere business of money-making and nothing else. There is
-plenty of this atmosphere in the eighteenth-century system:
-a study merely of the society memoirs of the age is enough to
-dissipate the fine old illusion that men of blood and breeding
-have a nice and fastidious sense about money. Just the
-opposite is the truth. Aristocracies have had their virtues,
-but the virtue of a magnificent disdain for money is not to be
-expected in a class which has for generations taken it as a
-matter of course that it should be maintained by the State.
-At no time in English history have sordid motives been so
-conspicuous in politics as during the days when power was most
-a monopoly of the aristocracy. No politicians have sacrificed
-so much of their time, ability, and principles to the pursuit of
-gain as the politicians of the age when poor men could only
-squeeze into politics by twos or threes in a generation, when the
-aristocracy put whole families into the House of Commons as
-a matter of course, and Burke boasted that the House of Lords
-was wholly, and the House of Commons was mainly, composed
-for the defence of hereditary property.</p>
-
-<p>But the politics of the eighteenth century are not a mere
-scramble for place and power. An age which produced the
-two Pitts could not be called an age of mere avarice. An age
-which produced Burke and Fox and Grey could not be called
-an age of mere ambition. The politics of this little class are
-illuminated by the great and generous behaviour of individuals.
-If England was the only country where the ruling class made a
-stand against Napoleon, England was the only country where
-members of the ruling class were found to make a stand for
-the ideas of the Revolution. Perhaps the proudest boast
-that the English oligarchy can make is the boast that some
-of its members, nursed as they had been in a soft and feathered
-world of luxury and privilege, could look without dismay on
-what Burke called the strange, wild, nameless, enthusiastic
-thing established in the centre of Europe. The spectacle of
-Fox and Sheridan and Grey leading out their handful of
-Liberals night after night against the Treason and Sedition
-Bills, at a time when an avalanche of terror had overwhelmed
-the mind of England, when Pitt, Burke, and Dundas thought
-no malice too poisoned, Gillray and Rowlandson no deforming
-touch of the brush too brutal, when the upper classes thought
-they were going to lose their property, and the middle classes
-thought they were going to lose their religion, is one of the
-sublime spectacles of history. This quality of fearlessness in
-the defence of great causes is displayed in a fine succession<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span>
-of characters and incidents; Chatham, whose courage in facing
-his country’s dangers was not greater than his courage in
-blaming his country’s crimes; Burke, with his elaborate rage
-playing round the dazzling renown of a Rodney; Fox, whose
-voice sounds like thunder coming over the mountains, hurled
-at the whole race of conquerors; Holland, pleading almost
-alone for the abolition of capital punishment for stealing before
-a bench of bishops; a man so little given to revolutionary
-sympathies as Fitzwilliam, leaving his lord-lieutenancy rather
-than condone the massacre of Peterloo. If moral courage is
-the power of combating and defying an enveloping atmosphere
-of prejudice, passion, and panic, a generation which was
-poor in most of the public virtues was, at least, conspicuously
-rich in one. Foreign policy, the treatment of Ireland, of
-India, of slaves, are beyond the scope of this book, but in
-glancing at the class whose treatment of the English poor
-has been the subject of our study, it is only just to record that
-in other regions of thought and conduct they bequeathed a
-great inheritance of moral and liberal ideas: a passion for
-justice between peoples, a sense for national freedom, a great
-body of principle by which to check, refine, and discipline the
-gross appetites of national ambition. Those ideas were the
-ideas of a minority, but they were expressed and defended
-with an eloquence and a power that have made them an
-important and a glorious part of English history. In all this
-development of liberal doctrine it is not fanciful to see the
-ennobling influence of the Greek writers on whom every
-eighteenth-century politician was bred and nourished.</p>
-
-<p>Fox thought in the bad days of the war with the Revolution
-that his own age resembled the age of Cicero, and that Parliamentary
-government in England, undermined by the power
-of the Court, would disappear like liberty in republican Rome.
-There is a strange letter in which, condoling with Grey on
-his father’s becoming a peer, he remarks that it matters the
-less because the House of Commons will soon cease to be of
-any importance. This prediction was falsified, and England
-never produced a Cæsar. There is, however, a real analogy
-in the social history of the two periods. The English ruling
-class corresponds to the Roman senatorial order, both classes
-claiming office on the same ground of family title, a Cavendish
-being as inevitable as a Claudius, and an Æmilius as a Gower.
-The <i>equites</i> were the second rank of the Roman social
-aristocracy, as the manufacturers or bankers were of the
-English. A Roman <i>eques</i> could pass into the senatorial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span>
-order by holding the quæstorship; an English manufacturer
-could pass into the governing class by buying an estate. The
-English aristocracy, like the Roman, looked a little doubtfully
-on new-comers, and even a Cicero or a Canning might
-complain of the freezing welcome of the old nobles; but it
-preferred to use rather than to exclude them.</p>
-
-<p>In both societies the aristocracy regarded the poor in much
-the same spirit, as a problem of discipline and order, and passed
-on to posterity the same vague suggestion of squalor and turbulence.
-Thus it comes that most people who think of the
-poor in the Roman Republic think only of the great corn largesses;
-and most people who think of the poor in eighteenth-century
-England think only of the great system of relief from
-the rates. Mr. Warde Fowler has shown how hard it is to find
-in the Roman writers any records of the poor. So it is with
-the records of eighteenth-century England. In both societies
-the obscurity which surrounded the poor in life has settled
-on their wrongs in history. For one person who knows anything
-about so immense an event as the disappearance of the
-old English village society, there are a hundred who know
-everything about the fashionable scenes of high politics and
-high play, that formed the exciting world of the upper classes.
-The silence that shrouds these village revolutions was not
-quite unbroken, but the cry that disturbed it is like a noise
-that breaks for a moment on the night, and then dies away,
-only serving to make the stillness deeper and more solemn.
-The <i>Deserted Village</i> is known wherever the English language
-is spoken, but Goldsmith’s critics have been apt to treat it,
-as Dr. Johnson treated it, as a beautiful piece of irrelevant
-pathos, and his picture of what was happening in England has
-been admired as a picture of what was happening in his discolouring
-dreams. Macaulay connected that picture with
-reality in his ingenious theory, that England provided the
-village of the happy and smiling opening, and Ireland the
-village of the sombre and tragical end. One enclosure has
-been described in literature, and described by a victim, John
-Clare, the Northamptonshire peasant, who drifted into a madhouse
-through a life of want and trouble. Those who recall the
-discussions of the time, and the assumption of the upper classes
-that the only question that concerned the poor was the question
-whether enclosure increased employment, will be struck by
-the genuine emotion with which Clare dwells on the natural
-beauties of the village of his childhood, and his attachment
-to his home and its memories. But Clare’s day was brief<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span>
-and he has few readers.<a id="FNanchor_489" href="#Footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a> In art the most undistinguished
-features of the most undistinguished members of the aristocracy
-dwell in the glowing colours of a Reynolds; the poor
-have no heirlooms, and there was no Millet to preserve the
-sorrow and despair of the homeless and dispossessed. So
-comfortably have the rich soothed to sleep the sensibilities
-of history. These debonair lords who smile at us from the
-family galleries do not grudge us our knowledge of the
-escapades at Brooks’s or at White’s in which they sowed their
-wild oats, but we fancy they are grateful for the poppy seeds
-of oblivion that have been scattered over the secrets of their
-estates. Happy the race that can so engage the world with
-its follies that it can secure repose for its crimes.</p>
-
-<p>De Quincey has compared the blotting out of a colony of
-Alexander’s in the remote and unknown confines of civilisation,
-to the disappearance of one of those starry bodies which, fixed
-in longitude and latitude for generations, are one night observed
-to be missing by some wandering telescope. ‘The agonies
-of a perishing world have been going on, but all is bright and
-silent in the heavenly host.’ So is it with the agonies of the
-poor. Wilberforce, in the midst of the scenes described in
-this volume, could declare, ‘What blessings do we enjoy in this
-happy country; I am reading ancient history, and the pictures
-it exhibits of the vices and the miseries of men fill me with
-mixed emotions of indignation, horror and gratitude.’ Amid
-the great distress that followed Waterloo and peace, it was a
-commonplace of statesmen like Castlereagh and Canning that
-England was the only happy country in the world, and that
-so long as the monopoly of their little class was left untouched,
-her happiness would survive. That class has left bright and
-ample records of its life in literature, in art, in political traditions,
-in the display of great orations and debates, in
-memories of brilliant conversation and sparkling wit; it has
-left dim and meagre records of the disinherited peasants that
-are the shadow of its wealth; of the exiled labourers that are
-the shadow of its pleasures; of the villages sinking in poverty
-and crime and shame that are the shadow of its power and
-its pride.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_1">APPENDIX A (1)</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The information about Parliamentary Proceedings in Appendix A
-is taken from the <i>Journals</i> of the House of Commons or of the
-House of Lords for the dates mentioned. The place where the
-Award is at present enrolled is given, where possible, under the
-heading ‘Award.’ A Return, asked for by Sir John Brunner,
-was printed February 15, 1904, of Inclosure Awards, deposited
-with Clerks of the Peace or of County Councils.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Armley, Leeds, Yorks.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1793</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;About 175 acres.</p>
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Waste Ground, called Armley Moor or
-Common.</p>
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 21, 1793.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from ‘several of the Owners of Lands within the Manor
-and Township of Armley,’ stating that this parcel of waste ground
-is, in its present state, incapable of improvement. Leave given,
-bill presented March 15.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 28.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various owners
-and proprietors of Messuages, Cottages, Lands and Tenements
-who ‘by virtue thereof, or otherwise, have an indisputable
-Right of Common upon the said Moor,’ stating that ‘they
-conceive that an Inclosure of the said Moor and Waste Ground
-would be productive of no Advantage to any of the Proprietors
-claiming a Right of Common thereon, but, on the
-contrary, would very materially injure and prejudice their respective
-Estates in the said Townships, by laying upon the said
-Township the Burthen of making, maintaining, and repairing the
-necessary new Roads, which must be set out to a considerable
-Extent over the said Moor and Waste Ground, and also by
-increasing the Poors Rate, inasmuch as the Petitioners conceive
-that the Inhabitants of the said Town of Armley, who are very
-numerous, and principally poor Manufacturers of broad Woollen
-Cloth, receive considerable Benefit and Advantage from the
-present open State of the said Moor and Waste Ground, particularly
-in having Tenters and Frames to stretch and dry their
-Cloth, Warps, and Wool, after it has been dyed, put up and fixed
-upon the said Moor and Waste Ground, which Privileges and
-Advantages have hitherto conduced to alleviate the Distresses and
-Hardships of the said poor Manufacturers in the said Township of
-Armley, and which, if the said Inclosure takes Place, they will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span>
-totally deprived of and reduced to Poverty and Want.’ The
-Petition was ordered to be heard on second reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 9.</i>&mdash;Bill read a second time. House informed that
-Petitioners declined to be heard on second reading. The Petition
-was referred to the Committee.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 17.</i>&mdash;(1) Petition against the bill from John Taylor, giving
-same reasons as last petition. (2) Petition from various master
-manufacturers of broad woollen cloth in Armley against the bill,
-stating that, as the Moor only contains about 160 Acres, inclosure
-which involves division ‘amongst so great a Number of Claimants
-in small Allotments,’ and also ‘the heavy and unavoidable
-Expenses of obtaining the Act, surveying, dividing, inclosing, and
-improving’ will confer little or no Benefit on the proprietors,
-whereas it will certainly deprive the poor Manufacturers, who are
-very numerous, of (1) the Privileges and Advantages of fixing their
-Tenters, etc., ‘which they and their Ancestors have hitherto
-enjoyed’; and (2) ‘of that Pasturage upon the said Common
-which they have hitherto much depended upon.’ Both Petitions to
-be heard at Report stage; (3) Petition against the bill from various
-owners and proprietors who ‘at the Instance of several other
-Owners of Lands’ signed a petition for inclosure, ‘under an Idea,
-that the Inclosure would meet with the Approbation of, and be
-of general Utility to the Inhabitants of the said Town,’ but now
-finding that this idea was mistaken, and that Inclosure would be
-of general disadvantage, ask that their names should be erased,
-and that if the bill is brought in, they should be heard against it.
-Petition referred to Committee. Petitioners to be heard, ‘if
-they think fit’ (‘they’ ambiguous, might be Committee or Petitioners).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>April 29.</i>&mdash;Wilberforce
-reported from the Committee; Standing Orders complied with,
-Committee had considered the two petitions referred to them
-(apparently they had not heard Counsel), and had found that the
-Allegations of the Bill were true, and that the parties concerned had
-given their consent ‘(except the Owners of Land of the Annual
-Value of £172, 8s. 2d. who refused to sign the Bill; and also,
-except the Owners of Lands of the Annual Value of £35, 15s. 9d.,
-who declared themselves neuter; and that the Whole of the
-Land entitled to Right of Common is of the Annual Value of
-£901, 12s. 1d.).’ There is nothing to suggest that the petitioners
-against the bill were heard at this stage. The Bill passed Commons
-and Lords. Royal Assent, June 3, 1793.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 33 George. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 61.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;One only. William Whitelock of Brotherton,
-Yorks, Gentleman. He is also to act as surveyor. Vacancy to
-be filled, if necessary, by ‘the major part in value’ of those
-interested in the Common. An arbitrator is to be appointed by
-the Recorder of Leeds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment to Commissioner.</span>&mdash;£1, 11s. 6d. for each working day.
-As surveyor, his remuneration is to be settled by the Recorder of
-Leeds.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;The Commissioner is to hear and to determine upon all
-claims, but if any one is dissatisfied the matter can be referred to
-the Arbitrator, whose decision is final. If the appeal is vexatious,
-the Arbitrator can award costs against the appellant. The
-Arbitrator’s decision is final except in respect of matters of Title
-which can still be tried at law.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Lord of the Manor.</i>&mdash;(1) The equivalent in value
-of one-sixteenth of the whole in lieu of his right in the soil.</p>
-
-<p>(2) His other manorial rights to continue as before, including
-his mineral rights, but he is forbidden to ‘enter into or damage
-any House, Garden, or Pleasure Ground’ hereafter made on the
-Common, and if he damages property he must pay for satisfaction
-either a yearly rent of £3 an acre or part of an acre actually used
-and damaged, or else make such compensation as shall be awarded
-by two indifferent persons, one chosen by the Lord of the Manor,
-the other by the person who sustains the damage. If these two
-cannot agree, they must choose an Umpire whose decision is to be
-final.</p>
-
-<p>(3) The Lord of the Manor is to have the use of a spring in the
-close belonging to Samuel Blackburn.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for the Poor.</i>&mdash;(1) Allotment to Cottagers of 8&frac12; acres
-in six or more distinct and separate places, as near as possible to
-the Cottages on or adjoining the Common ‘which shall for ever
-hereafter remain open and uninclosed, and shall be used and
-enjoyed by the Occupiers of the several Cottages or Dwelling
-Houses now or hereafter to be built within the said Township of
-Armley, for the setting up and using of Tenters, Stretchers for
-Warp, Wool Hedges,’ etc., under the direction of the Minister,
-Chapel Wardens, and Overseers. No buildings are to be erected
-on this ground, and no rent paid for the use of it; no roads or
-paths may be made through it, and no buildings erected within
-20 yards on the South or West.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Allotment to the Poor.&mdash;2 acres, to be vested in the
-Minister, Chapel Wardens, and Overseers, and used for a Poor
-House, School House, and for the benefit of a School master. Until
-used for these purposes, the rent and profits are to go towards the
-Poor Assessment.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment for Stone</i> for roads, etc.&mdash;5 acres (for the making and
-repairing of highways and private roads).</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;To be divided out amongst the persons
-having right of common according to their several rights and
-interests, quantity, quality, and situation considered, provided ‘that
-in case it shall be determined that the Owners of any Messuages<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span>
-or Cottages, or Scites of Messuages and Cottages, are entitled to
-Right of Common on the said Common or Waste Ground, then
-that the said Commissioner ... shall award and allot such
-Parcels of the Common and Waste Ground to the Owners of such
-Messuages or Cottages, as have been erected for Sixty Years and
-upwards, unless the same shall have been erected upon the Scite
-of an ancient Messuage or Cottage, as to him ... shall appear a
-fair Compensation for such Right,’ and in making this allotment
-he is not to pay any regard to the value of these Messuages and
-Cottages one to another, except with reference to the Quantity of
-land. If any allottee is dissatisfied with his share, he can appeal
-for arbitration to the Recorder of Leeds, whose decision is to be
-final, except in cases where the question concerns any Right of
-Common claimed ‘for or in respect of any ancient Houses or
-Scites of Houses, Lands or Grounds,’ when there may be an appeal
-at law, if notice is given within a specified time. Allotments
-must be accepted within 6 months after award. Failure to
-accept excludes allottee from all benefits. (Saving clause for
-infants, etc.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;(1) Incroachments 60 years old and more to
-be treated as old inclosures with right of common, except such
-Incroachments as have been made by or for the Curate of Armley
-for the time being. (2) Incroachments from 40 to 60 years old
-to remain with possessors but not to confer any right of common.
-(3) Incroachments made within 40 years to be deemed part of the
-Common to be divided, but to be allotted to present holders as
-part of their allotments. But if they do not lie adjoining the incroacher’s
-ancient estates then the Commissioner can allot them to
-anyone, giving ‘adequate Satisfaction for any Improvement’ to
-the incroacher. The above does not apply to two inclosures made
-by Stephen Todd, Esqr. and by Joseph Akeroyd which are to be
-allotted to them respectively under their present indentures of
-lease.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done by allottees under the Commissioner’s
-directions. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;The allotment of 2 acres for the poor is to
-be fenced and enclosed at the expense of the other proprietors.
-If allottees refuse to fence, the Commissioner can do it for them
-and charge them, ultimately distraining. To protect the young
-quickset, no sheep or lambs are to be depastured in allotments for
-7 years, unless special fences are made, and no cattle, sheep or
-lambs are to graze in the roads and ways for 10 years.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To be paid by the proprietors in such proportion as
-the Commissioner decides. The Commissioner’s accounts are to be
-entered in a book, and produced when 5 proprietors require it.
-To meet expenses, allotments may be mortgaged in some cases,
-with consent of the Commissioner, up to 60s. an acre.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;All leases, as regards right of
-common and other rights on the waste ground for 21 years and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span>
-under to be null and void, the lessor making such satisfaction to
-the lessee as the Commissioner thinks a fit equivalent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners have full power to set out and stop up
-roads and footpaths.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases
-where the Commissioner’s or Arbitrator’s decision is said to be
-final; or where some other provision is made, <i>e.g.</i> to Recorder of
-Leeds about allotments.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Not with Clerk of the Peace or of County Council or
-in Record Office.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_2">APPENDIX A (2)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Ashelworth, Gloucester.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1797</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;Not given in Act. Commonable Land of every kind
-stated in Petition (see below) as 310 Acres in all.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;‘Open and Common Fields, Meadows, and
-Pastures, Commonable and intermixed Lands, and a Tract of
-Waste Ground, being Part and Parcel of a Common called Corse
-Lawn,<a id="FNanchor_490" href="#Footnote_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a> and also a Plot, Piece, or Parcel of Land or Ground, on the
-Eastern Side of the said Parish,<a id="FNanchor_491" href="#Footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a> adjoining to, and lately Part of the
-Parish of Hasfield ... but now Part of the Parish of Ashelworth’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 21, 1797.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from various owners of lands and estates. March 24, Bill
-read first time.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 7, 1797.</i>&mdash;Petition from various Landowners and Owners
-of Mease Places, against the bill, stating ‘That there are only
-about 310 Acres of Commonable Land belonging to Land Owners
-of the said Parish, of which 148 Acres are Meadow Land, called
-the <i>Upper Ham</i>, lying in the Manor of <i>Hasfield</i>, the Right of
-Common upon which belongs exclusively to the Petitioners (and
-some others) as Owners of Fifty Five Mease Places within the
-said Parish, and the Petitioners are the Owners of Thirty-four of
-such Mease Places; and that the Remainder of the said Commonable
-Land consists of a Common Meadow, called <i>Lonkergins Ham</i>,
-containing about eight Acres (upon which Six Persons have a
-Right of Common) and about 150 Acres of Waste Land, Part
-of a Tract of Land called Corse Lawn, upon which Waste Land all
-the Land Owners of the said Parish are entitled to a Right of
-Common; and that the several Estates within the said Parish, lie
-very compact and convenient, and many of such Estates are exempt
-from the Payment of Great Tithes; and that of the
-Remainder of such Estates the Great Tithes (except a Portion of
-which the Vicar was endowed) belong to Charles Hayward Esq.,
-who is Lord of the Manor of Ashelworth, and Owner of an Estate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span>
-in the said Parish; and that there is no one Object in the Bill
-sufficient, under the Circumstances of the Case, to justify the
-enormous Expences which will attend the obtaining and carrying
-it into Execution, but that, on the Contrary, it is fraught with
-great Evil, and will be extremely injurious to the Petitioners,’
-and asking that the Petitioners may be permitted to examine
-Witnesses and to be heard by their Counsel against the bill.</p>
-
-<p>Petitioners to be heard on Second reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 10.</i>&mdash;Second reading of bill. House informed that
-Petitioners did not wish to be heard at that stage. Bill committed.
-Petitioners to be heard when Bill reported if they think fit.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>May 3, 1797.</i>&mdash;Mr.
-Lygon reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders
-were complied with; that the allegations were true; and that
-the Parties concerned had consented to the satisfaction of the
-Committee ‘(except the Owners of Property assessed to the
-Land Tax at £11, 0s. 5d., and that the whole of the Property is
-assessed at £86, 14s. 10d.) and that no Person appeared before
-the Committee to oppose the Bill.’ (Nothing about hearing
-Petitioners.) Bill passed both Houses with some amendments.
-In the House of Lords an amendment was made about referring
-the quarrel between the Vicar of Ashelworth and the Rector of
-Hasfield on the subject of tithes to arbitration. Royal Assent,
-June 6, 1797.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 37 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 108.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed. Richard Richardson of
-Bath: Francis Webb of Salisbury: Thomas Fulljames of
-Gloucester, Gentlemen. Two to be a quorum. Surveyor to be
-appointed by Commissioners. Vacancies, both Commissioners and
-Surveyors, to be filled up by remaining Commissioners from
-persons not interested. If they fail to fill up, ‘the major part
-in value’ of the Proprietors and Persons interested can do so.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment to Commissioners.</span>&mdash;2 guineas each working day.
-Survey to be made, unless the existing one seems satisfactory
-and correct.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Special Clauses.</span>&mdash;It is enacted ‘That all Fields or Inclosures
-containing the Property of Two or more Persons within One
-Fence, and also all Inclosures containing the Property of One
-Person only, if the same be held by or under different Tenures or
-Interests, shall be considered as Commonable Land, and be
-divided and allotted accordingly.’</p>
-
-<p>Also ‘all Homesteads, Gardens, Orchards, old Inclosures, and
-other Lands and Grounds,’ shall, with the consent of their proprietors
-or Trustees, ‘be deemed and considered to be open and
-uninclosed Land for the Purpose of the Division and Allotment
-hereby intended,’ provided that Charles Hayward has to get
-Bishop of Bristol’s consent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims to be delivered in writing at first and second
-Meeting, and no claim to be received after second Meeting, except
-for some special cause allowed by Commissioners. Commissioners
-to hold a subsequent meeting and give account in writing of what
-claims are admitted and rejected.</p>
-
-<p>Persons whose claims are rejected can bring an action on a
-feigned issue against some other Proprietor. Verdict to be final
-and conclusive. If Plaintiff wins, Commissioners pay costs; if
-Defendant wins, Plaintiff pays. Action must be brought within a
-specified time (3 months).</p>
-
-<p><i>Exceptions.</i>&mdash;(1) If the Commissioners disallow the claim of the
-Dean and Chapter of Westminster to the Right of Soil in ‘A,’
-then the Dean and Chapter may bring an action within 12 months
-against the Bishop of Bristol and Charles Hayward for ascertaining
-the rights of soil. Costs to be paid by losers.</p>
-
-<p>(2) If the Commissioners allow the above claim, then the
-Bishop of Bristol or Charles Hayward can bring an action <i>mutatis
-mutandis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Also, If any dispute or difference arises between the Parties
-interested in the inclosure ‘touching or concerning the respective
-Shares, Rights, and Interests which they or any of them shall
-claim’ in the land to be inclosed, ‘or touching and concerning the
-respective Shares and Proportions’ which they ought to have, the
-Commissioners have power to examine and determine the same;
-their determination to be ‘final, binding and conclusive upon and to
-all Parties.’ Commissioners can on request of person who wins his
-point assess costs on person who loses it, and ultimately distrain
-on his goods.</p>
-
-<p><i>Exception.</i>&mdash;Commissioners to have no jurisdiction about
-Titles.</p>
-
-<p>Tithe owners are to send in their claims with all particulars.
-Commissioners’ determination to be final ‘(if the Parties in Dispute
-think proper and agree thereto)’; but not to affect power to try
-titles at law.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Lord of the Manor.</i>&mdash;(1) The Bishop of Bristol is Lord of the
-Manor of Ashelworth (except ‘A’ and ‘B’), and Charles Hayward
-is his lessee. He is to have such part as Commissioners judge
-full compensation, to be ‘not less than ¹⁄₁₅’ of the Waste Land to
-be inclosed.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Dean and Chapter of Westminster and also the Bishop of
-Bristol claim Right of Soil in ‘A,’ whichever establishes his claim
-to have not less than ¹⁄₁₅ of ‘A.’</p>
-
-<p>(3) John Parker Esq., is Lord of Manor of ‘B’: to have not
-less than ¹⁄₁₅ of ‘B’.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Allotment to be made from land about to be
-inclosed for all tithes on all land (including present inclosures), as
-<span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span></p>
-
-<p>Not less in value than One Fifth of Arable Land. Not less in
-value than One Ninth of Meadow or Pasture Ground, Homesteads,
-Gardens, Orchards and Woodlands. Where Tithes only
-partially due, full equivalent to be given.</p>
-
-<p>The Vicar of Ashelworth and the Rector of Hasfield can have
-their disputed rights to tithes of ‘B’ settled by Arbitration.</p>
-
-<p>Owners of old inclosures who have not large enough allotments
-to pay their due proportion of the tithe allotments, are to pay a
-lump sum of money instead; <i>unless</i> the Commissioners deem it
-convenient to allot part of the old inclosures to the tithe owners
-instead; in which case the land so set out is to ‘be deemed Part
-of the Lands to be divided, allotted, and inclosed by virtue of
-this Act.’</p>
-
-<p>Full equivalent to the Vicar for his Glebe Lands and their right
-of Common.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Stone, Gravel</i>, etc.&mdash;From 2 to 3 acres; ‘to be used and
-enjoyed in Common’ by proprietors and inhabitants, ‘for the
-Purpose only of getting Stone, Gravel, or other Materials for
-making and repairing the Roads and Ways within the said Parish.’
-Herbage of above to be allotted to whomsoever Commissioners
-direct, or for some general, parochial or other use.</p>
-
-<p><i>To Proprietors of Cottages.</i>&mdash;Every proprietor or owner of a
-cottage and land of the annual value of £4 or under is to have
-from &frac12; acre to 2 acres ‘as they the said Commissioners shall think
-proper.’</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;Amongst the various persons interested
-according to their respective rights and interests. Allotments to
-be as near homestead or old inclosure as conveniently may be. If
-two or more persons with allotments of not more than 2 acres each
-want to have the same laid together in order to avoid the expence
-of inclosing, they are to give notice to the Commissioners, and
-the Commissioners are then to put these allotments together ‘and
-in and by their Award to direct how and in what manner such
-small Allotments shall be cultivated, and in what Manner and Proportion,
-and with what Cattle the same shall be stocked, depastured
-and fed, during the Time the same shall lie open to each other,’
-and if at any time the Major part of proprietors of the small
-Allotments wish it, they are to be inclosed.</p>
-
-<p>Award with full particulars of allotments and of orders and
-regulations for putting Act in execution to be drawn up, and to be
-‘binding and conclusive upon and to all Persons, to all Intents
-and Purposes whatsoever.’</p>
-
-<p>Allotments to be of same tenure as property in virtue of which
-they are given. Allotments must be accepted within 6 months;
-if allottee fails to accept, the Commissioners can put in a salaried
-Bailiff or Receiver to manage allotment till allottee accepts, when
-any surplus profits are to be handed over to allottee. (Saving
-clause for infants, etc.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done by respective allottees according to
-Commissioners’ directions.</p>
-
-<p><i>Exceptions.</i>&mdash;(1) In the case of allotments to Trustees for
-parochial or charitable purposes, the Commissioners are to deduct
-a portion for these allottees’ share of fencing and expenses. This
-deducted land is to be divided amongst other proprietors. The
-Commissioners do the fencing.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Glebe and Tithe Allotments to be fenced by other proprietors,
-and the fences to be kept in repair for 7 years at expense
-of persons named by the Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p>If an allottee fails to fence, his neighbour can complain to a
-J. P. (not interested) and obtain an order to do it and charge expenses
-on allottee, or else enter and receive rents.</p>
-
-<p>If any allottee has an unfair share of fencing the Commissioners
-can equalise matters. No sheep or lambs to be kept in any
-inclosure for 7 years, unless special fences are made. No sheep
-or lambs ever to be kept in the roads.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;Part of the Common or Waste Land to be sold to
-defray expenses. If the money so raised is not sufficient, ‘the
-deficiency shall be paid, borne, and defrayed’ by the various proprietors
-(excluding the Tithe owners and the Lords of the Manor
-for their respective allotments) in such proportion as the
-Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>Land may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre.</p>
-
-<p>Money advanced for Act to have 5 per cent. interest.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioners must keep accounts, which must be open to
-inspection.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to set out roads, ways and footpaths, all
-others to be stopped up. But no turnpike road to be interfered
-with.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation.</span>&mdash;Leases at rack-rent to be void; owners paying
-or receiving such satisfaction as the Commissioners think right.</p>
-
-<p>Compensation (under Commissioners’ direction) to be paid by
-new allottee to former owner for timber, underwood, etc., or else
-former owner can enter and cut down, unless Commissioners
-direct that trees etc. are not to be cut.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements Between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to
-have full power to direct the course of husbandry.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power or Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases
-‘where the Orders, Directions and Determinations of the said
-Commissioners are directed to be conclusive, binding and final.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Date, August 24, 1798. With Clerk of Peace or of
-County Council, Gloucester.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_3">APPENDIX A (3)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Cheshunt.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1799</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;2741 Acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Common Fields and common Lammas
-meadows about 1555 acres; A common called Cheshunt Common
-about 1186 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 23, 1799.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from Sir George William Prescott Bt. (Lord of the Manor),
-the Rev. Joseph Martin (Tithe owner), Oliver Cromwell, William
-Tatnall and others. Leave given. Bill read twice; committed
-April 25.</p>
-
-<p><i>May 7, 1799.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various proprietors
-of Lands and Common Rights setting forth ‘That a very great
-Proportion of such Open Fields and Commonable Lands are of so
-bad a Quality, as to be incapable of any Improvement equivalent
-to the Expenses of the Inclosure; and that the said Commons in
-their present State, are well fitted for the breeding of Sheep and
-Support of lean Stock, and that many of the Inhabitants of the
-said Parish, who, by reason of their Residence and Occupation of
-small Tenements, have Rights of Common, are enabled, by the
-lawful Enjoyment of such Common Rights, to support themselves
-and their Families; but, as almost all the said Commons lie at the
-extreme Edge of the Parish, and are subject to very numerous and
-extensive Common Rights, any Allotments of the said Commons to
-the lesser Commoners must be too small, and too distant from their
-Habitations, to be of any substantial Use to them, which Inconveniences
-are now prevented by the Use of general Herdsmen;
-and that the Inclosure of the said Open Fields and other Commonable
-Lands would be, in many other Respects highly injurious to
-the Rights and Interests of the Petitioners.’ Petitioners to be
-heard before the Committee. All to have voices.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>May 24.</i>&mdash;Mr. Baker
-reported from the Committee that they had heard Counsel for
-the Petitioners; that the allegations were true; that the Parties
-concerned had given their consent to the bill, and also to the
-changing of one of the Commissioners named therein ‘(except
-the Proprietors of 314 Acres and 19 Perches of Land, who refused
-to sign the Bill; and also, the Proprietors of 408 Acres, 3 Roods
-and 22 Perches who were neuter; and that the whole Property
-belonging to Persons interested in the Inclosure consists of 6930
-Acres, or thereabouts).’</p>
-
-<p>Bill passed both Houses. June 13, Royal Assent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 39 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 75.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed.</p>
-
-<p>(1) John Foakes of Gray’s Inn, Gentleman representing the
-Lord of the Manor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span></p>
-
-<p>(2) Richard Davis of Lewknor, Oxford, Gentleman representing
-the Impropriator of the Great Tithes.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Daniel Mumford, of Greville St., Hatton Gardens, Gentleman,
-representing the other Proprietors of Estates with Right of
-Common or a major part in value. Two to be a quorum. Vacancies
-to be filled up by the parties represented from persons not
-interested in the enclosure. Surveyor appointed, Henry Craster
-of Cheshunt.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment.</span>&mdash;Commissioners, Surveyor, and Clerk or Agent to
-Commissioners each to have 2 guineas a day for each working
-day.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims with particulars of tenure, etc., to be
-handed in at specified times; claimants must give such particulars
-‘as shall be necessary to describe such Claims with as much
-Precision as they can.’ No claim to be received afterwards, unless
-for some special cause. Commissioners’ determination on claims to
-be final and conclusive, if no objection is made. If objection is made,
-the objector can (1) try the matter at law on a feigned issue; or
-(2) submit the question to 2 arbitrators, the claimant naming
-one arbitrator, the objector naming the other. If the arbitrators
-disagree, they can name an umpire, whose decision is final and
-conclusive. Commissioners can award costs. Commissioners to
-have no jurisdiction over matters of title which can be tried at law.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>To Lords of the Manor.</i>&mdash;(7 of them.)</p>
-
-<p>(1) Sir G. W. Prescott of Cheshunt.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Rev. J. Martin of the Manors of the Rectory of Cheshunt.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Anne Shaw, widow, of the Manors of Andrews and Le Mott.</p>
-
-<p>(4) Francis Morland of the Manors of Theobalds, Tongs, Clays,
-Clarks, Dareys, Cross-Brookes, and Cullens.</p>
-
-<p>(5) Robert William Sax, and</p>
-
-<p>(6) Mary Jane Sax, and</p>
-
-<p>(7) Joseph Jackson, of the Manors of Beaumont and Perriers.</p>
-
-<p>So much ‘as shall in the Judgment of the said Commissioners
-be an adequate Compensation and Satisfaction’ for their Rights
-and Interests.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;One-fifth of arable or tillage, and one-ninth of
-the other land to be divided which is subject to tithes.</p>
-
-<p>Above to be divided between Impropriator of Great Tithes and
-Vicar.</p>
-
-<p>For Glebe Lands, a full equivalent. If any owner of old
-inclosed land who has no land in the common fields, but possesses
-a Right of Common over Cheshunt Common, wishes it, part of his
-allotment can (with the tithe owner’s consent) be set aside and
-given to the tithe owners, and his Land will be free of tithes for
-ever.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Stone and Gravel</i>, etc.&mdash;2 Acres, to be used in common
-by proprietors and tenants, for their own use and also for the roads.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>For Cottagers.</i>&mdash;An allotment of 100 Acres, exclusive of Roads,
-to be vested in the Lord of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens,
-and Overseers, ‘for the Use of the Occupiers of Houses or
-Cottages within the said Parish already having Right of Common,
-without more than One Rood of Land belonging to and used with
-the same as a Garden or Orchard, the Yearly Rent of which, at
-the Time of passing this Act, shall not exceed Six Pounds, without
-paying any thing for such Use.’</p>
-
-<p>The number of the Houses with their rents and the number of
-cattle are to be described in the Award. No one else is to send
-cattle on to the 100 acres.</p>
-
-<p>These cottagers are also to have the herbage of the 2-acre
-allotment for stone and gravel.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;Amongst the various persons interested
-in proportion to their various rights and interests, Quantity,
-Quality, and Situation considered.</p>
-
-<p>Small allotments may, on application of allottees, if Commissioners
-think proper, be laid together, and enjoyed in common
-under Commissioners’ direction.</p>
-
-<p>Each Copyholder of all the Manors is to have a separate and
-distinct allotment. If any allottee is dissatisfied with his allotment,
-he can send in a complaint to the Commissioners, who are
-to hear and determine the matter; their determination is to be
-final and conclusive.</p>
-
-<p>The Award is to be final and conclusive. If any allottee fails
-to accept his allotment, or molests another in accepting, he is to
-be ‘divested of all Right, Estate, and Interest whatsoever’ in the
-Lands to be divided.</p>
-
-<p>The tenure of the allotment to be that of the estate in virtue of
-which it is given.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;Not specifically mentioned, but from clauses <i>re</i> tithe
-owners, etc., must be done at allottee’s expense.</p>
-
-<p>Beasts, cattle, etc., not to be depastured on the new allotments
-for 7 years unless special fences made, or a proper person sent to
-look after cattle.</p>
-
-<p>Tithe owners’ allotments to be fenced, and fencing kept in
-repair for 7 years by the other proprietors.</p>
-
-<p>The 100-acre allotment for cottagers to be fenced at the expense
-of the owners of the residue of the common. Mortgage up to £2
-an acre allowed for expense of fencing.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To be borne by all owners and proprietors (except
-the Rector and the Vicar, in regard to their Glebe and Tythe
-Allotments) in proportion to their shares, at an equal pound rate
-to be fixed by the Commissioners. If allottees fail to pay, Commissioners
-can distrain or enter and receive rents, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioners must keep accounts which must be open to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-inspection. If they receive more money than is needed, the
-surplus is to go to the Poor Rates.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation.</span>&mdash;All rack-rent leases to be void, the owners
-giving the tenants ‘reasonable Satisfaction’; but where it seems
-more equitable to the Commissioners, the allotment can be held
-by the tenant during his lease at a rent to the owner fixed by the
-Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfaction for crops and for ploughing, manuring and tilling
-to be given by new allottee.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to
-have full power to direct the course of husbandry.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to have full power to set out and to
-stop up roads and footpaths (except that they are not to make
-them over ‘Gardens, Orchards, Plantations, and other Private
-Grounds’), and if ancient footways or paths are stopped up, the
-owners of old inclosed land, for whose accommodation it is done,
-are to pay something towards the general expenses of the act.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not when
-Commissioners’ or others’ determination is said to be final and
-conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Enrolled at Westminster, February 27, 1806. Record
-Office.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of <span class="lock">Award</span>:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left" rowspan="2">Whole area divided out including roads, some old inclosures and homesteads given up to be allotted,</td>
-<td><i>a.</i> </td><td><i>r.</i> </td><td><i>p.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="totalbottom">2,667</td>
-<td class="totalbottom">2</td>
-<td class="totalbottom">33</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left" rowspan="2">Tithe owners in various allotments including 106 acres for exonerating old inclosures, and 1&frac34; acre for Vicar’s Glebe and Right of Common,</td>
-<td><i>a.</i> </td><td><i>r.</i> </td><td><i>p.</i></td></tr>
-<tr>
-<td>474</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">The Lord of the Manor (Sir G. B. Prescott) and the trustees of the late Lord of the Manor, including 38&frac34; acres or ¹⁄₁₈8 for manorial rights,</td>
-<td>438</td>
-<td>0 </td><td>24</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Mrs. Anne Shaw,</td>
-<td>376</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Oliver Cromwell, Esq.,</td>
-<td>107</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>29</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Occupiers of Cottages,</td>
-<td>100</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Gravel Pits,</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>13</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The remainder (excluding roads) is allotted amongst 213
-<span class="lock">allottees:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td>From 50&ndash;100 acres </td>
-<td class="right">4</td>
-<td class="tdl borderl" rowspan="3">Above 10 acres</td>
-<td class="right" rowspan="3">23</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>From 30&ndash;50 acres</td>
-<td class="right">3</td>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>From 10&ndash;30 acres </td>
-<td class="right">16</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"></td>
-<td>From 1&ndash;10 acres</td>
-<td class="right">141</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>From &frac12;-1 acre </td>
-<td class="right">37</td>
-<td class="tdl borderl" rowspan="3">Below 1 acre</td>
-<td class="right" rowspan="3">49</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>From &frac14;-&frac12; acre </td>
-<td class="right">8</td>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Below &frac14; acre </td>
-<td class="right">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3"></td>
-<td class="right total">213</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Award shows that there must have been 86 owners of the
-1555 acres of Open Fields and Lammas Meadows as 86 allottees
-receive allotments in lieu of land. Of these 86, 63 receive allotments
-of under 10 acres in lieu of their land. (13 from 5&ndash;10
-acres, 37 from 1&ndash;5 acres, 13 below 1 acre.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Amending Act</span> <i>re</i> the 100 Acres Allotment, 1813.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>November 6, 1813.</i>&mdash;Petition from
-the Lord of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens and Overseers
-for amending Act.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>November 20, 1813.</i>&mdash;Reported
-that the parties concerned had consented except 9 Persons
-with right of common who refused, and 3 who were neuter; the
-total number of persons having right of common being 183.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Amending Act.</span>&mdash;(Local and Personal, 54
-George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 2.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">New Arrangements Respecting 100-Acre Allotment.</span>&mdash;The
-Commissioners had set out the 100 Acres for the use of certain
-occupiers, who were to be entitled to turn out on May 12 till
-February 2 either 1 Horse or 2 Cows or other Neat Cattle, or 7
-Sheep; ‘And whereas, partly owing to the great Extent of the
-said Parish of Cheshunt, and to the Distance at which the greater
-Part of the Cottages or Houses, mentioned in the Schedule to
-the said Award, are situated from the said Plot or Allotment of
-One hundred Acres, and partly to the Inability of most of the
-Occupiers of such Cottages or Houses to maintain or keep any
-Horses, Cows, or other Neat Cattle or Sheep, the Persons for
-whose Benefit and Advantage such Plot or Allotment of Land was
-intended, derive little if any Advantage therefrom; but the
-Herbage of such Plot or Allotment of Land is consumed by the
-Cattle of Persons having no Right to depasture the same’; it is
-enacted that the Trustees are to have power to let out the 100
-Acres to one or more tenants for not more than 21 years, ‘at the
-best and most improved yearly Rent or Rents that can at the
-Time be reasonably had and obtained for the same. The proceeds
-of the rents (when expenses are paid, see below) are to be
-divided among the occupiers of the houses and cottages mentioned
-in the Schedule.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;The Allotment is to be mortgaged up to £500 for
-the expenses.</p>
-
-<p>To repay the mortgage £50 is to be set aside from the rents
-yearly.</p>
-
-<p>Interest at 5% on the sum borrowed is to be paid from the
-rents.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_4">APPENDIX A (4)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Croydon, Surrey.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1797</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;2950 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Open and Common Fields, about 750
-acres, Commons, Marshes, Heaths, Wastes and Commonable
-Woods, Lands, and Grounds about 2200 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>November 7, 1796.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from Hon. Richard Walpole, John Cator, Esq., Richard
-Carew, Esq., John Brickwood, Esq., and others. Leave given;
-bill presented May 8, 1797; read twice and committed.</p>
-
-<p><i>May 18, 1797.</i>&mdash;(1) Petition against the bill from Richard Davis
-and others, as prejudicial to their rights and interests; (2) Petition
-against it from James Trecothick, Esq. Both petitions to be heard
-before Committee. May 26, Petition against the bill from Richard
-Davis and others stating ‘that the said Bill goes to deprive the
-Inhabitants of the said Parish and the Poor thereof in particular,
-of certain ancient Rights and Immunities granted to them (as
-they have been informed) by some, or one, of the Predecessors of
-His present Majesty, and that the said Bill seems calculated to
-answer the Ends of certain Individuals.’</p>
-
-<p>Petitioners to be heard when the Bill was reported.</p>
-
-<p><i>June 7.</i>&mdash;Petition of various inhabitants of Croydon against the
-bill; similar to last petition. To be heard when Bill reported.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>June 19.</i>&mdash;Lord
-William Russell reported from the Committee, standing orders
-complied with, that the Petitions had been considered, allegations
-true; parties concerned had given their consent to the satisfaction
-of the Committee, ‘(except the Owners of 230 Acres 2 Roods
-and 25 Perches of Inclosed Land, and 67 Acres 1 Rood and 31
-Perches of Common Field Land, who refused to sign the Bill; and
-also the Owners of 225 Acres 1 Rood and 34 Perches of Inclosed
-Land, and 7 Acres 3 Roods and 5 Perches of Common Field
-Land, who, on being applied to, returned no Answer; and that
-the Whole of the Land consists of 6316 Acres and 37 Perches of
-Inclosed Land, and 733 Acres 1 Rood and 39 Perches of Common
-Field Land, or thereabouts)....’</p>
-
-<p>The same day (June 19) petition from various Freeholders,
-Copyholders, Leaseholders and Inhabitant Householders of Croydon
-stating that the promoters of the bill have named Commissioners
-without consulting the persons interested ‘at an open and public
-meeting,’ and that since the Archbishop of Canterbury as Lord of
-the Soil of the Wastes has named one Commissioner (James Iles of
-Steyning, Gentleman) the other two Commissioners ought, ‘in
-common Justice and Impartiality’ to be nominated by the proprietors
-of lands and the Parish at large; and as they understand
-that the Tithe owners and other Proprietors wish John Foakes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span>
-named in the bill, to remain a Commissioner, asking leave to
-nominate as the third Thomas Penfold of Croydon, Gentleman.
-Lord William Russell proposed to recommit the bill in order
-to consider this petition, but obtained only 5 votes for his motion
-against 51.</p>
-
-<p>The Bill passed Commons.</p>
-
-<p>In the Lords a Petition was read July 4, 1797, against the Bill
-from the Freeholders, Copyholders, Leaseholders and Inhabitant-Freeholders
-of Croydon, praying their Lordships, ‘To take their
-Case into their most serious Consideration.’ Petition referred
-to Committee.</p>
-
-<p><i>July 10, 1797.</i>&mdash;Bill passed Lords in a House of 4 Peers.
-(Bishop of Bristol, Lords Walsingham, Kenyon, and Stewart of
-Garlies.)</p>
-
-<p>[3 of these had been members of the Committee of 6 to whom
-the Bill was committed.]</p>
-
-<p>Royal Assent, July 19.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 37 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 144.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed. (1) James Iles of Steyning,
-Sussex; (2) John Foakes of Gray’s Inn; (3) Thomas Crawter of
-Cobham, Gentlemen.</p>
-
-<p>The first represents the Archbishop of Canterbury, Lord of the
-Manor of Croydon, the other two represent the proprietors of
-estates with right of common (the Archbishop excluded) ‘or the
-major part in value’ (such value to be collected from the rentals
-in land tax assessments). Vacancies to be filled up by the parties
-represented. New Commissioners not to be interested in the
-inclosure. Two Surveyors appointed by name: vacancies to be
-filled up by Commissioners.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment To Commissioners.</span>&mdash;2 guineas a day. Surveyors to
-be paid what the Commissioners think ‘just and reasonable.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;To be delivered in at the meeting or meetings
-advertised for the purpose. None to be received after, except
-for some special cause. Claimants must send in claims ‘in
-Writing under their Hands, or the Hands of their Agents, distinguishing
-in such Claims the Tenure of the Estates in respect
-whereof such Claims are made, and stating therein such further
-Particulars as shall be necessary to describe such Claims with
-Precision.’ The Commissioners are to hold a meeting to hear and
-determine about claims, and if no objections are raised, then their
-determination is final and conclusive. If objections are raised,
-then any one person whose claim is disallowed, or any three
-persons who object to the allowance of some one else’s claim, can
-proceed to trial at the Assizes on a feigned issue. The verdict
-of the trial is to be final. Due notice of trial must be given and
-the allotment suspended. The Commissioners cannot determine
-on questions of title which may still be tried at law.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Lord of the Manor.</i>&mdash;The Archbishop of Canterbury
-is Lord of the Manor of Croydon and also of Waddon, and
-there are six other Lords whose manors lie either wholly or partly
-within the parish, <i>i.e.</i> (1) Robert Harris, Esq., of Bermondsey;
-(2) Richard Carew, Esq., of Norbury; (3) John Cator, Esq., of
-Bensham; (4) William Parker Hamond, Esq., of Haling; (5)
-James Trecothick, Esq., of Addington, otherwise Temple, who
-also claims for Bardolph and Bures. (6) The Warden and Poor
-of the Hospital of Holy Trinity (Whitgift Foundation) of Croham.
-Each of these 7 Lords is to have one-eighteenth of the Commons
-and Wastes lying within his Manor. But whereas James Trecothick
-claims some quit-rents in the Manor of Croydon, if he makes good
-his claim to the Commissioners, then the Archbishop’s eighteenth
-is to be divided between James Trecothick and the Archbishop,
-and this is to be taken by James Trecothick as his whole share
-as Lord of a Manor. The Archbishop can also have part of
-Norwood Common in lieu of his due share of Norwood woodlands.</p>
-
-<p>Manorial rights, save Right of Soil, continue as before.</p>
-
-<p>Compensation for the timber in Norwood Woodlands is to be
-fixed by the Commissioners and paid by the allottees to the
-Archbishop.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;For Rectorial Tithes, such parcel
-or parcels as Commissioners judge to be full equivalent.</p>
-
-<p>Whereas the Archbishop claims that Norwood Woodlands (295
-acres) are exempt from all tithes, this claim is to be determined
-by the Commissioners or at law, and if not found good, another
-parcel to be set out as full equivalent.</p>
-
-<p>But the tithe allotments in all are not to equal in value more
-than one-ninths of the Commons, marshes etc.</p>
-
-<p>For Vicar’s tithes over Norwood Common, an equivalent parcel
-of land.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for the Poor.</i>&mdash;If the inhabitants of Croydon prove
-their claim to Rights of Common on Norwood Common, and in
-Norwood Commonable Woods to the satisfaction of the Commissioners,
-or before a Court (if it is tried at law) then the Commissioners
-are to set out from the Commons, Wastes, etc., as much
-land as they judge to be equivalent to such right, ‘having
-particular Regard to the Accommodation of Houses and Cottages
-contiguous to the said Commons, etc.,’ and this land is to remain
-common, for the use of the inhabitants of Croydon, subject to the
-right of getting gravel from it. Suppose, however, that the
-inhabitants’ claim is not allowed, or if allowed does not equal
-215 acres of common in value: even then the Commissioners are
-to set out 215 acres for the above purpose. These 215 acres are
-to be vested in the Vicar, Churchwardens, Overseers, and 6
-Inhabitants chosen at a Vestry meeting. These trustees can
-inclose as much as a seventh part and let it on lease for 21 years.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span>
-They are to manage the common with regard to stint, etc., and to
-dispose of rents.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;The open common fields, commons,
-marshes, etc., to be divided amongst the several persons ‘according
-to their respective Rights and Interests,’ due regard being paid
-to Quality, Quantity, and Situation, and the allotments being
-placed as near the Homesteads, etc., as is consistent with general
-convenience.</p>
-
-<p>All houses erected 20 years and more before the Act, and
-the Sites of all such houses to be considered as ancient messuages
-entitled to right of common, with the exception of houses
-built on encroachments, the owners of which are to have whatever
-allotment the Commissioners think fair and reasonable.</p>
-
-<p>The Commissioners are to give notice of a place where a
-schedule of allotments can be inspected and of a meeting where
-objections can be heard. The Commissioners are to hear
-complaints, but their determination is to be binding and conclusive
-on all parties.</p>
-
-<p>When the award is drawn up ‘the said Allotments, Partitions,
-Divisions, and Exchanges, and all Orders, and Directions,
-Penalties, Impositions, Regulations and Determinations so to
-be made as aforesaid, in and by such Award or Instrument, shall
-be, and are hereby declared to be final, binding and conclusive
-unto and upon all Persons interested in the said Division and
-Inclosure.’ Persons who refuse to accept within an appointed
-time, or who molest others who accept, are ‘divested of all Right
-of Possession, Right of Pasturage and Common, and all other
-Right, Estate and Interest whatsoever in the allotments.’
-Allotments are to be of the same tenure as the estates in right
-of which they are given. Copyhold allotments in the Manors of
-Croydon and Waddon can be enfranchised by the Commissioners
-at the request of the allottees, a part of such allotments being
-deducted and given to the Archbishop for compensation.
-Allotments may be laid together if the different owners wish it.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Those made within 6 months not to count.
-Those of 20 years old and over to remain with present possessor,
-but not to confer right to an allotment.</p>
-
-<p>Encroachments under 20 years old, (1) if the encroacher has a
-right to an allotment, then it shall be given to him as whole or
-part of that allotment (not reckoning the value of buildings and
-improvements); (2) if the allotment to which he has a right is
-unequal in value to the encroachment, or if he has no right to an
-allotment, he can pay the surplus or the whole price at the rate
-of £10 an acre; (3) if the encroacher cannot or will not purchase,
-the Commissioners are to allot him his encroachment for which
-he is to pay rent at the rate of 12s. an acre a year for ever, such
-rent being apportioned to whomever the Commissioners direct
-as part of their allotment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span></p>
-
-<p>Provisions are also made for giving encroachers allotments
-elsewhere instead, in certain cases.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done by allottees. If the proportion of
-fencing to be done by any allottee is unfair, the Commissioners
-have power to equalise it. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;(1) The allotment to
-Rector for Tithes which is to be fenced at the expense of or by
-the person or persons whom the Commissioners appoint; (2) The
-allotments belonging to certain estates leased out at reserved
-rents by the Archbishop and by Trinity Hospital for 21 years,
-are to be fenced by the lessees; to compensate lessees new leases
-are to be allowed; (3) Allotments to Charity Estates (except
-Trinity Hospital) are to have a part deducted from them and be
-fenced by the Commissioners. If any proprietor refuses to fence,
-his neighbour can, on complaint to a J.P., obtain an order or an
-authorisation to enter, do the fencing, and take the rents till it is
-paid for.</p>
-
-<p>Guard fences to protect the quickset are allowed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Penalty for damaging fences</i> from 40s. to £10. The owner of
-the damaged fence may give evidence. Half the penalty goes to
-the informer and half to the owner. But if the owner informs,
-the whole penalty goes to the Overseer.</p>
-
-<p>Estates may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre to meet expenses
-of fencing. Roads are not to be depastured for 10 years.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To meet all expenses (including the lawsuits on
-feigned issues) part of the Commons, Wastes, etc., are to be sold by
-public auction. Private sales are also authorised, but no one
-person may buy privately more than 2 acres; except that if
-James Trecothick, Esq., so wishes, the Commissioners are to sell
-him by private contract part of Addington Hills at what they
-judge a fair and reasonable price.</p>
-
-<p>Any surplus is to be paid to the Highways or Poor Rates
-within 6 months after award. Commissioners are to keep
-Accounts, which must be open to Inspection.</p>
-
-<p>Common Rights and Interests may be sold before the execution
-of the award by allottees except the Archbishop, the Vicar,
-Trinity Hospital, and Trustees for Charitable purposes.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;In the case of leases at rack-rent
-the Commissioners are to set out the allotment to the owner, but
-the owner is to pay fair compensation to the tenant for loss of
-right of common, either by lowering his rent or by paying him a
-gross sum of money as the Commissioners direct. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;If
-the Commissioners think it a more equitable course they
-may allot the allotment to the tenant during his lease, and
-settle what extra rent he shall pay in respect of the owner’s
-expense in fencing, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfaction for crops, ploughing, tilling, manuring, etc. is to be
-given in cases where the ground is allotted to a new possessor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners have power to set out and shut up
-roads (turnpike roads excluded), footpaths, etc., but if they shut
-up a footpath through old inclosed land, the person for whose
-benefit it is shut is to pay such compensation as the Commissioners
-decide, the money going towards the Expenses of the Act.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases,
-<i>e.g.</i> claims and allotment, where the Commissioners’ decisions are
-final and conclusive or a provision for trial at law is made.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;As soon as the Act
-is passed the Commissioners are to have sole direction of the
-course of husbandry. Exception.&mdash;They are not to interfere with
-Thomas Wood and Peter Wood, Gentlemen, in their cultivation of
-such parts of the common fields of Waddon as are leased to them
-by the Archbishop. (Four years of the lease are still to run.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Date, March 2, 1801. Clerk of Peace or of County
-Council, Surrey.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Amending Act, 1803.</span>&mdash;(Private, 43 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 53.)</p>
-
-<p>Passed in response to a petition (February 16, 1803) from the
-Vicar, Churchwardens, Overseers, and other inhabitants of Croydon,
-stating that whereas the Commissioners have set out 237 acres
-2 roods for the inhabitants of Croydon, instead of 215 acres, doubts
-have arisen as to whether this land is vested in trustees as was
-directed to be done with the 215 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features.</span>&mdash;The 237 acres 2 roods to be treated as the 215
-acres. Land up to 5 acres to be sold to defray cost of this new
-Act; any surplus to go to Use and Benefit of Poor, any deficit to
-be made up by rents or sale of gravel.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Note on Results.</span>&mdash;Third Report of Select Committee on
-Emigration, 1826&ndash;7, p. 369. Dr. Benjamin Wills stated that as
-the result of the loss of common rights suffered under the Bill, he
-had seen some 900 persons summoned for the Poor Rate.
-‘By the destruction of the common rights, and giving no
-remuneration to the poor man, a gentleman has taken an
-immense tract of it and converted it into a park: a person in
-the middling walk of life has bought an acre or two; and though
-this common in its original state was not so valuable as it has
-been made, yet the poor man should have been consulted in it;
-and the good that it was originally to him was of such a nature
-that, destroying that, has had an immense effect.’</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_5">APPENDIX A (5)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Haute Huntre, Lincs.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1767</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;22,000 Acres ‘more or less.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Haute Huntre, Eight Hundred or
-Holland Fen and other commonable places adjacent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span></p>
-
-<p>Owners and Proprietors of Houses and Toftsteads in the
-following 11 Parishes or Townships have Right of Common:&mdash;Boston
-West, Skirbeck Quarter, Wyberton, Frampton, Kirton,
-Algarkirke, Fosdyke, Sutterton, Wigtoft, Swineshead, and
-Brothertoft; and also in a place called Dog Dyke in the Parish of
-Billinghay.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>December 4, 1766.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from various owners and proprietors with right of
-common, asking that the fen shall be divided up into specific
-allotments for each Town. Leave given. Bill read first time,
-December 9.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 4, 1767.</i>&mdash;Long petition against the bill from (1) the
-Master, Fellows and Scholars of Trinity College, Cambridge,
-which College is Impropriator of the Great Tythes, and Patron of
-the Vicarage of Swineshead, (2) the Rev. John Shaw, Patron and
-Rector of Wyberton, (3) Zachary Chambers, Esq., Lord of the
-Manor of Swineshead, and others. The petition gave a history of
-the movement for enclosure. On August 26, 1766, a meeting of
-several gentlemen and others was held at the Angel Inn, Sleaford,
-at which a resolution was passed that a Plan or Survey of the
-fen with a return of the Houses etc., with Right of Common
-should be made before a bill was brought in. On October 16, 1766,
-a public meeting of several proprietors was held at Sleaford at
-which some of those present proposed to read a bill for dividing
-and inclosing the fen; the great majority however of those
-present objected to this course, and requested and insisted that as
-no Survey had been produced, nothing further should be done
-till the following spring, ‘but notwithstanding the said Request,
-some few of the said Proprietors then present proposed that a
-Petition for the said Bill might then be signed; which Proposition
-being rejected by a considerable Majority, the said few Proprietors
-declared their Resolution to sign such a Petition, as soon as their
-then Meeting was broke up, without any Resolutions being
-concluded upon, or the Sentiments of the Majority of the
-Proprietors either entered down or paid any Regard to, and
-without making any Adjournment of the said Meeting; and that,
-soon after the said Meeting broke up, some of the Proprietors
-present at the said Meeting signed the Petition, in consequence
-of which the said Bill hath been brought in.’ The petitioners
-also pointed out that the petition for enclosure was signed by
-very few proprietors except those in Boston West, and requested
-that no further measures should be taken till next session, and
-that meanwhile the Survey in question should be made, and
-suggested that the present bill was in many respects exceptionable,
-and asked to be heard by Counsel against the bill as it now stood.
-Petition to lie on table till second reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 6, 1767.</i>&mdash;Bill read second time and committed. Petition
-referred to Committee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>March 21.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from Sir Charles Frederick,
-Knight of the Bath, sole owner of Brothertoft, where there are
-51 Cottages or Toftsteads with right of common. Referred to
-Committee.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 27.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from Sir Gilbert Heathcote,
-Bart. and others; bill injurious to interests. Referred to Committee.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>April 29, 1767.</i>&mdash;Lord
-Brownlow Bertie reported from the Committee; Committee had
-heard Counsel in favour of the first petition and considered the other
-two; that the Allegations of the Bill were true; and that the
-Parties concerned had given their consent to the Bill to the
-satisfaction of the Committee ‘(except 94 Persons with Right of
-Common and Property of the Annual Value of £3177, 2s. 6d.
-who refused, and except 53 Persons with Right of Common and
-Property of the Annual Value of £694, 10s. who could not be
-found, and except 40 Persons with Right of Common and
-Property of the Annual Value of £1310, 0s. 6d. who declared
-they were indifferent, and that the whole Number of Persons
-with Right of Common is 614, and the whole Property of the
-Annual Value of £23,347, 8s.).’ Several amendments were made
-in the Bill and it was sent up to the Lords. In the Lords,
-petitions against it were received from Sir Gilbert Heathcote
-(May 7) and Samuel Reynardson, Esq. (May 14), both of which
-were referred to the Committee. Several amendments were made,
-including the insertion of a clause giving the Proprietors or
-Occupiers the same right of common over the Parish allotment
-as they already had over the whole. Royal Assent, June 29,
-1767.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 7 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 112.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Five are to be appointed; they are to be chosen
-by eleven persons, each representing one of the eleven townships.
-These eleven persons are to be elected in each township by the
-owners and proprietors of Houses, Toftsteads, and Lands which
-formerly paid Dyke-reeve assessments; except in the case of
-Brothertoft, where Sir Charles Frederick, as sole owner and
-proprietor, nominates the person. No person interested in the
-inclosure is to be chosen as Commissioner, and in addition to the
-usual oath of acting ‘without favour or affection’ the Commissioners
-are required to take the following <span class="lock">oath:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I, A. B., do swear, that I am neither Proprietor nor Occupier
-of, nor, to the best of my Knowledge, am I concerned as Guardian,
-Steward or Agent for any Proprietor of any Houses, Toftsteads, or
-Lands within any of the Parishes of’ (names given) ‘or for any
-Person to whom any Allotment is to be made by virtue of the said
-Act.’</p>
-
-<p>Three Commissioners are a quorum. Vacancies are to be filled
-by the 11 persons elected as before. If they fail to do so, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-remaining Commissioners can nominate. Survey to be made by
-persons appointed by the Commissioners, and number of present
-Houses and Toftsteads to be recorded except in Boston West and
-Brothertoft. Edward Draper of Boston, Gentleman, to be Clerk.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment.</span>&mdash;Commissioners each to have £210 and no more.
-Two guineas to be deducted for each day’s absence.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;Nothing is said about sending in claims, as the survey
-giving the Houses, etc., does instead. If any difference or dispute
-arise between parties interested in the division with respect to
-shares, rights, interests, and proportions, the Commissioners are
-to hear them, and their determination is to be binding and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>To Lords of the Manor.</i>&mdash;Zachary Chambers, Esq., is Lord of
-the Manor of Swineshead; Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is
-Lord of the Manor of Frampton. These two are intitled jointly
-to the soil of the fen, and Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is
-also intitled ‘to the Brovage or Agistment’ of 480 head of cattle
-on the fen every year.</p>
-
-<p>(1) Zachary Chambers, Esq., is to have 120 Acres in one piece
-in a part called Brand End in lieu of his rights of soil and of all
-mines and quarries of what nature whatsoever.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is to have 120 Acres in one
-piece, near Great Beets, for his rights of soil and of mines and
-quarries.<a id="FNanchor_492" href="#Footnote_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a></p>
-
-<p>Charles Anderson Pelham, Esq., is also to have in lieu of his
-right of Brovage a parcel of the same number of acres that were
-given by an Act of 9 James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> to the Lords of the Manor of
-Swineshead for Brovage.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Not mentioned.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;After part has been sold for expenses
-(see below) and after allotment to the Lords of the Manor, the
-residue is to be divided amongst the eleven townships and Dog
-Dyke in proportion and according to the number of Houses and
-Toftsteads in each parish. For Brothertoft and Dog Dyke there
-are special arrangements; in the ten remaining townships or
-parishes, the following method is to be pursued:&mdash;For each House
-or Tenement there must be 4 acres, and for each Toftstead 2 acres
-allowed; when this proportion has been set out, the remainder
-is to be shared out in proportion to the Dyke-reeve assessments
-before the passing of a recent drainage Act. Quantity, Quality,
-and Situation are to be considered. <i>Special provision.</i>&mdash;Boston
-West is to have the same proportion of fen as Frampton.</p>
-
-<p>The share that each of the above ten townships receives is to
-be the common fen belonging to the township or parish, subject<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span>
-to the same common rights as the present fen, and is to be contiguous
-to the township.</p>
-
-<p><i>Brothertoft and Dog Dyke allotments.</i>&mdash;The allotment for Brothertoft
-is to be half as many acres as are allotted to Boston West, and
-is to go to Sir Charles Frederick, sole owner and proprietor, and
-to be near Brothertoft.</p>
-
-<p>The Allotment to Dog Dyke is to be calculated in reference to
-the share that Brothertoft receives. Each House or Toftstead in
-Dog Dyke is to have ⅔ of the proportion that each House or
-Toftstead in Brothertoft is assigned. The Dog Dyke Allotment
-is to go to Earl Fitzwilliam, the sole owner, and is to be near the
-Earl’s gardens.</p>
-
-<p>If any half-year lands, and other inclosed lands, directed to be
-sold (see Expenses) remain unsold, these are to be sold and the
-leases are to be allotted to the parishes in such proportions as
-the Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>An award is to be drawn up and its provisions are binding
-and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;Each township’s share is to be divided by an 8-feet
-wide ditch and a quick hedge, and guarded with a fence and
-rail 4&frac12; feet high, with double bars of fir or deal and with oak
-posts; the fence and the rail are to be nailed or mortified together.
-The Commissioners do this fencing out of the money raised for
-defraying the expenses of the Act, but each township is to keep
-up its fences according to the Commissioners’ directions. The
-fences, etc., are to be made within 18 months.</p>
-
-<p><i>Penalty</i> for wilfully and maliciously cutting, breaking down,
-burning, demolishing, or destroying any division fence:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>1st offence (before 2 J.P.’s), fine of £5 to £20, or from 1 to 3
-months in House of Correction.</p>
-
-<p>2nd offence (before 2 J.P.’s), fine of £10 to £40, or from 6 to
-12 months in House of Correction.</p>
-
-<p>3rd offence (before Quarter Sessions), transportation for 7 years
-as a felon.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To defray all expenses the Commissioners <span class="lock">can&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>(1) sell the Right of Acreage or Common upon certain specified
-half-year lands,<a id="FNanchor_493" href="#Footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a> <i>e.g.</i> The Frith, Great Beets, Little Beets, the
-Mown Rakes, etc., to the owners and proprietors of these lands.
-If the owners refuse to buy or do not pay enough to cover the
-expenses of the Act, the Commissioners <span class="lock">can&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>(2) sell part of the Fen. In this case the first land to be sold
-is Coppin Sykes Plot, Ferry Corner Plot, Pepper Gowt Plot, and
-Brand End Plot; the next land, Gibbet Hills.</p>
-
-<p>As Coppin Sykes Plot, etc., belong to the Commissioners of two
-Drainage Acts, the drainage Commissioners can as compensation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span>
-charge rates on the respective townships instead, and if any
-township refuses to pay, they can inclose a portion of its allotment,
-but not for tillage.</p>
-
-<p><i>Penalty for taking turf or sod</i> after Act.</p>
-
-<p>Culprit can be tried before one J.P., and fined from 40s. to £10,
-or, if he or she fails to pay, be given hard labour in the House of
-Correction for 1 to 3 months, or till the penalty is paid. Notice of
-this penalty is to be fixed on Church and Chapel Doors and
-published in newspapers.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases
-where the Commissioners’ decisions are said to be final and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Date, May 19, 1769. With Clerk of Peace or County
-Council, Lincoln.</p>
-
-<p>From <i>Annual Register</i>, 1769, p. 116 (Chronicle for July 16):</p>
-
-<p>‘Holland Fen, in Lincolnshire, being to be inclosed by act of
-parliament, some desperate persons have been so incensed at
-what they called their right being taken from them, that in
-the dead of night they shot into the windows of several gentlemen
-whom they thought active in procuring the act for
-inclosure; but happily no person has been killed.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Amending Act, 1770.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>January 25, 1770.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-an amending Act from the Commissioners who carried out the
-previous one; stating that ‘the Posts and Rails for many Miles
-in the Division Fences, which have been erected pursuant to the
-Directions of the said Act, have been pulled down, and the
-greatest Part thereof destroyed, together with great Part of the
-Materials for completing the said Fencing,’ and asking for leave
-to take down the Fencing and to make wide ditches instead.</p>
-
-<p>Leave given. Bill passed both Houses and received Royal
-Assent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Amending Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 10 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-c. 40.)</p>
-
-<p>The Commissioners are empowered to take down the posts and
-rails, and to make ditches 10 feet wide and 5 feet deep as boundaries
-instead.</p>
-
-<p>The Posts and Rails are to be sold, and the proceeds are to defray
-the expenses of this Act and the costs of the Commissioners. The
-Commissioners are to have a sum of £31, 10s. each as payment,
-with 2 guineas deducted for each day’s absence.</p>
-
-<p>Edward Draper, Clerk to the Commissioners, is to be repaid up
-to £1000, his costs in prosecuting fence-destroyers.</p>
-
-<p>If any proprietor has already made ditches wide enough, he is
-to be repaid his proportion.</p>
-
-<p>Any surplus is to be handed over to Drainage Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Notes</span>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="autotable" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th colspan="4"></th>
-<th>Act.</th>
-<th>Award.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="4">Boston West division was enclosed in</td>
-<td>1771</td>
-<td>1772</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="3">Algarkirke cum Fosdyke</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>1771</td>
-<td> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Frampton</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1784</td>
-<td> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Kirton</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1772</td>
-<td>1773</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Skirbeck</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1771</td>
-<td>1772</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Swineshead</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1773</td>
-<td>1774</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Sutterton</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1772</td>
-<td>1773</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Wigtoft</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1772</td>
-<td>1773</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>Wyberton</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1789</td>
-<td> </td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_6">APPENDIX A (6)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Knaresborough Forest.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1770</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;About 20,000 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Open, Commonable or Waste Lands.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 8, 1770.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from several freehold and copyhold tenants within the
-Forest; stating that the said tracts are of little advantage now,
-whereas it would be of public utility to have them divided into
-just allotments and enclosed. Leave given, bill presented, read
-twice, March 19; committed March 28. Petition against the bill
-from ‘a very great Number of the Freeholders, and Customary or
-Copyhold Tenants having Right of Common,’ stating that the bill
-contains provisions very injurious to the petitioners and others.
-Referred to the Committee.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>May 7, 1770.</i>&mdash;Lord
-Strange reported from the Committee that the allegations of
-the bill were true, that no person had appeared before the
-Committee to oppose the bill, and that ‘the Parties concerned
-had given their Consent’ ‘(except the Proprietors of Land in the
-Seven Lower Constableries, assessed to the Land Tax at
-£47, 2s. 3d. per Annum, and the Proprietors of Land in the Four
-Higher Constableries assessed to the Land Tax at £118, 3s. 6¾d.,
-and that the whole of the Assessment in the Seven Lower
-Constableries, and for Estates of several Persons adjoining, being
-within the District called the Forest, in virtue whereof Right of
-Common is enjoyed, amounts to £497, 1s. 4½d., and in the Four
-High Hamlets to £183, 9s. 8d.).’</p>
-
-<p>The bill passed both Houses and received the Royal Assent on
-May 19.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 10 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 94.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Five appointed. William Hill of Tadcaster,
-Gentleman; Joseph Butter of Bowthorp, Surveyor; William
-Chippendale of Ripley, Surveyor; John Flintoff of Boroughbridge,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span>
-Surveyor; Thomas Furness of Otley, Gentleman. Vacancies
-to be filled up by remaining Commissioners. Three are a quorum.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arbitrators.</span>&mdash;Nine appointed by name. Two can act.
-Vacancies to be filled up by Commissioners from barristers.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Surveyors.</span>&mdash;Three named, two of them are also Commissioners.
-Vacancies to be filled up by Commissioners.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment to Commissioners, Arbitrators and Surveyors.</span>&mdash;Nothing
-stated.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims to be delivered in at the first, second or
-third meeting; claims must be in writing and must specify and
-contain ‘an Account and Description of the Messuage or Messuages,
-antient Building or Buildings, and Lands’ in respect of which the
-claim is made, and also the name or names of the person or persons
-in actual possession. For a month after the third meeting all
-claims are to be open to the inspection of other claimants.
-Failure to deliver in ‘such Writing and Account as aforesaid’ at
-the first three meetings debars the would-be claimant from all
-right to allotment, ‘Infancy, Coverture, Lunacy, or any other
-general legal Impediment whatsoever of or in any such Person in
-anywise notwithstanding.’</p>
-
-<p>If claims are duly made and no objection raised to them by
-any person, they are to be allowed finally and conclusively at the
-fourth meeting; and no right so allowed can be disputed afterwards.
-Supposing objections are made by any two other
-claimants or by any Commissioner present, then the matter is to
-be referred to two or more of the arbitrators whose decision is to
-be final and conclusive. If unreasonable, unjust, frivolous or
-vexatious claims or objections are made, the Arbitrators can assess
-the costs on the maker.</p>
-
-<p>In deciding on claims, 40 years’ enjoyment of commonage is to
-be considered to confer a right, when it is enjoyed in respect of
-owning ancient messuages, etc., whether situated within or without
-the limits of the Forest (save and except in respect of Commonage
-by Vicinage).</p>
-
-<p>The quantity and the value of the lands in virtue of which
-claims are made, are to be adjudged by the Commissioners, and
-such judgment is to be final and conclusive, but no ancient
-Messuage or Building or Scite thereof is to be allowed at greater
-value than any other.</p>
-
-<p>Disputes between landlords and tenants are to be referred to
-the Arbitrators, and their award is to be final and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for the Lord of the Manor</i> (the King).&mdash;(1) One-tenth
-part of the whole, after allotments for Stone Quarries, watering
-places and roads have been deducted; ‘the said Tenth Part to
-consist of a proportionable Share of the best and worst kind of
-Land as near as may be.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span></p>
-
-<p>(2) All incroachments made within 40 years, and held by
-persons not entitled to right of common; but see Incroachments.</p>
-
-<p>(3) The King’s rights to Mines, Minerals, and Quarries (except
-Stone Quarries) are not to be prejudiced, but he or his lessee is to
-pay reasonable satisfaction for any damage done, such satisfaction
-to be determined by 2 or more J.P.’s, or, if the parties are still
-dissatisfied, by a Jury of 12.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Such portions as the Commissioners
-shall adjudge to be ‘full Recompence and Satisfaction.’</p>
-
-<p><i>For Stone Quarries, Watering Places, and Roads.</i>&mdash;Such allotment
-as the Commissioners think requisite.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Harrogate Stray.</i>&mdash;‘Whereas there are within the constableries
-of Bilton with Harrowgate and Beckwith with Rosset, or
-One of them, certain Wells or Springs of medicinal Waters,
-commonly called Harrowgate Spaws, to which during the Summer
-Season great Numbers of Persons constantly resort to receive the
-Benefit of the said Waters to the great Advantage and Emolument
-of Tradesmen, Farmers, and other Persons in that Neighbourhood,
-and the Persons resorting to the said Waters now have the Benefit
-of taking the Air upon the open Part of the said Constableries,’
-it is enacted that 200 acres of land near the said springs shall be set
-apart and left free and open for ever. The Freeholders and
-Copyholders within the said Constableries are to have right of
-pasture on these 200 acres, the stint being regulated by the
-Commissioners, and such right of common being taken as part of
-their respective allotments.</p>
-
-<p><i>For the Poor.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;To be allotted to the Persons entitled
-to commonage ‘in Proportion to the real Value of their several
-and respective Messuages, Lands, and Tenements’ in respect of
-which they are entitled. Quality and situation to be considered
-in settling the Quantum. Allotments must be accepted within
-six months after award (see also Fencing).</p>
-
-<p>Award to be drawn up with all particulars, but nothing is
-specifically said about its being final. It is to be Evidence in
-Courts of Law.</p>
-
-<p>Stone Quarries are to be vested in the landholders. Allotments
-to be of the same tenure as the property in virtue of which they
-are given. Timber is to belong to copyholders as if they were
-freeholders. Disputes arising in the execution of the Act, which
-do not affect the persons in general interested in the Inclosure,
-can, if all the Parties concerned in the particular dispute wish it,
-be referred to some other Arbitrator or Arbitrators not mentioned
-in the Act, and his or their decision is to be final.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;(1) Incroachments 40 years old and upwards,
-with all buildings thereon, to be absolute property of persons in
-possession; but Copyhold.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Incroachments made within 40 years.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) If incroachers are also owners who have a right of common,
-then the incroachments are to be given as their respective allotments
-(reckoning the value of the land only). If any particular
-incroachment is bigger than the allotment to which the incroacher
-is entitled, the surplus ground is to be treated as ordinary distributable
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) If incroachers are not entitled to right of common, then
-their incroachments, together with all the buildings on them, are
-to go to the King as Lord of the Manor; But whereas these
-incroachments ‘consist chiefly of Buildings and Inclosures which
-have been erected and inclosed, or are held and enjoyed by poor
-Persons who have, by their own Industry and Labour, built and
-improved the same, or by Persons who have been at considerable
-Charges therein,’ His Majesty is graciously pleased to grant
-Leases for 40 years in possession, ‘to the End no Person whatsoever
-may be removed from or deprived of his, her, or their
-present Possessions.’ These leases are to hold good even though
-not amounting to one-third of the improved annual value of the
-incroachments. After 40 years, full rents must be taken. <i>Exception</i>
-to (2 <i>b</i>).&mdash;Small incroachments made for Workhouses, for
-cottages of Poor chargeable to the Parish, or for Free Schools, are
-to be assigned to Trustees for benefit of the users.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of above provisions any Incroachments which the
-Commissioners think fit can be set out for roads, ditches, or
-fences, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;In the paragraph about selling land for expenses it
-says that the Ring fences to be made by Commissioners, but elsewhere
-it says fencing to be done by allottees under Commissioners’
-directions. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;Tithe allotments which are to be fenced
-by other proprietors, and certain other cases. If allottees do not
-fence, Commissioners do it for them and charge. If any persons
-think their allotments not worth fencing, then two or more of
-them whose allotments are contiguous can agree to leave them
-unenclosed, provided that within 12 months they set up a good
-stone wall or other substantial Fence between their allotments
-and those of others. They must keep this wall or fence in repair
-always.</p>
-
-<p>No sheep or goats to be kept for 7 years in any Inclosure
-adjoining a boundary fence, unless a special wall or Pale-fence is
-provided.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To be defrayed by sale at auction of parcels of
-land. Any surplus to be distributed amongst allottees in proportion
-to allotments. But if a Majority in Value of the persons
-interested do not wish any land sold, they can signify the same in
-writing, and can deposit a sufficient sum of money for the purposes
-of the Act with the Commissioners, and then the provisions
-for sale cease. Mortgages, in certain cases up to 50s. an acre, to
-meet expenses are allowed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;In Award, Commissioners are to give orders for laying
-out roads, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in cases
-where decisions are said to be final and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;June 25, 1775. Duchy of Lancaster.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Amending Act</span>, 1774.&mdash;(Private, 14 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 54.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 21, 1774.</i>&mdash;Petition from
-Sir Bellingham Graham, Bart., Walter Masterman, Esq., and others
-stating that the land to defray expenses is not yet sold, and
-asking for an amending Act to enable the Petitioners and others
-to pay their respective shares instead of the land being sold.
-Leave given and bill brought in. March 23, 1774, Petition from
-Mary Denison of Leeds, widow, and her heirs, who had ‘neglected
-to deliver her Claim of Common Right within the Time limited
-by the said Act, of which Neglect the Petitioners were not acquainted
-till after the Third Meeting of the Commissioners;
-soon after which the Petitioners caused a Claim to be made
-and delivered, but the said Commissioners refused to accept the
-same,’ asking for relief. Petition referred to the Committee, with
-instructions that they have power to make provision in the bill.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 25.</i>&mdash;Petition from several persons asking relief on same
-grounds as Ellen Oxley (see April 15 below).</p>
-
-<p>Petition from various persons asking that their allotments
-may be near within their townships.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 14.</i>&mdash;Petition from Daniel Lascelles, Esq., Sir Savile
-Slingsby, Oliver Coghill, Esq., and the Rev. William Roundell
-stating that they sent in claims as owners of rights of common;
-that these claims were referred to the Arbitrators; and that ‘it
-was discovered that Mistakes were made in the Description of
-such Tenements, or some Parts therof; and that, notwithstanding
-the said Errors arose merely from Inadvertency, and in no respect
-altered the Merits of the Petitioners’ Claims, the Arbitrators did
-not think fit to permit the Petitioners to rectify the same,’ but
-disallowed the claims. The Petitioners ask for reconsideration.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 15.</i>&mdash;Petitions from Rev. Thomas Collins who through
-‘Inadvertency’ had neglected to deliver in his claim of common
-right in respect of two Copyhold Messuages within the specified
-time, and from Francis Bedford, ditto, <i>re</i> copyhold close.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 15.</i>&mdash;Petition from Ellen Oxley and John Clarke, stating
-that they preferred claims of common rights to the Commissioners;
-that these claims were objected to and referred to the Arbitrators,
-who heard divers claims, several of which they disallowed; that
-as Ellen Oxley and John Clarke could not produce such evidence
-as was required by the Arbitrators in support of their claims, they
-withdrew them; that subsequently a Verdict was produced and
-read in evidence to the Arbitrators, by means of which similar
-claims were allowed.</p>
-
-<p>Bill passed both Houses. Royal Assent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Amending Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 14 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 54.)</p>
-
-<p>New Commissioner added, Richard Richardson (who was one of
-the Surveyors under the former Act).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;Commissioners can set out allotments without
-abatement for sale to 48 persons named, and other allottees
-who give notice. In the case of these allottees, the Commissioners
-are to settle their quota of charges and assess them accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>The Commissioners in rendering their account may charge one
-guinea a day for loss of time, and 10s. a day for expenses.
-The surveyors’ charges must be ‘reasonable and moderate.’
-The Commissioners must give an account before they call for
-payment, and the account is to be open to inspection at the
-charge of 6d.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;The claims of 32 persons named, which have been
-disallowed or withdrawn (1) for want of evidence; (2) for
-misnomers; (3) for failure to deliver in time, are to be reconsidered.
-Such claims must be delivered in at the first meeting,
-and must not be greater than they were before. They can be
-referred on appeal to the Arbitrators as before, but the appellant
-must now give security for costs in case the appeal fails.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;As some encroachments of over 40 years
-standing are found to have no right of common (and so cannot
-contribute their share to the Tithe Allotment), tithes can be
-charged on these in the form of rent charges.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions in respect of the
-Commissioners’ accounts, if any person interested thinks any item
-unreasonable, and no satisfactory explanation is forthcoming.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award</span> (for 2 Acts).&mdash;June 25, 1775. Duchy of Lancaster.</p>
-
-<p>From the Award we learn as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>Over 2751 Acres were sold to meet the expenses of the Act.</p>
-
-<p>The King received 2344 acres.</p>
-
-<p>The tithe owners received 4694 acres odd.</p>
-
-<p>The remainder was divided amongst over 700 different persons
-and bodies. The allottees’ shares varied from as much as 1386
-acres (Devisees of Sir John Ingelby, Bart.) down to a few perches.</p>
-
-<p>The amount that went to trustees for the use of the poor,
-including the various small incroachments (for schools, workhouses,
-etc.), which were allowed to stand was about 32 acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Notes on After-History.</span>&mdash;<i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvii.
-p. 292.&mdash;In 1793 Arthur Young bought an estate in Knaresborough
-Forest of about 4400 acres; 4000 acres of this was
-waste land, let out at a rental of 6d. an acre; 2751 acres
-of the estate were copyhold, and had been sold to pay the
-expenses of inclosure. The rest had formed part of the King’s
-allotment, and was hired on a long lease. On the 400 acres of
-cultivated land there were 3 farmhouses. The game of the
-waste was let for £30 a year; peats dug from it produced £6 to
-£8 a year, and Arthur Young calculated that one Scotch wether
-could be supported per acre.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_7">APPENDIX A (7)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Laleham.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1774</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;(From Award), 918 Acres.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;‘Several large and open Fields,’ ‘and
-likewise certain Wastes and Commons.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary <span class="lock">Proceedings.</span>&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">First attempt, January 31, 1767.</span>&mdash;Petition from Sir James Lowther,
-Lord of the Manor, and from ‘divers owners’ for enclosure of
-the open fields and commons, and also of ‘a large Pasture called
-Laleham Burway.’ Leave given, but bill dropped after first
-reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second attempt, December 7, 1767.</i>&mdash;Petition for enclosure from
-Sir James Lowther alone, on behalf of himself and others. Leave
-given; bill prepared by Mr. Anthony Bacon and Mr. Fuller, read
-twice and committed (December 14) to Mr. Bacon, Mr. Jenkinson,
-Sir James Lowther, and others.</p>
-
-<p><i>December 21, 1767.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various persons,
-being Owners, Proprietors and Occupiers entitled to Rights of
-Common, and also Owners of Cow Gates on Laleham Burway,
-setting forth ‘that the Inclosure sought by the said Bill is
-contrary to the general Sense and Opinion of the Petitioners and
-others, who compose a Majority in Number of the Owners or
-Proprietors of, or Persons interested’ in the Inclosure, and also
-stating that the meadow of Laleham Burway is not within the
-Manor of Laleham, but has been proved by a trial at law to be
-part of the Manor of Chertsey Beaumont. Petitioners to be
-heard on Report.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>December 21, 1767</i>
-(same day).&mdash;Mr. Anthony Bacon reported from the Committee that
-the Allegations of the Bill were true, and ‘that the Parties concerned
-had given their Consent to the Bill, to the Satisfaction of
-the Committee (except the Proprietors of Estates, who are entitled
-to Right of Common in the said Manor, who are rated to the
-Poors Rate to the Amount of £8, 2s. 0d. per Annum; and also
-the Proprietors of Estates, who are intitled to Right of Common
-in the said Manor, who are rated to the Poors Rate to the Amount
-of 15s. per Annum, who, being applied to, refused to sign the
-Bill, but declared they would not oppose the same; and that the
-whole of the Estates, in the said Manor, are rated to the Poors
-Rate to the Amount of £27, 6s. 6d. or thereabouts; and that the
-Proprietors of Eighty-six Cow Pastures or Farines, had refused to
-give their Consent to the said Bill; and that the whole Number
-of Cow Pastures, or Farines, are 292&frac12;); and that no Person appeared
-before the Committee to oppose the said Bill.’</p>
-
-<p>The consideration of the Report was put off several times; February<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span>
-25, 1768, a debate on the subject, resumed on February 29,
-with the result that the Bill was defeated.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Attempt, February 28, 1774.</i>&mdash;Petition from various owners
-and occupiers for enclosure of Laleham and of Laleham Burway.
-Leave given. Bill read first time March 18.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 22.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various owners and proprietors
-of certain Messuages, Cottages, Farmsteads, Lands and
-Rights of Common, and also owners of Cattle gates on Laleham Burway,
-setting forth that the ‘Bill is contrary to the general Sense
-and Opinion of the Petitioners and others, who compose a great
-Majority of the real Owners and Proprietors of, or Persons interested
-in, the Lands and Grounds intended to be inclosed: and that the
-Petitioners conceive that the said Bill, if passed into a Law, will in
-general be injurious to all the Petitioners, and in particular highly
-burthensome and oppressive to such of them who enjoy small and
-inconsiderable Rights and Interests therein.’ The Petition again
-pointed out that Laleham Burway was not in the Manor of
-Laleham, and that apart from that fact, ‘Inclosure would render
-the Enjoyment thereof’ inconvenient if not impracticable. To be
-heard by Counsel on second reading. On April 15 came another
-Petition from William Barwell, Esq., and other proprietors in and
-near Chertsey, opposing the enclosure of Laleham Burway as
-detrimental to the proprietors thereof and to the inhabitants in
-general of Chertsey, and suggesting that it is ‘calculated only for
-the private Emolument of some One or few’ of the proprietors.
-Petition to lie on table.</p>
-
-<p><i>May 20.</i>&mdash;Bill read a second time. Both above Petitions read
-and Counsel against the Bill heard and several witnesses examined.
-Bill committed.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>June 7, 1774.</i>&mdash;Mr.
-Norton reported from the Committee, that the allegations were
-true and that the parties concerned had consented ‘(except the
-Owners of 13 Houses intitled to Right of Common and the Proprietors
-of Lands rated to the Land Tax of £35, 4s. 6d. per Annum
-who refused to sign the Bill, and also except the Proprietors of
-Lands rated to the Land Tax at 9s. per Annum who could not be
-found; and that the whole Number of Houses having Right of
-Common is 80, and the whole of the said Lands are rated to the
-Land Tax at £168, 2s. 6d. per Annum).’</p>
-
-<p>A Clause was offered to be added to the Bill, for giving an
-Appeal to Quarter Sessions,<a id="FNanchor_494" href="#Footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a> and this was agreed to. Other
-clauses to restrain the Commissioners from setting out a road over
-Laleham South Field and for saving the rights of tithe owners
-were also added.</p>
-
-<p>The Bill passed both Houses and received the Royal Assent,
-June 22, 1774.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 14 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 114.)</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed:&mdash;Ralph Gowland, Esq., of
-Laleham; Thomas Jackman of Guildford; Henry Brumbridge of
-Thorpe.</p>
-
-<p>Two a quorum. Vacancies to be filled by remaining Commissioners
-from persons not interested in allotments or division.</p>
-
-<p>Surveyor or surveyors to be appointed by Commissioners.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment.</span>&mdash;Nothing stated.</p>
-
-<p>A special clause enacting that they are to make the division
-and allotment on or before December 24, 1774, ‘or as soon after as
-conveniently may be done.’<a id="FNanchor_495" href="#Footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims to be delivered in writing with particulars
-of right or title in respect of which claim is made at 1st or 2nd
-meeting. If any claim is objected to at 1st, 2nd, or 3rd meeting
-by another claimant then the Commissioners can hear and determine,
-and their determination is final and binding. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;If
-a claimant refuses to refer the matter to the Commissioners, then
-he or she can bring an action at law against the objector on an
-issue to be settled if necessary by the officer of the Court. But if
-the claimant whose claim is objected to fails to bring the action,
-and still refuses to refer the question to the Commissioners, then
-(after 3 months) he loses all his rights.</p>
-
-<p>There is also a clause ‘for the better settling the Rights and
-Claims of all the said parties so interested and concerned as
-aforesaid’ by which it is enacted that in case any difference touching
-rights and claims arises between any of the parties so interested
-and concerned, the Commissioners have power to hear and
-finally determine the same, ‘which Determination shall be binding
-and conclusive to all Parties.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Lord of the Manor</i> (Sir James Lowther).&mdash;No special provision
-mentioned, but see Award.</p>
-
-<p>Clause to say that the Lord of the Manor’s rights are not to be
-prejudiced by the Act ‘(except such Common of Pasture, or other
-Rights of Common, as can or may be claimed by or belonging to
-him).’</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Nothing in the Act to affect any right or title
-to tithes.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for the Poor.</i>&mdash;Nothing mentioned, but see Award.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment.</i>&mdash;The Commissioners are to make the allotments
-amongst the several persons ‘intitled to any Lands, Grounds,
-Right of Common or other Property,’ in proportion to ‘the real
-value of their several and respective Shares and Interests and
-Right of Common or other Property through and over the said
-Common Fields, or other the Premises to be allotted and divided.’
-Quantity, Quality and Convenience are to be considered. The
-Commissioners are to draw up an Award as soon as is convenient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-after allotment, and ‘the several Allotments, Partitions and
-Divisions so made’ in and by the Award ‘shall be and are hereby
-declared to be binding and conclusive unto and upon all and every
-the several Parties interested in the said open and common Fields,
-common Pastures, and commonable Lands.’ Allotments must
-be accepted within 12 months after award. (Saving clause for
-infants, etc.) Failure to accept excludes allottee from all benefits
-in lands and estates allotted to any other person, and the Commissioners
-can appoint a Bailiff or rent receiver with full power
-to manage the allotment in question, any surplus of profits to go to
-the original allottee who has refused to accept&mdash;until he changes
-his mind and accepts it.</p>
-
-<p>Allotments are to be of the same tenure as the estates for which
-they are claimed. The Herbage of the Lanes and Public Roads
-to be allotted to such person or persons as the Commissioners
-direct.</p>
-
-<p>A special clause to exempt Laleham Burway from division.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;No instructions given; except that when an allotment
-abuts on the highway, the fences are to be kept up by the
-owner.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;To be paid by the ‘Owners and Proprietors and
-Persons interested of and in the said Lands and Grounds’ in such
-proportion as the Commissioners decide. If persons refuse to pay,
-Commissioners can distrain or else enter on allotment and take
-rents. Allotments may be mortgaged up to 40s. an acre.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation To Occupiers and Others.</span>&mdash;Leases at rack-rent
-‘shall cease and be totally extinguished’ if Commissioners give
-notice; the owner giving such compensation to the tenant as the
-Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>Underwoods, hedges, shrubs, etc., are not to be grubbed up or
-destroyed before allotment without special permission from the
-Commissioners, but are to remain for the benefit of the allottee,
-the allottee paying the former owner such compensation as the
-Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>Also, If any land with woods, underwoods, hedges, shrubs, etc.,
-is allotted to someone who does not already hold it, then the first
-owner may enter and fell, grub up and cut down the underwood,
-hedges, etc., and take them away, unless the same have been
-allotted by the Commissioners to the new owner.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;Only with respect to roads, and then to
-Quarter Sessions only.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Date, 1803. Record Office. During the 29 years
-between the Act and the Award 10 Commissioners were concerned,
-(A) Ralph Gowland, (B) Thomas Jackman, (C) Henry
-Brumbridge, (D) George Wheatley, (E) John Baynes Garforth,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span>
-(F) Sir Philip Jennings Clarke, (G) Richard Penn, (H) Sir William
-Gibbons (see Stanwell), (I) Thomas Chapman, (J) George
-Kinderley, as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>C refused to act straight away. A then appointed D. B refused
-to sit in 1781. A and D appointed E. A died 1787. D and E
-appointed F. F died 1788. D and E appointed G. D died
-1802. E and G were desirous of being discharged from acting
-further. H was ‘duly appointed.’ E and G refused to act. H
-appointed I and J. H, I and J gave the award.</p>
-
-<p><i>Distribution of Land.</i>&mdash;918 acres odd, exclusive of roads, were
-divided out as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable center" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th> </th>
-<th>Acres.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Lord Lowther</i><a id="FNanchor_496" href="#Footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a> (including 18&frac12; for his rights of soil),</td>
-<td>626&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Six other owners</i> (in shares varying from 68&frac14; to John Coggan, Martha his wife, to 16&frac14; to the Vicar,</td>
-<td>223&frac14;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Twenty-three owners</i> (in shares varying from 7&frac12; acres, Messrs. Blackwell and Elson, to 16 perches John Goodwin,</td>
-<td>51&frac14;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Churchwardens and Overseers for the Poor (see below),</td>
-<td>13</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Gravel Pit,</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td class="total">918</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The destiny of the 13 acres vested in the Churchwardens and
-Overseers is described thus: they are ‘for the use of the poor of
-Laleham, as a compensation for their loss of Common, the said 13
-acres in lieu of the herbage of the roads the use of which by the
-poor was thought might be injurious to the young quick by the
-grazing of their cattle on the roads, and as the Majority of the
-Proprietors have agreed’ to give up this 13 acres as an equivalent
-for the Herbage, the Herbage is given to the proprietors instead.</p>
-
-<p>The Churchwardens and Overseers may do one of two things
-with the 13 acres plot, they may (1) lease it out for 21 years at
-‘the best and greatest rent’ to a parishioner: (the plan shows the
-13 acres to have been wedged in between Lord Lowther’s fields),
-or (2) ‘if they should think it more advantageous to the parish to
-raise a certain sum of money upon it for the Purpose of erecting
-a Workhouse’ they may let it out for 60 years.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_8">APPENDIX A (8)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Louth, Lincolnshire.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1801</span></p>
-
-
-<table class="autotable" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;</td>
-<td>In Petition </td><td>for Enclosure, </td><td>about </td><td>1770 </td><td>Acres.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td>In Act</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1854</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td>In Award</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-<td>1701</td>
-<td class="tdc">„</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;‘Open Common Fields, Meadows,
-Pastures, and other Commonable Lands and Waste Grounds.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span></p>
-<p>Description from Eden, vol. ii. p. 395 (June 1795).&mdash;‘Most
-of the land belonging to this town lies in 2 large common fields,
-which are fallowed and cropped alternately: in several parts of
-these common fields there are large tracts of waste land, upon
-which a great number of poor people summer each a cow, which in
-winter go at large in these fields. The Poor complain heavily of
-the farmers, saying, “That they encroach on their property”;
-and the farmers say, “That the Poor take the opportunity of
-eating their corn with their cattle.” Tithes are here taken
-in kind.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>March 11, 1801.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from various persons, owners, or interested in estates
-in Louth. Leave given. Bill read twice, and committed
-on June 5. Same day, Petition of various Freeholders and
-Proprietors of old inclosed land against the bill; setting forth
-that there are ‘now more than 750 acres of old inclosed Meadows
-and Pasture Lands very contiguous to the Town; and that the
-Soil of these Open Fields is best adapted for Wheat and Beans,
-of which it produces excellent Crops alternately, and is in a very
-high State of Cultivation; and that there is no Waste Land, as
-the Commons are a very rich Pasture, which keep a large
-Quantity of Cattle, the Property of a great many industrious
-People, who have Common Rights, and are enabled by their
-Common Rights to maintain their Families, and increase the
-Population and Prosperity of the Town of Louth’; and asking the
-House either to reject the Bill ‘or not to suffer that Part thereof to
-pass into a Law, which would compel the Petitioners to relinquish
-Part of their Old Inclosed Land against their Consent, but permit
-them to remain subject to the Tythes they have hitherto paid.’
-Petition referred to the Committee. All to have Voices.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>June 17, 1801.</i>&mdash;Mr.
-Annesley reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders
-had been complied with; that the allegations were true; and that
-the parties concerned had consented ‘(except the Proprietors of
-Messuages, Cottages and Toftsteads, having Right of Common
-of the Annual Value of £465, 10s. who refused to sign the Bill,
-and also except the Proprietors of Messuages, Cottages and
-Toftsteads having Right of Common of the Annual Value of
-£177, 15s. who were neuter; and that the Whole of the Property
-interested in the Inclosure is of the Annual Value of £1670, 12s.).’
-The Bill passed both Houses. Royal Assent, June 24, 1801.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Local and Personal, 41 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-c. 124.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed. (1) John Renshaw of
-Owthorpe, Notts, gentleman, on behalf of Tithe owners;</p>
-
-<p>(2) Isaac Leatham of Barton-le-Street, Yorks, gentleman, on
-behalf of the majority in value of the proprietors of common fields,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>
-meadows and commonable Lands and Waste Grounds (tithe
-owners excluded);</p>
-
-<p>(3) John Parkinson of Asgarby, Lincs, gentleman, on behalf of
-the majority in value of the proprietors of ancient inclosures and
-of Common Right Houses and Toftsteads (tithe owners excluded).</p>
-
-<p>Two to be a quorum. Vacancies to be filled by the party
-represented from persons ‘not interested in the inclosure.’</p>
-
-<p>Surveyor appointed by name. Vacancy to be filled by majority
-in value of all those interested.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment to Commissioners.</span>&mdash;2 guineas each a day. Surveyor
-to be paid what Commissioners think fit.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims to be delivered in with full particulars at
-meetings held for the purpose; no claims to be received afterwards
-except for some special cause. Full notice of a meeting to
-examine claims to be given. Commissioners can determine on
-claims, but if any claimant is dissatisfied with their determination
-he or she can try the matter at law by bringing an action on a
-feigned issue against any person interested in the Lands. Jury’s
-Verdict to be final. Defendant’s costs to be borne by all or some
-of the persons interested, as the Commissioners determine. If no
-notice of such action is given, then the determination of the
-Commissioners on claims is final and conclusive. But the Commissioners
-are not to determine on questions of title which can
-be tried at law. Such suits are not to impede inclosure, and
-the allotment is to be set out to the person in possession.
-Claimants in respect of Messuages, Cottages, Tofts, or Toftsteads
-need not prove usage of Right of Common.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>The Lord of the Manor</i> (<i>i.e.</i> The Warden and Six Assistants
-of the Town of Louth and Free School of King Edward the Sixth)
-to have one twentieth in value of the Waste Lands and other
-Lands which are not the separate Property of any Person or
-Persons; in particular a piece of Common called <i>Julian Bower</i>
-with the Trees on it is to be included as part of the Allotment.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;(1) The Worshipful Roger Kedington, M.A.,
-Prebendary of the Prebendal of Louth in Lincoln, impropriator
-of the Rectory of Louth, and patron of Vicarage;
-(2) William Hutton, Esq., lessee of above for 3 Lives; (3) Rev.
-Wolley Jolland, Vicar of Louth, entitled to Vicarage House
-and Garden and also to a Right of Common, and to small Tythes.</p>
-
-<p>(1) Allotments which Commissioners consider equal in value
-and a full Compensation for present unenclosed Glebe Lands and
-Rights of Common.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed (of
-every kind) as shall equal in value ⅕ part of all the open,
-arable and tillage land ‘(although the same may be occasionally
-used in Meadow or Pasture)’ ‘and which are not Waste Lands.’</p>
-
-<p>(3) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span>
-shall, in Commissioners’ judgment, equal in value all the Great
-and Small Tythes and other Ecclesiastical Dues on ancient
-Inclosed Arable and Tillage Lands.</p>
-
-<p>(4) Such pieces of the Lands and Grounds to be enclosed as
-shall equal in value ⅛ part of all the ancient enclosed Meadow and
-Pasture Lands, Grounds and Homesteads ‘(not being Glebe Lands,
-consecrated Burying Grounds, or Orchards or Gardens),’ and of
-the Near East Field, Far East Field, Great Roarings, Butter
-Closes, and all other open and commonable Meadow or Pasture
-Lands, Commons and Grounds to be inclosed which are subject
-to tithes and ecclesiastical dues.</p>
-
-<p><i>Arrangements for Owners of Old Inclosures.</i>&mdash;(See Petition
-on March 11, 1801). Owners of old Inclosures who have not
-sufficient allotments in the land to be inclosed, to contribute from
-them their proportion of the above Tithe allotments, can <i>either</i> have
-part of their old inclosures allotted instead (with their consent) <i>or</i>
-pay such gross sum of money towards the expenses of the Act as
-the Commissioners direct, whilst a portion of the land to be inclosed
-is given to the tithe owner.</p>
-
-<p>After this Act the only Tithes which remain are those for
-Gardens and Orchards, and Tithes of Mills, Pigs, Poultry, Bees and
-Honey; also Surplice Fees, Easter Offering and Mortuaries are
-untouched.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Repair of Roads.</i>&mdash;Sufficient pieces or parcels to be vested
-in the Surveyor of Highways.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Fairs.</i>&mdash;A piece of ground called ‘The Quarry’ is to be
-allotted to the Lords of the Manor for the holding of Fairs.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for the Poor.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;Amongst the various persons interested
-with due regard to Quantity, Quality and Situation. No undue
-Preference to be shown. The open fields to be allotted to their
-present owners, unless the owners ask for allotment elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>If an allottee is dissatisfied with his allotment, the Commissioners
-must hear his complaints, but their determination is
-final till the Award is made.</p>
-
-<p>The Award is to be drawn up and read over to the Proprietors
-and all the orders and directions, penalties, impositions, regulations
-and determinations of the Award are to be final, binding and
-conclusive on all parties.</p>
-
-<p>If an allottee refuses to accept or molests anyone else who
-accepts, he or she must pay the penalties decided on by the
-Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p>The tenure of allotments is to be the same as that of the estate
-in virtue of which they are claimed.</p>
-
-<p>The grass on the road allotment is to be allotted to such person
-or persons as the Commissioners direct, or else be applied for some
-general, Parochial, or other use.</p>
-
-<p>No person is to graze cattle, dig, cultivate or plant in any road
-or way under penalty of a fine of £3.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Incroachments 20 years old and over are to
-stand. Incroachments made within 20 years are to be treated as
-part of the Commons to be divided, but, if the Commissioners
-think it fit and convenient they can be allotted to the person in
-possession, without considering the value of erections or
-improvements (1) as the whole or part of his allotment; (2) as his
-allotment, the allottee paying such extra sum of money as the
-Commissioners think fit (this is supposing the allotment he is entitled
-to is less in value than the incroachment); (3) for such sum
-of money as the Commissioners think fit (this is supposing he is
-not entitled to any allotment).</p>
-
-<p><i>But</i> if the Commissioners do not think it fit and convenient to
-allot an incroachment to the person in possession, they may (1)
-sell it at public auction and apply the money to the purposes of
-the Act; (2) allot it to someone else, in which case a ‘reasonable’
-sum of money is to be given to the dispossessed owner, the new
-allottee paying the whole or part of it.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done by the several proprietors as the
-Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p><i>Exception.</i>&mdash;(1) The Tithe Owners’ allotments are to be fenced
-by the other proprietors.</p>
-
-<p>(2) In the case of allotments to Churchwardens, Overseers or
-Colleges, Chantries, Charities, etc., the Commissioners are to fence,
-deducting such portion of the allotments as is equal to the expenses
-of fencing and to these allottees’ share of the expenses of
-the Act.</p>
-
-<p>The portion deducted is to be divided amongst the other
-Proprietors who have to pay the expenses.</p>
-
-<p>If any allottee refuses to fence, the Commissioners can do it and
-charge the expenses on the allotment, appointing a Bailiff to receive
-rents and money.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;The expenses of the Act are to be defrayed by all
-the Proprietors benefited in proportion to the value of their allotments,
-<i>except</i> the Lords of the Manor and the Tithe owners in
-respect of their special allotments, and except the holders in trust
-for public bodies. (These last have had a portion deducted. See
-Fencing.)</p>
-
-<p>The cost of the survey of the land to be inclosed is to be borne
-by those interested in it, and the cost of the survey of the old
-inclosures by the proprietors of old inclosures.</p>
-
-<p>Mortgages are allowed under certain conditions (except to Tithe
-owners) up to £4 an acre.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioners are to keep accounts which must be open to inspection.
-A penalty is specified for failure to keep them. Money
-amounting to £50 is to be paid in to a Banker.</p>
-
-<p>Proprietors (tithe owners excepted) can sell their Common
-Rights or allotments before the Award.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation.</span>&mdash;(1) Leases at Rack Rent of any land to be inclosed,
-either alone or together with any Messuages, Cottages,
-Toftsteads, etc., to be void; the proprietor paying the lessee such
-satisfaction as the Commissioners direct. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;No lease
-of any Messuage, Cottage, Toftstead, Lands, Hereditaments or
-ancient Estate in respect of which allotment is made for Right
-of Common is to be void; but the allotments made to these are
-to belong to the proprietors who must pay to the lessees such
-satisfaction as the Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Satisfaction (adjudged by the Commissioners) is to be given
-for standing crops by the new allottee, unless the owner of the
-crops likes to come and reap them.</p>
-
-<p>Satisfaction is also to be given to the occupier for ploughing,
-tilling and manuring, but no Swarth 6 years old is to be ploughed
-till allotments are entered on.</p>
-
-<p>(3) If any trees, shrubs, etc., go with the ground to a new
-proprietor, the old proprietor is to be paid their valuation (as
-judged by the Commissioners).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;The Commissioners
-are to have absolute power to determine the course of husbandry.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to have power to set out and stop up
-roads and footpaths (turnpike roads excepted), but are to give notice
-in a local newspaper <i>re</i> public carriage roads, and any person who
-thinks himself or herself aggrieved can appeal to Quarter Sessions
-whose decision is final.</p>
-
-<p>If an ancient road or path is shut up, the person for whose
-accommodation it is shut up may be required by the Commissioners
-to pay compensation either (1) to person or persons injured or (2)
-for general expenses of the Act.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not where
-Commissioners’ determinations are said to be final.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Date, 1806. Record Office.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Award</span>:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th></th>
-<th class="totalbottom"><i>a.</i></th>
-<th class="totalbottom"><i>r.</i> </th>
-<th class="totalbottom"><i>p.</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Whole Area divided out,</td>
-<td>1701</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>21</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Tithe Owners (various allotments), in all,</td>
-<td>584</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>6<a id="FNanchor_497" href="#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">One of the tithe holders also receives,</td>
-<td>24</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">The Lords of the Manor,</td>
-<td>109</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>4<a id="FNanchor_498" href="#Footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Lords of the Manor, as Guardians of the Free School,</td>
-<td>69</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>19</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Allotments for repairing roads,</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">For Fairs,</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>12</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td class="total">795</td>
-<td class="total">1</td>
-<td class="total">8<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>
-The remainder is divided out amongst 130 <span class="lock">allottees:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left">From 50&ndash;100 acres</td>
-<td>4 </td>
-<td class="tdl borderl" rowspan="4">Above 10 acres </td><td rowspan="4">21</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">From 30&ndash;50 acres</td>
-<td>7 </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">From 10&ndash;30 acres</td>
-<td>10 </td>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td class="total">21</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td colspan="2"></td>
-<td class="left">From 1&ndash;10 acres </td><td>42</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">From &frac12; acre-1 acre</td>
-<td>22</td>
-<td class="tdl borderl" rowspan="3">Below 1 acre</td>
-<td rowspan="3">67</td>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>From &frac14; acre-&frac12; acre</td>
-<td>10</td>
-
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Below &frac14; acre</td>
-<td>35<a id="FNanchor_499" href="#Footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td></td>
-<td class="total">67</td>
-<td class="borderl"></td>
-<td class="total">130</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The smallest allotments are, Ann Metcalf, Spinster, 14 perches,
-which she must fence on the N. and W. sides; Ann Hubbard,
-Widow, 15 perches, which she must fence on the S. and W. sides.</p>
-
-<p>These, like the other small allotments, are in lieu of Right of
-Common and all other Interest.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_9">APPENDIX A (9)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Simpson, Bucks.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1770</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;Not specified anywhere. The annual value unenclosed
-is stated to be £773, so the acreage was probably over 1500.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Open and Common Fields, Lammas
-Grounds and Pastures.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>First Attempt, December 13, 1762.</i>&mdash;Petition from Walden
-Hanmer, Esq., Lord of the Manor, William Edge, Gentleman, and
-other owners and proprietors, stating that the holdings are at present
-intermixed and dispersed, that the land in its present state is
-in great measure incapable of Improvement, and that if it were
-divided and inclosed great Benefit would accrue, and asking for
-leave to bring in a Bill to enclose. Leave was given, and the
-Bill passed its second reading and was sent to Committee.
-On March 16, 1763, came a petition against it from John
-Goodman and Nicholas Lucas, Gentlemen, and other owners and
-proprietors against the bill, ‘alleging that the Petitioners are
-Owners and Proprietors of Four Fifth Parts, and upwards, of the
-said Fields, Grounds, and Pastures, so intended to be inclosed, and
-of several Rights and Privileges incident thereto,’ stating that the
-bill would be greatly detrimental to all of them and ‘tend to the
-Ruin of many of them,’ and asking to be heard by Counsel
-against the bill. Petition to be heard when the bill was
-reported.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>March 25, 1763.</i>&mdash;Mr.
-Lowndes reported from the Committee, that the allegations were
-true and that ‘the Parties concerned had given their Consent to
-the Bill, to the Satisfaction of the Committee (except Michael
-Woodward, Nicholas Lucas, senior, Lewis Goodman, who, being
-asked to sign a Bill testifying their Consent, and whose Interest
-in the said Lands and Grounds amounts to £31 a Year, or thereabouts,
-but the Witness could not ascertain the Interest of the
-said Lewis Goodman and Thomas Goodman, said that they had
-no Objection to the Inclosure, but did not care to sign, and
-also except Luke Goodman and Edward Chad, whose Interest in
-the said Lands and Grounds is £16 a Year; Edward Chad said
-he was by no means for it, and Luke Goodman said, he would
-neither meddle nor make; and also except Joseph Etheridge, a
-Minor, whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is £38 a
-Year; and Mary Etheridge, his Guardian whose Interest in the
-said Lands and Grounds is £16 a Year, said, she never was for it,
-as being a Woman, and having nobody to look after her Fencing;
-and also except &mdash;&mdash; Loughton, John Goodman, and Son, whose
-Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is £24 a Year; John
-Goodman said, he would lose his Life before he would lose his
-Land; his Son said, he did not care to meddle; and also except
-John Goodman, who, being asked to sign a Bill, testifying his
-Consent, and whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is
-£55 a year, said he would not sign it; and except Sear Newman,
-whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds amounts to £30 a
-Year, who said he had no Objection to it, but did not care to meddle
-or make, upon Account of his Father being so much against it;
-and it appeared to your Committee, by Articles of Agreement,
-dated the 31st Day of December, 1761, that the said John
-Goodman and Sear Newman did thereby consent and agree to an
-Inclosure of all the Open and Commonable Fields, Lands, Cow
-Pasture, and Fields, within the said Parish of Simpson, and to
-pay their respective Proportions of the Expence of an Act of
-Parliament; and other the necessary Expences attending the
-same; and also except John Newman, whose Interest in the said
-Lands and Grounds is £30 a Year, who said he would not sign it;
-and also except Nicholas Lucas the younger, whose Interest in the
-said Fields is £36 a Year, who said he had no Objection to sign, if
-the Cow Pasture had been left open; and also except Daniel
-Lucas, whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is £25 a Year,
-who refused signing; and also except George Wilkes, whose
-Interest in the said Lands and Grounds is £1, 10s. a Year, who
-said he had no Occasion to sign, because he had agreed with Mr.
-Hanmer for the Purchase of his Commons; and also except
-Richard Goodman, Edward Ashwell, for a Minor, Edward Cooke
-and John Fox, whose Interest in the said Lands and Grounds
-together amounts to £5, 10s. a Year, who were not applied to;
-and also except Sarah Hawes, Widow, who is lately dead; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span>
-also except George Stone, whose Interest in the said Lands and
-Grounds is £3 a Year, who was not applied to, because he had
-sold his Interest to Mr. Hanmer, who has consented to the Bill;
-and also except Six out of Eight of the Feoffees of Lands belonging
-to the Poor of Simpson, which Lands are of the yearly
-Value of £24: and also except the Feoffees of certain Charity
-Lands and Grounds, of the yearly Value of £16; William Cooper,
-one of the Feoffees, being asked to sign a Bill testifying his
-Consent, said he was against it; and that the yearly Value of the
-said Lands and Grounds, in the said Fields, Cow Pasture, Common
-Meadows, Lammas Grounds, and Waste Grounds, amounts to
-Seven Hundred Ninety-nine Pounds, Fifteen Shillings, or thereabouts;)....’</p>
-
-<p>After the Report was read, Counsel was heard for the Petitioners
-against the Bill, but the Bill was read a third time and sent up to
-the Lords. March 29, it was read a second time, and a
-Petition against it from John Goodman, John Newman, Nicholas
-Lucas and others was received. April 14, Lord St. John of
-Bletsoe reported it without amendments from the Committee,
-but it was defeated on its third reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second Attempt, January 15, 1765.</i>&mdash;Walden Hanmer, Esquire,
-the Rector, and others again petitioned for enclosure. Leave was
-given to bring in a bill, but nothing came of it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Attempt, February 6, 1770.</i>&mdash;Walden Hanmer, Esquire, and
-others again petitioned for enclosure. Leave was given, and a bill
-read twice and sent to Committee.</p>
-
-<p><i>March 6, 1770.</i>&mdash;‘A Petition of the Major Part of the Owners
-and Proprietors’ against the Bill, stating ‘that the Petitioners
-are very well satisfied with the Situation and Convenience of their
-respective Lands and Properties in their present uninclosed
-State,’ and that the Bill will do them great Injury.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>March 6, 1770</i> (same
-day).&mdash;Mr. Kynaston reported that the allegations were true, and
-that the Parties concerned had consented to the Bill ‘to the
-Satisfaction of the Committee,’ with the following exceptions&mdash;Five
-Persons with property of the annual value of £192, 10s.;
-Sear Numan, with property of annual value of £20, 15s., ‘who
-said he must do as his Father would have him’; John Lucas the
-younger, with property of the annual value of 15s.; George Cross,
-‘who would not say any Thing,’ with property of the annual
-value of £5; Elizabeth Mead, ‘who said she should sell when
-inclosed,’ with property of the annual value of £2, 10s.; and Five
-Persons, who said they would not oppose the Bill, with property
-of the annual value of £77, 10s. The annual value of ‘the whole
-of the Estates in the said Fields intended to be inclosed’ was
-given as £773. The Bill passed the Commons and the Lords,
-where a petition against it was considered. It received the Royal
-Assent on March 29, 1770.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 10 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 42.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Three appointed. (1) The Rev. John Lord of
-Drayton Parslow, Clerk; (2) Thomas Harrison of Stoney Stratford,
-Gentleman; (3) Francis Burton of Aynho, Northamptonshire,
-Gentleman. Two a quorum. Vacancies to be filled up by
-remaining Commissioner or Commissioners from persons ‘not
-interested in the Division and Inclosure.’ No particulars of
-payment.</p>
-
-<p>A survey to be made by a surveyor nominated by Commissioners.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;The Commissioners are ‘to hear and finally determine’
-any differences about Interests and Rights.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Lord of the Manor.</i>&mdash;None (as there seems to have
-been no common or waste ground concerned).</p>
-
-<p>His manorial rights, right of common excepted, to go on as
-before.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;The Rector to have (1) such
-parcels of Land as shall be a full equivalent of his glebe lands
-and common Right; (2) ⅐ part of all the rest, ‘Quantity as well
-as Quality considered,’ as full compensation for all Tithes.</p>
-
-<p>In the case of old inclosures which have allotments, the
-Commissioners can give him either part of these or part of the
-owner’s allotment in place of tithes, and in case of old inclosures,
-etc., which have no allotment, they remain subject to Tithes.</p>
-
-<p>The Rector is exonerated from keeping a Bull and a Boar.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for Gravel</i>, <i>Sand</i>, <i>etc.</i>&mdash;See Allotment of Residue.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for Poor.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;As soon as is convenient after the
-survey is made, the Commissioners are to set out and allot the
-land in proportion to the respective interests and right of common
-of the claimants, ‘having a due Regard to the Situation and Convenience,
-as well as to the Quantity and Quality of the Lands
-and Grounds.’ The award, which contains their decision, is to be
-final and conclusive.</p>
-
-<p>Allotments must be accepted within 12 calendar months.
-Failure to accept excludes the allottee from all Benefits under the
-Act. (Saving clause for infants, etc.)</p>
-
-<p>If material is needed for the roads, the surveyors may, under an
-order from two J. P.’s not interested in the inclosure, enter
-on any allotment and take it, except where the allotment is
-a garden, park, orchard, paddock, wood, or ground planted with
-an avenue of trees for the ornament of any House.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned; as no common.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done ‘at the proper Costs and Charges’ of
-the respective allottees, as directed by the Commissioners, except
-in the case of the Rector, whose allotment is to be fenced for him
-by the other proprietors, and whose fences, if they abut on a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span>
-highway, are to be kept up by the other proprietors for 7
-years. The fencing of all allotments must be carried out within
-12 months after the Award, and if any person refuse to fence,
-the Commissioners, on complaint of a neighbour, can do the
-fencing and charge it to the recalcitrant owner, distraining on his
-goods, if necessary. If any one proprietor has more than his fair
-share of fencing to do, then the Commissioners can make the
-other proprietors pay something towards it. If any allotment
-abuts on a common field, fencing is not compulsory.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;These are to be paid by the Owners and Proprietors
-‘by an equal Pound Rate according to the Value of the
-Lands and Grounds each Person shall have allotted to him.’
-Proprietors are allowed to mortgage their allotments up to 40s. an
-acre in order to meet expenses.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;All rack-rent leases are to be
-null and void, the owners making such satisfaction to the tenants
-as the Commissioners think reasonable.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to have full power to set out and shut
-up roads, footpaths, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only; and not in cases
-where the Commissioners’ decisions are final and conclusive,
-as, <i>e.g.</i>, on claims and allotments.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between Act and Award.</span>&mdash;Directly the Act is
-passed, till the allotments are made, the Commissioners are to
-have ‘the sole, intire and absolute Management, Order and
-Direction’ of all the land with regard to cultivation, flocks, etc.,
-any usage to the contrary notwithstanding.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Bucks, with Clerk of the Peace or Clerk of the Council.
-Date, April 26, 1771.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_10">APPENDIX A (10)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Stanwell.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1789</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;According to Act ‘by Estimation about 3000 Acres,’
-but Award gives 2126 Acres only.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;‘Large open fields, Arable and Meadow
-Grounds, and Lammas Lands, about 1621 acres, and also several
-Commons, Moors and Waste Lands,’ about 505 acres (unstinted).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><i>First Attempt, December 12, 1766.</i>&mdash;Petition for Enclosure from
-the Lord of the Manor, the Impropriator of the Great Tythes, the
-Vicar, and the most considerable Proprietors. Leave given. Bill
-read first time, January 27, 1767.</p>
-
-<p><i>February 18, 1767.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>
-‘Owners or Occupiers of Cottages or Tenements in the parish of
-Stanwell,’ setting forth ‘that the Petitioners in Right of their
-said Cottages and Tenements are severally intitled to Common of
-Pasture for their Cattle and Sheep upon all the said Commons,
-Moors, and Waste Lands, at all Times of the Year, except for Sheep,
-without any Stint whatsoever, as also a Right of intercommoning
-their Cattle and Sheep, with those of the Tenants of divers other
-Manors, at all Times in the Year, upon the large Common called
-<i>Hounslow Heath</i>: and the Petitioners in the Rights aforesaid, are
-also intitled to and do enjoy Common of Turbary on the said
-Commons and Heath, and that the Lord of the Manor of Stanwell
-lately caused part of the said Moors within the said Parish, to be
-fenced in, and inclosed with Pales for his own sole and separate
-Use, without the Consent of the Petitioners and other Persons
-intitled to a Right of Common therein, which said Pales have
-been since pulled down by several of the Petitioners and others,
-against whom several Actions have been commenced by the Lord
-of the said Manor, in order to try the Petitioners’ said Right of
-Common therein, all which Actions are now depending; and that
-the Petitioners apprehend, and believe, in case the said Bill should
-pass into a Law, the Legality of the Petitioners’ said Rights will
-be left to the Determination of Commissioners unqualified to
-judge of the same: and that in case the Petitioners’ said Rights
-should be allowed by such Commissioners, that no adequate
-Compensation in Land will or can be awarded to the Petitioners
-for the same: and that the dividing and inclosing the said
-Commons, Moors, and Waste Lands within the said Parish, will
-greatly injure and distress many....’ Another petition was
-presented on the same day from George Richard Carter, Esq.,
-Samuel Clark, Esq., Jervoise Clark, Esq., John Bullock, Esq.,
-and several others, being owners and proprietors of Farms and
-Lands in the parish of Stanwell, setting forth that the Petitioners,
-as also the Owners of near 100 Cottages or Tenements within the
-said Parish, and their respective Tenants are entitled to right of
-pasture as in the petition given above, and stating that inclosing
-will be attended with great inconvenience.</p>
-
-<p>On February 26 came yet another petition from owners and
-occupiers in the parishes of Harmondsworth, Harlington, Cranford,
-Heston, Isleworth, Twickenham, Teddington, Hampton,
-Hanworth, Feltham, and East Bedfont in Middlesex, setting forth
-that the Commons and Waste Lands in the parish of Stanwell
-were part of Hounslow Heath, over which the petitioners had
-right of pasture, and stating that if the part of the Heath in
-Stanwell parish were inclosed it would be very injurious to all
-the owners and occupiers in the parish of Stanwell, except to the
-Lord of the Manor, and would also be prejudicial to the petitioners.</p>
-
-<p>All these petitions were ordered to lie on the table till the
-second reading, which took place on February 26. Counsel was
-heard for and against the Bill; the motion that the Bill should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span>
-committed was defeated by 34 to 17 votes, and thus the farmers
-were able to parade along Pall Mall with cockades in their hats.<a id="FNanchor_500" href="#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a></p>
-
-<p><i>Second Attempt, February 20, 1789.</i>&mdash;Petition from the Lord
-of the Manor (Sir William Gibbons), the Vicar and others
-for enclosure. Leave given. Bill read twice.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>March 30, 1789.</i>&mdash;Sir
-William Lemon reported from the Committee that the
-Standing Orders had been complied with; that the allegations
-were true, and that the parties concerned had given their consent
-‘(except the Proprietors of Estates of the Annual Value of £164,
-14s. or thereabouts who refused to sign the Bill, and also except
-the Proprietors of £220, 5s. 8d. per Annum or thereabouts who
-did not chuse to sign the Bill, but made no Objection to the
-Inclosure, and also except some small Proprietors of about £76
-per Annum who could not be found, and that the whole Property
-belonging to Persons interested in the Inclosure amounts to
-£2,929, 5s. 4d. per annum or thereabouts).’ Bill passed both
-Houses. Royal Assent, May 19, 1789.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 29 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 15.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Edward Hare of Castor, Northampton, Gentleman;
-William Young of Chancery Lane, Gentleman; Richard
-Davis of Lewknor, Oxford, Gentleman. Two a quorum. Vacancies
-to be filled by remaining Commissioners from persons not interested
-in the Inclosure.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Surveyor.</span>&mdash;One named. Vacancy to be filled by Commissioners.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment to Commissioners.</span>&mdash;£2, 2s. for each working day.
-Nothing about Surveyor’s pay.</p>
-
-<p>Special clause that certain Surveys already made may be
-used.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims about Right of Common ‘and all Differences
-and Disputes which shall arise between the Parties interested, or
-claiming to be interested in the said intended Division and
-Inclosure, or any of them concerning their respective Rights,
-Shares, and Interests in the said open Fields, arable and meadow
-Grounds, and Lammas Lands, Commons, Moors, and Waste
-Grounds, or their respective Allotments, Shares and Proportions
-which they, or any of them ought to have’ in the division, are to
-be heard and determined by the Commissioners. This determination
-is to be binding and conclusive on all parties; except with
-regard to matters of Title which can be tried at law.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p>(1) <i>Lords of the Manor</i> (Sir William Gibbons, Thomas Somers
-Cocks, Esq., and Thomas Graham, Esq.).&mdash;One sixteenth part of
-the residue of the Moors and Waste Lands, when roads and allotment
-for gravel have been deducted.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span></p>
-<p>(2) <i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Not to be prejudiced by the Act. Land
-still to be liable to tithes as before.</p>
-
-<p>(3) <i>Gravel Pits.</i>&mdash;For roads and for use of inhabitants; not more
-than 3 acres.</p>
-
-<p>(4) <i>Provision for Poor.</i>&mdash;Such parcel as the Commissioners think
-proper (‘not exceeding in the whole 30 Acres’). To be vested in
-the Lords of the Manor, the Vicar, Churchwardens, and Overseers,
-and to be let out, and the rents and profits thereof to be given
-for the benefit of such occupiers and inhabitants as do not receive
-parish relief, or occupy lands and tenements of more than £5
-a year, or receive any allotment under the Act.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;The land to be divided among the various
-persons interested ‘in proportion and according (Quantity,
-Quality and Situation considered) to their several and respective
-Shares, Rights, and Interests therein.’ If the Commissioners
-think that any of the allotments in the common fields are too
-small to be worth enclosing they may lay such proprietors’ allotments
-together.</p>
-
-<p><i>Certain principles to be followed.</i>&mdash;Owners of cottage commons
-who are also proprietors of lands in the open fields are to have
-their allotment in virtue of their Right of Common added
-to the other allotment to which they are entitled.</p>
-
-<p>Owners of cottage commons who do not possess land in the open
-fields as well, are to have their allotments put all together for
-a cow common, with such stint as the Commissioners decide.
-But if they wish for separate allotments they may have them.</p>
-
-<p>Allotments must be accepted within six months after award.
-Failure to accept excludes allottee from all ‘Benefit Advantage’
-by this Act, and also from all estate right or interest in any other
-allotment. (Saving clause for infants, etc.)</p>
-
-<p>The award is to be drawn up; ‘and the Award, and
-all Orders, Directions, Regulations, and Determinations therein
-contained, and thereby declared, shall be binding and conclusive
-to and upon all Persons whomsoever.’ Tenure of allotments to be
-that of estates in virtue of which they are granted. Copyhold
-allotments can be enfranchised if wished, the Commissioners
-deducting a certain amount as compensation for Lord of the Manor.
-Allottees lose all Right of Common on any common in adjoining
-parishes.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned in Act.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Exchanges.</span>&mdash;Allowed (as always). Also former exchanges can
-be confirmed by the Commissioners ‘notwithstanding any legal
-or natural Incapacity of any Proprietor or Owner having made
-any such Exchanges.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;To be done by allottees. If any person has an
-undue proportion Commissioners have power to equalise.</p>
-
-<p><i>Exceptions.</i>&mdash;(1) Fences of cow common allotment for those
-who have Cottage Common only (see above), which are to be made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span>
-and kept in repair by the other proprietors; but if these allottees
-choose to have separate allotments they must fence them
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Allotment for the Poor (30 acres).&mdash;To be fenced by other
-proprietors.</p>
-
-<p>(3) Allotments to charities, ditto.</p>
-
-<p>If any allottee refuses to fence or keep fences in repair his neighbour
-can complain to a J.P. ‘not interested’ in the inclosure, and the
-J.P. can either make an order, or else empower the complainant
-to enter and carry the work out at the charge of the owner.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;Part of the Commons and Wastes to be sold by
-auction to cover expenses. Any surplus to be laid out by Commissioners
-on some lasting improvements; any deficit to be
-made up by proprietors as Commissioners direct.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioners are to keep accounts which must be open to
-inspection.</p>
-
-<p>To meet expenses allotments may be mortgaged up to 40s. an
-acre.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;Leases at rack or extended rents
-of any of the land to be inclosed by this Act to be void, owners
-paying tenants such compensation as Commissioners direct.
-Satisfaction is also to be given for standing crops, for ploughing,
-manuring, and tilling.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Arrangements between the Act and Award.</span>&mdash;The Commissioners
-are to direct the course of husbandry ‘as well with
-respect to the Stocking as to the Plowing, Tilling, Cropping,
-Sowing, and Laying down the same.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Full power to set out roads and footpaths and to shut
-up others. Turnpike roads excluded.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Record Office.</p>
-
-<p>From the Award we learn as <span class="lock">follows:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>14 parcels of land, containing in all over 123 acres were sold
-to cover expenses for £2512.</p>
-
-<p>31&frac12; acres are allotted to the Lords of the Manor (Sir William
-Gibbons, Thomas Somers Cocks, and Thomas Graham) in lieu
-of their rights as Lords of the Soil.</p>
-
-<p>490 acres to Sir William Gibbons in trust for himself and the
-other Lords of the Manor in lieu of all other claims (freehold
-lands, rights of common, etc.).</p>
-
-<p>69 acres to the mortgagees of the late Sir J. Gibbons.</p>
-
-<p>6 acres to the Trustees of the late Sir J. Gibbons.</p>
-
-<p>400 acres to Edmund Hill, Esq. (who also bought 117 acres of
-the land sold to defray costs).</p>
-
-<p>100 acres to Henry Bullock, Esq.</p>
-
-<p>72 acres to Thomas Hankey, Esq.</p>
-
-<p>45 acres to Jervoise Clark Jervoise, Esq.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span></p>
-
-<p>Allotments of from 20 to 40 acres to eleven other allottees.</p>
-
-<p>Allotments of from 10 to 20 acres to twelve allottees.</p>
-
-<p>Allotments of from 12 perches to 9 acres to seventy-nine
-allottees.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-four of these smaller allotments (including six of less
-than 2 acres) are given in lieu of open field property; the remaining
-fifty-five are given in compensation for common rights of some
-sort or other.</p>
-
-<p>Sixty-six cottages appear as entitling their owners to compensation.<a id="FNanchor_501" href="#Footnote_501" class="fnanchor">[501]</a>
-Of these 66, 16 belong to Henry Bullock and 8 to Sir
-William Gibbons, and the remaining 42 to 38 different owners.
-The allotments to cottages vary from a quarter of an acre (John
-Merrick) to over an acre (Anne Higgs). The owners of cottage
-commons only had their allotments separately and not in
-common.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_11">APPENDIX A (11)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Wakefield, Yorks.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1793</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;2300 acres ‘or thereabouts.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Open Common Fields, Ings, Commons,
-Waste Grounds, within the townships of Wakefield, Stanley,
-Wrenthorpe, Alverthorpe, and Thornes.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>January 23, 1793.</i>&mdash;Petition from
-several owners and proprietors for enclosure. Leave given to
-prepare bill. January 28, Wilberforce presented it; February 18,
-it was committed to Wilberforce, Duncombe and others.</p>
-
-<p><i>February 28.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from the Earl of
-Strafford, stating that the bill will greatly affect and prejudice his
-property. Petition referred to Committee.</p>
-
-<p>Same day, Petition against the bill from several Persons, being
-Owners of Estates and Occupiers of Houses in the Town and Parish
-of Wakefield. ‘Setting forth, That, if the said Bill should pass
-into a Law, as it now stands, the same will greatly affect and
-prejudice the Estates and Property of the Petitioners, (viz.), their
-being deprived of the Benefit they now receive from the Pasturage
-of the Ings, from the 12th of August to the 5th of April, and for
-which they cannot receive any Compensation adequate thereto, as
-well as the Restrictions which exclude the Inhabitants from
-erecting Buildings on Land that may be allotted to them for
-Twenty, Forty, and Sixty Years, on different Parts of Westgate
-Common, as specified in the said Bill.’ This petition also was
-referred to the Committee.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>March 12.</i>&mdash;Wilberforce
-reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span>
-been complied with, that they had considered the first Petition
-(Lord Strafford’s), (no one had appeared to be heard on behalf of
-the second Petition), that they found the allegations of the Bill
-true, that ‘the Parties concerned’ had given their consent to the
-Bill, and also to adding one Commissioner to the three named in
-the Bill ‘(except the Owners of Estates whose Property in the
-Lands and Grounds to be divided and inclosed is assessed to the
-Land Tax at £5 per Annum or thereabouts, who refused to sign
-the Bill; and also, except the Owners of Estates whose Property
-in the said Lands and Grounds is assessed to the Land Tax at
-about £51 per Annum, who have either declared themselves
-perfectly indifferent about the Inclosure, or not given any Answer
-to the Application made to them respecting it; and that the
-whole Property belonging to Persons interested in the Inclosure is
-assessed to the Land Tax at £432 per Annum, or thereabouts ...).’</p>
-
-<p>Bill passed Commons and Lords. March 28, Royal Assent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 33 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 11.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Four appointed. (1) Richard Clark of Rothwell
-Haigh, Gentleman; (2) John Renshaw of Owthorp, Notts,
-Gentleman; (3) John Sharp of Gildersome, Yorks, Gentleman;
-(4) William Whitelock of Brotherton, Yorks, Gentleman; the first
-representing the Duke of Leeds, the second the Earl of Strafford
-(no doubt this was the Commissioner added in Committee), and
-the other two representing the Majority in Value of the Persons
-interested. Any vacancy to be filled up by the party represented,
-and new Commissioners to be ‘not interested in the said Inclosure.’
-Three to be a quorum. In case of dispute and equal division of
-opinion amongst the Commissioners, an Umpire is appointed
-(Isaac Leatham of Barton, Gentleman); the decision of Commissioners
-and Umpire to be final and conclusive.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment To Commissioners.</span>&mdash;2 guineas each for each working
-day. The Surveyors (2 appointed) to be paid as Commissioners
-think fit.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;All claims with full particulars of the nature and
-tenure of the property on behalf of which the claim is made are
-to be handed in at the 1st or 2nd meeting of the Commissioners;
-no claim is to be received later except for some special cause;
-and the determination of the Commissioners as to the various
-claims is to be binding and final. There are, however, three
-exceptions to the above, (1) Persons claiming in virtue of
-Messuages and Tofts need not prove usage of common; (2) Any
-Person who is dissatisfied with regard to his own or some one
-else’s claim, may give notice in writing, and the Commissioners
-are then to take Counsel’s opinion on the matter. The Commissioners
-are to choose the Counsel, who is to be ‘not interested
-in the Premises.’ The Commissioners may also on their own
-responsibility take Counsel’s opinion at any time they think
-proper; Counsel’s opinion is to be final. The costs are to be paid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span>
-by the party against whom the dispute is determined, or otherwise
-as the Commissioners decide; (3) The Earl of Strafford is
-exempted from specifying particulars of Tenure in making his
-claim, for there are disputes on this subject between the Duke
-and the Earl, ‘which Matters in Difference the said Duke and
-Earl have not agreed to submit to the Consideration or Determination
-of the said Commissioners.’ The Commissioners need not
-specify the tenure of the Earl’s share in making their award, and
-if the Duke and Earl go to law about their dispute and the matter
-is settled in a Court of Equity, then the Commissioners are to
-make a second special Award for them.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for the Lord of the Manor</i>&mdash;‘the Most Noble Francis,
-Duke of <span class="lock">Leeds.’&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>(1) Such part of the Commons and Waste Grounds as is ‘equal
-in Value to One full Sixteenth Part thereof in lieu of and as a
-sufficient Recompence for his Right to the Soil of the said
-Commons and Waste Grounds, and for his Consent to the Division
-and Inclosure thereof;</p>
-
-<p>(2) An allotment of the Commons and Waste Grounds to be
-(in the judgment of the Commissioners) a fair compensation for
-his Coney Warrens which are to be destroyed;</p>
-
-<p>(3) An allotment equal in value (in the judgment of the
-Commissioners) to £40 a year as compensation for the reserved
-Rents he has been receiving from persons who have made incroachments
-during the last 20 years;</p>
-
-<p>(4) An allotment or allotments of not more than 5 acres in the
-whole, to be awarded in such place as the Duke or his Agents
-appoint, close to one of his stone quarries, as compensation for the
-right given by the Act to other allottees of the Common of
-getting stone on their allotments;</p>
-
-<p>(5) The value of all the timber on allotments from the
-common is to be assessed by the Commissioners, and paid by the
-respective allottees to the Duke. If they refuse to pay, the Duke
-may come and cut down the timber ‘without making any Allowance
-or Satisfaction whatsoever to the Person or Persons to whom
-any such Allotment shall belong, for any Injury to be done
-thereby’;</p>
-
-<p>(6) The Duke’s power to work Mines and to get all Minerals is
-not to be interfered with by anything in this Act but the ‘Owners
-or Proprietors of the Ground wherein such Pits or Soughs shall be
-made, driven, or worked, or such Engines, Machines or Buildings
-erected, or such Coals or Rubbish laid, or such Ways, Roads or
-Passages made and used,’ are to have a ‘reasonable Satisfaction
-for Damages.’ The payment of the reasonable Satisfaction however
-is not to fall on the Duke, but on all the allottees of the
-Commons and Waste Grounds who are to meet together in the
-Moot Hall and appoint a salaried officer to settle the damages and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span>
-collect the money by a rate raised according to the Poor Rate of
-the previous year. If the claimant and the officer fail to agree,
-arbitrators, and ultimately an umpire, can be appointed.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provisions for Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;A fair allotment is to be given to
-the Vicar in compensation for his small Tythes. In cases where
-the allottees have not enough land to contribute their due share
-to the tithe allotment, they have to pay a yearly sum instead.</p>
-
-<p><i>For Stone and Gravel</i>, <i>etc.</i>&mdash;Suitable allotments for stone and
-gravel, etc., to be made ‘for the Use and Benefit’ of all allottees
-‘for the Purpose of getting Stone, Sand, Gravel, or other Materials
-for making and repairing of the public Roads and Drains’; but
-these allotments are not to include any of the Duke’s or of his
-tenants’ stone quarries.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for the Poor.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;(1) The open fields are to be divided out
-amongst the present proprietors in proportion to their present value
-and with regard to convenience; unless any owner of open-field
-land specially asks for an allotment elsewhere; (2) The owners of
-Ings are to have Ings allotted to them, unless they wish for land
-elsewhere; (3) The Commons and Waste grounds are first to have
-the various allotments to the Lord of the Manor and the Vicar specified
-above, and also the allotment for Stone and Gravel for roads
-deducted from them, and then the residue is to be allotted
-‘among the several Persons (considering the said Duke of Leeds
-as one) having Right of Common in or upon the said Commons
-and Waste Grounds’ in the following fashion; one half is to be
-divided among the Owners or Proprietors of Messuages, Cottages
-or Tofts with Right of Common, according to their several
-Rights and Interests; the other half, together with the rest
-and residue of Land to be divided, is to be allotted among the
-Owners or Proprietors of open common fields, Ings, and old
-inclosed Lands according to their several rights and interests
-‘without any undue Preference whatsoever.’ The Commissioners
-are also directed to pay due regard to situation and to putting
-the different allotments of the same person together. Allotments
-are to be of the same tenure, <i>i.e.</i> freehold or copyhold, as the
-holdings in respect of which they are claimed, but no fines are
-to be taken on account of the allotment.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the allottees of allotments on Westgate Moor, a
-special clause (see petition on January 23) is inserted. They are
-forbidden to put up any House, Building or Erection of any kind
-on one part for 20, on another for 40, on another for 60, years,
-unless the Duke consents, the object being ‘thereby the more
-advantageously to enable the said Duke, his Heirs and Assigns,
-to work his Colliery in and upon the same Moor.’</p>
-
-<p>The award, with full particulars of allotments, etc., is to be
-drawn up and is to be ‘final, binding, and conclusive upon all
-Parties and Persons interested therein.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span></p>
-
-<p>If any person (being Guardian, etc., tenant in tail or for life of
-lessee, etc.) fails to accept and fence, then Commissioners can do
-it for him and charge; if he still refuses, Commissioners can
-lease allotment out and take rent till Expenses are paid.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Incroachments 20 years old are to stand; those
-made within 20 years are to be treated as part of the Commons
-to be divided, but they are, if the Commissioners think it fit and
-convenient, to be allotted to the person in possession without
-considering the value of erections and improvements. Three
-contingencies for allotment to the person in possession are provided
-for;&mdash;(1) if he is entitled to an allotment, his incroachment
-is to be treated as part or the whole of his allotment;</p>
-
-<p>(2) If his incroachment is of greater value than the allotment
-he is entitled to, then he is to pay whatever extra sum of money
-the Commissioners judge right;</p>
-
-<p>(3) If he is not entitled to any allotment at all, then he has to
-pay the price set on his incroachment by the Commissioners.</p>
-
-<p>If the Commissioners do not allot an incroachment to the person
-in possession, they may sell it at public auction and apply the
-money to the purposes of the Act, or they may allot it to someone
-not in possession, in which case a ‘reasonable’ sum of money is
-to be given to the dispossessed owner, the new allottee paying the
-whole or part of it.</p>
-
-<p>The above provisions apply to the ordinary incroachers; the
-Duke has special arrangements. If he has made any new incroachments
-during the last 20 years in addition to any older incroachments,
-these new incroachments are to be valued by the Commissioners,
-and the Duke is to have them either as part of his
-allotment or for a money payment, as he chooses; also ‘whereas
-the Tenants of the said Duke of Leeds of the Collieries on
-the said Commons and Waste Lands ... have from Time to
-Time erected Fire Engines, Messuages, Dwelling Houses, Cottages
-and other Buildings upon the said Commons and Waste Lands,
-and made several other Conveniences thereon for the Use and
-Accommodation of the said Collieries, and the Persons managing
-and working the same, a great Part of which have been erected
-and made within the last Twenty Years, these are not to be
-treated like other incroachments, but are to ‘be and continue the
-absolute Property of the said Duke of Leeds, his Heirs and Assigns,
-in as full and ample Manner’ as if the erections had been made
-more than 20 years before.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing.</span>&mdash;All allotments are to be fenced at the expense of
-their several proprietors ‘in such Manner, Shares and Proportions
-as the said Commissioners shall ... direct’ with the following
-exceptions&mdash;(1) the Vicar’s allotment for small Tithes is to be
-fenced by the other proprietors; (2) the allotments to Hospitals,
-Schools, and other public Charities are to have a certain proportion
-deducted from them to cover the cost of fencing. Allottees<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span>
-who refuse to fence can be summoned before a J.P. by their
-neighbours, and the J.P. (who is not to be interested in the
-Enclosure) can make an order compelling them to fence.</p>
-
-<p>To protect the new hedges, it is ordered that no sheep or lambs
-are to be turned out in any allotment for 7 years, unless the
-allottee makes special provision to protect his neighbour’s young
-quickset, and no beasts, cattle or horses are to be turned into any
-roads or lanes where there is a new-growing fence.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;Part of the Commons and Waste Grounds is to be
-sold to cover the expences; if the proceeds do not cover the
-costs the residue is to be paid by the allottees in proportion to
-their shares, and any surplus is to be divided among them, But
-Hospitals, Schools, and Public Charities are exempted from this
-payment, a portion of their allotments, in fact, having been
-already deducted in order to pay their share of Expenses. The
-Commissioners are to keep an account of Expenses, which is to
-be open to inspection. The owners of Ings are to pay a sum of
-money in return for the extinction of the right of Eatage (referred
-to by the Petitioners) on their land from August 12 to April 5;
-and this money is to be applied for the purposes of the Act.</p>
-
-<p>If allottees find the expenses of the Act and of fencing more
-than they can meet, they are allowed (with the consent of the
-Commissioners) to mortgage their allotments up to 40s. an acre.
-If they dislike this prospect, they are empowered by the Act, at
-any time before the execution of the Award, to sell their rights
-to allotment in respect of any common right.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation to Occupiers.</span>&mdash;Occupiers are to pay a higher rent
-in return for the loss of the use of common rights. The clause runs
-as follows:&mdash;‘That the several Persons who hold any Lands or other
-Estates, to which a Right of Common upon the said Commons and
-Waste Grounds is appurtenant or belonging, or any Part of the
-said Open Common Fields or Inclosures, by virtue of any Lease, of
-which a longer Term than One Year is unexpired, shall and are
-hereby required to pay to their respective Landlords such Increase
-of Rent towards the Expences such Landlords will be respectively
-put to in Consequence of this Act, as the said Commissioners shall
-judge reasonable, and shall by Writing under their Hands direct
-or appoint, having Regard to the Duration of such respective
-Leases, and to the probable Benefit which will accrue to such
-respective Lessees by Reason of the said Inclosure.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to have full power to set out and shut
-up roads and footpaths (turnpike roads excepted).</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not in any
-cases where the Commissioners’ decisions are final, binding, or
-conclusive, as they are, <i>e.g.</i> on claims (except the Earl of Strafford’s)
-and on allotments.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;Not with Clerks of Peace or of County Council, or in
-Record Office.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span></p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_12">APPENDIX A (12)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Winfrith Newburgh, Dorset.&mdash;Enclosure Act, 1768</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Area.</span>&mdash;2254 Acres or thereabouts.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Nature of Ground.</span>&mdash;Common Fields, Meadow Grounds,
-Sheep Downs, Commons, Common Heaths, and other Waste
-Grounds.</p>
-
-<p>(In Report, Common Arable Fields and Common Meadows =
-1218 acres.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>December 1, 1767.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosure from Edward Weld, Esq., George Clavell, Esq., Benjamin
-Thornton, Clerk, William Weston, Clerk, John Felton, Gentleman,
-and others. Leave given; bill read twice and committed on
-December 11 to a Committee of 42 members in addition to the
-members for Dorset, Somerset, Devon and Cornwall. All to have
-Voices. January 25, 1768, Petition from persons being Freeholders,
-Proprietors of Estates or otherwise interested, against the bill
-stating ‘that if the said Bill should pass into a Law the Estates
-of the Petitioners and others in the said Parish will be greatly
-injured, and several of them must be totally ruined thereby; and
-that some of the Petitioners, by Threats and Menaces, were
-prevailed upon to sign the Petition for the said Bill; but upon
-Recollection, and considering the impending Ruin they shall be
-subject to by the Inclosure, beg Leave now to have Liberty to
-retract from their seeming Acquiescence in the said Petition,’ and
-ask to be heard by Counsel against the Bill. Petition referred to
-the Committee.</p>
-
-<p><i>January 29, 1768.</i>&mdash;Mr. Bond reported from the Committee that
-there was an erasure in the prayer of the said Petition and asked
-for instructions. A fresh Committee of 36 members (many of
-whom were also members of the other Committee) was appointed
-to examine into the question of how the erasure was made, and
-whether it was previous or subsequent to the signing. This
-Committee was ordered to report to the House, but there is no
-record of its report.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>February 2, 1768.</i>&mdash;Mr.
-Bond reported from the Committee that the allegations were true,
-and that the ‘Parties concerned’ had given their consent ‘(except
-Four Persons who could not be found whose Property in the
-Common Meadows to be inclosed amounts to Five Acres, Three
-Roods, Twenty Three Perches and a half; and also except Four
-other Persons who, when applied to for their Consent to the Bill,
-refused to sign, though they declared they had no Objection, and
-whose Property in the Common Meadows to be inclosed amounts
-to Four Acres, One Rood, Thirty Eight Perches; and also except
-Six Persons whose Property in the Common Arable Fields and
-Common Meadows to be inclosed mounts to One hundred and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span>
-twenty two Acres, Thirty Three Perches, who refused to sign the
-Bill; and also, except Three Persons, whose Property in the
-Common Arable Fields and Common Meadows, to be inclosed,
-amounts to One hundred and seven Acres, Twenty Three Perches,
-who hold under Copies of Court Roll, granted on Condition that
-they would join in any Act or Deed for the dividing and inclosing
-the said Common Fields, and Meadows, and other Commonable
-Lands within the said Manor, when thereto requested by the
-Lord of the said Manor; and that the whole Number of Acres in
-the said Common Arable Fields and Common Meadows is One
-thousand, Two hundred and eighteen, Twenty Eight Perches and
-a half, and that the Rector of Winfrith Newburgh and Vicar of
-Campden, who are intitled to all the Great and Small Tithes
-arising out of the said Common Arable Fields and Common
-Meadows have consented thereto).’</p>
-
-<p><i>February 2, 1768</i> (same day).&mdash;Another Petition against the bill
-from Freeholders, Proprietors and Persons otherwise interested
-stating that the Inclosure is ‘contrary to the general Sense of the
-Persons interested therein,’ and will be ‘injurious to the Property
-of the Petitioners and others, the smaller Landholders within the
-said Parish, some of whom must, in the Petitioners’ Judgment, be
-totally ruined thereby.’ Petitioners to be heard when Report
-considered.</p>
-
-<p><i>February 3, 1768.</i>&mdash;Report considered. House informed that
-no Counsel attended. Report read. Clause added settling the
-expenses to be paid by Copyholders and Lessees for Lives. Bill
-sent to Lords. February 9, Committed. Same day, Petition against
-it from various persons as ‘contrary to the general Sense of the
-Persons interested therein.’ Referred to Committee. February 12,
-Lord Delamer reported from the Committee without amendment.
-February 24, Royal Assent.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Main Features of Act.</span>&mdash;(Private, 8 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 18.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Commissioners.</span>&mdash;Seven appointed. (1) John Bond, Esq., of
-Grange; (2) David Robert Mitchell, Esq., of Dewlish; (3)
-Nathaniel Bond, Esq., of West Lulworth; (4) Thomas Williams,
-Esq., of Herringstone; (5) William Churchill, Esq., of Dorchester;
-(6) George Lillington of Burngate, Gentleman; (7) Joseph
-Garland of Chaldon, Gentleman; all of Dorset.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes 3, sometimes 4 a quorum. Vacancies to be filled up
-by remaining Commissioners from persons not interested in the
-land to be inclosed.</p>
-
-<p>Survey to be made if Commissioners ‘shall think the same
-necessary.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Payment.</span>&mdash;Nothing stated.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Claims.</span>&mdash;Commissioners to examine into and determine on all
-claims; and ‘in case any Difference or Dispute shall arise between
-all or any of the Parties interested in the said Division and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span>
-Inclosure, with respect to the Premises, or any Matter or Thing
-herein contained or consequent thereon, or in relation thereunto,
-the same shall be adjusted and finally determined between the
-said Parties, and every of them, by the said Commissioners, or any
-Three or more of them.’ Commissioners can examine witnesses
-on oath, ‘and the Determinations of the said Commissioners, or
-any Three or more of them therein, shall be binding and conclusive
-to all and every the said Parties....’</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">System of Division&mdash;Special Provisions</span>:</p>
-
-<p><i>Lords of the Manor</i> (Edward Weld, Esq., of Winfrith Newburgh;
-George Clavell, Esq., of Langcotts and East Fossell).&mdash;No
-special provision for allotment. Their Manorial Rights are not to
-be prejudiced by Act except as regards ‘the Mines, Delves, and
-Quarries lying within and under such Parts, Shares, and Proportions
-of the said Common Fields, Meadow Grounds, Sheep
-Downs, Commons, Common Heaths and other Waste Grounds, as
-shall or may be allotted and assigned to the several other Freeholders
-and Owners of Lands’ within these Manors ‘or to any
-Person or Persons not having any Lands within the said In-Parish
-or Manors, or within the Precincts thereof as aforesaid, in Lieu of
-or as an Equivalent for such Right or Claim as aforesaid; and
-other than and except such Common of Pasture and other Common
-Rights as can or may be claimed by or belonging to the Lord or
-Lords of the said Manors in and upon the Premises so intended to
-be divided and inclosed as aforesaid.’</p>
-
-<p><i>Tithe Owners.</i>&mdash;Tithe owners to have the same rights to Tithes
-over the land about to be inclosed as they have over the lands
-already inclosed.</p>
-
-<p>If arable land is converted to pasture on inclosure (for Dairy
-Cows or Black Cattle) then allottees shall pay an annual 3s. an
-acre to tithe owners as compensation for corn tithes. Allotments
-given in virtue of estates which are Cistertian Lands, are to be
-deemed Cistertian Lands too, <i>i.e.</i> to have same exemption from
-tithes, but any Cistertian Lands which are allotted are to be under
-the same obligations for tithes as the estates in virtue of which
-they are allotted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for the Poor.</i>&mdash;None.</p>
-
-<p><i>Provision for Fuel Allotment.</i>&mdash;Commissioners are to ascertain
-and determine all Rights of Common over the land to be enclosed,
-and are then to set out such part or parts ‘as shall appear to them
-to be sufficient, and to be conveniently situate for the preserving
-and raising Furze, Turf, or other Fuel, for the Use of the several
-Persons’ who shall appear to the Commissioners to be intitled to
-a Right of Common.</p>
-
-<p><i>Allotment of Residue.</i>&mdash;Amongst all persons who appear to
-the Commissioners to be intitled to a Right of Common, or to
-have or be intitled to any other Property in the said Common
-Fields, etc., in such proportions as the Commissioners judge right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span>
-‘without giving any undue Preference,’ and with due regard to
-Quality, Quantity, and Situation.</p>
-
-<p>But the following Rules are to be observed with regard to
-<span class="lock">proportions:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>(1) Common Fields and Sheep Downs are to be divided ‘by
-and according to the Parts and Proportions of the Arable Lands
-lying in the said Common Fields, where the said Parties respectively
-now are, or, at the Time of such Allotments so as aforesaid
-to be made shall be intitled to.’</p>
-
-<p>(2) Meadow Grounds, Commons, Common Heaths, and other
-Waste Grounds to be divided ‘according to the Sum or Sums of
-money which the said Parties and each of them now stand charged
-with towards the Relief of the Poor of the said Parish’ in respect
-of their lands which have right of common.</p>
-
-<p><i>Special Clause.</i>&mdash;In case it appears to the Commissioners that any
-persons who have no land, nevertheless have a right of common,
-then the Commissioners can allot such person such part of the land
-to be inclosed as they think an equivalent for such right of common.
-In order to prevent all Differences and Disputes, the Commissioners
-are to draw up an Award, and this Award shall be binding and
-conclusive to all and every Person and Persons interested.
-Failure to accept within 6 months excludes allottee from all
-benefit and advantage of this Act, and also ‘from any Estate,
-Interest or Right of Common, or other Property whatsoever’ in
-any other allotment. (Saving clause for infants, etc.)</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Incroachments.</span>&mdash;Not mentioned.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Fencing</span>, etc.&mdash;To be done by allottees in such proportions as
-Commissioners direct. Such directions to be put in award,
-and to be final and binding. Fences to be made within 12
-months, or some other convenient space of time.</p>
-
-<p>If an allottee fails to fence, his neighbour can complain to
-a J.P. (not interested in the inclosure), who can authorise complainant
-to do it, and either charge defaulter or to enter on
-premises and receive rents till expenses paid. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;Allotment
-of Copyholders and leaseholders for one or more lives are
-to be fenced partly by the Lord of the Manor and partly by the
-allottees in such proportion as the Commissioners (or 4 of them)
-direct.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Expenses.</span>&mdash;(1) Expenses of obtaining and passing the Act to
-be borne by the Lords of the Manor.</p>
-
-<p>(2) Expenses of carrying out the Act (survey, allotment,
-Commissioners’ charges, etc.) to be borne by the several allottees
-in proportion to the Quantity of Land allotted to them, or
-otherwise as Commissioners direct. <i>Exception.</i>&mdash;Tithe owners’
-share to be borne by the Lords of the Manor. Commissioners
-can distrain for payment.</p>
-
-<p>Trustees, Tenants in Tail or for Life may mortgage up to 40s.
-an acre.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Compensation.</span>&mdash;Leases and agreements at Rack Rent to be
-void, owners making such compensation to Lessees as Commissioners
-judge right.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Roads.</span>&mdash;Commissioners have power to set out and shut up
-roads and footpaths.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Power of Appeal.</span>&mdash;To Quarter Sessions only, and not when
-Commissioners’ determination said to be final.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Award.</span>&mdash;August 17, 1771. With Dorset Clerk of Peace or of
-County Council.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_13">APPENDIX A (13)</h2>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Quainton.&mdash;Attempted Enclosure, 1801</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>March 20, 1801.</i>&mdash;Petition for
-enclosures from ‘several persons.’ Leave given. Earl Temple,
-Sir William Young, and Mr. Praed to prepare bill.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 2.</i>&mdash;Bill read first time.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 13.</i>&mdash;Petition from various proprietors of Lands, Common
-Rights, and other Hereditaments against the bill, stating that
-enclosure ‘would be attended with an Expence to the Proprietors
-far exceeding any Improvement to be derived therefrom.’
-Ordered to be heard on second reading.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 15.</i>&mdash;Bill read second time. Petitioners declined to be
-heard. Bill committed to Mr. Praed, Earl Temple, etc.</p>
-
-<p><i>April 21.</i>&mdash;Petition against the bill from various proprietors
-stating ‘that the Proprietors of the said Commonable Lands are
-very numerous, and the Shares or Properties belonging to most of
-them are so small that the proposed Division and Inclosure would
-be attended with an Expence far exceeding any Improvement to
-be derived therefrom; and that a great Majority in Number of
-the said Proprietors dissent to the said Bill, and the Proprietors
-of more than One-third, and very nearly One-half Part in Value,
-of the Lands to be inclosed, also dissent thereto; and that many
-of the Clauses and Provisions in the said Bill are also highly
-injurious’ to the petitioners.</p>
-
-<p>Referred to the Committee. All to have voices.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>June 12.</i>&mdash;Mr. Praed
-reported from the Committee that the Standing Orders had
-been complied with, that the allegations were true, and that the
-Parties concerned had given their consent (except the owners of
-Estates assessed to the Land Tax at £39, 12s. 6¼d. who refused
-to sign the bill, and the owners of Estates assessed at £3, 10s. 0d.
-who were neuter; and that the whole of the Estates ‘interested’
-were assessed at £246, 8s. 6d.).</p>
-
-<p>Same day.&mdash;Petition against the bill from Richard Wood on
-behalf of himself and other proprietors who were parties to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span>
-the former petition, Richard Wood being the only one left in
-London, setting forth ‘that the said Bill proposes to inclose only
-a Part of the said Parish of Quainton, consisting of 3 open Arable
-Fields, and about 280 Acres of Commonable Land, lying dispersedly
-in, or adjoining to the said Open Fields, the rest of the
-said Parish being Old inclosed Lands’; that the agent for the bill
-had given the Committee a statement (1) of the names of the
-persons interested; (2) of the amount at which these persons were
-assessed to the Land Tax for their property throughout the parish,
-according to which statement it appeared, first, that of the
-34 persons interested, ‘not being Cottagers,’ 8 assented, 4
-were neuter, and 22 dissented; but that, second, as stated in
-terms of Land Tax Assessment, £203, 5s. 11¾d. assented, and
-£39, 12s. 6¼d. dissented; that this statement was wrong inasmuch
-as the proprietors of old inclosed lands had in respect of old
-inclosures no rights over the commonable lands, and that therefore
-no old inclosed land could rank as property ‘interested’ in
-the inclosure. The petitioners gave the following enumeration of
-Consents as the correct one; whole quantity of land in the Open
-Fields, ‘in respect of which only a Right of Common could be
-claimed,’ 42&frac14; yard <span class="lock">lands:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable center" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td>Land belonging</td>
-<td>to those who </td>
-<td class="left">assented,</td>
-<td>21&frac34; </td>
-<td>yard lands</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">dissented,</td>
-<td>19&frac12;</td>
-<td>„</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>„</td>
-<td>„</td>
-<td class="left">were neutral,</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>yard land</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>or in terms of annual <span class="lock">value&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Assenting,</td>
-<td>£406</td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Dissenting,</td>
-<td>370</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Neutral,</td>
-<td>37</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>The petitioners further stated that their Counsel had offered to
-call witnesses before the Committee to prove the above facts; that
-the agent for the bill had retorted that old inclosed lands had a
-right in the Commons, although he did not pretend that such
-right had ever been enjoyed, or produce any witness to show that
-it had ever been claimed, but supported his claim by quoting
-a clause in the bill by which it was proposed that the Rector’s
-Tithes for the old inclosures as well as the new should be
-commuted for an allotment of land; and that the Committee
-refused to hear the evidence tendered by the petitioners’ Counsel.
-This Petition was referred to the Committee to whom the bill
-was recommitted, and the bill was dropped.</p>
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A_14">APPENDIX A (14)</h2>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Subsequent History of King’s Sedgmoor</span></p>
-
-<p>In 1775, Mr. Allen, Member of Parliament for Bridgwater, tried
-to get an enclosure bill passed. ‘Sanguine of success, and highly
-impressed with the idea of its importance, he purchased a large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span>
-number of rights, and having obtained a signature of consents,
-went to Parliament; but not having interest enough in the House
-to stem the torrent of opposition, all his delusive prospects of
-profit vanished, and he found himself left in a small but respectable
-minority.’<a id="FNanchor_502" href="#Footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a> No further attempt was made till 1788, when a
-meeting to consider the propriety of draining and dividing the
-moor, was held at Wells. ‘At this meeting Sir Philip Hales presided;
-and after much abuse and opposition from the lower order
-of commoners, who openly threatened destruction to those who
-supported such a measure, the meeting was dissolved without
-coming to any final determination.</p>
-
-<p>‘The leading idea was, however, afterwards pursued, with great
-assiduity, by Sir Philip, and his agent Mr. Symes of Stowey; and
-by their persevering industry, and good management,’<a id="FNanchor_503" href="#Footnote_503" class="fnanchor">[503]</a> application
-was again made to Parliament in 1791.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Parliamentary Proceedings.</span>&mdash;<i>February 18, 1791.</i>&mdash;Petition from
-several Owners and Proprietors for a bill to drain and divide the
-tract of waste ground of about 18,000 acres called King’s Sedgmoor.
-Petitioners point out that the moor is liable to be overflowed, ‘and
-thereby the same is not only less serviceable and useful to the
-Commoners, but also, by reason of the Vapours and Exhalations
-which arise from thence, the Air of the circumjacent Country is
-rendered less salubrious’; also that it would be ‘beneficial, as well
-to the wholesomeness of the neighbouring Country as also to the
-Profitableness of the Pasturage of the said Moor’ if it were
-drained and divided into Parochial or other large allotments. The
-House was also informed that the expense of the undertaking was
-not proposed to be levied by Tolls or Duties upon the Parties
-interested.</p>
-
-<p>Leave given. Mr. Philips and Sir John Trevelyan to prepare.
-February 28. Bill committed to Mr. Philips, Mr. Templar, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><span class="smcap">Report and Enumeration of Consents.</span>&mdash;<i>March 7.</i>&mdash;Mr. Philips
-reported that the Standing Orders had been complied with, that
-the allegations were true, and that the parties concerned had consented
-‘(except the Owners of 107 Rights on the said Moor, who
-declared themselves neuter in respect to the Bill; and also except
-the Owners of 84 Rights, who declared themselves against the
-Bill; and that the whole of the Rights on the said Moor consist
-of 1740, or thereabouts; and that no Person appeared before the
-Committee to oppose the Bill).’</p>
-
-<p>The Bill passed Commons, March 9; Lords, April 15. Royal
-Assent, May 13.</p>
-
-<p>Billingsley, after describing the attempts to enclose Sedgmoor,
-remarks (p. 192): ‘I have been thus particular in stating the
-progress of this business merely to show the impropriety of calling
-public meetings with a view of gaining signatures of consent or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span>
-taking the sense of the proprietors in that way. At all publick
-meetings of this nature which I ever attended noise and clamour
-have silenced sound sense and argument. A party generally
-attends with a professed desire to oppose, and truth and propriety
-have a host of foes to combat. Whoever therefore has an object
-of this kind in view let him acquire consent by <i>private application</i>;
-for I have frequently seen the good effects thereof manifested by
-the irresistible influence of truth when coolly and quietly administered;
-and it has frequently happened that men hostile to your
-scheme have by dispassionate argument not only changed their
-sentiment but become warm partisans in that cause which at first
-they meant to oppose.’</p>
-
-<p>The task of Sir Philip and Mr. Symes in acquiring consents
-by the cool and quiet administration of truth must have been
-considerably lightened by the fact that Parliament anticipated the
-Commissioners with extraordinary accuracy in disregarding 55% of
-the claims. The Commissioners, says Billingsley, investigated
-4063 claims, of which only 1798 were allowed. The Parliamentary
-Committee had asserted that there were 1740 rights, ‘or
-thereabouts.’</p>
-
-<p>The Act for draining and dividing King’s Sedgmoor is not, so
-far as we have been able to discover, amongst the printed
-Statutes.</p>
-
-<p>Particulars of the expenses are given by Billingsley (p. 196),
-who estimates the area at 12,000 <span class="lock">acres:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<th> </th>
-<th>£</th>
-<th><i>s.</i></th>
-<th><i>d.</i></th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">To act of parliament and all other incidental expenses,</td>
-<td>1,628</td>
-<td>15</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Interest of money borrowed,</td>
-<td>3,239</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>11</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Commissioners,</td>
-<td>4,314</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Clerk,</td>
-<td>1,215</td>
-<td>19</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Surveyor,</td>
-<td>908</td>
-<td>12</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Printers,</td>
-<td>362</td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Petty expenses,</td>
-<td>575</td>
-<td>11</td>
-<td>1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Land purchased,</td>
-<td>2,801</td>
-<td>4 </td>
-<td>11</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Drains, sluices, bridges and roads,</td>
-<td>15,418</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left">Awards and incidentals,</td>
-<td>1,160</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td> </td>
-<td class="total">£31,624</td>
-<td class="total">4</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>About 700 acres were sold to discharge the expenses.</p>
-
-<p>The drainage and division into parochial allotments was a
-preliminary to enclosure of the different parochial shares, which
-was of course made easier by the fact that 55% of the claims had
-already been disallowed. In the years 1796, ’97, and ’98, fourteen
-Enclosure Acts for the different parishes were passed.</p>
-
-<p>(Butleigh and Woollavington, 1796. Aller, Ashcott, Compton
-Dundon, Higham, Othery, Moorlinch, Somerton, Street, and
-Weston Zoyland, 1797. Bridgwater, Chedjoy, and Midellzoy, 1798.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span></p>
-
-<p>Billingsley estimated that the total cost of subdividing parochial
-allotments would be £28,000.</p>
-
-<p>He also estimated that the value of the land rose from 10s. to
-35s. an acre.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_B">APPENDIX B</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Bedfordshire.&mdash;Clopshill, 1795.</span><a id="FNanchor_504" href="#Footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Six Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences by the Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center">£ </td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i></td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread, flour, or oatmeal,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Yeast and salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Thread and worsted,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bacon or other meat,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, sugar, and butter,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>10&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Beer,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total of the Week,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0 </td>
-<td class="total">11</td>
-<td class="total">8&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Amount per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>£30</td>
-<td>8</td>
-<td>10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent,</span></td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Wood,</span></td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>12</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cloaths,</span></td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Sickness,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Expences per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£35 </td>
-<td class="total">18</td>
-<td class="total">4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Earning per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The children,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total of the Week,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0 </td>
-<td class="total">13</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£33 </td>
-<td class="total">16</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p>
-<i>N.B.</i>&mdash;‘The Harvest earnings not included: they go a great
-way towards making up the deficiency.’
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Dorset.&mdash;Sherborne, 1789.</span><a id="FNanchor_505" href="#Footnote_505" class="fnanchor">[505]</a></p>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Five Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center">£</td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i></td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Meat,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>8<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2<a id="FNanchor_506" href="#Footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cheese,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Milk,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Thread, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">5</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Amount per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>£14</td>
-<td>14</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent,</span></td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Fuel,</span></td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>18</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Clothes, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Expences per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£21 </td>
-<td class="total">12</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left" colspan="4"><i>Earnings per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-<td class="total">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£22</td>
-<td class="total">2</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Hampshire.&mdash;Long Parish, 1789.</span><a id="FNanchor_507" href="#Footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a></p>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Six Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center">£</td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i> </td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread or Flour,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Yeast and Salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bacon or other Meat,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, Sugar, and Butter,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cheese,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap, Starch, and Blue,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Thread, Thrum, and Worsted,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">7</td>
-<td class="total">9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Amount per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>£20</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent, Fuel (‘both very high and scarce’), Clothes, Lying-in, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Expences per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£27</td>
-<td class="total">3</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Earnings per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>8</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">9</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£23</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Herts.&mdash;Hinksworth, 1795.</span><a id="FNanchor_508" href="#Footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a></p>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Six Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences by the Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td>£ </td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i></td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread, flour, or oatmeal,</span></td>
-<td>0 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Heating the oven,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Yeast and salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bacon or pork,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, sugar, and butter,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>9&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cheese,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>7&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Small beer,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6&frac34;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Milk,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Potatoes,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Thread and worsted,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total of the Week,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£1</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-<td class="total">0&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Amount per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>£52</td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent,</span></td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cloaths,</span></td>
-<td>6</td>
-<td>5 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Fuel, coal, wood, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>3 </td>
-<td>15</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Births and burials,</span></td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Expences per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£65</td>
-<td class="total">6</td>
-<td class="total">9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Earnings per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>2&frac34;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The children,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total of the Week,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0 </td>
-<td class="total">15</td>
-<td class="total">4&frac34;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£40</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-<td class="total">7</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Northamptonshire.&mdash;Castor, 1794.</span><a id="FNanchor_509" href="#Footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a></p>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Six Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center">£</td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i> </td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread and Flour,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Meat,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, Sugar, and Butter,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>1</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cheese (sometimes),</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap &frac14; lb., Starch, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles &frac12; lb., Thread, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-<td class="total">0&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span><span class="i2">Amount per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>20 </td>
-<td>18</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent,</span></td>
-<td>1 </td>
-<td>15</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Fuel and coals,</span></td>
-<td>1 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Clothing,</span></td>
-<td>2 </td>
-<td>15</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Lying-in, loss of time, etc.,</span></td>
-<td>1 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Expenses per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£28</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-<td class="total">2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Earnings per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>7</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0 </td>
-<td>10</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The children,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£22 </td>
-<td class="total">10</td>
-<td class="total">8</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>
-<i>N.B.</i>&mdash;To the earnings may be added what is got by gleaning.
-</p>
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Norfolk.&mdash;Diss, 1793.</span><a id="FNanchor_510" href="#Footnote_510" class="fnanchor">[510]</a></p>
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Family of Six Persons.</span></p>
-
-<table class="autotable right" summary="">
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Expences by the Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-<td class="center">£</td>
-<td class="center"><i>s.</i> </td>
-<td class="center"><i>d.</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bread, flour or oatmeal,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>7&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Yeast and salt,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Bacon or other meat,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Tea, sugar, and butter,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>9&frac14;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Soap,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2&frac14;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Candles,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>3</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cheese,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>5&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Milk,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Potatoes,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Thread and worsted,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>2</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total per Week,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">7</td>
-<td class="total">10&frac12;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Total per Annum,</span></td>
-<td>£20</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Rent,</span></td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Fuel,</span></td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>4</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Cloaths,</span></td>
-<td>2</td>
-<td>3</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Births, burials, sickness,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>10</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">Total Expenses per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£27</td>
-<td class="total">9</td>
-<td class="total">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><i>Earnings per Week</i>&mdash;</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The Man,</span></td>
-<td>£0</td>
-<td>9</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The Woman,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i2">The Children,</span></td>
-<td>0</td>
-<td>1</td>
-<td>6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£0</td>
-<td class="total">11</td>
-<td class="total">6</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="left"><span class="i4">Total Earnings per Annum,</span></td>
-<td class="total">£29</td>
-<td class="total">18</td>
-<td class="total">0</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>
-<i>N.B.</i>&mdash;In 1795 the earnings of this family were the same but
-their expenses had risen to £36, 11s. 4d. On bread they spent
-8s. a week instead of 4s. 7½d.
-</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHIEF_AUTHORITIES">CHIEF AUTHORITIES</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p><i>Journals of House of Commons</i> for period.</p>
-
-<p><i>Journals of House of Lords</i> for period.</p>
-
-<p>Reports of Parliamentary Debates for period in <i>Parliamentary
-Register</i>, <i>Parliamentary History</i>, <i>Senator</i> and <i>Parliamentary
-Debates</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Statutes, Public and Private</i> for period.</p>
-
-<p><i>Enclosure Awards</i> in Record Office or Duchy of Lancaster.</p>
-
-<p><i>Home Office Papers</i> in Record Office.</p>
-
-<p><i>Parliamentary Papers</i> for period; <span class="lock">specially&mdash;</span></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">For Enclosures</span>&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Standing Orders relating
-to Private Bills, 1775.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Waste Lands. Ordered
-to be printed December 23, 1795.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Waste Lands, 1797.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Means of Facilitating
-Inclosure, 1800. (Deals specially with Expense).</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Constitution of Select
-Committees on Private Bills, 1825.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Commons Inclosure, 1844.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">For Poor Laws</span>&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Poor Laws, 1817.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Lords Committee on Poor Laws, 1818.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Poor Laws, 1819.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Relief of Able-Bodied
-from the Poor Rate, 1828.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Lords on Poor Law, 1828.</p>
-
-<p>Documents in possession of Poor Law Commissioners, 1833.</p>
-
-<p>Report of Poor Laws Commissioners, 1834</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">For Game Laws, Crime, and Punishment</span>&mdash;</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Game Laws, 1823.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Lords Committee on Game Laws, 1828.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and
-Convictions, 1827.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and
-Convictions, 1828.</p>
-
-<p>Return of Convictions under the Game Laws from 1827&ndash;30.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Secondary Punishments,
-1831.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span></p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Secondary Punishments,
-1832.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Transportation, 1838.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">For other Social Questions</span>&mdash;</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Agricultural Distress, 1821.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Labourers’ Wages, 1824.</p>
-
-<p>Reports from Select Committee on Emigration, 1826&ndash;7.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Agriculture, 1833.</p>
-
-<p>Report from Select Committee on Allotment System, 1843.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Publications of Board of Agriculture.</p>
-
-<p><i>General Report on Enclosures</i>, 1808.</p>
-
-<p><i>Report on the Agricultural State of the Kingdom</i>, 1816.</p>
-
-<p><i>Agricultural Surveys</i> of different Counties, by various writers,
-alluded to in text as <i>Bedford Report</i>, <i>Middlesex Report</i>, etc.</p>
-
-
-<p class="appspace"><i>Annual Register</i> for period.</p>
-
-<p><i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, 1784&ndash;1815 (46 vols.).</p>
-
-<p>Cobbett’s <i>Political Register</i>, 1802&ndash;35.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Tribune</i> (mainly Thelwall’s lectures), 1795&ndash;6.</p>
-
-<p>Reports of the Society for Bettering the Condition and Improving
-the Comforts of the Poor, (5 vols.), 1795&ndash;1808.</p>
-
-<p>Ruggles, Thomas, <i>History of the Poor</i>, 1793 (published first in
-<i>Annals of Agriculture</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Davies, David, <i>The Case of Labourers in Husbandry stated and
-considered</i>, 1795.</p>
-
-<p>Eden, Sir Frederic Morton, <i>The State of the Poor or An History
-of the Labouring Classes in England</i>, 1797.</p>
-
-<p>The Works of Arthur Young, William Marshall, and other
-contemporary writers on agriculture and enclosures; see
-list in Hasbach, <i>History of the English Agricultural Labourer</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Cobbett’s <i>Works</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Dunkin’s <i>History of Oxfordshire</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Carlisle Papers, Historical MSS. Commission.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Memoir of Lord Suffield</i>, by R. M. Bacon, 1838.</p>
-
-<p><i>Life of Sir Samuel Romilly</i>, 1842.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center appspace"><span class="smcap">Modern Authorities</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p>Babeau, A., <i>Le Village sous l’ancien Régime</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Curtler, W. H. R., <i>A Short History of English Agriculture</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Eversley, Lord, <i>Commons, Forests, and Footpaths</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hasbach, Wilhelm, <i>History of the English Agricultural Labourer</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hirst, F. W., and Redlich, J., <i>Local Government in England</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hobson, J. A., <i>The Industrial System</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Hudson, W. H., <i>A Shepherd’s Life</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Jenks, E., <i>Outlines of Local Government</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Johnson, A. H., <i>The Disappearance of the Small Landowner</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span></p>
-
-<p>Kovalewsky, M., <i>La France Économique et Sociale à la Veille de la
-Révolution</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Levy, H., <i>Large and Small Holdings</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Mantoux, P., <i>La Révolution Industrielle</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Porritt, E., <i>The Unreformed House of Commons</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Scrutton, T. E., <i>Commons and Common Fields</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Slater, G., <i>The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common
-Fields</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Smart, W., <i>Economic Annals of the Nineteenth Century</i>.</p>
-
-<p>De Tocqueville, <i>L’ancien Régime</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Vinogradoff, P., <i>The Growth of the Manor</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Webb, S. and B., <i>English Local Government</i>.&mdash;<i>The Parish and the
-County.</i></p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>English Local Government</i>.&mdash;<i>The Manor and the Borough.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Abel, Mr., <a href="#Page_248">248</a>. f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abingdon, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Special Commission at, <a href="#Page_305">305</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abingdon, Lord, and Otmoor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Special Commission, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abree, Margaret and Thomas, <a href="#Page_109">109</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adam, the brothers, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Addington, H. <i>See</i> <a href="#Sidmouth">Sidmouth</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Stephen, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Addington Hills, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Addison, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aglionby, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agriculture, and enclosure, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">during French war, <a href="#Page_166">166</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Brougham on, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aix, Archbishop of, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Albemarle, Lord, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aldborough, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alderson, Justice, on Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Looker case, <a href="#Page_295">295</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Allotments, and enclosure, <a href="#Page_84">84</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">experiments, <a href="#Page_154">154</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hostility of farmers to, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">M. Chateauvieux on, <a href="#Page_232">232</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Suffield’s scheme in 1830, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Almack’s, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Althorp, Lord, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">America, farmers in, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett in, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amnesty Debate, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Andover, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Appeal, against enclosure award, <a href="#Page_59">59</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arbuthnot, J., <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aristocracy, contrast between English and French, <a href="#Page_1">1</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">control over all English institutions, <a href="#Page_7">7</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Burke on, <a href="#Page_24">24</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">characteristics, <a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">Chapter xiii</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armley (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_A_1">Appendix A (1)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Arson"></a>Arson, in 1830, <a href="#Page_243">243</a> ff., <a href="#Page_268">268</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">penalties for, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">trials for, <a href="#Page_309">309</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Artaxerxes, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arthur, Sir George (Governor of Van Diemen’s Land), <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arundel, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arundel, Lord, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ash, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ashbury (enclosure), <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ashelworth (enclosure), <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_A_2">Appendix A (2)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Astley, Sir E., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aston, Tirrold, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Atkins, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Attorney-General. <i>See</i> <a href="#Denman">Denman</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aunalls, James, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Austen, Jane, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Avington, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Award, enclosure, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aylesbury, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">riots in 1795, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Special Commission, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Azay le Rideau, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Babeau, M., <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bacon, R. M., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bagehot, W., <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bagshot Heath, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bailiffs, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baily, Mr., <a href="#Page_97">97</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baker, Mr., M.P., and Settlement, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bakewell, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bamford, S., <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bampfylde, Copleston Warre, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barett, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baring, Bingham, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Cook 286;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Deacle case, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sir Thomas, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barings, the, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barkham, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnes, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Common, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barré, Colonel, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barton Stacey, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Basingstoke, <a href="#Page_162">162</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baskerville, Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bath, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bathurst, Lord, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Batten, Matthew, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Battersea, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Battle, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beaconsfield, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beckett (the gaoler), <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span>Beckley, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> f., <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bedford, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Gaol, account of prisoners in, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belgrave, Lord, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benett, John, M. P., and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Cobbett’s trial, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bennett, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Cornelius, <a href="#Page_303">303</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benson or Bensington, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bentham, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on enclosure, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Pitt’s Bill, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bentley, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berkeley, Bishop, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berkshire, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">1830 rising in, <a href="#Page_258">258</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Bread Act. <i>See</i> <a href="#Speenhamland">Speenhamland</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bernard, Scrope, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sir Thomas, on Lord Winchilsea’s allotments, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on minimum wage, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on removals, <a href="#Page_154">154</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Betts, John, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bicester, <a href="#Page_99">99</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Billingsley, J., <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birdingbury, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birmingham, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishop, Daniel, on poaching, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishop, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishops, the, comparison of French and English, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reforming, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishopstone (Wilts), (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishops Walthams, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishton, Mr., <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackstone, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on common rights, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on gleaning, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blake, Mr., of Idmiston, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blean, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blizzard, Thomas, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blomfield, Bishop, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blow, Charles, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Board of Agriculture, and enclosures, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> ff., <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">questions to correspondents, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bocking, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Bolingbroke"></a>Bolingbroke, Lord (author of <i>Patriot King</i>), <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bolland, Mr. Justice, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bolnhurst (enclosure), <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bologna, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Booby, Lady, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Borderers. <i>See</i> <a href="#Squatters">Squatters</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boroughs, disputes about franchise, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Scot and lot, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">potwalloper, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">burgage, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">corporation, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">freemen, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bosanquet, Mr. Justice, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boston, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boswell, Will, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Botany Bay, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bourton, Charles, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boys, John (agriculturist), <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; (farmer, in 1830 rising), <a href="#Page_282">282</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bradley, <a href="#Page_116">116</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bragge, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_44">44</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bramshott, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandon, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Braunston (enclosure), <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bread, wheaten and mixed, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Diet">Diet</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brede, parish rising at, <a href="#Page_248">248</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brighton, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brimpton, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bristol, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bristowe, Squire, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brittany, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broad Somerford, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brocklehurst, Mr., <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brooks’s, <a href="#Page_68">68</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brotherton, Colonel, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Brougham"></a>Brougham, Henry, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on agriculture, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on J.P.’s, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on increase of commitments, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on criminal courts, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Cobbett’s trial, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broughton, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Thomas, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryan, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryant, Joseph, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckingham, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Duke of, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and rising of 1830, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckland Newton, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Budgets, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bulcamp, House of Industry, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bull-baiting, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bullen, Robert, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bullington, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bully. <i>See</i> <a href="#Bolingbroke">Bolingbroke</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bunce, Henry, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buns, parish, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burbage, George, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdett, Sir F., <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdon, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burgage boroughs, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burgundy, Duke of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burke, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on the aristocracy, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Parliamentary representation, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on regulating wages, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">philosophy of social life, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on French Assembly, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burkhead, Charles, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span>Burley on the Hill, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burn, Dr., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnet, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnham, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burwash, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bury St. Edmunds, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buxton, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Byron, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cabinet System established, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cade, Jack, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cæsar, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambridge, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Cambridge Modern History</i>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambridgeshire, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Camden, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Camden, Lord, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canning, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canterbury, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canterbury, Archbishop of, <a href="#Page_190">190</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prayer in 1830, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capes, W. W., <a href="#Page_159">159</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Capital offences, and Private Bill Committees, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carbery, Lord, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlile, Richard, prosecution in 1831, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlisle, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlisle, Lord, and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_66">66</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carlyle, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carmarthen, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carnarvon, Lord, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carr, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carrington, Lord, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carter, James, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; John, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cartmel (enclosure), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carus Wilson, Mr., <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Case, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castlereagh, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cavan, Lord and Lady, <a href="#Page_279">279</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Certificates (under Settlement Laws), <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a> ff., <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chancellor, Lord. <i>See</i> <a href="#Brougham">Brougham</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, and enclosures, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">VIII.</span>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">X.</span>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charlton (Otmoor), <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; (Wilts), <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chateauvieux, M., <a href="#Page_233">233</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chatham, Lord, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cheese, dearness of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chenonceaux, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cherry, Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cheshunt (enclosure), <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_A_3">Appendix A (3)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chester, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chester, Charles, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children, employment of, <a href="#Page_141">141</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">punishment of, <a href="#Page_200">200</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chinon, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chippendale, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christian, Mr., <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chudleigh, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, the (<i>see also</i> <a href="#Clergy">Clergy</a>), <a href="#Page_326">326</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and enclosure, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a> f., <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and tithes, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and the poor, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Churchill, Lord, <a href="#Page_94">94</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cicero, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cinque Ports, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claims, presentation of, under enclosure Acts, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clare, Lord, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; John, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarke, Marcus, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Tom, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Clergy"></a>Clergy, non-residence of the, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and the poor, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">association with governing class, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">salaries of curates, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and tithes, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clerk, George, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clive, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clough, John and Thomas, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cobbett, William, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on enclosures, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on unpaid magistrates, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on tea, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on allotments, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Whitbread’s 1807 scheme, <a href="#Page_180">180</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of labourers, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on relations of rich to poor, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on change in farming, <a href="#Page_212">212</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on parsons, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> on, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and village sports, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">description of, <a href="#Page_234">234</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Whig ministers, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">trial in 1831, <a href="#Page_315">315</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cobbold, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cockerton, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Codrington, O. C., <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coke, Lord, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; of Norfolk, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and spring guns, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Game Laws, <a href="#Page_196">196</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colchester, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coleman, Mr., <a href="#Page_249">249</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collingwood, Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collins, A., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; (in Deacle case), <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Combination Laws, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commissioners, Enclosure, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">power of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointment of, <a href="#Page_60">60</a> ff., <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commissioners. <i>See</i> <a href="#Poor_Law_Commission">Poor Law Commission</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commoners, character of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Otmoor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theory of rights of, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Common fields, extent of, in 1688, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">system of cultivation, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">managed by manor courts, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span>varieties in system, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Sir R. Sutton’s Act, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ownership of, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">subdivision of property in, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">position of labourers under system, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> f., <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disadvantages of, <a href="#Page_36">36</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">relation to old enclosures, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Common land, three uses of term, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commons, relation to village economy, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">alleged deleterious effects of, on commoners, <a href="#Page_37">37</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">commoners’ own views on subject, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">aesthetic objections to, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Common rights, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">legal decision about inhabitants, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">claims for, on enclosure, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Otmoor, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Consents, proportion required for enclosure, <a href="#Page_49">49</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how assessed, <a href="#Page_50">50</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how obtained, <a href="#Page_51">51</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>see also</i> <a href="#Kings_Sedgmoor">King’s Sedgmoor</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cook, Henry, <a href="#Page_286">286</a> f., <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cooper, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; and others, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coote, Eyre, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Copyholders, position of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> f., <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corn Laws, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cornwall, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corporation boroughs, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corsley (Wilts), <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cottagers, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">position before enclosure, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and enclosure, <a href="#Page_52">52</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">presentment of claims by, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">results of enclosure on, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and allotments, <a href="#Page_155">155</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cotswolds, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coulson, Mr., <a href="#Page_97">97</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Councils, French, under Regency, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cove, Rev. Mr., J. P., <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coventry, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coventry, Lord, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cows, loss of, on enclosure, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> f., <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Raunds commoners on benefit of, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and allotments, <a href="#Page_155">155</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and settlement, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cox, William, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coxe, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coxhead, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crabbe, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on workhouse, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on roundsmen, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on poachers, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on poor, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cranbrook, <a href="#Page_255">255</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craven, Lord, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creevey, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cricklade, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croke, Sir Alex., <a href="#Page_89">89</a> f., <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croker, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and enclosures, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crook, John, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croxton, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croydon (enclosure), <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> <i>n.</i>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_A_4">Appendix A (4)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtler, W. H. R., <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curwen, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Dalbiac, General, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darling, Alfred, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davenant, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davies, Rev. David, his book, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on fuel, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on rise in prices, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his budgets, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on mixed bread, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on milk, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on tea, <a href="#Page_128">128</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on minimum wage, <a href="#Page_136">136</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on land for labourers, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Miss M. F., <a href="#Page_220">220</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dawson, Hannah, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deacle, Mr., and the Deacle case, <a href="#Page_277">277</a> f., <a href="#Page_287">287</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deal, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Debates in Parliament, on Private Enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_55">55</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on General Enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Whitbread’s Bill, <a href="#Page_140">140</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Pitt’s Poor Law Bill, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Settlement, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on rising of 1830, <a href="#Page_314">314</a> f., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deddington, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deerhurst, Lord, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Defoe, Daniel, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Grey, Mr., <a href="#Page_71">71</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Demainbray, Rev. S., <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Denman"></a>Denman, Lord, on J.P.’s, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Cook, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Lush, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and amnesty debate, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Cobbett’s trial, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Quincey, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derby, <a href="#Page_117">117</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derby, Brooker, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Deserted Village, The</i>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">D’Este, Isabella, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Tocqueville, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Devon, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dicketts, Henry, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diderot, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Diet"></a>Diet, of labourer, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attempt to introduce cheap cereals, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">soup, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tea, <a href="#Page_128">128</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dillon, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Disraeli, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Domestic industries, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Doomsday Book</i>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dorchester, Special Commission at, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dorset, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">1830 rising, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span>Dover, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dowden, W., <a href="#Page_285">285</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Downton, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drake, Sir F., <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Mr., <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dryden, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dubois, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dudley, Lord, <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dundas, Charles, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Speenhamland, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Special Commission, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Henry, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunkin, on Otmoor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Merton, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunmow, <a href="#Page_135">135</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunn, Ann, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunwich, <a href="#Page_11">11</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Durham, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Durham_Lord"></a>Durham, Lord, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dyott, Sir W., <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ealing, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">East Grimstead, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Grinstead, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Retford, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Stretton, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Easton, Rev. Mr., and family, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eaves, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ebrington, Lord, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eden, Sir F. M., <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and enclosure, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his book, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and gleaning, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">budgets, <a href="#Page_111">111</a> and <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Settlement Laws, <a href="#Page_113">113</a> f., <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a> <i>n.</i> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and food riots, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on diet, <a href="#Page_123">123&ndash;132</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on workhouses, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on roundsmen, <a href="#Page_148">148</a> <i>n.</i> and 164;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Speenhamland meeting, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his ideal poor woman, <a href="#Page_208">208</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on rich and poor, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Edinburgh Review</i>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Egleton, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Egremont, Lord, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eldon, Lord, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Eleanor</i>, the, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eliot, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Eliza</i>, the, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elizabeth, Queen, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellenborough, Lord, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellison, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ely, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enclosures, and productivity, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">by voluntary agreement, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of, before eighteenth century, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">motives for, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">extent of Parliamentary enclosure, <a href="#Page_41">41</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Parliamentary procedure, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">consents required, <a href="#Page_49">49</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lord Thurlow on Parliamentary procedure, <a href="#Page_53">53</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">local procedure, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">General Enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_74">74</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Act of 1801, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hostility of poor to, <a href="#Page_78">78</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">criticism of methods, <a href="#Page_81">81</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">provision for poor, <a href="#Page_85">85</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">results on village, <a href="#CHAPTER_V">Chap. v.</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects on relationship of classes, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Encroachments, by squatters, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">treatment of, under enclosure, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Engrossing of farms, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Entail. <i>See</i> <a href="#Settlements_family">Family Settlements</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Epsom, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erskine, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Essex, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Estcourt, Thomas, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; T. G. B., <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Evelina</i>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eversley, Lord, <a href="#Page_32">32</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ewbanks, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Expenses of enclosure, <a href="#Page_97">97</a> f.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Fees">Fees</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eycon, Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Falkland, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fane, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farmers implicated in 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_248">248</a> f., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; large, gained by enclosure, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and milk, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and allotments, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">divided from labourers, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_212">212</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; small, ruined by enclosure, <a href="#Page_97">97</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and milk, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and other classes, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_212">212</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farmer, William, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farm servants, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farnham, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fawley, <a href="#Page_242">242</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Fees"></a>Fees for Enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Felony, counsel in cases of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fencing, cost of, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">penalties for breaking, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fencott, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fénelon, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fielding, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on village life, <a href="#Page_18">18</a> f., <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on lawyers, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his scheme for the poor, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on solidarity of poor, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finch, Mr., <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Firth, Mr., <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzwilliam, Lord, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzwilliams, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flackwell Heath, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flanders, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ford, John, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fordingbridge, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forster, Mr., of Norwich, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fox, C. J., <a href="#Page_53">53</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on M.P.’s and patrons, <a href="#Page_13">13</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_68">68</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Horne Tooke, <a href="#Page_72">72</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on mixed bread, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span>on minimum wage, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on charity, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">despair of Parliamentary government, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fox-hunting, change in, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">France, position of aristocracy in, <a href="#Page_1">1</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">monarchy in, <a href="#Page_2">2</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">division of common land in, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">peasants compared with English labourers, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Franchise"></a>Franchise, Parliamentary, <a href="#Page_7">7</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in boroughs, <a href="#Page_8">8</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">county, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Francis <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Philip, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freeholders, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Freemen boroughs, <a href="#Page_11">11</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">French, Colonel, M.P., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">French Convention, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; war, agriculture during, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Friends of the People, <a href="#Page_13">13</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frome, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fryer, Mr., <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fuel rights, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">allotments, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cost of, to labourer, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scarcity after enclosure, <a href="#Page_130">130</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken from hedges, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fussell, J., <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gage, Lord, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gaiter, John, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galloway, Lord, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galsworthy, J., <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Game_Laws"></a>Game Laws, <a href="#Page_187">187</a> ff., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">convictions under, <a href="#Page_191">191</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">supply of game to London, <a href="#Page_196">196</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gardens for labourers, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gateward’s case, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gatton, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geese on Otmoor, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Cobbett, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">German legion, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibbon, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibbons, Sir W., <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibbs, Sir Vicary, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilbert’s Act, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gillray, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilmore, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glasse, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gleaning, <a href="#Page_107">107</a> ff., <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">controversy on, <a href="#Page_108">108</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gloucester, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">trials at, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gloucestershire, 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Godalming, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goderich, Lord, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> f., <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Godmanchester, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goldsmith, Oliver, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gooch, Mr., <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goodenough, Dr., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goodfellow, Thomas, <a href="#Page_303">303</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goodman, Thomas, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gordon riots, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gosport, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">jurors, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goudhurst, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gould, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Graham, Sir James, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gray, Thomas, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Great Tew, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greenaway, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greenford, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greetham, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gregory, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grenville, Lord, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grey, Lord, <a href="#Page_14">14</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Prime Minister, <a href="#Page_311">311</a> ff., <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Cobbett’s trial, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Corn Laws, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Suffield, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guercino, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guernsey, Lord, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guildford, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guildford, Lord, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#North_Francis">North, Francis</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gulliver, Mary, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gurney, J., in 1830 trials, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> ff.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hale, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halifax, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hambledon, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hampden, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hampshire, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">1830 rising in, <a href="#Page_258">258</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; and Wiltshire labourers compared, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Harbord_Harbord"></a>Harbord Harbord, Sir, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a> f., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harding, John, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hardres, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hardy, J., <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harewoods, the, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hasbach, Professor, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haslemere, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hastings, Warren, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hastings, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hatch, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haute Huntre (enclosure), <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> <i>n.</i>, and <a href="#APPENDIX_A_5">Appendix A (5)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hawker, W., <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hay, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hazlitt, William, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heacham, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Headley Workhouse, <a href="#Page_243">243</a> f., <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Healey, Dr., <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heathfield, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heckingham, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hele, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Helpstone, <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span>Henley, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henley, Thomas, <a href="#Page_249">249</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> (of France), <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henstead, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hereford, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hetherington, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hickson, Mr., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Higgs, Ann, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Highlands, the, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hill, Edmund, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; G. S., <a href="#Page_249">249</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Isaac, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hinchcliffe, J. <i>See</i> <a href="#Peterborough_Bishop_of">Bishop of Peterborough</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hindhead, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hindon, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hirst. <i>See</i> <a href="#Redlich">Redlich</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Histon and Impington (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hobhouse, H., <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; John Cam, <a href="#Page_312">312</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_22">22</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hobson, J. A., <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hodges, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_253">253</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hodgson, Naomi, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holdaway, Robert, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holdsworth, W., <a href="#Page_23">23</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holkham, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holland, Lady, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on spring guns, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on penal code, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holy Island (enclosure), <a href="#Page_48">48</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Homage. <i>See</i> <a href="#Juries">Juries</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Homer, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Rev. H., <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hone, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horace, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horsham, <a href="#Page_257">257</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horsley, Bishop, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horton, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hothfield, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howlett, Rev. J., <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on minimum wage, <a href="#Page_135">135</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hubbard, Ann, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hudson, W. H., <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hume, J., <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hungerford riots, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunt, Henry, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Lush, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and amnesty debate, <a href="#Page_314">314</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_189">189</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Huntingdon, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hurst, Ann. <i>See</i> <a href="#Strudwick">Strudwick</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mr., <a href="#Page_257">257</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hurstbourne, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hythe, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Idmiston, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ilchester, Lord, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ilmington, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ipswich, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Ipswich Journal</i>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isherwood, H., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isle of Wight, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Islip, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jenks, E., <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jennings, John, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jerome, St., <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, A. H., <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mary Ann, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; (overseer), <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Samuel, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Joliffe, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Rev. J., <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Jones, Tom</i>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jordan, Edmund, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Judd, Mr., <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Judges, discretion in sentences, <a href="#Page_202">202</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">salaries advanced, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">addresses at Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Juries"></a>Juries, presentments by, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of Manor Courts, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Justices of the Peace, growth of power, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">autocratic character, <a href="#Page_18">18</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unpaid, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and regulation of wages, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and workhouses, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Brougham on, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Juvenal, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Keene, Mr., <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kelvedon, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kempster, Richard, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kemys Tynte, Sir C., <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kendal, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kent, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">1830 rising in, <a href="#Page_244">244</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kent, Nathaniel, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kenton, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kew, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kibworth-Beauchamp, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King, Gregory, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Captain, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Thomas, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kingsley, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Lynn, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <a id="Kings_Sedgmoor"></a>Sedgmoor (enclosure), <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a> ff., <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_14">Appendix A (14)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kington, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kintbury mob, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">anecdotes of, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirton, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span>Knaresborough (enclosure), <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a> f., <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_6">Appendix A (6)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knatchbull, Sir Edward, <a href="#Page_245">245</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kosciusko, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">‘Labour Rate’ system, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laleham (enclosure), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_7">Appendix A (7)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lamb, George, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lambton. <i>See</i> <a href="#Durham_Lord">Durham, Lord</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lampsacus, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lancashire, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lane, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lansdowne, Lord, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauderdale, Lord, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Launceston, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lawyers, French and English, compared, <a href="#Page_215">215</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laxton, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lechmere, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lecky, W. E. H., <a href="#Page_111">111</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leeds, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leeds, Duke of, <a href="#Page_47">47</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legg, the brothers, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; George, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leicestershire, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leigh, Lord, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leo <span class="allsmcap">X.</span>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lespinasse, Mlle. de, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Levy, Professor, <a href="#Page_26">26</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lewes Assizes, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Gaol, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Light, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lilley, the brothers, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Limoges, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincolnshire, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Litchfield, <a href="#Page_119">119</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Marlow, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Littleport, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liverpool, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liverpool, Lord, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Llandaff, Bishop of. <i>See</i> <a href="#Watson">Watson</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loches, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Locke, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loes and Wilford, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lofft, Capel, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">London, City of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Londonderry, Lord, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Long, Walter, J.P., <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Long Crendon, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Newnton, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Longparish, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lonsdale, Lord, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Looker case, the, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Lord"></a>Lord of the Manor, position under common-field system, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> f., <a href="#Page_32">32</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">position on enclosure, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louis <span class="allsmcap">XIII.</span>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">XIV.</span>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">XV.</span>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">XVI.</span>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Louth (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_8">Appendix A (8)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lowell, Professor, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lower Winchendon, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucan, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucretius, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ludlow, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lush, James, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyminge, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lynn, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Macaulay, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on <i>Deserted Village</i>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macclesfield, Lord, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Machinery, judges on benefits of, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">destruction of, in 1830, <a href="#Page_259">259</a> ff., <a href="#Page_268">268</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">penalties for destruction, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Threshing_machines">Threshing Machines</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackarness, John, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackrell, Thomas, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macquarie Harbour, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magnesia, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maidenhead, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maids Morton, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maidstone, <a href="#Page_246">246</a> f., <a href="#Page_255">255</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Assizes, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maine, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mair, Colonel, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maldon, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malicious Trespass Act, <a href="#Page_199">199</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malthus, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Whitbread’s scheme, <a href="#Page_180">180</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manchester, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manor, the, connection with common field system, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Courts, <a href="#Page_16">16</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and common field system, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord of the. <i>See</i> <a href="#Lord">Lord</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">March Phillipps, L., <a href="#Page_327">327</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marengo, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Margate, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mariner, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Market Lavington, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marlborough, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marlborough, Duke of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marshall, William, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on methods of enclosure, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mason, Joseph and Robert, <a href="#Page_284">284</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maulden (enclosure), <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice of Saxony, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayfield, <a href="#Page_250">250</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mazarin, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M‘Culloch, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Melbourne, Lord, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and transportation, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">circular of Nov. 24, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span>of Dec. 8, <a href="#Page_266">266</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Cobbett’s trial, <a href="#Page_317">317</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and spring guns, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Corn Laws, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Suffield’s proposals, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meredith, Sir William, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merton, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Metcalf, Ann, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Methodist movement, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Micheldever, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middleton, Mr., <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Middlesex, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Midlands, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milan, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Millet, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Military tenures, abolition of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milk, and enclosure, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attempts to provide, <a href="#Page_129">129</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minimum wage, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Whitbread’s proposals, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">probable effects of, <a href="#Page_233">233</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mirabeau, Marquis de, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mollington, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monck, J. B., <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monoux, Sir P., <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montesquieu, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montgomery, Mrs., <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moorcott, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moore, Adam, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; F., <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Robert (in <i>Shirley</i>), <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moreton Corbet (enclosure), <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morey, Farmer C., <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morgan, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mould of Hatch, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mount, W., <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Muir, Thomas, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Municipal government, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Myus, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Napoleon, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nash, Thomas, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neale, Jane, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newbolt, Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_265">265</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newbury, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">New England, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Forest, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newington, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newport, <a href="#Page_201">201</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Pagnell, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Sarum, <a href="#Page_109">109</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; South Wales, <a href="#Page_261">261</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton, Mr., <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton Toney, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicholls, Sir George, <a href="#Page_146">146</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ninfield, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noakes, David and Thomas, <a href="#Page_249">249</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noke, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norfolk, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="North_Francis"></a>North, Francis, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Roger, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northampton, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northamptonshire, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northesk, Lord, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norton, Sir Fletcher, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norwich, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Norwich Mercury</i>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nottingham, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">castle, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nottinghamshire, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nutbean, E. C., <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nylands, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Oakley, William, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Connell, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oddington, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Officials, salaries raised, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Parliamentary">Parliamentary</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#Village_officials">Village</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Age Pensions, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oldfield, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Sarum, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orleans, Duke of, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormonde, Duke of, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orpington, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orridge, Mr., <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oswestry, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Otmoor"></a>Otmoor (enclosure), <a href="#Page_45">45</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oundle, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overseers, and relief, <a href="#Page_145">145</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">salaried, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hostility to, in 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overton, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Owslebury, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oxford, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Oxford Journal</i>, Jackson’s, <a href="#Page_88">88</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Oxford University and City Herald</i>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oxfordshire, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Page, Mr., <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paine, Thomas, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pakeman, the brothers, <a href="#Page_309">309</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Palmer, G., <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; T. F., <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Palmerston, Lord, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parham, Farmer, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parish carts, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Park, Mr. Justice, on Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Parke_Mr_Justice"></a>Parke, Mr. Justice, and Otmoor, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span>Parliament, qualifications for members, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Parliamentary"></a>Parliamentary Committees, on Private Enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_45">45</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how constituted, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; government, established, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; officials and enclosure, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Reform, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cobbett and, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Grey’s Government and, <a href="#Page_311">311</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; representation, analysis of, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Franchise">Franchise</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parr, Dr. 203.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patience, Ambrose, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patrons, control of boroughs by, <a href="#Page_10">10</a> f., <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">relations to M.P.’s, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patteson, Sir John, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pearse, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peel, Sir Robert, <a href="#Page_191">191</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and prosecution of Cobbett, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penal Code, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Settlements, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peninsular War, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pennells, Richard, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perceval, Spencer, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perry, E., <a href="#Page_109">109</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; John, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peterborough, <a href="#Page_31">31</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Peterborough_Bishop_of"></a>Peterborough, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peterloo, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petersfield, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petitions, for enclosure, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">against enclosure, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">how treated, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">about New Forest, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">about Tollington, <a href="#Page_71">71</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinniger, Mr., <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitt, William, the younger, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on mixed bread, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on minimum wage, <a href="#Page_134">134</a> f., <a href="#Page_141">141</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his Poor Law Bill, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a> ff., <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and settlement, <a href="#Page_152">152</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Sinking Fund, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and French War, <a href="#Page_328">328</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plymouth, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plympton, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poachers, in Bedford Gaol, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">loss to village, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Game_Laws">Game Laws</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Polhill, Mr., <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Political economy, in fashion, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">judges on, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Unions, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pollen, R., J.P., <a href="#Page_275">275</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pompey, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poor Law, system of relief, <a href="#Page_145">145</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of employment, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Pitt’s Bill of 1796, <a href="#Page_149">149</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Whitbread’s Bill of 1807, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">litigation, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Settlement">Settlement</a> <i>and</i> <a href="#Speenhamland">Speenhamland</a> system.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; <a id="Poor_Law_Commission"></a>Commission of 1834, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pope, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Popham, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Population and Speenhamland system, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a> f., <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Porritt, E., <a href="#Page_8">8</a> ff., <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Port Arthur, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Porter, Thomas, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Porteus, Bishop, charge to clergy, <a href="#Page_220">220</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Portland, Duke of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Portsmouth, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potato ground, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potter, Richard, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Macqueen, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pottern, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potwalloper boroughs, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Powis, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pretymans, the, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Price, William, and others, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prices, growth of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priestley, Dr., <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Privileges, Committee of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Proteus</i>, the, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prothero, R. E., <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Public schools, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pulteney, Sir William, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Punishment, discretion of judges, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">penal code, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fears of its mildness, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Transportation">Transportation</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Purley, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pym, Mr., <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pyt House affray, <a href="#Page_261">261</a> f., <a href="#Page_292">292</a> f.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quainton (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_13">Appendix A (13)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quarrier, Dr., <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quarter Sessions, change in procedure, <a href="#Page_17">17</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quesnai, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quidhampton, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Radicals, the, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Radnor, Lord, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rastall, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raunds (enclosure), <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ray, river, <a href="#Page_93">93</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reading, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Special Commission at, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Reading Mercury</i>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a> <i>n.</i> f., <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>n.</i> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Redlich"></a>Redlich and Hirst, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Redlinch, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reed, Mr., <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reform Bill, riots, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">agitation for, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Parliamentary">Parliamentary Reform</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Government, and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_311">311</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prosecution of Carlile and Cobbett, <a href="#Page_315">315</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span>incapacity for social legislation, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reni, Guido, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Revolution of 1688, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reynolds, Sir J., <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ricardo, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richardson, Samuel, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richelieu, <a href="#Page_1">1</a> ff., <a href="#Page_5">5</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richmond, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richmond, Duke of, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rick-burning. <i>See</i> <a href="#Arson">Arson</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ride, J. and F., and R., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ringmer, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riots, enclosure, <a href="#Page_78">78</a> (<i>see also</i> <a href="#Otmoor">Otmoor</a>);</li>
-<li class="isub1">food riots of 1795, <a href="#Page_120">120</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">of 1816, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">law about riot, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in 1830, Chaps. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">xi.</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">xii.</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rising in 1830, <a href="#Page_240">240</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin in Kent, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spread to Sussex, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">to Berks, Hants, and Wilts, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">alarm of authorities, <a href="#Page_266">266</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spread West and North, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">wholesale arrests, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">trials, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robertsbridge, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robespierre, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rochefoucault, Duc de la, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockingham, Lord, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockley, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rode, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rogers, Sarah, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; T. L., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rome, comparison between English and Roman social history, <a href="#Page_330">330</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Romilly, S., <a href="#Page_202">202</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on Game Laws, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Romsey, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roundsman system, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rous, Sir John, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rousseau, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowland, John, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rowlandson, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruggles, Thomas, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Run-rig system, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russell, Lord John, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord William, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <a href="#Page_273">273</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rutland, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rutland, Duke of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rye, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sagnac, P., <a href="#Page_87">87</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="St_Davids_Bishop_of"></a>St. Davids, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Denis, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Germain, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. John, H., and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_65">65</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Lawrence Wootten, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Mary Bourne, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Neots, <a href="#Page_102">102</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salehurst, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salisbury, Special Commission at, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gaol rules at, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scene in court, <a href="#Page_298">298</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salisbury, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_85">85</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanctuary, Mr., <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandwich, Lord, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandy (enclosure), <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sarney, John, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Savile, Sir George, <a href="#Page_54">54</a> f., <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scarborough, Lord, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schools of Industry, <a href="#Page_149">149</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sclater, W. L., <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scot and lot boroughs, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scotland, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scotsmen, Cobbett on, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, Sir William, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seaford, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sedgefield, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sedgford, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sedgmoor. <i>See</i> <a href="#Kings_Sedgmoor">King’s Sedgmoor</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Selborne Workhouse, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Select Committees. <i>See</i> <a href="#CHIEF_AUTHORITIES">List of Authorities</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Vestry. <i>See</i> <a href="#Vestry_Reform">Vestry Reform</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Selwyn, George, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_65">65</a> ff., <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Settlement"></a>Settlement, Laws of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a> ff., <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> f., <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect of, <a href="#Page_114">114</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reforms made and proposed, <a href="#Page_152">152</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Whitbread’s proposals in 1807, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">litigation, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Settlements_family"></a>Settlements, family, <a href="#Page_21">21</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sevenoaks, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheffield, <a href="#Page_115">115</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheffield, Lord, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shelley, Sir Timothy, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; P. B., <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shepherd, Aaron, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheppard, Joseph, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheraton, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheridan, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on enclosure Bills, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and minimum wage, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Pitt’s Poor Law Bill, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Game Laws, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shooting, change in character, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shopkeepers and allotments, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shore, Mrs., <a href="#Page_125">125</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shottesbrook, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shrewsbury, <a href="#Page_147">147</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sidlesham, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Sidmouth"></a>Sidmouth, Lord, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sidney, Sir Philip, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silcock, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simms, the brothers, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simond, M., <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span>Simpson (enclosure), <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_9">Appendix A (9)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simpson, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Sir John, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on common-field system, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and enclosure, <a href="#Page_59">59</a> ff., <a href="#Page_83">83</a> ff., <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinecures, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinking Fund, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sittingbourne, <a href="#Page_246">246</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skipton, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slade, Mrs. Charlotte, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slater, Dr., <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slaugham, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slinn, John, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smart, Professor, <a href="#Page_173">173</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Abel, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Adam, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on settlement, <a href="#Page_114">114</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on clergy, <a href="#Page_216">216</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; General, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sydney, <a href="#Page_190">190</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smollett, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snettisham, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Society for Bettering the Condition of the Poor, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; for the Reformation of Manners, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soldiers and food riots, <a href="#Page_121">121</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerset, <a href="#Page_98">98</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soup for the poor, <a href="#Page_125">125</a> and <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Southampton, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Southey, <a href="#Page_14">14</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">South Sea Bubble, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Special Commissions, in 1816, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in 1830, <a href="#Page_272">272</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Winchester, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Salisbury, <a href="#Page_290">290</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Dorchester, <a href="#Page_300">300</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Reading, <a href="#Page_302">302</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Abingdon, <a href="#Page_305">305</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Aylesbury, <a href="#Page_306">306</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conduct of prosecutions, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Speenhamland"></a>Speenhamland, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; system, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">introduction of, <a href="#Page_161">161</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scale, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effects of, Chaps. <a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">viii.</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_X">x.</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">introduction into Warwickshire, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reduction in scale, <a href="#Page_184">184</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spenser, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spring guns, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Melbourne’s suggested reintroduction, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Squatters"></a>Squatters, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">described, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ignored in enclosure consents, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">results of enclosure on, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Standing Orders, about enclosures, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> f., <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin of, <a href="#Page_73">73</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanhope, Lord, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanwell (enclosure), <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_10">Appendix A (10)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Star Chamber and enclosures, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">States-General, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stavordale, Lord, and Sedgmoor, <a href="#Page_67">67</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steel, George, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sterne, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stevens, James, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Jane, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steyning, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stirling, Mrs., <a href="#Page_196">196</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stixswold, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stockbury, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stockton, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stoke, <a href="#Page_154">154</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Cheriton, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stokes, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stone, Thomas, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stotfold, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strafford, Lord, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Strudwick"></a>Strudwick, Dame, <a href="#Page_208">208</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stubbes, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Studley, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sturges Bourne, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffield, Lord, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and spring guns, <a href="#Page_195">195</a> f., <a href="#Page_319">319</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scheme in 1830, <a href="#Page_320">320</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interviews with ministers, <a href="#Page_322">322</a> ff.</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>See also</i> <a href="#Harbord_Harbord">Harbord Harbord</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffolk, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Sumner"></a>Sumner, Bishop, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Surplus profits, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Surrey, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sussex, 1830 rising in, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutterton (enclosure), <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutton, Sir Richard, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swabey, Maurice, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swaffham, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swift, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swing, Captain, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Taltarum’s Case, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taunton, Mr. Justice, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taxation, <a href="#Page_171">171</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tea-drinking, <a href="#Page_128">128</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tenant farmers, <a href="#Page_28">28</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennyson, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tenterden, Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thanet, Lord, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thelwall, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Themistocles, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thompson, Mr., <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Captain, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Threshing_machines"></a>Threshing machines, destruction of, Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">xi.</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reason of hostility to, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">penalty for destruction, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thurlow, Lord, on enclosure procedure, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a> f., <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ticehurst, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tilsworth, <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span><i>Times</i>, the, <a href="#Page_177">177</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a> <i>n.</i>, and Chapters <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">xi.</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">xii.</a> <i>passim</i>, including articles quoted, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, and Special Correspondent, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tisbury, <a href="#Page_261">261</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tithes, <a href="#Page_217">217</a> f., <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">origin, <a href="#Page_167">167</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">demand for abatement in 1830, Chap. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">xi.</a> <i>passim</i>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tithe-owners, and enclosure, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a> f., <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tollington, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tonbridge, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tonga Islands, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tooke, J. Horne, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_71">71</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Toomer, James, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Transportation"></a>Transportation, dreaded by labourers, <a href="#Page_198">198</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">described, <a href="#Page_205">205</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">effect on village life, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Treason and Sedition Acts, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trecothick, James, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trevelyan, Sir George, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trout, J., <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tunbridge Wells, <a href="#Page_255">255</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Turgot, <a href="#Page_4">4</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Turner, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mr. (Pyt House affray), <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ullathorne, Dr., <a href="#Page_206">206</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Universities, the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Upper Clatford, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Vachel, Rev. Mr., <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Diemen’s Land, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vansittart, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Rev. Dr., <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vaughan, Baron, on Special Commissions, <a href="#Page_273">273</a> f., <a href="#Page_278">278</a> ff., <a href="#Page_300">300</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vavasour, Sir Henry, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Venice, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Versailles, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Vestry_Reform"></a>Vestry Reform, Whitbread’s proposals, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Acts of 1818 and 1819, <a href="#Page_182">182</a> f.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Village_officials"></a>Village officials, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vine Hall, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vinogradoff, Professor, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Virgil, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Voltaire, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wages, and prices, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">regulation of, <a href="#Page_133">133</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">assessment in 1725, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in 1732, <a href="#Page_144">144</a> f.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">proposals to assess at Speenhamland, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">wages in 1824, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">demand for living wage in 1830, Chaps. <a href="#CHAPTER_XI">xi.</a> and <a href="#CHAPTER_XII">xii.</a> <i>passim</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">wages in Berks, Hants, and Wilts, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wakefield (enclosure), <a href="#Page_47">47</a> f., <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a> f., <a href="#APPENDIX_A_11">Appendix A (11)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walden, <a href="#Page_268">268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waller, William, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walpole, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sir Spencer, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walsingham, Lord, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waltham (enclosure), <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wanstead, <a href="#Page_132">132</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warbleton, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warburton, Mr., M.P., <a href="#Page_187">187</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ward, Mr., <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warde Fowler, Mr., <a href="#Page_331">331</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warren, John. <i>See</i> <a href="#St_Davids_Bishop_of">St. Davids, Bishop of</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warwick, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warwickshire, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wasing, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waterloo, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Watson"></a>Watson, Bishop, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webb, Mr. and Mrs., <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webster, Sir Godfrey, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellingborough, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellington, Duke of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as Prime Minister, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wensleydale, Lord. <i>See</i> <a href="#Parke_Mr_Justice">Mr. Justice Parke</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Westcote (enclosure), <a href="#Page_43">43</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Western, C. C., <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Squire, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sophia, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">West Grimstead, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Westminster, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wetherall, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wharncliffe, Lord, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wheble, Mr., <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wherwell, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitaker, Sergeant, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitbread, Samuel, and minimum wage proposals, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a> ff., <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scheme of 1807, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a> ff.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mr., J.P., <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitchurch, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitecross Green, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whiteparish, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">White’s, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wickham, Mr., <a href="#Page_266">266</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wigtoft (enclosure), <a href="#Page_100">100</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilbarston (enclosure), <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilberforce, William, <a href="#Page_124">124</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and minimum wage, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Protestant Church in Copenhagen, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> <i>n.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and the reform of manners, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Prince of Wales on Cobbett, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on blessings of England, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilde, Mr. Serjeant, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilford, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilkes, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span>Wilkinson, Dr., <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilkinson, Mr. John, <a href="#Page_116">116</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willet, Mr., the banker, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; the butcher, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">William <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williams, Mr., <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mr., J. P., <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; George, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; William, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilton, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>, <a href="#Page_292">292</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wiltshire, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">1830 rising in, <a href="#Page_258">258</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">labourers compared with Hampshire, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prisoners, <a href="#Page_308">308</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winchester, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and 1830 rising, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Special Commission at, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_278">278</a> ff.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scenes outside gaol, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winchester, Bishop of. <i>See</i> <a href="#Sumner">Sumner</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Lord, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Mayor of, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winchilsea, Lord, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his allotments, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a> ff., <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Windermere, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Windham, W., <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Windsor, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winfrith Newburgh, (enclosure), <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#APPENDIX_A_12">Appendix A (12)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winkworth, William, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winslow, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winter, Captain, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winterbourne, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Withers, Peter, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Witley, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wonston, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woolridge, Henry, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Worcester, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Worcestershire, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Workhouses, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">destroyed in 1830, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wraisbury, <a href="#Page_50">50</a> <i>n.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wycombe, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wynne, Squire, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Xenophon, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Yardley Goben, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yorkshire, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young, Arthur, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a> <i>n.</i>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on France and England, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on common-field system, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on enclosure and its methods, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">protest against methods, <a href="#Page_82">82</a> ff., <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scheme for allotments, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Otmoor, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on wheaten bread, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and minimum wage, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and Speenhamland system, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and bailiffs, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and curates, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">&mdash;&mdash; Sir William, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="center small">
-Printed by T. and A. <span class="smcap">Constable</span>, Printers to His Majesty<br />
-at the Edinburgh University Press<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="r65" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> House of Commons, May 26, 1797, on Grey’s motion for Parliamentary
-Reform.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> The only person who is known to have declined to sit on this account is
-Southey.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> <i>Outline of English Local Government</i>, p. 152.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> A clear and concise account of these developments is given by Lord Hobhouse,
-<i>Contemporary Review</i>, February and March 1886.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Holdsworth’s <i>History of English Law</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Gregory King and Davenant estimated that the whole of the cultivated land
-in England in 1685 did not amount to much more than half the total area, and
-of this cultivated portion three-fifths was still farmed on the old common-field
-system.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> For a full discussion, in which the ordinary view is vigorously combated in
-an interesting analysis, see Hasbach, <i>History of the Agricultural Labourer</i>: on
-the other side, Levy, <i>Large and Small Holdings</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> This was the general structure of the village that was dissolved in the
-eighteenth century. It is distinguished from the Keltic type of communal
-agriculture, known as run-rig, in two important respects. In the run-rig village
-the soil is periodically redivided, and the tenant’s holding is compact. Dr.
-Slater (<i>Geographical Journal</i>, Jan. 1907) has shown that in those parts of
-England where the Keltic type predominated, <i>e.g.</i> in Devon and Cornwall,
-enclosure took place early, and he argues with good reason that it was easier to
-enclose by voluntary agreement where the holdings were compact than it was
-where they were scattered in strips. But gradual enclosure by voluntary agreement
-had a different effect from the cataclysm-like enclosure of the eighteenth
-century, as is evident from the large number of small farmers in Devonshire.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> See Webb, <i>Manor and Borough</i>, vol. i. p. 66 <i>seq.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> Slater, <i>The English Peasantry and the Enclosure of Common Fields</i>, p. 77.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> 13 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 81.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> This was done at Barnes Common; see for whole subject, <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>,
-vol. xvii. p. 516.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> For cases where changes in the system of cultivation of common fields had
-been made, see <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xvi. p. 606: ‘To Peterborough,
-crossing an open field, but sown by agreement with turnips.’ Cf. <i>Report on
-Bedfordshire</i>: ‘Clover is sown in some of the open clay-fields by common
-consent’ (p. 339), and ‘Turnips are sometimes cultivated, both on the sands
-and gravels, by mutual consent’ (p. 340).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Slater, p. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Dr. Slater’s conclusion is that ‘in the open field village the entirely landless
-labourer was scarcely to be found,’ p. 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> See <i>Commons, Forests, and Footpaths</i>, by Lord Eversley, p. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> <i>Bedfordshire Report</i>, 1808, p. 223, quoting from Arthur Young.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> P. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> P. 138.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> See on this point, Levy, <i>Large and Small Holdings</i>, p. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> <i>Report of Select Committee on Waste Lands</i>, 1795, p. 15, Appendix B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. i. p. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> <i>An Inquiry into the Connection between the present Price of Provisions and
-the Size of Farms</i>, 1773, p. 81.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> <i>Report on Somerset</i>, reprinted 1797, p. 52; compare Report on Commons in
-Brecknock, <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxii. p. 632, where commons are denounced
-as ‘hurtful to society by holding forth a temptation to idleness, that fell
-parent to vice and immorality’; also compare <i>Ibid.</i>, vol. xx. p. 145, where they
-are said to encourage the commoners to be ‘hedge breakers, pilferers, nightly
-trespassers ... poultry and rabbit stealers, or such like.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> P. 103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> <i>Committee on Inclosures</i>, 1844, p. 135.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> <i>House of Commons Journal</i>, June 19, 1797.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> <i>Large and Small Holdings</i>, p. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> <i>Disappearance of Small Landowner</i>, p. 90; Slater’s <i>English Peasantry and
-the Enclosure of Common Fields</i>, Appendix B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, March 30, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> See Dr. Slater’s detailed estimate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> There were probably many enclosures that had not the authority either of a
-special Act or of the Act of 1756, particularly in the more distant counties. The
-evidence of Mr. Carus Wilson upon the committee of 1844 shows that the
-stronger classes interpreted their rights and powers in a liberal spirit. Mr.
-Carus Wilson had arranged with the other large proprietors to let out the only
-common which remained open in the thirteen parishes in which his father was
-interested as a large landowner, and to pay the rent into the poor rates. Some
-members of the committee asked whether the minority who dissented from this
-arrangement could be excluded, and Mr. Wilson explained that he and his
-confederates believed that the minority were bound by their action, and that by
-this simple plan they could shut out all cattle from the common, except the
-cattle of their joint tenants.&mdash;<i>Committee on Inclosures</i>, 1844, p. 127.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> <i>E.g.</i> Laxton enclosed on petition of Lord Carbery in 1772. Total area
-1200 acres. Enclosure proceedings completed in the Commons in nineteen
-days. Also Ashbury, Berks, enclosed on petition of Lord Craven in 1770.
-There were contrary petitions. Also Nylands, enclosed in 1790 on petition of
-the lady of the manor. Also Tilsworth, Beds, enclosed on petition of Charles
-Chester, Esq., 1767, and Westcote, Bucks, on petition of the most noble George,
-Duke of Marlborough, January 24, 1765. Sometimes the lord of the manor
-associated the vicar with his petition: thus Waltham, Croxton and Braunston,
-covering 5600 acres, in Leicestershire, were all enclosed in 1766 by the Duke of
-Rutland and the local rector or vicar. The relations of Church and State are
-very happily illustrated by the language of the petitions, ‘A petition of the
-most noble John, Duke of Rutland, and the humble petition’ of the Rev. &mdash;&mdash; Brown
-or Rastall or Martin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> This Standing Order does not seem to have been applied universally, for
-Mr. Bragge on December 1, 1800, made a motion that it should be extended to
-the counties where it had not hitherto obtained. See <i>Senator</i>, vol. xxvii.,
-December 1, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> See particulars in Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> <i>A Six Months’ Tour through the North of England</i>, 1771, vol. i. p. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> Pp. 21 f.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> Cf. Otmoor in next chapter.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> See Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> See Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> See <i>House of Commons Journal</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> Eden, <i>The State of the Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 157.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> Eden, writing a few years later, remarks that since the enclosure ‘the
-property in Holy Island has gotten into fewer hands,’ vol. ii. p. 149.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> Report of Select Committee on Most Effectual Means of Facilitating
-Enclosure, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> Cf. also Wraisbury in Bucks, <i>House of Commons Journal</i>, June 17, 1799,
-where the petitioners against the Bill claimed that they spoke on behalf of
-‘by much the greatest Part of the Proprietors of the said Lands and Grounds,’
-yet in the enumeration of consents the committee state that the owners of
-property assessed at £6, 18s. are hostile out of a total value of £295, 14s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> <i>House of Commons Journal</i>, March 21, 1796.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> <i>House of Commons Journal</i>, June 10, 1801; cf. also case of Laleham. See
-Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, June 15, 1801.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, May 3, 1809.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, June 29, 1797.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> See Appendix A (13).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> <i>A Political Enquiry into the Consequences of enclosing Waste Lands</i>, 1785,
-p. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> See Appendix A (12).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> House of Commons, May 1, 1845.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> Aglionby, House of Commons, June 5, 1844.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> Thurlow was Chancellor from 1778 to 1783 (when Fox contrived to get rid
-of him) and from 1783 to 1792.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, House of Lords, March 30, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> Sir George Savile (1726&ndash;1784), M.P. for Yorkshire, 1759&ndash;1783; carried
-the Catholic Relief Bill, which provoked the Gordon Riots, and presented the
-great Yorkshire Petition for Economical Reform.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1867, p. 68. For a detailed history of the Stanwell
-Enclosure, see Appendix A (10). Unhappily the farmers were only reprieved;
-Stanwell was enclosed at the second attempt.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a> See <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, House of Lords, March 30, 1781; April 6,
-1781; June 14, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> John Warren (1730&ndash;1800).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> John Hinchcliffe (1731&ndash;1794), at one time Master of Trinity College,
-Cambridge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, March 30, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">[64]</a> <i>Senator</i>, vol. xxvi., July 2, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">[65]</a> For both speeches see <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, May 24, 1802.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">[66]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, June 14, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">[67]</a> See Cheshunt, Louth, Simpson, and Stanwell in Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">[68]</a> <i>Six Months’ Tour through the North of England</i>, 1771, vol. i. p. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">[69]</a> See <i>Annual Register</i>, 1800, Appendix to Chronicle, p. 87.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">[70]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, June 14, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">[71]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvi. p. 111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">[72]</a> February 1, 1793.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">[73]</a> See Chapter iv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">[74]</a> Vol. xxvi. p. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">[75]</a> Sinclair’s language shows that this was the general arrangement. Of course
-there are exceptions. See <i>e.g.</i> Haute Huntre and other cases in Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">[76]</a> Cf. Billingsley’s <i>Report on Somerset</i>, p. 59, where the arrangements are
-described as ‘a <i>little system of patronage</i>. The lord of the soil, the rector, and a
-few of the principal commoners, monopolize and distribute the appointments.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">[77]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, June 14, 1781.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">[78]</a> <i>General Report on Enclosures</i>, 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">[79]</a> <i>Six Months’ Tour through the North of England</i>, vol. i. p. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">[80]</a> See Appendix A (6).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">[81]</a> <i>Report on Somerset</i>, p. 192.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">[82]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, January 21, 1772.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">[83]</a> <i>Carlisle MSS.</i>; <i>Historical MSS. Commission</i>, pp. 301 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">[84]</a> Charles James Fox.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">[85]</a> The earlier name of Brooks’s Club.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">[86]</a> For the subsequent history of King’s Sedgmoor, see Appendix A (14).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">[87]</a> Most private Enclosure Acts provided that if a commissioner died his successor
-was to be somebody not interested in the property.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">[88]</a> Sir John Sinclair complained in 1796 that the Board had not even the
-privilege of franking its letters.&mdash;<i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvi, p. 506.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">[89]</a> Vol. xxvi. p. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">[90]</a> From the Select Committee on the Means of Facilitating Enclosures in 1800,
-reprinted in <i>Annual Register</i>, 1800, Appendix to Chronicle, p. 85 ff., we learn that
-the fees received alone in the House of Commons (Bill fees, small fees, committee
-fees, housekeepers’ and messengers’ fees, and engrossing fees) for 707 Bills
-during the fourteen years from 1786 to 1799 inclusive amounted to no less than
-£59,867, 6s. 4d. As the scale of fees in the House of Lords was about the
-same (Bill fees, yeoman, usher, door-keepers’ fees, order of committee, and
-committee fees) during these years about £120,000 must have gone into the
-pockets of Parliamentary officials.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">[91]</a> See Appendix A (5).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">[92]</a> <i>Bedford Report</i>, 1808, p. 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">[93]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1799, Chron., p. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">[94]</a> Eden, 1. Preface, p. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">[95]</a> <i>Bedford Report</i>, p. 249. Cf. writer in Appendix of <i>Report on Middlesex</i>,
-pp. 507&ndash;15, ‘a gentleman of the least sensibility would rather suffer his residence
-to continue surrounded by marshes and bogs, than take the lead in what may be
-deemed an obnoxious measure.’ This same writer urges, that the unpopularity
-of enclosures would be overcome were care taken ‘to place the inferior orders of
-mankind&mdash;the cottager and industrious poor&mdash;in such a situation, with regard to
-inclosures, that they should certainly have some share secured to them, and be
-treated with a gentle hand. Keep all in temper&mdash;let no rights be now disputed....
-It is far more easy to prevent a clamour than to stop it when once it is
-raised. Those who are acquainted with the business of inclosure must know
-that there are more than four-fifths of the inhabitants in most neighbourhoods
-who are generally left out of the bill for want of property, and therefore cannot
-possibly claim any part thereof.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">[96]</a> Vol. xx. p. 456.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">[97]</a> Vol. xxiv. p. 543.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">[98]</a> <i>The Appropriation and Enclosure of Commonable and Intermixed Lands</i>,
-1801.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">[99]</a> ‘Allow to the cottager a little land about his dwelling for keeping a cow,
-for planting potatoes, for raising flax or hemp. 2ndly, Convert the waste lands
-of the kingdom into <i>small</i> arable farms, a certain quantity every year, to be let
-on favourable terms to industrious families. 3rdly, Restrain the engrossment and
-over-enlargement of farms. The propriety of those measures cannot, I think, be
-questioned.’&mdash;<i>The Case of Labourers in Husbandry</i>, p. 103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="label">[100]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. i. p. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="label">[101]</a> This scheme marks a great advance on an earlier scheme which Young
-published in the first volume of the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>. He then proposed
-that public money should be spent in settling cottagers or soldiers on the waste,
-giving them their holding free of rent and tithes for three lives, at the end of
-which time the land they had redeemed was to revert to its original owners.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="label">[102]</a> Slater, pp. 126&ndash;7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="label">[103]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 128.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="label">[104]</a> <i>The Poor Man’s Best Friend, or Land to cultivate for his own Benefit.</i>
-Letter to the Marquis of Salisbury, by the Rev. S. Demainbray, B.D.,
-1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="label">[105]</a> P. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="label">[106]</a> See for this subject <i>Cambridge Modern History</i>, vol. viii. chap. 24, and
-P. Sagnac, <i>La Législation Civile de la Révolution Française</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="label">[107]</a> Vol. i. p. 119 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="label">[108]</a> Jackson’s <i>Oxford Journal</i>, September 11, 1830, said that a single cottager
-sometimes cleared as much as £20 a year by geese.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="label">[109]</a> <i>Oxford University and City Herald</i>, September 25, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="label">[110]</a> <i>House of Commons Journal</i>, February 17, 1815.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="label">[111]</a> Alexander Croke (1758&ndash;1842), knighted in 1816, was from 1801&ndash;1815 judge
-in the Vice-Admiralty Court, Nova Scotia. As a lawyer, he could defend his own
-interests.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="label">[112]</a> Dunkin’s <i>Oxfordshire</i>, vol. i. pp. 122&ndash;3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="label">[113]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 123.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="label">[114]</a> Jackson’s <i>Oxford Journal</i>, September 18, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="label">[115]</a> Vol. i. p. 124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="label">[116]</a> Jackson’s <i>Oxford Journal</i>, September 11, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="label">[117]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="label">[118]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, September 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="label">[119]</a> See Jackson’s <i>Oxford Journal</i>, and <i>Oxford University and City Herald</i>, for
-September 11, 1830, and also <i>Annual Register</i>, 1830, Chron., p. 142, and Home
-Office Papers, for what follows.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="label">[120]</a> <i>Oxford University and City Herald</i>, September 11, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="label">[121]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="label">[122]</a> Jackson’s <i>Oxford Journal</i>, March 5, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="label">[123]</a> See the Evidence of Witnesses before the Committee on Commons Inclosure
-of 1844. (Baily, land-agent): ‘General custom to give the Lord of Manor
-¹⁄₁₆th as compensation for his rights exclusive of the value of minerals and of
-his rights as a common right owner.’ Another witness (Coulson, a solicitor)
-defined the surface rights as ‘game and stockage,’ and said that the proportion
-determined upon was the result of a bargain beforehand.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="label">[124]</a> ‘Many small proprietors have been seriously injured by being obliged in
-pursuance of ill-framed private bills to enclose lands which never repaid the
-expense.’ Marshall, <i>The Appropriation and Enclosure of Commonable and
-Intermixed Lands</i>, 1801, p. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="label">[125]</a> <span class="smcap">Cost of Enclosure.</span>&mdash;The expenses of particular Acts varied very much.
-Billingsley in his <i>Report on Somerset</i> (p. 57) gives £3 an acre as the cost of
-enclosing a lowland parish, £2, 10s. for an upland parish. The enclosure of
-the 12,000 acre King’s Sedgmoor (<i>Ibid.</i>, p. 196) came (with the subdivisions) to
-no less than £59,624, 4s. 8d., or nearly £5 an acre. Stanwell Enclosure, on
-the other hand, came to about 23s. an acre, and various instances given in the
-<i>Report for Bedfordshire</i> work out at about the same figure. When the allotments
-to the tithe-owners and the lord of the manor were exempted, the sum
-per acre would of course fall more heavily on the other allottees, <i>e.g.</i> of Louth,
-where more than a third of the 1701 acres enclosed were exempt. In many
-cases, of course, land was sold to cover expenses. The cost of fencing allotments
-would also vary in different localities. In Somerset, from 7s. 7d. to 8s. 7d.
-for 20 feet of quickset hedge was calculated, in Bedfordshire, 10s. 6d. per pole.
-See also for expense Hasbach, pp. 64, 65, and <i>General Report on Enclosures</i>,
-Appendix xvii. Main <span class="lock">Items:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>1. Country solicitor’s fees for drawing up Bill and attending in town;</p>
-
-<p>2. Attendance of witnesses at House of Commons and House of Lords to
-prove that Standing Orders had been complied with;</p>
-
-<p>3. Expenses of persons to get signatures of consents and afterwards to attend
-at House of Commons to swear to them (it once cost from £70 to £80
-to get consent of principal proprietor);</p>
-
-<p>4. Expense of Parliamentary solicitor, 20 gs., but more if opposition;</p>
-
-<p>5. Expense of counsel if there was opposition;</p>
-
-<p>6. Parliamentary fees, see p. 76.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="label">[126]</a> <i>Inquiry into the Advantages and Disadvantages resulting from Bills of
-Enclosure</i>, 1780, p. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="label">[127]</a> Cf. Ashelworth, Cheshunt, Knaresborough.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="label">[128]</a> Previous to enclosure there were twenty-five farmers: the land is now
-divided among five or six persons only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="label">[129]</a> It was then confidently said that several poor persons actually perished from
-want, and so great was the outcry that some of the farmers were hissed in the
-public market at Bicester.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="label">[130]</a> Dunkin’s <i>Oxfordshire</i>, pp. 2 and 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="label">[131]</a> F. Moore, <i>Considerations on the Exorbitant Price of Proprietors</i>, 1773,
-p. 22; quoted by Levy, p. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="label">[132]</a> <i>Essay on the Nature and Method of ascertaining the specific Share of Proprietors
-upon the Inclosure of Common fields, with observations on the inconveniences
-of common fields, etc.</i>, p. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="label">[133]</a> The Kirton, Sutterton and Wigtoft (Lincs) Acts prescribed a penalty for
-taking turf or sod after the passing of the Act, of £10, and in default of payment
-imprisonment in the House of Correction with hard labour for three months.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="label">[134]</a> P. 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="label">[135]</a> The only provision for the poor in the Maulden Act, (36 Geo. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 65)
-was a fuel allotment as a compensation for the ancient usage of cutting peat or
-moor turf. The trustees (rector, churchwarden and overseers) were to distribute
-the turf to poor families, and were to pay any surplus from the rent of the
-herbage to the poor rates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="label">[136]</a> P. 240.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="label">[137]</a> At St. Neots a gentleman complained to Arthur Young in 1791 that in the
-enclosure which took place sixteen years before, ‘the poor were ill-treated by
-having about half a rood given them in lieu of a <i>cow keep</i>, the inclosure of which
-land costing more than they could afford, they sold the lots at £5, the money
-was drank out at the ale-house, and the men, spoiled by the habit, came, with
-their families to the parish.’&mdash;<i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xvi. p. 482.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="label">[138]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxxvi. p. 508.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="label">[139]</a> Davies, <i>The Case of Labourers in Husbandry</i>, p. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="label">[140]</a> In some instances it is reckoned as costing only 7s. <i>Ibid.</i>, see p. 185.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="label">[141]</a> Davies, p. 181.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="label">[142]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 547.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_143" href="#FNanchor_143" class="label">[143]</a> Vol. xxv. p. 488.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_144" href="#FNanchor_144" class="label">[144]</a> See <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. ix. pp. 13, 14, 165&ndash;167, 636&ndash;646, and vol. x.
-pp. 218&ndash;227.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_145" href="#FNanchor_145" class="label">[145]</a> Capel Lofft (1751&ndash;1824); follower of Fox; writer of poems and translations
-from Virgil and Petrarch; patron of Robert Bloomfield, author of <i>Farmer’s Boy</i>.
-Called by Boswell ‘This little David of popular spirit.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_146" href="#FNanchor_146" class="label">[146]</a> Thomas Ruggles (1737&ndash;1813), author of <i>History of the Poor</i>, published in
-1793, Deputy-Lieutenant of Essex and Suffolk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_147" href="#FNanchor_147" class="label">[147]</a> Sir Henry Gould, 1710&ndash;1794.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_148" href="#FNanchor_148" class="label">[148]</a> The <i>Annals of Agriculture</i> (vol. xvii. p. 293) contains a curious apology by a
-gleaner in 1791 to the owner of some fields, who had begun legal proceedings
-against her and her husband. ‘Whereas I, Margaret Abree, wife of Thomas Abree,
-of the city of New Sarum, blacksmith, did, during the barley harvest, in the month
-of September last, many times wilfully and maliciously go into the fields of, and
-belonging to, Mr. Edward Perry, at Clarendon Park, and take with me my
-children, and did there leaze, collect, and carry away a quantity of barley....
-Now we do hereby declare, that we are fully convinced of the illegality of such
-proceedings, and that no person has a right to leaze any sort of grain, or to come
-on any field whatsoever, without the consent of the owner; and are also truly
-sensible of the obligation we are under to the said Edward Perry for his lenity
-towards us, inasmuch as the damages given, together with the heavy cost
-incurred, would have been much greater than we could possibly have discharged,
-and must have amounted to perpetual imprisonment, as even those who have
-least disapproved of our conduct, would certainly not have contributed so large
-a sum to deliver us from the legal consequences of it. And we do hereby faithfully
-promise never to be guilty of the same, or any like offence in future.
-Thomas Abree, Margaret Abree. Her + Mark.’ It is interesting to compare
-with this judge-made law of England the Mosaic precept: ‘And when ye
-reap the harvest of your land, thou shalt not make clean riddance of the
-corners of thy field when thou reapest, neither shalt thou gather any gleaning
-of thy harvest: thou shalt leave them unto the poor, and to the stranger’
-(Leviticus xxiii. 22).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_149" href="#FNanchor_149" class="label">[149]</a> Kent, <i>Hints</i>, p. 238.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_150" href="#FNanchor_150" class="label">[150]</a> P. 34; cf. Marshall on the Southern Department, p. 9, ‘Yorkshire bacon,
-generally of the worst sort, is retailed to the poor from little chandlers’ shops
-at an advanced price, bread in the same way.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_151" href="#FNanchor_151" class="label">[151]</a> <i>Notes on the Agriculture of Norfolk</i>, p. 165.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_152" href="#FNanchor_152" class="label">[152]</a> <i>Large and Small Holdings</i>, p. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_153" href="#FNanchor_153" class="label">[153]</a> Young’s <i>Political Arithmetic</i>, quoted by Lecky, vol. vii. p. 263 note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_154" href="#FNanchor_154" class="label">[154]</a> See Appendix B for six of these budgets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_155" href="#FNanchor_155" class="label">[155]</a> Ruggles, <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xiv. p. 205.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_156" href="#FNanchor_156" class="label">[156]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 180.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_157" href="#FNanchor_157" class="label">[157]</a> The parish might have the satisfaction of punishing the mother by a year’s
-hard labour (7 James <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> c. 4, altered in 1810), but could not get rid of the
-child.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_158" href="#FNanchor_158" class="label">[158]</a> <i>Wealth of Nations</i>, vol. i. p. 194.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_159" href="#FNanchor_159" class="label">[159]</a> Quoted by Eden, vol. i. p. 347.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_160" href="#FNanchor_160" class="label">[160]</a> See <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_161" href="#FNanchor_161" class="label">[161]</a> Vol. xiv. pp. 205, 206.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_162" href="#FNanchor_162" class="label">[162]</a> An example of a parish where the interests of the employer and of the
-parish officers differed is given in the <i>House of Commons Journal</i> for February
-4, 1788, when a petition was presented from Mr. John Wilkinson, a master
-iron-founder at Bradley, near Bilston, in the parish of Wolverhampton. The
-petitioner states ‘that the present Demand for the Iron of his Manufacture and
-the Improvement of which it is capable, naturally encourage a very considerable
-Extension of his Works, but that the Experience he has had of the vexatious
-Effect, as well as of the constantly increasing Amount of Poor Rates to which he
-is subject, has filled him with Apprehensions of final Ruin to his Establishment;
-and that the Parish Officers ... are constantly alarming his Workmen with
-Threats of Removal to the various Parishes from which the Necessity of employing
-skilful Manufacturers has obliged him to collect them.’ He goes on to ask
-that his district shall be made extra-parochial to the poor rates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_163" href="#FNanchor_163" class="label">[163]</a> Hasbach, pp. 172&ndash;3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_164" href="#FNanchor_164" class="label">[164]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 384.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_165" href="#FNanchor_165" class="label">[165]</a> See p. 148.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_166" href="#FNanchor_166" class="label">[166]</a> The unborn were the special objects of parish officers’ dread. At Derby
-the persons sent out under orders of removal are chiefly pregnant girls. (Eden,
-vol. ii. p. 126.) Bastards (see above) with some exceptions gained a settlement
-in their birthplace, and Hodge’s legitimate children might gain one too if there
-was any doubt about the place of their parents’ settlements.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_167" href="#FNanchor_167" class="label">[167]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 383.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_168" href="#FNanchor_168" class="label">[168]</a> Vol. ix. p. 660.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_169" href="#FNanchor_169" class="label">[169]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 288. In considering the accounts of the state of the
-commons, it must be remembered that the open parishes thus paid the penalty
-of enclosure elsewhere. <i>Colluvies vicorum.</i> But these open fields and commons
-were becoming rapidly more scarce.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_170" href="#FNanchor_170" class="label">[170]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 691.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_171" href="#FNanchor_171" class="label">[171]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. 743.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_172" href="#FNanchor_172" class="label">[172]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_173" href="#FNanchor_173" class="label">[173]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, vol. ii. p. 591.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_174" href="#FNanchor_174" class="label">[174]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 654, <i>re</i> Litchfield. ‘In two or three small parishes in this neighbourhood,
-which consist of large farms, there are very few poor: the farmers,
-in order to prevent the introduction of poor from other parishes, hire their
-servants for fifty-one weeks only. I conceive, however, that this practice would
-be considered, by a court of justice, as fraudulent, and a mere evasion in the
-master; and that a servant thus hired, if he remained the fifty-second week
-with his master, on a fresh contract, would acquire a settlement in the parish.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_175" href="#FNanchor_175" class="label">[175]</a> See <i>Annual Register</i>, 1817, p. 298.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_176" href="#FNanchor_176" class="label">[176]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 689.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_177" href="#FNanchor_177" class="label">[177]</a> <i>Reading Mercury</i>, April 20, 1795; also <i>Ipswich Journal</i>, March 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_178" href="#FNanchor_178" class="label">[178]</a> <i>Ipswich Journal</i>, April 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_179" href="#FNanchor_179" class="label">[179]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, August 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_180" href="#FNanchor_180" class="label">[180]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_181" href="#FNanchor_181" class="label">[181]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_182" href="#FNanchor_182" class="label">[182]</a> <i>Reading Mercury</i>, April 27, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_183" href="#FNanchor_183" class="label">[183]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 591.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_184" href="#FNanchor_184" class="label">[184]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 495.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_185" href="#FNanchor_185" class="label">[185]</a> Resolution of Privy Council, July 6, 1795, and Debate and Resolution in
-House of Commons. <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, December 11, 1795, and Lord
-Sheffield in <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_186" href="#FNanchor_186" class="label">[186]</a> See <i>Senator</i> for March 1, 1796, p. 1147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_187" href="#FNanchor_187" class="label">[187]</a> See Wilberforce’s speech, <i>Parliamentary Register</i> and <i>Senator</i>, February
-18, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_188" href="#FNanchor_188" class="label">[188]</a> Eden, vol. ii. pp. 104&ndash;6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_189" href="#FNanchor_189" class="label">[189]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_190" href="#FNanchor_190" class="label">[190]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 280.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_191" href="#FNanchor_191" class="label">[191]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 426.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_192" href="#FNanchor_192" class="label">[192]</a> See <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxiv. pp. 63, 171, 177, 204, 285, 316, etc.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_193" href="#FNanchor_193" class="label">[193]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 678.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_194" href="#FNanchor_194" class="label">[194]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 533.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_195" href="#FNanchor_195" class="label">[195]</a> Perhaps the unpopularity of soup is partly explained by a letter published
-in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i> in December 1795, vol. xxvi. p. 215. The
-writer says it is the custom for most families in the country ‘to give their poor
-neighbours the pot liquor, that is, the liquor in which any meat has been boiled,
-and to which they sometimes add the broken bread from the parlour and kitchen
-tables: this,’ he adds, ‘makes but an indifferent mess.’ The publications of
-the time contain numerous recipes for cheap soups: ‘the power of giving
-an increased effect to Christian benevolence by these soups’ (<i>Reports on Poor</i>,
-vol. i. p. 167) was eagerly welcomed. Cf. Mrs. Shore’s account of stewed ox’s
-head for the poor, according to which, at the cost of 2s. 6d. with the leavings
-of the family, a savoury mess for fifty-two persons could be prepared (<i>Ibid.</i>,
-p. 60).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_196" href="#FNanchor_196" class="label">[196]</a> Davies, pp. 31&ndash;2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_197" href="#FNanchor_197" class="label">[197]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 455.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_198" href="#FNanchor_198" class="label">[198]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, November 2, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_199" href="#FNanchor_199" class="label">[199]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. 769.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_200" href="#FNanchor_200" class="label">[200]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, vol. ii. p. 97.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_201" href="#FNanchor_201" class="label">[201]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 621.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_202" href="#FNanchor_202" class="label">[202]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 645.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_203" href="#FNanchor_203" class="label">[203]</a> In many budgets no milk is included.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_204" href="#FNanchor_204" class="label">[204]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. iv. p. 151.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_205" href="#FNanchor_205" class="label">[205]</a> Davies, p. 104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_206" href="#FNanchor_206" class="label">[206]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_207" href="#FNanchor_207" class="label">[207]</a> Vol. ii. p. 587.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_208" href="#FNanchor_208" class="label">[208]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 134; another reason for the dearth of milk was
-the growing consumption of veal in the towns. Davies says (p. 19), ‘Suckling
-is here so profitable (to furnish veal for London) that the poor can seldom either
-buy or beg milk.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_209" href="#FNanchor_209" class="label">[209]</a> P. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_210" href="#FNanchor_210" class="label">[210]</a> See <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. pp. 367&ndash;8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_211" href="#FNanchor_211" class="label">[211]</a> Davies, p. 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_212" href="#FNanchor_212" class="label">[212]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 39.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_213" href="#FNanchor_213" class="label">[213]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvi. p. 121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_214" href="#FNanchor_214" class="label">[214]</a> The dearness of malt was another fact which helped the introduction of tea.
-Cf. Davies, p. 38: ‘Time was when <i>small beer</i> was reckoned one of the necessaries
-of life, even in poor families.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_215" href="#FNanchor_215" class="label">[215]</a> Lecky, <i>History of England in Eighteenth Century</i>, vol. ii. p. 318.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_216" href="#FNanchor_216" class="label">[216]</a> In connection with the dearth of milk it is important to notice the rise in
-the price of cheese. ‘Poor people,’ says Davies, (p. 19), ‘reckon cheese the
-dearest article they can use’ (cf. also p. 143), and in his comparison of prices
-in the middle of the eighteenth century with those of 1787&ndash;94 he gives the
-price of 112 lbs. of cheese at Reading Fair as from 17s. to 21s. in the first
-period, and 40s. to 46s. in the second. Retail cheese of an inferior sort had
-risen from 2½d. or 3d. a lb. to 4½d. or 5d. (p. 65); cf. also correspondent in
-<i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. ii. p. 442. ‘Every inhabitant of Bath must be
-sensible that butter and cheese have risen in price one-third, or more, within
-these twenty years.’ (Written in 1784).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_217" href="#FNanchor_217" class="label">[217]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 129.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_218" href="#FNanchor_218" class="label">[218]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, vol. iii. p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_219" href="#FNanchor_219" class="label">[219]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1806, p. 974; ‘My local situation afforded me ample
-means of knowing how greatly the lower orders suffered from being unable to
-procure a supply of milk; and I am fully persuaded of the correctness of the
-statement that the labouring poor lose a number of their children from the
-want of a food so pre-eminently adapted to their support’; cf. also Curwen’s
-<i>Hints</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_220" href="#FNanchor_220" class="label">[220]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 510.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_221" href="#FNanchor_221" class="label">[221]</a> Vol. iii. p. 96.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_222" href="#FNanchor_222" class="label">[222]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. 694.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_223" href="#FNanchor_223" class="label">[223]</a> Cf. <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 43; ‘Where there are commons, the ideal
-advantage of cutting flags, peat, or whins, often causes a poor man to spend
-more time in procuring such fuel, than, if he reckoned his labour, would
-purchase for him double the quantity of good firing.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_224" href="#FNanchor_224" class="label">[224]</a> Vol. iv. p. 496.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_225" href="#FNanchor_225" class="label">[225]</a> Vol. ii. p. 587.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_226" href="#FNanchor_226" class="label">[226]</a> Davies, p. 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_227" href="#FNanchor_227" class="label">[227]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_228" href="#FNanchor_228" class="label">[228]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. 805.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_229" href="#FNanchor_229" class="label">[229]</a> P. 179.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_230" href="#FNanchor_230" class="label">[230]</a> Cf. also Eden’s description of a labourer’s expenses, vol. iii. p. 797, where
-he says that whilst hedging and ditching, they are allowed to take home
-a faggot every evening, whilst the work lasts, ‘but this is by no means sufficient
-for his consumption: his children, therefore, are sent into the fields, to collect
-wood where they can; and neither hedges nor trees are spared by the young
-marauders, who are thus, in some degree, educated in the art of thieving.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_231" href="#FNanchor_231" class="label">[231]</a> Vol. ii. p. 231.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_232" href="#FNanchor_232" class="label">[232]</a> Cf. also for the difficulties of the poor in getting fuel, the account by the
-Rev. Dr. Glasse; <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 58. ‘Having long observed,
-that there is scarcely any article of life, in respect to which the poor are under
-greater difficulties, or for the supply of which they have stronger temptations to
-dishonest practices, than that of fuel,’ he laid up in summer a store of coals in
-Greenford (Middlesex), and Wanstead, and sold them rather under original cost
-price, carriage free, in winter. ‘The benefit arising from the relief afforded them
-in this article of coals, is obvious: they are habituated to pay for what they have;
-whereas at the shop they ran in debt. When their credit was at an end, they
-contrived to do without coals, by having recourse to wood-stealing; than which
-I know no practise which tends more effectually to introduce into young minds
-a habit of dishonesty; it is also very injurious to the farmer, and excites a degree
-of resentment in his breast, which, in many instances, renders him averse to
-affording relief to the poor, even when real necessity calls loudly for it.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_233" href="#FNanchor_233" class="label">[233]</a> 20 George <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> c. 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_234" href="#FNanchor_234" class="label">[234]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 305 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_235" href="#FNanchor_235" class="label">[235]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 298.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_236" href="#FNanchor_236" class="label">[236]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, December 9, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_237" href="#FNanchor_237" class="label">[237]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, February 12, 1796.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_238" href="#FNanchor_238" class="label">[238]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxv. p. 345.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_239" href="#FNanchor_239" class="label">[239]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 316.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_240" href="#FNanchor_240" class="label">[240]</a> <i>An Examination of Mr. Pitt’s Speech in the House of Commons, February
-12, 1796.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_241" href="#FNanchor_241" class="label">[241]</a> P. 106 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_242" href="#FNanchor_242" class="label">[242]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, 1795, vol. xxv. p. 503.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_243" href="#FNanchor_243" class="label">[243]</a> <i>Parliamentary Debates.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_244" href="#FNanchor_244" class="label">[244]</a> Printed in <i>Parliamentary Papers</i> for 1795&ndash;6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_245" href="#FNanchor_245" class="label">[245]</a> The age was not filled up.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_246" href="#FNanchor_246" class="label">[246]</a> For report of debate see <i>Parliamentary Register</i> for that date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_247" href="#FNanchor_247" class="label">[247]</a> See <i>Parliamentary Register</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_248" href="#FNanchor_248" class="label">[248]</a> See <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, February 14, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_249" href="#FNanchor_249" class="label">[249]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. v. p. 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_250" href="#FNanchor_250" class="label">[250]</a> See p. 179.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_251" href="#FNanchor_251" class="label">[251]</a> <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvi. p. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_252" href="#FNanchor_252" class="label">[252]</a> 22 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 83.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_253" href="#FNanchor_253" class="label">[253]</a> In 1834 there were 924 comprised in 67 incorporations (Nicholls, vol. ii.
-p. 91.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_254" href="#FNanchor_254" class="label">[254]</a> 9 George <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> c. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_255" href="#FNanchor_255" class="label">[255]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_256" href="#FNanchor_256" class="label">[256]</a> <i>E.g.</i> Oxford and Shrewsbury.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_257" href="#FNanchor_257" class="label">[257]</a> There is a significant entry in the Abstracts of Returns to the 1775 Poor
-Relief Committee in reference to the building of that death-trap, the Bulcamp
-House of Industry. ‘In the Expences for Building is included £500 for building
-a Part which was pulled down by a Mob.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_258" href="#FNanchor_258" class="label">[258]</a> At Heckingham in Norfolk a putrid fever, in 1774, killed 126 out of 220
-inmates (Eden, vol. ii. p. 473, quoting Howlett); cf. also Ruggles, <i>History of
-the Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 266.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_259" href="#FNanchor_259" class="label">[259]</a> ‘The Village,’ pp. 16 and 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_260" href="#FNanchor_260" class="label">[260]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. 694 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_261" href="#FNanchor_261" class="label">[261]</a> 36 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_262" href="#FNanchor_262" class="label">[262]</a> The last of these systems had been included in a Bill introduced by Sir
-William Young in 1788. ‘In order to relieve agricultural labourers, who are
-often, during the winter, out of employment, the vestry in every parish is
-empowered, by notice affixed to the church door, to settle a rate of wages to be
-paid to labourers out of employ, from the 30th Nov. to the 28th of Feb.; and to
-distribute and send them round in rotation to the parishioners, proportionally as
-they pay to the Rates; to be paid by the person employing them two-thirds of
-the wages so settled, and one-third by the parish-officers out of the Rates.’&mdash;Eden,
-vol. i. p. 397.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_263" href="#FNanchor_263" class="label">[263]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, February 12, 1796.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_264" href="#FNanchor_264" class="label">[264]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, December 22, 1796.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_265" href="#FNanchor_265" class="label">[265]</a> The Bill is printed in House of Commons Papers, 1796. The ‘Heads of
-the Bill’ as circulated appear in the <i>Annals of Agriculture</i>, vol. xxvi. pp. 260 ff.
-and 359 ff. Eden gives in the form of Appendices (1) the Heads of the Bill,
-(2) the Amendments introduced in Committee.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_266" href="#FNanchor_266" class="label">[266]</a> <i>House of Commons Journal.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_267" href="#FNanchor_267" class="label">[267]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, February 11, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_268" href="#FNanchor_268" class="label">[268]</a> 35 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_269" href="#FNanchor_269" class="label">[269]</a> For Whitbread’s proposals to amend the Law of Settlement in 1807 see next
-chapter. An attempt was made in 1819 (59 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 50) to define and
-simplify the conditions under which the hiring of a tenement of £10 annual
-value conferred the right to a settlement. The term of residence was extended
-to a year, the nature of the tenement was defined, and it was laid down that the
-rent must be £10, and paid for a whole year. But so unsuccessful was this piece
-of legislation that it was found necessary to pass a second Act six years later
-(1826, 6 George <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 57), and a third Act in 1831 (1 William <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 18).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_270" href="#FNanchor_270" class="label">[270]</a> <i>Senator</i>, March 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_271" href="#FNanchor_271" class="label">[271]</a> See Debates in <i>Senator</i>, March 31 and April 3, 1800, and <i>Parliamentary
-Register</i>. Cf. for removals for temporary distress, Sir Thomas Bernard’s Charge
-to Overseers in the Hundred of Stoke. Bucks. <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 260.
-‘With regard to the removal of labourers belonging to other parishes, consider
-thoroughly what you may lose, and what the individual may suffer, by the
-removal, before you apply to us on the subject. Where you have had, for a
-long time, the benefit of their labour, and where all they want is a little
-<i>temporary</i> relief, reflect whether, after so many years spent in your service, this
-is the <i>moment</i> and the <i>cause</i>, for removing them from the scene of their daily
-labour to a distant parish, etc.’ (1798).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_272" href="#FNanchor_272" class="label">[272]</a> Davies, pp. 102&ndash;4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_273" href="#FNanchor_273" class="label">[273]</a> 15 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_274" href="#FNanchor_274" class="label">[274]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 171.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_275" href="#FNanchor_275" class="label">[275]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 136.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_276" href="#FNanchor_276" class="label">[276]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 137.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_277" href="#FNanchor_277" class="label">[277]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, vol. v. p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_278" href="#FNanchor_278" class="label">[278]</a> Mr. Estcourt mentions that the land ‘would let to a farmer at about
-20s. per acre now.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_279" href="#FNanchor_279" class="label">[279]</a> It is interesting to find that these allotments were still being let out successfully
-in 1868. See p. 4145 of the Report on the Employment of Children, Young
-Persons, and Women in Agriculture, 1868.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_280" href="#FNanchor_280" class="label">[280]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. iii. p. 329.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_281" href="#FNanchor_281" class="label">[281]</a> 1803, p. 850.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_282" href="#FNanchor_282" class="label">[282]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. i. p. 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_283" href="#FNanchor_283" class="label">[283]</a> Vol. xxvi. p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_284" href="#FNanchor_284" class="label">[284]</a> The most distinguished advocate of this policy was William Marshall, the
-agricultural writer who published a strong appeal for the labourers in his book
-<i>On the Management of Landed Estates</i>, 1806, p. 155; cf. also Curwen’s <i>Hints</i>,
-p. 239: ‘A farther attention to the cottager’s comfort is attended with little
-cost; I mean giving him a small garden, and planting that as well as the walls
-of his house with fruit trees.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_285" href="#FNanchor_285" class="label">[285]</a> Vol. xxv. p. 349.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_286" href="#FNanchor_286" class="label">[286]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 358.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_287" href="#FNanchor_287" class="label">[287]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 184.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_288" href="#FNanchor_288" class="label">[288]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_289" href="#FNanchor_289" class="label">[289]</a> Cf. <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1817, Appendix G, p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_290" href="#FNanchor_290" class="label">[290]</a> Capes, <i>Rural Life in Hampshire</i>, p. 282.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_291" href="#FNanchor_291" class="label">[291]</a> <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1834, p. 61; cf. <i>ibid.</i>, p. 185.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_292" href="#FNanchor_292" class="label">[292]</a> Notes to Kent’s <i>Norfolk</i>, p. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_293" href="#FNanchor_293" class="label">[293]</a> See <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1834, p. 181, and <i>Allotments Committee</i>, 1843,
-p. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_294" href="#FNanchor_294" class="label">[294]</a> 59 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_295" href="#FNanchor_295" class="label">[295]</a> 1 and 2 William <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> c. 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_296" href="#FNanchor_296" class="label">[296]</a> Speenhamland is now part of Newbury. The Pelican Inn has disappeared,
-but the Pelican Posting House survives.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_297" href="#FNanchor_297" class="label">[297]</a> Charles Dundas, afterwards Lord Amesbury, 1751&ndash;1832; Liberal M.P. for
-Berkshire, 1794&ndash;1832, nominated by Sheridan for the Speakership in 1802 but
-withdrew.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_298" href="#FNanchor_298" class="label">[298]</a> <i>Reading Mercury</i>, April 20, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_299" href="#FNanchor_299" class="label">[299]</a> <i>Reading Mercury</i>, April 20, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_300" href="#FNanchor_300" class="label">[300]</a> See <i>Ibid.</i>, May 11, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_301" href="#FNanchor_301" class="label">[301]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 578.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_302" href="#FNanchor_302" class="label">[302]</a> On the same day a ‘respectable meeting’ at Basingstoke, with the Mayor
-in the chair, was advocating the fixing of labourers’ wages in accordance with the
-price of wheat without any reference to parish relief.&mdash;<i>Reading Mercury</i>, May
-11, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_303" href="#FNanchor_303" class="label">[303]</a> See <i>Ipswich Journal</i>, February 7, 1795, and <i>Reading Mercury</i>, July 6, 1795.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_304" href="#FNanchor_304" class="label">[304]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 384.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_305" href="#FNanchor_305" class="label">[305]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 548.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_306" href="#FNanchor_306" class="label">[306]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_307" href="#FNanchor_307" class="label">[307]</a> Eden, vol. ii. p. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_308" href="#FNanchor_308" class="label">[308]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_309" href="#FNanchor_309" class="label">[309]</a> ‘The Village,’ Book <span class="allsmcap">I</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_310" href="#FNanchor_310" class="label">[310]</a> <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1834, p. 60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_311" href="#FNanchor_311" class="label">[311]</a> The big landlord under this method shared the privilege of paying the
-labourer’s wages with the small farmer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_312" href="#FNanchor_312" class="label">[312]</a> <i>Tribune</i>, vol. ii. p. 317.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_313" href="#FNanchor_313" class="label">[313]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 339.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_314" href="#FNanchor_314" class="label">[314]</a> Poor Law Commission Report of 1834, p. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_315" href="#FNanchor_315" class="label">[315]</a> See Curtler’s <i>Short History of Agriculture</i>, p. 249.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_316" href="#FNanchor_316" class="label">[316]</a> Smart, <i>Economic Annals</i>, p. 36.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_317" href="#FNanchor_317" class="label">[317]</a> ‘It was during the war that the cottagers of England were chiefly deprived
-of the little pieces of land and garden, and made solely dependent for subsistence
-on the wages of their daily labour, or the poor rates. Land, and the produce of
-it, had become so valuable, that the labourer was envied the occupation of the
-smallest piece of ground which he possessed: and even “the bare-worn common”
-was denied.’&mdash;<i>Kentish Chronicle</i>, December 14, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_318" href="#FNanchor_318" class="label">[318]</a> Curtler, p. 243.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_319" href="#FNanchor_319" class="label">[319]</a> <i>Agricultural State of the Kingdom</i>, Board of Agriculture, 1816, p. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_320" href="#FNanchor_320" class="label">[320]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 250&ndash;1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_321" href="#FNanchor_321" class="label">[321]</a> P. 144.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_322" href="#FNanchor_322" class="label">[322]</a> C. C. Western (1767&ndash;1844); whig M.P., 1790&ndash;1832; chief representative of
-agricultural interests; made peer in 1833.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_323" href="#FNanchor_323" class="label">[323]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1816, Chron., p. 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_324" href="#FNanchor_324" class="label">[324]</a> The disturbances at Brandon ceased immediately on the concession of the
-demands of the rioters; flour was reduced to 2s. 6d. a stone, and wages were
-raised for two weeks to 2s. a head. The rioters were contented, and peace was
-restored.&mdash;<i>Times</i>, May 23, 1816.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_325" href="#FNanchor_325" class="label">[325]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1816, Chron., p. 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_326" href="#FNanchor_326" class="label">[326]</a> <i>Cambridge Chronicle</i>, June 28, 1816.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_327" href="#FNanchor_327" class="label">[327]</a> <i>Times</i>, June 26. A curious irony has placed side by side with the account
-in the <i>Annual Register</i> of the execution of the five men who were hung for their
-share in this spasm of starvation and despair, the report of a meeting, with the
-inevitable Wilberforce in the chair, for raising a subscription for rebuilding the
-Protestant Church at Copenhagen, which had been destroyed by the British
-Fleet at the bombardment of Copenhagen in 1807.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_328" href="#FNanchor_328" class="label">[328]</a> <i>Agricultural State of the Kingdom</i>, p. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_329" href="#FNanchor_329" class="label">[329]</a> 59 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_330" href="#FNanchor_330" class="label">[330]</a> See <i>Annual Register</i>, 1819, p. 320.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_331" href="#FNanchor_331" class="label">[331]</a> Those assessed at £100 were to have two votes, those at £150 three votes,
-and those at £400 four votes. Whitbread did not propose to copy the provision
-of Gilbert’s Act, which withdrew all voting power in vestries in parishes that
-adopted that Act from persons assessed at less than £5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_332" href="#FNanchor_332" class="label">[332]</a> <i>Political Register</i>, August 29, 1807, p. 329.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_333" href="#FNanchor_333" class="label">[333]</a> Letter to Samuel Whitbread, M.P., on his proposed Bill for the Amendment
-of the Poor Laws, 1807.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_334" href="#FNanchor_334" class="label">[334]</a> 58 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 69.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_335" href="#FNanchor_335" class="label">[335]</a> 59 George <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> c. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_336" href="#FNanchor_336" class="label">[336]</a> H. O. Papers, Municipal and Provincial.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_337" href="#FNanchor_337" class="label">[337]</a> Of course the system was only one of the causes of this difference in wages.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_338" href="#FNanchor_338" class="label">[338]</a> P. 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_339" href="#FNanchor_339" class="label">[339]</a> See <i>Agricultural State of the Kingdom</i>, Board of Agriculture, p. 231, and
-Cobbett, <i>Political Register</i>, October 5, 1816.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_340" href="#FNanchor_340" class="label">[340]</a> Pp. 21 and 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_341" href="#FNanchor_341" class="label">[341]</a> The table is given in the Report of the Committee on the Poor Laws,
-1828.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_342" href="#FNanchor_342" class="label">[342]</a> Cobbett, <i>Political Register</i>, September 21, 1822. Cobbett wrote one of his
-liveliest articles on this scale, setting out the number of livings held by the five
-parsons, and various circumstances connected with their families.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_343" href="#FNanchor_343" class="label">[343]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, September 9, 1826.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_344" href="#FNanchor_344" class="label">[344]</a> <i>Rural Rides</i>, p. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_345" href="#FNanchor_345" class="label">[345]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 609.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_346" href="#FNanchor_346" class="label">[346]</a> The farmers were usually sympathetic to poaching as a habit, but it was
-not so much from a perception of its economic tendencies, as from a general
-resentment against the Game Laws.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_347" href="#FNanchor_347" class="label">[347]</a> See Cobbett; <i>Letters to Peel</i>; <i>Political Register</i>; and Dr. Hunt’s evidence
-before the Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions,
-1827.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_348" href="#FNanchor_348" class="label">[348]</a> A manifesto was published in a Bath paper in reply to this Act; it is quoted
-by Sydney Smith, <i>Essays</i>, p. 263: ‘<span class="smcap">Take Notice.</span>&mdash;We have lately heard and
-seen that there is an act passed, and whatever poacher is caught destroying the
-game is to be transported for seven years.&mdash;<i>This is English Liberty!</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Now we do swear to each other that the first of our company that this law is
-inflicted on, that there shall not be one gentleman’s seat in our country escape
-the rage of fire. The first that impeaches shall be shot. We have sworn not to
-impeach. You may think it a threat, but they will find it a reality. The Game
-Laws were too severe before. The Lord of all men sent these animals for the
-peasants as well as for the prince. God will not let his people be oppressed. He
-will assist us in our undertaking, and we will execute it with caution.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_349" href="#FNanchor_349" class="label">[349]</a> The Archbishop of Canterbury prosecuted a man under this Act in January
-1831, for rescuing a poacher from a gamekeeper without violence, on the ground
-that he thought it his duty to enforce the provisions of the Act.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_350" href="#FNanchor_350" class="label">[350]</a> House of Lords, September 19, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_351" href="#FNanchor_351" class="label">[351]</a> A magistrate wrote to Sir R. Peel in 1827 to say that many magistrates sent
-in very imperfect returns of convictions, and that the true number far exceeded
-the records.&mdash;Webb, <i>Parish and County</i>, p. 598 note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_352" href="#FNanchor_352" class="label">[352]</a> <i>Brougham Speeches</i>, vol. ii. p. 373.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_353" href="#FNanchor_353" class="label">[353]</a> <i>Political Register</i>, March 29, 1823, vol. xxiv. p. 796.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_354" href="#FNanchor_354" class="label">[354]</a> Select Committee on Criminal Commitments and Convictions, 1827, p. 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_355" href="#FNanchor_355" class="label">[355]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 39.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_356" href="#FNanchor_356" class="label">[356]</a> Quoted in <i>Times</i>, December 18, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_357" href="#FNanchor_357" class="label">[357]</a> Return of Convictions under the Game Laws from 1827 to 1830. Ordered
-by the House of Commons to be printed, February 14, 1831, p. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_358" href="#FNanchor_358" class="label">[358]</a> <i>Hansard</i>, June 9, 1817.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_359" href="#FNanchor_359" class="label">[359]</a> Scotland was exempted from the operation of this statute, for whilst the
-Bill was going through Parliament, a case raised in a Scottish Court ended in a
-unanimous decision by the six Judges of the High Court of Justiciary that
-killing by a spring gun was murder. Hence the milder provisions of this Act
-were not required. See <i>Annual Register</i>, 1827, p. 185, and Chron., p. 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_360" href="#FNanchor_360" class="label">[360]</a> That Coke of Norfolk did not err on the side of mercy towards poachers is clear
-from his record. His biographer (Mrs. Stirling) states that one of his first efforts
-in Parliament was to introduce a Bill to punish night poaching.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_361" href="#FNanchor_361" class="label">[361]</a> P. 29 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_362" href="#FNanchor_362" class="label">[362]</a> <i>Annual Register</i>, 1827, p. 184.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_363" href="#FNanchor_363" class="label">[363]</a> <i>Edinburgh Review</i>, December 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_364" href="#FNanchor_364" class="label">[364]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, February 25, 1782.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_365" href="#FNanchor_365" class="label">[365]</a> P. 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_366" href="#FNanchor_366" class="label">[366]</a> ‘Speaking now of country and agricultural parishes, I do not know above
-one instance in all my experience.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_367" href="#FNanchor_367" class="label">[367]</a> Some Enclosure Acts prescribed special penalties for the breaking of fences.
-See cases of Haute Huntre and Croydon in Appendix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_368" href="#FNanchor_368" class="label">[368]</a> See Mr. Estcourt’s evidence before Select Committee on Secondary Punishments,
-1831, p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_369" href="#FNanchor_369" class="label">[369]</a> <i>Present State of the Law</i>, p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_370" href="#FNanchor_370" class="label">[370]</a> <i>From Ploughshare to Parliament</i>, p. 186; the <i>Annual Register</i> for 1791
-records the execution of two boys at Newport for stealing, one aged fourteen and
-the other fifteen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_371" href="#FNanchor_371" class="label">[371]</a> Sydney Smith, <i>Essays</i>, p. 487.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_372" href="#FNanchor_372" class="label">[372]</a> Vol. ii. p. 153.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_373" href="#FNanchor_373" class="label">[373]</a> Romilly, <i>Memoirs</i>, vol. ii. p. 181.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_374" href="#FNanchor_374" class="label">[374]</a> It was again rejected in 1813 by twenty to fifteen, the majority including
-five bishops.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_375" href="#FNanchor_375" class="label">[375]</a> <i>Correspondence on the Subject of Secondary Punishments</i>, 1834, p. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_376" href="#FNanchor_376" class="label">[376]</a> See Select Committee on Secondary Punishments, 1831, and Select
-Committee on Transportation, 1838.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_377" href="#FNanchor_377" class="label">[377]</a> See evidence of Dr. Ullathorne, Roman Catholic Vicar-General of New Holland
-and Van Diemen’s Land, before the 1838 Committee on Transportation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_378" href="#FNanchor_378" class="label">[378]</a> <i>Reflections on the Revolution in France</i> (fourth edition), p. 359.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_379" href="#FNanchor_379" class="label">[379]</a> Eden, vol. i. p. 579.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_380" href="#FNanchor_380" class="label">[380]</a> <i>Reports on Poor</i>, vol. ii. p. 325.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_381" href="#FNanchor_381" class="label">[381]</a> <i>Political Register</i>, vol. lxxviii. p. 710.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_382" href="#FNanchor_382" class="label">[382]</a> Hasbach, p. 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_383" href="#FNanchor_383" class="label">[383]</a> ‘Village,’ Book 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_384" href="#FNanchor_384" class="label">[384]</a> Vol. xxxviii. p. 750 ff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_385" href="#FNanchor_385" class="label">[385]</a> Cobbett’s <i>Political Register</i>, March 17, 1821, p. 779.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_386" href="#FNanchor_386" class="label">[386]</a> Bamford, <i>Passages in the Life of a Radical</i>, p. 38.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_387" href="#FNanchor_387" class="label">[387]</a> <i>Rural Rides</i>, p. 460.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_388" href="#FNanchor_388" class="label">[388]</a> <i>Reflections</i>, p. 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_389" href="#FNanchor_389" class="label">[389]</a> <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1817.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_390" href="#FNanchor_390" class="label">[390]</a> Cf. <i>Ibid.</i>, 1834, p. 161.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_391" href="#FNanchor_391" class="label">[391]</a> Cf. case of apprentice, <i>Annual Register</i>, 1819, p. 195.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_392" href="#FNanchor_392" class="label">[392]</a> <i>Poor Law Report</i>, 1817; in some cases there were amicable arrangements to
-keep down legal expenses; <i>e.g.</i> at Halifax (Eden), the overseer formed a
-society of the officers of adjoining parishes. Cases were referred to them, and
-the decision of the majority was accepted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_393" href="#FNanchor_393" class="label">[393]</a> <i>Wealth of Nations</i>, vol. iii. p. 234.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_394" href="#FNanchor_394" class="label">[394]</a> <i>Life in an English Village</i>, by Maude F. Davies, p. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_395" href="#FNanchor_395" class="label">[395]</a> <i>Inquiry into the State of the Public Mind among the Lower Classes</i>, p. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_396" href="#FNanchor_396" class="label">[396]</a> The parsons under Squire Allworthy’s roof, the parson to whom Pamela
-appealed in vain, and, most striking of all, Mr. Collins in <i>Pride and Prejudice</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_397" href="#FNanchor_397" class="label">[397]</a> <i>Life</i>, vol. iv. p. 277.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_398" href="#FNanchor_398" class="label">[398]</a> <i>Parliamentary Register</i>, April 18, 1800.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_399" href="#FNanchor_399" class="label">[399]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 243.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_400" href="#FNanchor_400" class="label">[400]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 84.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_401" href="#FNanchor_401" class="label">[401]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 56&ndash;7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_402" href="#FNanchor_402" class="label">[402]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 244.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_403" href="#FNanchor_403" class="label">[403]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, pp. 78&ndash;9.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_404" href="#FNanchor_404" class="label">[404]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_405" href="#FNanchor_405" class="label">[405]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 291.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_406" href="#FNanchor_406" class="label">[406]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_407" href="#FNanchor_407" class="label">[407]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 172.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_408" href="#FNanchor_408" class="label">[408]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_409" href="#FNanchor_409" class="label">[409]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, pp. 98&ndash;104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_410" href="#FNanchor_410" class="label">[410]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_411" href="#FNanchor_411" class="label">[411]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_412" href="#FNanchor_412" class="label">[412]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 210.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_413" href="#FNanchor_413" class="label">[413]</a> Report of the Poor Law Commission, 1834, p. 73.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_414" href="#FNanchor_414" class="label">[414]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 157.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_415" href="#FNanchor_415" class="label">[415]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 158.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_416" href="#FNanchor_416" class="label">[416]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 161.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_417" href="#FNanchor_417" class="label">[417]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, p. 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_418" href="#FNanchor_418" class="label">[418]</a> Appendix F, No. 3, to 1st Report of Commissioners.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_419" href="#FNanchor_419" class="label">[419]</a> See Webb’s <i>History of Trade Unionism</i>, p. 59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_420" href="#FNanchor_420" class="label">[420]</a> <i>Tom Jones</i>, Bk. <span class="allsmcap">XII.</span> chap. i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_421" href="#FNanchor_421" class="label">[421]</a> See Fawley, p. 279.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_422" href="#FNanchor_422" class="label">[422]</a> <i>Kent Herald</i>, September 2, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_423" href="#FNanchor_423" class="label">[423]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 3, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_424" href="#FNanchor_424" class="label">[424]</a> September 30, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_425" href="#FNanchor_425" class="label">[425]</a> <i>Brighton Chronicle</i>, October 6, quoted in <i>Times</i>, October 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_426" href="#FNanchor_426" class="label">[426]</a> For Brede see H. O. Papers, Extracts from Poor Law Commissioners’ Report,
-published 1833, and newspapers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_427" href="#FNanchor_427" class="label">[427]</a> They were signed by G. S. Hill, minister, by eight farmers and the four
-labourer delegates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_428" href="#FNanchor_428" class="label">[428]</a> Affidavit in H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_429" href="#FNanchor_429" class="label">[429]</a> <i>Times</i>, November 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_430" href="#FNanchor_430" class="label">[430]</a> The petition was as follows: ‘We feel that in justice we ought not to suffer
-a moment to pass away without communicating to your Grace the great and
-unprecedented distress which we are enabled from our own personal experience
-to state prevails among all the peasantry to a degree not only dreadful to individuals,
-but also to an extent which, if not checked, must be attended with
-serious consequences to the national prosperity.’ Mr. Hodges does not mention
-the date, merely stating that it was sent to Wellington when Prime Minister.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_431" href="#FNanchor_431" class="label">[431]</a> H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_432" href="#FNanchor_432" class="label">[432]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_433" href="#FNanchor_433" class="label">[433]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_434" href="#FNanchor_434" class="label">[434]</a> H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_435" href="#FNanchor_435" class="label">[435]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_436" href="#FNanchor_436" class="label">[436]</a> Transported for life to New South Wales.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_437" href="#FNanchor_437" class="label">[437]</a> Ford was capitally convicted and sentenced to transportation for life, but
-his sentence was commuted to imprisonment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_438" href="#FNanchor_438" class="label">[438]</a> H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_439" href="#FNanchor_439" class="label">[439]</a> According to local tradition he was killed not by the yeomanry but by a
-farmer, before the troop came up. See Hudson, <i>A Shepherd’s Life</i>, p. 248.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_440" href="#FNanchor_440" class="label">[440]</a> Transported for life to New South Wales.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_441" href="#FNanchor_441" class="label">[441]</a> Transported for life to New South Wales.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_442" href="#FNanchor_442" class="label">[442]</a> H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_443" href="#FNanchor_443" class="label">[443]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_444" href="#FNanchor_444" class="label">[444]</a> Ten days later, after Lord Melbourne’s circular of December 8, Dr.
-Newbolt changed his tone. Writing to the Home Office he deprecated the
-censure implied in that circular, and stated that his conduct was due to personal
-infirmities and threats of violence: indeed he had subsequently heard from
-a certain Mr. Wickham that ‘I left his place just in time to save my own life,
-as some of the Mob had it in contemplation to drag me out of the carriage, and
-to destroy me upon the spot, and it was entirely owing to the interference of
-some of the better disposed of the Peasantry that my life was preserved.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_445" href="#FNanchor_445" class="label">[445]</a> See p. 258.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_446" href="#FNanchor_446" class="label">[446]</a> H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_447" href="#FNanchor_447" class="label">[447]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_448" href="#FNanchor_448" class="label">[448]</a> See <i>Oxford University and City Herald</i>, November 20 and 27, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_449" href="#FNanchor_449" class="label">[449]</a> Russell, <i>On Crimes and Misdemeanours</i>, p. 371.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_450" href="#FNanchor_450" class="label">[450]</a> Sir J. B. Bosanquet (1773&ndash;1847).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_451" href="#FNanchor_451" class="label">[451]</a> <i>Times</i>, December 15, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_452" href="#FNanchor_452" class="label">[452]</a> Sir W. E. Taunton (1773&ndash;1835).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_453" href="#FNanchor_453" class="label">[453]</a> The <i>Times</i> on December 25 quoted part of this charge in a leading article
-with some sharp strictures.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_454" href="#FNanchor_454" class="label">[454]</a> Sir John Vaughan (1769&ndash;1839).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_455" href="#FNanchor_455" class="label">[455]</a> <i>Times</i>, December 21, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_456" href="#FNanchor_456" class="label">[456]</a> Sir James Parke (1782&ndash;1868).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_457" href="#FNanchor_457" class="label">[457]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 3, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_458" href="#FNanchor_458" class="label">[458]</a> Sir E. H. Alderson (1787&ndash;1857).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_459" href="#FNanchor_459" class="label">[459]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 6, 1831. Cf. letter of Mr. R. Pollen, J.P., afterwards one of
-Winchester Commissioners, to Home Office, November 26: ‘It may be worth
-considering the law, which exempts all <i>Threshing Machines</i> from capital punishment,
-should such scenes as these occur again amongst the agricultural classes.
-I confess I view with great regret that they have found the mode of combining,
-which I had hoped was confined to the manufacturing classes.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_460" href="#FNanchor_460" class="label">[460]</a> Sir J. A. Park (1763&ndash;1838).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_461" href="#FNanchor_461" class="label">[461]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 15, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_462" href="#FNanchor_462" class="label">[462]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, January 12, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_463" href="#FNanchor_463" class="label">[463]</a> <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_464" href="#FNanchor_464" class="label">[464]</a> February 8, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_465" href="#FNanchor_465" class="label">[465]</a> There are no statistics for Wilts, Hants, Bucks, and Dorsetshire prisoners.
-At Reading out of 138 prisoners 37 could read, and 25 of the 37 could also write.
-At Abingdon, out of 47, 17 could read, and 6 of them could also write. In
-Wilts and Hants the proportion was probably smaller, as the people were more
-neglected.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_466" href="#FNanchor_466" class="label">[466]</a> <i>Times</i>, December 24, 1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_467" href="#FNanchor_467" class="label">[467]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, January 8, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_468" href="#FNanchor_468" class="label">[468]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 7, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_469" href="#FNanchor_469" class="label">[469]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, December 24, 1830. Henry Bunce was transported for life to New
-South Wales.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_470" href="#FNanchor_470" class="label">[470]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, January 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_471" href="#FNanchor_471" class="label">[471]</a> Cobbett, <i>Political Register</i>, vol. lxxiii. p. 535, and local papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_472" href="#FNanchor_472" class="label">[472]</a> Fussell’s sentence was commuted to imprisonment. Boys was sent to Van
-Diemen’s Land.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_473" href="#FNanchor_473" class="label">[473]</a> H. O. Papers, Municipal and Provincial. Hants, 1831, March 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_474" href="#FNanchor_474" class="label">[474]</a> As early as November 26, Mr. Richard Pollen, Chairman of Quarter
-Sessions and afterwards a commissioner at Winchester, had written to the
-Home Office, ‘I have directed the Magistrates’ attention very much to the
-class of People found in the Mobs many miles from their own homes, Taylors,
-Shoemakers etc., who have been found always very eloquent, they are
-universally politicians: they should be, I think, selected.’&mdash;H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_475" href="#FNanchor_475" class="label">[475]</a> For a full account of the incident, including the text of the petition and list
-of signatures, see Cobbett’s <i>Two-penny Trash</i>, July 1, 1832.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_476" href="#FNanchor_476" class="label">[476]</a> See p. 277.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_477" href="#FNanchor_477" class="label">[477]</a> February 8, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_478" href="#FNanchor_478" class="label">[478]</a> <i>Times</i>, January 8, 1831. The <i>Times</i> of the same day contains an interesting
-petition from the Birmingham Political Union on behalf of all the prisoners
-tried before the Special Commissions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_479" href="#FNanchor_479" class="label">[479]</a> The scene is still vividly remembered by an old woman over ninety years of
-age with whom Mr. Hudson spoke.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_480" href="#FNanchor_480" class="label">[480]</a> H. O. Papers, Disturbance Entry-Book, Letter of January 3, 1831.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_481" href="#FNanchor_481" class="label">[481]</a> See p. 268.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_482" href="#FNanchor_482" class="label">[482]</a> Three boats carried the convicts, the <i>Eliza</i> and the <i>Proteus</i> to Van Diemen’s
-Land, the <i>Eleanor</i> to New South Wales. The list of the prisoners on board
-shows that they came from the following <span class="lock">counties:&mdash;</span></p>
-
-<p>
-Berks, 44<br />
-Bucks, 29<br />
-Dorset, 13<br />
-Essex, 23<br />
-Gloucester, 24<br />
-Hampshire, 100<br />
-Hunts, 5<br />
-Kent, 22<br />
-Norfolk, 11<br />
-Oxford, 11<br />
-Suffolk, 7<br />
-Sussex, 17<br />
-Wilts, 151<br />
-<br />
-<span class="smcap">Total</span>, 457<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>If this represents the total, some sentences of transportation must have been
-commuted for imprisonment; possibly some rioters were sent later, for Mr. Potter
-MacQueen, in giving evidence before the Committee on Secondary Punishments,
-spoke of the six hundred able-bodied men who had been transported in consequence
-of being concerned in the Swing offences.&mdash;Report of Committee, p. 95.
-Four years later Lord John Russell, as Home Secretary, pardoned 264 of the
-convicts, in 1836 he pardoned 86 more, and in 1837 the survivors, mostly men
-sentenced for life or for fourteen years, were given pardons conditional on their
-‘continuing to reside in Australia for the remainder of their sentences.’ No
-free passages back were granted, and Mr. Hudson states that very few, not more
-than one in five or six, ever returned.&mdash;<i>A Shepherd’s Life</i>, p. 247.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_483" href="#FNanchor_483" class="label">[483]</a> See Hudson, <i>Ibid.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_484" href="#FNanchor_484" class="label">[484]</a> See <i>Annual Register</i> and local papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_485" href="#FNanchor_485" class="label">[485]</a> He was sent to Van Diemen’s Land. It is only fair to Lord Sheffield to say
-that he applied in vain to Lord Melbourne for a mitigation of the life sentence.
-See Criminal Entry-Book, H. O. Papers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_486" href="#FNanchor_486" class="label">[486]</a> Correspondence on Secondary Punishment, March 1834, p. 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_487" href="#FNanchor_487" class="label">[487]</a> See a remarkable letter from Lord Dudley. ‘He has already been enough
-on the Continent for any reasonable end, either of curiosity or instruction, and
-his availing himself so immediately of this opportunity to go to a foreign country
-again looks a little too much like distaste for his own.’&mdash;Letters to Ivy
-from the first Earl of Dudley, October 1808.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_488" href="#FNanchor_488" class="label">[488]</a> See on this subject a very interesting article by Mr. L. March Phillipps in
-the <i>Contemporary Review</i>, August 1911.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_489" href="#FNanchor_489" class="label">[489]</a> Helpstone was enclosed by an Act of 1809. Clare was then sixteen years
-old. His association with the old village life had been intimate, for he had
-tended geese and sheep on the common, and he had learnt the old country songs
-from the last village cowherd. His poem on Helpstone was published in 1820.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_490" href="#FNanchor_490" class="label">[490]</a> Referred to below as ‘A’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_491" href="#FNanchor_491" class="label">[491]</a> Referred to below as ‘B’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_492" href="#FNanchor_492" class="label">[492]</a> Note that the compensation to the Lords of the Manor added together
-comes to less than one ninety-first part of the soil.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_493" href="#FNanchor_493" class="label">[493]</a> <i>I.e.</i> lands over which there is right of common for half the year between
-Michaelmas and Lady Day or Lammas and Lady Day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_494" href="#FNanchor_494" class="label">[494]</a> This referred to roads only, see Act.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_495" href="#FNanchor_495" class="label">[495]</a> It took twenty-nine years.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_496" href="#FNanchor_496" class="label">[496]</a> Sir James Lowther, afterwards Lord Lowther, who had originally petitioned
-for enclosure, had died in 1802. He was succeeded by his cousin, Wordsworth’s
-patron.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_497" href="#FNanchor_497" class="label">[497]</a> These allotments were fenced by the other proprietors and did not bear
-any of the expenses of the Act.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_498" href="#FNanchor_498" class="label">[498]</a> Including 8 acres 1 rood 5 perches for rights of soil.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_499" href="#FNanchor_499" class="label">[499]</a> Nine of them women.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_500" href="#FNanchor_500" class="label">[500]</a> See p. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_501" href="#FNanchor_501" class="label">[501]</a> See Petition, p. 379, where nearly a hundred are said to do so.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_502" href="#FNanchor_502" class="label">[502]</a> Billingsley’s <i>Somerset</i>, p. 191.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_503" href="#FNanchor_503" class="label">[503]</a> <i>Ibid.</i>, pp. 191&ndash;2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_504" href="#FNanchor_504" class="label">[504]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxxxix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_505" href="#FNanchor_505" class="label">[505]</a> Davies, p. 152.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_506" href="#FNanchor_506" class="label">[506]</a> Davies puts 1½d., but this is probably a slip.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_507" href="#FNanchor_507" class="label">[507]</a> Davies, p. 166.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_508" href="#FNanchor_508" class="label">[508]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxlii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_509" href="#FNanchor_509" class="label">[509]</a> Davies, p. 176.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_510" href="#FNanchor_510" class="label">[510]</a> Eden, vol. iii. p. cccxlvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-<div class="transnote p4">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Note">Transcriber's Note</h2>
-
-
-
-<p>The following apparent errors have been corrected:</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li>p. 3 "Gobereau" changed to "Hobereau"</li>
-
-<li>p. 22 "eighteeenth-century" changed to "eighteenth-century"</li>
-
-<li>p. 31 (note) "consent (p. 339)" changed to "consent’ (p. 339)"</li>
-
-<li>p. 51 "of 721 neuter.’" changed to "of 721 neuter."</li>
-
-<li>p. 58 "of canvassing,’" changed to "of canvassing.’"</li>
-
-<li>p. 62 "his award was made," changed to "his award was made."</li>
-
-<li>p. 69 "irregularity the Bill" changed to "irregularity: the Bill"</li>
-
-<li>p. 76 "no less that" changed to "no less than"</li>
-
-<li>p. 78 "ask for permisson" changed to "ask for permission"</li>
-
-<li>p. 79 "inariably" changed to "invariably"</li>
-
-<li>p. 105 "ses vaissaux" changed to "ses vassaux"</li>
-
-<li>p. 107 "As Sidlesham in Surrey" changed to "At Sidlesham in Surrey"</li>
-
-<li>p. 113 "till be became" changed to "till he became"</li>
-
-<li>p. 119 "a parishoner" changed to "a parishioner"</li>
-
-<li>p. 121 "As Ipswich" changed to "At Ipswich"</li>
-
-<li>p. 121 "severe sentence." changed to "severe sentence.’"</li>
-
-<li>p. 146 (note) "p. 91." changed to "p. 91.)"</li>
-
-<li>p. 148 (note) "vol. i. p. 397" changed to "vol. i. p. 397."</li>
-
-<li>p. 160 "saying ‘The more" changed to "saying "The more"</li>
-
-<li>p. 160 "for us.’" changed to "for us."’"</li>
-
-<li>p. 217 "demander a leur" changed to "demander à leur"</li>
-
-<li>p. 228 "p. 66" changed to "p. 66."</li>
-
-<li>p. 274 (note) "Vaughan (1769&ndash;1839" changed to "Vaughan (1769&ndash;1839)."</li>
-
-<li>p. 278 "Sergeant Wild" changed to "Sergeant Wilde"</li>
-
-<li>p. 304 "years’ transportation," changed to "years’ transportation."</li>
-
-<li>p. 342 "(Lord of the Manor)" changed to "(Lord of the Manor),"</li>
-
-<li>p. 343 "Clarks, Darey’s" changed to "Clarks, Dareys"</li>
-
-<li>p. 357 "asking for leave." changed to "asking for leave"</li>
-
-<li>p. 365 "‘A Clause was offered" changed to "A Clause was offered"</li>
-
-<li>p. 380 "Cocks, Esq" changed to "Cocks, Esq."</li>
-
-<li>p. 395 "p, 191." changed to "p. 191."</li>
-
-<li>p. 397 "oatmeal" changed to "oatmeal,"</li>
-
-<li>p. 398 "scarce’) Clothes," changed to "scarce’), Clothes,"</li>
-
-<li>p. 402 "<i>History of the English Agricultural Labourer</i>" changed to "<i>History of the English Agricultural Labourer</i>."</li>
-
-<li>p. 405 "Aldeborough" changed to "Aldborough"</li>
-
-<li>p. 405 "43 <i>n</i>" changed to "43 <i>n.</i>"</li>
-
-<li>p. 405 "50 59" changed to "50, 59"</li>
-
-<li>p. 405 "1795, 121" changed to "1795, 121;"</li>
-
-<li>p. 405 "J.P, 297" changed to "J.P., 297."</li>
-
-<li>p. 409 "Charles, 141," changed to "Charles, 141;"</li>
-
-<li>p. 409 "148 <i>n</i>" changed to "148 <i>n.</i>"</li>
-
-<li>p. 411 "Isle of Wight, 169" changed to "Isle of Wight, 169."</li>
-
-<li>p. 411 "Holdsworth, W., 23 <i>n.</i>" was printed out of order</li>
-
-<li>p. 414 "Prothero, R. E" changed to "Prothero, R. E."</li>
-
-<li>p. 414 "against enclosure 47" changed to "against enclosure, 47"</li>
-
-<li>p. 417 "Mr. Serjeant" changed to "Mr. Sergeant"</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<p>Inconsistent or archaic spelling and punctuation have otherwise been kept as printed.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VILLAGE LABOURER 1760-1832 ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
- other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
- whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
- of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
- at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/69002-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/69002-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c2c43e4..0000000
--- a/old/69002-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ