2017
DOI: 10.1111/1750-0206.12262
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The Popular Movement for Parliamentary Reform in Provincial Britain during the 1860s

Abstract: Provincial perspectives are largely lacking in accounts of the emergence of the Second Reform Act, but a vigorous and innovative popular movement for reform emerged in the mid 1860s. A burgeoning newspaper press both conveyed and itself did much to create a sense of accelerating movement unparalleled since Chartism. Former Chartists, notably Ernest Jones, were significant organisers, but the infusion of this movement into communities hitherto untouched by organised popular politics was widespread. Formal organ… Show more

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“…69 Martin Hewitt regards the 'proliferation' of Manchester suffrage organizations as 'a sign of weakness' but Malcolm Chase interprets provincial initiatives like these more positively. 70 For Heywood, Hooson, and the rest, there was surely a collective strength from persistent activism when mainstream liberalism was uninterested locally and nationally. A straight line can be drawn from the MMSA and the MWMPRA to the National Reform League, established in 1865, in their case.…”
Section: IIImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…69 Martin Hewitt regards the 'proliferation' of Manchester suffrage organizations as 'a sign of weakness' but Malcolm Chase interprets provincial initiatives like these more positively. 70 For Heywood, Hooson, and the rest, there was surely a collective strength from persistent activism when mainstream liberalism was uninterested locally and nationally. A straight line can be drawn from the MMSA and the MWMPRA to the National Reform League, established in 1865, in their case.…”
Section: IIImentioning
confidence: 99%