Today has seen members of the working class, miners and police,
killed at a platinum mine in South Africa. The slaughter has echoes of
earlier conflicts such as Sharpville
and Peterloo, where on this day on 16 August 1819, troops attacked a
radical meeting held on St Peter's Field in Manchester. At least eleven
of the crowd were killed, and over 600 injured. Within a few
days the massacre was being ironically styled 'Peterloo'. It was an
event of enormous significance, not just for the north west area but for
the history of working class struggle in Britain.
The
back-ground to Peterloo can be traced within the development of
industrial capitalism and workers' response. Trade unions, though
strictly illegal, were active during the second half of the eighteenth
century (primarily among skilled workers and organised on a purely local
basis), and were of ten reasonably successful in defending wages.
Political activity among artisans and other workers grew in the 1790s,
mainly aimed at reforming the antiquated electoral system by introducing
manhood suffrage and annual elections. Despite the mildness of the
measures proposed, the government and ruling class were unable to
countenance any independent political action by .workers, and they
reacted with vicious repression, including charges of
treason ( England being at war with . France). By 1799 all the most
prominent activists were in prison or in exile.
The
economic depression which followed the end of the Napoleonic Wars led
to a growth of unrest and the passing of the Corn Laws to benefit the
landowners by keeping up the price of wheat. From 1816 mass meetings of
workers . resumed for the first time since the repression of the 1790s.
The government fought back with spies, agent provocateurs, and
prosecutions; Habeas Corpus was suspended for a while. By 1819 there
were many outdoor meetings for parliamentary reform: this was seen, even
by working class radicals, as a necessary means to the economic end of a
more equitable taxation system.
The new
industrial cities were the centres for much of the protest. The economy
of the Manchester area was based on cotton, and there was particular
support for radicalism from the hand loom
weavers, who worked in their own homes (unlike the industry's other
workers, the spinners, who worked in the mills operating spinning
machines). As early as 1808, a weaver was killed by troops, at a
Manchester meeting for a minimum wage bill. The depression hit the
cotton trade especially hard, and by 1819 weavers could only earn half
the wages of a few years before. 'Passages in the life of A Radical', by
the Middleton weaver Samuel Bamford, gives a vivid account of working
class political activity during this period; the clandestine meetings,
the constant fear of informers, the effects of government repression.
The 1817 Blanketeers' March intended to be from Manchester to London to
petition for the relief of distress, was broken up by troops within a
few miles of Manchester. By 1819 mass meetings were being held in
Manchester as in other large Towns, and the city's magistrates were
becoming alarmed, and making military preparations against what they
feared might befall.
The 16 August meeting on
St Peter's Field was intended to be the largest gathering of all, and
men and women and children came from the cotton towns around Manchester,
eventually forming a crowd of around sixty thousand. The magistrates
assembled in a house overlooking the site, and had fifteen hundred
troops, both hussars (regular soldiers) and yeomanry (part-time force of
local merchants and factory-owners), waiting on horse back in nearby
streets, even though the meeting itself was illegal. When Henry Hunt,
one of the prominent radical organisers, was speaking, the magistrates
decided Manchester was in danger and ordered Hunt's arrest. Troops were
summoned to effect this, and the yeomanry began to ride through the
packed crowd, striking out with their swords when they could not make
their way forward. The hussars were then called in to disperse the
crowd. In ten minutes, among scenes of
unbelievable chaos and carnage, St Peter's Field were cleared, leaving
the dead and injured to be take n away as best could be arranged.
Bamford provides a dramatic eye-witness description of the scene:
"Over
the whole field, were strewed caps, bonnets, hats, and shoes, and other
parts of male and female dress; trampled, torn, and bloody....Several
mounds of human beings still remained where they had fallen, crushed
down and smothered. Some of these still groaning, - others with staring
eyes, were gasping for breath, and others never breathe more.... Person
might sometimes be noticed peeping from attics and over the tall
ridgings of houses, but they quickly withdrew, as if fearful of being
observed, or unable to sustain the full gaze, of a scene so hideous and
abhorrent." The rulers had replied as decisively as they knew to working
class demands.
Eleven of the main radical
leaders were arrested by the troops. They
were originally charged with high treason, though this was later
amended to conspiracy and illegal assembly. Hunt was sentenced to two
and half years in prison, Bamford and others to one year. Further
repressive legislation was passed, and by 1820 working class resistance
was greatly reduced. Many radicals rejected the policy of peaceful
agitation promoted by Hunt and turned to violent action; the same year,
five men were executed for high treason in the Cato Street Conspiracy,
when they plotted to assassinate members of the Cabinet. The Government
supported the actions of the magistrates at Peterloo, and refused to
hold an inquiry into their conduct. Some were even given financial
rewards; William Hay was a clergyman and magistrate in Salford, he was
awarded a sinecure worth £730 a year (at a time when weavers earned
perhaps £25 a year).
It is impossible to believe,
as has sometimes been suggested, that the events of 16
August were a chapter of accidents, leading to an outcome that no body
wanted. In an atmosphere of government repression and provocation
stretching back a quarter of a century, there can be no doubt that the
massacre fitted in with the strategy of the ruling class. The use of
state power against those who were unprepared simply to accept their lot
continued: in 1831; at least two dozen workers were killed by troops
after the uprising in Merthyr Tydfil, and in 1834 six trade unionists
were transported from Tolpuddle, this even after the 'reform' of the
House of Commons in 1832 (which still left the vast majority of workers
without a vote).
But Peterloo is probably the
clearest demonstration of the viciousness of ruling class politics in
the nineteenth century, of the fact that the vote and trade unions'
rights were not handed to workers on a plate but had to be fought for
against savage repression. The courage and commitment of
those in the early working class movement remains astonishing and
humbling even now.
PB
(Socialist Standard, August 1994)
Published on behalf of Hallblithe.
(Socialist Standard, August 1994)
Published on behalf of Hallblithe.
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