Lest we forget - Peterloo
200
years ago, working people in Manchester and surrounding towns were
becoming increasingly vocal in their demands for political reform.
They were angry about the fact that most of the population could not
vote, that corruption was rife, and that urban areas were grossly
under-represented in Parliament.
50-60,000
people arrived at St Peter's Fields on 16 August 1819 to hear radical
Henry Hunt campaign for parliamentary reform. When Hunt began to
speak the Manchester Yeomanry were sent in try to arrest him, and
attacked anybody who got in its way. The sabre-wielding cavalrymen
charged into the crowd. At least 11 people were killed and 400
injured. Estimates of the final death toll vary widely and the true
number will never be known.
The
events were dubbed Peterloo, an ironic reference to the Battle of
Waterloo that had taken place four years previously was one of many
brutal battles in capitalism’s ongoing class war. Peterloo is an
event which deserves to remembered — especially by those who claim
that the British working class has no ‘revolutionary’
tradition.
William
Hulton was the magistrate who gave the order for troops to violently
disperse the peaceful, pro-democracy protest. Hulton was born into a
family of wealthy landowners.
Seven years before Peterloo, as a justice of the peace, Hulton had already sentenced four Luddites to death for setting fire to a weaving mill in Westhoughton, near Bolton. One of those hanged was just 12-year-old.
Eleven of the leaders were arrested by the troops. They were charged with conspiracy and illegal assembly. Hunt was sentenced to two and half years in prison, Middleton weaver, Samuel Bamford, and others to one year.
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.
Depicting Peterloo as an aberration, out of character with British values, obscures the reality that this was business as usual, at home and abroad, then and now.
Peterloo was just one particularly brutal battle in the class war of capitalism — which still persists today. And there should be few workers with any doubts as to which side they should be fighting on.
Reposted from SOYMB, 16 August, 2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eh_pikNlEp4
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