Study Guide exam 2
Queen Victoria
Public Health act (1875)
Kensington System
Congress of Berlin
Lord Palmerston
Boer Wars
Crimean War
The Great Game
Sudan
Alma River
Mahdi
Balaklava
William Hicks
Inkerman
Khartoum
Lord Stratford de Redcliffe
Charles “Chinese” Gordon
Lord Raglan
Horatio Kitchener
Lord Cardigan
Omdurman
Lord Lucan
Jameson Raid
Florence Nightingale
Transvaal
William Howard Russell
Orange Free State
William Gladstone
Lord Chelmsford
Benjamin Disraeli
Cetsweyo
Free Trade
Rourke’s Drift
Disestablishment act (1869)
Isandlwana
Irish Land Act (1870)
Reform Bill (1867)
Employers Liability Act (1880)
Trade Union Act (1875)
Artisan’s Dwellings act (1875)
Food and Drug Act (1875)
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Notes part four feb 28th.
Notes for February 28th
The Indian Mutiny contained too many factions and too many ideas to work. Some Sepoys revolted and some didn’t. Some sided with the British because they hated other Indian groups/religions more. For example: The Shia and Sunni worked against each other.
Three instances of revolt:
Delhi
Cawnpore
Lucknow
The native soldiers were angry because of pig and beef fat on rifle charges. The British also stopped many ancient Indian practices, such as allowing widow’s to remarry. They no longer had to burn themselves on their husband’s funeral pyre.
The majority of the revolt came from the Bengal army. The Delhi revolt started first and the others followed. The Indian soldiers were able to push back the outnumbered British East India Company soldiers into a few fortified areas. The British were slow to respond because of being outnumbered and they had to tend to European civilians. The British redirected troops that had been bound for China. The British weren’t used to armies attacking civilians like the Sepoys did.
When British reinforcements arrived they met up at Carnow. They pushed the Sepoys into Delhi. They Sepoy’s still outnumbered the British so they still had access to supplies. The British had to bring in more troops to cut off the city. When the reinforcing Brits arrived the Sepoys asked for terms. The British refused. They brought up their siege train and bombarded the city. They took many casualties but eventually the walls were taken. The British took vengeance on the populace for the slaughter of Europeans. Many Indians were killed. However, no Indian women or children were killed. The Sepoy leader of the city was executed along with all his male relatives (sons and grandsons included.)
The British moved on to take Agra and onto Cawnpore. General Wheeler had been in charge of Cawnpore before the mutiny. He was married to a high-caste Indian woman so he thought he would be safe when the mutiny started. Because of this he failed to stockpile weapons and ammo. His city was besieged by Sepoys and in a hopeless situation. The sepoy’s offered to transport the British out of the city if they left their long arms. The British gathered together and were led out of the city. The Sepoys who had been loyal to the British were executed. Several wounded British officers were also left behind and massacred on the road. When the British got to the boats they were supposed to take, someone opened fire. History doesn’t know which side fired. The British were surrounded by Sepoys and were massacred. Only four British soldiers survived. The Women and children were taken captive by the Sepoys. When British troops approached sometime later the Sepoys decided to kill the women and children so as to make the British focus elsewhere. The Sepoys mainly wouldn’t kill the women and children. Only six men could be found who would partake. Two butchers, two peasants, and two bodyguards of their leader. They massacred all the women and children and threw them in a well fifty feet deep. The bodies filled the well. British troops retook Cawnpore and found the well stilled stuffed with bodies. The British would tale bloody retribution and it would change the face of British politics. There had been groups in the British govt who wanted to leave the Indians alone. They didn’t think turning the Indians British was a good idea. They wanted to govern them but not destroy their culture. After the massacre of Cawnpore was discovered though, all that went out the window. The population of England was set on vengeance against the Indians. The soldiers who took Cawnpore tied most of their prisoners to the front of cannons, the cannon was then fired. This was called “Blown from the cannon”, an old Mughal punishment. The rest were hung.
The Siege of Lucknow
The British here had time to fortify their city before it was attacked. The sepoys bombarded the city but failed to blow up the walls. They tried bombing the walls and even tunneling beneath them. None of it worked. A british relief column fought its way into the city to join the garrison. A larger british force came later and was able to break the Britsh troops out of the city. They returned with more troops and ran the Sepoy army out of Lucknow.
The Mutiny was mostly put down by june 1858.
Some British officers would take no prisoners during the war. They killed every male Indian they could find. The British had tried to change too much of India at one time. The Indians saw their way of life disappearing and couldn’t stand it.
As a result of the mutiny the British East India Company was dissolved. A Viceroy was put in charge of India until the work of Gandhi changed it again.
Read “The Curious Great Depression” in the text book. Pg 137. Focus on 137-144.
How England lost its role in industry during the second industrial revolution. Germany and America took over. England didn’t want to put more money into changing industries.
Gladstone vs Disraeli
Gladstone Born 1809- Died 1898. Started his career as a torrie then joined with the Torrie peelites. Helped found the Liberal party. Served as Prime Minister four times. The oldest Prime Minister at 84.
Called “The grand old man of the liberal party.” First entered office in 1832 and became important in 1841 after supporting the repeal of the corn laws. After Robert Peele’s death in 1850 Gladstone became a star. The Peelites broke away from the Torries and joined with the Whigs to form the Liberal Party. The rest of the Torries became the Conservatives. At this time Disraeli was also a Peelite. Disraeli was not picked by Peele to become a minister so he gets very jealous and moved to the conservatives.
1846-1851 Gladstone was on the opposition Bench since the Torries/Conservatives were in power. He aided the House of Mercy which helped former prostitutes find real jobs. His opponents floated rumors about him and these prostitutes. (Gladstone’s last act was to leave death note denying these charges.)
In 1852 Lord Aberdeen was made Prime Minister of a coalition of Whigs and Peelites. Gladstone became the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He got rid of tariffs and moved England towards free trade. His budget speech in april 1853 lasted for five hours. People were blown away by the details.
He denied a position in the Palmerston govt because they would push free trade.
In 1859-1866 he is called again to be Chancellor of the Exchequer with a deficit of six million pounds. He refused to borrow money for his country’s debt. He raised the income tax to nine pence from five. He set up free trade between the british and French. This was the Cobdon-Chevalier treaty. This also served to tighten bonds between the former enemy nations. In 1859 there were over 400 duties on the record. In 1860 he reduced those to 40. He kept the higher income tax as well.
At the time the British govt kept the tax on paper high so that the radical press couldn’t afford to print. Gladstone made a bill to abolish this tax but it was denied by House of Lords. This outraged the people as bills dealing with the “purse” were supposed to be dealt with by the House of Commons. The next year Gladstone put the bill into the first British consolidated budget. The House of Lords would have to veto the entire budget to axe the bill. They passed the budget and the paper tax was done away with. Through the years Gladstone was also able to consecutively lower the income tax from nine pence to four. Gladstone became known as the “Liberator of British Trade and the Breakfast Table”, because he made things affordable for the working man. His tax actions were very popular.
Gladstone did make some errors. He flubbed by supporting the Confederate states in our civil war. He was also seen as an asshole for saying that he supported universal male suffrage but only once the working class took an interest in ever voting.
Queen Victoria disliked Gladstone because of his constant formality. She liked Disraeli better because he was a ladies’ man.
Gladstone supported reform in England and the repeal of the mandatory Church of England Tax for Ireland. He also wanted to abolish the unpopular Church of Scotland, and Church of Wales.
Gladstone was of course the MP for Oxford University. When he went against the church, Oxford kicked him out of their seat. He ran again in Lancashire and won there. He became the liberal party leader in 1868, but kept his job as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
The liberals had a reform bill they wanted to pass, but the conservatives came up with a better one. It enfranchised more of the males in England. These new voters used their new powers to throw the conservatives out of power. They made Gladstone the new Prime Minister.
Gladstone’s mission in the new govt was to peacefully pacify Ireland. In England he shot down laws limiting personal freedom. He ended the sale of commissions in the armed forces, and reorganized the court system. He also made peace time flogging in the army illegal.
With the Irish land act he tried to help Irish tenants against arbitrary abuse from their landlords.
Forester’s education act- mandatory education for children up to 14 years old.
University test act- Must take an exam to be accepted into a university.
In 1872 Gladstone was even able to pass that old Chartist goal, the secret ballot system.
Gladstone wrote a book in his off time called “Vatican Decrees and their bearing on Civil Allegiance.” He urged British Catholics to deny the new Catholic idea of Papal infallibility.
He constantly attacked Disraeli’s govt. especially for their support of Ottoman’s who were killing eastern European Christians.
In 1880 he was made the Liberal PM again this time to 1885.
Gladstone saw the end of the second Afghan war, the first Boer war, and the war against the African mahdi. Gladstone ordered the bombing of Egyptian capitol and the capture of egypy for the British to “protect the canal.”
In 1881 he passed the Irish Coercion act. Any Irish person could be kept in jail for as long as the authorities pleased. This was because the Irish Secretary Lord Cavendish was stabbed to death in Dublin. The Lord Lieutenant wanted to take a harder line on the Irish.
He also passed the Second Irish Land Act, which gave a little more help to Irish tenants but not much.
In 1886 Gladstone works with the Irish to try to get Home Rule for Ireland. It didn’t work and the Conservatives took back power. He was back on the opposition benches for six years. In 1892 he takes back control and is named Prime Minister. He tries again for Irish Home Rule but the House of Lords killed the bill.
1893- The Conservatives motioned for an expansion of the Royal Navy. Gladstone opposed this, but he was in the minority of that opinion. He resigned as Prime Minister in 1893 because the expansion went against everything he had worked for. In 1895 he left his seat in Parliament for Lancashire, his last seat in govt.
Gladstone was well known for getting exercise by cutting down trees well into his 80’s. He owned 32,000 books and was said to have read 23,000 of them. He had a library built down the street from his house and moved most of the books their by himself with just a wheelbarrow. He was a tough old guy.
The Indian Mutiny contained too many factions and too many ideas to work. Some Sepoys revolted and some didn’t. Some sided with the British because they hated other Indian groups/religions more. For example: The Shia and Sunni worked against each other.
Three instances of revolt:
Delhi
Cawnpore
Lucknow
The native soldiers were angry because of pig and beef fat on rifle charges. The British also stopped many ancient Indian practices, such as allowing widow’s to remarry. They no longer had to burn themselves on their husband’s funeral pyre.
The majority of the revolt came from the Bengal army. The Delhi revolt started first and the others followed. The Indian soldiers were able to push back the outnumbered British East India Company soldiers into a few fortified areas. The British were slow to respond because of being outnumbered and they had to tend to European civilians. The British redirected troops that had been bound for China. The British weren’t used to armies attacking civilians like the Sepoys did.
When British reinforcements arrived they met up at Carnow. They pushed the Sepoys into Delhi. They Sepoy’s still outnumbered the British so they still had access to supplies. The British had to bring in more troops to cut off the city. When the reinforcing Brits arrived the Sepoys asked for terms. The British refused. They brought up their siege train and bombarded the city. They took many casualties but eventually the walls were taken. The British took vengeance on the populace for the slaughter of Europeans. Many Indians were killed. However, no Indian women or children were killed. The Sepoy leader of the city was executed along with all his male relatives (sons and grandsons included.)
The British moved on to take Agra and onto Cawnpore. General Wheeler had been in charge of Cawnpore before the mutiny. He was married to a high-caste Indian woman so he thought he would be safe when the mutiny started. Because of this he failed to stockpile weapons and ammo. His city was besieged by Sepoys and in a hopeless situation. The sepoy’s offered to transport the British out of the city if they left their long arms. The British gathered together and were led out of the city. The Sepoys who had been loyal to the British were executed. Several wounded British officers were also left behind and massacred on the road. When the British got to the boats they were supposed to take, someone opened fire. History doesn’t know which side fired. The British were surrounded by Sepoys and were massacred. Only four British soldiers survived. The Women and children were taken captive by the Sepoys. When British troops approached sometime later the Sepoys decided to kill the women and children so as to make the British focus elsewhere. The Sepoys mainly wouldn’t kill the women and children. Only six men could be found who would partake. Two butchers, two peasants, and two bodyguards of their leader. They massacred all the women and children and threw them in a well fifty feet deep. The bodies filled the well. British troops retook Cawnpore and found the well stilled stuffed with bodies. The British would tale bloody retribution and it would change the face of British politics. There had been groups in the British govt who wanted to leave the Indians alone. They didn’t think turning the Indians British was a good idea. They wanted to govern them but not destroy their culture. After the massacre of Cawnpore was discovered though, all that went out the window. The population of England was set on vengeance against the Indians. The soldiers who took Cawnpore tied most of their prisoners to the front of cannons, the cannon was then fired. This was called “Blown from the cannon”, an old Mughal punishment. The rest were hung.
The Siege of Lucknow
The British here had time to fortify their city before it was attacked. The sepoys bombarded the city but failed to blow up the walls. They tried bombing the walls and even tunneling beneath them. None of it worked. A british relief column fought its way into the city to join the garrison. A larger british force came later and was able to break the Britsh troops out of the city. They returned with more troops and ran the Sepoy army out of Lucknow.
The Mutiny was mostly put down by june 1858.
Some British officers would take no prisoners during the war. They killed every male Indian they could find. The British had tried to change too much of India at one time. The Indians saw their way of life disappearing and couldn’t stand it.
As a result of the mutiny the British East India Company was dissolved. A Viceroy was put in charge of India until the work of Gandhi changed it again.
Read “The Curious Great Depression” in the text book. Pg 137. Focus on 137-144.
How England lost its role in industry during the second industrial revolution. Germany and America took over. England didn’t want to put more money into changing industries.
Gladstone vs Disraeli
Gladstone Born 1809- Died 1898. Started his career as a torrie then joined with the Torrie peelites. Helped found the Liberal party. Served as Prime Minister four times. The oldest Prime Minister at 84.
Called “The grand old man of the liberal party.” First entered office in 1832 and became important in 1841 after supporting the repeal of the corn laws. After Robert Peele’s death in 1850 Gladstone became a star. The Peelites broke away from the Torries and joined with the Whigs to form the Liberal Party. The rest of the Torries became the Conservatives. At this time Disraeli was also a Peelite. Disraeli was not picked by Peele to become a minister so he gets very jealous and moved to the conservatives.
1846-1851 Gladstone was on the opposition Bench since the Torries/Conservatives were in power. He aided the House of Mercy which helped former prostitutes find real jobs. His opponents floated rumors about him and these prostitutes. (Gladstone’s last act was to leave death note denying these charges.)
In 1852 Lord Aberdeen was made Prime Minister of a coalition of Whigs and Peelites. Gladstone became the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He got rid of tariffs and moved England towards free trade. His budget speech in april 1853 lasted for five hours. People were blown away by the details.
He denied a position in the Palmerston govt because they would push free trade.
In 1859-1866 he is called again to be Chancellor of the Exchequer with a deficit of six million pounds. He refused to borrow money for his country’s debt. He raised the income tax to nine pence from five. He set up free trade between the british and French. This was the Cobdon-Chevalier treaty. This also served to tighten bonds between the former enemy nations. In 1859 there were over 400 duties on the record. In 1860 he reduced those to 40. He kept the higher income tax as well.
At the time the British govt kept the tax on paper high so that the radical press couldn’t afford to print. Gladstone made a bill to abolish this tax but it was denied by House of Lords. This outraged the people as bills dealing with the “purse” were supposed to be dealt with by the House of Commons. The next year Gladstone put the bill into the first British consolidated budget. The House of Lords would have to veto the entire budget to axe the bill. They passed the budget and the paper tax was done away with. Through the years Gladstone was also able to consecutively lower the income tax from nine pence to four. Gladstone became known as the “Liberator of British Trade and the Breakfast Table”, because he made things affordable for the working man. His tax actions were very popular.
Gladstone did make some errors. He flubbed by supporting the Confederate states in our civil war. He was also seen as an asshole for saying that he supported universal male suffrage but only once the working class took an interest in ever voting.
Queen Victoria disliked Gladstone because of his constant formality. She liked Disraeli better because he was a ladies’ man.
Gladstone supported reform in England and the repeal of the mandatory Church of England Tax for Ireland. He also wanted to abolish the unpopular Church of Scotland, and Church of Wales.
Gladstone was of course the MP for Oxford University. When he went against the church, Oxford kicked him out of their seat. He ran again in Lancashire and won there. He became the liberal party leader in 1868, but kept his job as Chancellor of the Exchequer.
The liberals had a reform bill they wanted to pass, but the conservatives came up with a better one. It enfranchised more of the males in England. These new voters used their new powers to throw the conservatives out of power. They made Gladstone the new Prime Minister.
Gladstone’s mission in the new govt was to peacefully pacify Ireland. In England he shot down laws limiting personal freedom. He ended the sale of commissions in the armed forces, and reorganized the court system. He also made peace time flogging in the army illegal.
With the Irish land act he tried to help Irish tenants against arbitrary abuse from their landlords.
Forester’s education act- mandatory education for children up to 14 years old.
University test act- Must take an exam to be accepted into a university.
In 1872 Gladstone was even able to pass that old Chartist goal, the secret ballot system.
Gladstone wrote a book in his off time called “Vatican Decrees and their bearing on Civil Allegiance.” He urged British Catholics to deny the new Catholic idea of Papal infallibility.
He constantly attacked Disraeli’s govt. especially for their support of Ottoman’s who were killing eastern European Christians.
In 1880 he was made the Liberal PM again this time to 1885.
Gladstone saw the end of the second Afghan war, the first Boer war, and the war against the African mahdi. Gladstone ordered the bombing of Egyptian capitol and the capture of egypy for the British to “protect the canal.”
In 1881 he passed the Irish Coercion act. Any Irish person could be kept in jail for as long as the authorities pleased. This was because the Irish Secretary Lord Cavendish was stabbed to death in Dublin. The Lord Lieutenant wanted to take a harder line on the Irish.
He also passed the Second Irish Land Act, which gave a little more help to Irish tenants but not much.
In 1886 Gladstone works with the Irish to try to get Home Rule for Ireland. It didn’t work and the Conservatives took back power. He was back on the opposition benches for six years. In 1892 he takes back control and is named Prime Minister. He tries again for Irish Home Rule but the House of Lords killed the bill.
1893- The Conservatives motioned for an expansion of the Royal Navy. Gladstone opposed this, but he was in the minority of that opinion. He resigned as Prime Minister in 1893 because the expansion went against everything he had worked for. In 1895 he left his seat in Parliament for Lancashire, his last seat in govt.
Gladstone was well known for getting exercise by cutting down trees well into his 80’s. He owned 32,000 books and was said to have read 23,000 of them. He had a library built down the street from his house and moved most of the books their by himself with just a wheelbarrow. He was a tough old guy.
History notes part three
British History notes
1851-2
The only places that hadn’t really had a revolution were England and the Russians. England because of democracy and Russia because of iron force.
At this point a Bonaparte was elected to power in France. Everything was hunky dory until Bonaparte overthrew the French govt and named himself emperor. England’s foreign minister Lord Palmerson gave Bonaparte England’s full support without consulting his govt or Monarch. Queen Victoria “asked” Palmerson to resign. England wasn’t going to interfere with Napoleon the Third but didn’t like it. Palmerson was even tempered and experienced. The new Foreign Minister was now inexperienced. They sent mixed signals over Russia moving in among the Ottomans.
Karl Marx and Frederik Engels had been predicting war between Russia and the Ottomans. They saw that the Ottomans were getting much weaker and that England and France wouldn’t allow the Russians to take Ottoman territory.
The war became more inevitable because of the comedy of errors by the foreign ministries.
Napoleon the third was supported by The army, The church, and the Middle class. In exchange for this support Napoleon had to scratch their back. The church didn’t like the Second Republic and figured Napoleon the Third would be a better power source. French troops were protecting the Pope in Rome and they wanted the French Army to take Holy sites in the Middle East. The French had an excuse for this because during the time of the Holy Roman Empire the French and the Ottomans had joined together in alliance. Suleman had given the French control of the holy sites. During the years of upheaval they had lost track of this and the Orthodox church had taken control. Russia and France had beefs because Russia had been holding France back for many years. Russia was seen as the police force of Europe because they moved in to stop revolutions.
The Ottoman Turks had allowed the Russians to represent the Orthodox people in the middle east. When the Catholics come in and remove the Orthodox people from power the Orthodox people scream their heads off. Czar Nicholas is outraged and sends his minister to the Ottomans and tells them that if they don’t take that treaty back then the Russians will invade. The French and British ministers tell the Ottomans they will defend them from the Russians. The British minister, Hugh Rose, commanded an admiral to sail his fleet through the area. The admiral refused and Rose was replaced. A more diplomatic minister Lord Stratford Canning (soon Stratford Redcliff) was placed in Constantinople.
Napoleon sends a ship of the line into the Black sea which was a violation of the London Straits Convention. Nicholas in St. Petersburg is seeing a wavering Ottoman, A determined France, Mixed Signals from the British. He turns to Austria who he had lent 200,000 troops to put down the Hungarian revolution. He believes they will refuse any diplomatic push from the West and help the Russians. The Austrian minister Schwarzenburg is famous for saying “We will shock the world with our ingratitude.” Russia gives the Turks and ultimatum. Kick the Catholics out of power and put the Orthodox back in charge of the holy sites, or the Russians will take Wallachia and Moldavia. The Sultan refused and the Russians sent troops into those places. The Turk commander wins a few battles and in the caucus regions the Chechen Muslims held back the Russians with Turkish help.
The other powers are searching for a diplomatic end to the war because the war hasn’t really heated up.
The war is agreed to end by all the powers except by the Turks. They declare Jihad against the Russians. The war will go on. The Russians unleash their Black Seas Fleet. At the battle of Sinope the modern Russian fleet destroy the old ottoman fleet. The French and the British take this as an excuse to declare war on Russia. 28 march 1854. The British and French figure it will be a good old fashioned knock em up in the usual area. Until Austria decides to join in the fight. They get nervous about these armies in their vicinity. Nicholas is happy to fight the Turks and the British and French who were at the end of a long supply line. When the Austrians tell him to get out of Wallachia and Moldavia or they will move in with a quarter of a million troops. Nicholas moves his troops out posthaste. Now the usual battlefield is removed. The West decides to attack the Crimean Penninsula. The British fleets blockaded Russian shipping in the Baltic.
The combined Allied fleet moves into the Black Sea. The Russian fleet moves their ships back takes off the guns and sinks all the ships in the harbor to keep the Allies out of Sevastopol. The allies land at upitoria and march south down towards Sevastopol. Their first battle was at the Alme river. Lord Raglin was the Overall commander of the British forces. William Russell was there as one of the world’s first war correspondents. He writes back via the telegraph. Russell writes back patriotic words of victory.
Lord Raglin is getting towards senility. This highlights the point of the problems in the British Command. His men know he is senile but can do nothing. They defeat the Russians and the Russians move back towards Sevastopol. Sept 30, 1854 battle of Alme River is a victory.
The Battle of Balaclava- famous for two things. Positive- The thin red line. The 93rd Highlanders are marching and a whole brigade of Russian cavalry comes over the hill at them. The Highlanders have no time to form square. Thanks to Breech loading rifled muskets the Highlanders were able to put out a greater rate of fire. They held their line and smashed up the cavalry due to their rate of fire.
Negative- Charge of the Light Brigade. Lord Raglin sitting on a hill sees Russian positions and behind one the Russians are moving their heavy naval guns. Lord Lucan is given a very vague order to use his cavalry to take the guns. Lord Lucan gives the order to Lord Cardigan in command of the Light Horse. Cardigan and Lucan hate each other. Cardigan lines up his cavalry and begins to charge the hill. The Russians had artillery with enfilading fire. A captain tried to stop the madness and gets blown up. Cardigan goes faster and chases away the gunners. But the light cavalry had nothing to spike the guns. They returned with heavy casualties. The heavy cavalry was supposed to support them but they never did. Lucan is eventually recalled back to London as the villain. Cardigan is promoted and made a hero. It didn’t really hurt Lucan’s career though.
Out of this politicians finally see that idiots are running the British army. After the war they start to examine the way officers are promoted. They would end the system of buying commissions.
The battle of Balaclava ended with the British and French not following up on their victory. Russia is allowed to bring their forces back into Sevastopol. After a siege the Russians try to break out of Sevastopol. Battle of Inkerman. The Russian troops are great but the Russian leadership are terrible. The outbreak is beaten back. Winter comes and shuts both sides down for a bit. The British army was woefully unprepared for Russian winter. The French knew and had brought supplies. The British suffer.
Ultimately the allies take Sevastopol on September 9th 1855.
The british used iron sided barges with cannon. The first use of iron ships in combat sort of(not against other ships, just to shoot at land).
Russell the war correspondent had started off gung ho, but after the battles started to change his tone. He questioned the slaughter and uselessness. Photos were sent back of battlefields to the unknowing public. The medical system was atrocious. Photos of medical tents with stacks of arms and legs outfront. More people died from sickness, exposure, and medical treatment died than from combat. Almost 2-3 times more. The medical service was very unprepared for such conflict. They will have to change their ways.
Florence Nightingale had come in with her medical outfit that would become the red cross. The british army tried to keep her out, but she was rich and well connected. The doctors became very happy that she came. She could get supplies in weeks where it took months for the army to get it. Called the Angels of the Battlefield.
Public opinion on the war swings to anti war after seeing all the evidence. The politicians responded to public outcry and began to question why they were in the fight. The beginning of “splendid isolation.” England will stay out of European conflicts and interact only diplomatically. The Russians also withdraw from Europe. England will be distracted by their colonies instead of a semi peaceful Europe.
The whigs and the torries start to fall by the wayside. The former torries become the conservatives mostly the torries who had followed Robert Peele away from the torries and the whigs mostly became the Liberals. Gladstone goes with the Liberals and D’Israeli goes with the Conservatives.
Negotiations begin in Paris in 1856. Nicholas the first dies and his son Alexander the second takes over. The economy and army of Russia were in shambles. The allies didn’t really push the invasion of Russia. So the Russian situation wasn’t sooo bad.
The british want to invade Russia but the French know better. They say they will help the british if they will re-establish Poland after the war. This would piss off the german factions so the British backed down.
The four terms of the peace of paris that ended the Crimean war.
1)Russia had to give up their rights as protector of Wallachia and Moldavia.
2) Russia had to abandom its claim as protector of the orthodox people in the ottoman empire.
3) The straits conventions were reaffirmed. The Russians couldn’t have a naval presence in the Black Sea.
4) Free access to the Danube River for trade. No country could put tariffs or taxes on trade on the Danube River.
The british have to make changes in their officer corps, their medical and commissary corps. The British admiralty finally realizes that steam ships are here to stay. Steam ships couldn’t be held back by the wind. Navies all over the world start looking at iron armored ships. England now had to deal with war correspondents and public opinion.
After the Crimean war England goes into its splendid isolation. 1856 to about the 1890’s.
In the 1860’s when Bismarck makes his first move in german unification a british minister says they should get involved but he is shouted down.
The Crimean war broke the quadruple alliance from the congress of Vienna (made after waterloo.) Diplomacy was now not taking precedence over war.
Right after the war the British made the Victoria Cross as an award for valor for their troops. Some were backdated for the Crimean actions.
The Sepoy Mutiny (The Indian rebellion, the Mutiny etc)
The East Indian company had taken control of most of the area in India and Pakistan. At first they just had trading posts, but then they used their army to fight and take more territory. They expand through conquest and alliance.
Getting into the 1850’s the sepoys are the native soldiers who have served in the army of the East India company. Just before the rebellion there were ober 200,000 sepoys divided into three sections. Bombay,Madrass, and Bengal. They supported the 50,000 british soldiers. (4 to 1)
The Bengal army recruited from the higher castes (rajhput and Brahmins) while the other two recruited any castes.
The british were Christian and their missionaries were battling up against the Indian Gods. They wanted to “civilize” India. They isolated themselves from the Indians. The general service enlistment act of 1856. The Bengal army could only be used in areas where they could march to within a couple of days. The british start wanting to use them farther and farther. The general service enlistment act revoked the Bengal distance rule. The Bengals got mad.
The british transport the weapons for the Indians in grease. Some of the grease is cow, some is pigs. The 200,000 sepoys are muslim or hindu. So either will piss off the sepoys. The british at first didn’t really care. Some officers realized that this was a problem and told the factories to not pack them in grease. The sepoy’s realize that the grease was pig fat and cow fat. The cartridges however are still made with pig and cow fat. The sepoys have to bite the cartridge open. So they are ingesting taboo animals. When a solider stood up and refused service, the situation got more serious. The civilian sector was also angry at the british. The nobles of the Indian system, The rural landlords, and the peasants. The doctrine of lapse. If the landlord left then he loses his land. The Nobility had fled the armies and were mad that they lost their stuff. The Rural landlords lost a lot of land due to land reform and redistribution from the east india company. The peasants followed their leaders.
(The rebellion failed because they couldn’t maintain leadership. The disparate Indian groups hated each other.)
Mangow Pandey, 29 year old member of the British Bengal army. Angered by the British decides to rebel against his commanders. The local officer walks out and mangow shoots at him. He misses. He shoots at another officer and it hits his horse. The officers order the sepoys to stop that man. Most of the sepoys realize mangow is just high so they refuse. One soldier sheikh paltu jumps out and restrains mangow. The commander of the regiment who had refused to help was brought up on charges and executed. Paltu was promoted as the new commander. The rest of that battalion was stripped of their uniforms and sent home. They think they have been mistreated so they decide to kick it off. The British commander of the Bengal army, General Anson, realizes that the ruckus is being caused by the cartridges. He says that they no longer have to bite the cartridges. It doesn’t work.
It all kicks off in meerut in 1857. They think it was a spontaneous outbreak instead of a planned plot. It starts as a disagreement and turns into a full fledged revolt. of a planned plot. It starts as a disagreement and turns into a full fledged revolt.
1851-2
The only places that hadn’t really had a revolution were England and the Russians. England because of democracy and Russia because of iron force.
At this point a Bonaparte was elected to power in France. Everything was hunky dory until Bonaparte overthrew the French govt and named himself emperor. England’s foreign minister Lord Palmerson gave Bonaparte England’s full support without consulting his govt or Monarch. Queen Victoria “asked” Palmerson to resign. England wasn’t going to interfere with Napoleon the Third but didn’t like it. Palmerson was even tempered and experienced. The new Foreign Minister was now inexperienced. They sent mixed signals over Russia moving in among the Ottomans.
Karl Marx and Frederik Engels had been predicting war between Russia and the Ottomans. They saw that the Ottomans were getting much weaker and that England and France wouldn’t allow the Russians to take Ottoman territory.
The war became more inevitable because of the comedy of errors by the foreign ministries.
Napoleon the third was supported by The army, The church, and the Middle class. In exchange for this support Napoleon had to scratch their back. The church didn’t like the Second Republic and figured Napoleon the Third would be a better power source. French troops were protecting the Pope in Rome and they wanted the French Army to take Holy sites in the Middle East. The French had an excuse for this because during the time of the Holy Roman Empire the French and the Ottomans had joined together in alliance. Suleman had given the French control of the holy sites. During the years of upheaval they had lost track of this and the Orthodox church had taken control. Russia and France had beefs because Russia had been holding France back for many years. Russia was seen as the police force of Europe because they moved in to stop revolutions.
The Ottoman Turks had allowed the Russians to represent the Orthodox people in the middle east. When the Catholics come in and remove the Orthodox people from power the Orthodox people scream their heads off. Czar Nicholas is outraged and sends his minister to the Ottomans and tells them that if they don’t take that treaty back then the Russians will invade. The French and British ministers tell the Ottomans they will defend them from the Russians. The British minister, Hugh Rose, commanded an admiral to sail his fleet through the area. The admiral refused and Rose was replaced. A more diplomatic minister Lord Stratford Canning (soon Stratford Redcliff) was placed in Constantinople.
Napoleon sends a ship of the line into the Black sea which was a violation of the London Straits Convention. Nicholas in St. Petersburg is seeing a wavering Ottoman, A determined France, Mixed Signals from the British. He turns to Austria who he had lent 200,000 troops to put down the Hungarian revolution. He believes they will refuse any diplomatic push from the West and help the Russians. The Austrian minister Schwarzenburg is famous for saying “We will shock the world with our ingratitude.” Russia gives the Turks and ultimatum. Kick the Catholics out of power and put the Orthodox back in charge of the holy sites, or the Russians will take Wallachia and Moldavia. The Sultan refused and the Russians sent troops into those places. The Turk commander wins a few battles and in the caucus regions the Chechen Muslims held back the Russians with Turkish help.
The other powers are searching for a diplomatic end to the war because the war hasn’t really heated up.
The war is agreed to end by all the powers except by the Turks. They declare Jihad against the Russians. The war will go on. The Russians unleash their Black Seas Fleet. At the battle of Sinope the modern Russian fleet destroy the old ottoman fleet. The French and the British take this as an excuse to declare war on Russia. 28 march 1854. The British and French figure it will be a good old fashioned knock em up in the usual area. Until Austria decides to join in the fight. They get nervous about these armies in their vicinity. Nicholas is happy to fight the Turks and the British and French who were at the end of a long supply line. When the Austrians tell him to get out of Wallachia and Moldavia or they will move in with a quarter of a million troops. Nicholas moves his troops out posthaste. Now the usual battlefield is removed. The West decides to attack the Crimean Penninsula. The British fleets blockaded Russian shipping in the Baltic.
The combined Allied fleet moves into the Black Sea. The Russian fleet moves their ships back takes off the guns and sinks all the ships in the harbor to keep the Allies out of Sevastopol. The allies land at upitoria and march south down towards Sevastopol. Their first battle was at the Alme river. Lord Raglin was the Overall commander of the British forces. William Russell was there as one of the world’s first war correspondents. He writes back via the telegraph. Russell writes back patriotic words of victory.
Lord Raglin is getting towards senility. This highlights the point of the problems in the British Command. His men know he is senile but can do nothing. They defeat the Russians and the Russians move back towards Sevastopol. Sept 30, 1854 battle of Alme River is a victory.
The Battle of Balaclava- famous for two things. Positive- The thin red line. The 93rd Highlanders are marching and a whole brigade of Russian cavalry comes over the hill at them. The Highlanders have no time to form square. Thanks to Breech loading rifled muskets the Highlanders were able to put out a greater rate of fire. They held their line and smashed up the cavalry due to their rate of fire.
Negative- Charge of the Light Brigade. Lord Raglin sitting on a hill sees Russian positions and behind one the Russians are moving their heavy naval guns. Lord Lucan is given a very vague order to use his cavalry to take the guns. Lord Lucan gives the order to Lord Cardigan in command of the Light Horse. Cardigan and Lucan hate each other. Cardigan lines up his cavalry and begins to charge the hill. The Russians had artillery with enfilading fire. A captain tried to stop the madness and gets blown up. Cardigan goes faster and chases away the gunners. But the light cavalry had nothing to spike the guns. They returned with heavy casualties. The heavy cavalry was supposed to support them but they never did. Lucan is eventually recalled back to London as the villain. Cardigan is promoted and made a hero. It didn’t really hurt Lucan’s career though.
Out of this politicians finally see that idiots are running the British army. After the war they start to examine the way officers are promoted. They would end the system of buying commissions.
The battle of Balaclava ended with the British and French not following up on their victory. Russia is allowed to bring their forces back into Sevastopol. After a siege the Russians try to break out of Sevastopol. Battle of Inkerman. The Russian troops are great but the Russian leadership are terrible. The outbreak is beaten back. Winter comes and shuts both sides down for a bit. The British army was woefully unprepared for Russian winter. The French knew and had brought supplies. The British suffer.
Ultimately the allies take Sevastopol on September 9th 1855.
The british used iron sided barges with cannon. The first use of iron ships in combat sort of(not against other ships, just to shoot at land).
Russell the war correspondent had started off gung ho, but after the battles started to change his tone. He questioned the slaughter and uselessness. Photos were sent back of battlefields to the unknowing public. The medical system was atrocious. Photos of medical tents with stacks of arms and legs outfront. More people died from sickness, exposure, and medical treatment died than from combat. Almost 2-3 times more. The medical service was very unprepared for such conflict. They will have to change their ways.
Florence Nightingale had come in with her medical outfit that would become the red cross. The british army tried to keep her out, but she was rich and well connected. The doctors became very happy that she came. She could get supplies in weeks where it took months for the army to get it. Called the Angels of the Battlefield.
Public opinion on the war swings to anti war after seeing all the evidence. The politicians responded to public outcry and began to question why they were in the fight. The beginning of “splendid isolation.” England will stay out of European conflicts and interact only diplomatically. The Russians also withdraw from Europe. England will be distracted by their colonies instead of a semi peaceful Europe.
The whigs and the torries start to fall by the wayside. The former torries become the conservatives mostly the torries who had followed Robert Peele away from the torries and the whigs mostly became the Liberals. Gladstone goes with the Liberals and D’Israeli goes with the Conservatives.
Negotiations begin in Paris in 1856. Nicholas the first dies and his son Alexander the second takes over. The economy and army of Russia were in shambles. The allies didn’t really push the invasion of Russia. So the Russian situation wasn’t sooo bad.
The british want to invade Russia but the French know better. They say they will help the british if they will re-establish Poland after the war. This would piss off the german factions so the British backed down.
The four terms of the peace of paris that ended the Crimean war.
1)Russia had to give up their rights as protector of Wallachia and Moldavia.
2) Russia had to abandom its claim as protector of the orthodox people in the ottoman empire.
3) The straits conventions were reaffirmed. The Russians couldn’t have a naval presence in the Black Sea.
4) Free access to the Danube River for trade. No country could put tariffs or taxes on trade on the Danube River.
The british have to make changes in their officer corps, their medical and commissary corps. The British admiralty finally realizes that steam ships are here to stay. Steam ships couldn’t be held back by the wind. Navies all over the world start looking at iron armored ships. England now had to deal with war correspondents and public opinion.
After the Crimean war England goes into its splendid isolation. 1856 to about the 1890’s.
In the 1860’s when Bismarck makes his first move in german unification a british minister says they should get involved but he is shouted down.
The Crimean war broke the quadruple alliance from the congress of Vienna (made after waterloo.) Diplomacy was now not taking precedence over war.
Right after the war the British made the Victoria Cross as an award for valor for their troops. Some were backdated for the Crimean actions.
The Sepoy Mutiny (The Indian rebellion, the Mutiny etc)
The East Indian company had taken control of most of the area in India and Pakistan. At first they just had trading posts, but then they used their army to fight and take more territory. They expand through conquest and alliance.
Getting into the 1850’s the sepoys are the native soldiers who have served in the army of the East India company. Just before the rebellion there were ober 200,000 sepoys divided into three sections. Bombay,Madrass, and Bengal. They supported the 50,000 british soldiers. (4 to 1)
The Bengal army recruited from the higher castes (rajhput and Brahmins) while the other two recruited any castes.
The british were Christian and their missionaries were battling up against the Indian Gods. They wanted to “civilize” India. They isolated themselves from the Indians. The general service enlistment act of 1856. The Bengal army could only be used in areas where they could march to within a couple of days. The british start wanting to use them farther and farther. The general service enlistment act revoked the Bengal distance rule. The Bengals got mad.
The british transport the weapons for the Indians in grease. Some of the grease is cow, some is pigs. The 200,000 sepoys are muslim or hindu. So either will piss off the sepoys. The british at first didn’t really care. Some officers realized that this was a problem and told the factories to not pack them in grease. The sepoy’s realize that the grease was pig fat and cow fat. The cartridges however are still made with pig and cow fat. The sepoys have to bite the cartridge open. So they are ingesting taboo animals. When a solider stood up and refused service, the situation got more serious. The civilian sector was also angry at the british. The nobles of the Indian system, The rural landlords, and the peasants. The doctrine of lapse. If the landlord left then he loses his land. The Nobility had fled the armies and were mad that they lost their stuff. The Rural landlords lost a lot of land due to land reform and redistribution from the east india company. The peasants followed their leaders.
(The rebellion failed because they couldn’t maintain leadership. The disparate Indian groups hated each other.)
Mangow Pandey, 29 year old member of the British Bengal army. Angered by the British decides to rebel against his commanders. The local officer walks out and mangow shoots at him. He misses. He shoots at another officer and it hits his horse. The officers order the sepoys to stop that man. Most of the sepoys realize mangow is just high so they refuse. One soldier sheikh paltu jumps out and restrains mangow. The commander of the regiment who had refused to help was brought up on charges and executed. Paltu was promoted as the new commander. The rest of that battalion was stripped of their uniforms and sent home. They think they have been mistreated so they decide to kick it off. The British commander of the Bengal army, General Anson, realizes that the ruckus is being caused by the cartridges. He says that they no longer have to bite the cartridges. It doesn’t work.
It all kicks off in meerut in 1857. They think it was a spontaneous outbreak instead of a planned plot. It starts as a disagreement and turns into a full fledged revolt. of a planned plot. It starts as a disagreement and turns into a full fledged revolt.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Britsh History Study Guide For Test
Study Guide #1
Agricultural Revolution
Enclosure Act of 1801
Jethro Tull
Seed Drill
Joseph Foljambe
Rotherham plough
Andrew Meikle
Open field system
Thomas Newcomen
James Watt
James Hargreaves
Spinning wheel
Spinning jenny
Richard Arkwright
Water frame
Eli Whitney
Cotton gin
Peterloo massacre
“rotten boroughs”
Corn laws
Henry Hunt
Six acts
Great reform bill of 1832
Viscount Melbourne
Dic Penderyn
Lord Liverpool
Catholic emancipation act
George Canning
Castlereagh
Wellington
Sir Robert Peel (bobbies, peelers)
Viscount Goderich
Lord John Russell
Lord Grey
Opium wars
Greek Revolt
Eastern Question
Chartists
George IV
William IV
Queen Victoria
Lord William Napier
Crimean War
“The great game” (Colonialism)
Daniel O’Connell
Agricultural Revolution
Enclosure Act of 1801
Jethro Tull
Seed Drill
Joseph Foljambe
Rotherham plough
Andrew Meikle
Open field system
Thomas Newcomen
James Watt
James Hargreaves
Spinning wheel
Spinning jenny
Richard Arkwright
Water frame
Eli Whitney
Cotton gin
Peterloo massacre
“rotten boroughs”
Corn laws
Henry Hunt
Six acts
Great reform bill of 1832
Viscount Melbourne
Dic Penderyn
Lord Liverpool
Catholic emancipation act
George Canning
Castlereagh
Wellington
Sir Robert Peel (bobbies, peelers)
Viscount Goderich
Lord John Russell
Lord Grey
Opium wars
Greek Revolt
Eastern Question
Chartists
George IV
William IV
Queen Victoria
Lord William Napier
Crimean War
“The great game” (Colonialism)
Daniel O’Connell
Day Two Notes
(British police became known as bobbies or peelers because of Robert Peel who started the police force.)
British maintain lead in industry until they get outstripped. Have second industrial revolution to take back lead.
Great reform act of 1832(representation of the people act 1832) came about because people were complaining about lack of representation. At the time five people controlled over 50% of the votes in parliament. After the peterloo massacre and its ensuing chaos died down, Lord Liverpool the prime minister passes away. The new PM is Lord Grey. During the whole Napoleonic area the mindset of Europe was very conservative. No social issues were brought up. After that more reforms could be passed through.
Sir Robert Peel who created the first professional police force in Europe sets about to work on prison and insane asylum reform.
Nobody wants to work on election reform because it benefits the powerful. The whims of different monarchs had highly screwed up the voting system. Some cities had no votes while some empty land had votes. Voters had to pass property requirements as well as who could run for parliament. After many years of Labor keeping its head down and helping through the wars they start to get fed up.
658 members in the House of Commons, 513 were English or Welsh. The rest made up mostly from Scotland some from Ireland.
The Tudors franchised 70 burroughs, later monarchs disenfranchised 30 of those. The whole system was a mess.
The Duke of Norfolk owned 11 seats.
The torries led by wellington saw that a rigid unchanging system was more open to revolution. Decided that it should change a bit.
When King George IV died parliament was dissolved.
The new parliament was a battle between the torries and whigs.
The torries won election but Wellington told the people he wouldn’t change anything. His party revolted and Wellington was relieved of his Prime Ministership. Lord Grey came to power as a reformer.
The first reform bill would disenfranchise 60 small burroughs and cut the power of 46 more. These new seats were to be spread out to real areas. On the second vote of the bill, a record 608 members showed up. The vote passed 304-303. The speaker couldn’t vote. Parliamentarians stonewalled the bill.
Lord Grey asked the King to disband parliament again. He did and a new election was held. An overwhelming Whig majority took over. Lord Grey was prime minister again. The reform bill was reintroduced and finally passed with a majority. However, it now went to the House of Lords. They were mostly conservative Torries. They hated the bill, but it had great popular support. People hoped that many Torries wouldn’t vote against the people. The torries voted against the bill anyway. It lost by 41 votes. When the Lords rejected the bill, the people went crazy. Rioting spread in derby and Nottingham. Nottingham castle was set on fire. Disparate political groups formed the National Political Union. The government said they were illegal. The union persisted but tried to work with the govt to stop violence.
The whigs immediately voted confidence in Lord Grey and his Prime Ministership. They asked the king to make parliament take a break. He did and a while later they brought the bill again. This was called Prorogueing.
The whigs compromised and changed the bill a little. They took out the part where parliament seats would be lost. The opposition did all they could to stop it. The bill passed the House of Commons again, this time by a larger majority. The bill goes to the House of Lords, they use amendments to try to change and kill the bill. Lord Grey and his whigs decide they need to get more whigs voted to the House of Lords. Only the king could appoint people to the House of Lords. William doesn’t want to do that. So Lord Grey resigns in protest. The king turns to Wellington, whose extreme views usually lost him the majority. Wellington couldn’t get the majority. The King turns back to Lord Grey and agrees to appoint more people to the House of Lords. However, the king secretly writes a letter to the Torries and tells them to wake the hell up and pass the bill to avoid revolution or worse getting whigs in the House of Lords. The Torries see the writing on the wall and finally abstain on the vote. This lets the bill pass and the King doesn’t have to put more Whigs into the House of Lords. The Bill became law.
The reform bill was a big step in the right direction. In total the act disenfranchised 143 and brought in another 135 seats in England and Wales. The extra eight were spread out to areas to up their existing numbers. The act also extended the franchise, so more people could vote. This was believed to have extended the franchise by half a million. This almost doubled the number of voters.
The act also instituted voter registration, set up a court for voting disputes, limited voting to two days, and set up multiple voting places in counties.
Scottish and Irish reform acts shuffled the available seats in those countries. 8 in Scotland and 5 in Ireland.
Bribery and corruption were still in place. Despite the reforms the “good old boy” network was still in place. The same men were still being voted in.
Most of the rotten boroughs that were disenfranchised were in torrie hands. This raised the power of the whigs slightly.
The great reform bill was limited mostly to the middle class.
-The Catholic Emancipation Act-
Parliament passed the Act of Union in 1800. This brought all four nations under one banner. Now that Ireland was in Britain they would need representation. There was a large representation of Irish in the Brit army.
Daniel O’Connell started a campaign to repeal the act of union unless catholics were emancipated. He was elected to parliament in Clare even though he as a catholic was unable to take his seat.
The Irish situation found strange allies in Wellington and Peele. The two worked on fixing the problem of Catholic Emancipation.
Catholic Emancipation act of 1829. Removed restrictions on voting for catholics. However, they raised the bar for who could vote. They had to own or rent property of ten pounds.
This also didn’t let the Catholics out of the mandatory 10% tithe for the Church of England.
The aftermath of the great reform bill is seen in the group called the Chartists.
They brought out the People’s Charter.
Peak of power from 1838-1848 or abouts. They set up Workers Unions for the disenfranchised workers.
They were supported by approximately 120 newspapers. The people’s charter of 1838 was a list of six requests that workers wanted from parliament.
1- Universal male suffrage for men over 21 of sound mind and not in jail
2- Secret ballots
3- No property qualification to hold office in the House of Commons
4- Wanted members of parliament to be paid (at this point it was not a paid position)
5- Equal constituencies (every member of parliament represented the same amount of people, everything would be divided up equally) ((This would shift national power from the country estates to the cities))
6- Annual Parliaments- A new parliament vote every year (This would help check bribery) ((At this point a parliament member held power for up to seven years at a time))
The radicals didn’t support it because it was too moderate, the conservatives didn’t support it because it was too radical. The charter however had mass popular support.
A vast crowd gathered in Lancashire to support the bill. The chartists set up a committee to gather signatures to show the support of the bill. The leaders of the chartists take great pains to show the govt how peaceful and law abiding they are. However, soon the group is infiltrated by radicals who try to subvert it.
The group sends the charter to Parliament with a million signatures. Parliament refuses to look at it.
The workers became violent again. Rumors of a Military uprising spread around.
The Newport rising, at the westgate hotel, the chartists tried to revolt but were put down.
In 1842 the chartists tried again this time with over 3 million signatures. Once again Parliament refused to read the charter. Workers went on strike in 14 English and 8 Scottish counties. It only lasted a few days. The chartist leaders were arrested along with many others. The lower ranks were jailed or transported. The leaders mostly weren’t convicted.
Some members of the Church of England got involved with the chartists, some didn’t.
Revolutions were spreading across Europe. The British govt was getting worried. In 1849 the Chartists set up a new convention. Anywhere from 15-300,000 people showed up (depending on who you listened to) The chartists promised the govt that it would be peaceful.
The Govt deputized 100,000 special constables and the Army came prepared. The Chartists had a peaceful meeting and went home. In other areas of the country chartists did revolt but just in riots.
Parliament passed new laws banning large meetings. The chartists decided to revolt but it didn’t work. The last meeting of the Chartists was in 1848. Other groups took their momentum and were able to do more.
Of the six demands the Chartists made the only one not passed by the end of the 19th century was the annual parliament.
British maintain lead in industry until they get outstripped. Have second industrial revolution to take back lead.
Great reform act of 1832(representation of the people act 1832) came about because people were complaining about lack of representation. At the time five people controlled over 50% of the votes in parliament. After the peterloo massacre and its ensuing chaos died down, Lord Liverpool the prime minister passes away. The new PM is Lord Grey. During the whole Napoleonic area the mindset of Europe was very conservative. No social issues were brought up. After that more reforms could be passed through.
Sir Robert Peel who created the first professional police force in Europe sets about to work on prison and insane asylum reform.
Nobody wants to work on election reform because it benefits the powerful. The whims of different monarchs had highly screwed up the voting system. Some cities had no votes while some empty land had votes. Voters had to pass property requirements as well as who could run for parliament. After many years of Labor keeping its head down and helping through the wars they start to get fed up.
658 members in the House of Commons, 513 were English or Welsh. The rest made up mostly from Scotland some from Ireland.
The Tudors franchised 70 burroughs, later monarchs disenfranchised 30 of those. The whole system was a mess.
The Duke of Norfolk owned 11 seats.
The torries led by wellington saw that a rigid unchanging system was more open to revolution. Decided that it should change a bit.
When King George IV died parliament was dissolved.
The new parliament was a battle between the torries and whigs.
The torries won election but Wellington told the people he wouldn’t change anything. His party revolted and Wellington was relieved of his Prime Ministership. Lord Grey came to power as a reformer.
The first reform bill would disenfranchise 60 small burroughs and cut the power of 46 more. These new seats were to be spread out to real areas. On the second vote of the bill, a record 608 members showed up. The vote passed 304-303. The speaker couldn’t vote. Parliamentarians stonewalled the bill.
Lord Grey asked the King to disband parliament again. He did and a new election was held. An overwhelming Whig majority took over. Lord Grey was prime minister again. The reform bill was reintroduced and finally passed with a majority. However, it now went to the House of Lords. They were mostly conservative Torries. They hated the bill, but it had great popular support. People hoped that many Torries wouldn’t vote against the people. The torries voted against the bill anyway. It lost by 41 votes. When the Lords rejected the bill, the people went crazy. Rioting spread in derby and Nottingham. Nottingham castle was set on fire. Disparate political groups formed the National Political Union. The government said they were illegal. The union persisted but tried to work with the govt to stop violence.
The whigs immediately voted confidence in Lord Grey and his Prime Ministership. They asked the king to make parliament take a break. He did and a while later they brought the bill again. This was called Prorogueing.
The whigs compromised and changed the bill a little. They took out the part where parliament seats would be lost. The opposition did all they could to stop it. The bill passed the House of Commons again, this time by a larger majority. The bill goes to the House of Lords, they use amendments to try to change and kill the bill. Lord Grey and his whigs decide they need to get more whigs voted to the House of Lords. Only the king could appoint people to the House of Lords. William doesn’t want to do that. So Lord Grey resigns in protest. The king turns to Wellington, whose extreme views usually lost him the majority. Wellington couldn’t get the majority. The King turns back to Lord Grey and agrees to appoint more people to the House of Lords. However, the king secretly writes a letter to the Torries and tells them to wake the hell up and pass the bill to avoid revolution or worse getting whigs in the House of Lords. The Torries see the writing on the wall and finally abstain on the vote. This lets the bill pass and the King doesn’t have to put more Whigs into the House of Lords. The Bill became law.
The reform bill was a big step in the right direction. In total the act disenfranchised 143 and brought in another 135 seats in England and Wales. The extra eight were spread out to areas to up their existing numbers. The act also extended the franchise, so more people could vote. This was believed to have extended the franchise by half a million. This almost doubled the number of voters.
The act also instituted voter registration, set up a court for voting disputes, limited voting to two days, and set up multiple voting places in counties.
Scottish and Irish reform acts shuffled the available seats in those countries. 8 in Scotland and 5 in Ireland.
Bribery and corruption were still in place. Despite the reforms the “good old boy” network was still in place. The same men were still being voted in.
Most of the rotten boroughs that were disenfranchised were in torrie hands. This raised the power of the whigs slightly.
The great reform bill was limited mostly to the middle class.
-The Catholic Emancipation Act-
Parliament passed the Act of Union in 1800. This brought all four nations under one banner. Now that Ireland was in Britain they would need representation. There was a large representation of Irish in the Brit army.
Daniel O’Connell started a campaign to repeal the act of union unless catholics were emancipated. He was elected to parliament in Clare even though he as a catholic was unable to take his seat.
The Irish situation found strange allies in Wellington and Peele. The two worked on fixing the problem of Catholic Emancipation.
Catholic Emancipation act of 1829. Removed restrictions on voting for catholics. However, they raised the bar for who could vote. They had to own or rent property of ten pounds.
This also didn’t let the Catholics out of the mandatory 10% tithe for the Church of England.
The aftermath of the great reform bill is seen in the group called the Chartists.
They brought out the People’s Charter.
Peak of power from 1838-1848 or abouts. They set up Workers Unions for the disenfranchised workers.
They were supported by approximately 120 newspapers. The people’s charter of 1838 was a list of six requests that workers wanted from parliament.
1- Universal male suffrage for men over 21 of sound mind and not in jail
2- Secret ballots
3- No property qualification to hold office in the House of Commons
4- Wanted members of parliament to be paid (at this point it was not a paid position)
5- Equal constituencies (every member of parliament represented the same amount of people, everything would be divided up equally) ((This would shift national power from the country estates to the cities))
6- Annual Parliaments- A new parliament vote every year (This would help check bribery) ((At this point a parliament member held power for up to seven years at a time))
The radicals didn’t support it because it was too moderate, the conservatives didn’t support it because it was too radical. The charter however had mass popular support.
A vast crowd gathered in Lancashire to support the bill. The chartists set up a committee to gather signatures to show the support of the bill. The leaders of the chartists take great pains to show the govt how peaceful and law abiding they are. However, soon the group is infiltrated by radicals who try to subvert it.
The group sends the charter to Parliament with a million signatures. Parliament refuses to look at it.
The workers became violent again. Rumors of a Military uprising spread around.
The Newport rising, at the westgate hotel, the chartists tried to revolt but were put down.
In 1842 the chartists tried again this time with over 3 million signatures. Once again Parliament refused to read the charter. Workers went on strike in 14 English and 8 Scottish counties. It only lasted a few days. The chartist leaders were arrested along with many others. The lower ranks were jailed or transported. The leaders mostly weren’t convicted.
Some members of the Church of England got involved with the chartists, some didn’t.
Revolutions were spreading across Europe. The British govt was getting worried. In 1849 the Chartists set up a new convention. Anywhere from 15-300,000 people showed up (depending on who you listened to) The chartists promised the govt that it would be peaceful.
The Govt deputized 100,000 special constables and the Army came prepared. The Chartists had a peaceful meeting and went home. In other areas of the country chartists did revolt but just in riots.
Parliament passed new laws banning large meetings. The chartists decided to revolt but it didn’t work. The last meeting of the Chartists was in 1848. Other groups took their momentum and were able to do more.
Of the six demands the Chartists made the only one not passed by the end of the 19th century was the annual parliament.
Day One Notes
Agricultural Revolution
Farmers used an open field system for centuries up til this time. Everyone worked the same land and reaped the benefits. They also used the three field system, in which crops were rotated. One field would have a crop, a second field another, and the third field would lie fallow to rest.
Farmers started to enclose their land and cut off the age old grazing rights of others. Mechanized means of farming led to more land being enclosed. Small farmers lost rights as bigger land owners took over. The church at first fought against land enclosures because of the amount of newly poor it was creating. These people would move to the cities to survive. This led to the new factory systems having the workers they needed.
The power source for these first factories was water. They were built near rivers so that wheels could power the machines.
When steam machines took over they needed coal.
Coal mines got bigger and deeper which led to them filling with water. Then they used steam engines to drain the mines.
The spinning jenny, water frame, and spinning mule were all spinning wheels.
Yarn was made more efficiently which led to a bigger need for cotton. Cotton gin stepped in.
Another factor of industrial revolution was the surplus capital available in England. England was wealthy, had power, favorable government, and had surplus workers.
Transportation was the fifth requirement for the revolution. Canals were built to transport goods from the riverine factories.
The sixth factor was the glut of markets available. England had merchants and colonies to buy their goods. The English Merchant Marine could transport and protect the goods to their intended markets.
With all of these things, England became the first industrialized nation in the world. Along with the primary economy.
England was the one country that Napoleon couldnt beat. They were too strong and had the channel to help defend them. Napoleon did his best to strangle the English economy, to slim effect. When Napoleon invaded Spain, England became free to trade with south america. After the war, England used its naval power to keep Spain from regripping power among its colonies. This led to South American revolutions.
During the war English labor had agreed not to strike or agitate. After the war many british troops became unemployed. They moved to the cities to get jobs. However, with manufacturing needs lowered the factories were cutting jobs and wages.
Labor started to agitate because the cost of living was rising while the wagers were being slashed.
Corn Laws- Govt wanted to protect british agriculture. You had to buy British food or pay high tariffs for cheaper foreign food. This led to calls for political reform. By 1819 political pressure had come to a head. Political disgruntlement led to the forming of the Manchester Patriotic Union.
The head of the union, Joseph Johnson, invited radical Henry Hunt to chair a political rally in Manchester. A letter from Johnson to Hunt, containing revolutionary speak out of context, fell into the hands of the govt. They took it out of context and feared insurrection.
The Manchester Patriotic Union wanted to put a good face on the working class. They were seen by the upper classes as louts. They emphasized good behavior and banned weapons.
Sixty to Eighty thousand people attended the meeting. To keep the gathering orderly, the attendees were made to practice marching. The govt saw this as an army training for insurrection. The authorities called in the Army and special constables. General Bing showed up with cavalry, infantry, and his artillery.
The 16th of august turned out to be a race day. Bing had horses in the race, so he left command to his adjutant. The govt decided to arrest Hunt and Johnson.
The Yeomanry were inexperienced militia drawn from the dregs of the Torrie loyalists. They were young, dumb, and ready for a fight.
The crowd hugely outnumbered the militia and they were pushed from the field.
William Hulton, the chairman of the magistrates, issued warrants for the arrest of Hunt and Johnson.
The yeomanry were very drunk and started pushing into the crowd on horseback. The yeomanry got stuck in the crowd and started to swing their swords. The crowd panicked from being attacked. The Hussars were sent in to "save" the yeomanry. The crowds were being pushed into the bayonets of the infantry. It seems that the yeomanry was deliberately attacking women. 168 of the casualties were women, way out of proportion.
This became known as the "Peterloo" massacre. The Hussars had fought at waterloo, and the massacre was at st. peters field. Hence Peter-Loo.
The effect of Peterloo was a crackdown on radicals. They were charged with sedition and transportation. The govt feared armed rebellion from the poor they were oppressing.
1819
The Six Acts- New legislation- any meeting of radicals was meant as an overt act of treason. Newspapers were gagged and the poor were stomped on.
1-Training prevention act- No more marching for workers. Violators were transported.
2- Seizure of Arms Act- Warrantless search and seizures on private property.
3- Misdemeanor Act- Reduced judicial processes to make it easier to jail dissidents.
4- Seditious Meeting Prevention Act- Any meeting of 50 or more people had to have magisterial approval.
5- Blasphemous and Seditious Libel Act- Toughened existing laws for seditious writings. 12-14 years in australia.
6- Newspaper and Stamp Duties Act- Newspaper and Opinion papers both have to pay for stamps to continue operation. Before, opinion papers were exempt. Newspapers also had to post bonds to show they would behave.
Farmers used an open field system for centuries up til this time. Everyone worked the same land and reaped the benefits. They also used the three field system, in which crops were rotated. One field would have a crop, a second field another, and the third field would lie fallow to rest.
Farmers started to enclose their land and cut off the age old grazing rights of others. Mechanized means of farming led to more land being enclosed. Small farmers lost rights as bigger land owners took over. The church at first fought against land enclosures because of the amount of newly poor it was creating. These people would move to the cities to survive. This led to the new factory systems having the workers they needed.
The power source for these first factories was water. They were built near rivers so that wheels could power the machines.
When steam machines took over they needed coal.
Coal mines got bigger and deeper which led to them filling with water. Then they used steam engines to drain the mines.
The spinning jenny, water frame, and spinning mule were all spinning wheels.
Yarn was made more efficiently which led to a bigger need for cotton. Cotton gin stepped in.
Another factor of industrial revolution was the surplus capital available in England. England was wealthy, had power, favorable government, and had surplus workers.
Transportation was the fifth requirement for the revolution. Canals were built to transport goods from the riverine factories.
The sixth factor was the glut of markets available. England had merchants and colonies to buy their goods. The English Merchant Marine could transport and protect the goods to their intended markets.
With all of these things, England became the first industrialized nation in the world. Along with the primary economy.
England was the one country that Napoleon couldnt beat. They were too strong and had the channel to help defend them. Napoleon did his best to strangle the English economy, to slim effect. When Napoleon invaded Spain, England became free to trade with south america. After the war, England used its naval power to keep Spain from regripping power among its colonies. This led to South American revolutions.
During the war English labor had agreed not to strike or agitate. After the war many british troops became unemployed. They moved to the cities to get jobs. However, with manufacturing needs lowered the factories were cutting jobs and wages.
Labor started to agitate because the cost of living was rising while the wagers were being slashed.
Corn Laws- Govt wanted to protect british agriculture. You had to buy British food or pay high tariffs for cheaper foreign food. This led to calls for political reform. By 1819 political pressure had come to a head. Political disgruntlement led to the forming of the Manchester Patriotic Union.
The head of the union, Joseph Johnson, invited radical Henry Hunt to chair a political rally in Manchester. A letter from Johnson to Hunt, containing revolutionary speak out of context, fell into the hands of the govt. They took it out of context and feared insurrection.
The Manchester Patriotic Union wanted to put a good face on the working class. They were seen by the upper classes as louts. They emphasized good behavior and banned weapons.
Sixty to Eighty thousand people attended the meeting. To keep the gathering orderly, the attendees were made to practice marching. The govt saw this as an army training for insurrection. The authorities called in the Army and special constables. General Bing showed up with cavalry, infantry, and his artillery.
The 16th of august turned out to be a race day. Bing had horses in the race, so he left command to his adjutant. The govt decided to arrest Hunt and Johnson.
The Yeomanry were inexperienced militia drawn from the dregs of the Torrie loyalists. They were young, dumb, and ready for a fight.
The crowd hugely outnumbered the militia and they were pushed from the field.
William Hulton, the chairman of the magistrates, issued warrants for the arrest of Hunt and Johnson.
The yeomanry were very drunk and started pushing into the crowd on horseback. The yeomanry got stuck in the crowd and started to swing their swords. The crowd panicked from being attacked. The Hussars were sent in to "save" the yeomanry. The crowds were being pushed into the bayonets of the infantry. It seems that the yeomanry was deliberately attacking women. 168 of the casualties were women, way out of proportion.
This became known as the "Peterloo" massacre. The Hussars had fought at waterloo, and the massacre was at st. peters field. Hence Peter-Loo.
The effect of Peterloo was a crackdown on radicals. They were charged with sedition and transportation. The govt feared armed rebellion from the poor they were oppressing.
1819
The Six Acts- New legislation- any meeting of radicals was meant as an overt act of treason. Newspapers were gagged and the poor were stomped on.
1-Training prevention act- No more marching for workers. Violators were transported.
2- Seizure of Arms Act- Warrantless search and seizures on private property.
3- Misdemeanor Act- Reduced judicial processes to make it easier to jail dissidents.
4- Seditious Meeting Prevention Act- Any meeting of 50 or more people had to have magisterial approval.
5- Blasphemous and Seditious Libel Act- Toughened existing laws for seditious writings. 12-14 years in australia.
6- Newspaper and Stamp Duties Act- Newspaper and Opinion papers both have to pay for stamps to continue operation. Before, opinion papers were exempt. Newspapers also had to post bonds to show they would behave.
Day One Guide
Agricultural Revolution
Open Field System
General Enclosure Act (1801)
---------------------------------------------------
Jethro Tull- Seed Drill
Joseph Foljambe- Rotherham Plough (1730)
Andrew Meikle- Threshing Machine (1786)
John Fowler- Steam Engine (1850's - 1860's)
Thomas Newcomen- Atmospheric Engine (1712)
James Watt- Improved Atmospheric Engine (1712)
James Hargreaves- Spinning Jenny (1764)
Richard Arkwright- Water Frame (1771)
Samuel Crompton- Spinning Mule (1779
Eli Whitney- Cotton Gin (1793)
----------------------------------------------------
Peterloo Massacre (16th August 1819)
St. Peters field
Manchester
Manchester Patriotic Union
15th Hussars
Cheshire Yeomanry
Henry Hunt
Joseph Johnson
Open Field System
General Enclosure Act (1801)
---------------------------------------------------
Jethro Tull- Seed Drill
Joseph Foljambe- Rotherham Plough (1730)
Andrew Meikle- Threshing Machine (1786)
John Fowler- Steam Engine (1850's - 1860's)
Thomas Newcomen- Atmospheric Engine (1712)
James Watt- Improved Atmospheric Engine (1712)
James Hargreaves- Spinning Jenny (1764)
Richard Arkwright- Water Frame (1771)
Samuel Crompton- Spinning Mule (1779
Eli Whitney- Cotton Gin (1793)
----------------------------------------------------
Peterloo Massacre (16th August 1819)
St. Peters field
Manchester
Manchester Patriotic Union
15th Hussars
Cheshire Yeomanry
Henry Hunt
Joseph Johnson
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