Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Protest in
Britain
1800-1914
- The Luddites
- When?
- 1811-1817
- Who?
- People in the Midlands that
worked in the knitting industry
- Why?
- Factory workers brought in new
machines so the workers were no
longer needed
- Machines made poorer
quality product but were
cheaper
- Their jobs and way of
life were threatened
- At the same time people were losing
jobs food prices were also increasing
- Increased poverty and
people unable to support
and provide for their
families
- They were unable to
vote for change
- Ultimately wanted revolution
- What?
- They attacked the
machines that had
replaced them
- In 1812 it was made a captial offence
to wreck a machine
- Led by 'General
Ned Ludd'
- Soldiers brought in to
protect the factories and
machines
- Luddites fought with soldiers
- Threatened and
attacked bosses
- Tolpuddle Martyrs
- Who?
- Group of farm
labourers from
Tolpuddle, Dorset
- Why?
- Already low wages were
being cut
- High food prices
- Poverty
- Influenced by
Captain Swing riots 1830
- When?
- 1833-1836
- What?
- George Loveless set up a
trade union in Tolpuddle
- The Friendly Society of
Agricultural Labourers
- Strikes were banned but the
Trade Unions Act 1825 made
trade unions legal
- The members swore
the the society's rules
- When local magistry heard
they obtianed the approval of
Home Secretary Lord
Melbourne to arrest them
- Huge fear of riots
and revolution
- Arrested for
taking an
'Unlawful Oath'
- Sentenced to
minimum 7
years
transportation
- Only
served 3
years
- Received
unfair trial
- One month after the trial a procession of 35 unions
marched to Whitehall to give a 200000 signature
petitions to Lord Melbourne but he refused
- Rebecca Riots
- Who?
- Farmers in Wales who dressed
as women to hide their identity
- Why?
- Tolls
- The Turnpike
Trust added tolls
on to gates
- This heavily
impacted farmers
going to and from
the market selling
produce
- Used money to
add more gates
- Tithes
- Money paid
to the Church
of England
- Most welsh farmers
were metheodist or
baptist and so tithes
didn't benefit them
- Poverty
- Only had small farms
- Income of £180 a year
- Rates, tolls, tithes,
wages and rent left
them with £50
- Rates
- Was a tax for the poor u sed to
build workhouses - where
unemployed/ unable to work
went - in England
- No benefit
for them
- What?
- Started to attack gates
and the Turnpike Trust
- 1843 they turned on other targets -
e.g farmers with more than one
farm, fathers who deserted families
and anyone the community
disproved of
- Juries were afraid to convict
rioters as they had become
enforcers of community feelings
- Sir Robert Peel had tolls
and tithes reduced for
farmers and more welsh
magistrates appointed
- When?
- 1839-1844
- Match Girls
- Who?
- Teenage girls and women that
lived in poverty in East London
and worked at Bryant and May
Match-making Works
- When?
- 1888
- Why?
- Long hours and low pay
- Fined for petty offences,
asked for permission to use
toilet, sometimes beaten,
health risks - red
phosphorous stained skin and
'phossy jaw' was fatal bone
cancer
- Clementina Black found out
about the conditions and tried
to encourage the women to
join trade unions
- Clemetina gave a talk to the London Fabian
Society which took Annie Besant's interest.
She then interviewed workers and published
an article
- What?
- After Annie's article Mr Bryant denied the claims and made
his workers sign a paper saying they were happy to work,
those who refused were fired. That caused 200 women to
leave work and go to Annie's office.
- Advised by Clementina, Besant set up
the Union of Match Workers and soon
they were all striking. They were
supported by the salvation army,
newspapers and received strike pay
- The Suffragettes
(WSPU)
- When?
- 1897-1814
- Who?
- Radical
women's rights
group
- Why?
- Women were treated as the
lesser gender
- Men thought the
woman's role was in
the home
- Was thought women were not
rational and so incapable to
make big decisions
- THE VOTE
- Policians thought you
should own a home to
get the vote
- Suffragists
(NUWSS) - the
peaceful protesters -
were not achieving a
lot with their methods
- What?
- Smashed windows,
fires, bombed a
politician's house, went
on hunger strike etc.
- Cat and Mouse Act - when
suffragettes went on hunger
strike now, instead of force
feeding them the women were
released and re-arrested once
they were stronger
- Emily Davidson
became a martyr for
the suffragettes during the 1913 Derby
- No vote until 1918