Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 January 2014
Histories of Chartism have tended to emphasize the hegemony of respectability within the movement, and with histories of the popular press have seen the 1830s as a decisive break with older radical traditions of sexual libertarianism, bawdy political culture, and a satirical, sometimes obscene print culture. However, the basis of this position is a partial reading of the evidence. Work on London Chartists has emphasized their moralistic politics and publications at the expense of their rich populist and satirical press and the clear survival of piracy and romantic literature well into the Chartist period. The neglect of an important early leader, Henry Vincent, has meant the bawdy, sensual, and sometimes scatological letters he sent to his cousin in London have been overlooked as a source on the moral life of the Chartist generation. This article will address this by studying Vincent's letters in the context of London's populist press, particularly the work of his friends John Cleave and Henry Hetherington. Vincent's humour and attitude towards sexuality clearly reflect a broader tendency in London radicalism, while his own efforts as a newspaper editor in Bath indicate that acerbic humour was an important aspect not just of Chartism's political critique, but of its appeal to the provincial working class.
I am grateful to Julie-Marie Strange, Bertrand Taithe, Michael Sanders, attendees at Chartism Day 2012, the postgraduate community at Manchester, and anonymous referees for the Historical Journal for feedback on various forms of this work.
1 Labour History Archive and Study Centre (LHASC), People's History Museum, Manchester, Henry Vincent Archive: LP/VIN/1/1/34, Vincent to Minikin, 2 Sept. 1840.
2 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/33, Vincent to Minikin, 11 Aug. 1840.
3 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/6, Vincent to Minikin, 18 June 1837.
4 Ashton, Owen, ‘The Western Vindicator and early Chartism’, in Allen, Joan and Ashton, Owen, eds., Papers for the people: a study of the Chartist press (London, 2005), pp. 54–81Google Scholar.
5 For the short biography written soon after his death, see Dorling, William, Henry Vincent: a biographical sketch (London, 1879)Google Scholar. For shorter articles, see Harrison, Brian, ‘Vincent, Henry’, in Bellamy, J. M. and Saville, J., eds., Dictionary of labour biography (London, 1972)Google Scholar; Nicholson, Albert, ‘Vincent, Henry (1813–1878)’, Oxford dictionary of national biography (ODNB); Western Vindicator, 25 May 1839Google Scholar. See also Harrison, Brian ‘Teetotal Chartism’, History, 58 (1973), pp. 193–203CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
6 Crossick, Geoffrey, ‘The labour aristocracy and its values: a study of mid-Victorian Kentish London’, Victorian Studies, 19 (1976), pp. 301–28Google Scholar; Crossick, Geoffrey, An artisan elite in Victorian society: Kentish London, 1840–1880 (London, 1978)Google Scholar; Harrison, Brian, Drink and the Victorians: the temperance question in England, 1815–1872 (London, 1971)Google Scholar; Leventhal, F. M., Respectable radical: George Howell and Victorian class politics (Cambridge, 1971)Google Scholar; Thompson, F. M. L., The rise of respectable society; a social history of Victorian Britain, 1830–1900 (London, 1988)Google Scholar.
7 Clark, Anna, The struggle for the breeches: gender and the making of the British working class (London, 1990), p. 220Google Scholar; idem, ‘The rhetoric of Chartist domesticity: gender, language and class in the 1830s and 1840s’, Journal of British Studies, 31 (1992), pp. 62–88CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
8 Schwarzkopf, Jutta, Women in the Chartist movement (London, 1991), pp. 222–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
9 Mason, Michael, The making of Victorian sexual attitudes (Oxford, 1994), p. 124CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Harrison, ‘Teetotal Chartism’, and Harrison, Brian and Hollis, Patricia, ‘Chartism, liberalism and the life of Robert Lowery’, English Historical Review, 82 (1967), pp. 503–35CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
10 Hendrix, Richard, ‘Popular humor and “The Black Dwarf”’, Journal of British Studies, 16 (1976), pp. 108–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gatrell, Vic, City of laughter: sex and satire in eighteenth-century London (London, 2007)Google Scholar.
11 Sanders, Mike, The poetry of Chartism: aesthetics, politics, history (Cambridge, 2009)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Scheckner, Peter, An anthology of Chartist poetry: poetry of the British working class, 1830s–1850s (London, 1989)Google Scholar; Haywood, Ian, ed., Chartist fiction: Ernest Jones, Woman's wrongs (Aldershot, 2001)Google Scholar; Ledger, Sally, ‘Chartist aesthetics in the mid-nineteenth century: Ernest Jones, a novelist of the people’, Nineteenth-Century Literature, 57 (2002), pp. 31–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vicinus, Martha, The industrial muse: a study of nineteenth-century British working-class poetry (London, 1974)Google Scholar.
12 Nicholson, Bob, ‘Jonathon's jokes’, Media History, 18 (2012), pp. 33–49CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 35.
13 McCalman, Iain, Radical underworld: prophets, revolutionaries, and pornographers in London, 1795–1840 (Cambridge, 1988)Google Scholar; idem, ‘Unrespectable radicalism: infidels and pornography in early nineteenth-century London’ Past and Present, 104 (1984), pp. 74–110.
14 McCalman, Radical underworld, pp. 204–37.
15 Ibid., p. 235.
16 For more on Vincent's generation of compositors, see Howe, Eric, The London compositor: documents relating to wages, working conditions and customs of the London printing trade, 1785–1900 (London, 1947)Google Scholar; Duffy, Patrick, The skilled compositor, 1850–1914: an aristocrat amongst working men (Aldershot, 2000)Google Scholar.
17 Address and rules of the London Working Men's Association (London, 1836), p. 2.
18 Harrison, ‘Teetotal Chartism’, p. 41.
19 Prothero, Iowerth, ‘Chartism in London’, Past and Present, 44 (1969), pp. 76–105CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Thompson, Dorothy, The Chartists: popular politics in the industrial revolution (New York, NY, 1984)Google Scholar, p. 3.
20 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/3, Vincent to Minikin, 4 Sept. 1837.
21 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/10, Vincent to Minikin, 26 Aug. 1838.
22 Gillis, John R., For better, for worse: British marriages, 1600 to the present (Oxford, 1985), pp. 175–9Google Scholar.
23 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/15, Vincent to Minikin, 21 May 1839.
24 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/16, Vincent to Minikin, 1 June 1839.
25 Mason, Michael, The making of Victorian sexuality (Oxford, 1994), pp. 89–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Walkowitz, Judith, Prostitution, and Victorian society: women, class and the state (Cambridge, 1980)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, p. 26.
26 Walkowitz, Prostitution and Victorian society, p. 22; Hudson, Derek, Munby man of two worlds: the life and diaries of Arthur J. Munby, 1828–1910 (London, 1972), pp. 40–1Google Scholar; Walkowitz, Judith, ‘Going public: shopping, street harassment, and streetwalking in late-Victorian London’, Representations, 62 (1998), pp. 1–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Nord, Deborah Epstein, Walking the Victorian streets: women, representation, and the city (London, 1995)Google Scholar.
27 Walkowitz, Judith, Cities of dreadful delight: narratives of sexual danger in late-Victorian London (London, 1992), pp. 21–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
28 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/3, Vincent to Minikin, 4 Sept. 1837.
29 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/10, Vincent to Minikin, 26 Aug. 1838.
30 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/14, Vincent to Minikin, 14 May 1839.
31 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/15, Vincent to Minikin, 2 Oct. 1838.
32 Gammage, Robert, History of the Chartist movement (London, 1976), p. 11Google Scholar.
33 Thompson, The Chartists, p. 133.
34 Schwarzkopf, Women in the chartist movement, pp. 222–6.
35 Thompson, The Chartists, pp. 225–6.
36 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/12, Vincent to Minkin, 2 Oct. 1838.
37 Thompson, The Chartists, p. 145; Chase, Malcolm, ‘“Resolved in defiance of fool and of knave”?: Chartism, children and conflict’, in Birch, David and Llewellyn, Mark, eds., Conflict and difference in nineteenth-century literature (Basingstoke, 2010)Google Scholar.
38 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/11, Vincent to Minikin, 23 Sept. 1838.
39 On the symbolism of clothing, see Novickas, Katrina, “That sash will hang you”’: political clothing and adornment in England, 1780–1840’, Journal of British Studies, 49 (2010), pp. 540–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar, and Pickering, Paul, ‘Class without words: symbolic communication within the Chartist movement’, Past and Present, 112 (1986), pp. 144–62CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
40 On the increasing role of women within the mechanized weaving industry of the west, see Randall, Adrian, Before the Luddites: custom, community and machinery in the English woollen industry, 1776–1809 (Cambridge, 1991)Google Scholar.
41 Bailey, Peter, ‘Parasexuality and glamour: the Victorian barmaid as cultural prototype’, Gender and History, 2 (1990), pp. 148–72CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
42 Western Vindicator, 23 Mar. 1839.
43 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/16, Vincent to Minikin, 1 June 1839.
44 Schwartzkopf, Women in the Chartist movement, p. 222.
45 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/15, Vincent to Minikin, 21 May 1839.
46 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/23.i, Vincent to Minikin, 28 Feb. 1840.
47 Schwarzkopf, Women in the Chartist movement, pp. 89–122.
48 Clark, The struggle for the breeches, pp. 179–196.
49 For his support for Female Radical and Chartist Associations, and some of the space in the Vindicator given to their correspondence and addresses, see Western Vindicator, 15 June, 29 June, 20 July, 17 Aug., 24 Aug., 31 Aug., and 28 Sept. 1839.
50 Hunt, Lynn and Jacob, Margaret, ‘The affective revolution in 1790s Britain’, Eighteenth-Century Studies, 34 (2001), pp. 491–521CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 497.
51 Smith, Charles Manby, The working man's way in the world: being the autobiography of a journeyman printer (London, 1854), pp. 251–7Google Scholar. See also Cleave's London Satirist and Gazette of Variety, 2 Dec. 1837, and Savage, William, A dictionary of the art of printing (London, 1841), p. 778Google Scholar.
52 Hunt and Jacob, ‘The affective revolution in 1790s Britain’, p. 510.
53 Elfenbein, Andrew, Byron and the Victorians (Cambridge, 1995), p. 8Google Scholar; Stone, Donald, The romantic impulse in Victorian fiction (Cambridge, 1980)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
54 LHASC LP/VIN/1/1/11, Vincent to Minikin, 23 Sept. 1838.
55 Byron, Don Juan, Canto vi, line 27.
56 Blann, Robinson, Throwing the scabbard away: Byron's battle against the censors of Don Juan (New York, NY, 1991)Google Scholar; McGann, J., Don Juan in context (Chicago, IL, 1976)Google Scholar; Haslett, Moyra, Byron's Don Juan and the Don Juan legend (Oxford, 1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
57 Marcus, Steven, The other Victorians: a study of sexuality and pornography in mid-nineteenth-century England (London, 1966), p. 211Google Scholar.
58 Frost, Thomas, Forty years recollections: literary and political (London, 1880), pp. 45, 49, 52, 102Google Scholar; Collins, Phillip, Thomas Cooper, the Chartist: Byron and the poets of the poor (Nottingham, 1969)Google Scholar. See also Adams, W. E., Memoirs of a social atom, i (London, 1903), p. 227Google Scholar; Holyoake, George Jacob, Sixty years of an agitator's life, ii (London, 1892), p. 301Google Scholar.
59 Elfenbein, Byron and the Victorians, p. 8.
60 Sanders, The poetry of Chartism, pp. 77–8.
61 Donelan, Charles, Romanticism and male fantasy in Byron's Don Juan: a marketable vice (New York, NY, 2000)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
62 Elfenbein, Byron and the Victorians, p. 87.
63 McCalman, ‘Unrespectable radicalism’, pp. 99–101.
64 Shelley, Percy Bysshe, Queen Mab: a philosophical poem (London, 1823)Google Scholar.
65 Fraistat, Neil, ‘Illegitimate Shelley: radical piracy and the textual edition as cultural performance’, PMLA, 109 (1994), pp. 409–23CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at p. 413; Cooligan, Colette, ‘The unruly copies of Byron's Don Juan’, Nineteenth-Century Literature, 59 (2005), pp. 433–462CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
66 Shelley, Queen Mab, p. 147; Shaw, George Bernard, ‘Shaming the devil about Shelley’, in Pen Portraits and Reviews by Bernard Shaw (London, 1949), pp. 236–46Google Scholar. See also Shaaban, Bouthaina, ‘The romantics in the Chartist press’, Keats–Shelley Journal, 38 (1989), pp. 25–46Google Scholar; idem, ‘Shelley in the Chartist press’, Keats–Shelley Memorial Bulletin, 34 (1983), pp. 41–60.
67 Bush, M. L., What is love? Richard Carlile's philosophy of sex (London, 1998), pp. 45, 118Google Scholar.
68 Hollis, Patricia, The pauper press: a study in working-class radicalism of the 1830s (London, 1970), pp. 147–9Google Scholar; Rogers, Helen, Women and the people: authority, authorship and the radical tradition in nineteenth-century England (Aldershot, 2000), pp. 48–79Google Scholar.
69 Bush, What is love?¸ p. 50
70 Malcolm Chase, ‘Cleave, John (1794/5–1850)’, ODNB; Hollis, Pauper press, p. 149.
71 Francis Place to William Lovett, 30 Mar. 1841, the Francis Place papers, British Library.
72 Lovett, William, The life and struggles of William Lovett in his pursuit of bread, knowledge and freedom (London, 1920), p. 55Google Scholar.
73 McCalman, ‘Unrespectable radicalism’, pp. 107–8.
74 Ibid., pp. 107–8.
75 Ashton, ‘The Western Vindicator and early Chartism’, p. 68.
76 Jacobs, Edward, ‘The politicization of everyday life in Cleave's Weekly Police Gazette (1834–1836)’, Victorian Periodicals Review, 40 (2008), pp. 225–47CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
77 The Destructive and Poor Man's Conservative, 15 June 1833.
78 The Destructive and Poor Man's Conservative, 7 June 1834; Hollis, Pauper press, p. 122.
79 Jacobs, ‘Politicization of everyday life’, p. 230.
80 Fraser's Magazine, 17 Mar. 1838.
81 Taylor, Miles, ‘John Bull and the iconography of public opinion in England, c. 1712–1929’, Past and Present, 134 (1992), pp. 93–128CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at pp. 108–10.
82 Chase, Malcolm, ‘Building identity, building circulation: engraved portraiture and the Northern Star’, in Allen, and Ashton, , eds., Papers for the people, pp. 25–53Google Scholar.
83 Berridge, Virginia, ‘Popular Sunday papers and mid-Victorian society’, in Boyce, George, Curran, James, and Wingate, Pauline, eds., Newspaper history from the seventeenth century to the present day (London, 1978), pp. 247–64Google Scholar.
84 Haywood, Ian, The revolution in popular literature: print, politics and the people, 1790–1860 (Cambridge, 2004), p. 131Google Scholar.
85 Jacobs, ‘Politicization of everyday life’, p. 234.
86 Bailey, Peter, ‘Will the real Bill Banks stand up? A role analysis of mid-Victorian working-class respectability’, Journal of Social History, 12 (1979), pp. 336–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
87 Ashton, ‘The Western Vindicator and early Chartism’, p. 58.
88 LHASC LP/VIN/3/5/2, Francis Hill to John Minikin, n.d.
89 Western Vindicator, 15 June 1839.
90 Western Vindicator, 6 July 1839.
91 Western Vindicator, 29 June 1839.
92 Bath and Cheltenham Gazette, 5 Mar. 1839.
93 Western Vindicator, 13 Apr. 1839.
94 Western Vindicator, 13 Apr. 1839.
95 Gilmartin, Kevin, Print politics: the press and radical opposition in early nineteenth-century England (Cambridge, 1996), pp. 94–5Google Scholar; Ashton ‘The Western Vindicator and early Chartism’, p. 64.
96 For instance, for the dialogue on hydrostatics, see Western Vindicator, 20 July 1839.
97 Western Vindicator, 27 Apr. 1839.
98 Bob Nicholson, ‘Looming large: America and the late-Victorian press, 1865–1902’ (Ph.D. thesis, Manchester, 2011), p. 124; Miller, Henry, ‘The problem with punch’, Historical Research, 82 (2009), pp. 285–302CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
99 Bailey, ‘Will the real Bill Banks stand up?’; Ross, Ellen, ‘“Not the sort that would sit on the doorstep”: respectability in pre-World War I neighbourhoods’, International Labour and Working Class History, 27 (1985), pp. 39–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
100 McCalman, Radical underworld, pp. 233–7.
101 Marcus, The other Victorians; Malcolm Chase, ‘Cleave, John (1794/5–1850)’, ODNB.
102 Mason, The making of Victorian sexuality, pp. 31–4; McCalman, Radical underworld, pp. 26–31.