One
of the least known literary associations with Staffordshire, is that
of Charles Kingsley's novel Alton Locke. Tailor and Poet,
which was published in 1851. The story of the rise and fall of a
self-taught working man who is eventually imprisoned for rioting, is
based upon a real person and a real incident. The person was the
Chartist leader, Thomas Cooper, who was arrested and sentenced to two
years in prison, for the events he had prompted in the Staffordshire
Potteries.
Thomas
Cooper was born in Leicester to a working class family and from an
early age displayed a precocious intelligence, the development of
which was only limited by the fact that most of his lessons were
self-taught. Occasionally, he had been known to immerse himself so
deeply into his studies that the sheer mental effort he put forth
ended on one occasion, at least, in him being physically ill. He
worked at various jobs, mostly as a teacher, lay preacher and
journalist, but eventually, appalled by the conditions endured by
many factory and workshop workers, he became a convinced Chartist, a
member of that Victorian working class movement which supported the
introduction of a People's Charter, which called for fair
representation for the working population. The Charter's six points
demanded votes for all men at 21, annual general elections, a secret
ballot, constituencies regulated by size of population, the abolition
of property qualifications for MP's and the payment of MP's. Most of
these points eventually became laws of the land and form a part of
the state we live in today, but none of these things came into being
until the latter half of the nineteenth century, long after the
Chartist movement itself had collapsed.
There
were two bodies of the Chartist movement, the physical and the
moral-force Chartists, who sought to bring about social change by
revolutionary or evolutionary means. In his early days, Cooper was a
supporter of the former faction. He was a fire and brimstone type of
preacher, who like all great orators could move people with his
speeches. This power comes through in Cooper's autobiography, which
is widely regarded as one
of the finest working class
'lives' written during the Victorian
age. The book, though,written in
Cooper's later years after he had become a convinced moral-force
Chartist, tends to carefully skate around his fiery physical-force
youth and he presents himself as a far more reasonable man than he
actually was in August 1842, when he arrived in the Potteries. Only
by bearing in mind, that Cooper at this time advocated revolution of
sorts, do the events he inspired in the Potteries make sense. Though
he says in his book that he proclaimed, 'Peace, law and order', the
resulting riots that left one man dead, dozens wounded or injured and
many buildings burnt or ransacked, indicated that he said more than
he was letting on.
Cooper
arrived in the Potteries, after a tour of several major towns and
cities in the Midlands, and here he was to make a number of speeches
before moving on to Manchester. The area was in the grip of a wage
dispute. In June, 300 Longton miners whose wages had been drastically
cut had gone on strike. By July, the strike had expanded to all of
the pits in north Staffordshire, and hundreds of miners were on the
streets, begging for money, and with the pits being closed, the
potteries through lack of coal, could not fire their kilns and were
also closed. By early August, the dispute had attracted widespread
attention, certainly the Chartists expressed sympathy for the miners'
action, but contrary to later claims that the subsequent riots were
Chartist inspired, it was mostly miners and not Chartists who did the
rioting. The Potteries were a powder keg, ready to explode and
Cooper's arrival, as he himself admitted was 'the spark which
kindled all into combustion'.
Standing on a chair in front of the Crown Inn, a low thatched building at Crown Bank in Hanley, on Sunday, 14 August, Cooper addressed a crowd of upwards of 10,000 people, delivering a brilliant Chartist speech to his audience. He look for his text the sixth commandment, 'Thou shalt do no murder'. Throwing his net wide, he drew on examples of kings and tyrants from history, such as Alexander, Caesar and Napoleon, who had violated this commandment against their own people, even as their own government would be prepared to do. The next day, he addressed an equally sizeable crowd and moved a motion, 'That all labour cease until the People's Charter becomes the law of the land'. What followed, Cooper later regretted. As the crowd dispersed. rioting started around the Potteries towns in all except Tunstall and the borough town of Newcastle. Police stations were attacked, magistrate's houses ransacked and burned, as were Hanley Parsonage and Longton Rectory. By the 16th, the chaos had lasted a day and a night, but on that day, the most famous, or infamous incident of the uprising occurred, what is known locally as 'the battle of Burslem'. Following the rioting in Stoke, Shelton, Hanley and Longton, a great crowd moved towards Burslem, there to meet a crowd coming from Leek. Here, though, the authorities played their hand, when a troop of mounted dragoons stopped the crowd from Leek. The magistrate in charge read the Riot Act, then tried to reason with the men, but when it was clear that they were bent on trouble, the soldiers were ordered to fire. One man from Leek was killed and many injured, the crowd was routed and the disturbances ended overnight, but for many weeks afterwards, the Potteries were full of troops and vengeful magistrates arresting rioters and Chartist leaders.
Thomas Cooper addresses the crowd at Crown Bank, Hanley |
Standing on a chair in front of the Crown Inn, a low thatched building at Crown Bank in Hanley, on Sunday, 14 August, Cooper addressed a crowd of upwards of 10,000 people, delivering a brilliant Chartist speech to his audience. He look for his text the sixth commandment, 'Thou shalt do no murder'. Throwing his net wide, he drew on examples of kings and tyrants from history, such as Alexander, Caesar and Napoleon, who had violated this commandment against their own people, even as their own government would be prepared to do. The next day, he addressed an equally sizeable crowd and moved a motion, 'That all labour cease until the People's Charter becomes the law of the land'. What followed, Cooper later regretted. As the crowd dispersed. rioting started around the Potteries towns in all except Tunstall and the borough town of Newcastle. Police stations were attacked, magistrate's houses ransacked and burned, as were Hanley Parsonage and Longton Rectory. By the 16th, the chaos had lasted a day and a night, but on that day, the most famous, or infamous incident of the uprising occurred, what is known locally as 'the battle of Burslem'. Following the rioting in Stoke, Shelton, Hanley and Longton, a great crowd moved towards Burslem, there to meet a crowd coming from Leek. Here, though, the authorities played their hand, when a troop of mounted dragoons stopped the crowd from Leek. The magistrate in charge read the Riot Act, then tried to reason with the men, but when it was clear that they were bent on trouble, the soldiers were ordered to fire. One man from Leek was killed and many injured, the crowd was routed and the disturbances ended overnight, but for many weeks afterwards, the Potteries were full of troops and vengeful magistrates arresting rioters and Chartist leaders.
Cooper,
horrified at the events he had unleashed, had tried to escape, but he
was arrested and eventually tried and sentenced to two years in
Stafford Gaol, on charges of arson and rioting. Here, he spent his
time profitably, learning Hebrew and writing his book, The
Purgatory of Suicides.
On leaving prison, though, his views were found to differ
considerably from the new mainstrean in Chartist thought, and he
became increasingly a moral-force activist and remained so for the
rest of his life.
It
was in the two or three years after leaving prison, that Cooper was
interviewed by the Rev. Charles Kingsley, whose Christian Socialist
movement had inherited many of the Chartist beliefs. Kingsley had
sought out several old Chartists and educated working men on whom he
wished to base the life of the major character in the novel he was
preparing. Thomas Cooper, was obviously the chief amongst these,
certainly his autobiography, written many years after Kingsley
had published Alton
Locke,
shows
many striking similarities between Cooper's life and that of his
fictional alter ego. The riot that Alton inspires in the book, for
which he too is committed to the prison, takes place in the
countryside, amongst agricultural labourers, but behind it there is
the faintest echo of the struggle in the Potteries, that one
historian has considered the nearest thing to a popular revolution
that the Victorian age saw.
After
1845, Thomas Cooper turned his talents mainly to writing, but he also
lectured on subjects such as history, literature and photography. In
this capacity, he made a number of return visits to the Potteries, to
the place where on that day many years before, he had 'caught
the spirit of the oppressed and discontented',
in seeking to establish the basis of a democratic society.
Reference:
Charles Kingsley, Alton
Locke. Tailor and Poet (1851);
Thomas Cooper, Life
of Thomas Cooper, written by Himself,
(1872).