When I retired it was my intention to write a book on
Chartism…one volume that distilled much of my teaching of the subject into a
narrative history of the movement. That was ten years ago and it’s only now that
I have managed to complete what started as one volume into a series of six
books. The reason for the delay was that I side-tracked myself into other
projects that were to inform my later volumes on Chartism. So a book that
looked at rebellions in Canada, South Wales and Australia, my Three
Rebellions grew into the Rebellion Trilogy with the addition of Famine,
Fenians and Freedom 1840-1882 and Resistance and Rebellion in the
British Empire, 1600-1980 that were finished by 2011 though the final
volume was not published until early 2013. These books in turn were in
2012 and 2013 expanded into Rebellion in Canada 1837-1885, ‘A
Peaceable Kingdom’: Essays on Nineteenth Century Canada and Settler
Australia, 1780-1880. Parallel to this I had been working on six Kindle
books on Nineteenth Century British Society and a synoptic volume
Coping with Change: British Society, 1780-1914 and Sex, Work and
Politics: Women in Britain, 1830-1914 and a second edition covering
1780-1945, on translations and commentaries of some medieval texts and
Breaking the Habit: A Life of History, a book combining some
autobiographical musing with essays on history in education. Never one to use
one word when I can use a paragraph—according to one of my students—these are
substantial pieces of work; Coping with Change, for instance, comes in
at over 700 pages. Some of this work represented a break from Chartism, an
interlude in a project that lasted nearly four years from beginning to end.
The delay in getting down to the Chartism series actually
proved to be advantageous. Researching and writing the other series meant that
I allowed myself time to think about how best to approach the movement. My
conclusion was that it needed four volumes. One of my major concerns about
existing books on Chartism was that its context was, at best, condensed into an
opening, often short, chapter. So, yes there needed to be a contextual volume.
Since I had been involved in the early 1970s in the Local History Classroom
project, an innovative and very early project on using computers in the
classroom, I had developed a view of history as a continuum from local to
national to global—what I called ‘a micro-macro approach’ and this view called
for three volumes on Chartism from local, national and global perspectives.
That was the plan which, for a variety of reasons, was modified as the research
and writing progressed. Four volumes became six and 850,000 words.
31 December 2013:
100,339 words
|
22 May 2014: 177,875 words
|
9 July 2015: 141,158 words
|
13 December 2015: 143,452 words
|
10 January 2016: 241,015 words
|
1 July 2016: 134,879 words
|
Having worked out what I planned to do, the next step was to
make decisions about research approaches. Getting to research libraries and
archives proved an impossibility as I was the sole carer 24/7 for my wife. This
meant that I had to rely on material on the Internet that I could access at home
such as the British Newspaper Archives, the National Archives online, EthOS,
Google Books and so on. Fortunately, I have an extensive collection of material
on Chartism that I have accumulated over several decades.
I started writing the first volume in May 2013 so it has taken
just over three years to complete. There was little problem with the first two
volumes but it was the volume on Chartism from a local perspective that proved
most challenging. My decision to include discussion of the nature of radical
politics in the decades before Chartism was established in each chapter meant
that a single volume would have been too long. So I divided the subject into
two--the first dealing with London and the South; the second on The North,
Scotland, Wales and Ireland—and then produced an abridged version The
Chartists, Regions and Economies. The final volume effectively examines
the global impact of Chartism and also considers some of the themes than run
through the remainder of the series—the historiography of the movement, Chartist
leadership, women, radicalism and Chartism, the state and Chartism and how
Chartism has been memorialised.
This volume completes the Reconsidering Chartism series.
What began as a plan for four books—context, national narrative, local narrative
and global history—expanded into six volumes . While these books, in their
printed and Kindle manifestations, form my most considered examination of
Chartism, whether they are my last word on the subject is possible but I suspect
unlikely. I keep being drawn back to the issues raised by O’Connor, Lovett and
the like and by the political challenges faced by the working-classes in the
decades round the mid-nineteenth century.
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