Francis Place Collection

The Francis Place Collection is an important British Library collection of press cuttings, leaflets, and ephemera about British politics and economics between 1770 and 1853 with some earlier material. The collection was created by the social reformer Francis Place (1771–1854).[1] In 1844, Place suffered a stroke, and possibly a brain tumour, which left him with difficulty reading and writing. It was about this time that he began to organise his collection into guard-books as he was unable to be as active in political circles as he had been previously.[2] The original paper collection is in 180 volumes which can be viewed at the main St Pancras site of the British Library and is also available to the public on Microfilm.[1]

Scope

The collection reflects the political and social issues important to Place, including:

  • The Corn Laws
  • Chartism
  • Emigration
  • Free Trade
  • The Sanitary Laws
  • King George IV and Queen Caroline
  • The Luddite Movement
  • Working conditions
  • The Irish Famine
  • Strikes
  • Sedition

It includes important newspapers such as:

  • The Anti-Corn Law Circular (Manchester 1839-1841)
  • The Anti-Bread-Tax Circular (Manchester 1841-1843)
  • Newspapers from 1770 to 1837, including illegal unstamped papers

It also includes the complete published materials and minutes of the London Corresponding Society.

gollark: I don't like it. We use a BT router with that "feature" at home and I cannot figure out how to turn it off and it *annoys me slightly*.
gollark: Self-driving cars should probably not be using the mobile/cell network just for communicating with nearby cars, since it adds extra latency and complexity over some direct P2P thing, and they can't really do things which rely on constant high-bandwidth networking to the internet generally, since they need to be able to not crash if they go into a tunnel or network dead zone or something.
gollark: My problem isn't *that* (5G apparently has improvements for more normal frequencies anyway), but that higher bandwidth and lower latency just... isn't that useful and worth the large amount of money for most phone users.
gollark: Personally I think 5G is pointless and overhyped, but eh.
gollark: It's a house using some sort of sci-fi-looking engines to take off, superimposed on the text "5G", with "London," and "is in the house." above and below it respectively.

See also

References

Further reading

  • Rowe, D.J. Ed. London radicalism 1830-1843: A selection from the papers of Francis Place. (London Record Society publications. Vol. 5.) London: London Record Society, 1970. ISBN 0-900952-01-6 Free full text electronic version here.
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