William Cobbett

William Cobbett (9 March 1763 – 18 June 1835) was an English pamphleteer, independent journalist, Member of Parliament and farmer born in Farnham, Surrey. He, with a popular agrarian faction, argued that reforming Parliament, including abolishing "rotten boroughs", unnecessary foreign activity and suppression of wages would promote internal peace and ease the poverty of farm labourers and smallholders. He was among the pre-party lobbies who backed lower taxes, saving and preferably reversing enclosure of the commons and resistance to the 1821-adopted gold standard.

William Cobbett
William Cobbett, portrait in oils, possibly by George Cooke, about 1831 National Portrait Gallery, London
Born(1763-03-09)9 March 1763
Farnham, Surrey, England
Died18 June 1835(1835-06-18) (aged 72)
Normandy, Surrey, England
OccupationPamphleteer, journalist, soldier
Notable worksRural Rides
William Cobbett
Member of Parliament
for Oldham
In office
1832–1835
Succeeded byJohn Frederick Lees
Personal details
Political partyRadical

He relentlessly sought an end to borough-mongers, sinecurists and "tax-eaters" (overpaid and sometimes corrupt bureaucrats, public servants and stockbrokers), also dismissing British Jews in a typecast by the same token. Early in life he was a soldier and loyal devotee of King and country, but he later pushed for Radicalism, which helped bring about the Reform Act 1832 and his election that year as one of two MPs for the newly enfranchised borough of Oldham. He also strongly advocated Catholic Emancipation. He surveyed British agriculture and other economic output geographically. His much-interwoven polemics cover subjects from political reform to religion. His best known book is Rural Rides (1830, still in print). He argued that economic improvement could support growth in global population, as an anti-Malthusian. His writing coined the metaphor "a red herring".

Life

Early life (1763–1791)

William Cobbett's birthplace.

William Cobbett was born in Farnham, Surrey, on 9 March 1763, the third son of George Cobbett, a farmer and publican, and Anne Vincent.[1] He was taught to read and write by his father and he started working from an early age. He later said: "I do not remember a time when I did not earn my living. My first occupation was, driving small birds from the turnip seed, and the rooks from the peas."[2][3] He worked as a farm labourer at Farnham Castle,[4][5] and also worked briefly as a gardener in the King's garden at Kew.[6][7] His rural upbringing gave him a lifelong love of gardening and hunting.[8]

Cartoon of Cobbett enlisting in the army. From the Political Register of 1809. Artist James Gillray.

On 6 May 1783, on a whim, he took a stage coach to London and spent eight or nine months as a clerk in the employ of a Mr Holland at Gray's Inn.[9][10] He joined the 54th (West Norfolk) Regiment of Foot during 1783 and made good use of the soldier's copious spare time to educate himself, particularly in English grammar.[1][11] Between 1785 and 1791 Cobbett was stationed with his regiment in New Brunswick and sailed from Gravesend in Kent to Halifax, Nova Scotia. Cobbett was in Saint John, Fredericton and elsewhere in the province until September 1791, being promoted through the ranks to sergeant major, the most senior rank of non-commissioned officer.

Cobbett returned to England with his regiment, landing at Portsmouth on 3 November 1791, and obtained his discharge from the army on 19 December 1791. In Woolwich during February 1792, he married the American-born Anne Reid (1774–1848), whom he had met while stationed at Fort Howe in Saint John.[12][13] His children with her were Anne Cobbett (1795–1877), William Cobbett (1798–1878), John Morgan Cobbett (1800–1877), James Paul Cobbett (1803–1881), Eleanor Cobbett (1805–1900) and Susan Cobbett (1807–1889).[14]

Refuge in France and the United States (1792–1800)

Cobbett had developed an animosity towards some corrupt officers and gathered evidence on the matter while in New Brunswick, but his charges against them were ignored. He wrote The Soldier's Friend (1792), protesting against the low pay and harsh treatment of enlisted men in the British army.[1] Sensing that he was about to be indicted in retribution, he fled to France in March 1792 to avoid imprisonment. Cobbett had intended to stay a year to learn the French language, but he found the French Revolution and the French Revolutionary Wars in progress, and so he sailed for the United States in September 1792.

He was first at Wilmington, then Philadelphia by the spring of 1793. Cobbett initially prospered by teaching English to Frenchmen and translating texts from French into English. He later claimed that he had become a political writer by accident: during an English lesson one of his French students read aloud from a New York newspaper the addresses of welcome that the Democrats had sent to Joseph Priestley upon his arrival in America, along with Priestley's replies. His student applauded the anti-British sentiments they contained and he quarrelled with Cobbett, who then resolved to "write and publish a pamphlet in defence of my country."[15][16] His Observations on the Emigration of Dr Priestley, which was published anonymously in 1794, was a violent attack on the radical Priestley.[17][18]

In 1795 Cobbett wrote A Bone to Gnaw for the Democrats, which attacked the pro-French Democratic Party.[17][19] He replied to his critics with A Kick for a Bite, which was his first work to be published under the pseudonym "Peter Porcupine" (a reviewer had compared him to a porcupine, which pleased him).[20][19] He took the side of the Federalists, who were led by Alexander Hamilton, because they were more friendly to Britain than the pro-French Democrats led by Thomas Jefferson.[21][22]

In January 1796 he began a monthly tract, The Censor. This was discontinued after eight numbers and replaced by Porcupine's Gazette, a daily newspaper which ran from March 1797 until the end of 1799.[23][24] Talleyrand, at the time a French spy in America, failed to bribe Cobbett to join the French cause.[25][26]

Cobbett opened a bookstore in Philadelphia in July 1796. He adorned its shop-window with a large portrait of George III and its interior with a huge painting of "Lord Howe's Decisive Victory over the French". This provocative display attracted considerable publicity and made him famous in America.[27] He reprinted and published much of the violent loyalist literature then current, including George Chalmers's hostile biography of Thomas Paine.[23][28][29]

After Spain entered into an alliance with France against Britain, Cobbett attacked the Spanish King in Porcupine's Gazette. The Spanish Minister in Philadelphia asked the United States government to prosecute Cobbett for libel on the Spanish King and he was arrested on 18 November 1797. He was tried in the State Court of Pennsylvania by Chief Justice Thomas McKean (who was also the Spanish Minister's father-in-law). Despite McKean's criticism of Cobbett in his summing up, the grand jury threw out the bill against him by a one-vote majority.[30][22]

Cobbett also campaigned against the physician and abolitionist Benjamin Rush,[31] whose advocacy of bleeding during the yellow fever epidemic may have caused many deaths.[32] Rush won a libel suit against Cobbett, who never fully paid the $8,000 judgement, but instead fled to New York and during 1800 via Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Falmouth, Cornwall.[33][34]

The British government was grateful to Cobbett for supporting Britain's interests in America: the Duke of Kent hailed him as "this great British patriot"; the British representative in America, Robert Liston, offered him a "great pecuniary reward" (which he turned down), and the Secretary at War, William Windham, said that Cobbett deserved a statue of gold for the services he had rendered to Britain in America.[35][36]

The Political Register (1800–1810)

Cobbett's American writings had been reprinted in Britain, with John Wright acting as his agent.[37][38] In August 1800 Windham invited Cobbett to dinner, where he met the Prime Minister, William Pitt, and contributors to the Anti-Jacobin, including George Canning.[39][40] Pitt's government offered Cobbett the editorship of a government newspaper, but he preferred to remain independent.[1][41][42] His own paper, The Porcupine, bearing the motto "Fear God, Honour the King", started up on 30 October 1800, but without success, and he sold his interest in it in 1801.[1] Less than a month later, however, he started the Political Register, a weekly newspaper that appeared almost every week from January 1802 until 1835, the year of Cobbett's death.[1] Windham and French Laurence had suggested the idea of a weekly newspaper to Cobbett and Windham raised the money to fund it by private subscription.[43]

When the British government signed a preliminary peace agreement with France in October 1801, Cobbett emerged as one of its foremost opponents, and in the pages of The Porcupine and in his Letters to Lord Hawkesbury, he denounced the agreement as humiliating to Britain and advantageous to France.[44][45] When news of the ratification arrived on 10 October, Cobbett refused to illuminate the windows of his house in celebration and it was attacked by a mob, which smashed all of its windows.[46][47] When the Peace of Amiens was signed in March 1802, Cobbett again refused to illuminate his windows and the Royal Horse Guards had to protect his house from the mob.[48][47]

War broke out again between Britain and France in May 1803 and Napoleon planned to invade England, assembling the Grande Armée at Boulogne. In June The Morning Post appealed to all newspapers to print articles for "the purpose of arousing the people to the defence of the country".[49] Cobbett immediately began a pamphlet, Important Considerations for the People of the Kingdom, warning the country of the consequences of a French invasion. Cobbett declined an offer of payment from the government and it was published anonymously in July.[50][51] The Prime Minister, Henry Addington, ordered copies to be sent to every parish in England and it had an immediate effect on public opinion.[52]

Cobbett formed a close friendship with Windham, who became his patron and shared his anti-Jacobinism and his love of rural and athletic sports.[53][54] The Evangelical movement was campaigning to reform the sports and recreations of the common people, intending to replace bull-baiting, boxing, singlestick, wrestling and racing with Sunday Schools and psalm singing.[55][56] Cobbett in the Register criticised the Evangelicals' hostility to rural and athletic sports, "which string the nerves and strengthen the frame, which excite an emulation in deeds of hardihood and valour, and which imperceptibly instill honour, generosity, and a love of glory. Men thus formed are pupils unfit for the puritanical school; therefore it was, that the sect were incessantly labouring to eradicate, fibre by fibre, the last poor remains of English manners."[57] Cobbett supported Windham in opposing attempts in the House of Commons to introduce Bills against boxing and bull-baiting; he wrote to Windham that the Bill "goes to the rearing of puritanism into a system."[58][59]

Although initially staunchly anti-Jacobin, by 1804 Cobbett was questioning the policies of the Pitt government, especially the immense national debt and profligate use of sinecures, which Cobbett believed were ruining the country and increasing class antagonism.[1] By 1807 he was endorsing reformers such as Francis Burdett and John Cartwright.[1]

Cobbett published the Complete Collection of State Trials between 1804 and 1812 and amassed accounts of parliamentary debates from 1066 onwards, but financial difficulties obliged him to sell his shares in it to T. C. Hansard in 1812.[1] This unofficial record of parliamentary proceedings later became known officially as Hansard.

Cobbett intended to campaign for Parliament in Honiton in 1806, but was persuaded by Thomas Cochrane, 10th Earl of Dundonald to let him campaign in his stead. Both men campaigned together but failed, having refused to bribe voters by "buying" votes. This situation also encouraged his opposition to rotten boroughs and belief in parliamentary reform.[60]

Prison (1810–1812)

The Hampshire hog in the pound

Cobbett was found guilty of treasonous libel on 15 June 1810, after objecting in The Register to the flogging at Ely of local militiamen by Hanoverians. He was sentenced to two years' imprisonment in Newgate Prison. While in prison he wrote the pamphlet Paper Against Gold,[61] warning of the dangers of paper money, and also many essays and letters. On his release, a dinner was held in his honour in London, attended by 600 people and directed by Sir Francis Burdett, who like Cobbett was a strong advocate of parliamentary reform.

"Two-Penny Trash" (1812–1817)

By 1815 the tax on newspapers had reached four pence a copy. As few people could afford to pay six or seven pence for a daily newspaper, the tax restricted the circulation of most journals to those with fairly high incomes. Cobbett could sell only just over a thousand copies a week. Nonetheless, he began criticising William Wilberforce for his endorsement of the Corn Laws, for his personal wealth and opposition to bull and bear-baiting, and particularly for his approval of "the fat and lazy and laughing and singing negroes".[62]

In 1816 Cobbett began publishing the Political Register as a pamphlet. It now sold for only two pence and soon had a circulation of 40,000. Critics termed it "two-penny trash", a phrase Cobbett adopted.[1] Cobbett's journal was soon the main newspaper read by the working class. The Radical campaigner Samuel Bamford later wrote:

At this time the writings of William Cobbett suddenly became of great authority; they were read on nearly every cottage hearth in the manufacturing districts of South Lancashire, in those of Leicester, Derby, and Nottingham; also in many of the Scottish manufacturing towns. Their influence was speedily visible. He directed his readers to the true cause of their sufferings—misgovernment; and to its proper corrective—parliamentary reform.[63][64][65]

This made Cobbett a dangerous man, and he learnt in 1817 that the government was planning to arrest him for sedition. With the government intending to suspend habeas corpus, and fearing arrest for his arguably seditious writings, Cobbett again fled to the United States.[23] On Wednesday 27 March 1817, he embarked at Liverpool for New York on the ship Importer, with D. Ogden as master, accompanied by his two eldest sons, William and John.

Refuge in the United States (1817–1819)

Rural rides in the southern, western and eastern counties of England, 1930.

Cobbett lived for two years on a farm on Long Island, where he wrote Grammar of the English Language and with help from William Benbow, a friend in London, continued to issue the Political Register. He also wrote The American Gardener (1821), one of the earliest horticultural books published in the United States.[6]

Cobbett closely observed alcohol-drinking habits in the United States. He stated in 1819, "Americans preserve their gravity and quietness and good-humour even in their drink." He believed it would be "far better for them to be as noisy and quarrelsome as the English drunkards; for then the odiousness of the vice would be more visible, and the vice itself might become less frequent."[66]

A plan to return to England with the remains of the British-American radical pamphleteer and revolutionary Thomas Paine (who had died in 1809) for a proper burial resulted in the ultimate loss of the remains. The plan was to remove them from his New Rochelle, New York farm and give Paine a heroic reburial on his native soil, but the bones were still among Cobbett's effects when he died 16 years later. There is no confirmed story of what happened to them after that, although claims to parts of the body have been made down the years, including his skull and right hand.

Cobbett arrived back in Britain at Liverpool by ship in November 1819.

Later life (1819–1835)

Cobbett's arrival came soon after the Peterloo Massacre. He joined with other radicals in attacks on the government and was charged with libel three times in the next couple of years.

The introduction of horse-powered threshing machines to farms was one of the principal causes of the Swing Riots.

In 1820, he campaigned for Parliament in Coventry, but finished last in the poll. That year he also founded a plant nursery at Kensington, where he grew many North American trees, such as the black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia), and with his son, a variety of maize he called "Cobbett's corn".[6] This was a dwarf strain found growing in a French cottage garden, which turned out to grow well in England's shorter summer. To help sell the variety, he issued a book entitled A Treatise on Cobbett's Corn (1828).[6] Meanwhile, he also wrote his popular Cottage Economy (1822), which taught cottagers some skills necessary for self-sufficiency, such as bread-making, beer-brewing and livestock farming.[6]

Not content to let information be brought to him for his newspaper, Cobbett did his own journalistic work – especially on his repeated theme of the plight of rural Englishmen. He began riding about the country observing events in towns and villages. Rural Rides, a work for which Cobbett is still known, appeared first in serial form in the Political Register from 1822 to 1826, and then in book form in 1830. While writing it, Cobbett also produced The Woodlands (1825), a book on silviculture.[6]

In the first supplement to the Political Register, Cobbett had defended the slave trade as necessary to British commerce.[51] After the Slave Trade Act 1807 prohibited the slave trade, Cobbett wrote in the Register that "there is not a reflecting man in the kingdom that cares one straw about it."[67] In the Register for 30 August 1823, Cobbett published his Letter to William Wilberforce, an answer to Wilberforce's Appeal to the Religion, Justice and Humanity of the Inhabitants of the British Empire in Behalf of the Negro Slaves in the West Indies.[68] Here, he attacked Wilberforce's support for the Combination Act, which prohibited trade unions among British workers,[69] and said: "Never have you done one single act, in favour of those labourers, but many and many an act you have done against them."[68] The Letter to Wilberforce was widely distributed in working class areas and gave an impetus to the Combination Act's repeal in 1824.[70] Cobbett contrasted the Evangelical reformers' campaign for the abolition of black slavery with their support for the "factory slavery" of British workers.[71] He argued that black slaves were better fed, clothed and housed than British workers, and were better treated by their masters.[72][73] He wrote: "Will not the care, will not the anxiety of a really humane Englishman be directed towards the Whites, instead of towards the Blacks, until, at any rate, the situation of the former be made to be as good as that of the latter?"[71] In 1833, Cobbett voted for the abolition of slavery but in the Register he was still contrasting Parliament's concern for black slaves with their indifference to the sufferings of British "factory slaves".[74]

Although not a Catholic,[75] Cobbett at this time also advocated the cause of Catholic Emancipation. Between 1824 and 1826, he published his History of the Protestant Reformation, a broadside against the traditional Protestant historical narrative of the reformation, stressing the lengthy and often bloody persecutions of Catholics in Britain and Ireland. Catholics were still forbidden at that time to enter certain professions or become members of Parliament. Although the law was no longer enforced, it was officially still a crime to attend Mass or build a Catholic church. Although Wilberforce also worked and spoke against discrimination against Catholics, Cobbett resumed his strident opposition to the noted reformer, particularly after Wilberforce in 1823 published his Appeal in Behalf of the Negro Slaves in the West Indies.[76] Wilberforce, long suffering from ill health, retired the next year.

William Cobbett (left foreground), John Gully (middle) and Joseph Pease (right) (the first Quaker elected to Parliament) arriving at Westminster, during March 1833. Sketch by John Doyle.

In 1829, Cobbett published Advice To Young Men, in which he criticised An Essay on the Principle of Population by the Reverend Thomas Robert Malthus. That year he also published The English Gardener, which he later updated and expanded. This book has been compared favourably with other contemporary garden tomes, such as John Claudius Loudon's Encyclopædia of Gardening.[77]

Cobbett continued to publish controversy in the Political Register and was charged in July 1831 with seditious libel for a pamphlet entitled Rural War, endorsing the Captain Swing Riots, in which rioters were smashing farm machinery and burning haystacks. Cobbett successfully conducted his own defence.[78]

Cobbett still sought to be elected to the House of Commons. He was defeated in Preston in 1826 and in Manchester in 1832, but after the passage of the Reform Act 1832, Cobbett won the seat of Oldham. In Parliament, Cobbett concentrated his energies on attacking corruption in government and the 1834 Poor Law. He believed that the poor had a right to a share in the community's wealth and that the Old Poor Law was the last remaining right that English workers possessed, and which set them apart from other countries which had no such provision.[79][80] Because the New Poor Law deprived the people of this right to relief, Cobbett believed that the social contract was broken and that therefore the duty of allegiance was dissolved.[81] In the week before his death, he wrote to a friend: "[B]efore the passing of the Poor-Law Bill, I wished to avoid [a] convulsive termination. I now do not wish it to be avoided."[81]

During later life, however, Thomas Macaulay, a fellow MP, remarked that Cobbett's faculties were impaired by age; indeed that his paranoia had reached insanity. From 1831 until his death, Cobbett managed a farm named Ash in the village of Normandy, Surrey, a few miles from his birthplace at Farnham. Cobbett died there after a brief illness in June 1835 and was buried in the churchyard of St Andrew's Parish Church, Farnham.

Parliamentary career

During his lifetime Cobbett campaigned for parliament five times, of which four attempts were unsuccessful:

In 1832 he was successfully elected as member for Oldham.

Legacy

The tomb of William Cobbett in the churchyard of St Andrew's church in Farnham.

Cobbett is considered to have begun as an inherently conservative journalist, who angered by the corrupt British political establishment, became increasingly radical and sympathetic to anti-government and democratic ideals. He provided an exegis for rural England in the age of an Industrial Revolution, with which he was not in sympathy. Cobbett wished England would return to the rural England of the 1760s, in which he had been born. Unlike fellow radical Thomas Paine, Cobbett was not an internationalist cosmopolitan and did not endorse a republican Britain. He boasted that he was not a "citizen of world.... It is quite enough for me to think about what is best for England, Scotland and Ireland."[1] Possessing a national identity, he often criticised rival countries and warned them that they should not "swagger about and be saucy to England."[1] He said his identification with the Church of England was due in part because it "bears the name of my country."[1] Among historian biographers, Ian Dyck (died 2007) claimed that Cobbett endorsed "the eighteenth-century Country Party platform";[82] Edward Tangye Lean (died 1974) described him as "an archaic English Tory".[83][84]

Cobbett has been praised by thinkers of various political persuasions, such as Matthew Arnold, Karl Marx, G. K. Chesterton, A. J. P. Taylor, Raymond Williams, E. P. Thompson and Michael Foot.[1]

A story by Cobbett issued in 1807 coined the term "red herring", to mean a distraction from an important issue.[85]

Cobbett's sons were trained as barristers and founded a partnership in Manchester named Cobbetts in his honour. The firm dissolved in 2013. His second son John Morgan Cobbett (1800–1877) followed him into politics and like his father became MP for Oldham.[86]

Cobbett's birthplace, a public house in Farnham once named The Jolly Farmer, has been renamed The William Cobbett. The Brooklyn-based history band Piñataland performed a song about William Cobbett's quest to rebury Thomas Paine entitled "An American Man". An equestrian statue of Cobbett was being planned for a site in Farnham,[87][88] which already has the William Cobbett Junior School named in his honour; its logo is a porcupine.

After Cobbett's death, Benjamin Tilly, who had served Cobbett as companion, secretary and factotum, initiated the Cobbett Club. Members sent petitions to Parliament demanding radical reform and produced radical pamphlets and leaflets to keep Cobbett's politics alive. Some of these are still available in libraries. The William Cobbett Society, based in Farnham, produces a yearly edition of 'Cobbett's New Register', and celebrates Cobbett's life, works and spirit in various activities, including an annual Rural Ride and lecture.

Works

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gollark: Do you want me to explicitly check or something?
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gollark: **You are using the wrong version of CC so it does not work.**
gollark: Apart from the folder thing.

See also

  • Tilford, with an ancient oak tree described by Cobbett

Notes

  1. Ian Dyck, 'Cobbett, William (1763–1835)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 23 July 2011.
  2. Daniel Green, Great Cobbett: The Noblest Agitator (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985), pp. 18–19.
  3. G. D. H. Cole, The Life of William Cobbett (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1971), p. 16.
  4. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 38.
  5. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 16.
  6. S. Clifford-Smith, "William Cobbett: cottager's friend", Australian Garden History, 19 (5), 2008, pp. 4–6.
  7. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 17–18.
  8. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 19, 21 and 30.
  9. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 41–42.
  10. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 22–23.
  11. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 48–49.
  12. John Robert Colombo Canadian Literary Landmarks p. 47.
  13. Jenny's Spring.
  14. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 437.
  15. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 125.
  16. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 55.
  17. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 127.
  18. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 57−58.
  19. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 59.
  20. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 129.
  21. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 130 and 132−134.
  22. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 64.
  23. Edward Smith, "Cobbett, William", Leslie Stephen, ed., Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume XI (1887).
  24. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 59−60.
  25. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 140.
  26. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 63.
  27. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 62.
  28. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 147.
  29. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 60.
  30. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 168–171.
  31. Cobbett, William (1817). "The Pride of Britannia Humbled". Belmont Abbey College NC USA. Retrieved 27 May 2009.
  32. Brodsky, Alyn (2004). Benjamin Rush: Patriot and Physician. pp. 337–343.
  33. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 170–175.
  34. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 65–70.
  35. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 141.
  36. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 58.
  37. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 154 and 183.
  38. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 58 and 70.
  39. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 183.
  40. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 70.
  41. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 184–185.
  42. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 70–72.
  43. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 207.
  44. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 192.
  45. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 75–77.
  46. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 197.
  47. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 76.
  48. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 197–198.
  49. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 231.
  50. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 231–232.
  51. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 81.
  52. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 232–235.
  53. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 209–210.
  54. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 71.
  55. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 218–219.
  56. Ian Dyck, William Cobbett and Rural Popular Culture (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992), pp. 20–22.
  57. Green, Great Cobbett, p. 219.
  58. The Earl of Rosebery (ed.), The Windham Papers. Volume Two (London: Herbert Jenkins Ltd, 1913), p. 234.
  59. Lewis Melville, The Life and Letters of William Cobbett in England and America: Volume I (London: J. Lane, 1913), pp. 205–206.
  60. David Cordingly, Cochrane the Dauntless: The Life and Adventures of Thomas Cochrane, Bloomsbury Publishing, London, 2008 (ISBN 978-0-7475-8545-9), pp. 105–113.
  61. Cobbett, William. "Paper Against Gold". Cobbett's Paper Against Gold. California Digital Library. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  62. Metaxas, Eric (2007). Amazing Grace: William Wilberforce and the Heroic Campaign to End Slavery. pp. 251–252.
  63. Samuel Bamford, Bamford's Passages in the Life of a Radical, and Early Days: Vol. II (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1905), pp. 11–12.
  64. Green, Great Cobbett, pp. 384−385.
  65. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 211.
  66. Ronald G. Walters, Getting Rid of Demon Alcohol.
  67. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 136.
  68. Nicole Carroll, 'William Wilberforce and William Cobbett: Reformers in Conflict in Early 19th-Century Britain', Voces Novae, Vol. 2 , Article 9, p. 8.
  69. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 257–258.
  70. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 258.
  71. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 259.
  72. Dyck, William Cobbett and Rural Popular Culture, p. 35.
  73. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, pp. 259–260.
  74. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 423.
  75. Hanink, James G (November 2005). "William Cobbett. By G. K. Chesterton. Review". New Oxford Review. LXXII (10). Retrieved 30 March 2009.
  76. Metaxas, Eric (2007). Amazing Grace: William Wilberforce and the Heroic Campaign to End Slavery. pp. 264–265.
  77. Clifford-Smith, S., "William Cobbett: cottager's friend", Australian Garden History, 19 (5), 2008, pp. 4–6.
  78. State Trials (New Series) II, 789.
  79. Green,Great Cobbett, pp. 458–459.
  80. Dyck, William Cobbett and Rural Popular Culture, pp. 208–209.
  81. Dyck, William Cobbett and Rural Popular Culture, p. 208.
  82. Ian Dyck, 'Introduction' in William Cobbett, Rural Rides (Penguin Classics, 2005), p. xxiii.
  83. Edward Tangye Lean, The Napoleonists. A Study in Political Disaffection. 1760–1960 (London: Oxford University Press, 1970), p. 206.
  84. Quinion, Michael. "The Lure of the Red Herring". World Wide Words. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  85. Martin Chilton, William Cobbett: forgotten chronicler of England, The Telegraph, 9 March 2015.
  86. Cole, Life of William Cobbett, p. 436.
  87. BBC Home town plans statue of Cobbett 21 January 2009
  88. Waverley Borough Council Committee Document William Cobbett Statue

References

  • G. D. H. Cole, The Life of William Cobbett (Westport: Greenwood Press, 1971). ISBN 0837147816
  • Ian Dyck, "Cobbett, William (1763–1835)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 23 July 2011.
  • Daniel Green, Great Cobbett: The Noblest Agitator (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1985). ISBN 0192818651

Further reading

Parliament of the United Kingdom
New constituency Member of Parliament for Oldham
18321835
With: John Fielden
Succeeded by
John Fielden and
John Frederick Lees
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