On this day … 7 November 1836

Some 660 spinners went on strike in Preston, putting out of work getting on for eight thousand workers employed by the town’s cotton industry. The strike lasted three months, ending in defeat, when the spinners returned to work on the mill owners’ terms.

The dispute is a reminder that while attention is usually given to the great industrial conflicts of the 1840s and 1850s in Preston, unrest boiled up in the cotton industry in the town in all the earlier decades of the nineteenth century. It was the 1850s that brought the great Preston Strike/Lock Out, which will be the subject of intensive investigation by UCLan historians over the next few months (see sources below).

The Preston historian Anthony Hewitson, expressed a view of Preston’s nineteenth-century industrial history decidedly unsympathetic to working-class solidarity:

‘Numerous conflicts, some very serious, and all of them tending to weaken the bonds of mutual good will between the employers and the employed, have taken place in the cotton trade of Preston. At one time Preston was deemed the chief battle field of Lancashire, so far as cotton trade difficulties of any moment were concerned; and until about 1869 it retained this distracting, costly, unenviable speciality. Generally, the victories have been won by the employers …’

Preston’s mill owners often had military men on their side, to quell the more vociferous pay demands from their workers. Industrial unrest and political unrest went hand in hand as in the protests in 1831 that followed a visit to the town by its recently elected Radical MP, Henry ‘Orator’ Hunt.

Preston Prison and Court House 1850s
The Prison & Court House, Preston. Image taken from the History of the Borough of Preston and Its Environs in the County of Lancaster, By Charles Hardwick 1857: https://www.flickr.com/photos/rpsmithbarney/4062981724/

The hero of the dispute, according to Hewitson, was a Captain Anthony, governor of the House of Correction (today’s Preston Prison) that stood barrack-like at the bottom of Church Street. Hewitson believed:

‘Captain Anthony earned great praise for the skill and courage he displayed in thwarting a projected attack upon the House of Correction, by a riotous mob.’

Captain Anthony’s actions also took place on a 7 November. This is how Hewitson portrayed the incident:

‘A mob marched up and down the town … and, in the course of their wild wanderings, the mobbers assembled in front of the outer wall separating the House of Correction grounds from the streets.

‘Captain Anthony, the governor, having been previously apprised of the doings of this lawless herd, and anticipating an attack upon the prison, planted in front on a walk which at that time ran in a straight line from Church street to the entrance an 18-pounder carronade (a short cannon) charged with grape shot, and at different parts stationed armed men, prepared to fire if an attack were really made.

‘The mobbers at length forced their way through the outer wall gate; and, seeing that matters were now beginning to assume a serious form, Captain Anthony, standing by the side of the carronade, with fuse in hand, vowed, in very emphatic language, that if any of them dared to come forward as far as a lamp which was then standing by the centre of the road, he would fire.

‘The firmness of his attitude cowed the would-be ruffians, and they gradually withdrew from the front, and proceeded into the town. Next day some soldiers belonging to the 50th Regiment arrived at Preston, and the town was preserved from further mob disturbance.’

Hewitson records earlier disputes being resolved by what he describes as ‘powder and shot preparations’, as in 1808, when there was:

‘… an agitation for higher wages amongst the operative weavers of Preston. There was much excitement and uneasiness in the town at this time; and, on the morning of the 2nd of June, a number of weavers assembled. Towards noon they were dispersed. Next day they assembled in greater force, and then went in the direction of the Moor.

‘The magistrates ordered the military to be in readiness; all the recruiting parties in the town [the volunteer militia] were furnished with arms, and joined the 84th Regiment; they marched towards Walton, and afterwards to the Moor; but, fortunately, military force was not actually required to quell the discontent.’


Sources
Hewitson’s History of Preston
For the latest on the Preston Strike/Lock Out project: https://www.hslc.org.uk/featured-events/the-preston-lock-out-1853-54-work-in-progress-online-seminars/?fbclid=IwAR2CCoF4Nn8RKUmv0JF1p91_3eSmZHbCZEukZQ4xXQ9B8cfdz1bVKry8Bow


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