On this day … 15 November 1879

The Preston Chronicle carried reports of two speeches delivered at separate meetings in the town on the subject of the Gunpowder Plot and Bonfire Night which perfectly illustrate the division in the town between Catholics and Protestants.

The first speech was given by a Fr Chapman to the members of the St Augustine’s Men’s’ Institute, who wondered why the anniversary of the plot was still ‘kept up on the 5th of November by juvenile crowds, with the firing of crackers and squibs’, when it was the work of a very small group, in no way representative of the vast majority of the country’s Catholics, who abhorred the plotters’ action and feared the repercussions.

This is the Chronicle report:

‘It was almost universally admitted now, even by Protestant writers, that the Catholics of 1605 condemned the gunpowder treason, and even the king himself acquitted them of any participation in or approval of it in his proclamation dated, dated 7th November, which was after the examination of Guy Fawkes. And though this was a matter of history, and not one of mere sentiment and feeling, they found it again and again ignored, and the old accusations trumped up and re-burnished annually against the Catholics of this country.

‘Time after time had the shallowness of the arguments of the enemies of the Catholic Church been made known, their falsehood detected, and their strength frittered away before the light of truth; but it mattered not – “the gunpowder plot”, “the popish plot”, were pleasing names and grand catches for notoriety seekers.

‘They were topics which pampered well to the ignorant bigotry of a mob, they furnished an instrument of exciting the worst passions, just as a stone when cast into a stagnant pool of water caused all the filth to rise to the surface. But recrimination was idle; the Catholics had no need of anything but the bare truth to make their defence complete.’

19th-century Anti-Catholic cartoon
Catholic emancipation earlier in the century had stoked ‘No Popery’ hostility: ‘Peel and Wellington are the “gravediggers” of the Constitution, Daniel O’Connell and the Pope are taking over St. Paul’s Cathedral (renamed St. Patrick’s) and the King is heading out of the picture (right).’ https://www.historyhome.co.uk/peel/ireland/cartoons.htm

A few days later, a Rev T. G. Johnson from Blackpool delivered an address on the Gunpowder Plot to an audience of between four and five hundred at the tenth annual tea party of the Preston Loyal Orange Institution at the Corn Exchange.

His speech demonstrated the vast divide that separated the two faiths in Preston, and offered little hope for any reconciliation. This is the Chronicle’s report:

‘He said the tendency of the present age was to dull recollection and stupefy memory. A self-satisfied spirit seemed to have bewitched the national and social mind – a spirit of security which saw nothing in the past for caution and nothing in the present for watchfulness and alarm. The rev. gentleman then referred to the Gunpowder Plot of 1605, which he stigmatized as one of the most diabolical plots of ancient or modern history, and said the deliverance was truly national, and should therefore be ever kept in remembrance by the people of this country.

‘To prove that the persecuting spirit of the Papacy had not changed, as some people seemed to think, Mr Johnson referred to St Bartholomew’s massacre, the Irish massacre of 1641, the persecution of the Waldenses and Albigenses, the martyrs of Romish persecution known in English history, including Ridley, Latimer, and Cranmer, and the victims of the Inquisition; and he also read extracts from Papal decrees and bulls and from the works of Romish authors to show that the persecution of “heretics” was sanctioned and authorised.

‘After referring to other massacres, Mr Johnson went on to say that people supposed that the Roman Catholic religion was different now from what it was 200 years since. He contended that if Roman Catholics were in power the same things would be enacted as were done 200 years ago. And yet Rome was fast regaining in England the ground she lost at the Reformation.

‘Her claims were being granted by successive Governments; yet each concession only served to increase her insatiable demands, and the very men who should resist her encroachments were engaged in things of infinitely less importance; Protestant Nonconformists exhausting their arts of eloquence in denouncing the Church as by law established and the Church being engaged in internal disputations.

‘It was time for one and all to throw off passive apathy, and for the Protestants of this country to unite in resisting Papal aggression, and in maintaining intact their civil and religious rights which their fathers died to maintain. He urged them to fight manfully against Papal intrusion. (Applause).


Source
Anyone with a Lancashire County Library card can read the Preston Chronicle and many more papers for free here: https://link.gale.com/apps/BNCN?u=lancs&aty=rpas


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