The great Preston Lock-Out

So good to see so many of the articles about the Preston Lock Out in the latest issue of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire’s journal freely available on line instead of locked behind a pay wall or between the covers of an eye-wateringly expensive academic publication.

You still have to pay to read three of the articles, including Lewis Darwen’s ‘Strikers and โ€˜Knobsticksโ€™: Intimidation and Violence During the Preston Strike and Lock-Out of 1853โ€“1854’. This will disappoint those who enjoyed Lewis’s talk to the Preston Historical Society earlier this year.

I’ve included the list of the articles here, indicating whether they are freely available or not:


Open Access
Introduction to the Special Issue Commemorating the 170th Anniversary of the 1853โ€“1854 Preston Lock-Out
Lewis Darwen, Jack Southern, and Andrew Hobbs

Open Access
Women and the Preston Lock-Out: Not Just โ€˜ten per centโ€™
Janet Greenlees

No Access
Strikers and โ€˜Knobsticksโ€™: Intimidation and Violence During the Preston Strike and Lock-Out of 1853โ€“1854
Lewis Darwen

Open Access
The Irish and the Preston Lock-Out, 1853โ€“1854
Mรกirtรญn ร“ Cathรกin

Open Access
The Periodicals that Puzzled Dickens: The Weekly Balance Sheets of the Preston Lock-Out, 1853โ€“1854
Andrew Hobbs

No Access
Ten Per Cent Ballads and the โ€˜Shodeocracyโ€™: Labour, Violence, and Humour
Simon Rennie

Open Access
The Preston Strike in Literature: Dickens, Gaskell and Bamford
Robert Poole

No Access
โ€˜I think youโ€™d strikeโ€™: Interpreting Preston in The Strike
Mike Sanders

Open Access
The Narratives and Legacies of the Preston Lock-Out
Jack Southern

Open Access
Reappropriating Cultural Memory of the Preston Lock-Out: Can Animation Be Used to Refocus and Reposition Historical Events Using Historical Visual Archives?
Sarah Ann Kennedy-Parr

https://www.facebook.com/groups/228587940924375/posts/2020863681696783/?.


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