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NOTTINGHAM.
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MR O'CONNOR AND HIS CON
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Transcript
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Nottingham.
NOTTINGHAM .
Mr O'Connor And His Con
MR O'CONNOR AND HIS CON
STITUENTS . Monday last presented a novel scene to the people of Nottingham—the miniature of the People ' s Charter . Perhaps in these dull times , when dis . cussion is altogether prohibited , and the expression of public opinion , whether in public or private , is suppressed by the law of the sword , or by the pertorsion of the law of the land , it is something refreshing and novel to find the people still ready to meet , even in the open air , fearlessly to express their opinions , thus proving , beyond refutation , that however brute force may triumph for a season , the
combined intelligence of a united people will yet overthrow its majesty and power . Cowed as the working classes now are—disappointed as they have been by the new parliament , from which so much was expected—and after the most protracted session ever known , and in which so much perfidy kas been perpetrated—there is something not only strange , but astonishing , in the fact , that the most abused of that house is—with the exception of Mr Sharman Crawford—the only one ef its members who would dare to base the tenure of his office upon the free and unfettered opinion of his constituents ,
electors anduon-electors . Our readers wereaware that it was impossible to secure a room , where this novel spectacle was to take place , not that we believe the inconvenience to have arisen from plot or contrivance , but from the fact of the Exchange , and the other pubb ' c buildings , being previously engaged ; and under these circumstances it was supposed that Mr O ' Connor would postpone his visit until such time as one or the other of these buildings could be secured for that purpose . However , he felt aware that such an excuse might have been put down to hesitation , and mhht have injured his cause ; and , therefore , he resolved to meet the people in
THE MARKET PLACE , and now we shall proceed to give an account of the affair . At half-past two o ' clock , the time appointed for commencing proceedings , Mr O'Connor , accompanied by a party of the Old Guards , mounted the platform , and was received with loud cheers Bad waving of hats . Mr Sanders was appointed as chairman , and , after commenting upon the novelty of the spectacle , and the honour which the proceedings would confer both upon Mr O'Connor and the people of Nottingham , he introduced the honourable member to his constituents .
Mr O'Coxxob , upon presenting himself , was again loudly cheered . He said , —Mr Chairman , and electors , and non-electors of Nottingham—I have come hereto-day to discharge a most sacred obligation . I received your confidence and support upon the assurance , and with a knowledge of my principles—with a knowledge of those principles you elected me as your representative , and I am come here to-day to tell you that , in spite of the reign of terror—in defiance of the odium sought to be cast upon thoseprinples , and of the persecution by which they are
attempted to beput down—I am here , I say , in defiance of those dangers and threats , to say that I still maintain those principles in their integrity and entirety —( loud cheers)—and if you are not prepared to accept me as their representative , elect another to fill my place ; but I will not sit in that assembly , to which you have sent me , if my voice , and my vote , and my principles , are not stamped with your unanimous approbation . ( Cheers . ) And I now present a novel spectacle . I stand here to give practical effect to two of the six points embodied in the People ' s
Charter . I stand here—denounced by the Pressdenounced by the classes denounced by some of the enthusiastic who would have jeopardised me , and jeopardised our cause ; I stand here as I stand in the House of Commons—ALONE , to give an account of my stewardship , to tender my resignation , if you are dissatisfied with my services , or to accept a renewal of the trust of those services if they have met with your approbation . ( Loud cheers . ) And when I say that such ' is my intention , do not mistake my by presuming that I will resort to any mean or shuffling trick for the purpose of deceiving you ; do not suppose that I am going to take a show of
hands , as a means of ascertaining the will of the majority , and thus hold my seat upon a puzzle . No , if I canno represent you almost unanimously , I will not represent you at " all . ( Cheers . ) And in order that this vast assemblage may be considered as a fair representation of your town , I tell you that if a very few hands in the front , or on the right , the left , or in the centre , are held up against the renewal of my tenure of office , I will surrender my trust into your hands . ( Loud cheers . ) When I represented my native county in Parliament , and before you had established your Charter , and before I became associated with English pontics , I carried
ihe two great principles of Annual Parliaments and Universal Suffrage into practical operation , at the close of each session of Parliament , by tendering my resignation to the people . ( Cheers- ) I sat in the reform parliament in its infancy ; and I shall now proceed to give you an account of its dctage . ( Laughter . ) Popular expectation was roused almost to madness , by hope raised , by the assurance that much new blood had been infused into the emaciated and withered body of legislation during the last general election . Another great and boasted principle of reform was to have been realised—the Six Points of the Charter were to be rendered
unnecessary by sound legislation , and while those six points are repudiated by the enemies of labour , there have been five new points added to the English Constitution . ( Hear , hear . ) Yes , of all the savage and bloody enactments that disgrace the statute book , those which have stained it daring the recent session of parliament , are the most atrocious and bloody . But although as the matter stands , perhaps in after time it will be more gratifying to the people of Nottingham , to know that their representative was the first man to resist them , and the last to abandon his opposition . ( Loud cheers . ) Yes , had it not been for me , the Irish Coercion Bill ,
which was No . 1 in the black catalogue , would have passed sob silentio , and without a voice being raised against it —( Shame , shame)—and the record ' s of Parliament will tell you that I opposed the whole five upon their introduction , until at length in my opposition to the last invasion , or rather destruction , of the remnant of Irishliberty , I was left alone , and without a seconder . ( Cheers . ) And as to all practical measures of amelioration , the voice of a ingle man was incapable of carrying any against the interests of faction . I stand alone in that house , hated by those opposite me , hated by those behind me , hated by those on each side and around me , constitutes the
because traffic in your destitution stock-in-trade and profit of each . ( Cheers . ) And although the solution oftne Labour Question now convulses the world , yet are those , called your representatives , as hopelessly ignorant of the subject as the unborn babe . ( Hear , hear . ) Your chairman has truly told you that I was not going to appeal to those stately houses and shops by which we are surrounded ; as I do not represent the bricks , « tone , and mortar , of which they are composed , but the intellect of thinking man , I have summoned the mind and not the mind ' s extinguisher as the tribunal to judge my fitness , but although I may not represent those inanimate things or their tenseless occupantsand as it is my desire to
ex-, plain the links by which all society is bound toge . ther I will prove to the inmates of those houses that their salvation , their comfort , th ? ir prosperity and wealth , depends wholly upon the prosperity of the working classes . ( Cheers . ) Let me ask . the inmates of those shops , whether the well-paid labourer , or the degraded pauper is the best customer at the counter ? Let me ask them whether the man rec eiving 25 s or 20 s a week , or the man receiving alms , to which they are obliged to contribute , is likely to be largest consumer of their goods . - ( Cheers . ) But they are blind , hopelessly blind , upon this subject . But to apply this Labour Question to a higher grade of society , let me further ask the landlords , whether those shopkeekew
would be better tenants , and better pay their rents from legitimate profit made by legitimate trade in the days of labour ' s prosperity , or in the days of labour ' s adversity ? and that brings us to the consideration of the great social question . And 1 will now show you how everv c lass of society is vitiated at the head and source , and I wul prove to you that middle-class ignorance of the Labour Question is the cause of their own ruin , and the depression of trade . ( Hear , hear . ) The middle classes , like the landed aristocracy , are linked together by social ties and class prejudices ; the little landlords , with small incomes , adopt the opinions and principle * of great | landlords , with large incomes and null intellects : they feix tooppow
Mr O'Connor And His Con
them lest they may be excluded from the festive table and the social board , and lest thereby their wives and families should lose their position in society ; their cry is a social cry , and so is the cry of the middle classes . Those shopkeepers and traders who are now perishing beneath the withering influence of class legislation , are obliged to pia themselves to the skirts of laree manufacturers and commercial men , —the one class commanding the competitive power which pauperises theshopkeeping class , the other commanding the credit which enables them to speculate in trade , —while both live upon the pride and destitution of the poor . ( Loud cheers . ) Alas ! it is too true ! and you find that
the same reasoning applies , the same motives operate , socially , upon the middle classes as upon the landed aristocracy . The shopkeeper , like the little landlord , prostitutes his judgment to the fallacies propounded by manufacturers , lest he himself , his wife , and his family , should be excluded from the society of the more wealthy of their order . But let me illustrate the proposition for you . Can labour ' now estimate its value in the manufacturing market ? ( Cries of ' No , no . ' ) No , —wages are measured by the pride and destitution of the poor and not by any standard of the value of labour . Your children may be , and probably are , as dear to yon as the children of the Queen , and so base is the
system , that by the love of those children is the amount of wages measured . The employer goes to the destitute man and says , ' I employ you from charity , but you must submit to a large reduction of wages ; ' the destitute man , in his pride and desolation , reflects and looks around him ; he sees his wife that is dear to him , and his children that ought to be a blessing to him , —he perceives his weakness arising from want of union ( cheers ) , and he says , which alternative shall I accept , —that of a pauper ' s fare , and separation from my loved wife and children , or the proffered pittance which is below the value of my labour . ( 'Aye , and that ' s it . ' ) Well , to his honour , be it spoken , pride and love of family
triumph , he adopts the sad alternative , and becomes a miserable exister . Well , is his position as a customer to the shopkeeper improved ? Far from it . He but suffers individually , while the shopkeepers suffer collectively from labour ' s destitution . ( Cheers . ) Let us look to the other side of the picture , and I furnish it from the Land Plan ( loud cheers ) , ay , this plan which a lickspittle mercenary of the go vernment—receiving £ 2 , 000 a year of your money for deciding upon the scratching of soldier ' s backsand the government itself , sought to destroy by destroying me . ( Hear , hear . ) Suppose trade is brisk , and that hands are wanted , and that the country must be scoured far a supply , the employer goes
into that free market , the husbandman rests upon his spade or his hoe ; here is reciprocity , —here they treat upon equal terms , and the husbandman says , ' I can earn oQs . a week and good health , —I can eat provisions that have not been thumbed in the market-place , —I can rest in my own house , surrounded by my own family , ani I am my own master ! WHAT WILL YOU GIVE ME ? ' ( Cheers . ) The employer retires , he comes to the slave market , and there the labourer measures his wages by the destitution of his class , —the shopkeeper becomes bankrupt from his poverty , and wealth becomes centralised in the hands of the few , who monopolise legislation , and which is applied to the degradation of In
labour . ^ Cheers . ) Nottingham and the other manufacturing towns , trade is paralysed , and you are at a loss for the solution , but I think I can show you why your fancy trade has suffered from the present continental convulsion . Men engaged in revolution and expecting death , to not prepare for the advent like the hero , or the bridegroom upon the stage , they are not like them attired in doublet and hose , embroidered with point lace ruffles , they go simply attired into the field of action , and cease to be customers fot your wares ; — then your labour ceases , its produce is not required , you cannot in return procure food , and you are deficient in the
commissariat department ; and vulgar and contemned as the Land question is , let me call your attention to this startling fact , that the prostration of trade at home or abroad , does not deprive a pig of its value , or paralyse the industry of the producer ; the pig is the commissariat , the feeder is the commissary-general , and although you cannot eat lace , he can eat his pig , and if his wife or himself require the produce of artificial labour , they will get more of it for the pig in bad than in good times . ( Hear , hear , and cheers . ) No man can control the labour of the free labourer , while the employment and wages of the hired labourer depends upon the caprice of the
capitalist , more than upon the demand for his produce . ( Hear , hear . ; In Prussia , and in France , and throughout the world , the solntioa of the Labour Question is now the one topic of all-absorbing conversation , and yet I defy you to point me out one practical word , written , published , or spoken upon this all-important subject . True , a great theory has been propounded—the theory of Socialism and Communism , and that theory has been enthusiastically accepted and applauded in consequence of its real and practical deficiency . It is a theory upon which the writer and the spouter may excite the most lively enthusiasm , but it is one which , in its practical result , must inevitably end in a war of the
industrious against the idle . ( Loud cheers . ) Do not mistake me , my friends , for while I am allowing the greatest latitude and toleration to the freest expression of opinion , and the most unbounded advocacy ot a principle , I am neither a Socialist nor Communist . ( Loud cheers . ) The principle is at variance with the ruling instinct of man , which is selfishness , self-interest , self-reliance , and individuality ; and decry that feeling or instinct as you may , I tell you that there is not a man in the meeting , or a man in this world , who is not governed by that ruling instinct , and above all—those who profess the principles of Socialism . ( Great cheering . ) The government of that instinct may be varied , one man may be selfish and sordid , another man may be
selfish and generous . I am selfish , and , if I had five millions of money to-morrow , the bearing of my selfishness would be to expend it to the last farthing upon the location of the poor upon the land . ( Loud cheers . ) 'What ! tell me that any one set of men , with brains in their heads , will labour that others may live upon their industry—and such would be the real practical effect of Socialism , or rather Communism . The state in which we live is one huge system of Communism : and it is only out of those materials of self-reliance , individuality , and co-operation , that a just system , equally protective of all , the rich and the poor , the strong and the weak , the educated and the ignorant , the hale and the cripple , the sane and the insane , can be moulded . Once
establish the priaaple of Communism , and you paralyse industry , you destroy honourable competition , you elevate the cunning , destroy self-reliance , and create a war of the idle strong against the weak industrious . ( Cheers . ) I ask you boldly , in the face of this promulgated and extensively-accepted theory , if there is a man amongst you who does not prefer the principle of self-reliance , individuality , and cooperation , to that of Communism , which would at once destroy every one of those att r ibutes ? ( Loud cheers . ) Jl am not astonished at a destitute people accenting any theory which promises them amelioration ; but , if I am asked to give a practical illustration of the power and the efficiency of employment upon the land , I point to Belgium , to Holland , to the Channel Islands , and other countries , where agriculture constitutes the staple of trade . Belgium
is an agricultural country , separated from France by a gate , and from Prussia by an open arch . France and Prussia are both convulsed , while agricultural Belg ium remains unshaken . In Holland , labourers receive small wages and small parcels of land for their labour . Holland is a monarchy , and has escaped the convulsion . ( Cheers . ) I think I hear the sceptic directing my attention to Ireland , and summoning that unhappy country as a refutation of my assertion—but my answer is , that there is no tenure in Ireland . ( Cheers . ) The serf who improves the soil is the bond slave of its owner . There is a premium for idleness , and a . discouragement to industry . If the small farmer , who pays £ i an acre for laud , increases its value to 25 s ., the piping landlord gives him the option of increasing his rent to 25 s . —thus taxing his own industry , and miking capital of hii labour—or the alternative of letting it
Mr O'Connor And His Con
to a stranger over his head . ( Cheers . ) Thus I show you that the state of Ireland furnishes no refutation . But , in God ' s name , where is the great difficulty of settling this Labour Question if Labsur was represented ? ( Cheers . ) I will show you two sources—the one a debasing fund , and the other a pauper fund—from the application of which , to its legitimate and proper purpose , the whole Labour Question and war question may be settled—I mean Tithes and Poor Rates . ( Loud cheers . ) Will any one deny that tithe—if at all sustainable—is not a divine charitable fund , from the proceeds of which the ignorant should be educated , the stranger housed , and the destitute fed ?—and will any one
deny that Poor-rates should not be most beneficially employed to the sustainment of the poor , instead of to the coercion of the destitute ? Well , those two unds may be estimated lowly at fifteen millions a-year ; and , if applied to the location of the poor upon the land of their birth , would , in five years , locate half a million of families , amounting to two millions and a half of people ; would leave a large revenue to the Exchequer ; would promote pure religion and education ; destroy pauperism and degradation ; and reduce the taxation of the country by fifteen millions a-year—substituting knowledge . Christianity , and wealth , for ignorance , prejudice , and poverty . ( Loud cheers . ) Then why is this
not attempted ? Because it constitutes the fund for the propagation of blasphemy and the prostration of Labour through destitution . ( Cheers . ) Talk of reduction of taxation , every year you are increasing it . This year you have increased it by two millions , and the generosity of Parliament will ever be measured by the resolution to suppress the demand of labour . ( Cheers . ) Perhaps , in giving an account of my stewardship , I may inform you that I voted against this grant of Two Millions . ( Cheers . ) But again I tell you , that an individual who standi up in that house to advocate the rights of Labour , ensures but a sorry hearing from any section . I
recollect Mr O'Connell was once arraigned for calling them 658 pickpockets—and when he became shy and overawed , and was about to retract , 1 pulled him by the skirt and said , * Stick to it , and we will back you . * And , although Mr M . J . O'Connell , Lord Arundel and Surrey , ' and the Methodist Parson Drnmmond , frequently read the Northern Star in the House of Commons , and would make me responsible , not only for every word in it , but also for the quack advertisements—( laughter)—and although what I am saying here now may be flashed in my face , I will apply the words of Sheridan to that
assembly' Tanta . rara . ra—rogues all , regue » all . ' ( Roars of laughter . ) My friends , if we could have secured a room uninterrupted by the passing of vehicles , as we are here , I might , and probably would , have delivered a mere consecutive address as regards my stewardship , the present position of nations and the Labour Question , but while other . " would be but too happy to make the excuse of not being able to get a meeting-place as an apology for postponing their appearance , I make no such excuse —I prefer meeting you in this market-place under the canopy of the broad blue sky and where none can be denied admittance . And now let no man misunderstand me or affect to misinterpret the
object of my visit . I come here to tell you that I maintain every point of the People ' s Charter as my principle . ( Cheers . ) I come here to tell you that if the most influential man in this borongh said , * Use your influence to secure me place , patronage , or emolument , and I will ensure you your re-election at the next contest , or , refuse It and my opposition shall ensure your defeat ; ' in such case my answer should be , ' You are not my master I am not your servant , I was not employed to do your work and I will not prostitute myself to your service . ' I would rather maintain my honour and independence than maintain my seat in parliament at the expense of either . ( Loud cheers . ) Nottingham has given
England a Chief Justice and the Board of Centroul a President , and it shall be the boast of the constituency that Nottinghamjhas obliterated those stains from its history by giving labour an honest representative . ( Loud cheers . ) Again , if any man in this vast assemblage and belonging to the constituency voted for me in the hope that I would recommend him as a policeman or an exciseman —( laughter)—or that 1 will do so , let him now vote for the accepting of the resignation of my trust as I will in nowise prostitute myself to his debasement . ( Loud cheers . ) I will make an honourable contract with my honourable colleague , to him I leave the patronage , if he can get it . ( Laughter . ) I
wdl reserve my independence . I am your servant but not your slave . If I hire a servant upon the presumption that he will faithfully discharge the required duties , I would consider it an act of the greatest tyranny if I was compelled to retain that servant after he had proved himself inefficient of not trustworthy , and I look upon you in the same po . sition ; I should consider that I had committed the greatest act of tyranny towards you if , having employed me from a belief in my efficiency or reliance upon my honour , I had deceived you upon both points but still had recourse to the flimsy
technicality of hiring for a certain period to secure my place . ( Loud cheers . ) I am not like the hon . members for Sheffield , who , when requested to re . sign by the very voters that elected them , urged their seven years ' tenure of office as a justification for continuing in their dishonoured trust . ( Cheers . ) There may be some men who attach paramount importance to a seat in parliament , but it is my pride to say , that I believe there are only two members of that house , and they are both Irishmen , representing English constituencies , who would have the manliness to face the electors and non-electors in
their respective boroughs and tender their resi gnation . Of course you are aware that I allude to Sharraan Crawford —( tremendous cheering)—the hon . member for Rochdale , who may , with confi . dence , stand before his constituents and non-electors and give an account of the zealous , the faithful , and independent manner in which he has discharged the duties of his office . ( Loud cheers . ) I tell you , electors and non-electors , that I did not buy you and I will not sell you , and as you did not buy me you shall not sell me . ( Great cheering . ) I may make myself as serviceable to your cause out of parliaraent as in it , and your rejection of me to day shall not damp my ardour in that cause .
( Cheers . ) No , although its death is again pronounced by the Press and our enemies , as of yore , I am going to make another tour of resurrection . ( Cheers . ) The little minister is gone to Ireland to settle the question of that country . What a subject for a puppet-show ! ( Cheers . ) If , instead of extracting two millions from your exhausted frames , he had placed himself at my disposal , I would have made more money of the raree-show , as the menageries or exhibitions of Batty , Wombwell , or Van Amburgh would have been as nothing compared to the exhibition of the smallest Saxon you ever saw for nothing . ( Great laughter . ) I think I hear the keeper crying out : ' Ladies and
Gentlemen—Vont yon valk up and see the smallest Saxon that vas ever seen for nothing ? ' and I think I hear Peggy Muldooney say to Nelly Mulligan : ' Wisba , my God , Peg , his ' nt he a poor little crater—the devil from me , but he'd fit in Jack Regan ' s belly . ' ( Roars of laughter . ) Well , but he is to go over as a witness upon Smith O'Brien ' s trial , and the Timks says , and the Chronicle says , and you know those papers never tell lies —( great laughter)—however , they say , and upon authority , that letters written by the Prime Minister of England , will be pu into his bauds at those trials , and that those letters recommended the Reformers in 1832 , to make a moral display of theii strength , and that if that does not
succeed-they MUST MAKE A PHYSICAL ARRAY . ( Loud cheers . ) Now I do not vouch for that , but the Times and Chronicle do ; and I should not be astonished , as the old adage says— ' Times change and we change with them . ' Now so much for Lord John ' s tour in Ireland as a means of pacificating and regenerating that ceuntry , and a word as to our own movement , and I have done . I stated in parliament as your representative , what I never stated bat what I always opposed on the hustings and upon the platform , namely—that if the Constitution was violated by the suppression of public opinion , which is the safety . valve of agitation , the bulwark of the Constitution , the preserver of peace , and the magnet of louad public opinion . —I stated that it
Mr O'Connor And His Con
that unconstitutional measure passed the Commons , I would from that moment avow myself a Republi . can . ( Tremendous cheering . ) I also stated that the suppression of public opinion would lead to the establishment of secret clubs and societies , and that t hose clubs and societies would be the focus of sedition , conspiracy , and treason , fomented , 7 spies and informers , and that the result would be , that the enthusiastic , the honest , and the destitute , would be entrapped by the wily , the cunning ,, and the villanous . ( Hear , hear . ) Well , such has been my warning to the ' people for now nearly eleven years , and see how my prophecy has been fulfilled by recent occurrences . In London we have the
informer Powell —( groans ) -and rely upon it yeu will have others . In Ashton we have Williamson and Wmterbottom . In Oldham , Gifford ; and in Halifax , Robert Emmett , the most trusted from his name . ( 'Oh , oh , ' and groans . ) And mark , that in every locality those men professed the largest amount of enthusiasm , while their own sworn testimony establishes the fact that they were the prime instigators in those several conspiracies . (• Oh , oh , ' and' Shame . ' ) Well , would I have been justified in jeopardising your cause by jeopardising my own liberty , in obeying the injunctions qf . those villains . ( ' No , no . ' ) No , but mark the difference , if all were < allowed to speak
openly ; the folly of the fool would be checked by the wisdom of the wise , our cause would have been saved froai the ignominy that those ruffians have cast upon it , and its advocates would have been saved from a dreary dungeon . ( Cheers . ) My . friends , I am not come here to flatter you ; you are the manufacturers of your own misery ; you spend yo jr money in drunkenness and dissipation —( loud cheers)—which , if applied to your reformation and organisation , would make you too powerful for your enemies . ( Cheers . ) I have toldyouathousandtimes , and I now repeat it , that your principles are within your grasp at any time ; that you can make Peel and Russell
bid the six points of the Charter for your support , when it is worth having ; and , as I have told you a thousand times before , you have no right to call upon me to violate one single law that would jeopardise my liberty , until you have all worked as I have done , within the law , for the accomplishment of your principles . ( Loud cheers . ) Let all work for a month as I have worked , for twenty . six years , and your Charter is carried . ( Cheers . ) The men who inhabit those houses now consider me a destructive and a firebrand ; but I tell you that I will live down their prejudice , and they will yet adopt my teaching . This class would draw lots for the honour of hanging and gibbeting me ; but so averse am I to
cruelty , that when saved from their fangs , I would not hurt a hair of their heads , but would reclaim them by kindness . ( Cheers . ) I hate cruelty , and though branded as a destructive , it is ray greatest boast to be able to say that I never committed or tolerated a single act of cruelty , even to a dumb animal , in all my life . ( Cheers . ) Cruelty is the greatest of all vices ; you may reclaim the drunkard , the idler , the liar , or the thief , but you never can reclaim the cruel man . Before the question of my resignation is put to this meeting , I must arm you and myself with an answer to any charge of partiality , or of this being a packed or one-sided meeting . I must remind you that the electors as well as the non-electors
have had ten days notice of the object ; and I must again , in order to place you and myself in a proper position , repeat and impress upon your minds that if a mere fraction of this meeting , an insignificant fraction , shall manifest disapproval of my conduct by voting to accept my resignation , I will at once resign , as the honour rests in representing all , and not in representing part of the mind , the will , and the intelligence of Nottingham . ' ! have now done , merely observing that no doubt the young gentlemen of the Press , who are numerically strong here—( cheers)—will assure their readers on Saturday next , that Mr O'Connor made a long and rambling speech , without beginning , middle , or ending , to three or four
hundred tattered ragamuffins —( great laughter )—and that the motley assemblage did not represent itij portion of the mind ' of Nottingham ; while , if a Whigling , or a Tory representative , had placed himself in the same honourable position , and spouted unconnected balderdash for ten minutes , his speech would be represented as the sublimity of eloquence , and his conduct as well worthy of imitation . ( Great cheering . ) But as my popularity never did—and please God 1 never shall , depend upon the hired praise of a prostitute Press , I now submit myself , as
your representative , to the most searching examination , not into my stewardship only , but , as trust should be based upon character and honour , I court , I invite , and challenge the most rigid inquirry into every act of my life , and from which , notwithstanding the denunciation of the Press , I shall be able to prove , before an impartial tribunal , that I have never committed a dishonest , a mean , a dishonourable or ungentleman-like act throughout my life . ( Loud and tremendous cheering . ) Now I am here to answer any question that may be put to me , not only upon my parliamentary , bu * upon my general
conduct . When silence was restored , a person came to the front of the platform , and asked Mr O'Connor why it was he had not supported Sir Henry Half ord ' s measure with regard to theFramework-knitters ; Mr O'Connor repeated the question , so that all might hear and understand it , and gave the following answer : —I shall first answer the question unequivocally , and I shall then ask another . Sir Henry Halford brought his measure forward upon a Wednesday , when the sitting of the house is limited from twelve to six o ' clock . I remained in the house till half-past two ; there were other questions to come on after that uuder discussion was decided , and
it was thought impossible to bring on the Framework-knitters' question on that day : I left the house to meet a deputation . I was returning at half-past three , upon the presumption that the question might come on . I met some members coming out , who told me it was impossible it could come on . However , that question , thatonghttohave taken along time in discussion , was not only brought on but disposed of in about an hour , And now I come to my question . Determined to discharge my obligations fairly to my constituents , I came to Nottingham before the session , to consult with the several classes and trades , upon questions of importance , without any reference to politics ; I came to receive instruction , and to act upon my instructions ; I
remained here three days ; not a question was submitted to me , except that of the irame-work knitters . I discussed their case with them ; I told them the impossibility of instructing me upon so large a question in conversation ; I asked them to submit their opinions in a plain and simple form in writing , to state distinctly their grievances and proposed remedics , and that , at my own expense , I would sicure the ablest counsel to lick them into parliamentary shape , embody them in a bill , propose it to and support it in parliament . ( Loud cheers . ) And as we say in Ireland , ' It ' s a bad dog that ' s not worth whistling after . 'I never received those instructions from those frame-work knitters , and , as in all cases , they would now charge me with their own neglect of duty . ( Cheers . )
The person who asked the question , replied , that he did not put the question with any the slightest ill-feeling , but that he wished the trade to be acquainted with the facts . ' ( Hear , hear . ) Mr O'Connoh . —Are there any more questions ? Here a person stepped from the centre of the meeting to the platform and said , « I wish to ask Mr O ' Connor why he did not vote upon the sugar question ?' Mr O'Connor . —I voted upon every question connected with sugar until I started at a sugar hogshead , and fell into fits at a grocer ' s shop , and upon that questian 1 always voted against slavery and in favour of freedom , without the slightest reference to the price of sugar . ( Cheers . ) Any more questions ?
No other question being put , though ample time was allowed , Mr Sweet , as an elector , moved' That Mr O'Connoihad faithfull y discharged his duties to the electors and non-eleclorsof Nottingham , and that he be re-elected as their representative in parliament . ' Loud cheers . ) The veteran George Harrison , with hii . nowwhite head , came forward , as a non-elector , to second tie proposition , and which , when put 6 / & e
Mr O'Connor And His Con
chairman , elicited smb . a show of hands as we believe was never before exhibited at a public meeting as illustrative of unanimity ; and upon the con . trary being put , not one' single solitary hand was held up against the motion , when the announcement of Mr O'Connor ' s re-electron was received with deafening cheers , followed by waving of bats and clapping of hands . When the cheering bad subsided , Mr O'Connor again presented himself , and said : My friends , I thank yout- I accept the renewal of my trust with pride and satisfaction ; the more especiall y as all were summoned , and the jury has been unanimous . And how , without vanity , I think I may say that I , in ' my own
person , must present to jour minds the most extraordinary recollection . Here I am . abused and denounced by every newspaper in the empire ; reviled by every class , save Labour , and' by some even of that order , and , nevertheless * accepted as its representative by a most enlightened constituency i and , to convince you of the importance that I attach to short accounts , I am here to' tell you now that I do not base ray tenure of office even upon its sessional duration , for if , during any session , I should fail to discharge my trust faithfully , and not ' according to the principles upon which ' you elected me , I shall not trifle with pledges- or opinion , but whenever called upon during the session I shall be prepared to surrender a trust if but a small
minority shall demand its restoration . ( Loud cheers . ) Again , I say , look at the novel spectacle of a man attempted to be crushed by the whole Press of the empire , and whose honour was to be destroyed by a Select Committee of the House of Commons . ( Loud cheers , and « They can ' t . ' ) Look , I say , upon that man who alone for his associates dares , in such stirring and troublesome times , to appear before his constituents and settle his accounts with them . ( Great cheering . ) Take it home with you , —think upon it—reflect upon it—dream upon it—and your
wonder will be that the man , whom those bloody acts were principally framed to entrap , is still at large , and fearlessly defends his principles in the Market-place , and then , I think , that instead of reviling yeu will honour me ; while you will agree with what I have before stated , that one tongue at large is worth thousands that are incarcerated . Again , I thank you , assuring you that I shall now resume my seat with more pride and more force when backed by the renewal of your confidence . ( Loud and long continued cheering . )
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And National Traded Journal, _ Vol. Xl N...
AND NATIONAL TRADED JOURNAL , _ VOL . XL No 570- LONDON , SATURDAY , SEPTEMBER 23 , 1848 . ~ ^^ m ^^^ :, ¦ / * five Shilling * and Sixpence per Quarter
To The Members Of The National Land Comp...
TO THE MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL LAND COMPANY . My Friends , You must naturally suppose that I , of all persons connected with the Land Scheme , am the most interested in a decision upon its future workings and efficiency ; and in order to secure a speedy decision upon the . propositions that have been submitted to you , I , together with Mr Dixon and Mr Doyle ( our brother Directors , being on their mission ) , have decided upon holding a Conference at Birmingham , on Monday , the 30 th October ,
and I am the more anxious for the adoption of this course , in consequence of the declaration of several of the Midland Counties' Secretaries , whom I had the pleasure to meet at Nettingham , on Monday last . They urged—and I entirely coincided with them—the indispensable necessity of convoking the Conference ; and they further urged the necessity of each district paying the expenses of its own delegate , and you may rest assured that I cordially acquiesced in that proposition .
. We have named a day sufficiently remote to afford the members of all districts maturely and dispassionately to consider the propositions to be -oxscuIsto by the Conference ; and every thinking man must see and understand that this , course would be just as necessary after the tour of Messrs M'Grath and Clark , as there is no other possible means by which the opinion of the several districts could be ascertained . As far as I am concerned , I only gather from mere rumour and from letters from individuals
in the several districts , that the propositions have been received with all but unanimous ap . proval . Of course there are and will be some objections , and some amendments , as the propositions are merely to elicit discussion ; and by the time appointed for the meeting of Conference , I hope to be enabled to present such a set of rules as will bring us within the Friendly Societies Acts , and enable us to procure enrolment . However , whatever you may think of the probable and ultimate success of
the Plan , I am determined to struggle to the death for its realisation , as in my soul and my conscience I believe , scoffed at as it is , that it must and will constitute the basis of social and political regeneration , and be the adopted of all nations . I trust that the members in the several districts will elect shrewd and trustworthy delegates , whose chief aim and object will be to do the best in their power to secure the effi . ciency of the Plan . I remain , your faithful friend , Peargus O'Connor .
The Directors' Propositions. To Thl Xdit...
THE DIRECTORS' PROPOSITIONS . TO THl XDITOa OV TEE NO & TUEKM BTA . R . Dunfermline , 16 th Sept , 1818 . Mr Editor , —Amongst the many plana that have been propounded for bettering the condition of the working classes , there has not been Que equal to the Land allotment put in practice by that great and good man , Feargus O'Connor , Esq . What a regret will it cause throughout the country should it fail . It is the duty of every one who feels an interest in tho working man , to do his utmost endeavour to work out this great scheme . I see the Directors are anxious and willing to do their best , they having brought before the members several propositions for their approval or disapproval .
Now , air , there ii one of these propositions that carries s strong' objection on the face of it . An estate ii bought—the ground is cleared—the houses built—all is made ready—a day appointed ior lecstion—due notice is . given to all—the members' bids are taken—the highest receives his location—the money to go for the good of all . This plan might do were there not a better and a juater way . The juster way , in my opinion , is to Rive an opportunity to all—the able and the less able member . The way I propose , is to take weekly instalments , bo that the poor member may pay in his pence , and the more able member his pounds—each to reap the benefit ot hie owe money , by way of interest , or by lowering
his rent when located—the highest on the list of payments to receive his house and land . In my opinion , were this plan adopted , it would give a stimulus to the members far surpassing the Ballot . It will double the funds that the proposed bonus would de . Suppose , for instance , 100 members wete to be located , say next month , and all the hundred to pay £ 20 on an average . This would amount to £ 2 , 300 . Now , let it bo supposed that weekly instalments were adopted , and 20 . 000 paid-up members to advance from Is ; to £ 10-aay 10 s . on the average . This would give funds to the astonishing amount of £ 10 , 000 . This , certainly , is well worth consideration . I am , yours , A Shareholder .
Child Stealing,—Glasgow Autumn Assizes.—...
Child Stealing , —Glasgow Autumn Assizes . — The Glasgow Autumn Circuit Conrt was opened on Tuesday by Lords Monorietf and Cockburn . The only case of interest tried during the day was that of Margaret Park , accused of child stealing , or' plagium , ' as the offence is termed in Scottish law phraseology . From the evidence it appeared that the prisoner picked from the streets a little girl , the daughter of a Mr Morrison , a pattern drawer ; that search was afterwards made for her in every direction ; and that many days afterwards the child was found in a state of nakedness in this woman'd possession in an obscure part of the city . t The prisoner was convicted a » d sentenced to fourteen years' transportation . Dbpartuke ov Convicts if or New SouihWai . es —The Eden , hired convict-ship , loft her moorings , opposite the Royal Arsenal , i YJoolwioh , on Friday afternoon , with 300 convicts on board from Milbank PenitentbHj and tta Model Prison at Pentwill *
Fc&Arttet Jtomiiq Mm
fc & arttet JtomiiQ Mm
Fihsburt.—At A Meeting, Held On Sunday L...
Fihsburt . —At a meeting , held on Sunday last , the following resolution was carried unanimously :- ^ Moved by R . Fuzzan , seconded by Mr Diorey , ' Thai we , the members of the council or the Finsbury locality , feel called upon to express our profound gratituda to F . O'Connor , Esq ., M . P ., for the generous and liberal offer he has made to secure counsel for the defence of the men awaiting their trials in Newgate ; asd we further feel that we should be wanting in out duty if we discontinue subscribing and collecting , until he be fully indemnified from any pecuniary loss by the adTanoement of monies for that purpose . ' Leeds . —On Sunday . Mrs Theobald , of Manchester , "" ivered two interesting lectures in the large room ottheBaxjar , Briggate . The room was crowded to excess , and the lecturer gave great satisfaction . Lo « catoies wishing the services of Mrs Theobald , may obtain information by applying to Mr Brook , Irongatty
Timioif , LEvoN .-A meeting of the Chartist Assoeiation was held on Friday evening , September 15 th , at the Golden Lion Inn , Westexe . Mr Row * cliffe , sown councillor , in the chair . After the iub < Bonptions of several individuals had been baaded in , in aid of the Defence Fund , and an annouawaeat maoVtbat during the past week £ l . had been re . mitte * to'Mr Rider ,. at the Stab office , making in all jW to thra fund , the' secretary brought forward the balance sheet for the past quarter , which was read and adopted . A question being asked respecting the horary , j ailed forth ; from one of the auditow
appointed to-sxamine the accounts-, the result of th * . same ; the income , expenditure , trad balance beinjr jnamed , it was- suggested that the various items of expenditure , in a detailed form ,-should be produced a * the next meetfag , which was accordingly ordered : after which , a portion of Mr Barker ' s publication , ta * People , was-read , which * gave rattoh satisfa * . lion , it being considered by those present that this publication was a-valuable co > worker with the WoBraBas Star , in' the great and' glorious cause of justice and truth . & vote of thanks to the chair * mar * finished the business of the-aveaing ,. when the company quietly separated .
RoBK »* us . —To the Chartists of England . —The following resolution was pasted unanimously at ft meeting of the council ' of the Rochdale National Charter' Association , held September 18 th : — 'That we , the council of the Rochdale branch , seeing the low state of the Executive funds , do forth witn remit the Bum . of fifteen shillings to the same , and earnestly call upon the men of England and Scotland to dolskewise . ' There are many localities who have never contributed a penny to the present Exe . cutive ; and we call upon them to do their duty , and contribute in proportion to- the number of members
, say a halfpenny per member ; then the wives and little ones of Messrs M'Douall and Jones can receive their wages . Remember they were sacrificed for advocating your riehts-and shall it be said that you , the Chartists of England and Sootland ,. !»! lowed their families to be neglected and forgotten I Surely , you will not . We hope , then , that your resposd will be the forwarding of pounds , shillings , , and pence , which will be putting into practical operation the golden rule- 'Do unto others as ye would- they should do unto you . ' Signed on behalt of the council , ' Leigh GoraAY-B ,. aeoretary ,
Metropolitan Cbmtbal Victim and- Dkmhcb Fond . —Receipts from September 10 th to September 17 th . —83 , Dean-street , Soho , & M ; for Defence , 2 « 2 d ; Carlisle , per J . Gilbertaon . ' for Defence of Cuffay and others , £ 1 ; Green-gate , 6 a 3 d ; Stallwood , 2 s Id ; Globe and Friends , 7 a ; Cigar makers , T n ffo , fi awye K' no ^' -, ^ [ I > Dlea ?^ - Pw , Mn Gill . lOslOJd ; MrKendnok , Globe and Friends , 5 s ; A Friend , per Mr Sumner , 6 d ; Mr Rider , as per Stab , £ 2 0 i 4 d ; Land Office , as per Star , 15 s 5 d ; Mr KydtJ , per Stab , 7 *; D ^ ptford , per Mr Floyd , 59 ; for Defence , per Floyd , 2 s fid ; Wootton-underedge , per R , Long , 63 ; Nottingham , per J . Sweet , 6 s 3 d .-Total , £ 74 s 0 id . James Grassby , secretary .
National Land Company. Alva And Distbict...
NATIONAL LAND COMPANY . Alva and Distbict . —Messrs M'Grath and Clark will meet the members of the several branches in this district , at Alva , on Monday eveniae next , the 25 th imt . Glasgow . —Messrs M'Grath and Clark will meat the members of this and surrounding branches , on Wednesday evening next , 27 ih lost ., at Glasgow . Kilmarnock . —Messrs M'Grath and Clark will meet the members of this and surrounding branches , on Tuesday , 26 th inst ., at Kilmarnock . Alexandbia . —Messrs M Grathaud Clark will meet the members of this branch ou Thursday evening , 28 th inst .
Bilsion—The Chartists Of Bilston Are-Req...
Bilsion—The Chartists of Bilston are-requested to meet at the house ef Mr Joseph Linney ; on Sunday evening next , to take into consideration the best means of raising funds for the support of the lawmade victims . South London Chabtist Hall . —Walter Cooper will lecture on Sunday evening next , September 24 , at eight o ' clock . Sabjeot : * The life , character , and writings of Robert Burns . '—Mr Kydd will lecture on Monday evening next . Subject : The four pillars of the state . '
Oldham . —A general meeting of the members of the National Land Company will take place in the school room of the Working Man ' s Hall , on Sunday next , September Si , when all who are enrolled are requested te pay their contributions , & c , and commence paying the penny per share to the aid fund . — Oa Sunday ( to-morrow ) Mr James Leaob . of Manchester , will lecture in the Working Man ' s Hall , at six o ' clock in the evening . Subject : ¦ 'The organisation of labour and co-operation . ' Mr Donovan ' s Route . —Mr Donovan , of Manchester , will attend theifollowing places next weekthe councils of the different localities will please announce and provide places of meeting : —Padiham , Sunday , September 24 ; Burnley , Monday , 25 ; Barowford , 26 ; Coloe , Wednesday , 27 ; CJithero , Thursday , 28 ; Baoup , Friday , 29 ; Todmorden , Sunday , October 1 .
New Radford . —The Land members of this branch are requested to attend a meeting at the Pelican , Pelican-street , on Monday evening next , at six o ' clock . Sheffield . —A meeting of the Chartists will be held in the Democratic Reading Rooms , 33 , Queenstreet , on Sunday evening , at eight o ' clock , and every succeeding evening , at which the Northern Stab and daily papers will be publicly read . On Tuesday evening , September 26 , at half-past seven , Mr Leaob , will deliver a lecture . Subject : ' Emigration and its effects upon British commerce . ' Exeter . —Tee Land members ef this branch are requested to convene a meeting for the purpose of electing a secretary in the room of J , W . Havill , who hasres gned .
West Riding Delegate Mbbtiso . —A West Riding delegate meeting will be held in the Chartist rooms , Leeds , on Sunday morning next , the 24 th inst , at . ten o ' clock , for the purpose of winding up the aocounts of the late West Riding Demonstration . It is to be hoped that all parties concerted will gee tha necessity of attending and settling this affair without further notice . Kidderminster . —A special meeting of the mem . bers of this branch of the Land Company will be held at the Falcon Ian , en Tuesday evening next , at aaven o ' clock . South London Chahtut Hall —A public diszussion will take place at the above hall , on Sunday morning , at eleven o ' clock . Subject : 'Which would moat benefit the nation , emigration or home ooloni . sation . '—The Land members will meet at sixo'clock in the evening .
EiimsATioN . —Mattsew Stevenson having resided four years in America , chiefly amongst the .- working classes , will deliver one or two lectures , if required , in any town within fifty miles of Bolton oa the probible good or evil results of emigrating tothe United States . Terms-paying his travelling and other reasonable expenses . Address , Matthew Stevenson , news-agent , No . 7 , Folda-road , Little Bolton , Lancashire . Newcastle-upon-Tine . —A general meeting 0 $ the members of this branch will be held in M . Juda ' a long room , on Monday evening , September 25 , at eight o ' clock , and the members will be required to commence paying up their shares , and to the . aid fund , in accordance with the resolution . —A district delegate meeting of the Charter Association will be held in the house of Mr T . Pratt , Magnesia Back , North Shields , on Sunday , September 21 . at two o ' elock .
Arrest of Mr John West . —Newcastie-dpon-Ttne . —Mr John West , of Macclesfield , was arrested here on Sunday evening , September IS , on a bench warrant issued at the late Liverpool Assizes , and the Chartists of Newcastle desire to express their thanks to the police authorities of Newcastle , fi . r the considerate manner in which the arrest was effected , and for the humane treatment Mr Went received from thsm while in their custody . The various localities in this district are particularly requested to send , delegates totlie district meeting , to be held on Sunday , at North Shields , as the district council have certain hopes that Mr West will be enabled to commeace his labours again on an early day next week ,
Tobmordkn . —The Chartists of this locality wil » , hold tea parties and balls ( laving the fair in the fuVlovring order : —A ball en Thursday [ eveninir , Ser . t , 28 th , aad a tea party and ball on iho two frd ! ov , ' iCg days , the 29 th » v . d 30 th of September , Tea ca the tible , each day , at five o ' clock preciaely . Saltobd —A meeting of the Cbariiyfc members wilt be held in their room , Bank-s ^ reet , Grant George-street , oa Sunday evening % xt , September 2 ivh , at naif-past six o ' clock . —On . Monday Evening a meeting will be held in the abo / a room for the purpose of strengthening the Deforce and Victim Fund , when the Manchester victim ' * will attend : —namely , Messrs Leach , Donovan . Clark , Grooott , Wbittaker , Wert , and others , fjfrftr to betaken at half-pas wen o ' clock ,
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Citation
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Northern Star (1837-1852), Sept. 23, 1848, page 1, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/ns/issues/ns2_23091848/page/1/
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