ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 1967, examines the implications of a now-forgotten minor riot that occurred in 1833, a turbulent year with the working classes striving for recognition in a changing social order. A political meeting in London had been declared illegal, the police breaking up the crowd were met with resistance, and in the fracas a policeman was stabbed to death. A bad-tempered inquest followed, at which the jury returned a verdict of justified killing – for which a section of the public hailed them as heroes. This analysis sets the crime and verdict against the political protests of the time.

chapter I|7 pages

Reform!

chapter II|11 pages

Mobs and Counter-Mobs

chapter III|5 pages

Skirmishes

chapter IV|10 pages

Unlawful Assembly

chapter V|10 pages

The Affray

chapter VI|8 pages

Aftermath

chapter VII|16 pages

A Remarkable Inquest

chapter VIII|11 pages

Some Lurid Testimony

chapter IX|11 pages

Cross Purposes

chapter X|6 pages

An Interlude. Mr Stallwood's Nemesis

chapter XI|13 pages

The Fourth Day of the Inquest

chapter XII|11 pages

The End of the Inquest

chapter XIII|8 pages

After the Verdict

chapter XIV|9 pages

Another Political Meeting

chapter XV|11 pages

The Trial of George Fursey

chapter XVI|8 pages

Celebrations

chapter XVII|9 pages

Assessment of the Affray