The Story of Peterloo


Lu par Phil Benson

(4.1 stars; 7 reviews)

On 16th August 1819 around 60,000 people gathered at St. Peter’s Fields, Manchester, to rally for parliamentary reform. Shortly after the meeting began, a troop of Hussars and local yeomanry rode into the crowd, wielding clubs, swords and sabres, leaving 18 dead and more than 700 severely injured. In the following years, the Peterloo Massacre was the subject of several trials and inquiries. It now counts as one of the most significant events in the history of the British labour movement. Francis Archibald Bruton’s account of the day’s events, published for its centenary and based on a detailed examination of contemporary accounts, is both dispassionate and moving.(Introduction by Phil Benson) (1 hr 43 min)

Chapitres

01 - Front matter 1:49 Lu par Phil Benson
02 - The site 3:31 Lu par Phil Benson
03 - Authorities on the details of Peterloo 6:22 Lu par Phil Benson
04 - The unrest that followed the Napoleonic wars 17:49 Lu par Phil Benson
05 - The story of Peterloo 7:40 Lu par Phil Benson
06 - The processions from the outlying districts 22:55 Lu par Phil Benson
07 - The charge of the Manchester Yeomanry 12:42 Lu par Phil Benson
08 - The Manchester Yeomanry in difficulty 7:28 Lu par Phil Benson
09 - The fateful decision 23:24 Lu par Phil Benson