Chartist Movement

E. P. Thompson addresses anti-nuclear weapons rally, Oxford, England, 1980

Thomas Paine, the Rights of Man and the Rights of the Freeborn Englishman 

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2013 Number 1 Volume 12

Thompson’s interpretation underlined Paine’s importance in what was labelled by historians as the ‘Atlantic-Democratic Revolution’. In the 1960s, my undergraduate days, this exercise in comparative history breaking through the constraints of nation state historiography was as fashionable as Thompson’s history from below.

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Pulteney Bridge in Bath, Somerset

BOOK REVIEW: Literary Walks In Bath

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2012 Number 3 Volume 11

What the chapter relates offers is a tour of the places in the city associated with individuals known for their support either for Paine and/or his ideas. It commences with Henry Hunt, who in 1817 is said to have addressed between twelve and twenty thousand people at a gathering.

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Karl Marx in 1875

BOOK REVIEW: Bradlaugh Contra Marx, Radicalism And Socialism In The First International

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2011 Number 1 Volume 11

On the one hand there is Karl Marx, a Communist and political exile in London, on the other Charles Bradlaugh, who rose from humble origins to become the leading nineteenth century advocate of Secularism and a MP for Northampton. Both were political giants.

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“Staunch reformers” a 1831 satirical print by John Dickinson with a dense crowd of rough-looking men at a London street-corner. One holds up a holds a placard on a pole topped by a red ‘liberty cap’ reading ‘Tom Paine’s Rights of Man—one penny!!!’ – © The Trustees of the British Museum.

Thomas Paine and Monarchical Republicanism 

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2011 Number 4 Volume 10

We remember Paine now, as radicals did in the nineteenth century, because he was distinctive — there have been few, if any, English political figures whose republicanism has been so strident and yet who have managed to communicate such a radical ideology (in an English context) to such a wide audience.

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“Cobbett at Coventry” a 1820 engraving by an unknown artist shows William Cobbett with Paine’s bones in a coffin on his back in the top left corner – American Philosophical Society

William Cobbett And Henry Hunt – The Extraordinary Story Of Their Thirty Year Radical Relationship 

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2010 Number 2 Volume 10

This is an account of the relationship between two men at a crucial time in history. It is set against the backdrop of the aftermath of the French revolution, the wars with France and the fear of a Jacobin-style revolution in England and the demands for reform.

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world globe

BOOK REVIEW: Transoceanic Radical: William Duane

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2008 Number 2 Volume 9

Thomas Paine called himself a citizen of the world and as if to sustain this claim was an active revolutionary in Britain, France and America. If any one of his contemporaries deserves the title more it is William Duane.

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“Spirit of Democracy or the Rights of Man maintained” a cartoon by William Dent from 1792 shows Charles James Fox, as Oliver Cromwell, wave a whip and drive the allied Kings in the direction of a sign inscribed: “To Equality or Annihilation” while an allegorical America, as “Indian Queen” with liberty cap and pole, looks on – American Philosophical Society

Paine, Spence, Chartism And ‘The Real Rights Of Man

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2008 Number 3 Volume 9

When Spence spoke of ‘the real rights’, or ‘the whole rights’ of man, he was signalling that the profoundly radical prescriptions of Thomas Paine had to become more radical still. Republicanism, even accompanied by a fiscal regime of progressive taxation, would not alone suffice to restore humanity.

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world puzzle

BOOK REVIEW: Thomas Paine His Life, His Time and The Birth of Modem Nations

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2007 Number 1 Volume 9

Abraham Lincoln, the father of the modern Republican Party, was converted to deism by reading The Age of Reason. He wrote a pamphlet extolling Paine’s views which his friends tossed into the stove. Even the bumbling third rate movie actor Ronald Reagan could quote Paine.

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A September 15th, 1892 Watson Heston illustration from the front page of the Truth Seeker magazine.

Paine’s Influence On 19th And 20th Century Radicals, Secularists And Republicans 

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2007 Number 4 Volume 8

Described by T. E. Uttley of the Daily Telegraph as “that evil man Tom Paine”, Thomas Paine was for generations of radicals, secularists and republicans an example and an inspiration. My first port of call was the Great Harry public house in Woolwich.

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“Billy the bully, and ranting Dan” a 1830 political cartoon by Charles Jameson Grant shows the devil attempt to lure John Bull (a British equivalent of Uncle Sam) into a box trap papered with slogans, names and advertisements for The Age of Reason, Rights of Man and other publications – American Philosophical Society

BOOK REVIEW: Contested Sites, Commemoration, Memorial and Popular Politics in Nineteenth-Century Britain

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2004 Number 3 Volume 7

Contested Sites deserves a wide readership. It contains much I found new and it has prompted me to wonder what other radical monuments lurk forgotten around the country and also what might be said to constitute one.

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