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5 - The gallows and Mr Peel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2009

T. C. W. Blanning
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
David Cannadine
Affiliation:
University of London
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Summary

Derek Beales has always delighted in the ballistic statistic, such as the fact that ‘in Scotland nobody at all voted in the general election of 1826’. Probably no statistics have detonated more destructively in the face of a prevailing historiography than those contained in his review article, ‘Peel, Russell and reform’. By 1974 the scholarly laudation of Sir Robert Peel and corresponding denigration of Lord John Russell were at their height. For half a century historians such as Elie Halévy, G. M. Young, George Kitson Clark, Robert Blake, Asa Briggs and Norman Gash had presented Peel as a uniquely skilful administrator and far-sighted statesman, a leader whose ability to straddle the gap between reform and reaction had ensured Britain's peaceful progression through the ‘age of revolutions’ and ‘the great transformation’ of society. Gash summed up this tradition in 1972 when he claimed that by the mid-nineteenth century ‘the larger problems of his time had been met and solved. The age of revolt was giving way to the age of stability; and of that age Peel had been the chief architect.’ Just two years later, in 1974, Beales planted his incendiary device, and Peel's reputation has never looked quite the same since, though Russell's has yet to benefit significantly.

The most devastating blasts were to Peel's reputation as a great penal reformer. Here Beales acknowledged his debt to Sir Leon Radzinowicz's pioneering History of English Criminal Law – a study which, in waspish rather than bombing mood, he described as so voluminous that ‘few historians have mastered its contents’.

Type
Chapter
Information
History and Biography
Essays in Honour of Derek Beales
, pp. 88 - 112
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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