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The Northern Coal-Owners and the Opposition to the Coal Mines Act of 1842

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2008

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“Never have I seen such a display of selfishness, frigidity to every human sentiment, such ready and happy self-delusion”, wrote Lord Ashley of the opposition to his coal-mines bill in the House of Lords. Historians have tended to confirm Ashley's judgement, and agreed that the motives of the Northern coal-owners in opposing the bill were inspired by simple self-interest, a desire to preserve their right to dispose of their pits, and the men, women and children in them, as they saw fit. It would, of course, be naive to suggest that the Northern coal-owners were not self-interested, but it is perhaps worth analysing the nature of that self-interest, which was not, as the simple and usual dismissal of it would suggest, merely an assertion of proprietorial rights.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Internationaal Instituut voor Sociale Geschiedenis 1980

References

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3 Ashley's diary, 16 June, loc. cit., p. 426. Men like John Fielden or William Cooke Taylor may have disputed this claim, see Bythell, D., The Handloom Weavers (Cambridge, 1969), p. 255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar For handloom weavers becoming pitmen, cf. ibid., p. 262.

4 Hansard, LXV, c. 109.

5 Ibid., LXIV, c. 999; LXV, cc. 119–20.

6 Londonderry to Peel, 20 July, Peel papers, British Library, Additional Manuscripts 40512, ft. 35–36.

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11 Ibid., LXV, cc. 582, 586. The Morning Post, 26 July, toned down Campbell's speech to read: “He could scarcely think the alternative of the workhouse worse than their present condition.”

12 Hansard, LXIII, cc. 197–98; LXV, cc. 118, 316–17; LXIX, c. 437.

13 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt I, p. 257Google Scholar; id., Pt II [PP, 1842, XVII], p. 516. Janet Neilson, from Fife, “much prefers service”, but supposed her father needed her earnings, PtI, p. 514.

14 Hansard, LXV, cc. 111–12.

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17 Hansard, LXV, c. 119. Londonderry also warned that poor rates must go up, or be subsidised from, for instance, increased excise duties, ibid., c. 582.

18 Ibid., LXIV, c. 1000.

19 Ibid., LXIX, c. 444. A Scottish miner, opposing Cumming Bruce's motion in a speech at Newcastle, 11 March 1843, “trusted that every pitman would be prepared to resist the slightest tampering with Lord Ashley's bill”, Hamilton-Russell Manuscripts, Northumberland County Record Office, 602/25/15.

20 Hansard, LXIII, cc. 1339–40.

21 Ibid., LXIV, cc. 1000–01.

22 Ibid., LXIII, cc. 197–98; LXIV, cc. 783–84; LXV, cc. 575–76.

23 Ibid., LXIII, c. 197; LXIV, c. 542, note.

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27 Ibid., cc. 1353–54, 1361. Of South Durham, the Children's Employment Commission wrote: “in this district children are sometimes taken down into the pits as early as five years of age, and by no means uncommonly at six”; in North Durham (where the Lambton collieries were) one case was recorded “in which a child was taken into the pit at four and a half years old; and several at five and between five and six”, CEC, First Report [PP, 1842, XV], p. 28.Google Scholar

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29 Hansard, LV, c. 1264.

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40 Buddie's place-book, 15–20 June, pp. 151–55; Taylor, “The Third Marquess of Londonderry”, loc. cit., p. 23, note 15, mistranscribes the date “June 18th 1842. Saturday” as 17 June.

41 Buddle's place-book, 20 June; Taylor, loc. cit., p. 23, note 17, omits Egerton; confuses Lord Harry Vane, MP for South Durham, and no relation to Londonderry, with Henry Vane, Viscount Seaham, Londonderry's son; and also confuses James Loch with James Losh, a Newcastle coal agent who died in 1833.

42 Buddle to Londonderry, 21 June, Londonderry Manuscripts 142 (1316).

43 Lambton to Morton, 24 June.

44 Hansard, LXIV, c. 426.

45 Ibid., cc. 538–44; Morning Post, 25 June.

46 Hansard, LXI1I, cc. 196–99.

47 Londonderry to Buddie, 12 May, National Coal Board Manuscripts l/JB/1781; id. to Brandling, 28 May, Coal Trade United Committee Minutes, 1840–44, p. 166 b.

48 Notice of petition, 8 June, Coal Trade Papers, Coal Trade Reports 1833–54; Buddie's place-book, 6 June, p. 146.

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50 Lambton to Morton, 24 June.

51 Ashley to Buddle, 28 June, National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1796.

52 Buddle to Londonderry, 9 July.

53 Buddle to Ashley, 5 July (2 letters), National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1797–98.

54 Ashley to Buddle, 8 July, ibid., 1799.

55 Buddle to Ashley, 11 July (draft), ibid., 1804.

56 Peel to Londonderry, 22 July, Peel Papers, loc. cit., ff. 71–72.

57 Hansard, LXIV, c. 426.

58 Ashley's diary, 28 June, loc. cit., p. 428.

59 Buddle's place-book, 21 June, pp. 158–60.

60 Hansard, LXV, cc. 104, 120–22.

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63 Ashley's diary, 23 June, loc. cit., p. 426.

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65 Buddle's place-book, 21 June.

66 CEC, First Report, pp. 68–69.

67 Ibid., pp. 59–60.

68 Ibid., Appendix, Pt I, p. 143.

69 Hansard, LXIV, c. 1000.

70 Buddle's place-book, 21 June.

71 Hansard, LXIV, c. 545, note.

72 CEC, First Report, p. 271.

73 Hansard, LXIV, cc. 426–27.

74 Ibid., LV, c. 1274.

75 Ibid., LXIV, c. 427.

76 Ibid., cc. 545–56, note.

77 Buddle to Lambton, 28 May.

78 Hansard, LXIII, cc. 1363–64.

79 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt II, p. 193.

80 Buddle to Lambton, 28 May.

81 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt I, p. 660.

82 Colls, R., “‘Oh Happy English Childeren!’: Coal, Class, and Education in the North-East”, in: Past & Present, No 73 (1976), pp. 7599CrossRefGoogle Scholar; A. J. Heesom, “Coal, Class and Education”, ibid., forthcoming.

83 Hansard, LXIII, c. 1354.

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89 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt I, p. 428.Google Scholar

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91 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt I, p. 259Google Scholar; Hansard, LXIII, c. 1355.

92 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt II, p. 152.Google Scholar

93 Ibid., Pt I, pp. 242–43. The pitmen argued that mechanical ventilation was unsafe, and a mere device “to save the masters a few paltry shillings in wages”, Fynes, R., The Miners of Northumberland and Durham (Wakefield, 1971), p. 59.Google Scholar

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95 CEC, Appendix to First Report, Pt I, pp. 132–33.Google Scholar

96 Hansard, LXIII, c. 1321.

97 Morton to Buddle, 27 June, National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1792.

98 Hansard, LXIV, cc. 538–39; Morning Post, 25 June; Hansard, LXV, cc. 6–7.

99 Hansard, LXV, cc. 111,117.

100 Ibid., LXIV, cc. 1166–68.

101 Wellington to Londonderry, 12 May, Londonderry Manuscripts 113 (202).

102 Londonderry to Brandling, 28 May; Coal Trade United Committee Minutes, 18401844, 30 05, p. 169.Google Scholar

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110 Returns of the ages of the pitmen in the Londonderry collieries, ibid., 1790; Hansard, LXIII, c. 1355.

111 Buddle, “Comments on Ashley's Speech”.

112 Hansard, LXIV, c. 1000.

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127 Hansard, LXIII, c. 1006.

128 Ibid., LXIV, c. 539.

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131 Ibid., LXIV, cc. 1003–04.

132 Ibid., LXIV, cc. 540–42; LXV, cc. 101–02, 118–19.

133 Londonderry to Buddie, 13 July, National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1807: “If I cannot throw over the bill the Select Committee will with good management put an end to it for this session at least.”

134 Hansard, LXV, c. 114.

135 Ibid., LXIII, c. 1321.

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137 Hansard, LXV, c. 109.

138 Buddle to Londonderry, 6 June, Londonderry Manuscripts 142 (1297). The executive-committee minutes have not, apparently, survived before January 1842, so Buddle's statement cannot be corroborated, but there is no reason to suppose he would have invented it.

139 Hansard, LXIII, c. 1354.

140 Printed copy of the Mines Bill with manuscript additions. National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1815.

141 Hansard, LXV.c. 891.

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144 Printed copy of the Mines Bill etc., 1815.

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146 Ibid., LXV, cc. 578–79, 587–88; Morning Post, 26 July.

147 Coal Trade United Committee Minutes, 1840–44, pp. 178–79; printed copies of the Mines Bill with manuscript additions, National Coal Board Manuscripts I/JB/1815–16.

148 Hansard, LXV, cc. 579–80.

149 Printed copy of the Mines Bill etc., 1816.

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155 Hunter to Londonderry, 15 December 1844, Londonderry Manuscripts 149 (199).

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157 Hansard, LXV, c. 113.

158 Ibid., LV, c. 437.

159 Ibid., LXIII, c. 197.

160 Ibid., LXV, cc. 571–78, 583.

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178 Buddle's place-book, 21 June.

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197 Hansard, LXIII, c. 199.

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200 The Times, 11 July.

201 Ashley's diary, 1 June, loc. cit., p. 420.

202 Hansard, LXIII, c. 1323.

203 Leifchild to Buddle, 18 May.

204 Morning Chronicle, 10 May.