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“Now the great Man in the Parliament House is dead, we shall have a big Loaf!” Responses to the Assassination of Spencer Perceval

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2012

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Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 2012

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References

1 The quotation in the title of this article is from a letter from Wolverhampton to Granville Leveson Gower, 13 May 1812, The National Archives (TNA): Public Record Office (PRO) 30/29/6/11, fol. 1607.

2 Maccoby, Simon, English Radicalism, 1786–1832: From Paine to Cobbett (London, 1955), 286Google Scholar. For similar brief and dismissive assessments, see Emsley, Clive, British Society and the French Wars, 1793–1815 (London, 1979), 148CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Derry, John W., Politics in the Age of Fox, Pitt, and Liverpool: Continuity and Transformation (London, 1990), 148CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Muir, Rory, Britain and the Defeat of Napoleon, 1807–1815 (New Haven, CT, 1996), 196Google Scholar.

3 Gray, Denis, Spencer Perceval: The Evangelical Prime Minister, 1762–1812 (Manchester, 1963), 455–66Google Scholar; Gillen, Mollie, Assassination of the Prime Minister: The Shocking Death of Spencer Perceval (London, 1972)Google Scholar; Hanrahan, David C., The Assassination of the Prime Minister: John Bellingham and the Murder of Spencer Perceval (Stroud, 2008)Google Scholar. The principal archives containing material on Bellingham’s time in Russia, his return to Britain, the murder of Perceval, and Bellingham’s trial are British Library (BL): Bellingham Papers, Add MSS 48216, and TNA: Rex v. Bellingham, TS 11/224.

4 Goddard, Kathleen S., “A Case of Injustice? The Trial of John Bellingham,” American Journal of Legal History 46, no. 1 (January 2004): 125CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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8 Declaration of John Bellingham in presence of Mr. Beresford, 27 May 1807, BL: Bellingham Papers, Add. MSS 48216, fol. 12.

9 These attempts at redress can be followed in the correspondence between 1809 and 1812 in BL: Bellingham Papers, Add. MSS 48216, fols. 31–45; and in TNA: Rex v. Bellingham, TS 11/224.

10 Gillen, Assassination, 83–84.

11 See. e.g., Stephens, F. G. and George, M. D., Catalogue of Personal and Political Satires Preserved in the Department of Prints and Drawings in the British Museum, 11 vols. (London, 1870–1954)Google Scholar (hereafter BMC), 11: nos. 11881, 11884.

12 Henry Burgess to R. B. Sheridan, 11 May 1812, BL: Autograph Letters, Add. MSS 29764, fols. 12–13.

13 John Bellingham to John Parton, 15 May 1812, TNA: Rex v. Bellingham, TS11/224.

14 An Authentic Account of the Horrid Assassination of the Honourable Spencer Perceval, by John Bellingham, of Liverpool (Hanley, 1812), 25Google Scholar. As well as numerous reports in London and provincial newspapers, there are several extant published versions of the trial, which include the above as well as A Full and Authentic Report of the Trial of John Bellingham, esq. at the Sessions House in the Old Bailey … Taken in Short Hand by Thomas Hodgson (London, 1812)Google Scholar; Trial and Execution of Mr. John Bellingham, for the Wilful Murder of the Right Hon. Spencer Perceval (Leeds, 1812)Google Scholar; The Trial of Bellingham, for the Murder of Mr. Perceval: with a Plan of the Lobby, and a Portrait of the Assassin. With the Remarkable Defence he made, and his Behaviour after Sentence, and at the Execution (London, 1812)Google Scholar; The Trial of J. Bellingham, a Liverpool Merchant, at the Old Bailey, on Friday, May 15, 1812, for the Assassination of the Right Hon. Spencer Perceval … With every Particular Attending the Sad Catastrophe, and other Important Information. Taken in Short-hand by Mr. Fraser (London, 1812)Google Scholar; Account of the Trial and Execution of John Bellingham: From “Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register,” May 23, 1812 (London, 1812)Google Scholar.

15 For the complex high politics of the early nineteenth century, see Harvey, A. D., Britain in the Early Nineteenth Century (London, 1978)Google Scholar; and Derry, Politics in the Age of Fox, Pitt and Liverpool, chaps. 3–4.

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17 The Prince Regent’s Message Respecting the Family of Mr. Perceval, 12 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 23 (1812), cols. 172–77Google Scholar.

18 Semmel, Napoleon and the British, 126.

19 Ibid., chap. 4. For the black legend and the role of assassination within it, see Simon Burrows, “Britain and the Black Legend: The Genesis of the Anti-Napoleonic Myth,” in Philp, Resisting Napoleon, 141–58.

20 Broom’s Authentic Account of the Attempt to Assassinate His Royal Highness the Duke of Cumberland at his Apartments in St James’s Palace, on Thursday Morning, May 31, 1810, by Joseph Seillis [sic], his Valet (London, 1810)Google Scholar; BMC, vol. 11, no. 11561; Fulford, Roger, Royal Dukes: The Father and Uncles of Queen Victoria (London, 1933), 206–10Google Scholar.

21 Semmel, Napoleon and the British, 131.

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24 Clark, Anna, Scandal: The Sexual Politics of the British Constitution (Princeton, NJ, 2004), chap. 1Google Scholar. For a sociologically and historically informed account of different understandings of the private/public division, see Weintraub, Jeff, “The Theory and Politics of the Public/Private Distinction,” in Public and Private in Thought and Practice: Perspectives on a Grand Dichotomy, ed. Weintraub, Jeff and Kumar, Krishan (Chicago, 1997), 142Google Scholar.

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28 “Political Virtue,” Examiner, 23 July 1809.

29 Gray, Spencer Perceval, 16. The moniker was well enough known that William Cobbett, at the time of Perceval’s murder, could call him “Old Hypocrisy Personified”; “To the Prince Regent on the Case of Mr. Bellingham … Letter II,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 6 June 1812, col. 717.

30 Conduct of the Duke of York, 8 March 1809,” in Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 20 (1811), col. 62Google Scholar.

31 “The Duke of York,” Examiner, 19 March 1809.

32 Assassination of Mr. Perceval, 13 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, vol. 23 (1812), col. 186Google Scholar.

33 Ibid., 14 May 1812, cols. 215–16.

34 Ibid., 14 and 16 May 1812, cols. 212–13, 225–26.

35 Romilly, Samuel, Memoirs of the Life of Sir Samuel Romilly, 3 vols. (London, 1840), 3:38Google Scholar.

36 The monument itself and its uniqueness within the pantheon of British patriots that was constructed during the French Wars is discussed in Bouwers, Eveline G., “Whose Heroes? The House of Commons, Its Commemorative Sculptures and the Illusion of British Patriotism, 1795–1814,” European Review of History 15, no. 6 (December 2008): 675–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

37 Monument to the Memory of Mr. Perceval, 20 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 23, cols. 228–29Google Scholar.

38 For examples, see “Assassination of Mr. Perceval—His Claims upon us, and Character,” Examiner, 17 May 1812; “To the Prince Regent … Letter II,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 6 June 1812, cols. 705–23.

39 The Prince Regent’s Message Respecting the Family of Mr. Perceval, 12 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, vol. 23 (1812), col. 177Google Scholar.

40 Joseph Butterworth to Richard Ryder, 18 May 1812, TNA: George III Domestic Correspondence, HO 42/123, fol. 141.

41 Morning Chronicle, 19 May 1812.

42 The Prince Regent’s Message Respecting the Family of Mr. Perceval, 12 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 23 (1812), col. 191Google Scholar.

43 Monument to the Memory of Mr. Perceval, 20 May 1812,” in Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 23, cols. 228–29Google Scholar.

44 Holger Hoock, “‘The Cheap Defence of Nations’: Monuments and Propaganda,” in Philp, Resisting Napoleon, 159–71.

45 Letter from Wolverhampton to Granville Leveson-Gower, 13 May 1812, TNA: PRO 30/29/6/11, fol. 1607.

46 Thorne, R. G., ed., The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1790–1820, 5 vols. (London, 1986), 5:590Google Scholar.

47 Full and Authentic Report, 21.

48 W. Hughes to Lord Sidmouth, 30 January 1813, Devon Record Office (DRO): Addington Papers, 152M/C1813/OH40.

49 Romilly, Memoirs, 3:35–36.

50 Ralph Fletcher to Henry Hobhouse, 15 May 1812, TNA: Home Office Disturbances, HO 40/1, fols. 115–16. There were other complaints about the attempts of local loyalists and the loyalist press to connect Bellingham to Jacobin or Catholic politics in Liverpool Mercury, 15 and 22 May 1812.

51 See, e.g., Cursory Remarks Occasioned by the Horrible Assassination of the Right Hon. Spencer Perceval (London, 1812), 511Google Scholar.

52 “Lines on a Late Disgraceful and Melancholy Degradation of the British Character, in the rejoicings on the Assassination of the Late Most Worthy and Honourable Spencer Perceval” by “An Englishwoman,” Morning Post, 19 May 1812.

53 For the significance of political debates about the nature of the middle class during this period, see Wahrman, Dror, Imagining the Middle Class: The Political Representation of Class in Britain, c. 1780–1840 (Cambridge, 1995)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

54 Cursory Remarks, 14–23.

55 Ibid., 33.

56 Wilson, Daniel, “The Substance of a Conversation with John Bellingham, the Assassin of the Late Right Hon. Spencer Perceval” [repr. of 4th ed.] in Daniel Wilson, Sermons and Tracts, 2 vols. (London, 1825), 2:187241Google Scholar.

57 Philp, Mark, “Vulgar Conservatism, 1792–3,” English Historical Review 110, no. 435 (February 1995): 4269Google Scholar.

58 There is a useful summary of these events in Hanrahan, The Assassination, chaps. 3–8. For a good account of Cobbett’s own confrontations with Perceval, see Spater, George, William Cobbett: The Poor Man’s Friend, 2 vols. (Cambridge, 1982), 1:207–54Google Scholar.

59 “To the Prince Regent, on the Case of Mr. Bellingham. Letter I,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 30 May 1812, col. 682.

60 Leeds Mercury, 16 May 1812; Ipswich Journal, 16 May 1812; Liverpool Mercury, 22 May 1812. See also Navickas, Loyalism and Radicalism, 243–44.

61 False Reasoning Condemned,” Satirist: Or Monthly Meteor 10 (1812): 52Google Scholar.

62 Anonymous to Prince Regent, 17 May 1812, TNA: George III Domestic Correspondence, HO 42/123, fol. 174.

63 “One of the Fifty—Brutus” to Granville Leveson-Gower, 24 May 1812, TNA: PRO 30/29/6/11, fol. 1615; “Letter from Lord G. L. Gower to Lord Castlereagh, Respecting Bellingham the Assassin, 20 May 1812,” Parliamentary Debates, vol. 23 (1812), cols. 239–43. For Bellingham’s statement that “it would have been fortunate for me, and it would have been more fortunate for Mr. Perceval, had Lord Gower received the ball which terminated the life of the latter gentleman,” see Trial and Execution, 19.

64 Blacow, Richard, A Statement of the Circumstances which led to the Prosecution of the King v. Blacow (Liverpool, 1812)Google Scholar, appendix. The letter is also reproduced in Binfield, Kevin, ed., Writings of the Luddites (Baltimore, 2004), 189–90Google Scholar.

65 Binfield, Writings of the Luddites, 230.

66 Lord Ellenborough to Lord Sidmouth, 14 July 1814, DRO: Addington Papers, 152M/C1814/OH15.

67 A Correct Report of the Trial of James Watson, Senior, for High Treason, before the Court of King’s Bench, Westminster, June 9th, 1817, and following Days (London, 1817), 127Google Scholar.

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70 Chalmers, George, An appeal to the Generosity of the British Nation, in a Statement of Facts on behalf of the Afflicted Widow and Unoffending Offspring of the Unfortunate Mr. Bellingham (London, 1812), 79Google Scholar. Chalmers also identified the Morning Post, the Courier, and the émigré journalist Jean-Gabriel Peltier as advocates of assassination. See also references to the Anti-Gallican Monitor in “Assassination of Mr. Perceval,” Liverpool Mercury, 15 May 1812.

71 Examination of Thomas Clare, 15 May 1812, TNA: George III Domestic Correspondence, HO 42/123, fol. 42.

72 Binfield, Writings of the Luddites, 139–42.

73 John Drinkwater to Viscount Canning, 28 May and 3 June 1812, TNA: PRO 30/29/6/11, fols. 1631–34; “Miscellaneous Extracts: No. XXXV,” Liverpool Mercury, 29 May 1812.

74 The following is a copy of a letter, addressed by Mrs Bellingham to the Editors of sundry London and Dublin Papers (printed), 6 June 1812, and Mary Bellingham to George Leveson-Gower, 10 June 1812, TNA: PRO 30/29/6/11, fols. 1637–38.

75 Oswald Smith to Richard Ryder, 16 May 1812, TNA: George III Domestic Correspondence, HO 42/123, fol. 428.

76 Bellingham: A Poem (London, 1812), 8 (printed), TNA: PRO 30/29/6/11, fols. 1619–20.

77 Ibid., 16–17.

78 “Court of Common Pleas: Cove v. Wright,” Examiner, 5 July 1812.

79 Cove, Augustus, The Tocsin Sounded, or A Libel Extraordinary! Dedicated to the Good Sense of the People of England! 2nd ed. (London, 1812), 64Google Scholar.

80 Ibid., 63. Cobbett made a similar point in assigning the repeal of the Orders in Council to the manner of Perceval’s death and the widespread rejoicing that had greeted it. “To the Prince Regent … Letter II,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 6 June 1812, cols. 718–19.

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85 Morning Chronicle, 16 May 1812.

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87 “Mr. Brougham’s Motion Relating to the Orders in Council and Right of Petitioning the Prince Regent, 3 and 4 March 1812,” Parliamentary Debates, Commons, 1st ser., vol. 21 (1812), cols. 1159–61, 1165–66.

88 Miller, Naomi Churgin, “John Cartwright and Radical Parliamentary Reform, 1808–1819,” English Historical Review 83, no. 329 (October 1968): 720–21Google Scholar; Fraser, Peter, “Public Petitioning and Parliament before 1832,” History 46, no. 158 (October 1961): 195211CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Eckersley, Rachel, “Of Radical Design: John Cartwright and the Redesign of the Reform Campaign, c. 1800–1811,” History 89, no. 296 (October 2004): 560–80CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For the debates on the right of petitioning in both the Commons and the Lords as a result of Cartwright’s campaign, see Major Cartwright’s Petition and Motion Respecting a Printed Petition from Nottingham Relative to Parliamentary Reform, 1 and 30 June 1813,” in Parliamentary Debates, Lords and Commons, 1st ser., vol. 26 (1813), cols. 479–85, 993–97Google Scholar.

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91 Smith, Olivia, The Politics of Language, 1791–1819 (Oxford, 1984), 2934Google Scholar; Dyck, Ian, William Cobbett and Rural Popular Culture (Cambridge, 1992), chap. 4Google Scholar.

92 “To the Prince Regent … Letter I,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 30 May 1812, col. 678.

93 Ibid., col. 679. Cobbett made his contribution to this wider debate on the nature of constitutional rights clear in his second letter, by quoting Ponsonby’s speech about British freedoms above the leading article: “To the Prince Regent … Letter II,” Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, 6 June 1812, cols. 705–6.

94 For whom, see Belchem, John, “Orator” Hunt: Henry Hunt and English Working-Class Radicalism (Oxford, 1985)Google Scholar.

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96 For a description of this print, see BMC, vol. 11, no. 13192.

97 For the Dighton print, see BMC, vol. 11, no. 11882.