Location
Nexus - University of Leeds

The journal Northern History, with the support of the School of History, University of Leeds and the Social History Society, is organising a symposium to celebrate the life and work of Professor Malcolm Chase, author of many important works on British popular radicalism and labour history including Chartism: A New History (Manchester University Press, 2007) and 1820: Disorder and Stability in the United Kingdom (Manchester University Press, 2013).
Link to registration: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/1043791016027?aff=oddtdtcreator. This event is free to attend.
Programme
09:30-10:00: Coffee and registration
10:00-10:30: Opening address
Simon Morgan (Leeds Beckett University): Welcome and housekeeping
Julia Barrow (University of Leeds): Malcolm Chase and Northern History
Jill Liddington (University of Leeds): Malcolm Chase and the University of Leeds Extra-Mural Department
Andrea Major (University of Leeds): Malcolm Chase the University of Leeds School of History
10:30-12:00: Panel 1: Radicalism before Chartism
Callum Manchester (University of Cambridge), ‘”Moderation” and “Radicalism”: Christopher Wyvill and the Yorkshire Association’
Rachel Hammersley (Newcastle University): ‘The Making of Thomas Spence: The Radical Political Culture of late eighteenth-century Newcastle’
Harriet Gray (Newcastle University): ‘John Marshall: Radical Politics and the Print Culture of early nineteenth-century Newcastle’
Vic Clarke (independent scholar): ‘Richard Oastler and Yorkshire Political Celebrity, 1830-1847’
Chair: Simon Morgan (Leeds Beckett University)
12:00-13:00: Lunch (provided)
13:00-14:00: Roundtable: The Legacy of Malcolm Chase
Katrina Navickas (University of Hertfordshire)
Robert Poole (University of Central Lancashire, emeritus)
Matthew Roberts (Sheffield Hallam University)
Chair: Joan Allen (Newcastle University)
14:00-15:30: Panel 2: Chartism and its Legacy
Christopher Day (Nottingham Trent University): ‘Unjust, tyrannical, arbitrary, and despotic’: Radical dissension from the Public Health Act 1848 and the legacies of Chartism in Clitheroe, Lancashire’
Joy Brindle (Durham University): ‘To do work for the Working Man’: the social networking of Thomas Dixon of Sunderland, 1855-80’
Henry Miller (Northumbria University): ‘The Humble Petitioners: Working People’s Petitions to Parliament after Chartism’
Andrew Walker (Rose Bruford College): ‘Representations of the later lives of Chartist activists in the Northern provincial press, 1860-1900’
Chair: Vic Clarke (independent scholar)
15:30-15:45: Break
15:45-17:15: Panel 3: After Chartism
Martin Wright (Cardiff University): ‘The “Socialist Revival” in the North: The Northumberland Miners’ Strike, 1887’
Jordan Clark (University of St Andrews): ‘The Radical Verse of the Pitmen Poets’
Tobin O’Connor (Manchester Metropolitan University): ‘The Labour Church: A Religious and Political Anomaly that Laid the Foundations for Labour Movements in 1890s Britain’
Laura Forster (University of York): ‘Friends in the North: Reading, Rambling, and Revolutionary Fellowship’
Chair: Clare Griffiths (Cardiff University)
17:15-17:30: Break
17:30-19:00: Book Launch
We will be celebrating the launch of Professor Andrea Major’s book, Reimagining Empire in India: George Thompson, Anti-Slavery Activism, and the Global Networks of British Colonial Reform, 1831-1858 (Bloomsbury 2024).
Image: Wiki Commons