Charles James Fox
1768-1806: Member of Parliament
-1768-1774: for Midhurst
-1774-1780: for Malmesbury
-1780-1784: for Westminster
-1784-1785: for Tain Burghs
-1785-1806: for Westminster
--1797-1803: Imprisoned in the Tower of London
1770-1772: Lord Commissioner of the Admiralty
1773-1774: Lord Commissioner for the Treasury
1782-1782; 1783-1783: Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
1783-1806: Leader of the Parliamentary Opposition
-Hoche successfully invades Ireland, causes War of the French Revolution (1792-1804) > Great Irish Rebellion (1796-9)
-makes government even more unhinged
-and Fox's links with United Irishmen back when they were constitutional does not help
-many call Fox a traitor, talk of arresting him
-and though he does condemn the violence and declares his support of the monarchy, doesn't stop it
-when Fox toasts to "Our Sovereign's Health, the Majesty of the People" in 1797, government arranges for his arrest
-through purely constitutional means by the Commons voting for it, and only until the end of the session
-however, they renew his arrest every time until Parliament dissolved
-backfires, makes him a martyr among many Radicals who would otherwise find him too Whiggish
-gives him time to write very biased history of late 17th to early 18th century
-famously, only released from jail to run for Parliament, and wins
-comes to Parliament in victory session, and later to support the end of the War of the French Revolution (1792-1804), otherwise almost entirely seceded from Parliament
-died in 1806
William Windham
1784-1820: Member of Parliament
-1784-1810: for Norwich
-1810-1817: for St Mawes
-1817-1820: for Norfolk
1793-1797: Secretary at War
1814-1815: Secretary of State for the Home Department
-serves as a representative of Burkean moderatism within Parliament
-and strongly seeks to keep Burke's legacy alive in his own way
-serves as Secretary at War until he resigns with Heads of British Isles > 1797-1797 William Pitt the Younger (Tory) over the lack of Catholic emancipation with the Acts of Union
-serves as a part of the Pittites but even becomes independent of them
-as he's just incredibly prowar and believes, like Burke, in forever war with the forces of democracy
-when Heads of British Isles > 1797-1814 Henry Addington (Tory) amends the Toleration Act to heavily restrict licenses Windham shifts again
-becomes a Foxite Whig when he corrals in the Toleration Act's defence
-and when the Foxite frontbench gets arrested he is an exception
-in the Heads of British Isles > 1814-1815 Francis Rawdon-Hastings, Earl of Moira (Ministry of All Talents [led by Whigs]) he becomes part of ministry
-his belief in restarting a war with France means he's at Home rather than War like last time
-gets frustrated at nature of coalition because he can't do desired reforms
-with release
-posthumously regarded as a founder of Ideology > Moderatism
Richard Brinsley Sheridan
1780-1823: Member of Parliament
-1780-1806: for Stafford
--1797-1803: Imprisoned in the Tower of London
-1806-1823: for Westminster
--1807-1810: Imprisoned in the Tower of London
1806-1823: Leader of the Parliamentary Opposition
1814-1815: Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs
-without Grenvillites joining opposition, after Fox's death the charismatic Sheridan becomes leader of Foxites
-and wins election in his former constituency of Westminster to boot
-in Moira ministry becomes foreign secretary, not very good at it
-greatly embarrasses Wellesley during his ministry, helps cause his resignation
-dies soon afterwards
Samuel Whitbread
1790-1831: Member of Parliament
-1790-1827: for Bedford
--1807-1810: Imprisoned in the Tower of London
--1824-1827: Imprisoned in the Tower of London
-1827-1829: for Bedford (Convention Parliament)
-1829-1831: for the 1st Grand Division of Bedford
1814-1815: Secretary of State for War
1831-1833: Prime Minister of the British Isles
1833-1834: Member of Parliament for the 1st Grand Division of Bedford
1834-1837: Prime Minister of the British Isles
1837-1838: Member of Parliament for the 1st Grand Division of Bedford
-funeral
-takes him his home to London
-major social event
-crowds cheer him with "Whitbread and Liberty"
-buried in Westminster Abbey with grand memorial
Daniel O'Connell
Jeremy Bentham
-life very similar initially, pre-pod especially
-brought to radicalism after failure of reformist proposals from 1808 onwards
-writes radical reform bill in 1813 in reaction to neo-saxon reform bill of major cartwright
-influential in philosophic radical circles, meets people like joseph hume and james mill and francis place
-interest in constitutional law piqued with french constitutional reform in 1810, gets to work writing a constitutional code
-gets through many drafts, ultimately it's republican and very democratic, published in 1826 for the benefit of reformers around world
-supports legal reform and codification of law, works with both whigs and radicals in this regard but believes parliamentary reform only way to pass it
-makes complete penal code as his life reaches end
-has many notes on civil and procedure codes, but not complete
-meets ram mohan roy, hassuna d'ghies, other reformers around world to meet with them
-British Wars > Popular Revolution (1827-9) occurs, bentham allies get much influence in convention parliament
-bentham allies present constitutional code for influential material, not for all of it, it was indeed influential on post-revolution order
-new constitutional settlement issued, ratified by convention parliament
-codification process pushed by bentham, codes in britain indeed issued but not as thorough and based on happiness principle as bentham wanted
-helps in creation of london university, a non-sectarian equivalent of oxbridge unis
-goa has revolution, adopts benthamic constitutional code as its law
-bentham sends penal code to them too, but dies before completion of procedure and civil codes
-after death, notes posthumously sent, procedure and civil codes of goa based on that
-remembered as highly influential philosopher, also very weird for naming cane "dapple" and stuff
-body preserved and kept at london uni for posterity's sake
-face mummified in maori manner, while procedure goes better than otl his face still looks garish
Robert Owen
-runs New Lanark as a benevolent factory owner from 1800 to 1824
-becomes very influential and his plans see widespread admiration
-as far afield of France and in the US
-post War of the French Revolution (1792-1804) and over 1810s with economic crisis attempts to promote back to the farms work to relieve unemployment
-Heads of British Isles > 1797-1814 Henry Addington (Tory) is sympathetic to these reform proposals
-in 1813 Addington passes a law to enact village scheme
-however when it ends up being horrid scheme he opposes it
-over years that follows he becomes an advocate of cooperative villages run by villagers themselves
-this wins him acclaim from a number of radicals
-however this also leads to him being viewed as an undesirable by British government
-in 1824 to better push his ideas moves to the United States of America
-forms a village which is broadly successful and does maintain self-sufficiency for some time
-returns to the British Isles after British Wars > Popular Revolution (1827-9)
-with rise of labor activity with abolition of Combination Acts becomes leading member of labor movement
-brings unions towards agenda of reconstructing society around cooperative system
-and slowly sees more and more unions towards his cause
-in 1832 attempts to form the Grand National Consolidated Trade Union (GNCTU)
-to unify labor and establish a guild associationist state
-several industries unified into several associations under unions, and then together they form economy
-they exchange goods between each other through labour bazaars
-however, there are very low fees which makes funding this movement tough
-gets worse after the treasurer absconds to the US with the money in 1834
-GNCTU collapses afterwards
-and then attention drawn by the dramatic events at Parliament
-membership of National Volunteers drawn somewhat from lower middle classes but a lot also from "respectable" members of working class
-after Recessions > Panic of 1835 decides to implement labor exchange system
-"National Equitable Labour Bazaar" established in London where independent workers can sell their produce for labor notes which can be exchanged for other goods
-with Bank promissory notes having crashed and gold having been hoarded, labor notes become an important holder of credit
-despite a lot of trenchant criticism from goldbug radicals it does become fairly influential
-Labour Bazaars become established in several other British cities
-however, as United Bank slowly buys up gold it's able to print more notes and put them into flow
-and with Australia Gold Rush the United Bank buys it up and this allows for easy credit
-and this results in Labour Bazaars declining
-but they do remain a sort of fixture of economy linking together the cooperative movement as a force
-considered founding father of Ideology > Associationism
Feargus O'Connor
1819-1821: Auditor of the Council of State of France
1822-1824: Tribune of France for Loiret
1824-1827: Councillor of State of France for Loiret
1829-1836: Member of Parliament for the 2nd Grand Division of King's County
1838-1854: Director of the National Land Company
1843-1847: Member of Parliament for the 3rd Grand Division of Cork County
1847-1856: Member of the Irish Legislative Assembly for the 3rd Grand Division of Cork County
1859-1865: Tribune of France for Loiret
-born in an Ireland going through the War of the French Revolution (1792-1804) > Great Irish Rebellion (1796-9), with Hoche's invasion in 1796
-his father and uncle big United Irishmen, uncle in particular
-in the end defeated
-and culminates with Hoche killed in 1799, the O'Connors fleeing to France shortly afterwards
-O'Connor grows up in France
-among Irish community there, his uncle is leader
-Feargus (very Irish version of name) grows up as elite in this context
-becomes lawyer, family connections mean he gets lucrative post of Auditor of Council of State
-does shit
-eventually elected to Legislative Assembly
-doesn't mean much, just that he votes silently
-but known to be oppositionist
-with downfall of Sieyesian order, gets elected as Tribune during Second French War (1821-32)
-very unpopular for abrasive personality despite his undoubted charisma, in dead end
-with British Wars > Popular Revolution (1827-9), moves to British Isles
-gets elected to revolutionary House of Commons from his uncle's old constituency
-eligible as natural-born
-becomes quixotic Irish nationalist for his strong French accent
-and as a United Irishman in contrast to Daniel O'Connell who he regards as a "Jesuit" and his nonviolence as stupid
-really really abrasive, rubs a lot of people very very badly but gets popularity against O'Connell's Radical Party fusionism
-eventually loses election
-denies he's anti-Catholic, states he believes in religious unity, but attacks on O'Connell really piss people off
-later on allies with land reform movement
-including proto-Ideology > Associationism movement by Bronterre
-eventually is founding member of National Land Company
-which seeks to establish homesteads from the Crown and Church land being sold off
-success for a while but eventually good land runs out, bubble pops
-company dies
-eventually gets elected as MP during O'Connellite repeal wave
-during 1846-7 period, when O'Connell achieves compromise (he intends to be "instalment" towards total repeal), O'Connor furiously denounces this as a betrayal
-and even his party receives seats during 1847 election
-in the end, however, O'Connell achieves very broad reaching autonomy and intends for it to be one step towards freedom
-gets elected as MLA to new Irish Legislative Assembly
-speaks positively about O'Connell with great reluctance after his death
-still doesn't help him much
-when Land Company goes under and O'Connellite radicals get subsumed into Radical Party, really he has no choice but to retire
-returns to France, gets elected in some role, then dies