In
the early months of 1811 the first threatening letters from General Ned
Ludd and the Army of Redressers, were sent to employers in
Nottingham.
Workers, upset by wage reductions and the use of unapprenticed workmen,
began to break into factories at night to destroy the new machines that
the employers were using. In a three-week period over two hundred stocking
frames were destroyed. In March, 1811, several attacks were taking place
every night and the
Nottingham
authorities had to enroll four hundred special constables to protect the
factories. To help catch the culprits, the
Prince
Regent offered £50 to anyone "giving information on any person or
persons wickedly breaking the frames".
Luddism
gradually spread to Yorkshire, Lancashire, Leicestershire and Derbyshire.
In Yorkshire, croppers, a small and highly skilled group of cloth
finishers, turned their anger on the new shearing frame that they feared
would put them out of work. In February and March, 1812, factories were
attacked by Luddites in Huddersfield,
Halifax,
Wakefield and
Leeds.
In February 1812 the government of
Spencer
Perceval proposed that machine-breaking should become a capital
offence. Despite a passionate speech by
Lord Byron
in the House of
Lords, Parliament passed the Frame Breaking Act that enabled people
convicted of machine-breaking to be sentenced to death. As a further
precaution, the government ordered 12,000 troops into the areas where the
Luddites were active.
On of the most serious Luddite attacks took place at Rawfolds Mill near
Brighouse in Yorkshire. William Cartwright, the owner of Rawfolds Mill,
had been using cloth-finishing machinery since 1811. Local croppers began
losing their jobs and after a meeting at Saint Crispin public house, they
decided to try and destroy the cloth-finishing machinery at Rawfolds Mill.
Cartwright was suspecting trouble and arranged for the mill to be
protected by armed guards.
Led by George Mellor, a young cropper from Huddersfield, the attack on
Rawfolds Mill took place on 11th April, 1812. The Luddites failed in gain
entry and by the time they left, two of the croppers had been mortally
wounded. Seven days later the Luddites killed William Horsfall, another
large mill-owner in the area. The authorities rounded up over a hundred
suspects. Of these, sixty-four were indicted. Three men were executed for
the murder of Horsfall and another fourteen were hung for the attack on
Rawfolds Mill.
Throughout 1812 there were attacks on Lancashire cotton mills. Local
handloom weavers objected to the introduction of power looms. On 20th
March, 1812 the warehouse of William Radcliffe, one of the first
manufacturers to use the power-loom, was attacked in Stockport.
Wheat prices soared in 1812. Unable to feed their families, workers became
desperate. There were food riots in Manchester, Oldham, Ashton, Rochdale,
Stockport and Macclesfield. On 20th April several thousand men attacked
Burton's Mill at Middleton near
Manchester.
Emanuel Burton, who knew that his policy of buying power-looms had upset
local handloom weavers, had recruited armed guards and three members of
the crowd were killed by musket-fire. The following day the men returned
and after failing to break-in to the mill, they burnt down Emanuel
Burton's house. The military arrived and another seven men were killed.
Three days later, Wray & Duncroff's Mill at Westhoughton, near
Manchester,
was set on fire.
William Hulton,
the High Sheriff of Lancashire, arrested twelve men suspected of taking
part in the attack. Four of the accused, Abraham Charlston, Job Fletcher,
Thomas Kerfoot, and James Smith, were executed. The Charlston's family
claimed Abraham was only twelve years old but he was not reprieved. It was
reported that Abraham cried for his mother on the scaffold. A local
part-time journalist,
John Edward
Taylor, investigated the case and claimed that the attack had been the
result of action taken by spies employed by Colonel Fletcher, one of
Manchester's
magistrates.
In June 1812
John Knight
organised a meeting for weavers at a public house in
Manchester.
As the meeting was coming to an end
Joseph Nadin,
Deputy Constable of Manchester, arrived and arrested Knight and
thirty-seven other weavers. Knight was charged with "administering oaths
to weavers pledging them to destroy steam looms" and they were accused of
attending a seditious meeting. At their subsequent trial all thirty-eight
were acquitted.
In the summer of 1812 eight men in Lancashire were sentenced to death and
thirteen transported to Australia for attacks on cotton mills. Another
fifteen were executed at
York. This
was followed by further sporadic outbreaks of violence but by 1817 the
Luddite movement had ceased to be active in Britain.

Poster
published in 1811
(1) The attack on Burton's Mill in Middleton was
reported in the Leeds Mercury in April, 1812.
A body of men, consisting of from one to two hundred, some of them armed
with muskets with fixed bayonets, and others with colliers' picks, who
marched into the village in procession, and joined the rioters. At the
head of the armed banditti a man of straw was carried, representing the
renowned General Ludd whose standard bearer waved a sort of red flag.
(2)
Archibald
Prentice, wrote about the Luddite disturbances in April 1812, in his
book Historical Sketches and Personal Recollections of Manchester.
On Saturday, the 18th April, a numerous body of women, chiefly women,
assembled at the potato market, Shude Hill, where the sellers were asking
14s. and 15s. per load (252 lbs.) for potatoes. Some of the women began
forcibly to take possession of the articles; but the civil and military
power interposing, to fix a sort of maximum, for eight shillings per load,
at which they were sold in small portions. On Monday a cart carrying
fourteen loads of meal was stopped, and the meal carried away. On 27th
April a riotous assembly took place at Middleton. The weaving factory of
Mr. Burton and Sons had been previously threatened in consequence of their
mode of weaving being done by the operation of steam. The factory was
protected by soldiers, so strongly as to be impregnable to their assault;
they then flew to the house of Mr. Emanuel Burton, where they wreaked
their vengeance by setting it on fire. On Friday, the 24th April, a large
body of weavers and mechanics began to assemble about midday, with the
avowed intention of destroying the power-looms, together with the whole of
the premises, at Westhoughton. The military rode at full speed to
Westhoughton; and on their arrival were surprised to find that the
premises were entirely destroyed, while not an individual could be seen to
whom attached any suspicion of having acted a part in this truly dreadful
outrage.
(3)
Lord Byron,
speech in the House of Lords (27th February, 1812)
During the short time I recently passed in Nottingham, not twelve
hours elapsed without some fresh act of violence; and on that day I left
the the county I was informed that forty Frames had been broken the
preceding evening, as usual, without resistance and without detection.
Such was the state of that county, and such I have reason to believe it to
be at this moment. But whilst these outrages must be admitted to exist to
an alarming extent, it cannot be denied that they have arisen from
circumstances of the most unparalleled distress: the perseverance of these
miserable men in their proceedings, tends to prove that nothing but
absolute want could have driven a large, and once honest and industrious,
body of the people, into the commission of excesses so hazardous to
themselves, their families, and the community.
They were not ashamed to beg, but there was none to relieve them: their
own means of subsistence were cut off, all other employment preoccupied;
and their excesses, however to be deplored and condemned, can hardly be
subject to surprise.
As the sword is the worst argument than can be used, so should it be the
last. In this instance it has been the first; but providentially as yet
only in the scabbard. The present measure will, indeed, pluck it from the
sheath; yet had proper meetings been held in the earlier stages of these
riots, had the grievances of these men and their masters (for they also
had their grievances) been fairly weighed and justly examined, I do think
that means might have been devised to restore these workmen to their
avocations, and tranquillity to the country.
(4) The Manchester Gazette (2nd May, 1812)
On Monday afternoon a large body, not less than 2,000, commenced an
attack, on the discharge of a pistol, which appeared to have been the
signal; vollies of stones were thrown, and the windows smashed to atoms;
the internal part of the building being guarded, a musket was discharged
in the hope of intimidating and dispersing the assailants. In a very short
time the effects were too shockingly seen in the death of three, and it is
said, about ten wounded.
(5)
John Edward
Taylor wrote an article in 1819 about the Luddite Riots in Manchester
during 1812.
The Middleton
riots originated in severe distress, exasperated by a short-sighted
prejudice against the introduction of newly-invented machinery. The attack
of the mob upon the factory, and the destruction of the house of one of
its owners, were crimes of the greatest enormity. But at Westhoughton,
where a steam-loom factory was set on fire and burnt down, the case was
widely different. This outrage was debated at a meeting which took place
on Dean Moor, near Bolton, the 9th of April, 1812, sixteen days before the
scheme was put in practice. At this meeting there were present, during the
greater part of its duration, and up to the time of its close, not more
than about forty persons, of whom no less than ten or eleven were spies,
reputed to be employed by Colonel Fletcher. The occurrence of
circumstances like these, sixteen days before the burning of the factory
took place, renders it not a matter of presumption, but of absolute
certainty, that that alarming outrage might have been prevented, if to
prevent it had been the inclination of either the spies or their
employers.
(6)
Archibald Prentice, Historical Sketches and Personal Recollections
of Manchester (1851)
At Accrington,
on the evening of Tuesday, April the 18th, a mob of probably two thousand
persons assembled round the steam-loom factory of Messrs. Sykes, and
proceeded to break the windows. The manager, who went out to address" the
misguided multitude, was assaulted and treated very roughly, and, fears
being entertained that still greater violence would be resorted to, the
military were sent for. On the following evening, w^en the market coach
from Manchester arrived at Blackburn, it was assailed by a crowd of
people, who showered stones upon it, and some of the manufacturers, who
were in and upon it, received severe bruises.