9780748628483 Industry Refor

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

9780748628483 Industry Refor The New Edinburgh History of Scotland VOLUME 9 Industry, Reform and Empire 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd i 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM The New Edinburgh History of Scotland General editor: Roger Mason, University of St Andrews Advisory editors: Dauvit Broun, University of Glasgow; Iain Hutchison, University of Stirling; Norman Macdougall, University of St Andrews; Nicholas Phillipson, University of Edinburgh 1 From Caledonia to Pictland to 795 James Fraser, University of Edinburgh 2 From Pictland to Alba 789–1070 Alex Woolf, University of St Andrews 3 Domination and Lordship 1070–1230 Richard Oram, University of Stirling 4 The Wars of Scotland 1214–1371 Michael Brown, University of St Andrews 5 The First Stewart Dynasty 1371–1488 Steve Boardman, University of Edinburgh 6 Scotland Re-formed 1488–1587 Jane Dawson, University of Edinburgh 7 Empire, Union and Reform 1587–1690 Roger Mason, University of St Andrews 8 Nation, State, Province, Empire 1690–1790 Ned Landsman, State University of New York, Stony Brook 9 Industry, Reform and Empire: Scotland, 1790–1880 I. G. C. Hutchison, University of Stirling 10 Impaled Upon a Thistle: Scotland since 1880 Ewen A. Cameron, University of Edinburgh edinburghuniversitypress.com/series/nehs 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd iiii 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM Industry, Reform and Empire Scotland, 1790–1880 I. G. C. Hutchison 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd iiiiii 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM To Rose and Patrick, the Future Edinburgh University Press is one of the leading university presses in the UK. We publish academic books and journals in our selected subject areas across the humanities and social sciences, combining cutting-edge scholarship with high editorial and production values to produce academic works of lasting importance. For more information visit our website: edinburghuniversitypress.com © I. G. C. Hutchison, 2020 Edinburgh University Press Ltd The Tun – Holyrood Road 12 (2f) Jackson’s Entry Edinburgh EH8 8PJ Typeset in 11/13 Ehrhardt MT by IDSUK (DataConnection) Ltd, and printed and bound in Great Britain A CIP record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 978 0 7486 1512 4 (hardback) ISBN 978 0 7486 1513 1 (paperback) ISBN 978 0 7486 2848 3 (webready PDF) ISBN 978 1 4744 6294 5 (epub) The right of I. G. C. Hutchison to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 and the Copyright and Related Rights Regulations 2003 (SI No. 2498). 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd iivv 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM Contents Tables and Illustrations vi Acknowledgements vii Abbreviations viii General Editor’s Preface ix Introduction 1 Chapter 1 The Agrarian Economy and Society 7 Chapter 2 The Manufacturing Economy 37 Chapter 3 Urban Society 64 Chapter 4 Urban Social Conditions 95 Chapter 5 The Presbyterian Churches 122 Chapter 6 Assimilation and Acculturation 148 Chapter 7 Politics in the Era of Revolutions, c. 1780–1815 183 Chapter 8 Politics in the Last Years of the Unreformed System, 1815–32 212 Chapter 9 Politics in the Age of the First Reform Act, 1832–c. 1865 237 Chapter 10 Inching towards Democracy: Politics, c. 1865–80 267 Conclusion: Approaching Niagara? 297 Guide to Further Reading 300 Bibliography 305 Index 334 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd v 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM Tables and Illustrations Table 4.1 Death rates per 1,000 living, 1861 and 1881 96 Table 4.2 Scottish housing stock by room size, 1861–1901 99 Table 4.3 Population in house sizes, 1861–1901 99 Table 4.4 Overcrowding in Scottish houses, 1861–1901 99 Table 7.1 General Election results, England and Scotland, 1784–1812 190 Table 9.1 Conservative MPs, Scotland and England, 1832–59 241 Table 10.1 Scottish and English Conservative MPs, 1865–80 287 Figure 1.1 Farm workers at Phantassie Farm 17 Figure 2.1 Camperdown Jute Works 40 Figure 3.1 Furnacemen at Dalmellington Iron Works 82 Figure 4.1 Close no. 80, High Street, Glasgow 98 Figure 5.1 Rev. Thomas Chalmers 127 Figure 6.1 A Premonstratensian priest with schoolchildren, Whithorn 150 Figure 7.1 Henry Dun das, 1st Viscount Melville 202 Figure 8.1 Francis Jeffrey 217 Figure 9.1 Kirriemuir weavers’ banner celebrating the repeal of the Corn Laws, 1846 248 Figure 10.1 West Calder reception committee for Gladstone, 1879 285 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd vvii 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM Acknowledgements I am indebted to the British Academy, the Carnegie Trust for the Universi- ties of Scotland, the Strathmartine Trust and Stirling University Faculty of Arts for generous financial support of the research for this book. I wish to thank the following owners of manuscripts who kindly gave me permission to quote from their papers: Mr K. Adam (Blair Adam MSS), Mr J. H. Crawford (Naughton House MSS), Lord Mansfield (Mansfield MSS), Sir Robert Clerk (Clerk of Penicuik MSS) and Mrs P. MacNeil (Kennedy of Dunure MSS). The staff at the National Register of Archives (Scotland) are thanked for their efficiency and courtesy in dealing with my requests for permission to consult manuscripts held in private hands. Staff at various university, national and local government archives were invariably helpful and friendly. David Lonergan and Sarah Foyle at Edinburgh University Press supported and advised me with great tolerance. Professor R. A. Mason and an anonymous reader read my draft chapters, and their comments greatly improved the final version. I am, of course, responsible for all errors of fact and oddities of opinion that remain. My wife Pat has patiently borne the interminable gestation of this book, for which I owe her an incalculable debt of gratitude. 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd vviiii 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM Abbreviations BL British Library CSU Complete Suffrage Union GCA Glasgow City Archives IRSS International Review of Scottish Studies JSHS Journal of Scottish Historical Studies MOH Medical Officer of Health NAVSR National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights NLS National Library of Scotland NRS National Records of Scotland NSA New Statistical Account NSWS National Society for Women’s Suffrage NYRO North Yorkshire Record Office PP Parliamentary Papers RSCHS Records of the Scottish Church History Society Scot. Trad. Scottish Tradition SCRAN Scottish Cultural Resources Network SESH Scottish Economic & Social History SGM Scottish Geographical Magazine SHR Scottish Historical Review SLHSJ Scottish Labour History Society Journal SPBA Scottish Permissive Bill Association SWTA Scottish Women’s Temperance Association UFC United Free Church UP(C) United Presbyterian (Church) USC United Secession Church 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd vviiiiii 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM General Editor’s Preface The purpose of the New Edinburgh History of Scotland is to provide up-to- date and accessible narrative accounts of the Scottish past. Its authors will make full use of the explosion of scholarly research that has taken place over the last three decades, and do so in a way that is sensitive to Scotland’s regional diversity as well as to the British, European and transoceanic worlds of which Scotland has always been an integral part. Chronology is fundamental to understanding change over time and Scot- land’s political development will provide the backbone of the narrative and the focus of analysis and explanation. The New Edinburgh History will tell the story of Scotland as a political entity, but will be sensitive to broader social, cultural and religious change and informed by a richly textured understanding of the totality and diversity of the Scots’ historical experience. Yet to talk of the Scots – or the Scottish nation – is often misleading. Local loyalty and regional diversity have more frequently characterised Scotland than any perceived sense of ‘national’ solidarity. Scottish identity has seldom been focused primarily, let alone exclusively, on the ‘nation’. The modern discourse of nationhood offers what is often an inadequate and inappropriate vocabulary in which to couch Scotland’s history. The authors in this series will show that there are other and more revealing ways of capturing the distinctiveness of Scottish experience. The astonishingly rapid and wide-ranging changes that Scotland experi- enced in the century after 1790 were not only without precedent, but trans- formed the country beyond all recognition. What was in the late eighteenth century a relatively under-populated rural society was by the 1880s densely populated, highly urbanised and heavily industrialised. The first part of Iain Hutchison’s compelling study of these decades charts the demographic, economic and social changes that lay at the heart of these seismic develop- ments, capturing the experience of Scots of all backgrounds – Lowlanders and Highlanders, landowners, tenants, artisans and entrepreneurs – as they were buffeted by the revolutionary changes that were taking place around them, 66222_Hutchison.indd222_Hutchison.indd iixx 002/01/202/01/20 110:140:14 AAMM x INDUSTRY, REFORM AND EMPIRE and analysing the high social costs that so often accompanied them. As with the New Edinburgh History of Scotland in general, however, the politics of the period – broadly conceived – lies at the heart of the volume. Thus issues of political identity within an expanding imperial framework come under the author’s close and insightful scrutiny, while the extension of the franchise and the emergence of class politics, the great schism in the established kirk known as the Disruption and the impact of Catholic emancipation all fall under his purview. Covering an era that witnessed the rise of revolutionary nationalism across Europe, this volume engages with Scotland’s self-perceptions as at once a historic nation and a ‘partner’ in British imperial expansion in ways that are as nuanced as they are enlightening.
Recommended publications
  • Electoral Statistics for Scotland As at 1 December 2018
    Electoral Statistics for Scotland as at 1 December 2018 Published on 22 March 2019 This statistical report provides information on the number of people registered to vote in UK Parliament, Scottish Parliament and Local Government elections. Electoral Statistics, Scotland, December 2018 Summary Electorates in Scotland Number of people registered to vote (millions) have decreased in 2018 4.11 The decrease in electorate compared with 2017 is 0.6% for the UK Parliament electorate in Scotland and 0.4% for the 3.99 Scottish Parliament 3.97 Scottish Parliament and Local and Local Government Government electorate. The 3.93 decrease in 2015 was caused by the introduction of Individual Electoral Registration (IER). UK Parliament 2001 2018 Number of attainers Number of attainers (thousands) remains similar to the previous year Attainers are people who will become old enough to vote (18 44.2 UK Parliament for UK Parliament, or 16 for 44.0 41.3 Scottish Parliament and Local Government elections) before December 2019. Since the Scottish Parliament voting age was lowered in and Local Government Scotland, there have been more 20.2 attainers for UK Parliament elections than for Scottish Parliament and Local 2008 2018 Government elections. Most electoral wards Change in electorate over previous year see a decrease Greater than 3.5% 5 wards compared to their 2.5% to 3.5% 6 wards electorate in 2017 electorate increasing 1.5% to 2.5% 16 wards Electoral wards are the sub- 0.5% to 1.5% 41 wards council level areas that are used -0.5% to 0.5% 111 wards to elect councillors for Local -1.5% to -0.5% 110 wards Government elections.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Independence Referendum Report on the Referendum Held on 18 September 2014
    Scottish Independence Referendum Report on the referendum held on 18 September 2014 December 2014 ELC/2014/02 This report is laid before the Scottish Parliament in pursuance of Section 27 of the Scottish Independence Referendum Act 2013. ELC/2014/02 Translations and other formats For information on obtaining this publication in another language or in a large- print or Braille version please contact the Electoral Commission: Tel: 020 7271 0500 Email: [email protected] We are an independent body set up by the UK Parliament. We regulate party and election finance and set standards for well-run elections. We work to support a healthy democracy, where elections and referendums are based on our principles of trust, participation, and no undue influence. The Scottish Independence Referendum Act 2013 gave the Commission a number of responsibilities for the referendum, for which we report directly to the Scottish Parliament. Contents Foreword 1 Executive Summary 4 1 Introduction 22 2 The referendum legislation 28 3 Information for voters about the referendum 42 4 The experience of voters 58 5 Campaigning at the referendum 82 6 Was the referendum well-run? 119 7 The cost of the referendum 145 Appendices Appendix 1 - Research methodology 150 Appendix 2 - List of registered campaigners 151 Appendix 3 - Summary of referendum results 152 Appendix 4 - Electoral Commission Voting Guide 154 Foreword As part of the legislation passed by the Scottish Parliament enabling the historic referendum on independence for Scotland on 18 September 2014, the Electoral Commission was tasked with producing a report on the conduct of the referendum and our associated expenditure.
    [Show full text]
  • University Microfilms. a XER0K Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan
    72-11430 BRADEN, James Allen, 1941- THE LIBERALS AS A THIRD PARTY IN BRITISH POLITICS, 1926-1931: A STUDY IN POLITICAL COMMUNICATION. The Ohio State University, Ph.D., 1971 History, modern University Microfilms. A XER0K Company, Ann Arbor, Michigan (^Copyright by James Allen Braden 1971 THIS DISSERTATION HAS BEEN MICROFILMED EXACTLY AS RECEIVED THE LIBERALS AS A THIRD PARTY IN BRITISH POLITICS 1926-1931: A STUDY IN POLITICAL COMMUNICATION DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By James Allen Braden, B. S., M. A. * + * * The Ohio State University 1971 Approved by ment of History PLEASE NOTE: Some Pages haveIndistinct print. Filmed asreceived. UNIVERSITY MICROFILMS Sir, in Cambria are we born, and gentlemen: Further to boast were neither true nor modest, Unless I add we are honest. Belarius in Cymbeline. Act V, sc. v. PREFACE In 1927 Lloyd George became the recognized leader of the Liberal party with the stated aim of making it over into a viable third party. Time and again he averred that the Liberal mission was to hold the balance— as had Parnell's Irish Nationalists— between the two major parties in Parlia­ ment. Thus viewed in these terms the Liberal revival of the late 1920's must be accounted a success for at no time did the Liberals expect to supplant the Labour party as the party of the left. The subtitle reads: "A Study in Political Communi­ cation " because communications theory provided the starting point for this study. But communications theory is not im­ posed in any arbitrary fashion, for Lloyd George and his fol­ lowers were obsessed with exploiting modern methods of commu­ nications.
    [Show full text]
  • The Arbuthnott Report and Scottish Elections
    The Arbuthnott report and Scottish elections Standard Note: SN/PC/03918 Last updated: 21 May 2007 Author: Isobel White Parliament and Constitution Centre The Commission on Boundary Differences and Voting Systems was established to look into the consequences of having four different voting systems in Scotland, and different boundaries between Westminster and Holyrood. The Commission was chaired by Sir John Arbuthnott and published its report on 19 January 2006. This Note examines the Commission’s recommendations and subsequent consideration of the report by the House of Commons. Details of the Government’s response to the report are also given. Local elections and Scottish Parliament elections were held on 3 May 2007 and there have been reports of large numbers of spoiled ballot papers; the final sections of the Note give a brief review of the press reports about the elections and explain the procedure for challenging an election in Scotland. Contents A. Background 3 B. The Report 4 1. Boundaries 5 2. Voting 6 3. Representation 9 4. Reaction to the report 10 C. Consideration of the report by the Scottish Affairs Committee 12 D. Westminster Hall debate on the report on 20 July 2006 14 E. The Government’s response to the Arbuthnott report 17 F. The Scottish Executive’s response to the Arbuthnott report 19 G. Local and Scottish Parliament elections on 3 May 2007 21 1. Statement by the Secretary of State for Scotland 23 2. Electoral Commission review of the Scottish elections 25 H. Election petitions 26 Standard Notes are compiled for the benefit of Members of Parliament and their personal staff.
    [Show full text]
  • What Might the Scottish Local Elections Tell Us About the State of Scottish Party Politics in the Run up to the 2014 Referendum on Independence?
    blo gs.lse.ac.uk http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/archives/23299 What might the Scottish local elections tell us about the state of Scottish party politics in the run up to the 2014 referendum on independence? Blog Admin Alistair Clark argues that the upcoming local government elections in Scotland will indicate how the referendum might turn out. Turnout and the still relatively new STV electoral system will be important determinants of the vote, and momentum following the results will be of crucial significance. In light of ongoing debates over Scottish independence and the mechanics of holding an independence ref erendum, the Scottish local government elections of May 2012 take on an importance not normally attributed to such elections. Indeed, the 2012 local elections are the last big Scottish test of electoral support in advance of any ref erendum being held. They will theref ore provide a number of clues as to how events in the ref erendum might play out and there are some important questions that they will answer. One key question is to what extent has the SNP’s momentous levels of support in the 2011 Scottish parliamentary elections carry through to the local level, and indeed, how Scottish voters will decide how to vote in the f irst place? While the SNP’s council tax f reeze may be popular at one level, it has also led to some controversial spending decisions at local level as councils are f orced to tighten their belts accordingly. Where such decisions have been taken by SNP councillors, this has mostly been in coalition with other parties, and particularly the Liberal Democrats.
    [Show full text]
  • The 2011 Scottish Conservative Party Leadership Election
    Edinburgh Research Explorer The 2011 Scottish Conservative Party Leadership Election Citation for published version: Convery, A 2014, 'The 2011 Scottish Conservative Party Leadership Election: Dilemmas for Statewide Parties in Regional Contexts', Parliamentary Affairs, vol. 67, no. 2, pp. 306-327. https://doi.org/10.1093/pa/gss035 Digital Object Identifier (DOI): 10.1093/pa/gss035 Link: Link to publication record in Edinburgh Research Explorer Document Version: Peer reviewed version Published In: Parliamentary Affairs Publisher Rights Statement: This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in Parliamentary Affairs following peer review. The version of record 'Convery, A. (2014). The 2011 Scottish Conservative Party Leadership Election: Dilemmas for Statewide Parties in Regional Contexts. Parliamentary Affairs, 67(2), 306- 327.' is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/pa/gss035 General rights Copyright for the publications made accessible via the Edinburgh Research Explorer is retained by the author(s) and / or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing these publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Take down policy The University of Edinburgh has made every reasonable effort to ensure that Edinburgh Research Explorer content complies with UK legislation. If you believe that the public display of this file breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 03. Oct. 2021 The 2011 Scottish Conservative Party Leadership Election: Dilemmas for Statewide Parties in Regional Contexts Abstract: The 2011 Scottish Conservative leadership election presented the party with two radically different visions for the future.
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Elections (Reform) Bill (SP Bill 53) As Introduced in the Scottish Parliament on 2 September 2019
    This document relates to the Scottish Elections (Reform) Bill (SP Bill 53) as introduced in the Scottish Parliament on 2 September 2019 SCOTTISH ELECTIONS (REFORM) BILL —————————— POLICY MEMORANDUM INTRODUCTION 1. As required under Rule 9.3.3 of the Parliament’s Standing Orders, this Policy Memorandum is published to accompany the Scottish Elections (Reform) Bill introduced in the Scottish Parliament on 2 September 2019. 2. The following other accompanying documents are published separately: • Explanatory Notes (SP Bill 53–EN); • a Financial Memorandum (SP Bill 53–FM); • statements on legislative competence by the Presiding Officer and the Scottish Government (SP 53–LC). 3. This Policy Memorandum has been prepared by the Scottish Government to set out the Government’s policy behind the Bill. It does not form part of the Bill and has not been endorsed by the Parliament. POLICY OBJECTIVES OF THE BILL General Overview 4. The Bill sets outs a range of changes to electoral law covering Scottish Parliament and local government elections in Scotland. Background 5. The Scotland Act 2016 1 amended the Scotland Act 1998 (the “1998 Act”) 2 to devolve further powers to the Scottish Parliament. The changes were based on recommendations made in the Report of the Smith Commission: Proposals for further Devolution to Scotland3 published on 27 November 2014 for further devolution of powers to the Scottish Parliament. These additional powers provided the ability to amend certain sections of the 1998 Act and gave the Scottish Parliament and the Scottish Ministers increased autonomy in relation to the operation of Scottish Parliament and local government elections in Scotland.
    [Show full text]
  • Consultation on a Draft Referendum Bill
    Consultation on a Draft Referendum Bill October 2016 Consultation on a Draft Referendum Bill The Scottish Government, Edinburgh 2016 © Crown copyright 2016 This publication is licensed under the terms of the Open Government Licence v3.0 except where otherwise stated. To view this licence, visit nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open- government-licence/version/3 or write to the Information Policy Team, The National Archives, Kew, London TW9 4DU, or email: [email protected]. Where we have identified any third party copyright information you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This publication is available at www.gov.scot Any enquiries regarding this publication should be sent to us at The Scottish Government St Andrew’s House Edinburgh EH1 3DG ISBN: 978-1-78652-555-0 Published by The Scottish Government, October 2016 Produced for The Scottish Government by APS Group Scotland, 21 Tennant Street, Edinburgh EH6 5NA PPDAS81949 (10/16) Foreword In May 2016 the current Scottish Government was elected with a clear mandate that the Scottish Parliament should have the right to hold an independence referendum if there was clear and sustained evidence that independence had become the preferred option of a majority of the Scottish people – or if there was a significant and material change in the circumstances that prevailed in 2014, such as Scotland being taken out of the EU against our will. On the 23 June, Scotland delivered a strong and unequivocal vote to remain in the EU. In Scotland, there was a majority for Remain in every single local authority, with 62 per cent across the country voting to Remain.
    [Show full text]
  • Supporting New Scots to Vote in the 2021 Scottish Parliament Election Facilitator Guide
    Supporting New Scots to vote in the 2021 Scottish Parliament election Facilitator Guide Contents Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 3 The right to vote in Scotland ........................................................................................... 5 The Scottish Parliament ................................................................................................... 9 Registering to vote ......................................................................................................... 12 Campaigning ................................................................................................................... 14 Voting in the 2021 Scottish Parliament election .......................................................... 18 2 Introduction In February 2020, the Scottish Parliament passed a new law that means if you are over 16 and resident in Scotland, you can vote in Scottish elections, regardless of where you were born. The extension to voting rights means that refugees and other foreign citizens living in Scotland who have leave to enter or remain in the UK, or do not need such permission, can now vote in Scottish Parliament and council elections. There will be an election to the Scottish Parliament on Thursday 6 May 2021. This will be the first election that many New Scots will be able to vote in. This guide has been created to support you, as someone who works with New Scots, to provide information to the people you
    [Show full text]
  • Scottish Local Election
    Local authority elections in Scotland Report 3 May 2007 and Analysis The illustration on the cover of this report represents the town hall in Lerwick, Shetland, a building whose imposing features reflect the important role of local councils and local democracy. Its foundations were laid in 1884, the year that the Electoral Reform Society was established. Local authority elections in Scotland Report and 3 May 2007 Analysis Local authority elections in Scotland 3 May 2007 5 Contents Acknowledgements 7 Introduction 9 Summary 11 17 Part 1: What happened in the elections? Chapter 1: The results of 3 May 2007 17 Chapter 2: The political parties and the local elections 29 Chapter 3: Candidate strategy in multi-member wards 51 Chapter 4: Representation of women, young people and minorities 57 65 Part 2: The voters’ experience Chapter 5: More choice for voters 65 Chapter 6: Transferable voting 69 Chapter 7: Did people record valid votes? 83 91 Part 3: Election issues Chapter 8: Ballot design 91 Chapter 9: Multi-member wards 97 107 Part 4: Looking ahead Chapter 10: Looking forward 107 111 Appendix Scotland’s 32 new councils 111 Local authority elections in Scotland 3 May 2007 7 Acknowledgements and Dedication A project of this size is never a one-person job and I would like to thank Ken Ritchie, Amy Rodger and Martin Steven in particular for their constant help, guidance and support. Alasdair Stuart contributed magnificently to the sections on the results council-by-council and equalities. Other colleagues have assisted with the text and gathering data, including Christine McCartney, Gertrud Malmersjo and Hywel Nelson.
    [Show full text]
  • UK Data Archive Study Number 66036 - Survey of Councillors in Glasgow, 1966
    UK Data Archive Study Number 66036 - Survey of Councillors in Glasgow, 1966 SSRC C001-25 66036 UNIVERSITY OF STRATHCLYDE LOCAL COMMUNITY PROJECT II FINAL COUNCILLOR INTERVIEW INTERVIEWER'S NAME COVER SHEET NUMBER TIME STARTED DATE 1. WHEN DID YOU FIRST SERVE AS A MEMBER OF THE CORPORATION? (IF MORE THAN ONE TERM) 2. HAS YOUR SERVICE BEEN CONTINUOUS? YES NO IF YES GO TO Q.3 (IF NO) 2A WOULD YOU TELL ME ABOUT THAT? (YOU ARE NOW (RESPONDENT'S OFFICE)) 3. HAVE YOU HELD ANY (OTHER) OFFICES ON THE COUNCIL? YES NO IF NO GO TO Q.4 (IF YES) 3A WHAT IS THAT? WHEN WAS THAT? (GET OFFICES AND DATES) 4. HAVE YOU HELD ANY OFFICES IN THE PARTY GROUP ON COUNCIL? YES NO IF NO GO TO Q.5 (IF YES) 4A WHAT IS THAT? WHEN WAS THAT? (FIND IF RESPONDENT HOLDS OFFICE NOW) 5. WERE YOU ELECTED TO THE COUNCIL THE FIRST TIME YOU STOOD? YES NO IF YES GO TO Q.6 (IF NO) 5A COULD YOU TELL ME ABOUT THAT? 6. THINKING BACK TO THE FIRST TIME YOU STOOD FOR THE COUNCIL, WHAT CONSIDERATIONS LED YOU TO STAND? (IF RESPONDENT HAS SERVED MORE THAN ONE TERM) 7. WHAT HAS LED YOU TO CONTINUE STANDING FOR RE-ELECTION? 8. BEFORE YOU ACCEPTED NOMINATION AS A COUNCILLOR, WERE YOU ACTIVE IN PARTY WORK? YES NO IF NO GO TO Q.9 (IF YES) 8A WHAT DID YOU DO? (IF NECESSARY) (GET OFFICES AND DATES) DID YOU HOLD OFFICE IN ANY WARD ORGANIZATION? DID YOU HOLD OFFICE IN THE CITY ORGANIZATION? 8B WHEN DID YOU FIRST BECOME ACTIVE IN PARTY WORK? 8C WHAT CONSIDERATIONS FIRST LED YOU TO BECOME ACTIVE? 9.
    [Show full text]
  • Resisting Labour: Unionists, Liberals, and Moderates in Glasgow Between the Wars*
    The Historical Journal, 46, 2 (2003), pp. 375–401 f 2003 Cambridge University Press DOI: 10.1017/S0018246X0300298X Printed in the United Kingdom RESISTING LABOUR: UNIONISTS, LIBERALS, AND MODERATES IN GLASGOW BETWEEN THE WARS* JAMES J. SMYTH University of Stirling ABSTRACT. This article examines the co-operation between unionists and liberals in inter-war Glasgow. As with the parliamentary challenge of labour, unionists and liberals were confronted at the local level also. The usual response was some sort of municipal alliance or pact. In Scotland, where unionist support for continuing links with liberals was particularly pronounced, this took the form of specific ‘moderate’ parties created to contest local elections. This strategy was markedly successful in keeping labour out of office. The moderates secured their majority in Glasgow by completely dominating the middle-class wards and winning a number of working-class seats. Moderate success is examined through the essential unity of the middle- class vote, the more limited local franchise, and religious sectarianism. However, it became increasingly difficult for the moderates to satisfy both their middle-class and working-class supporters. The sudden emergence of a militant protestant party in the depths of the depression provided a temporary vehicle of protest, which split the moderate vote and allowed labour in to power in 1933. I In recent years considerable attention has been paid to the fortunes of the Con- servative party in the inter-war period. No longer are historians prepared to,
    [Show full text]