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Samuel Holberry

Revolutionary Democrat 1814-42

John Baxter

$62.95   $53.30

Paperback

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English
1889 Books
13 October 2025
Samuel Holberry felt he had no choice but to rise up. In 1839, his neighbours were out of work; men, women and children were dying of starvation and disease caused by atrocious living conditions. The Chartists sent huge petitions to Parliament, signed by millions - but they were laughed at: the propertied classes would never cede power!

Holberry risked everything to force change and was in effect murdered by the State for his efforts. Many Chartists fled to the U.S. to avoid his fate; our loss - of bright, dynamic, freedom-loving men and women - was America's gain.

His, and others' sacrifices for democracy, gave us freedoms we enjoy today: we take these hard-fought rights for granted at our peril. In the U.S, U.K. and around the world, democracy is losing ground to individuals and organizations who don't believe ordinary people should have a say, who believe democracy, liberty and freedom of expression are not in their own interests, and are working to undermine them.

There are voters who are kept ignorant of how democrats like Holberry died so that they could have a right to vote - voters who say they can't be bothered, who would seemingly give away their rights to autocrats. The forces that Holberry tried to rein in, which silenced him, are still all around us. Democracy is fragile - we need to understand our history to avoid mistakes of the past.
By:  
Imprint:   1889 Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781915045485
ISBN 10:   1915045487
Pages:   250
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for Samuel Holberry: Revolutionary Democrat 1814-42

""Throws open a window on the world of revolutionary democracy in Britain in the 1830s and 40s and does so with amazing clarity and detail."" ― John Foster, Education Secretary, Marx Memorial Library ""An exemplary account of 'history from below', combining finely written commentary, scrupulous scholarship and lavish illustration, so as you read it, you truly know and feel you are there, in Sheffield in 1840, alongside the protagonists."" ― Chris Searle, author and educator


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