Rebecca Riots

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Depiction of the Rebecca Riots, Illustrated London News 1843
Depiction of the Rebecca Riots, Illustrated London News 1843
Aberystwyth Southgate Tollhouse, now at Museum of Welsh Life
Aberystwyth Southgate Tollhouse, now at Museum of Welsh Life

The Rebecca Riots took place between 1839 and 1844 in South Wales and Mid Wales. They were a protest against the high tolls which had to be paid on the local Turnpike roads.

The many toll-gates on the roads were operated by trusts which were supposed to maintain and even improve the roads, funding this from tolls. Many trusts however charged extortionate tolls and diverted the money raised to other uses. Even where this was not the case, the toll-gate laws imposed an additional financial burden on poor farming communities and people decided that enough was enough. They took the law into their own hands and gangs were formed to destroy the toll-gates.

These gangs became known as Merched Beca (Welsh for Rebecca's Daughters) or merely the Rebeccas. The origin of their name is said to be a verse in the Bible, Genesis 24:60 - 'And they blessed Rebekah and said unto her, Thou art our sister, be thou the mother of thousands of millions, and let thy seed possess the gate of those which hate them'.

The accepted leader of those first protests, Thomas Rees (Twm Carnabwth), wore women's clothes when leading attacks. Some versions of the story say that these clothes were borrowed from a (rather large) lady called Rebecca living near his home at the foot of the Preseli hills. Local records do not bear this out - and the wearing of women's clothes was an established part of traditional Welsh justice (the Ceffyl Pren, wooden horse), of which Twm Carnabwth is remembered as a notoriously enthusiastic participant.

The first protests, led by "Rebecca" destroyed the toll-gates at Yr Efail Wen in 2 attacks in Carmarthenshire in 1839. But Twm did not participate when the attacks flared again 3 years later. Other communities adopted the name and disguise, and other grievances besides the toll gates were aired in the riots.

Anglican clergymen from the established Church of Wales were targets on several occasions. The Church could demand tithes and other ecclesiastical benefits even though most of the population of Wales were Nonconformists. Other victims were petty local villains such as the fathers of illegitimate children.

The riots caused at least one fatality, in the small village of Hendy, in which a young woman named Sarah Williams died.

She had been warned before hand that the rioters were on their way but refused to leave. On the night of her death she could be heard shouting "I know who you are" by a family living up the road who had locked their doors from the rioters. A few moments after this a gunshot could be heard. The family refused to open the door to look until a few minutes later when they could hear something scraping the door. They opened the door to find Sarah Williams dead on their doorstep.

The riots ceased after several ring leaders were convicted and transported to Australia. The protests prompted several reforms, including a Royal Commission into the question of toll roads. Most of the hated toll-gates were legally removed in 1844.

[edit] The Rebecca Riots in fiction

The Rebecca Riots were the setting for the novel, "Hosts of Rebecca", by Alexander Cordell, Blorenge Books, ISBN 1-872730-19-1

In 1948 Dylan Thomas wrote the screenplay for a film, Rebecca's Daughters, and eighteen years later (in 1966) a novel of the same name. The film was not released until 1991, and starred Peter O'Toole, Paul Rhys and Joely Richardson. See also the IMDB entry for the film Rebecca's Daughters at http://imdb.com/title/tt0105222/ and the National Library of Wales' catalogue entry for the novel.

The name of Rebecca is also mentioned in the context of the Merthyr Rising of 1831 in the song "Ironmasters" by the british folkpunk band "The men they couldn't hang" on their album "Night of a thousand candles".

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