Revolution Society

The London Revolution Society was formed 1788 to commemorate the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the landing of William III, and was one of several radical societies in Britain in the 1790s. Other similar Revolution Societies were formed in provincial cities such as Norwich which rivalled Sheffield as the centre of English Jacobinism.[1]

Many of the members of the London Revolution Society were also members of the Society for Constitutional Information (CSI), 1780-1794. Along with some Anglicans a large number of English Dissenters and Unitarians were at the centre of the Society including Richard Price, Joseph Priestley, Andrew Kippis, Abraham Rees, Theophilus Lindsey, Thomas Belsham, and Thomas Brand Hollis.[2] At the time of the fall of the Bastille in July 1789, the London Revolution Society was the most vocal of the radical societies. The meeting place in 1789 was the London Tavern.[3] Meetings continued in 1789-1792 but after 1792 the radical momentum shifted from the London Revolution Society back to the SCI and the London Corresponding Society (LCS)[4] The LCS was arguably the most influential and the longest-surviving of the societies.[5]

The London Revolution Society last met in 1792, and as most of these societies went inactive after the conservative reaction in 1792-1794, when, following local sedition trials of 1792 and 1793, William Pitt the Younger initiated the 1794 Treason Trials, followed by the Seditious Meetings Act of 1795.

References

  1. ^ Richard Brown Church and state in modern Britain, 1700-1850
  2. ^ Daniel E. White Early Romanticism and religious dissent p214
  3. ^ An abstract of the history and proceedings of the Revolution Society London, England 1789 "At a Meeting of the Committee of the Revolution Society, Friday 19th Dec 1788, at the London Tavern. ... who shall be desirous of being admitted a Member of this Society, shall be sent to the Secretary, signed by two Members."
  4. ^ Daniel E. White "After 1792 the source of oppositionist discourse shifted from the London Revolution Society to the LCS and SCI."
  5. ^ Gregory Fremont-Barnes Encyclopedia of the Age of Political Revolutions and New ... 2007 Page 423 "The London Corresponding Society was to be the most influential and the longest-surviving radical society in Britain in the 1790s"

See also