George IV – The History of Parliament https://historyofparliament.com Articles and research from the History of Parliament Trust Thu, 03 Oct 2024 15:47:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/historyofparliament.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/cropped-New-branding-banners-and-roundels-11-Georgian-Lords-Roundel.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 George IV – The History of Parliament https://historyofparliament.com 32 32 42179464 The royal scandal that helped change British politics: the 1820 Queen Caroline affair https://historyofparliament.com/2020/06/17/the-1820-queen-caroline-affair/ https://historyofparliament.com/2020/06/17/the-1820-queen-caroline-affair/#comments Tue, 16 Jun 2020 23:00:00 +0000 https://historyofparliament.com/?p=4851 On 5 June 1820 Caroline of Brunswick returned to England to take her place as Queen Consort to George IV. But the breakdown in the couple’s relationship would become a matter of parliamentary and national importance. This blog from Dr Philip Salmon, editor of our Commons 1832-68 project, explores the impact of the Queen Caroline Affair on British politics.

Two hundred years ago the Prince Regent succeeded to the throne as George IV. His wife Caroline had been living abroad since their separation in 1814 and the new king wanted the Tory government to pass legislation giving him a divorce. Caroline’s unexpected return to England on 5 June to claim her place as Queen Consort, and the government’s failed attempt to prosecute her for adultery in the House of Lords, triggered one of the most significant political crises of the early 19th century. The unprecedented nationwide popular movement that emerged in her support, and the government’s inability to prevent public protests, had important consequences for the development of British politics.

Caroline is welcomed by Radicals in London (T. Lane, 1821) Henry Hunt is on the extreme left.

Only the previous year a large public rally in Manchester calling for parliamentary reform had been violently suppressed by the military. The Peterloo massacre resulted in at least 18 deaths. Fearing similar mass protests the government had imposed one of the biggest clamp-downs in British political history. The Six Acts of 1819 banned all ‘unofficial’ large public meetings and outdoor processions or demonstrations. It became illegal to criticise the state in print and punitive taxes were imposed on newspapers. The public execution in May 1820 of the Cato Street conspirators, for allegedly plotting to overthrow the government, reinforced this hard-line message. To preserve Britain from the threat of revolution and radically-inspired insurrection, the Tory Prime Minister Lord Liverpool and his Home Secretary Lord Sidmouth would take whatever action was necessary.

Within a few months, however, this hard-line policy seemed to be in tatters. Large public meetings and processions in support of the Queen had begun to sweep the nation. The issue ‘took possession of every house or cottage in the kingdom’, recalled one observer. ‘Every man, woman and child took part in it …nothing was thought of but the fate of the Queen’s trial’. Lord Sidmouth, along with many others who failed to display pro-Caroline ‘illuminations’ at their properties, had all his windows smashed. By September 50,000 protesters carrying anti-government banners were parading on a weekly basis through central London. By October the numbers meeting at Piccadilly had reached 100,000. The Times took the lead in fuelling press outrage at the Queen’s treatment, running brazen attacks on a ‘debauched’ king. The popular petitioning campaign in her support eventually attracted over a million signatures. The satirists and cartoonists had a field day.

All this public protest attracted remarkably little reaction from the authorities. The lack of a response was extraordinary. The Whig diarist Thomas Creevey MP noted with astonishment how ‘every Wednesday the same scene which caused so much alarm at Manchester is repeated under the very nose of Parliament and all the constituted authorities’. Part of the problem for the government was that the military were often involved. On one occasion 5,000 sailors marched to pay their own respects to the Queen, who was then staying with her main supporter in the Commons, the radical MP and former lord mayor of London, Matthew Wood.

Another difficulty was the constitutional and moral context. Although the Queen had separated from the king and was known to have had sexual affairs whilst living abroad, her constitutional status had not changed. Loyalty to the Queen, and demands for her name to be included in the Church of England’s official prayers, for example, could hardly be deemed ‘seditious’ or ‘libellous’. Obtaining ‘official’ sanction from a sympathetic magistrate for a meeting in her support, in these circumstances, was not difficult. George IV’s own notorious promiscuity added a moral dimension too. Fuelled by sympathy for the Queen and indignation about double standards, women marched, spoke and signed addresses in unprecedented numbers. With religious leaders and some members of the Cabinet, including the key minister George Canning, also deeply divided over her claims and treatment, the political and legal situation was far from straight forward.

Queen Caroline receiving loyal addresses (T. Dolby, 1820)

Perhaps the most significant factor inhibiting the government’s response, however, was the constitutional language and respect for historic institutions widely adopted by so many of the Queen’s supporters, especially in their formal addresses and petitions. When the City of London Corporation petitioned the Commons, for instance, they denounced the Queen’s trial as ‘repugnant to the constitution’ and ‘dangerous’ to the ‘honour and dignity of the Crown’.  Many leading reformers and radicals who rallied behind the Queen’s cause used similar language, distancing themselves from the sort of demagoguery and association with the mob that had helped to trigger the government’s repressive measures. The ‘loyal’ and ‘respectable’ nature of their assemblies, and an emerging alliance between non-violent radicals, middle-class reformers and local Whig leaders in support of the Queen, was widely remarked on.

The History of Parliament volumes on constituency politics in this period suggest that in many towns and cities those who took the lead in organising support for the Queen went on to play an important role in local campaigns for municipal and parliamentary reform. In Taunton, for example, the same people responsible for the meetings and petitions of 1820 helped to establish a growing local reform movement. They eventually founded the ‘Loyal Political Union’ a decade later, with its declared aim of furthering ‘by every constitutional means the great measure of parliamentary reform’ while using ‘every exertion for the maintenance of order’. Put simply, at the local level the Queen Caroline affair seems to have taught reformers and radicals important lessons about how to organise and manage political agitation in ways that were considered legitimate and constitutional. As Thomas Creevey remarked:

The people have learned a great lesson from this wicked proceeding: they have learnt how to marshal and organise themselves … The arrangements made in every parish … are perfectly miraculous – quite new in their nature – and … will be of eternal application in all our public affairs.

Leading Whig politicians, whose campaigns for parliamentary reform had always been hampered by the outdoor activities of the more extreme radicals, also welcomed the shift in politics resulting from the Queen Caroline affair. ‘The Queen’s business’, observed Lord John Russell MP, ‘has done a great deal in renewing the old and natural alliance between the Whigs and the people, and weakening the influence of the violent radicals’.

Caroline depicted as Boadicea riding over the government and her opponents (G. Cruikshank, 1820)

When the government abandoned the Queen’s trial in November 1820, realising they would never secure the parliamentary votes they needed, the whole nation celebrated. Church bells were rung and ‘illuminations’ were held everywhere. The government’s highly controversial decision to prorogue Parliament to prevent any further discussion was one of the first political prorogations of the 19th century. Whigs and radicals hoped the beleaguered Tory government would collapse, but popular support for the Queen quickly evaporated. By February 1821 the political climate had cooled enough for the government to successfully see off radical and Whig calls in the Commons for a public inquiry. The affair, to all intents and purposes, seemed over. Lord Liverpool’s ministry had weathered the storm and survived. On the surface little had changed. At the local level, however, politics would never be quite the same.

PS

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Exhibition review: Georgian Delights: Life during the Reign of George IV exhibition review https://historyofparliament.com/2020/03/03/georgian-delights-life-during-the-reign-of-george-iv-exhibition-review/ https://historyofparliament.com/2020/03/03/georgian-delights-life-during-the-reign-of-george-iv-exhibition-review/#respond Tue, 03 Mar 2020 00:00:00 +0000 https://historyofparliament.com/?p=4251 Last week Senior Research Fellow on the House of Lords 1715-90 project, Dr Stuart Handley, headed off on a field trip to the University of Nottingham to view Manuscripts and Special Collections’ current exhibition about life during the reign of George IV. Here he reports on what you can expect from the exhibition…

Georgian Delights: Life during the Reign of George IV (1820-1830) is the title of the exhibition jointly curated by the department of Manuscripts and Special Collections at the University of Nottingham and Dr. Richard Gaunt, Associate Professor in History at the same university, and one of the editors of the journal Parliamentary History. The exhibition is located in the Weston Gallery of the D.H. Lawrence Pavilion at the Lakeside Arts Centre in the University Park. It is free to attend, as are the other exhibitions, and a walk around the Lake is to be recommended to round off a visit. The exhibition closes on 29 March.

Our primary interest in exploring this exhibition is on account of our forthcoming activities to mark the bicentenary of the trial of Queen Caroline, during which the newly invested King attempted to divorce her. There is a case dedicated to Queen Caroline, “The Unruly Queen”, telling the story of matrimonial conflict between the couple. Public support for Caroline was overwhelming and was credited with securing the failure of a bill of pains and penalties against her that King George IV had introduced to the House of Lords. The bill narrowly passed the Lords, but was then allowed to lapse. Nevertheless, King George debarred her from the Coronation on 20 July 1821. Their enmity given further force by the story that when a courtier informed the king of the death of Napoleon Bonaparte by saying “your greatest enemy is dead”, King George apparently replied, “By God, is she?

The exhibition, however, is mainly concerned with show-casing the university’s manuscript collections, such as the papers of the dukes of Portland, along with pictorial evidence such as “The Cradle Hymn”, a satirical cartoon of George IV as a baby. It provides documentary evidence on certain themes with contemporary artefacts. The exhibition cases are interspersed with wall hangings, such as an elaborate chart of the peerage in 1821, with the names of the bishops along the bottom.

Thus, the case devoted to “Popular Radicalism” includes a George IV “door-knocker”, and ties in with a planned talk by Dr. Gaunt on “The Diabolical Cato Street Plot”. Fashion is catered for by a special showing of the 1954 film, Beau Brummell, starring Stewart Granger in the title role, Elizabeth Taylor, and Peter Ustinov as the Prince of Wales. Other interesting facts emerge, such as the expense of the Coronation, which totalled £230,000 (£21 million at today’s prices).

The display case in the centre of the room is given over to other prominent figures in George IV’s life. It represents the King and Queen Caroline’s only child, Princess Charlotte (1796-1817), as well as George IV’s brothers. Frederick, duke of York (1763-1827), was an army officer famous for marching his men up and down a hill and the subject of the well-known children’s nursery rhyme. William, duke of Clarence (1765-1837) was an admiral, who later became the sailor king, William IV.

Another theme represented is Catholic Emancipation with the display case being supplemented by a large television screen showing Dr. Gaunt conducting an interview with Lady Antonia Fraser on the subject of her book, The King and the Catholics: The Fight for Rights 1829. Once the viewer has got over the incredibly deep sofa upon which both interviewer and interviewee lounge, Lady Antonia gives her views on the King, Catholic Emancipation, the duke of Wellington, Sir Robert Peel and Daniel O’Connell.

For the more scholarly inclined, a computer terminal is set up for people to explore the Georgian Papers online, a veritable treasure trove of material placed online from the Royal Archives at Windsor Castle.

Full details about how to visit can found here. We highly recommend it if you are in the area!

SH

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