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Saving the People's Forest - Open spaces, enclosure and popular protest in mid-Victorian London (Paperback)
Loot Price: R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
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Saving the People's Forest - Open spaces, enclosure and popular protest in mid-Victorian London (Paperback)
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Loot Price R555
Discovery Miles 5 550
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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The growth of nineteenth-century London was unprecedented,
swallowing up once remote villages, commons and open fields around
the metropolitan fringe in largely uncontrolled housing
development. In the mid-Victorian period widespread opposition to
this unbridled growth coalesced into a movement that campaigned to
preserve the London commons. The history of this campaign is
usually presented as having been fought by members of the
metropolitan upper middle class, who appointed themselves as
spokespeople for all Londoners and played out their battles mainly
in parliament and the law courts. In this fascinating book Mark
Gorman tells a different story - of the key role played by popular
protest in the campaigns to preserve Epping Forest and other open
spaces in and near London. He shows how throughout the nineteenth
century such places were venues for both radical politics and
popular leisure, helping to create a sense of public right of
access, even 'ownership'. At the same time, London's suburban
growth was partly a response to the rising aspirations of an
artisan and lower middle class who increasingly wanted direct
access to open space. This not only created the conditions for the
mid-Victorian commons preservation movement, but also gave impetus
to distinctive popular protest by proletarian Londoners. In
comparing the campaign for Epping Forest with other struggles for
London's commons, the book highlights influences which ranged from
the role of charismatic leaders to widely held beliefs regarding
the land, in which the rights of freeborn Englishmen had been
plundered by the aristocracy since the Norman conquest. Mark Gorman
reveals a largely hidden history, since ordinary Londoners left few
records behind, but his new research clearly reveals how their
protests influenced the actions of the more visible elite groups
who appeared in parliament or in court.
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