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This is a study of industrial unrest in the cotton industry at a
time when the economy was on the threshold of mid-Victorian
prosperity, and when Chartism was still much more than a memory.
The town of Preston was the crucial battlefield, and here the
masters and men fought out a bitter trial of strength. The strike
of 1853-54 closed the Preston cotton industry for seven months, and
disrupted production in many other towns in Lancashire. Against the
implacable opposition of the masters, the strikers toured the
country to organize support, and raised GBP100,000 in subscriptions
from their fellow operatives. The dispute featured prominently in
the national and provincial press, and the weavers' delegates,
notably George Cowell and Mortimer Grimshaw, became celebrities
overnight. After five months, the employers brought in blackleg
labour, and when the detested `knobsticks' failed to break the
strike they had the operatives' leaders arrested. These moves did
not deter the cotton workers, who were forced back to work only
when their financial reserves were exhausted. Their campaign ended
defiantly, as it had begun, with cries of `Ten Per Cent still, and
no surrender'. This book is their story.
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