This book tells the story of how the Home Office suppression of Chartist protest in West Riding led to development of the modern British State. Chartism was a powerful community force, staging protests across the West Riding and attracting much support, especially from the dispossessed, the disenfranchised, and Irish immigrants. The Home Office led the state’s response, using new resources—railways, the press, and the electric telegraph—and mobilized coercion from army and police forces. In 1…



