:''For other incidents referred to by this name, see
Bloody Sunday.''

Bloody Sunday 1887
'Bloody Sunday',
London,
13 November,
1887, was the name given to a demonstration against coercion in
Ireland and to demand the release from prison of MP
William O'Brien, who was imprisoned for incitement as a result of an incident in the Irish
Land War. The demonstration was organized by the
Radical Federation.
The Background
Gladstone's espousal of the cause of Irish
Home Rule had split the
Liberal Party and made it easy for the
Conservatives to gain a majority in the House of Commons. The period from 1885 to 1906 was one of
Tory dominance, with short intermissions. Coercion Acts were the answer of British governments perturbed by rural unrest in Ireland, and they involved various degrees of suspension of civil rights. Although the immediate object of the 13 November demonstration was to protest about the handling of the Irish situation by the Conservative government of
Lord Salisbury, it had a much wider context.
The
Long Depression, starting in 1873 and lasting almost to the end of the century, created difficult social conditions in Britain - similar to the economic problems that drove rural agitation in Ireland. Falling food prices created rural
unemployment, which resulted in both
emigration and internal
migration. Workers moved to the towns and cities in thousands, eroding employment, wages and working conditions.
By November 1887, unemployed workers' demonstrations from the
East End of London had been building up for more than two years. There had already been clashes with the police and with the members of upper class clubs.
Trafalgar Square was seen symbolically as the point at which the working class East End met upper class
West End of London, a focus of
class struggle and an obvious flash point. This attracted the attention of the small but growing
Socialist movement - both the Marxists of the SDF (
Social Democratic Federation) and
Socialist League and the
reformist Socialists of the
Fabian Society. Police and government attempts to suppress or divert the demonstrations also brought in the radical wing of the Liberal party and free speech activists from the
National Secular Society and the Law and Liberty League, who saw the Square as a public space that had to kept free for public, political use. As so often in British politics, the Irish issue provided a focus for a wide range of political and social concerns. The
Left felt that the Irish situation had direct parallels within Britain and that coercion in Ireland propelled repression in Britain.
In order to appreciate fully the closeness of the relationship between British and Irish
Radicalism at the time, it is vital to understand that the working class in British cities contained a very large element that was Irish in birth or origin. London, like the industrial areas of northern England and lowland Scotland, had a large Irish working class, concentrated in the East End, where it rubbed shoulders with a very diverse population, including increasing numbers of Jews from Eastern Europe. As newcomers, Irish and Jewish workers were especially prone to unemployment and likely to face the worst conditions when in work.
There was also a strong international dimension to the situation. Irish and British workers were strongly concerned about the fate of the
anarchists arrested after the
Haymarket Riot in
Chicago the previous year. The hanging of four of them on 11 November helped to bring resentment to a high pitch: many workers had close family and ethnic links, as well as political sympathies, with the US radicals.
The Demonstration of 13 November
As it became clear that the demonstration would be very large and that police might attack it,
Charles Bradlaugh of the National Secular Society advised his member to stay away. However, the Socialist and Radical groups largely maintained their support and their leaders took part.
Some 10,000 marchers approached
Trafalgar Square from several different directions, led by (among others)
Elizabeth Reynolds,
John Burns,
Annie Besant and
Robert Cunninghame-Graham, who were primarily leaders of the
Social Democratic Federation. Also marching was the Fabian playwright
George Bernard Shaw, who spoke during the demonstrations.
Two thousand police and 400 troops were deployed to halt the demonstration. In the ensuing clashes many demonstrators, including women and children, were badly beaten. Hundreds of
working class demonstrators were injured and at least three died of the injuries they received. Alfred Linnell, a young clerk, also died at about the same time, but it seems his injuries were actually inflicted in an earlier demonstration. It is possible that there were other deaths and certainly there were many serious injuries. 200 were treated in hospital but many of the injured would not dare to present themselves at hospitals, either because of the cost of treatment or for fear of arrest. Burns and Cunninghame-Graham were arrested and imprisoned for six weeks. Annie Besant, who was a Marxist, Fabian and secularist, spoke at the rally and offered herself for arrest, but was unable to get the police to respond.
Most of the injuries were inflicted by the police, using fists and truncheons. There were both infantry and cavalry present. Although the infantry were marched into position with bayonets fixed, they were not ordered to open fire and the cavalry were not ordered to draw their swords. This is probably the main reason casualties were not much higher.
The Aftermath
Bloody Sunday was certainly a major clash between the working class and the state, but casualties were relatively light - much lower than in some clashes of the
Reform agitation or
Chartism, earlier in the century. The aftermath of the demonstration largely explains why it came to play such an important part in British working class history.
Besant and
William Thomas Stead. Stead, of the Law and Liberty League were particularly active in organizing legal defence for the arrested and in raising funds for the families affected by arrest or injury of a wage-earner. Both were superb self-publicists and their skilled manipulation of press and public opinion created an impression of a much more serious massacre than actually took place. They stage-managed court appearances and other public events to gain maximum effect. The verse and oratory of
William Morris, largely focussed on the funerals, were also enormously important in fixing the memory of the events of 13 November.
The Liberal Party, nationally and in parliament, on the other hand, did not organize major protests. Gladstone continued to attack government policy in Ireland without condemning police treatment of Irish people living in Britain. This handed the initiative to the Left and the Radicals in his own party, creating an impression of a
ruling class, both Tory and Liberal, callous and indifferent to suffering on their own doorstep.
The funeral of Linnell in December provided another focus for the unemployed and Irish movements, with more attending than on Bloody Sunday itself. William Morris, leader of the Socialist League, gave the main speech and the crowd sang his "Death Song". A smaller but similar event marked the burial of another of those killed, W. B. Curner, which took place in January. The release of those imprisoned was celebrated on 20 February 1888, with large public meeting. At this
Henry Hyndman, leader of the SDF, violently denounced the Liberal Party and then went on to attack the Radical M.P.s who were present. This bitterly divisive speech marked the end of the movement that had culminated in Bloody Sunday and the funeral of Linnell.
Significance of Bloody Sunday
Bloody Sunday and its aftermath were significant events in the history and the mythology of the British and Irish Left but they were also crucial media events. They formed a high point for the interest of the media and middle-class commentators in the "social question", largely embodied in the condition of the
East End of London. The spectres of the mob or of poverty could be conjured, according to taste, to generate interest in social conditions. The spate of murders attributed to
Jack the Ripper, which began shortly afterwards, diverted this attention and allowed concern with the East End to take a very different focus, around crime and policing. Then, as now, it was hard to make actual social need interesting for very long. The perennial tendency of the press is to shift the focus to sex and violence, preferably in combination.
Socialist activism, on the other hand, tended to flow away from direct political confrontation into the industrial struggles of the
New Unionism, like the
London matchgirls strike of 1888 and the
London Dock Strike of 1889. The rift between the middle-class liberals and secularists, on the one hand, and the Socialists, on the other, proved to be an important step in the evolution of an independent working class movement. The new unionism produced a new working class leadership, which was itself to mould the
Labour Party in the next century.
Reading
Thompson, E. P. William Morris: Romantic to Revolutionary, Merlin Press, London, 1977
Taylor, Anne. Annie Besant: A Biography, Oxford University Press, 1991 (also US edition 1992) ISBN 0-19-211796-3